The Somerset Herald.! F.I'WAHI !Jri-U JV.itor and Proprietor. nX. S?7 -i-Vi.nw; VKI'Vh!AY -AuiruM 1, I- REPU3L!CANN0MiNAT!0NS. Election, Tuesday, Nov. 13th. STATE- r",.r i;.nrni'ir-Iniiii ! II. H:i-4incs-J-'or I.i.-tilriiant .".vt-ni-n Wader I.r.m. lor Au-iitor lit-m-ra! Aiim' H. Mylin. lr S-Ti-lary 'f Iutt-rnal All.tir Jamf Y. !j4iU. r'..r '.rtii;r'-viiiati-at-Lar(.'C (Jalusba A Urow ami (irtirgp K. J I ii IT. COUNTY. State Sknate: X. P.. YiUhdM. J ini rT.. n,1.i. Sul-jin-l to Hie ln-ini..n of 111.- Iln1ri-l olif.-r- As-embi.y: Wiii. Henry Miller. ueniHlioniiig Tp. Jeremiah Matirer, M y l ' " ltonmtfli. Ji bv Ctm wi1"NKR: Situiue! J. Ilif, MCford Touiinhiji. rimn IIKKtTtIK William Hull, MillVir 1 Towni-liip. Tiikv all -take siijrar in tln-irs." ShaI.i. I lie St-nUte or tlif House ' lack l..wn ?" Ah. there's tlx- ink As a financier a'l a liitiiiey-avt-r, Nfret.-irv Car!ile is in a howlinsr ui- r a 1 1 Ihivid H. Hill, " I am a IK i-.io--rat," ami now "Ik- winks tin- other eve." Ciiaikmax WllxtS, nf the House Committee on Ways ami Means, i now out with a Uiuteni wstrrhiiijr for the remain-to his little hill. Ami now the organs are down on I Heir knees lealiutr with the Senate, "i!ca-- ln'iroixl lvs ami let the l'resi !eiit have his way." '-.lu-t look how those lUm-ally !el!Uh!ieali lire laUi:h i:i;r at us." If the Hou-s- ac.vpt- the Senate tar iff hill, ami it look very much as if it will have to, the IVc-i'lent will, when lie sitrn it, wiiii His Wilson letter 1 fre him. have a di-!i of crow to swallow ami (liesl. I'.knkst 1". Achiimix, of Washin to:i -ou:ily, was Mniiilay nijrlit Humi liates! u tile lteiulilie:in eamliilate for 'oinrre-LS in the Twenty-fourth l'eiin hvlvuiiia district. The nomination was made oil tile wVMll hallot. After the lwl!'.t HoUrt K. I I..iiw.nl. the Kayelle ('-unity candidate, with drew fr-iu the contest. The nominee is one of the le-t known and active younu lt iui'li(-iiis in IVnn-ylvaiim. He w ill U- triiiiiii!iantly elected and will lv faithful to the interests' of liis coiistilueiits. The "readiiisr mil" roes.s with which the I H-iiKM-ralie organs are wont to intimidate rci-alcitraiit statesmen has fallen into most lauhahle disor der. A few days since Seiialcr Hill was U'injr most rigorously "read out of the party," and now that Senator, faithful amoiijr the faithless, standing KHiarey on the party platform, grills w ith trlioulish ilce at the "r.-adintrout" of all his colli-afriu- for "jx-rfnliously" (ltsM-rtiujr the President and the plat form. It is the old story of "the hiter hit" or "aiiswerinsr a fisl aeconlint to his follv." Tiik insineerity ami inconsistency of the Democratic "statesmen" iscxhihit cd in a very inarkei maiim r Hy their votes on Senator Hill's motion to in struct the confi-n-s to ahandoii the proposed dill ies on coal and iron ore and place them on the free list. Xot wilhsiandilifr the party pled-s and party irioiil l.ins and in face of the Pn-sidciit's denunciations of "party ix riidy" and "jmrty dishonor" hut two 1 in une Democrats Hill ami Irhy cast their votes for free coal ami free iron ore. Nothing could more clearly ienionstrate the utter Lick of principle and sHaiiieh-s ahamloniiielit of Jiarty pledge made hy the DcimN-ratic lead ers. llv a nij) and tuck vote the Demo crats in the Senate, on Friday lust, es-4-ajfcsI defeat oil their tariff hill. On the question of s-ndillir the hill Ull iauiNTis: to the Conference Committee the vote stNNl to Senator Stewart ( Populist I, of Nevada, having nunki-d sit the last moment and refused to vote. Never he fore was a majority party so l.adly scared ; never was a President so humiliated. Tiie managers of the iorman or "what is if."' hill saw de feat staring them in the faiv, and were only saved hy the vote of a Senator who openly declares that on a final Vote he ill opjiose the hill unl.-ss it is mncndcd to suit him, and the President with a majority of his jiarty in the S.-nate and after denouncing ;..nn.in :i!id his allies as corrupt and perfidious, f-'.ind himself utterly jiowcrlcs in the hMise of his jiarty friends ami was coiujicllcd to see the "KTtidious" (ior maii gather ill the fruits of victory. The sugar trust proved more power ful than the President with all his pat ronage and the hill goes hack to con fereiuv without the dotting of an "i" or the crossing of a "t." After the pitiful apjieul of Senator Vilas, the mouth-piece of the President, and after all the whipping in of himself and friends, (oirniau is aiisolutciy muster of the situation for the present, ami there will either lie no hill jKissed at this ses sion or the President and the House w ill have to eat a surfeit of crow. With their victory on the hard fought field of the Senate, there is no proluhility of any comvsious lieiug made hv the conferees apjioiiitcd hy that Ualy, ami so it must U-the Senate hill or nothing. There is no escajH' from this dilemma, except hy the President w inning over one of the iormaii ."senatorial eomhine, and after the tie vote of Friday this hojie appear to be aiisolutciy prejxw I. rous. It is true a single vote would 'haiige the tuv of the situation, !ut who will dare lake tlutt r-sxinsihility ? It looks, therefore, as though there is no .oil.lc solution otherwise than through a total surrender on the jrt of ihe President and the House. Will the President . surrender, or must the -iHintry do wiLhout the "tariir refonu" v hieh has so long been announced as s-wntial hi its salvation ? This is the Ucstioii that will liave to U deUnuiu--d w ithiu a few brief days. Mhotih hile the country iwfler aud waits. Tiik silence maintaintsl by (iovemor Pattisoii during tlie late lulior insurrec tion has l.ecn so adversely criticised thai his Kxrt-lk-nej- has made known Uie fui-t that so far from ln-iiig a mere slisinlcrcsted luoker-ou, he made an ollicial lender of the eutire wilitarv f-.r-ee of theSJ.i'e to "i-t the Pn j in m.-iititaiiitnir or.ier nn-l enfon- i-.f !h- law. While the G.nvriM.r is -nti:lei! to full rr.tlit for his itatri.iiif action in this irt:ciiiar, ana ri:is r. heve.1 !iim'if tlu rtl-y of a.lwrne criti cism, we are of opinion that a little clo-sT atU'i:tion to home affair and the sUjirc.sio!i ,f the lawles-ne-ramiiiiit in siime s:iotis of our Commonwealth would Heeome him and also relieve the iiil.lie of much anxiety. For instance, the dculorahlo condition of ail.iirs in the coke r.-n'ioa should havesjH-eily Miul detennined hatnl'mir, an. I tlie cr- puiifl ami defiant hostility t law ;,Tid or.ler i.revallinff there slionl l l? summarily rushisl. For week.- Jast hundreds of alien strikers nave in or ganized ami anned 1-allds been mareh- inir thnm-'h that n-t'Kin. lntiniKiatnitf workmen, terrorizinjr the entire coiii nini.il v aiitl enforcim.' idh-liess thrc.UL'h f.-ar. The law-ahidine citiz iis and the willing workmen of that section of the Slate are entitled to, and should have, sjieeily and ample protection from these ifrnor.nit and lawless men. These or ganized miscreant, are not Aineriean I iy either hirth or ado.t!on, hut as a rule are the -scum of Kiiroi', aliens in sympathy and aliens to law and order and pxsl frovcrnim lit. Iliotous, hni tal, and fcariiur Iiothin hut liayonct law, they must U- put down with a stroiifr arm ami an iron hand, if the civil authorities are not equal to the task of controlling them. The Ameri can and naturalized workmen of that and other reirioiis are, with scarce an exception, law ahid'mjr, law rcsectin;r citizens, w ho are entitled to protection in their iei-sons, their i.roperty ami their lalir from the authorities of the Commonwealth, and it is the duty of the tiovernor to s' to it. Tlien-should v no iisirleyiiitr, no hesitancy, notri rlinr with the hrutal and anarchistic aliens now terrorizing jHirtiousof West ern Pennsylvania. To hesitate is a crime. The tJovernor has the jxiwer; let him use it. Kiot and disorder must U put down. If the tJivernor uoi pnmijit in tendering the arm.il force of the State for the purpose of putting down reU llioii ami inoh law at Chica go and other places, why not use the forc-s for the suppression of anarchy and lawlessness at home? Ijet the iovemor act K foiv riot liecomes chron ic and the citizens are c.nistrainel to ariil themselves ill self-defense. A TIT VOTE. Krom tie' N- w Vork Trilnnu'. The Tariir bill ffpcslui-k to coiiferem-e on a lie vole. Ill the alisein-c of Vice President Stevenson, who has n easting vot-e, the inotion to instniet against the ditrereiitial duty for the sugar refiners tailed, :il against XI, and by the skin of Iheir t4-clh, so to speak, the 1 lemocfais save the ehaiuf to agree ill conference uj. oii a liili which they can pass. The gree dy Sugar Trust still has the business of the country by the throat. Tlie Presi dent's cuckoo in the Senate represented him ai-enrately by oiTcrir.gan amendment with loiid-voii-ed denunciations of the inonoHily and its corrupt 1-arguins, with draw ing it as soon as there amn-arcd a chance if its adoption, and finally voting against it and for the Trust, hen his vole r that of any other friend of the Presi dent would have carried the amendment :in. I saved the people i'i,it(i,iil directiv ami ?0),iiii.i"0 ln-sid'-s w hu h the m onop oly expe-is u snatch. If any Presi.h ut ever occupied a more piliaMe aud humil iating ositioii, lirandi'd Willi falsehood and dishonor by leaders of his on u party, uualile to command a single vote in the Senate, and whipped by his own coward-i-e into aiding the men and measure he had denounced, licking the hand Il.it smote him, history has strangely failed to record the spectacle. Not one vote could the President inllii-em-e to stop the "perfidy" of duties on coal and iron ore ; not one vote to thwart the infamous sale of legislation to the Sugar Trust. But without him the im ltooly would still have liecn lieatcii. and with it the Itill of Sale, if Senator Stew art had represented anylxsly but himself, lie proclaims himself a Populist, but aids the most corrupt and shameless liargaiu ever made by a inonojmly to control leg islation. It is the destiny of some nu n to serve as the linisiiisi'ious tool of those they must heartily detest. ProluMy Mr. Stewart detests the President as much as HiivUxly in the world, and so he helps Vilas and the cilckoos to dig the Presi dent out of the hole into which his Wilson letter plunged him. Who wiil rejoice at the )nai- of this bill It is dciiouiK-cd as infamous by I he President, who will have to sign it; de nounced as a shameless barter which they wore forced to accept by the Senators who reportcl an J voted Air it ; denounced as a corrupt sale of pul.jic interests by all independent men ill IsHil houses, and resisted to the end from a high si-use of duty by Itepuhlii-ana who know that its passage will disgrace and defi-at the arty in Isiwer. Not a single mail lives who approves it, as one prominent I'etnocrat has ulilicly dis'lans, and the men who have done the most to frame and pas it are those who resent most savagely the I use coercion which has forced it Um them. Xu Ixsiy of citizens anywhere, of cither psrty, has ever pretended to desire tlie passage of this bill. There never has lx-eii a more striking exhibition of the imiermo-st nature of licmocratic partisan ship than is given by the sujijwi-t of a bill so hostile to every public interest, and so dishonoring and fatal to the party itself in the end, merely Iss-ausea great major ity of liciiiocratie Senators and Represen tatives care for nothing hut immediate success ill their Stale and districts, and have lalxiriously educated their constitu ents to Is'lieve that any tarilf reform measure whatever would bless them lx yond calc ilatioii, and meanwhile a few mends'iv have Ish-ii -. irrupt ctiough to IsH-viue the tools of insatiable motioo lists and the highwaymen to force their party to stand aud deliver. Such is Iieui ocratie rule, and the country will doulK less think more than once Ix-fore it tries that kind of rule again. ' If the bill were Ix-atcn, ds-s auyiiody ask who would rejoice? Kvcrylxxly in the osintry. President Cleveland, ls eause without the manly a1 for w hii 1 hi.' had not courage he esa-spes signliiK a measure by him publicly pnnioiiiu-ed in Oimoiis. The iH'iiiocrats of the Semite, Iss'ausc imist of them diHisit the cynically shameless cormptkiU which has compel led them lj cune 'x tw een this bill and n i tariff bill whatever. The Iiemix'rals of the House, lKS-ause the bill they passed was clean and pure by the side of this. AH the Miple of ImtU parties, Is-vause their industries would have litw life, liut uow all must wail for the next barter in conference. CHIHA AID ;APAI. From the New York Tntune. Strong as have U-cii the intlueiices fu favor of a peaceful settlement of the Corean disjiule, the- Uvxarto have failed lyo etfeet their piiirsise. For a fortnight the trend of attaint has Is-en directly to ward war. The recent fighting at Sosil made it well nigh inevitable, esMs-islly since the attack uimiii the Japanese was said to Is instigated by the Chinese K.sii ib iit ; and the sinking of a Chinese iruns m ii t )' a Japanese gu nl sua made much further in the same dire.li.ni. And now we have the announ.-einent t list war h;is a.1ually Isgun. It U a war that must lie reganled w ith regret, and into which the combatants tre surely not entering with eagarucM, Neither China nor Japan really wants to fight ; Core certajniy d s not ; and Kngtand, Prance and Rus sia, all deeply interested iu the case, can scarcely lie supjswsl to desire a war which may extend into their own Kuio h'su circle. Xjieculation on ihe prolstble result o" tlie war. ynnposiiig China and Jaoan be 1- ft to f til it o:-.t Itetweeii tlnni selves is naturally rife; aid the ni.-st comnsi es timate seems to Is' t!iat China hss the ad vantage ehielly on her side. And at first sight the chances of victory do apiear to lx- decidedly in China's favor. Her pop ulation is eight or ten times as great as that cf Japan, and she can therefore put a vastly larger army in tho field. Her territory is immediately iviiitiguons to that of CVrea, so that she can send tnxips ihithcr by 'th land and si-a. while Japan mu-t seiid here a!l by sea. The navies of the two powers are not greatly unequal in str,::gt' 'nit the coasts and orts of Japan arp . oiisidcrably mow vuineratde than those of China. The latter country, therefore, iuis in these material particu lars a decide.! advanliige over il anlago nist. A more imixirt.'iit factor, however, than mere numbers or position is that ton. Ii.-. 1 upon by an intelligent Chinaman lon- resident in this csmtry, w hen he Kii.l : "The Japanese arethe r-al Chinese. " They represent the Is-st elemeiiLs of the " Mongol rai-e." I lis words were entire ly true. Not only are the Japain-se the lxst of the Mongols, but they are close rivals of the liesi of the Caiu-asiatis. The pr.grnss they have made within the last generation has never Ix-en paralleled by any nation in so short a peri.sL III edu cation, industries, lits-ral government, and iodised all the elements of civiliza tion, Japan is to Ix; ranked with America and the nations of Western Kuro, rath er than with Asiatic countries. And such qualities tell ill war as well as in pewe, The arsenals, foundries aud shipyards of Japan are comparable w ith the 14 in the world. The organization and disci pline of her army are far sucrior to th.ise of the Chinese. And in pluck, per sistent valor and patriotic spirit there is no comparison ls-twcen the two. The true Chines were, jK-rhaps, many gener ations ago, the equals of the Japanese. I'.ut they have long !kcii overlxirue and crushed by the Mantchoorian Tartars, who are now the dominant element in the Kiupire, and who control its destini'w. The true Chinisie made one tremendous attempt to reassert themselves in the Taipiug Kelx-llion, and lmt for foreign intervention Would prolsibly have suc ceeded ; but they were ls-aten, and have since had little part in public attairs. The ruling classes in China, then, represent the worst elements of the Mongol ra, as the Japanese do the lsst, and those elements also tell in w ar. These conditions, in a contest IsHween the two ixiwers, inust surely Is? of great avail in determining the result. Foreign intervention, of course, may (Mine, in one form or another, and may tako the play ing of the game entirely out of the hands of the original contestants. Hut left to themselves, there is reason to hope that ihe Japanese spirit may prove more k tent than China's huge material bulk, an. I that of this war may Ix; rcpcat.sl the words of Ma'-atilay on the siege of Lon donderry: "The victory remained with " in the nation which, though inferior in " mi ml st, was superior ill civilization, in capacity for self government, and in stuhlmiTiness of resolution." Cleveland and Hill. Sew York le tter in Philadelphia Istifer. me of the strangest things in the re cent politii-al history of the country, isthe way in which ihe names and fortunes of Cleveland and Hill have continued to be linked t'igethcr, notwithstanding the ide ditl'crence ill the personality and an tecedents of the two men. Cleveland and Hill were Mayors respistively of lliltl.ilo and Kliuira when, in lss-J, without any previous personal acquaintance, they weie iioiiiinated for (iovemor ami Lieu tenant i Jovernor on the same ticket, and were some weeks later triumphantly elected by 3.til plurality. At Alliany tlicy soon represented different w ings of the Iciiiocralic party, and have ever sii.-t bis-n opposing leaders. Cleveland's selection as President made Hill liovcr nor. Cleveland's deficit for re-ehxtion in ls made Hill's re-election as liovernor l..s-ible, although the lattt-r has always bitterly rM-iit.l the Imputation that he sold t 'lev eland out, and he lias always de nounced the President for never having put a stop to w hat he has regarded as a lia.se slander. In li'l the two men ap Mitred as rival candidates tor the Presi dential nomination, and now in the great est delude of the Cleveland administra tion. Hill comes to the front as the de fender of the President, although it is said he has crossed the threshold of the While House but once sim-e Cleveland wa Inaugurate.!. Coieyitei Deititbte. Washixotox, Julv 2S. The lushes of men styling themselves "The I". S. In dustrial Army," in camp at Koslyn, Va., opposite Washington, lidding themselves in tsi.l straits, have issued an apcal to the public for aid. The appeal recites the sufferings of the men iu journeying hither and theohje-t of coming here, and aiiiioun.i-s that u hile "at war w ith h'.uiiftr, w rctchcditisis and despair," they pr.ijstM. to stay here unless forciliiy removed, until their demands are granteiL Continuing the appeal says : "The en campment is to-day nearly destitute of provisions or nonius (,f shelter, and it is aiisolutciy UHcessary that the friends of this movement should come toisir imme diate relief. We therefore make an tam est apiie.d to all w ho can isuilributo some thing for our support to d so immediate ly. It is stated that upwards of llol uifii are encamped at Washing and vicinity and that other are arriving daily. Com plain! is made of mismanagement (pro sumaiily by Coxeyl, and friends of the movement are urg.nl to organize Isutrds of relict to assist the men as sixiii as jmis sihle, and the same request is made of lalxT and reform organizations. Contri butions should Is' sent to A. S. Piggs, luT Kighth street. Northeast, Washiiigton, I. C. Memliers of nine contingents sign Ihe appeal. Hekt and Fire. The heat wave in the Northwest has liccii attended by unusually destructive forest tires. Keports from the northern part of Wisconsin show that much of the territory which is covered by timber is iu highly iiirlaimiiable condition. There has ls'ii ii rain of any coiiscquc m-e in Price county and iu the territory sur rounding it for several w eeks, and numer ous blazes have got U yoiid the control of the settlers. Several bridges near Pren-li.-e have busned and a mimlxT of settlers remlerud hmelis. liraiid Kapids re Kr the same nditious iu that section, w hile from Ashland it is reirte,l that on the Wisconsin Central it is imixrisible to mov e trains. Phillips, a low ii of 2,nuU pixtple, is destniyed and only a few build ings remain standing. A dispatch from Filield says -iu women and children from Phillips axe iu the w.ssis there w ithout shelter. They sent a request for fssj ami supplies, as the supply is very short. Shorts ( rossjng, a email village near Asle-lau-1, ltjis destroyed, the loiueless jiciple being cainl for iM -Vshland. Froui many other points the iiks js of hk tcimr aud many lumlsT ami vilayw are threuUu e.L Hot Dead Imngk to Bury. Cixcixxati, (., July John Melltze, an old man, w ho had lssn a patient at St. Francis Hospital, apparently died this morning. The house physician pro noiiu.vd him dead, signed the death cer tificate and Mentze was removed to the dind nxiin. l iiilertaker Anthony Sterner was in structed to 1 airy the remains this after noon. While preparing the body for burial, Sterner says he detected signs of life. "This man is not dea-l, and if 1 uri.nl now lie w ill be buried ulive," said Ster ner. The hospital physician again examined the lxxly and emphatically declared Mentze dead. The undertaker olmtiuate- ly refused to bury the body, and it was decided to hold it until Wedncshiy next, I Phillip, TUoonua SevaiUted ty FUmes. Phii.liii, Wis., July it. At daybreak this morning a dense smoke covered an area of forest a hundred miles square and the centre wa this desolate, lire swept little city. More than 2,-Vrt jiersons have ll.sl into the forests or to the village near by. The town this morning was a heap cf ruins aud the smoke was so dense that the headlight of a locomotive could not be seen fifty feet away. Three relief trains reached Phillips soon after 6 ocl.s-k this morning. One was in charge of (iov. eo. W. Peck and hisstaiT. The second came from Stevens Point in charge of Frank Loiuoreaux and Crosby rant ami the third from Murshtield in charge of Majo' W. II. I'pham, Kepubli can nominee fir governor. Amn as he arrived Jov. Peck called his staff together and directed the work of unloading the provisions. There were several car loads of fissl and a warehouse was opened in one of the laiildiugs. Through the dense smoke iovemor Peck started out on ahmrof iii-qssHion. He shiii f.iund two hi-avy w alls of masonry w hich nuirkisl the place where the two banks had sUssL tin in quiry it was learned that the valuts of the hanks contained $c!,ftl and tSovernor Peck immediately swore in a dozen men to guard the money in the vaults. They were armed w ith Winchester rilles and ordered to remain oil duty in two shifts day and night. The loss by the great conflagration in its entirely is difficult to estimate. Out of sun buildings in the town only 3? remain. W. Pavis of the Ihtvix LumlxT company estimates the total loss at ?I,'l.lU, with scarcely half of the full amount covered by insurances The Ihivis I.umlx'r Com pany lost f.i,i, fully insureil. There is no way of estimating the nuni Ixt of lives lost in the fire and even after 4s hours had passed no one can lx found w ho ventures an opinion of the loss. ..f life. When the people tied Wforethe wave of lire they lxs-aine separated and can give no account of each other. It is known that Hi persons perished on the raft that Imrned in the layou. A bridge or trestle crossed the liayou and when the supixrts of this bridge were burned away it fell. Women and children were crossing at the lime and some must have perished. As the tire swept towards the bridge a niimlx r of children w ere seen to take re fuge in the big lumlxT yard. Their cries were heard by others who lied towards the water, but tho children have never bocn found. Of the ten persons who lost their life on the raft that lsirmsl iu the bayou eight are now in the water. Dynamite was exphsled all day in the liayou and a numlx-rof lslies were raised by this means. The true story ol this ill-f it.-.! raft has never ix-eil tobL The only man w ho tells a comprehensive narrative of the horror is Joseph 1 ill en, a lumlx'rman. He was standing near a boat house w hen a num ber of women and children cam" tow ard him. There were throe or four men fol lowing. They went to the raft and at tempted to push it from the shore when it caught fire. Some jumped into small boats and others remained on the rail. All these perished, a theJioals were over loaded and sank. The raft burned to the water's edge. Three Littla Boy Ktet With a Frightful Death. H aktfohii, Conn., July 29. The three lost children of James W. loiinan, an en gineer in the Consolidated railroad shops, who have Iss-n missing since last Thurs day, were found to-day dead in a lx car. Ijist Thursday afternoon the three Ix.ys Kaymoud, aged !. Lerov, aged 7, and Freddie, aged 4, left their home to follow their older brother down to the bath house to go swimming. Since then ic (th ing was heard of them, and so great has lxs-ti the excitement that searching parties containing hundreds of men hav e scoured the country for Ihe past three days I-ast night the chief of police start ed out on a new tinsiry, that of searching cars on the railroad that runs only aliotit lull yards from the i iiiiuan house. I dicers Mamie and 'Irady were detailed for the work. After s.ian liiiig tor some time an awful stench greeted t!eir nostrils This odcr seemed to come, from a newly-painted calssise, w hh h for a w eek past has Isx-ii standing on a aide track. Th d.xir was H it l.s-kud and thi ottb-ers walked iu. At first they saw no tra'-es of tho children, but ou closer Investigation II was found tiiat the stench ritnu from a corner of the ear, w here there wax a small l.x-ker. This was Ls-ked w ith a spring lis-k and w as burst open. The sight that met theolncr-rseyes is Is-yond description. The cubby hole into w hich the Ixiys had crowded was only la inches one way by the other and was five fix-t high, en tirely closed in and almost air-tigiit. In this coilindike tomb the children were found, one piled on top the other. So tightly were the bslii-s crushed into the locker that it w as w ith some dilliciilty that thev were removed. The Imdiist of all the children w ere stripped naked, and all were horribly !i-oin)xscd. There were no marks of v iolence. The thisiry is that the children's minds w ere full of the idea of ff.iing in swimming. They wondered in the wrong diro-tinn and something frightening thtiu they craw led into the calxmse. (iii'-e iu here thev "played" going in sw imming taking off their clothes These they tucked away iu the l.s-ker, w hich was open. Ity and by tl)cy craw lei) in there theinselves and the isir ls.'iiigou an iie.line, ax tip d r cams to, tl spriiijj l.M-k swapped and tlpc children wuro taught ill a liviua toujl). B'.indaen Cred at Orv. Wn.KKsu.vitHK, Pa., July 2S. Through pmtractwl prayer at the grave of Itev. Father O'llaren, in Hanover Cemetery, and the application of l.wse earth from his grave to her eyes. Sirs. Mary Coyje, of this city, claims to have been cured of blindness Mrs Coyle. w ho resides mi Hazle street, has been almost totally blind for several years On Wednesday last she visited the tomb of her Ix'loved pastor, who for i years had presided at St, Mary's Church. The result, as she states it, after prayer and application of the tomb dust. was that she at once ts-gan to recover her sight. Now she sees almost as well as she did Is'fore the long period of blind iicss The Soaadeit of Sleepers. Jackson, Miss., July . Kx press Messenger Kdward Stevens fell while asleep from a car running at the rate of frty miles an hour last Thursday night. A hand-car was rigg.-d up and several gentlemen started down the track hunting for him. Three miles below they found him laying w ithin two feet of the track ami soundly sleeping. He awoke as so.ii as touched and ask ed what was wanted. He says he has no rc.-ollcction of falling and imagined himself asleep in his lied at Orleans w hen the res.-.ting party found him. Aside from a few minor 1 .ruses he is not hurt. 4 Snake ia the Organ. " Lkwks IM-, July 2i. At the picnic of tli I,ts! Presbyterian Sunday Scluxd, at Csf) Kpriug, the schoof orgau was taku along, in ordr to biijiveq tl(0 um siml exari.istts When tl)ey wrw urpir ing to return home a largd bauk snake was disaxivensl in the bellows of tlpi or. gaii. The women w ho had participated in the music and singing were throw n in to a panic by the discovery, but the ncii settled matters by promptly killing the snake. Powell'i Shorthand School, Diliert Building, Johnstown, Ia., is eon-du.-te.l by a practitatl Stenographer. Thorough iiLslructions given in Short hand and the exiwrt use of the Tvpe wriler. Lcmsuhs by mail. Write for terms and first lesson free. Social rales to part its. commencing Is-fore Septemlsr 1st. C. IL Powti.l, Prineip U. War Bcrint i t?ie Eut Siivxt.u vl. July 7. II. tstditics have actually Ix-giiu lx-tw.s-11 Japan and Chi na, while no formal dts-iaration of war according to the usual diplomatic fornix Icas !eeii made, the govemmo'it-s of Ix.th eisintries reefigiiize that an actual state of war exists, and more collisions lietween the fortsps of the two cixintries arecxjio-t-ed hourly. The actual cause of the Inutilities, out side of the grow ing complications in re gard to Korea, is said to lx the fact that, on Tuesday, Japanese cruisers attacked Chinese transport conveying tnsips to Ken 'a and sunk one of them, causing heavy loss of life. One sttiry declares that seven! transisirts wre sunk. The Chimste tleet consisted of eleven steamers anil sailed fn.in Tuku Friday with litroois est'irte-l by gunlxMits. Most of the transports proceeded slowly with the guiilxsits while the faster out- steamed at full sioetl. so as to laud their troos as sm as jsrtsilile. On the trans s.rts w hich arrivetl first at the Korean coast were a few hundred soldiers from the Army of the Nortli, 5bt of the force, however, consisted of(sxilit with inferior firearms or merely Imw s and ar rows JAPAXKSE WARsllIPS Ol'KX FUSE. The attack by the Japanese is describ ed in a dispatch from Nagasaki. The firing was lxgnn by a Japanese lottery on the shore, while the Chinese officers w ere trying to deUtrk their men from the first steamer. The cruiser then steamed up ami en ed fire on all the tmnsports which were lying to. waiting to discharge the men. The Chinese were unable to make any cf-fts-tive resistance. They were throw n in to great confusion, and many jumped ovcrlxKird to estsipe the hot fire, under w hi. h two transports sutl'ensl severely. Wanted Someone to Love' Newark, IM July :K A young man employed on a farm at McClcliainlsv ille, near hen', answered an advertisement of a young woman w ho appealed in a New York paper for a congenial irrcspoiid cnt object matrimony, ami asked that she send her photograph. Mack came the reply that she had no photographs and no money, but that if he would semi her two dollars she would have photographs taken and send one on. The money was sent, and in due time the young man re ceived one of Lillian Kussell's photo graphs taken in the operatic artist's most attractive xe. The picture mightily pleased the sus ceptible young m-m, i:'d heat oius sent his correspondent a proiosalof marriage, to which she replied affirmatively, but asked him to s. n. 1 her ten dollars with which to Journey to the place where she miu'lit met t him. He sent the ten dollars, with the request that she come on the train arriving at Stanton, seven miles north of lu re, laM evening. At the np MiinUd time he was at the station, a is.mpauietl by a frientl, but the sender of Ihe photograph tlid not apMnr, and then it slowly dawned upon the young man how he find lss:ii swindled. Set Theinielvei on Fire. Sri.i.iv.vN, r.Mi., July 2V Tiie wife of Scigel K. Haines a schix.I teacher, com mitled suicide yesterday by setting fire to a brush heap and jumping into it. Her relativist were out blaeklsTry picking, and she s!iped away from them and committed suicide in this horrible way. Her lxxly was found near the burning brush heap, w ith all the clothing burned off. Mrs. Itainex had Is-eii dcrang".! for stime time. A few week ago she at tempted suicide by hanging, but was pre vented. A nt.vziNo criiT.vix iikr siiKorn. St. Iu is Mo., July 2 Mrs. Augusta Ktx-h, agt.il 71, saturated a lace curtain w ith coal oil last night anil wr.ip;i::j il alioiit her person sheset fire to it and re ceived injuries from w hich she died. It is ls-lieved she had become suddenly in sane. Chicago Hast Fay the BiU. Cuic.vtrfi, 111., July '. Ijirge bills for damages to aud destruction of railroad property by the strike rioters are now coiqing in to the City Hall. J. T. Prooks, second vice proxiih-nt of the Pittsburg, Cincinnati A St. Louis K:iilral, has pre sent's! 4 bil which aggregates ff.l,IW. The largtt item is nl,i for 71 freight ears d.istroyod ami 4J tlamag.sl. Ligh locit thoiisaiul tiojiars is tditirg.sl for hold ing 7-1 ears, Thu Pittsburg, Port Wayne A Chicago has preM'iito.1 a bill of !U1,.'H7. Thj larg est Item is for. I "Irs dostroyt-d and S tlamag.-.l, sl4.7. Mayor 1! ipkins smiled w hen shown the bills and merely remarked: "Wait until we get ihroui,'!i with them." Lightning Amid the Bottle. Youk, Pa., July -JS. While John Kais er, of Hanover, wax driving with Nicho las Wagner's wagon load of pop !tilcx, Ih-Ivvccii Littbstiiiwii anil Tanneytovvn, yesterday afternoon, a lsilt of lightning played a pretty prank oil him ami Ihe wagon. He saw it dart along the chains which supMrt-d the wagon tongue. Then he collapsed. When a stranger entered the wagon ami shook Kaiser out of his numbness, three miles further on, ail the wire-topped Isiltles till one side of the wagon were broken. These l)ad Iss'll a "g'xsl coii thiclor." Four Timet Murderer. .John Craig shot anil kill.sl his father-in-law, VilIiain Hunter, his mother-in-law .")' I ry Ilimii.-r, ie.i. Hunter his bMiti:r-in-l.iw, am! lis wife, Kmily Hunt er Cr.iig. Tliuiday, at Iw Angeles, Cali fornia, He states that he was li iiin led by his vv ifn's relatives and wanted revenge, but w as sorry he had not succeeded in killing himself to eoiiqilcti.' the whole biisiui-s Craig was prominent in xilitics The killing grew Hit of trouble over the set tlement of community property. Mistaken for Burglar. I'm vi mi ii am, A I. v., July i Mistaking his father and sister for burglars early this morning, Wiiiie Collins, aged 1, shot them IxKh. The father, John Collins w ho is a gardener, w as instantly killed, and the daughter, Maggie, aged Pi, w ill tlie. Mr. Collins thought he heard thieves in his garden, ami, w ith Maggie, rose slid went out to investigate. The closing of the door awoke Mrs Collins who aroused Wiiiie, telling him burglars were trying to get iu. The Isiy got a Winchester and blazed away, w ith fatal results Ex-Senator Sloan Near Death. I.viuvXA. Pa., July 2S. Kx-Senator llamiilial K. Sloan, of this plats?, k-iii-txTatic nominee for Coiigressiuan-nt-Largc, is so seriously ill at his home with nasal hemorrhages that he may tlie. If so, Ihe Stale I'eiii.s-nltic Committee will liavy to Ix- t-ailed together to fill his place on the ticket. Some persons go so far us to insist that the State Convention itself must till such vacancies The World Fair Bsbailt for tho Page of Eiitory. The "llook of the Uuilders" one of the most artistic and magnificent publications cvyr issued is now being tillered by the pittslsir ixicA fq its readers It is Ijcyoiid (jiiextion the greatest offer ever undo by a iiuwtiiiapur. See the 7i'.yscA for full information. Tell Hi "Amy" to Get Arreitei. Masskxox.O.. July 2s, leneral Cojey denies the charge that he has deserted his army at Washington, and says that he is sending them all the money he can spare. He says: "I suggiited to them that they get ar rested, and the Covernmeiit Would liave to prov ide for them." Lava Hovers. A handsome line and cheap. For sale by ' J is B. HoLUKKBAi . Gtieer Way to 8t?p a F'.vyne. WA"li.iT'lN, IK C. July A .sc. c;; I rep iiW n -ar !l;.g tho i lag-!'-' 'u Chint have lwn r.x-eived at t!i Marin" Hos pital Ptir.a.u Secretary Denby, of tho I'liitetlSt.it.-s I-.-g.ili m, snys ih ttat Cunt in a novel and thoroughly Chinese metlss! of checking the disease w;ls Ii upon. A fortune teller, having given out th it the plague would die away with tlie appr.cli of the spring stilst ice. t lie people of Canton, In order to deceive the Otfcls of Sickness made the hr-t day of the fourth M.rn (May 5i their New Year's day. Kvery ceremony by which the day is celebrated wits gme through with sertipulo-.is exaeiitude. The lociil authorities assist. s i"i this farci-:;l performants. The New Year's f.-siiviti'X in the preseiice of such widt-iread death had a somewhat "liaMly cimra.ier. Consul Seymour, w riting from Canton, says everything continuis in wil.l con fusion. Iliisiness is almost snsjMiidc 1. He has Isvn in nearly all parts of Can ton during the plague, and has rem iinc-l at his sist through it all, and is sr sua le l lhat w ith tiie olMcrvamvof proper prei-.i'ltions extieci.'illy in securing a sii ply of pure water for tssiking and wash ing, and for ibihing drains in timo of drought there sloiild and would Is. no such thing as this plague, except where the natives in congested localities, cause; pollution of air by overcrowding and filth and violation of sanitary conditions for safely. During all of the plague heitheti pr.x-tsisioiis have t-instantly luarclusl tin' st reels of Canton throughout the night, pounding gongs exploding firecrackers exMwing idols and other similar doings supported by contributions from theshops ami stores, to propitiate their g xls. Chief Weather Man Talk. PiTrsiu-Kii, Pa., July 'v. A prediction made by Prof.-ssor Henry A. Hazcii. chief meteorologist of the Washington Weather l'.urtaii, who happened to !.e iu Pittsburg last evening, was amply verified t.-day. He said that thesizz.ling HI degrees of yesterday would really Ix? t-ast in the shade by the ex s-tsive licit of to-day. Plenty oft hermoineters tcsti lietl that the temperature w us hm t-.lay. As Prof.soor Ilar.eu's hut wave still remaiiuMl in the Mississippi Valley up to a late hour last night, il couldn't have Ix-en that one which Pittsburg sweltertxl under to-day. ConspieiitIy, there is an other torid sH'll ahead. What is nccie.L Professor Hazeu says, is the addition of ballismiug to the Weather Service, I1.iU.kihs containing meteor ilogi.sts ought to Ix; st ilt up to make a study of the conditions existing in the clouds At present they depend entirely on theory for all alx.ve tiie siir-faix-. lie thinks tlie hot waves arc due to the heating of Ihe atmosphere for a height of i".,tmior-'!n,Uil f.x-t al.ve the cartlu At fifteen cents ikt week, tite Pittsburg lUxffitrh, one of the bc-t new .-.papers in the I'nit.sl States, is the cheapest article in exist i e. It is worth more than lif- bs'ii cents per w eek to have the eye pleas ed by a clear, w ell-printed paper, publish ing all not a part of the news only, mid iu all respects the lxsd printed. Strike Investigator. The President has iiunoiiiu'ed the com missioners to investigate the controver-sit-t Ix'tween tsTtain railroads and their employes connected w ith the recent strike as follows: Carrol l. Wright, commis sioner of lalior; John l. Keruan, of New York, and Nicholas K. Worthiugtoii. of Ptsiria. III. Judge Lyman Trumbull wirtsl o Washington refusing to a.-t as governmenl arbitrator in the Pullman strike. Judge Trumbull gives as his rt-a-soii lor dtvlitiiiig that I he act under w hich the arbitrators are appointed will confine their investigations; to ihe recent strike, and that inasmuch as ihe trouble is over he sees no need of investigating it. pkiis oi vi:s n vii- lcl s, Howard, Keliheran.l It igers. of the American ltailay I'uioii, are at lils erty, under Util, pending the hearing against them. They were required to give s7t(iii) Ihiiii! each, covering five in dictments, in addition to Uk contempt case brought by the government and the Santa Fe railroa.L The hearing of the contempt (-ises was continued until Scp-tcuilH-ri William Fit.geraltl and Wil liam Skakt !, w ho were alrea ly on the Ismd of the defendants for ?J,"iiisi each, signt-l tiie additional bonds, and the ag gregate amount tif their guarantee is so ."mi .i eaclj of tlpt four nteii, . S,il in all. Brace the Nerves. Sed ilivnx mid opiates won't do it. These nei vinos do Dot make the nerv is strong, ami failing to do this fall sh rt of produc ing the essential of (heir quietude vigor. And w hile in extreme eases and those only --of nervous Irritation such drugs may ls advisable, their frequent use is highly prejudicial to the delicate organism upon which they act, and in order to renew their quieting effect increase 1 and dangerous dosts eventually Iksiuiic nec.-.-t-xary. Ibetlctter's Stomach liilters is ail efficient sulistitute f.r such pernicious drags II quiets the nerves by br.iciug. toning, streiigihening them. The cm-ne-tioii Is'twcen weakness of the nervous system and that of the organ of digestion is a strong and sympathetic link. The r.iiters by imparting a healthful im pulse to the tlig.s.:ive and assimilating fun -lions promoteslhroiii;liout the whole system a vigor in which th.' nerves c line in fir a large share. I'se Ihe Kilters in iii .lari.t, constipation, bilio.is and ki.ln v tn mi I le. Headers of the II ki;am should not for get that J. N. Snvder, tip- druggist, cm lit their eyes The Parching West. llesirts from tin ill i are t the elb't t that a more withering blast never swept across parched Sahara thin that which scorched the great plain ls-tween the Missouri river and t!n It x-ky mounlains For two day th sim sui had blown from the southwest and each day was hotter than its predecessor. The max imum temperature was n; degree at the highest poinl ; Thursday it was pri. From all over the territory tributary to iinah.i, a strip of :;m miles north aud south, and miles east and west, came reports of the terrible effects of the hot wind. Wherever tho ground was already dry the grow ing corn has been baktsl. Where there vv-.ls any moisturtt left there Is still hope for the crop. A dispatch from I 'h i ln.n said the temperature theru reach ed UK At Superior, on the southern li irder of the Statu, tiie maximum w as Hi All points reporting placed the temperature at alxive lm. Musical Instruments. Violins, Mandolins Ouilars, llanjos antl other striugtsl iiistruineiiLsat Siiyth-r's drug store. Indignint Commoavealers. Large delegations from tho in histrial armies cneamH'il alxiut Washington a plits! at the rxui of the Hons,. Coiumitti-e on lilir, u.it to urge their bills but to plead for assistance. The exptx-teil had happened- their leaders had d.-sertcd them, ami they sought congressional aid to return to the l.s-.ilities w hence they had come. Coxey's men siid their leader had left them in the lurch. Kelly's men said their leader had gone away several days ago, and they ditl not txiect to see him again, w hile 1-rye's men said their leader had proijably alrmdt'iied them. The iqen who were brought from the Pacific c.isist were particularly indignant. Mr. MeU.irr told them there was no chance of a government appropriation f r their return, and scut them to the I's-al superlnLcntlent of charities. Send for a copy of the bright new cata logue of the California, Pa State Nor mal, one of the Ix-st institutions of the kind in the state. Wanted : Several tons second lii.mi li tt T. liail Iron, for pit track. Address K. II. P.Kli., Lrsiu:i, Pa. 9evs iMmi. I i Th -wu.is K. Kee-I was rt vmiinatisl bv the Firsi C.iigrc-i-ied district He- pnV.ii i ns of Maine. Speaker Crisp has lie-n reiiomin.ucl for congress by acclamation by the Iemt cratie cimvention of his.in.'ia district. In a light wiih a big blacksnake. An drew Winner, of Pleasant Valley, Pe.icks Ccsiiily, was severely bitten three timisi Is'fore iiesuetv.shsl in killini; too re tile. Choketl to death by her h mnet strings which were to tight, was the fate of Catherine MoCarreti, an elderly woman, w ith a bank account of alsmt who was found dead on ihe street in New York Fritlay morning. While playing in his father's mill at Tyrone, Pa., 7-year-old Amlirste liver i limit-. I into a corn bin to hide. The isiru was lx'ing run out at the tjnie, and ls-fore assistance oiuld retch him the little fellow had beeu drawn into the funnel and smothered. Mrs (Jeorge Lewis and Mrs Shfn-is of New Castle, In.L, were tlriving the other day, when iheir horse ran away. Mrs Lewis jumped and bmke her arm. Mr. Sheets was throw n from the bugey. hT eorstK broke, and the stay were driven into her stomach, killiitg her. Three highwaymen held up Hugh A. IL sks, a oiie-leggtl veteran of Adrian, Armstrong county, ami robbed him of his quarterly x-iision alli vvsnce, lnit $7.k Ho w-,is on his way home from Kittanning, where he had gone to get his pension check ca-shctl when the thieves .topped aud roblx-d him. A remarkable ease of fee;indity is re ported from Ste, (Jencvicve, Canada. The wife of Palmer Theort-t, a farmer of that phuv, has just given birih to triplets for the second timo in five years licsidc having twins on three other (s--CAsituia, Mrs Tilts irct, who L .'!U years of age, L the mother of 17 children. Oeueral A. J. Pleassnton died Thurs day at his county home, near overhitsik. He w as a graduate of West Point, and served in the regular army. Iniring the civil war he was connected with the Pennsylvania Volunteer Militia. He was the author of a work on "The Influence of the Klue Color of the Sky in Iieveloping Animal ami Vegetable Life," which hxl to what wan termed the "blue glass craze." Kcsrts to the llawkeye from sints in Southeastern Iowa and adjacent States show an unprecedented heat-wave. The mercury rose 4u degree in iu hours A hot, blistering wind swept this region, tloing great damage to crops and pas turage. The drouth near Crestoii ami lliat se-'lioii of Iowa continue, and there is no prospect of rain. Crops are suffering badly. Corn is seriously damaged, and unless rain falls iu a few days it w ill be ruined. The thermometer range ! from iu", to lot) degrtsL' Friday, it U-ing the hottest day of the season. I'ncleSaui is nuv distributing another million dollars among the Cheroktvs iu payment for their strip. When this pay ment is finished ft.niiil.iliio of the s-7,Ui.ii will have Ixs-n distributed. The a.-t of Congress provided that every Cherokee man, woman or infant, living on March 1, lsjq, should receive his or her pro rata of the seven millions of dollars the in fant's part going to the parents as trustees As a direct result or very remarkable coincidence of this provision, it is es timated that more than rt,(nu baliies hav e liecn lxirn in theeightceii months preced ing last March, which gives a birth to alout every marri.sl couple iu ihe nation. Infants mew ling in their nurses' arms are presented constantly to establish Iheir claims and secure their In :i. y to the industrious parents. Here is a woman saving a gixslwurd for the lanky old linen duster. Listen to her tale of praise: What has Ih-imih.' nf the old-fashioned linen duster I can see that nu n as w ill as women are shu t to fashion's mandates I tlou't Isiieve, actually, that a man iu this I'nited States cm Ix- found brave enough to bring from its obscurity the comfortable, but, just now, iuueh-dcspi.se, I long coat that used to protect in such a thoroughly satisfacto ry manner his clothes from the ravages of railroad travel. The linen duster was cool, easily donned, and a man l.sike 1, at the eml of his journey, like a rcscctable meiulxT of sx-icty rather than an t x;i; gcrate.l cinder on legs We women are also victims to the w Ijiiu w hit h ha n--ished these tidy wrap. Ons uix.it a time line could envelope one's finery from top to i.k in Jsiug s-, alpaca or linen. There was such a protct'tivu air alxait tho long snugly-fitting duster. Why cannot we coax it back into general use Flying Mn Falls 333 Feet. While sailing on his riving machine at the height of ill feet, on Sunday, near Lichtc rfflilc, iu Itelgiiim, cngims-r Lilitnthal, the noted "living man" lost c nitrs'1 of tUe wing, w hich collapsed under him. He dripped heavily to the earth, and although bis fall wa some what broken, he was bully injured. I.iliciithal has ls-en exK-runentiiig in liv ing, or rather soaring machines for "ii years He ha reeogn ijtcd standing in the scientific circles of liermaiiy. He is eng i - 1 in business as a m imil'acturer of steam engines but ha spent all his sparetiiiL" in exp.'riiuentin with living machines He is an accomplished in itiiein itieian and naturalist. Hew Prices for 1394. Painted Karb Wire per tf, Kisscll Chilled Plow s No. 4t Syracuse " ' tiule " " r 2 cts st; hi t; t.i Ii HI K 141 Call and see the latest itnprovement ii Lever Spring T.xith Ilarniwis. J AMI- II. Hol.l'KKn.M M. Soiueiact, Pa. , To the Atlantic Coast and Eetara for $10 the Bonni Trip. )n August till next the Pennsylvania Kailnatl Company w ill run another of its )ip;i!ar seashore excursions Th's.triis are plaumsl for ihe express purix-' tif furnishing an coiioiui.-al ipxirtuuity for siple liv ing iu Western Pennsylvania to visit some of the principal summer re sorts of the Atlantic Coast. Tiie tickets MTiuit a stay of nearly two weeks, and a choice of destination is allowed Atlantic City, the most fsipular resort in America, Cape May, appropriately called the(fueeii of the Coast, .Sea Isle City, the I ieui of the Coast, and Ocean City, last but by no means the least attraelive of the places Special train will leave Pittsburg on alsive-iuentioiusl tlnte at t:-VI A. M., arriv ing at AlUxuia lii'i p. M., w here stop for tliuiler will Is) made, ami reaching Phila delphia 7:JU P. M. Passengers can spend the night in Philadelphia, autl take any rcgular train of the following day for the shore. Ta i s I.KAV S ":" A M 7: U -7:lu Il:u". - s: ai " :.' - 711 It VTF. M to II) IU . - 10 to .r.".".z. s o S jJ Ar llltsl'iir; I lliellv Il1e.. Ml I'l.usiuii ... Jiinistt,wii...H 4 'lillllHThllltl.. It tll..r.l , I'liiiuUc Ipiita.... No matter how hard the times the one thingytsicami.it ailbrd to go witlusitis all the news If yon want ALL the news you get it irtthe Pittsburg IHiirh. The IHxpiiti h publishes all n.4 a j,art only. " Low Prices and Good Work. Ixw price and good work are still the rule at my Photograph gallery, w itnc-: I down g.ssl Cabinet Photographs, 9l.r llalf-.l i.en in proportion. " ' I half-dozen Card 'i7,i; . . . . .m 1 doitt-ii Square lairu, ft ir .... .75 llaisit-t per half-dozen .v At such pric.) evtrybsly cai, albird to havo pictures taken, (iaiiery up stairs Kiilrancc- next to si's sio.-e, s.HuerscL Pa. W. II. Wki klbv. WANTED SALESMEN v v Vols0 fM5: Ploy ,,,, , k 1 v rm.... ..a Hi.sITloSS to pnl bi-o. S?,'u,t in luce euli w oesmoer. eac-lisi VF. TKRKlToftY iven if deurrd. Write at once fur Unas la THE HAWKS NURSERY CO., Rochester, N. Y. ISUCAH MAKERS SUPPLIES. WE CARRY A LARGE STOCK OF - - - - Syrup Cans Sap Buckets, Sap Spouts, Gathering Buckets, "Sugar Pans, Etc., at rock bot- torn prices for cash. WE HANDLE THE BEST Maple ;P. A- Main Cros Street, M- FURNITURE. TRUE IDCOOIY LIFs in bttyiiiu ir'xxl thmirs tbxxl thiiijfs ms;tl not ! hii.'h prinsl. Therr's a cortaili'hard wall of facts and t'lL'tires, however, that stands U y, sibilities and pnxlii::il ppnuis-s There are ts-rtain pri.ss (s low vvhi. i, ,, irtsxl, honest Furniture can ! Ixsibt. TIhvh PUICKS are ours If you jy k-ss (HI Tt Its. d use tltxlyiiii; a fact. YOU IvXOAV OUR LINE. It ism-ists of high and low prade Furniture, Springs, Mattre and Refrigen lors, nt PKICHS to suit the times. C. H. COFFROTH, 60S Mailt Somerset, Great Inducements. Goods reduced in price in every line. Dry Goods, Carpets, Oil Cloths, Lace Curtains, Ladies Coats, tie. Now is the time to buv to save monev and jret something good. ?JAMES CLINTOr STREET, STENGER'S ! : : Tin Umf lMkfl fir tftoriouj KMirtli tf July U over, hut I hut imi cImI our vtxu-'i. Wf have jii-t N-n ruiTins riijltl an-! left m Hir Stimnit-r itw.ls. T!i yail uni i it l inK our plicy to mrry over any iiimtuT irtttKl-. t ar' uctnally sHItns Kn-iM-h ti-n-ns (J.iwn um low as IJ' ,c. Jht yarl; this it n)t iu- half wlint lin y to inirl. liinl4 in urston A lt f Z. j'hy rtin tiwu t :lwr v.oli nI-i ilouu to itrn-HHi-i.n-ly low pri-K. Have You Tried a Bottle of Spotine Yet? : : : I-icvs niv iill In ilciiuiihl. V have I la-til hi wiii't. ort:mi, huttt-r t!tM h:tii- ah.I.;i khmI lint- In Mack. Ladies' Wash Suits Have hrt-n jom !ilp. N vi!tr. wliu you c:n buy th.T.i for what yiu m!t! h tv. to ay a ln-situikcr to make tin in; PARASOLS. You Can Say Thetii Now For Just About Ha!f Price. Spotine Will Clean Your Kid Gloves. For sale by J0HIST STJSNG-EE. Johnstown, It EPORT OF THE CONDITION or THC First National Bank, AT SOMERSET. Iu th.- kl.i.- trf IVnn- Ivanut. nt tltt-1-1.- .r liii.tin.-v., July h. W1. RESOURCES: Ixxin anl liMuuts Hi t vTlnft-. ui-ur.it A: uin--cur.il V. S. Iloinl to vn- i-irciiUtlion Premium on I', HHtU. UiukHi-hotiM-, fiiriuuirc. Jc tii' I u frotu lt llitiik" A ituiikfi-H.... luit rnin ai)tntvitl rcM-rv tftutH htkM and oihcr cah it.-n Nn!i" of ottMT NrtTtoitril Iwillk r"r.nt:oa:il kiti:r ctirrt-iicv, nickl" Hiul t'iit. .-. SMft" .1: 1 .t,iil-t-inti r not- j,HtW lU-lciiitini Kuml with (.S. Tn us urer ' ptTiriit. of cin alutioti I :. a ' o ,kt 111 T- ". -c Tl'i :CT . HO 3. l'. Tottl LIABILITIES: fanilal "T-k iid in Vi.iUrt 00 su. ilit fund 1kiu l iHuxidttl pnhLs h exiM-iifM-M 3c t;i t- ind . NaUoiuil fkoik iiou ot)ttindtiit-.. II.' Ihie totlt-r National Kutk I. "d tr, o mi I MH (o Slut- Ktllkullii Uillfci rn I i tdi ii.N unitrtul Itidivaltuil th'poMtA inljct to rhtvk l.i7 it: tkt I'iu'd tvrtincN of delimit, l:i,Kii l-V Total I.sS I. Kdwanl SciiM. !'nidnt of ih Imivw nnitod Ktitk. do si!.inti: y w-tir lhat ti: utMivc ttat'iont N tnu h ti( tt of m$ kiitwlctUc ait J Ifticf. KTWAH1 s 'I I. I . ' I'rfNi.iciif. Snltsi-riKt! and sworn to U-forx' m !ht Z'iilx dav of Julv, A. I- i. HAY. Nolarv TuMio. (OKirFCT attkvi: : tif i. I. srl i. JlilN K. !S m i In r.vtjp. PUBLIC SALE Vahai3l2RS Estate. Hy virtu f an oniit f V lu il tut f till I rluil Kirt (H NillU-IN t OMIIitV. I, tltl- K.vlvai:!. and 10 iim dir--l-tl. I will po . tii.-u- r irivat' s:iif on t r ttn in tinxiu rvsmt, v towu-tup. Snu r t nmniy.ou Saturday, August 4th. 1894, al hm oVI.k-Ic p. m.. Hi., r.illowi.ix r.-j -stat, btl ilu- pniM-rt- ol H. iirv Ijivuutu, dt v U: A ts-rtnln tntPt tf Ihii.I xiuuilf in Kr.rtli. rv-VHlu-y l.iwn-hip. istiiii.-ni.-i itHiutv, I'l-.iii-vl-viiiuii, a.lj.Hinnx lun.N tf Jtilm '.. fjtn.iu. itlit-r Ijtn, SoiiHiiim llnmi. Joint Aklmii.-r! tH al., ttmiMiiiinx n!ul .k; m-n-H inorv .,r uIkmiI iHi'ifi-l.ar, ilir UiUuue well iiuiU-r-tnl, a twu-i4iry LOG HOUSE, ami a Umk hum, uii.l nrvr fiiilinK .rtiit t.n Hi.- pniiii-, u on-Kir.l; , Uii.l wt-il a.lapi.-d (ortraiiiiiic i-itttU-, uu.lrr K.nl rulii vu:uji. Terms : in lialt.l lii.iii .l.-liv. rv of r j jj in..i.lli: mi.l a iM ,,n,- y.-.,r with liii.-rtt im III. li in. III,. In p. r n-ul ti Hi,, pur. lul-e in. n. y to u- (ui.l m li. n ih,. ,n.Mij u ku.. k-t-tl tlowii. SAMI'KI. H. Kt.KNKY. A.liiiliiislnilor of H. nr) ILiyim. .l.x- a, JXKCl'TOK'S MlTICrl F.i'ul trf lVU-r lU.yi-r, latf of (1. ln;i Jioiiin Tom n:.iip. dn-'tl. . I-ltt-nt I 'I111111 nliiry on hIm.vo t-Ui!f ll:ivililf U-. ll Itr.nilo.l In llir llll.l-T-i-.-li,. l,v Itit- iror autiMTilv, imiliv r lii-n i.y Kivt-n I. .all H-rMn in.i.-la.i tt out.! tr.tutr ,. iiutkr iiiini.-itiiilf (yrnrin, mut iihwv lmvin?rlaiiiis iio.ili,! Hi.- v.inr l i.rwM-rrt lh.111 .Inly ai I ht rui.-Mt.nl fi.r urrlu.-iil. mn t(iir,h., Autf JMH: ln, iK'Is.n ii hi oVIoa-k a. 111." ami tiVha-k u. m.. at mv ri nl. nw- of .1. n zl.Mirri illf. - Jonathan hi i-Fit. K.-utrir. I DITi iU S NOTK K Tii 'r.M-.iite of fhri-t.-iin K,-ii.l.l,I. Uit of tirttiivillf t.m iilnp. in-muH--t i-B i ' d-a.-tl. Th uii.l, r-U-n.1 h.ivin !! t.iilx-ini;,! lll'lit-.ir liv the limn to p,.w 11 tt tii,. rxtn-u-liti.t-s lin.l th 6..-K. .Imlriliuu- ilu- fund j,, ni7. Ii:tml ol J. .. Wrulii, f x.-nir of 1 lirintt-im Iw-iii!IiL iKt '.l.. ainti.linlriliulr f l- lm..l ..ri lint In.lii Ilu- n-ai ptilr l.v r.-.-.-l.iii, Ui utru lion in lltr t-Mi.U- ol mi hi t hn.l.iui lU-ini-.i.l d.-t-'d., to an.l hii. our llnnr k-llt nulllci tlH-r. lt UI11I.Y thr lu.i Wiii and IV-.Ltiiu-in of mii-I I hrlsi.-iut liin,i, ,.() aH u.,.r ,w lillntt-itf lava, iM-r.-by flr uhhv liml 1 will t( at ItiiaollW in tla- honaish Soiiit-r-ft. l'a.. on Wr.tiu-x.ljiv, Autu-l .11. A. 1 l. al 1 n'rta l P. u , h,r tin utirvow tf tti-rh-.iviiir llw dun.-, afon-vu.l. h.n ami wlirtvnil parti.. in'rrntt.nl -ati ari.-nd if IIm f pmpt-r. iir la. f..nvr latrrvd from lainici ptiiiiilf la Ibe dL-inlitilloii 111 I11U .l..l.-. J.M L. J'l till, Au.l11.1r. Evaporator on the Mar- kct at less than half the price asked for some others. It will "pay you to get our prices te!ore buying. SCHELL,-: SOMERSET, PA Cross Street. Pa. QUINN, -JOHNS TOWN P - Pa j k:al not mo. J.ilm II. Kumn. r N.k i'.X May T. !(. r to - Voluntary aii;iim..,i J. A. ll.-r!t.v. I tltr In-iirin ui . r.i!ii.,r.. Ii. 1. ' And now. tiin Jtiut- KM, on motion ,rfr,,f. froiii A Kti 1 .. I. iiiiorii.yi. f..r the A iuii.-.-. III.-1 oun i..-iiiil Jolui 1 . K1111M1. I. y.t.. aii- .llt.lT, III Kllv- llHHI III,' -..-.-.!lotl-.. if m.v In nl.-.!. uii.l ulno lo n .rl a tli-ln.iulioii oi iih- Il.llil.n 111 lur rialiiln of tin- Avitrn,-,- t aliwii; HUM- It-aliy rliliti.-U tiit r- lo. uii.l S.ift. rarf C.tm.y, M .- K.tlrtrt fr.un l!i, ininnr.-4 - t'. rtlli.it tin-. Urn .Inn,- -i, I -- - i k. r. Aii. .K. I'niilioiioiary. In ptirvii:i!i.-.-, tlio nlmic .-..niiui,,,. .11 the A11.l1t.1r ill aiii-n.i, ut hit oiti.-r in s..u,. r- t lK.r.ivti, oil t tnliM-xtiuv. July iVh. Ism. i wlui-li nun-all r.iin liaviint cl,,i,,i, ar,- liiinnl in . in Hi, 1,1 to th,. Au. tier or 1 .l,.,jirr.-.l troiu .-01.1111 in for a Miare of tlio aid fund li.-n-.ifi.-r. J. t. KIMMKI, Au.litor. YIM IN'KriiAToiI'S NUTICK. K,inlc of Jonathan Mart, la!.- of Southamp ton t..u iiiinp, ,i.i, r-; ,1.11, ity. l'a.. ,1..- .1. I-tt.-r of :i.lmiui,t rili. hi having U-. 11 i.'nilil-t-d by Hi, ir..Nr Htiltioritv, To lli- un.l.-r,iti-ed. Iioti.f I-. iiri-i-l.y ii, ii i.. all - r-.a. 111-d.l.l.-d It. N.i.l rKtutr 10 inak.- imiii.-.li.ii.- uuv- lll.-llt, Illl.l lil.r. Iuivilll ,-lail.in acalll,! nui.i t-lal.. will .r, -. nt th.111 duly auili. iili.-..l.-it for M-nlt'int nt. JAtuB II. M u: r. -'.ilmiui'.ri.'r. J7-KIT T)K-i NfiTICK. Knta'c of -iarl.-t s. (irimtlu Int.- .,f M.-v-rv dalf liorotn;l. S.lilt-rx I .-.iiilily. !'a.. ,. . ,1. 1-11. l '.-Maui, lilary on the iiih,. .- .,l..i lia vini; lan-ii tfr.int.-.! to llw iin.l.-r,iii..l 1 j tin- .r. r Hiii'iiw II v, notice in jun in ivi 11 ' I k'I in r-'ilin 111.I1 I. iwl t jaj.l ,.,it.' ti", n.ulo: iniiti.tllai,. jm m.-iu ai .,. lannij ,-L.iint iiK.tllml tl;e tii,i. 1,, pr.--iu , i ,ii,v th,-ii!i.-j..t,-, hir -tia tia at, 011 Knilay, An; i"l I7tli. WU. ,l II, Iioiii.. of Harv.y 1 t,n;!.iii, 111 M.-vt rlal In.nil..-ll . h m;vky 1. ..KiKurii, J. II. Null, AKKillUKll, Ationity. Kx.vut.int. un- Itrinlil-n I.tn-in... Irt.v. liniv. l. N'.ir- V.ln;i.n..n. 11,-iirt l'n,...n- . 'l ... .1 1 kiM.wu l,y a tln langui.i f.n-11111.-: ina. li.iii 1 ""' itliif.v. wmk.11.. and i-n-ou. hr l.i.n.l. oor inun- it. rvinov.-d v. hi .-uiiii..i lu.tr h.-ajllu l uM iivi r llvr ir a,. .4 Krvl.l . 1'iwi. anil ln.ny. Mr. I. I" r. rr. K-lhMlriil. l'a. I.uai H H.r similar lmtilii..ln ai. Try 11. urv jsuantiit.nnl. Cann'i Kidney Cur.Co , 720 Venango St. Philadelphia, Pa. Sil hif nil rt !itil,h- l, WHY? Slioui'I t-vrrj' "nr. if in n.tnl of a pur.- .niii ulant for lix-.ll.-lii;.) purp,.-. g to Inn K.-l--r- bi J.i.7 ii.n-aun.. he n ill liii.i ihr laiv t.k n.l,n from nt L,i..,i Tii.- i: Wlu,ki- anr all from liif iap.'-t ami known tlliii:.-ri.aii, at tlir fo;i..m prl.tnt: 2-y rur-old at Ii.nl prr r..ll.m: S-.-jrn.hl a 4-r.u r-od al -J. !; K-y.ir-ol.l al r- H-y.-ar-oldalM.VO-, IU and li-y.nr-old al '' St. Il.-i.-na. I'aliloniia. .n.l.-nl and 1 t.d mtii,n,o lir.in.U tlry and i-w.n l, at t ' lr rtlloii: llhifif wlnr. In.n. mi.,.i .M.,.(. n. i'ort and I'osimi-n, al l.H.n. flnr.-. Ni rloiSr for U,HII. at Cttll n.l for ,n. i H-t A. ANDRIESSEN F.tK-r:il St., All.-vli- ry- X.-lr.ihoii.- .i. Pennsylvania College, GETTYSBURG, P: roundtd in )4 Ijtnrr rHtiHilly. Two mil nnm, .tu.lf 'l:i,lat and JS-i.-iitin.-. s-,-u.l .nHir.ni all tt. lartin. ntn. t.t-rrT iloty. I a.r, an.l II..-JT livniii-tiiiiti kk Liny i.iiii.iii'--. iriim li,Tti. l.il.ran.n. -JL'.ihm volutiii-. p..n.n U.w. In ixirtiiii-iil .f llyairnr '" rhv.i.-al t ullur.- in ,-liar-.-irf all ri ri.-".nnl pli.,1. mn. A.i-,-i.l.- l.v lrv.ii..nt nt!inJ tr.tuin. NrnlK.iiiin lh K.lll. li. l.l of t.rtl burr. m.n.t pln.mt and h.nllhv. , REPRATfflf DEPARTMENT In l-iruli- ltal.liiin, fl.r l.i, anil yotm;.' i"0 l'n-rm f. .r l-tinlnrw, r i-.ll.n;i.. Dii.l.'t- ?''" pal rarr tMT tl.r t'rim-ipM: ami tnrra a.miaii;. in-ni.illne witn xlud.-uln i Ihr l.tlli.llnif. 1 trnn t.i-tln tit It. Imh. I iirintii'ur ad.lr.nu 11. W. Mi-Knli.-lit, l. 1.. 1.1- !.. I'"-'' tl.-nt. or lu-v. t. ti. K.ui.r, A. M , l'nufH -p.il Tii 1:1