The Somerset herald. (Somerset, Pa.) 1870-1936, June 20, 1894, Image 2

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    Tlie Somerset Jlerald.
KIVARI WTU, Editor aud PmprieUM.
M KI'XEM'AY.
June 30, Ml
REPUBL!CANN0MINATI0NS.
Election, Tuesday, Nov. 13th.
STATE-
Fr iov rnor I;nit'l II. IIa.-4intr.
For I.ii-uK'ii.tiit iJovtnior WaltiT Lyim.
For Auiiilor ;inral Amo H. Myliiu
For Si r.t;iry of Internal Atl'iiir Jaiiu
. I-atUi.
For r.ii'r-.ii':ui-at-I.arg Ualiifchii A.
;row hi:I ;. !(; F. Hurt".
COUNTY.
STATK SKVATt:
N. 15. "rit-li!i-M, Ji-hiu r Tm n-l.ip.
Sul.jii ! lo !ti- lvin rf 11k- li-lrit UufiT-
AKtiitiA:
Win. Henry Mi!l r. iunnali'mii2 T).
J.-rt-iniah Maurvr, Mo.vostowu ltoroiigli.
Jt'UV oMMIloXKIC
Samuel J. R.w-r, Miili.nl Twiuhil.
I'lX'R IdKWTolC
William I'ull. Milfon! Tow n!ii.
ThkNVw York llV UlU workinjr-iiii-n
a pnul troth in ti w.-nt-mv: "A
man vilio i" M-rfl into workiiifi r
into 1 1 1 i 1 1 i 1 1 r work i a slave."
Tiik ul striko Uiiiiaural'ly wttli-l.
A jnvat inahv imr homes have Ut-n
in.i'ii' jm-r; a won-orsoof live haw
U--n jcn-ril'm-!, ami no one -:ii iut
nit iuivlly w ho Iih" Uvii ).-ii.fittfl-
It i no W0II.I1T the I're;lelit i r-iek
ami left VKhiii)Toii. With xiuli a
-.iiL'r.-s "on hi- haii'l-," the iiriiorinji
of his view-, ami the tttnlinir oil' of hi
jK-t tarill' l-etr:ii-s the woiiih r is thai
he i- alive.
Aktki: all their Mowing ami striking
the IK-iiiiM-rats are not a hie to jisss
tiieir tariir hill without the help of the
1'ojiulir.t.s. To this miseralile estate h:is
tlie party fallen that has " a certain
ami sure'' majority in ltl hou.--s and
a 1'r.s-iileiit in tin- While lIu-.
On Saturday the 1 h ni.ier.tts in the
Senate ileeiikii to refuse any proteetion
ti tlie jirowers of wool ami p!avil it on
the free list. These xame friends of the
jHt..le had just previously deteriniluil
to put a tax on sinrar for the U-nelit of
tlie trust. The farmers " ain't in it"
when the trusts i-onie with jrifl.
Tin;:'" are millions and millions of
tollarsof money in this country lyinir
idle, only waitim.' for an investment,
until the Ilesnoeratie liaraiu and Kile
now in proirr-ss in the Senate is eoti
siimniatel. When the result is known
this money will flow into the channels
of trade, and hiisiness will have to ad-jil-l
itself lo the situation.
Ik 1'ncle Sam could ship Uu k to Ku-
re a couple of hundred thousand of
his un-Anierii-aii miners, he lni-jlit
haw pcaii-. The principal trouhle is
w ith the men who ln't speak Kiij.'
lish, and who, havini; Ikvii hrouirht up
under the rule nf the lttiylict, respect
no other Law, and have no conception
f a Hepuhlie.in form of iroveriiiueiit.
TlIK jrreat eil strike is settled for
the present and the mills and factories
fomil to suspend for want of fuel will
ai'aiii resume ierat ions. If any lalr--r
or miiH-r has liecn U-netittcd hy the
Mrike he has not yet lavii heard from.
Meanwhile many tlmusauils if dollars
have Ikvii lost lth to o rators and
miners, and many additional thous
ands hy mill owuersand manufacturers
who were compelled to u-pcnd work.
Jink 1.1th, l-!-!, wasthe last of many
date- fixed hy 1 emocratic Statesmen as
the very latest day to which tlie jas-sa-cof
the Wilson Tarill" hill could lie
tlekiyed. Well, June Mth, lv4, has
-ome ami -joiie, and not withstanding
the IV-ni.K-rats have a majority in hntli
houses the hill still hans tire, and is
likely to do so for some time yet.
Meanwhile husincss remains stagnant,
latwir is crying for hread, the puhlie
leht is increasing and the National
Treasury is in a state of collapse.
'iin;i(Kssm ax Kkhsus, of 'larion
i-iiuuty, who r iri-s nts the -ih Dis-trii-t
in Conjrress and was a candidate
for i-nouiination, was hailly licatcii in
his own county at tin l.-nio ratic nom
inating convention. Mr. Krihlis is a
clever frentlemau, and was cht tctl to
t'ie preM-iit H'Misc hy a plurality of
over 4.UKt votes. He voted for the Wil
son hill and now he has his reward.
His district taw tirow a majority at
the Fchruary election and will proha
hly piw Mr. Krihlis a licpuhlieaii sue
eessor in Noveinlicr next.
Tin: cot per capita of maintenance
and education of the pupils in the S il
diers' Orphans' Schools of the State for
the year endiiiir May Slt, 1!-1, was
SlSH.s!, ir four -iits less than the jkt
capita allowed l.y law. The average
attendan.v ill the ts hools ilariuir the
.war was ,V!. There are now - p'.i
jiils in tlie t-.luH.lf and thirUvu others
pnniiled for hy the commissi. m in
wcitooii oiitsiile of those under its juris-lii-ttiu.
A numlier if di.- harins will
ir duriii); July and August, the va
aliiin ftcriotl, and the commission de
sires to have all the applications for
admissions made as early as jiossihle in
order that it may In- cnahlcd to decide
as to the eoiitimialKv of all the schools
now ill existeiii-e during the current
year. A circular letter has Ihvii issued
hy the comuiissioii to the (irand Army
ps4s if the Slate statin-; that with
proper attention every soldier's or sail
or's orphan can l? carctl for in the
s-hools now in existence, hut unless
applications an-revived in sutlii ieiit
Uantity during another year one at
least will ! dosed. Children clirihle
lor admission must lie ln-twcell five and
fourtivn years of age.
I.N view of the thunderous denuncia
tions of Protection as "a fraud" and "a
rohU-ry of the jrrcat majority of the
American people for the W-ucfit of the
few," which made up the sum and suls
stance of the Last I V llloeralic National
plat fi rm, the tariir schedules now Iks.
hi); enacted into law hy the IVni'icratic
Senate, herehy almost every iliU-rcst,
save and exccplin; wool, is friwii a
nu-asure of protection, showctmciusivi
ly the fraudulent pretenses f u,t. jiany
liiiw contro'.linjt the Natioiud tioverii-nieiit-
Concession after coiKvssioii has
liecii made to the clamorous ticmainls
if the trusts, until thewt-callcd revenue
liill is a tiling of shreds and patches,
affording protection to monopolies and
denying it to the farmers and wool
jrrowers of the country. It Is simply a
hill of particuUra, iK-ttintf. fprth the
Ba'.e of the American jiiaiuiluitun.-r-t
and prnduci rs to the tru.-ts that nihil :
the campaijni Usesf the Ik-ni-KTatic
nartv at the Last Presidential elu tion.
A more shameful trade and dicker, a
more flagrant tictrayal of the people V
intcnts was never maie than is con
templated hy the mwalhil revenue tar
iff hill now U inf arrannl ly the free
traders in the Senate.
It is frtxl to haw "a vacation' in
the sf hools and wiileiri-s, hut the thing
that the xiiple must want to " take a
vacation" Is Congress, and the fool
thing runs ritrht alomr. -frr tn-fun.
Seimtor Qaay'i Convincing Wy.
From Hit- lvaltiniiMV Aini rican.
YcsUTday's pm-e was Uio unieh for the
drowsy Senate, so Unlay was wasted in
sKcehliiakiiiK to empty Win-lies. Sh-iui-torCiiay
read some ten or twenty thous
and words whiehnoone heard. and whieh
no one attempted to lur. Mr. Quay's
usual Uiic of voiee is very low, ami, as he
inteiid.il to talk all day, he w-irccly once
raised his voice almve a inuninir during
the whole of his " remarks." Moreover,
as the hupe pile of tyj-writlen matter
on his d?-k appeared to -onslst principal
ly of miliums of statistics, cut out of cen
s.is hiilli-tiiis, it is no wonder that Mr.
(fiiay had only the presiding ofliccr fur an
audience most of the day.
Mr. iuay and his hig sun k of spM-ech
hae Iks ii an interesting feature of the
tarill' "dcliatc' for the past eleven weeks.
Represent iiij, as he d'les, a state whose
industries are vitally atlccted hy the hill,
Mr. Quay has liecn a el olxrver ofthe
variegated -ireer of the difl'ereiit editions
of the hill, lie has made many demands
for eotieessioiLs, and has invariahly pur
sued the same ta-ties in olrfaining what
hewaiitnl. His method is simple. Tlie
day In-fore the particular sclmlule in
which he is interested comes up in the
Senate, Mr. iuay iilitely directs the at
tention of Mr. Jones, who is authorized
hy the Iicinocnitie caucus to make any
changes that exiedieiiey may demand, to
the change that would Is- aiveptahle to
Pennsylvania. Taught hy experience,
Mr. Jones usually surrenders at discre
tion. If. however, he refus, he knows
exactly what to exMi-t the following
morning. Shortly after the tarill lill will
lie calliil up the next morning, Mr. Quay
will saunter into the chamls-r, lollowed
hy his clerk, who carries a huge hundle
of typi-w ritten copy. Mr. Quay sits
lo n to his th-sk, and soon 1kihiiii- ali-sorU-d
in the reading of tlio iu:iss of mat
ter. After a short interval he looks up,
and, then rising, suggests, in a deprnnito
ry sort of way, the aluem-e of a quorum.
P.y this time Mr. Jones roiigiiia-s the
program, and, as a rule, invites Mr. Quay
to a l.rief coiifcrcni-e, at which a compro
mise is usually patched up, hut, if Mr.
Jones remains olnlurate, then Mr. Qaay
takes the next step, and, rising to any
clause K-nding at the moiii-nt. he reels
off a few thousand Words of his speech.
When he tires, some friendly Senator will
sh11" him for an hour or so, hy gravely
asking permission to put a question. Mr.
Quay iM-rmiLs himself to lie interrupt
ed, and then gK-s out to enjoy his lunch
eon or to take a short nap, while hiscol-h-agiie
hoi. Is the 11. nr for him in an hour's
speech. Then Mr. Quay returns, invig.i
ratiil and refn-shed, and resumes the dis
e.iiirse at the point where he was iuter
riiptc.L It t'K.k Mr. Quay several days to liriug
Mr. Jones to terms on the stii'l and iron
schtihile, hut he finally siuvccded ln-vond
his hojusv. Just what niii-sions Mr.
Quay is after now no one rnw to know,
hut his suii-ess in ohtaining it will lie sig
nalized some morning, when he will ci
ther tail to l.c ill his scat, or when he ill
dim-t his clerk to take away the ominous
pile of copy on his desk. To-day, after
he had read at his speech for a few hours,
he yielded "with great reluctance" to
Mr. Pettigrew, who talked long enough
for Mr. Quay to have lunch, take a slcirt
n-st, change his clothes, and then resume
with uiiahalcd vigor. An intcrsiting in
terlude was furnished when Mr. Mitchell
moved to lay the hill on the tahle. The
motion was voti-.l down, of course.
The Hivemeyer Confemou.
From th' I'tiiiiio IiilerlH-ean.
The statements made hy Mr. Have
mcVer, head of the sugar Irust, to the
S'liatorial investigating committee,
Weilnesday, fell far short of making a
clean hreast of the matter, hut they
certainly had sonic elements of frank
ness. It gosi without saying that all trusts
are formed for private gain and not for
puhlie hencfit. His initial confession
on that s,-ore amounts to nothing. All
husincss associations cxivptiug divi
dends are of that nature. The ivntral
Hiint of his statemeiit is that the ols
jeet and ctlcct of the trust as the case
now stands is to make the puhlie pay
J of a cent more Jut ouiid for sugtir
than it would cost did no trust exist,
and under the schedule adopted hy the
S nate the other day the prolits of the
trust would lie fully 1 cent H-r jhiiiihI.
IScfore passing to any other part of the
confession it is well to siv just what
tliis means.
Tlie consumption of sugar List year
in this country amouiil.il to l,vil,!M
tons, that is, long tons. In other
words, 4,'7,vAi4tljtomid. i;."s .i.iiiils
per i-ipita of the jKijuilatioii of the
I'liitnl States. 1'nder the new taritl"
hill tiie trust would get, on this liais,
consi.l. rahly over N42,ii,il a year,
and as it is now it gets in the vicinity
of spi.inik!.!, or more than the total
value of all the refineries in the coun
try in lv.
There is really no excuse for this. To
say tiiat the refining of sugar cannot
! carried on in this country without
making one grand monopoly out ofthe
four hundred or so plants is equivalent
to saying that one of two things should
l' done, cither the husincss should Ik
uhaiidoin.il and foreigners allowed to
do it all, or it should become a govern
ment monopoly. If from the nature of
the case iiioikimi1v is necessary, let the
niiple get the U'tietit of it. The total
plants are worth some trl4,(mu,uim, and
employ 1,-s than S,lil persons, or did
in lvl. Tlicre may Ik now 10,(k, at
tlie outside. It would U an easy mat
ter for the government to handle an
industry as small and as simple as that.
Of iursc we are not advisnting that,
only show ing that on Mr. Ilawiueyer's
own tigun-s it would U far preferable
to the perpi tiuition of the trust.
Echo From the Put.
Kr.nn tlie Hart font louranL
Two yean ag.) this summer irover
Cleveland th.Mlght that the tariff involved
a question of morals, that greed and sel
fishness were very twd things and that it
wouldn't do to "permit injustice to taint
the spirit of right and equity." He said
so in his letter of occcplanoe. Professor
Wilson has, we W-lieve, the original of
that diMiiment.
He said another thiug in his letter.
" K.vcry governmental concession," lie
sai.l, "to clamorous favorites" say. for
instance, a concession of U.Il,uo to
ford Meyer, Haveiucyer eL aL " invites
corruption in s.liii.nl affairs."
Year Uf..re last Mr. Cleveland was
very earnestly of the opinion that it w as
all w rong so to construct sugar schedules
and things like that as to "swell directly
the accumulations of a favored few." He
Raid so in his siecch at the Madison
Square (iarden.
An recently as a year ago last XovciiiIkt
Mr. Cleveland considered it the most ur
gent of patriotic duties to withstand " the
Hrversion of our (iovernuicnt to the fur
therane of limited and sccial interests."
lie expressed this conviction and urged
fidelity to this duty io his sjHs.s-h at the
lx'isix Lyceum.
What remote past that autumn of
l;esiiiiH now! What singular oonir
reiiees havesiiu occurred! How very
remarkalily Mr. Cleveland's reform is
o.riiiii? out ! How tMiniiar must his
emotions I as he watches the surprising
evolution:
Tit Cnlminating Atrocity.
Senator Sherman, in scakiiig of Sena
tor Feller's amendment to the Tariff hill
to restore per cent, of the duty on raw
wool, said the question or free wool vital
ly aft. i-ted the people of Ohio. He reit
erated what he had said in a previous
sieech that free wool was the culminat
ing atrocity of this bill. He apealed to
the Iieniocmts to put aside polili.-s and
withhold this destructive blow to this
great industry. The sheep-raising and
wool-grow ing industry was common, in
a greater or less extent, to every state and
territory. It was certain, he said, that the
I'niUil Statu ei hi hi not compete in the
prodiKtioii of wool with Australia, Ar
gentine ltepuhlie and other countries
here shii'p raising was tlie principal in
dustry. Cnlew government aid was giv
en the fanners of the I'nited States they
must abandon the field. Mr. Pultois fol
low til Mr. Sherman and Mr. Stewart
took the floor and made an argument
against free wool. Mr. Hansbrough fol
Jowed Mr. Stewart and Mr.Shoupalso o
Ksed free xif as di.s:ist rous to one of
the chief industries of his state, Mr.
Siioup contended that the fall in the price
of wool had !ccii world-H ide for JH years,
and that in the I'liiled Suites it ruled
higher than elsewhere hy the amount of
the duty levied. 11c contended that free
wool would ruin the industry in the
I'nit.il States,
Mr. Mitchell argued that the Pacific
coast would I more injuriously affected
by free wool than any other part of the
country. Free wool meant alisolute de
struction to the wool-growing industry of
Oregon, an industry that had grown to lie
of vast iiit-iortani-e to the Slate, A large
portion of Oregon was more useful for
sliecp-gra.ing than for any other pm-posc.
Mr. Frye declared Australia could pro
duce enough wool to supply tlie entire
consumption of the United States. Aus
tralian wool, he sai.l, could lie laid down
in New York for live cents a pound. Yet
it was the delilierate intention of the
IhMiiocratic majority to suhjii every
farmer in the United States, whether he
fed his sheep six months of the year in
Maine, or allowe.1 them to run wild all
the year round in Texas, to such annihi
latory competition from Australia.
Gen. Bosser'i Fiery Speech.
At the reunion of the cavalry in Rich
mond, Va., recently ien. Hosier made a
fiery spdi h. He said: "The great prin
ciples for which we fought have ls-eii
dishonored, lust they are not-dead. We
are now only an aiuhulam-e corps. Hut
we are here to-day to do honor to the men
v. iio fell, for we love their memory as we
low our iod. The men who overran us
remind me of the locusts hich are now
infesting tortious of this slate. They
couldn't hip us hut they devoured our
sulistanee. The army that devoured us
was an army of sulwtilutes. We killed
all the stilistitutes, and the men whom
they represented stopped at home and
made money and now draw pensions. I
disipise the man who gives United States
money to a pensioner. This country can't
stand when it makes one citizen support
another. I shall never vote for a t'oii
grcssiiian who Is in favor of government
pensions. I would say to Massachusetts,
y. hi pay your pensioners as Virginia pays
hers."
I it ucral H isser then went on to say that
the 1. A. H. was handed together to get
pensions, and it lie had Item at Hirming-
haui he would have vot.il against the
proposition to invite them to Atlanta. He
did not want them to come to Iichnio;id.
Some time ag ," he concluded, "we
unveiled a monument to the greatest
general who ever live L To-day we un
veil a monument to tho greatest private
soldiers who ever lived, and in timo we
will unveil a monument to the president
of the iiinfedenicy. Hut we are ms-ked
at the north, and w ill live to see the
Yankee army march again through the
south and pull down our monuments. I
don't know what sort of stuff the rising
geiier.itiou are maile of, but if you and I
are living there'll Ik bloodshed when
that is done."
To Blow Up the Capitol.
The Washington W published, Mon
day, an cxpiisure of an alleged plot which
had for its object the destruction ofthe
Opitol and jwrhaps other government
buildings, w Inch had liecn slowly devel
oping for several weeks jiast. The Secret
Service and silice authorities, however,
have Iksii kept informed of the move
ments of the plotters and would have
ls-eneiialil.il to thwart lliem had their
machinations approached actual violence.
According to the story, the plot was
formed at the time t'oxey's army was
marching to the Capitol, and rejsirts of
its existence came from vari.His stints,
Omaha, Chicago and Pittsburg among
them. Mom. re Jaxon, an Indian half
brccd. is said to have Ikcii at the head of
the plotters.
The dctci-tivcs obtained the formula for
making the explosive to Ik us.il. They
had a chemist till a small prescription,
and he placed it on a w indow sill in the
sun. In a few moments there was an ex
plosion. A great ileal of noise did not
a.iitmpany the explosion, but there wasa
terrible concussion, and a most nauseat
ing and blinding smoke. A cat whieh
was in the room ili.il in a few seconds
from tlie effects of the vapor.
An occasion for the use of the explo
sive the Anarchists h ;, it is said. Is to
Ik furnished by the arrival of that part of
1" rye's industrial army now in CuiiiIkt
land Valley. Under e iver of a disturb
ance prisliiccd hy them the (dot against
the Capitol is to lie carried out. In sup
Mirt of this it is said that a number of
Chicago's anarchists of the most rabid
type are illi that army.
Thoi. Eayne a Suicide.
Washixoton, I. C June PL Kx-Cou-grcssinaii
Thomas M. H.iyne, of Aile
jiheny City, Pa., blew his bruins out this
morning ut his residence in this city, tiJ9
Massacliun-tts. avenue. Although not in
the 1k4 of health. Colonel Itayne had l-een
out w ith some friends the previous even
ing (his wife Wing on a visit to Philadel
phia ), and retired w ithout anything un
usual occurring.
When a female servant arous.il him
aliut 7 A. M., and asked if he w anted any
thing, he requested that a window Ik
(IM-ticd, and then called her attention to
the fai-t that his pillow was bl.M.lv, ex
pressing the ts-licf that during the night
he had suffered a hemorrhage from the
lungs; hut said he wanted nothing, and
the servant retired. Shortly after HI
o'clock a shot was heard, and servants
rush.il to Colonel Hay lie's room to find
him .lead, w ith a revolver in his grasp
and a bleeding hole in his hca.L. IKs-tors
were hastily called, but they only con
firmed the tact that life was extinct,
Mrs. Hayne was tclcgraphii for, and
retunusl to the city this afternoon. She
was m.t at the station by Hepresentative
Sume, 1m. Sowers and Mrs. Kwingand
the new s broken to her. The Coroner
.1.1 IU.-.1 it unn.i-es.siiry to bold a formal
inquest aud gave the lieccssmry certili-ale.
Selected a Futor by Lot
Laxcastkk, P.u,June The Men
n. mite miigregation at Kaluuga selei-ted a
new minister in a novel w ay. There were
teu applicants for the pulpit, and a large
emwd gathered to witness the cereiiKHiy
of -(Hxising a pastor. Bishop Hniltakcr
presiihil.
Ten Hihhs were placed on a platform,
one of w hich contained a slip of paper.
The candidate s'l-ting the Kible con
taining the slip of paHr wasthe person
calhil to the ministry. The 10 were seat
ed according to age, aud the slip of taHr
w hich ilesiguated him for the pla.-e was
drawn by Hinun Kaiiffuian, of Ijindis
ville, the youngest of the 1(1, and, there
fiire, the last to make the selectiou. Ordi
nation servii-es follow e.'. the selection.
Stirtliug Murder at Haatingdon.
Hi"snNfiiK, Pa., June 1R. A paltry
rew ard of stolen articles, w hich he pawn
ed fir jMi. iudui-cd Edward Couch to give
William R. Miller, ex-City Auditor and
a leading furniture dealer, a fatal d-tse of
poison. The victim died sn after drink
ing the deadly mixture of laudanum, and
his murderer, after tieing chase. 1 to Ty
rone, was landed in jaiL.
Miller was a member ofthe firm ofii.
Ashman Miller 4 Son, furniture dealers.
Yesterday aftem'stn Miller, feeling un
well, resorted to stimulants, which slight
ly affected him. While in this condition
he was accosted by Couch, recently re
leased from prison, w ho shadowed him
all the afternoon aud finally lured hint
into a house kept by Mrs. Jennie Nash in
West Huntingdon. In the morning
Couch had purchased a vial of laudanum
at Wills' grocery, with the evident inten
tion of playing the "kn.s-k-iHit" trick on
some unsiisiKi-ting victim, ltefore the
Coroner's Jury it was shown that he con
fided to a friend that he would "put Mil
ler to shsp." tin entering the Nash hiMise
Couch procured a w hisky glass and, jstur-
ing it half full of laudanum, went into the
kitchen and filled the glass up w ith water.
He returned to where Miller was lying
down, locked the d.iors, and, as circum
stances show, dosed him with the sison.
11 K KOURK11 HIS VIIT1M.
Couch then relieved his victim of his
gold w atch and chain, a valuable ring and
a sum of money, lie opened the rear
door then, and quietly slipped out. Hy
this time Miller had Is-come unconscious,
and his gasping for breath alarmed the
inmates ofthe house. They notified his
young w ife and sent Ir. A. I. Brum
baugh to the husliand, but ten minutes
after the physician's arrival Miller was
dead.
His death, I'r. Bmmliaugh declared
before the Coroner's Jury this evening,
w as solely due to narcotic iMiison.
While Miller lay dying, Couclivisit.il
various hotel bars and attempted to pawn
the watch and ring. TheMiliee were in
formed, and Couch, Ismming alarmtil,
escaped on a wcst-lxmud freight train.
The silii-e of all the neighlioring towns
wert notified, and at 2 o'clock this morn
ing officer Barr, of Tyrone, l.s at.il Couch
in a poker joint in that pla.-e, and at once
arrested him. Ho had pawned his Isioty
for six dollars in Tyrone, and only two
dollars were left when he was arrosieiL,
Kingf ia Blackmailing.
For some time past a Senatorial Com
mittee has Iks'H at work investigating the
methods of the Police licpartmcnt of New
York city. Senator Ij xmv is chairman,
and the prols has been put in so ilivp as
to show great corruption among Police
Commissioners, and nearly all persons
attached to the fore.. Blackmail has Isi n
levied on everybody that it has lsen ss
sible to get one cent from. Including
J.1,1 ti.117.iil forsalari.s the police of that
city extort from the people the enormous
sum of alsnit M."' i,i x I.
The testimony brought out by the I.ex
ow Ieglslative Investigating Committee,
now in session in New York, shows that
the Hliu, in addition to tlcir salaries
from the city, have had nn additional in
come contributed hy the keepers of disor
derly houses, siil.sms, gambling houses,
merchants and push-cart puldlers. This
extra income Is called "paying protn
t:on" by those who pay. By the public it
is sometimes called blackmail. The po
lice proliiibly called it jH-rquisiti-s.
Eye Tkei the Place of Wheat.
Wkst CiiKsTKit, I'a., Juno M It is
exiii-til that a largely inre:isHl acreage
of rye w ill 1-e sow u next fall and that the
Iss.j crop will lie l.tn l,Mt bushels in
Chster County. This year there has
Ik-cii a big deiiiaii.l for rye, and lieoige
IL Hitoics lias w ritten scores of farmers
urging them to sow more rye. He has
received many rcpPes to the effect that
the acreage will lie increased largely,
ow ing to the low price of w hcnl.
Saved 13 Boyi and Girli.
Waco, Ky., June 1.1. Hy the upsetting
of a Hat Uiat in the Kentucky Iliver yes
terday afteriKsiu, Miss Carrie Hush, a
handsome young lady, was drow ned. A
party of 14 lys and girls were on a fish
ing excursion, and all of them were
thrown into the water, w hich was eight
feet d:ep.
A man named Jack Sewell, w ho w as
working in a field near-by, heard their
cries of distress, rushed to tlie scene and
plunged into the river. By the most
heroic efforts he brought them all safely
to shore except Miss Bush.
.Several of those who were taken out
were more dead than alive, and were
resuscitated only after the most patient
work of physicians.
A Blow of the Flit Silled Him.
Nononuaiikla Citv, P.., June It III
a fist fight to-day William (iihsoii instant
ly killed Anthony Wolfe by a terrific
blow on the jugular. He is a man of un
usual strength. He is a blacksmith, and
had txi n employed in his father's shop.
Recently he was discharged, and Wolfe
was employed in his phut. The latter
was also a strong, athletic man. and w lieu
he heard of tiibsou's threats paid no heed
to them. To-day the two men met in the
street and start.il a fight, which liilsum's
fatal blow K.HH1 ende.L (iilts.ui is under
arrest.
Crazed by a Dream.
Wii.KKsBAnKK, Pa., June 17. Having
d reamed that his wile, u ho is now on a
visit to her home in the old country, had
deserted him for another man, John
Sinillisou, of tieorgetown, has issnine
insane. His trouble preyed on him so
that last Wednesday he departed from
home, leaving a note ls hiiul to say that
he intended to hang himself. The w.mkIs
are Is-ing searched for his IkmIv.
Lynched a Fioai Firebug.
Nkw Oki.kans, La., June 14. I. II.
Ihiy, a prominent meinlxT of the church
in Monroe, Ia, was lynched last night
for arson. The place had had many in
cendiary fires recently. Last night two
fires broke out almost simultaneously.
Bl.Hidhounds, put on the track of the
incendiary, led to Ihiy'a house. I in liti
gation Hiinted to Ihiy as the incendiary.
and he w as jailed. Later in the night a
limb broke the jail and liaug.il Hay on
tree in front of the Court House.
Ho Peiuiont for Deierten.
Washixoton-, I. C., June 1.1. The hist
administration's (tension decision, that re
enlisted deserters from the Union army
in the late war were entitled to pensions
as if they had never descrtnl, w as set
aside by a decision of Assistant Secretary
of the Interior Reynolds yesterday. The
latter holds that w here a claimant forM-n
sion has deserted from his first servh-e
and enlisted in another and different or
ganization, and where the War Depart
iiient refuses to remove the charge of de
sertion or recognize the legality ofthe
second service, the Pension licpartmcnt
can recognise no other ruling. This will
involve the immediate cancellation of
thousands of pensions already granted.
Crossing the Atlantic
Usually involves a sickness. When the
waves play pitch and toss with you
strong iud.-ed must lie the stomach that
can stand it without revolting. Tourists,
commercial travelers, yachtsmen, marin
ers, all testify that lbs hsjetter's Stomach
Bitters is the lsst remedy for the nausea
expcricni-cd in rough w eather on the wa
ter. Nervous and weak travelers by land
often suffer from something akin to this,
and find in the bitters its surest r. nnsly.
Xo disorder of the stoniachc, liver or Ikiw
els Is so olistinate that it may not be over
come by this prompt and thorough reme
dy. Kqually eftUwiims is it for chills
and fever, kidney and rheumatic trouble
and nervousness. Kmigrants to the fron
tier should provide themselves with this
fine medicinal safeguard against the ef
f.Kts and vicissitudes of climate, hardship,
exjiosure and fatigue.
The Caal Strike Ended
The U-lief Is general in mining distri.ts
flint '.V per cent, of the striking miners re
sumed work Monday morning under the
Columbus scale of wages.
This, the first general strike ofthe Min
ers' asso. iation,.lK-gan April 1, and has
continued wit Ik sit interruption to the
present time. With an exception here
and there, the entire bituminous coal
fields have lwen involve.!. Virginia,
West Virginia, Western Pennsylvania,
Ohio, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, a part of
Miswairi and Kentucky, comprise the ter
ritory. The struggle was fiercest in west
ern Pennsylvania, Ohio and Illinois.
Conservative estimates place the numlter
of men involved at lt.i,. These men,
according to the lKst olttainable informa
tion yesterday, earn on an average tM
a dav. The loss to the miners in wages
for the, say, fifty days' duration ofthe
strike makes the astounding total of !li
.Vl,il. That a iiMiiilsr of mine owners l.tst
heavily is equally true. Imt it Is more dif
ficult even to approximate the loss m
their case. Naturally, none of them w ill
discuss their losses, although one was
candid enough to say it had Iteeii heavy,
and that if the others similarly situated
as himself lost as heavily, the operators
were out of pocket several million dol
lars. Then, again, there is the cost to the
state in general of maintaining order by
tr.insK)rtation of tro.ts and an increase
in the civil forces in the several liLsiirni-
tionarv counties of the several states.
rToHrl , too, the losses of manufactur
ing plants Iss-anse of lack of fuel and
those of the railroads and other means of
l.M-omotion must Ik iiiehidiil. This loss
is represented in the increased prie paid
for coal, the advance being from $V to
54.7.1 and " a toil. In all, u-hiii the tmsis
of an oKrator's figuring, the total loss ns
a result ofthe miner's strike for fifty days
w ill not fall short of J MM.
A Few Danger in Milk.
Dr. II M. tiatehel, of Westchester, Pa.,
has w ithin a week examined alsmt Tun
cows for tulrereulosis. Only a few cases
were found. He thinks that It will not
lie long ls'fore all the her.ls have passed
iusHs-tioii and milk from that county may
once more Ik shipped to Philadelphia.
Ill speaking of his examinations. Dr.
tiatehel made this startling oltscrvation :
"Tlicre is one other evil I w ish to call
your, attention to. That is in regard to
using the milk of a herd of cnttle on the
days immediately following the oper.it ion
of dehorning. I have examined quite a
nuinls r of cattle after they were dehorn
ed and found that their teniHraturc arose
to lot, ln, and, in some cases, as high as
Ins. A periiMl of eight or nine days
elapsed l-fore their temperature went
dou n to nearly the normal. During that
period tlie ow ners coiitimidl shipping the
milk to Philadelphia. When a cow's
temperature runs up to ln4 or upward her
milk is stsiiivcly unlit fir use, and, I
dare say, may 1 deadly to infants,"
The custom of dehorning i-atile is prae
ti.nl by a majority of the Chester farm
ers. This statement will probably lead
to a halt in this dehorning lmsiness or to
the stopping of the shipment of the dis
eased milk.
Tricked By Trampi.
It has just (Mine to the surface that a
practical, though novel joke was perpe
trated upon the Hoard of lleallhof Lew is-t-iwu.
Pa. It seems that a tramp took
si.k therewith a mild attack of small-pox.
The Health Ib-ard naturally quarantined
the case and employed a volunteer nurse
w ho prov.il suliscquctitly to Is another
tramp, to take care of him.
No one went near the place, of course,
and in a few days the tramp nurse re-
tort.il to the Board that his patient had
died. The Hoard of Health the 1 :. ::'i .r
ized the nurse to bury the body mid pre
sent his hill for the scrvhis rendered.
The lo.ly was interr.il ns directed, and a
bill presented f ir $11.1, which was prompt
ly pai.L
It has sim-c dawned ii'miii the
tow u functionaries that the whole Isisiness
w as a put-up job by the tramps to Is' U
the Isiniugh. ns the grave was suls
Mipieiitly opened and the colhn was
empty.
Kewi Items.
The lire w hich start.il at Panama on
Wediis.lav afternoon destroyed over .'BKI
buildings, comprising one-third of the
city's are., and made persons home
less. The loss is estimated at nearly
X. t.lRKI.IKMt.
John Kaulfman, .12 yeitrs old, of Cn-
mcrllill, near Camden, N. J., driven
to d.-sH'ratiou through jaiverty, murdered
his w ife and thru children, by cutting
their throats, on Wednesday night, and
then end.il his own life hy hanging. The
crime was discovered Thursday evening
by neighlMirs,
Matthew- Smith, of Whig Corners. Stew
art township Fayette county, w as instant ly
kill.il by a stroke of lightning while at
work in the w.khIs Tuesilay. A rain
storm coming up. Smith took shelter
under a tree. The dindly Ixilt descended
upon the unfortunate man thereunder.
Death was instantaneous.
Herman Woretsche, a young and
wealthy farmer, w ho married a young
woman of I.ifayette, Minn., on Tuesday.
was taken suddenly ill on the night of
his marriage from IiI.rmI )Miisoiiing. He
h-id Ini'ii suffering from an ugly pimple
on iiis lip previous to his wedding day;
and anxious to present tha lie-it ap
pearance on that Ki-asion, tic went to a
surge hi and had him remove the pimple.
He was taken to a h ispit.il, where ho
died after intense suffering.
Six years ago fieorge B!aislcil, of
Montezuma, New York, w hileut a funeral,
dropped de.uL in Port Byron Cem,tcry.
Three years ago a brother of Hlaisdcll's
w idow, w hile walking in the same cem
etery, dropped dead near Hlaisdcll's
grave. Ths other day Mrs. Hlaisdcll
w cut to the cemetery to order work on
t he lot w here her husliand and brother
were buried, and while talking with the
suerinte:i.lent. dropped suddenly t the
ground and died almost instantly.
A furious wind, rain and hail storm
passed over Mechaui.-slHirg, Pa., on Tues
day afternoon. At the west end of the
town the hail was very disastrous to
garden truck and the heading w heat. At
shejtherdst.iw n hail fell so thick and fast
for twenty minutes tluit the stones, many
as large as walnuts, could lie sciMtjicd up
by the litickctful, and the damage there
to the wheat and garden track will Ik
very serious. At Lishurn the storm of
hail is also reurt.il very severe, and
damaging to the maturing crop and
Vegetables.
The War Iiepartmcnt Is l.mkiug for
relatives of Private John Boyle, a retired
enlisted man, w ho committc.l suicide on
the l.'tth of May, near Mount Vernon, Ala.,
and w ho has left valuable property, w hich
will go to the liov eminent if his relatives
are ieH found. All that the War De
partment knows is that he had an honora
ble record in the army, that he lived ail
alone on a fine plantation near Mt, Ver
non, which he owned, and that he first
burned his house down and then com
mitted suicide.
A quarrel over possession of a corjise
caused the post'ioneiuc nt of a funeral and
the disapiMiiutment of mourners, who had
gathered at the residence of AIlKrt Pen
nypocker, in Chester County, to pay their
last respects to Mr. Pennypacker's uncle,
Jacob Moser. He died a few days ago.
worth fo.'M.' Mr. Pennypacker aud
Ix-vi Kiiiery were naiii.il as executors in
Moser's will and Finery sent an under
taker to Pennypacker's home at 8 o'clock
in the morning and demanded the corpse.
After some parleying it was given to
him, and consequently w hen the preach.
and mourners arrived there was no corpse
and no funeral. The funeral was after
ward held from Emery's residence.
Lawm Xowr.
A han;ls.iiue line and clntap. For s:dc
by Jas. K. IIoi.fcnR.irj.
Still Makes Big Claims.
H Ai:r:isr.rR'i, June 17. ficu. Coxey t t-
day addressicd MM people at Hoffman's
wihsIs, near this city. lie declared there
was no truth in the reMn t that his army
was ulx.iit leaving the vicinity of Wash
ington, and expresses! the belief that I'' -
n people would reinforce it during the
summer for the pnrose of teaching Con
gress an object lesson.
Idle )Kople were urged to join Lis army,
and the employed requested to contribute
money to pay their expenses. After
spending a short time at Pittstmrg and
Mitssillon, O., Citxey will leave for Mil
waukis, were he is Imokiil Fir a spsn h
at a lalKir demonstration on the Fourth
of July.
WHY?
Should ewry tmt if in nvrt f m purv utifit-
uutul for iiud;ciiinl purji-iMTfc. uo ut Kt-l'r
hI st.T lUt-.m-M" ho will tin 'I tho hiryM
to s- hi-t fmtu Mt liwe-.i i.ritfs. Th Hye
WhUkifs art nil fnm tl o hir?-st atit
known li!(iHt riti ami mUl at the followtnt;
prinu: 2-ywr-ihl at J.nO jt pillon: A-yt-ttr-oUft
at tl.V; -yr"oh. nt S-yiir-nhl at
H-year-ohl at H-V; 10 aiil 12-yrtir-sHi! at
St. Hcl-na. Califitniia, iKUt ami last m Itvttnl
wine?, lo hmiicln dry and xwct-t, at ?lit jnT
pillon; Khiitt wine, hup. Sherry, MatlrUtt
1 'ort and Coffmrti, at lowt ilsurr. Ntrxlra
chanrc for i:i kin. 4 'all or K-nd Ur prico list
at
A. ANDRIESSEN
lss. Federal St., Allegheny.
Tcici!ni!ie .11:.
Mrs.A.E.Uhl.
Jlr stot k of sca-5onalIe wash Ire39
G ootid ii larjo ami cheap.
Consisting in Part of:
4!-incii Irish Iiwns, lisrun.il and
striKil.
White and colonsl dimities.
Plain A figured CrcKs, very pretty.
AH grades of Dns-s tiinghaiiis, at
low priiv-s.
Crinkled (iinvhaius.
Wisd and Cotton Cliallis, from "u
up.
Auieii.an and French Sattincs, till
grades.
Plain striKil and plain Nainsooks.
" " " " India Iiwns.
A BEAUTIFUL ASSORTMENT OF
DOTTED SWISS,
FOR DRESSES it PRArilltV.
A Larjre line of yard wide Cambrics.
JVrcales in nuuiy di-sins.
Handsome Princess Ducks.,
lint ist ic in inaiiy styles, .
A Gretit Variety of White, Cream,
Ecru ami lilac k lAices for
Trimming.
All widths and styles of braides
for Press Trimming.
All colors Moire Silk, Chan-reable
Silk, Surah Silk, etc , for trim
ming and waists.
A complete line of Serges, Henri
ettas and fancy Wool aud Silk
Dress Goods.
Cheap Wool Dress Goods ia great
variety.
Idby Dresses and Baby Coats, long
and short.
Baby Caps and Huts to suit all.
All kinds of goods fur Childreu's
Dresses.
Lace Curtains from .0c. a pair up.
Scrim from 5 to Do.
A largo assortment of Ladies
Misses' and Children's L'nden
wear.
Beautiful Table Spreads, cheap
handsome ties in Silk and Cot
ton.
Silk Gloves and Mits in great vari
ety. The best line of CORSETS to be
found.
Hundreds of articles in Notions,
and Tritumiugs that cannot be found
elsewhere. The best line of FAST
colored Stockings, either in Blick
or Colors.
Summer Opening
-UK-
Millinery Godds,
The largest, most stylish and cheap
est.
Ifcm't forget that with the extreme low
prices tillered, you have a chamv to gel
a juirt of UicfblO 10, that we arc now
giving to our customers.
Mrs. A. E. UHL.
33. &c IB.
Quality, Style -
- - and Price.
Thrv rontiilrmtloiK mhi-h muM Wof nion
thnn onlinnry ItiUTi-st Ui our culnntrs or
wt- i not do a
MAIL ORDER BUSINESS
aiimmitfiiir it doe Ut hundrtNl-4 if thou--
aiiitj aititiially.
Xw Kriffii'ih Styh('hrk Sultintr3
t difli rctit colortii;; 1J iiichi-s tt iilr-,
0t yunl.
New ;rniii and (vt rt Si:itinir
4i to.ju iia ht-M,
T5' l' $1 20 P-ryar.l
Thiarp but Ktimh" h-tn- fnnii larv rws-
urtiiiTiti if fin t hh riMNlii a tHiUiiit
r'lH'val tf n'vf-!, iiMtv Htvlih lnsM
;mh1s iilkt aitl Sutiiu' irivt-i vkl
-h:tuc of tuiyiiix 1 f-ti-lhtlt' fethrit-2-t at
this itor ttiniti-erttout t in-1 uiire H-u4n tttnl
always al LESS PHICtS.
MM -lt-?ant nv-niii' ut of iv-.tv Taffi ta
antl Iiitlia SHU wi-'vf wvr Imw -ii
k to MJli.
i(MHl quality print! I ml in Silk Navy and
iwhck nnnni) Willi whil rtntliur
28 35''tn yanl.
wsm enow rrrMTMfNT-i piMi-ia-d
tfiviu ItscirvalUt-H without purall!.
IJnrii Klax HuiliiijfH ;!H hifhcH whl
40 tk a yard.
Kino (iulatin loth HO iiirh with
16 20. ' 30
Killarnfy Haml-Spun !uck Stiithitf
(ufi tint i'lafu Navv anl l'ntk and l'.luv
Ktriw or k hit gnuanis ;X iiH-hc wiil
Fliu Knwh Oreun(Ih" hautifu! iticulorand
lciii- iui-h m Uiv
Krvnch JaTo(i"t Onrundics gonl printinir-
,tl im-hcjt wid'
Om lot Vt, hue. (.hyr I iinihitiiij tgootl
ciln, nint d-Kisn t inch- a id
12 I ahayard.
Colonel Ikurk Kuitinin in plain ! rn and
itt-.il tlur" and dii in-lit widi
Uk ll dia-Ht ut k lM.
Mrilr pUft M. O OtPT. fr wiiip!, illut--tnit4lta:ttul'ui'
and prh't list you'll nmhi
Uani the way tif -iaioiuial huying and
we'll gt your piiiniuM.
Boggs & Buhl,
ALLEGHENY, PA.
I8i4
Spg Opening
-AT-
PARKER &
PARKER'S.
We are
NOW PREPARED TO SHOW
Our
!Tsw aai Eegatt Sprisg Stock ef
OAEPETS
IN ALL GRADES
AND QUALITIES.
a larger and greater variety than
ever before shown in this
place.
STRAW MATTINGS,
RUGS,
LACE CURTAINS,
OIL CLOTHS
and WINDOW SHADES
Of every description.
A FULL LINE OF
TRUNKS &
SATCHELS
JUST IN
All of which will le ottered at
PRICES lower than ever.
BUTTERICK PATTERNS
NOW ON SALE.
PARKER & FABKEB.
Promoted.
Please note this in your Memoran
dum Cook,
STENGER.
THE DRY GOODS MAN,
JOHNSTOWN.
Will stay at hi.s old stand, but the
o. has been changed from
227 to 515.
We Shall Continue Our Old
A ffz-k Best values market
A U I IU .can afford for monev.
(15.
Fifteen Dollars has a power to
draw, if correctly invested, which
beats a lottery. For FifU-en Do
lar-i yon can draw a nice Charaocr
Suite no blank ticket?. Every
Fifteen Dollars deposited getd one
Suite SURE. It's like getting dol
lar for dollar.
You have seen or heard of our
$16 Suite. What you saw or heard
of in that Suite you can find in this
and more; yon save a dollar too,
which is an item to most of us.
One thing sure, if you buy one of
these $15 Suites you get a reliable
article from a reliable firm. The
Suite will "stand by" you and we
stand by " the Suite.
HENDERSON
FURNITURE CO.,
JOHNSTOWN. PA.
Ciin Hrisrhr Iii 1ny, ;nir-, Nr-Voumim-n,
iltiirt, I riiuiry r "Uvt t1i-n
known hy a tinil lMfiriitt f.-'llnir; inat (mmi f
tin kiliit- M, witk'iiM Hiul poim.it llm(l,
nntl iiii1kk otUM in ivinovAi ym tinnc li-tve
hcultli.1 -I'upitl yt five vnrt atf irltrht-4
hMHN mil lniwy. Mm, I. i Milli-r,
lU-ttirVh-m, i.mt iMher iiiiil!:tr trsliiiMnt-
mIh. Tr' it- uiv guuruiiUt ti.
Cann't Kidney Curt Co , 720 Venango St.
Philadelphia, Pa.
old by all re table Dnjintx
IS.
ISUGAR MAKERS SUPPLIES.
WE CARRY A LARGE STCCX OF
WE HANDLE THE BEST
Maple
-:.p. A.
Mjin Cros Street,
RAIN jRlSHiNE
THE FURNITURE STORE OF C. H. COFFROTH IS OPENED
PROMPTLY EVERY MORNSNG,
AND HE gives : : :
BARGAINS EVERY DAY.
- - - ADMISSION FREE
The Store is Accessible to
: : : : Sidewalks. : : : :
Styles are bright and merry as you please. Mote pretty Furniture than
3011 thought we had.
-A HINT HERE AND THERE-:
is all we have space to give you. You must see them. You'll uii'lir-unj.
C. H. COFFROTH,
Main Crou Street.
Great Inducements.
Goods reduced in price in every line.
Dry Goods, Carpets, Oil Cloths, Lace Curtains,
Ladies' Coats, c. Now is the time to buy to
save money and get something good.
CLINTON STREET. ' -
a" The I?t hoea for
y uitLruiMowjr
Jfc iz st m
A
1 ii'
DEALERS who pusli the sale of V. L. Douglas fehoes gain customers,
which helps to increase the sales on their full line of goods. Tbry ru
ftfTbrrl tm At a ba protir. and w brllev yow can ure nionry bf nyimg all your
Iwotwaar oi Ui iicaJixitilvertieA bvlow. CaUtJUMraa trm upoa ailicatiua.
J. D. illLLEU & SOX, Ktx-KWfHiD, V.
'l uls . evr.liicv.t
p'liyzlclan !:j3 t:Y
tv.V.:r ll'e time to
r S
i ...
t'J-i'S c. ine , ti.
., j i czc, i iir.
L;:r.s$ ar.d Ch ren
te OIwjscs.
'-, y s.vk c -.'f -. tf
Wonderfully Successful in all Chronic Diseases of the
EYE, EAR, HOSE, THROAT, M5S oi! NASAL CATAREI.
All Eye Operations Successful Performed by him.
fmr tlamrhtpf. Aicim, h h n fcilir ith
urtv Mirl trwibi-t; fr over 3 jvtirs It m.tlv
her very mirttiv mu fit U t i .iiniif. M
trttJ to uuii y the Ust rtot'ior oitaitihie
nn w;thit -tie Tra- lr Halm mie
t i-orrtct d:i:iVK al hi lirst xi-it, the fj.l n-lM
ivitt!!tof tlie tnaatineul hav rriivti : for iie u
oiK-e more aite l Wu a hiiJtn bautL We tail
rt AtiuinoiM '.lie Iv-rtor liiuWijr
i. r. iihbi ks, b lie fento, r.
VM ' Ctntfitn Mtuit SH'cfiittii ;y lr. s'm.
(mr !!ll Uy. rii1, had Mmttrl frTr when
he a.i vtni tf tre. H ten hiin onw i yed m
Ymjtti !r. Sal.n operaiel on the in mil h,y
are now f-crtecUT ; rait hi. 1 he wa uot
eu auy tciorolria, auJ tiie iferaoi km paiii
lixr but? PkiuHTol,
Fme GU-dq, Centre couuiy. Fa.
A (W f-f Cit'trrh if l" Yrnr .S'.'a.y f'wrtl bp
I l.xt ha1 at.) f of atarrb Uw 1 yer
It r'ltiiiia-ly airrv:eI all of my irxaia. t- mme
wraktr daly, rat.ifitl rold id tlie r- of feral tier
aoti he oiua nnefable m nrraliy. I tried veral
d vUt Ui ret rid of the dixra-?, bit they did ru
help me auy, I ik Uu ii pateut meili-ie, hut
mitfit j'Ut an we-11 have thrown bit mority affay.
Hiiu e Lr. Salm tr a:ed nxe I trrt-w better )aili!y
and am mice more a man, ami I am certain that
the ducU,r uuderiaud hi liiAitea.
SlileaburH, lutre Cuuuty, fa.
APtr VI Yrxirt f rimtf ftr Snim Ihu Cirrd Me
iiti (. ( OCurrk.
For the Ut V2 teers I bare had a bad ca-e o'
Catarrh, wilb ali ita atiendittv ytn piora.
the laM 5 r it ixUird me a icutl d-eni hard
ly iM-iOf wiituHit a eoid : nankin ums nuriib:e
generally. 1 irWd 1 d.iferent thj ri-ia., but c.(
do avail, and I can aure you it La Ir. saina
to cure atarrh . fijf 1 do not take rt4d any im.rv.
no 4m Hifn any more ia my aue ait here'.idore
bd1 I nn;t y It at 1 co&vider djm:U fcal:tied
asth the Iahvt In. aunt cc
JoSATHAf l.rZ.
Tnih r7ille. Centre County, Pa.
Manhooil prtW t!y rc-U red ialric, pain and certain mre tr imrten.?e. I a .'i i
spermaUrrlii-a luea. weak aud Ut iviuatlehi;i:r ; al- U nr latitis Ter:e n!e. aid ad un -
dtnra ca whether froia iuprudeot haUu uf youth or aecuuuai fuuctwut speedily an 1 per-uucat-ly
curtJ.
Our Advertisement Wiil Appear twice Before Each Visit.
CWSILW1CN iri IXAKINAT CN FLEE. ACCRESSall CCIfULMCATICKS to ECX 769 COLlBlS,0.
T"S nutci. i ItXi uh
J..hiu4wn I Grii.t Vulr't I Tu-rtj I .'1
8oiurrH I .iim'i tiuiuc I "aiiiM y h
bTliii I McAuin - Vou.hr il'",
Hya'iB.n irmuntn l T
At.
ji
2
I -Ji
i-M
Dates ut-jv to ctianiw, of whicb naiulai-
1HA ART AMATEUR.
Bit and Largest Practical Art
Magazine.
iThe only Art Frinctut -rir.ll JivJal at the
Woc.UiFmir
Inmt cut',!? t nil H-Un to ib!jt- thtir Vrinf by ttrt
r ry f ort i uuiir tl ir totu- b u . jU
run wewilleDdt.an)ro.ie
?io;
mviuNiauig iiua ui.iicail(Hl a
m-n c.ifry, with ityrb o'ur rl
' fur ot.v:Dr or (rAmin an.1 A ununt-
!. Or
FOR 25c. tor Begi
eni1 a!V"Paintinci
MONTAGUE MARKS, 23 If on Square,
m
New York.
- - - -
Syrup Can3 Sap Buckets, Sap
Spouts, Gathering Buckets,
Sugar Pans, Etc., at rock bot
tom prices for cash.
Evaporator on the Mar-
-ket at less than half the price
"asked for some others. It will
"pay you to get our prices before
buying.
SCHELLY
SOMERSET, Pa
all Highways, Byways and
Somrse, P
- -JOHNSTOWN P
lw i nmiRi a?
m m kh 'w imr am M Hf
m m -j mism
U;3 VW WUtfV&r&-ai ii.LT. ;
S K.ikirs.BolUm Wmerproof. Best Shoe eW at 'I-tpncn.
tS5, S4 and 53.50 Oreas Shoe.
v i.uitai wot. cti.jajf kroui j lo jo.
KiS3.C0 Polico Shoe. 3 6ol6t.
S2.50, and S2 Shooe,
l ocquojircj lam nrjee.
Boys S2 & SI.75 School Shoes
AK LiM- ( v Hr .TCI lie
LADIES'
$3, $2.50 $2, $1.75
til tuujcul, SlyliKb, t'rrfrrt
i tl worl.l. All MWs.
liwuKiit NnM. nut
uottouu ItrtH kiua
t
i ti J'., tiis
ten fcr yes.rs a
Trr 'es.cr :i J
Leilurer it: .v:vr.:.'
cft'r.e !nrge;i
L-::ee::
!:s ejrueJ ger.:i
A'
:e I3 j;: j: r
' :.':. r itt
''to '' -l
lr. SilM LHrrU I!.,
F.rSyri f hav? mrrf imMr with i. m
4 !i Itotit l., anil ail ttic rtvit:Di; ni:!!i.-iil.v ). 'i
a h-ndrlu, niriiiK!a, rht-tiuiaiii V!, uki. a
a tl .l. rce that l .ti.l not pik ti.w I
u.iii.l .lie. In Hint lime I Irentcl l.y 'li
ferent rt.K;ons (,ut tiune ia iheiii .lnl ir.e i.j
gout. To The rouirary, Krew e ai:-l .rM-;
U aurit wan imi: of the tnelion : I rr .'.K-r
u-l wtaaer on aitt:iit ,i nyt lri:tit Ut re-
t. in any klu'l of iool oa my H..mn ti. t It'ipu
lrea;mDt alib tr. aluj : moni&i a'.i. a't.t
hnw a dnlereui om.in. 1 i.ave ne.er voiiii'..-
once i m e the ;irl trtalinei.t. ant l mi
!i.ry hort, 1 ens :iee m.re, wuh a
dial uf leaure, aUta.l u mv I j y laion.
Mm 31.1 my Tvt..
oaiiiu;u. P
On Art -.nut Si w,WS.i :.-..' '' -ft
tn lir. Hut wt t rnrnt ?tf in. Sii-x.
Tir 2 years I stiiV-r- d t!;e mt'. ner.u -n'ri
torturt-. a.l ou acixoutof kiiliiey trMiUle. i'-
I:um my Wk hxh territ-le, and aiauy tin:
when 1 Miopd I did nut know how to Mia.t
en upagaiu. ofteu I itai to to NM ft r
at a lime, and tu tbeend ct t:.d ntKiti nl im my
reKuiar tahor any mire. 'ra.ir.aity ail tuc u.lio'
orau Itet-aine atJW ted, my Lladter tK- i:tie
m-h a condition thai I did n4 rare b-t:.-rl
hvtd itr ditd , indeed I piavl for Hi latter oft
en. Tiie tiouic doi tor ittd Dot ure in j
put idt we It uuder ir, yim n c re and t t'i-
ibe day bra 1 done o, ftiruUl am iUite
dnerMit aomau : wUi:na anO p Ud t 11
once mr. 1 ft-el -plenjdiy. ani 1 aru ; r:.i-eta
that the dror wdi cure ne ia toe time lie ua
m. ai.d I have come to Uie t oa lu-nm
lnu.d nevtr Kiveup hope as Un.g a tt.ey -aa
ohtaiu Lh aervuea of Uiw aotidt rful t.
Vta. J. M. .-M.-.k.
pririij Miiis, Ceulre Chd:j. I-
I har been ftutferiuit with rery eTeretiJnt b
hladter anl klduey uxjuhle. aid im a. "
that felt all )r.ke tip. t-otiidn I follow my -ia- f
taUfxon acntiut oi jfivat paiits weknt- a-i
he-H'la-rbe. but now. after a bourse of irt Hiiiij'1
witu Lr. Satin, ran outv more aiteini ui uiy a' J
Latjort with pLeMur aud rttini'ler niv-it ti
ajid hearty atfa.a. . K. ikiy. ludaua, ra
J-ine July j Aug Srp tK-l
1J il. in ill t
-a I I f.t 1 1 u
i a. 1:! I JO mt t.
A I it I .'t li IS
I Jt I U ! .'I 1-1 lk
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imu - .ta will b proJipily omitieil.
WANTFD SALESMEN
W NURSEftY STOCK ai,.l Set
SEED PO-
TOES LI dfc.it At, iHK or
SToV )mi weekU. Permanent an! t1'
Hi-dTlii VS to if wl nin. i-Mihl ?n !' nlB
to hrtrinnani. K.i:lLI VE 1 KKKlTRV "a
IX dairtL Wntvatonoe lur terms u
THE HAWKS NURSERY CO.,
Rochester, N. Y.
IMPORTANT TO ADTXBTl!KB-
The cream of the country papers U fco"
!k Remington's County 8at lists. Shr"
n3Teniera to11 tixxnselr of tin
corr of which eta be had of Emunfa
Erua., ef J.Y'W York 1 Pittt-ur.
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