Republican News Item. Published Evdry: Thursday. Volume 4. £ Years J in Dushore. The largest and best stock of goods We ever had for the V I jfall anb Winter Zvabc £ 112 The finest line of £ 112 Time%Kespsrs> / Q Ever seen in a Jewelry Store in Sullivan S RETTE IN BURY, ? DUSHORE, PA. THE JEWELEII. ✓ Coks... * TT GENERAL l)ardwar^- DWA R E PAINTS, OILS, VARKSHES and GLASS. SPECIAL inducements given on CTOVES and RANGES and all kinds of HEATING STOVES for Wood or Coal, suitable for parlors, halls, churches, school houses, camps, etc. Attention to a line of Cheap air-tight wood heaters from $3.00 to SIO.OO. Also a line of coal heaters from 82.50 up to 835.00. My Special Bargain Sale is open on a line of heaters slightly damaged by water. Good as new, but they must be sold CHEAP If in need of a cheap heater, call early. My "Dockash" Ranges are without a question the finest in the market, made up of the best material and designed to be a handsome Range. Furnaces always the best on the market. In fact we are ready to heat the universe either in hot water, steam or air. Try us, we guarantee satisfaction. STOV REPAIRS AND REPAIRING. PLUMBING, STEAM FITTING AND SUPPLIES. MILL SUPPLIES. Hardware, DUSHORE, PA. Turniiurc i HO -i-s and CARPEST.' "Id* Will do well to see Our White Enameled Beds $4.75 t 5.25 and 8.76 i HARDWOOD BEDS $2.75, 4.75" and Chamber Suits S2O. to 25.00. Solid Golden Oak Double Cup boards 9.50. Extra High Back Kitchen Chairs 3.95. High Back Dining Chairs, 8.50. Rockers, 1,50 to $8 Ingrain Carpets, 30, 35, 40c. Brussels Carpet 75 to 85c. Rag Carpets, 30c to 50c. Matting, 12 to 30c. Childs Cradles, 1.00 and 1.50. Cribs with springs, 2. 75 and 3.00 Cook Stoves ant> IRanges RED CROSS MAKE, B—2o Herald with high pipe shelf *2:!.00 B—2o Ditts $20.00 • B—lß withreservoir, K—2o with reservoir, $4 ex tra. g—23 Champion Cook Stove §23.00 8—25 Ditts, $25.00 Every Stove warranted to give satisfaction. Jeremiah Kelly, HUGHESVILLE, "ETERNAL VIGILANCE IS THE PRICE OF LIBERTY." LAPORTE, PENNA., THURSDAY, APRIL 5, 1900. Wanted at once for cash 1000 cords ~ Bass wood,, Cut 4 1-2 feet long, sto 15 inch es diameter. Apply to AMERICAN MANUFACTURERS ASSOCIATION, SONESTOWN, PA. This strip is manufactured under a U. S. patent and is the neatest, strongest and most durable window shade holder on the market, and we guarantee it to be as represented or money re tunded. The price, Express paid, to all point! in Pa.. Md., Del., N.J. and N.Y.,One Dollar per dot. other states $1.25. Your order solicited. lOHN A. PARSONS A CO. Cstswllts, Fa. T J. KEELER. I • Justice-of-the Peace. Oitk'o in room over store, LAI'OKTK, l'A. Special attention given to collections. All matters left to the care of this otlice will be promptly attended to. CARROLL HOUSE, D. KEEi'E, Proprietor. DUSHOUK, PA. Ono of ihe largest .in.l best |-ed U > in this section of the xtittu. Table ot ti e bust. Ra.te« 1.0t» dollar pur day. L;ir)je at. liles. COMMERCIAL HOUSE. THO3. E. KENNEDY, Prop. LAI'OKTK l'A. This largo and well appointed isl i sl the most popular hostelry in this section " LAPORTE HOTEL. ~ P. W, GALLAGHER, Prop. Newly erected. . * "Opposite Court house square. 'Steam heat, bath rooms, liot and cold water, reading and pool room,and barber shop: also good stabling and livery, P. SHOEMAKER, Attomey-at-Law. Otlice in County Building. LAI'OKTK, PA. Collections, conveyancing; the settlement of estates and other legal business wilt receive prompt attention. J. BRADLEY, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, orrict IH COUNTY BUILDING NEAHCOUUT BOUSE. LAI'OKTK. PA PIKST NATIONAL BANK ■ OF DUSIIORE, I'ENNA. CAPITAL - - $50,000. SURPLUS - - SIO,OOO. Does'a General Banking Business. B.W.JENNINGS, M. I). SWAKTS. President. Cashier T # J. & F. H. INGHAM, ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, Legal business attended to in this and adjoining counties _ A PORTE, PA. £ J. MULLEN, i Attorn ey-at-Lavw. I.APORTE, PA. Office over T. J. Keeler's store. J # H. CRONIN, ATTORNEY*AT -LAW, NOTARY PUBLIC. orrici on MAIN STRICT. DUSIIORE, PA ri* wjL Candles I Hothfng elae adds BO much ju 1: I to the charmof the drawing r h I room or boudoir at* the soft Ij r;idf- ' h 1 ant light from CORDOVA CaudieM. ii. A Nothing will contribute mor« to the JfTJT/ art tat ic success of the tynchfois J tea or dinner. Th« bent decusa\»Te jj yjgy candles for the or th« ¥Sr? most elaborate function—to* cot ) ta*e or macwon. Blade im ell colors • TSf and the wost delicate ttete by Ul STANDARD All CO. J Jfl eixAeold everywhere. 4 ANOTHER BOER AMBUSH. THE BRITISH LOSE GUNS, WHICH ARE RECAPTURED. A Full Bummary of the Transvaal, War News—Progress of the Con flict From Day to Day—Tha British Encouraged. The extraordinary run of success which has attended Roberts' opera tions so long has been broken by a British force walking blindly into a Boer ambush. It was captured, with six guns. Colonel Broadwood is in command of the Tenth Hussars, the Household Cavalry and two batteries of a force of mounted Infantry, under Colonel Pilcher, garrisoning Thaban chu, due east of Bloemfontein, and about half way between It and the Basuto border. Late-.—The British have recap tured the guns which were iost with Col. Broadwood In the ambush. President Kruger says that the last expressed desire of the late Command ant General Joubert was that he should be succeeded as Commandant General by Louis Botha, who has been chosen in his place. There is as yet no confirmation of (he death of Gen. Joubert, but the re port is generally credited in Europe. The London Times publishes a de spatch from its L'oemfontein corre spondent, stating his belief that 150,- 000 foreign treops have been landed to aid the Boer Republics. The report that General French and liis force of cavalry have returned to Bloemfontein, and that a small Brit ish column had hurriedly retreated from Ladybrand before superior Boer forces, indicates that the Burghers have made good their retreat from the south of tlie Free State, thus elud ing the British columns. A despatch from Ladysmitii says 20.0U0 Boers are guarding the nine passes of the Drakensberg ICange, led by Commandant De Beer. This force consists of Free Staters. Messrs. Wolmarans, Fischer and Wesels, the peace envoys from the Boer forces, after visiting two or three European capitals, will goto New York, by way of Antwerp. It is un derstood at The Hague that they are invested with large powers, and are prepared to agree to anything looking to intervention. The Boers are entrenching at Kroonstadt, where they may make a stand against the advance of Roberts' forces, which comprise some 35,000 cavalry anl Infantry. A despatch from Bloemfontein says General French has returned from Thaba Nchu, having failed to engage the Boers, who are trekking north ward. Lord Roberts's infantry have now been quiet for fourteen days, and news of an advance is hourly expect ed at the British War Office. The Times points a statement from Cape Town that the Boers, after de ducting heavy losses, are probably unable now to put more than 30,000 men on the fighting line. — „i PECULIAR LAWSUIT. Result of a Chat, Late Travel and Appendicitis. Miss E. L. Delacroix and S. Scoville, jr., of Stamford, Con., have begun ac tion for SI,OOO damages against the New York, New Haven and Hartford Uailroad Company which is unique. Late travel, brakemen the clearness of whose voices is impugned, pedestrian- Ism, appendicitis and the law of the State of Connecticut are all mixed u|» in the suit. None but a jury of Nut meg citizens could ever hope to "calc'- late" accurately enough to settle the rights of the matter. . Air. Scovilie and Miss Delacroix came out from New York on the late train a few weeks ago. They were happy in each other's society; so hap py that they didn't notice the brake man calling out Harlem, Mount Ver non, Pelhamville, New Eochelle, Rye, Harrison, Mamaroneck, Cos Cob Greenwich or any other of the way stations on their blissful journey. "Stamford! Stamford! All out for Stamford!" Mr. Scovilie and Miss Delacroix thought the men yelled this. The brakemen say they did not. Mr. Sco vilie and Miss Delacroix ran to the door and jumped to the station plat form as the train was starting. They saw the vaishing red tail-lights of the train and the station signboard, "Sound Beach," at the same moment. "Five miles from home," sighed Miss Delacroix. Mr. Scovilie took off his hat and murmured a few words in to it. They had to walk home. Mr. Sco vilie wants damages because he caught cold. Miss Delacroix deposes and says that she had only recently re covered from an operation for apendi citis, and that the long walk injured her to a considerable degree. The railroad company insists that the brakemen really called out "Sound Beach" in clear tenor voices. CASUALTIES. By the burning of the High School building at Owosso, Michigan, April 1, two firemen were killed by falling walls and four other persons injured. The Columbus and Wheeling ex press train on the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad crashed into a freight train at Whiting, Indiana, death in a fire which destroyed the farm house of John Brassill, in East Providence, R. 1., March 29. The mother succeeded In rescuing one, an Infant, from cradle, but MISCELLANEOUS NEWS. Events of the Week Told in a Few Words. The recent heavy floods ia Uruguay have caused great destruction of cat tle and wheat. Two bridges on the Central Railway have been swept away, with a loss of $50,000. The first electric tram car ever operated in Santiago do Chile went over the lines April L The Committee of Senators which visited Cuba has returned to Wash ington well satisfied with their visit. All classes of people on the island are declared to be anxious for inde pendence, the only difference of opin ion being as to the haste with which it should come. It is reported in Lima, Peru, that Colonel Parra, on his return from an expedition to the interior, will take the Portfolio of War and Marine, in succession to Senor Carillo. The body of Ed Hembrick, the trap per boy, has been recovered from the Red Ash mine, in West Virginia, where there was a disastrous explo sion on March C. This is the last body of the fifty victims. The University of Chicago is richer by nearly $5,000,000 than it has ever been before. John D. Rockefeller has confirmed his gift of $2,000,000 to the university, and President Harper, Secretary Goodspeed and the trustees supplemented it with the announce ment of gifts in cash and land re ceived aggregating in value more than $2,000,000. The Maroons are again threatening disturbance in Jamaica. Armed police have been sent to quiet them, and the military authorities have been noti fied to hold troops in readiness. Jacob Kopplc, a miser, who was ' found dead in a dilapidated house on his farm in Lewistown, Pa., where he lived alone, has been buried at Middle port. He lived in squalor, but rela tives found in the house bonds and securities worth $30,000. It was also found that he owned property at Jer sey Cltv»worth 112 BUILT ON SAND. Hotel Wollaston. in Boston, to Be Taken Down. Because it was built on sand, and shifting sand at that, the Hotel Wol laston. one of the handsomest new apartrr.ent houses on the Beacon Street Boulevard, must be taken down. The cost of the structure was $200,000, and It w.is c ompleted about two years ago. Soon after it was occupied tilt' walls both inside and out side, began to open, and so rapidly tlid the cracks widen that the attention of the authorities was called to the structure, and it was ordered vacated. As a consequence, one of the most handsomely linlshed apartment hotels in the city—ir lien Just over the Brook line boundary—has lain idle for a full rear, with its: vacant rooms growing Cardinal VatnUlo Mazella. Bishop of Palestrina and Prefect of the Congre gation of Sacred Rites, is dead at Home at the age of 67. His loss is a serious one to the Jesuit order," of which society ho was a member 1.25 Per. Number 46 WELL PLANNED ROBBERY A NEW YORK REBTAURANT LOOT ED OF $3,100. The Scheme Involved the Changing of a SIOO Bill and a "Make-Up" That Deceived Employee—They Sent the Waiters Away. One of the most skilfully planned and daringly executed robberies the police of New York have been called upon to run down was carried out March 20 by five men who took from a safe in Healy's fashionable res taurant, at the northeast corner of Columbus avenue and Sixty-sixth street, $3,100 in cash and checks. Three of the thieves sipped their coffee while the fourth entertainingly engaged Cashier Casey, and No. 5 looted the cash drawer in the safe, an arm's length away from the em ploye. The stolen checks, amounting to $273 were later returned by maii to Thomas Healey, the proprietor. Two well-dressed men alighted from a cab in front of the restaurant short ly before 9 o'clock, and entered by the Sixty-sixth street entrance. They took a table in the rear of the cash ier's desk. Soon after two others en tered and walked quickly to a table opposite the cashier's desk. A fifth man, stout of figure and wearini; a black mustache, bustled in and seated himself at an adjoining table. The portly man who had entered last finished his breakfast tirst. He called the waiter to the table and handed him a SIOO bill in payment for a check of sl. The waiter took the bill and walked slowly toward the cashier's desk. Before he reached it the man got up from the table, called the waiter, and said lie was in a hurry and would give the bill to the cashier himself. He gave the wniter 25 cents as u tip. Then lie went to the cashier and presented the SIOO bill. Iu the small safe drawer, in which were the receipts for four days, Casey placed the bill. He closed the drawer but did not lock the safe. Then lie stepped to the cigar counter, and while giving the man his change con tinued to answer innumerable ques tions concerning a proposed dinner. While this was going on one of the two men who sat behind the cashier got up and went ostensibly to the cash ier to pay his bill. The waiter had meantime been sent back for an order. The man crawled under the brass railing unnoticed by the cashier and quickly reached the safe. He opened the drawer, which Casey had failed to lock, and quickly looted it of its con tents. Then he crawled back, ad vanced to the cashier with his check and put down the exact amount of change and left the restaurant. The stout man had kept up his in cessant questioning, which had dis tracted Casey's attentions and pre vented any sounds of the robbery be ing heard. During this time the three confederates had remained uncon cerned at their tables, apparently en joying their breakfast. The stout man finally said he would call later in the day, and, going over to the two men still eating, greeted them pleasantly and went out. Five minutes after the man had left the bartender called on Casey for some change for the day's business. Then it was that the cashier went to the drawer in the safe and discovered the robbery. FAMILY FEUD. The DePeyster Trouble Involves a Whole Village. The family feud which ha« been raging in the DePeyster family has involved the whole village of Tivoli, N. Y., in a bitter political strife. Chafges of bribery and the import ing of voters from Saugerties. and other places in the Interests of the factions in the recent village election are being freely made. The success of Colonel John Living ston De Peyster in getting elected t President of the village is said to have so enraged .the father that the son will find his administration of village affairs thwarted in every way in which his father's great wealth and influence can thwart it. The aged General has long sought to control the politics of Tivoli, and when it was announced last week that Colonel De Peyster had been elected Village President the followers of the elder De Peyster began to cry "fraud." "Money was somewhere," said a devoted follower of General De Pey ster. "Was bribery practiced in the vil lage election?" was asked.. "Yes, there was bribery," he an swered. "General De Peyster w»snot on the ground at all, and we were beaten by 59. I will not say that enough votes were bought to defeat the General's followers, but that votes were bought there can be no doubt." Robert Baldwin Davidson, oldest member of the Philadelphia Stock Exchange, oldest graduate of the Uni versity of Pennsylvania, and last sur viving clerk of the old Bask of th* United States, is dead.