Republican News Item. Published Every Thursday. Volume I). jc Kxpert |S Repairing. All our knowledge: all our long experience: all our \ Oresources for doing fine >vatch and jewelry repair- r jS ing is for sale. Big job;, iittie jobs,simple jobs, hardp jobs everything in our iino we are ready to do and«C do better than you ever hll it done before. We've made a special study of superiority. We excell 112 charging but moderately tor it. J Very respectfully J \ RETTENBURY . \ Y DUSHORE, PA. THE JEWELER. \ I IQOLES HARDWARE H '■ THE FINEST UM|» 'ffltollßtL BICYLEC N REPAIRfNT *Hnl Done in first lcass order and as Quickly as possible, using good ' Material and prices right. jlVrll sell you the Best a4^U BICYCLE MADE for CQ>|K THE COLUMBIA » Line of chain wheels always leads the race, from $25.00, $35.00, and $50.00. The Columbia Chainless on exhibition now with coaster brake. Call and see*my.line, if you contemplate sending for a wheel. I will givo you as much for your money as you will get elsewhere. GENERAL LINE OF HARDWARE, MILL SUPPLIES. STOVES and RANGES, Plumbing and general job work, r UniNftOtQ. Estimates given. : Soles Hardware, DUSHORE, PA. I The Shopbell Dry Good Co., 313 Pine street, WILLI AM SPORT, PA., The leading Dry Goods, Notion, Cloak and Suit House in Williamsport. Preparation have been going on for months gathering merchandise, new and up to date, for the different depart ments. We can assure you tl ere is no better selected stocks to be found elsewhere. A LIST OF DEPARTMENTS. Linen Department. Hosiery and Gloves. Everything in table linens, napkins, Kid gloves, knit gloves, fabric gloves, towels, towling, crashs, linen sheeting, hosiery of all kinds for men, women and Domestic Department. Muslin and Knit Underwear. Muslins, sheetings, pillow casings,out- Muslin underwear occupies a large ing, tickings, shirtings, cretons, silkolines, space, as this department hasjgrown larg prints, percals, flannels blankets, com forts, er each year* You get the style, tke ttt, skirting, etc.,this department is complete, the material, the making for the price af nothing wanting. muslin. Why not buy, ready made. Knit _ underwnre, all grades at all prices. Dress Goods and Silks. Corsets. This department has taken more room 25 dillerent kinds found here. We are to display the stock; it's larger than ever. BUre to please you; price, 50c to $2.50, all All the new things you'll tind here. the new shapes. Notions and Fancy Goods. Cloak and Suit Department. . ~ , i this department is larger than ever. This department would make a large H ere von find Tailor Made Suits, Skirts, sized store in itself. Here you will find Waists, Jackets, Capes, Wrappers, Petti small wears, lac«»,purses,dress trimming, coft ftm , c , liuiren *bresscs. gim|>s,braids veilings, netts, toilet articles The newcgl )e8 (or sand Sum . soaps, stamped linens and fancy goods. mer Ilow ready. Don'l fail to visit the Ready to Wear Department when in town. To the out o'( town customers, samples sent on applica tion, state kind of goods wanted. Ready to wear goods sentC. O. D. with privilege to examine. The Shopbell Dry Good Co. "ETERNAL VIGILANCE IS THE PRICE OF LIBERTY." LAPORTE, PENNA., THURSDAY, AUGUST, 8, 1901. T J. KEEIJER. I . J ustiee-of-the Peace. Office in room over store, LAI'ORTE, PA. Special attention given to collections. All matters left to the care of this oflice will be prom tended to. CARROLL HOUSE, D. KEEFB, Proprietor. DUBIIORK, PA. 0n« of the largest and best equipped hotel h in this section of the state. Table of the best. lUtes 1.00 dollar per day. Large stukles. ULYSSES BIRD Land Surveyor Engineer and Conveyancer. Relocating old lines aiul coiners, ami draw ing 111111* a«i«H-ialty. Will usually l>e found at home ou Moudays. Charges reasonable. Estella, Sullivan Co., Pa. HOTEL GUY. MILDRED, PA. R. H. GUY, - Proprietor. Newly 'furnished throughout, special attention given to the wants ol the travel ing public. Kar stocked with first class wines, liquors and cegars. The best beer on the market always 011 tap. llute* Reasonable. COMMERCIAL HOUSE THOS. E. KENNEDY, Prop. LAPORTK PA. This large and well appointed house is the most popular hostelry in this section TAPORTE" HOTEL. P. W, GALLAGHER, Prop. Newly erected. Opposite Court House square. Steam heat, bath rooms, hot and cold water, reading and pool room,and barbershop; also .good stabling and livery, FT J. BRADLEY, ATTORMBT-AT-LAW, Office Building, Cor.Main and Muncy Sts. LAPORTE, TA FIKST NATIONAL BANK OK nr.SllOllE, PENNA. CAPITAL - - $50,000. SURPLUS - - SIO,OOO. Does'a'General Hanking Business. H.W. JENNINGS, M. D. BWAKTH. President. Cashier J. & F. H. INGHAM, ATTORHBTH-AT-LAW, Legal husin«Bß attended to in thin and adjoining counties „A PORTE, PA. £ J. MULLEN, Attomey-at-l ' .l(, PA. on. - I* COUKTY BUILDina NEAR COURT 80011. \ m H. CRONIN, HOTART PUBLIC. OPPICB OH MAIM STRIBT. DUSIIORE, PA ra? ? ? ? • # 112 IT'S WORTH WHILE H to step in and absorb a little General Knowledge that is to be found in a really down to date General Store. The new things for Spring and Summer are now on iEXHIBITIQNj ?????? ? ? ? STEP IN AND ASK ABOUT THEM. All answered at Vernon Hull's Large Store. HiUsffrove* Pa. Everybody Bay* So. Cascareta Candy Cathartic, the moat won derful medical discovery of the age, pleas ant and refreshing to tne taste, act gently and positively on kidneys, liver and bowels, cleansing the entire system, dispel colds, cure headache, fever, habitual constipation and biliousness. Please buy and try a bo* of C. C. C. to-day; 10, 35, Mi cents. Hold and guaranteed to cure by all druggists. ROM HAT Willi Whole Families Trying to Exist on Child's Rations. ELIZABETHGRAD SUFFERS MOST People of That District Become Blind As Sun Goes Down—Many Dying of Starvation At Result of Hunger Typhus. St. Petersburg, Aug. 5.—A traveler chancing Into the district of Eliza bethgrad, province of Kherson, South Russia, would find men and women who, endowed with serviceable visual powers as long as the sun is visible, become totally blind the moment twi light sets in and must be led home. This Is one of the queerest diseases known to medical science, and is one of the camp followers of the famine which is not officially admitted to exist in this district. In correspondence from here men tion has been made from time to time of the dearth which has visited many, though not very large, districts of Russia and of the efforts made by the government to alleviate suffering re sulting from it. The ministry of the interior repeatedly declared the fam ine had been conquered, food had been distributed and seed corn provid ed for the current year. Newsyape s here received during the last few months occasional letters depicting the situation in anything else than the rosy colors which the government or gans used. The government answered by a communique recapitulating what had been done, and repeating former assertions that all was well as could be expected, and then the newspapers received a secrot circular forbidding further mention of the subject. The existence of famine was an in convenient fact at a time when nego tiations were ponding for foreign loans. Access to the famine districts was made difficult for non-rosidents of them, and the charity workers who were not directly under the control of the state were sent back to their homes, and the agencies they had created were placed under the Red Cross, r which Is as much a brunch of the government as any ministry. These measures did not still the natural curiosity to ascertain the truth about the matter, and certain people with Influential connections which could not be ignored sent a trustworthy young man to Elizabethgrad to investigate for himself. He has just returned. Without going into details, he reports the following facts: The city and districts of Elizabeth grad, with a population of 600,000, are suffering now from famine and disease incident upon famine. The investigat or found: 1. General destitution. 2. Many cases of acute destitution. 3. Some people dying of starvation. 4. "Spotted" or hunger typhus prev alent. Hunger typhus is an unfailing indi cation that poverty has sharpened into want. Whole families are attempting to ex ist on rations allowed for a single child. The government is still making an unavailing effort to alleviate the suffering. St. Petersburg has been planning to celebrate the two hundredth anniver sary of her foundation by an exposi tion in 1903. Minister De Wltte has, however, decided that the time Is too short for such a grand undertaking, and it will be deferred until 1913, which will be 200 years after the cap ital was removed here. Actress Shot At Rehearsal. Omaha. Neb., Aug. 5. —Mrs. Millie Lighthawk. an actress, known on the stage as Millie Allen, was fatully shot here yesterday by Thad Brookie, who afterward turned his revolver on him self, sending a bullet through his heart. Mrs. Lighthawk Is dying in the Clarkson Hosplital, with no chance for recovery. Jealousy is said to have been the motive for the deed. The tragedy occurred at a rehearsal of "The Arizona Female Bandit," of which the dying womafli was the author. Escaped Convict Recap., .d. Lincoln, Neb., Aug. s.—Of the three convicts who escaped from the peni tentiary on Friday morning, one, Adaire, was captured by the sheriff of Hall county near Grand Island yes terday. Posses are pursuing the other two with bloodhounds from Lincoln. Adair had discarded his prison garb and was in his underclothing, supple mented with a long coat which some one had given him. Dumont, Aeronuat, Fails Again. Paris, Aug. 5. —M. Santos-Dumont, the Brazilian aeronaut, made another unsuccessful attempt yesterday after coon to win the prize of 100,000 francs offered by M. Deutsch, of the Aero I Club, for a dirigible balloon. He only j succeeded in covering about half the I distance to the Eiffel Tower. DETECTIVE WAS CRUEL. Life Saving Men Attribute Brutality To Pennsylvania Rnilroaa Official. Trenton, N. J.. Aug. s.—Leon Uray, John Welsh and William Welsh, who claimed to be members of the United State Life Saving Service, charge Con stable Dennis Frawley with cruelty and unjust arrest. Frawley is a Penn sylvania railroad detective and met the men at the coal shute just outside of Trenton. Bray and the two Welshs were among 64 men whom Frawley arrested last week on the charge of trespassing on the railroad company's tracks. The men were taken before Justice of the Peace Humphreys, who sentenced them to the county work house for 30 days. Bray and his two companions in listed that they were not on the tracks and Frawley Is charged with having kept some of the men chained to tele graph poles for several hours before taking them to the justice for a hear ing. TOWN SPRINGS UP IN A NIGHT. Lawton, Oklahoma, Already Ha* 10,- 000 Population. Fort Siil, O. T., Aug. 3. —A town of 10,000 people, to be known as Lawton, hits grown up Just outside the Fort limits, almost within a night. Follow ing the ciose of the land lottery at El Reno, thousands of homeseekers, who drew blanks, started for the throe points picked out by the Federal gov ernment for town sites in the new country, namely, Anardarko, Hobart and Lawton. A majority of the people favored Lawton, which is 25 miles in land, and last night thousands are camped in about the proposed town site awaiting the sale of lots on Aug ust 6. Already Lawton has 400 temporary business houses, including a grocery firm and a newspaper, and three streets have been laid out. A national bank has been projected. Every form of gambling known on the frontier is be ing run wide open, side by side with fake shows of various descriptions. To add to the picturesqueness of the scene, a thousand Comanche Indians have pitched their tents nearby. JAPANESE STRUCK7TOO. Oriental Feature Added to San Fran cisco's Big Strike. San Francisco, Aug. 3. —Conferences were held yesterday with a view of bringing the local strikes to a close. While no appreciable result has been reached, Mayor Phelan, who is labor ing to bring about an adjustment, ex presses confidence that the controver sy will end with the week. The new features of the day involved Oriental labor. The Japanese labor union vol untarily called upon Japanese em ployed upon the water front to stand with the strikers, and the Chinese crew of the steamer Coptic was pro hibited from working ashore by the Federal authorities, In pursuance of the exclusion act. STRICKEN IN HIS PULPIT. Asbury Park Pastor Meets Death At Morning Service. New York, Aug. 5. —The Rev. Geo. E. Hancock, pastor of the West Park M. E. Church, of Asbury Park, N. J., was stricken with paralysis at the morning service yesterday. He was carried into the rectory and died at 2.30 o'clock in the afternoon. Mr. Hancock complained of not feel in;; well before he went into the pul pit, but attempted to deliver the ser mon. He had not spoken more than five minutes when the fatal stroke came. The funeral will be held on Tuesday evening at the church, the Rev. George L. Dobbins, presiding elder of the Camden district, officiat ing. Mount Assinibolne Still Unconquered. Banff, N. W. T., Aug. 5. —Mount As sinibolne, the Matterhorn of the Cana dian Rockies, after seven attempts in as many seasons is still unconquered. Waiter D. Wilcox, of Washington, D. C., and Henry G. Bryant, ex-president of the Geographical Society of Phila delphia, accompanied by two Canadian Pacific Swiss guides, were defeated in an attempt to reach its summit, al though an altitude of 11,125 feet was attained. Pekin Populace Becomes Unfriendly. Pekin. Aug. 5. —American and Euro pean residents assert that the de meanor of the Pekin populace is con stantly becoming more unfriendly, and that as the allied troops depart the Chinese resume their old habits of Jostling and cursing foreigners in the streets. London, Aug. s.—The Renter Tele gram company has received the fol lowing dispatch, dated Aug. 4, from Curacao: "Advices from Caracas say that 6,000 revolutionists were defeat ed after 30 hours of fighting on July 29 and 30, with a loss of 800 men, the government loss being 300." British Torpedo Destroyer Wrecked. London. Aug. s.—The British tor pedo boat destroyed Viper struck a rock off the Island of Alderney, in th® English Channel, and is a total wrack. i.2j Per. Year Number l;j WMIMTIM Within a Week ShafTe" ".7ill Call Out All Union Men, NO COMPROMISE WILL BE ASKED Every Mill of the Steel Corporation Will Be Closed, It Is Said—Amal gamation Said To Have Many Sur priees Ready. Pittsburg, Aug. 5. —"Within a week every union man and every union man at heart in the employ of the United States Steel Corporation will be asked to join in the strike now in ing waged by the Amalgamated Association. We must settle whether unionism is to stand or fall. "There will be no more conferences with the United States Steel Corpora tion unless the meeting is asked for by the officials of that corporation. The Amalgamated Association will not request a peace meeting." These and several other significant statements were made last night by Theodore J. Shaffer, president of the Amalgamated Association ol' Iron, Steel and Tin Workers, upon his re turn from the fruitless conference with J. Pierpont Morgan and others in New York. It is now a fight to the bi.ter f.n's-i between the great billion dolkir steel trust and organized labor. Mr. Shaifer says that he is ready to employ every peaceable means within the power of man to win a victory. No quarter is to be given and none will be requested. The entire management of the battle has been placed in the hands of Presi dent Shaffer He has absolute power to call out every man who is connected with the organization, and he intends to do it. He is satisfied with the pro gress of the fight to date. He finds that none of his battle lines have been broken. Mr. Shaffer was asked this question: "Do you think you will be able to close all of the mills of the Steel Cor poration?" "I am of the opinion that every one of them can be closed. We have some great surprises in store for the trust. The men have been organized in some of their mills that they never dreamed could be touched. We have the sym pathy of the workmen, and they will throw any straws in the way of our victory." "Don'f t,l«jme Mr. Morgan for all this," said Mr. Snuffer, as he went on. "Mr. Morgan knows v al/sp 1 uto 1 y nothing about the true conditions of the mills except as he is told by oth»!« He has their word and is guided by it Btot'rolv. 1 believe that Mr. Morgan is a fa minded man and is only acting on his judgment based on information of others whom he looks to." Mr. Shaffer said that the stories that Mr. Morgan had been ugly during the conference on Saturday were untrue. He said the gentleman had been cour teous and business like throughout th:; entire meeting, and if he had lost his temper it was after the adjournment of the gathering. "Are you afraid of southern negroes being brought into break the strike?" "Not In the least. The negroes of the south are thoroughly organized. We have not been overlooking that detail. They make the best kind of union men. The 300 colored men brought from the south to as.-ist in starting # the plant of the Latrobe S:> 1 company, in Chicago, were all ini'iu bers of the union. When they d ; - covered what was wanted of th m they returned to their homes." COULD NOT ACCEPT THE TERMS. It Would Have Meant Association's Death Blow, Says Rees. Pittsburg, Aug. B. —Vice Precid. David Rees said this moinii:.,: "As anxious as the members of the executive board of the Amalo.mpt >d Association are to settle the s-trik' , their refusal to accept the terms of Mr. Morgan was the only alternative left them at the last moment. Fr m the association side to have a;reed to the proposition that would have d - elared all of the hoop combine m!U.: now idle as non-union would have meant the desertion of the thousand, of workmen who were employed in them and who organized and cam ;• out on a strike since the trouble began. To have deserted these men jio-.v would have been the death blow o: the organization and it would have died in dishonor. To fight the trust ir. an honorable battle, with a good chance to win, means at least a chaniv for life, but if beaten a demise ol the Amalgamated Association with honor." Rain Maker a Dead Failure. Lincoln, Neb , Aug. 3. —Without pro ducing the desired result of a fall ol rain, W. N. Wright yesterday aban doned his bombardment of the sky temporarily. Mr Wright said ne was convinced his mortars were too small and the powder charges too litht.