GRIEF STRICKEN GALVESTON. Ston of a| Rtiujjec 112 rom Ibe Uevastatcd Texas City. THE £N I IRd CITY SUBMERGED Citizens? WV-re Held Prisoners Like Eita in a Trap. FIEST REPORT SOT EXAGGERATED Gal< r.l»> \rn> t ia j»«-r Mnn Itrrlarra fit#* nf I.if.* In THnl ( il« Will Br I'ull? ai Tii<iu«nn<l—l !•«* I.firu* *■ Si ri»«-l •»»-«-« in < II) »oH< r<-d th«* l.rratrkt I rnln th•- I df> uf lh«' Sihtk—<" t|ilia ii •' Monti- l"«-II I-il» «* » H«»«a%c i»f « ardt-Ncisl I'or 11» hi i-d I - air Utitianr*' |'ar ilir <i|rirki'U S»r* It »r«. Houston. Tel., Sept. 11. — Richard Ppillaiie. a well known Galveston in-ws man and press correspondent in that city, who i«a- i.cd Ifoust :i yester day after a terrii-le experience, gives the following TfflTWlt of the dluitff It Galveston One of the most awfnl tragedies of modern tiro. - h: - visited Galveston. "Tfce city ]:- in ruins and the dead will number probaMy a thousand. 1 am Just from the city, having b»-en com missioned by the mayor and citizens' committee to re' in tonch with the outside world and appeal for help. Houston was th«* nearest p tint a< whb h working tHecraph instruments could be found, the wires, as well as nearly all the btiiliings t»et*"een here and the j Gulf of Mexico being wrecked. When 1 i '"t (lalvi ston shortly before noor, iin Sunday the people were organ itint tor the prompt burial of the dead, i distribution of food and all necessary work after •* j• ri i of disaster. Th» wr«-cV 112 Galveston was brought abctut by a tempest as terrible that no words can adequately descril>e its in tensity and by a flood which turned ; the city Into a rae'ne sea The weather bureau re' or .- 'mw that the wind at- , tained a ve'.-x-aty of 84 miies an hour w-hen the r - ;r;r.c instruments blew away, so it is impossible to tell what was the Trnxirr.nm Rt «iNßliis of the Storm. The storm becan at 5 o'clo. k Satur day n><>minc. Previous to that a great storm had been raging in the gulf, and : the tide wti 5 - very high. The wind at i first came from the south, and was in direct opposition to the force from the gulf While the storm in the gulf pil«-d the w rer upon the beach side of the city th< • \ rind piled water ! from the bay onto the hay part of the | city. Aboiit noon it became evident that . the city was colng to be visited with <Ji«wst. r. Hi.ndrel* of residences along tfce t«each front were hurriedly a ban- j doned th. fame's fleeing to dwellings In higher portions of the city. Every | home wj ? i ; en«-d to the r- fugees. black or white. The winds were rising con- 1 stantly :rd it rained in torrents. The ' wind w ; s fo force that the rain cut j like a knife By ~ ij'rt K-k the waters of the gulf i and bay met. and by dark the entire j city w.ns submerged. The flooding of / the electric light plant and the gas gas plants left the city in darkness. Togo upon the streets was to court death. The wind was then at cyclonic velorlty Roofs. cisterns, portions of trail'lmss. telegraph poles and walls were fallinr and the noise of the wind and the crashing of the buildings were terrifying in the extreme. The wind nnd waters rose steadily from dark un til 1:45 o'clock Sunday morning. During all this time the people of j GaSve-t n were like rats in traps. The highc-t portions of the city was four to five feet under water, while in the great majority of cases the streets were submerged to a depth of ten feet. To leave a house was to drown. To remain was to court death in the wreckage Such a night of agony has seldom been equaled. Without appar ent reason the waters suddenly began to subside at 1 45 a. m. Within 20 minutes they had gone down two feet, and before daylight the streets were practically freed of the flood waters, in the IT. ennt;me the wind had veered to the southeast. Very Irw llnilillna* K»caped. Very f*w if any buildings escaped Injury- There is hardly a habitable dry house in the city. When the peo ple who had escaped death went out at daylight to view the work of the tempest and the floods, they saw the most horrible sights imaginable. In the thr»f blocks from Avenue N to Avenue P. tn Tremont street. I saw eight Ixxlies. Four corpses were in one yard. The whole of the business front for three blocks in from the gulf was strip ped of every vestige of habitation, the dwellings, the great bathing establish ments. the Olympia and every struc ture having lieen either carried out to sea or its ruins piled in a pyramid far into the town, according to the vagaries of the tempest. Th< first hurried glance over the city showed that the largest structures, supposed to be the most substantially built, stiffen d the greatest. The Or phans' Home. Twenty-first and Avenue M, fell like a house of cards. How many dead children and refugees are in the ruins could not be ascertained. Of the sick in St. Mary's Infirmary, to gether with the attendants, only eight are understood to have been saved. The Old Woman's Home, on Rosen berg avenue, collapsed, and the Rosen berg school house is a mass of wreck age. The Rail high school is but an empty wall, crushed and broken. Ev ery church in the city with possibly one or two exceptions is in ruins. At the fort nearly all (he soldiers are reported dead, they having been In temporary quarters, which gave them no protection against the tempest or the flood. At military headquarters, depart ment of Texas, at San Antonio, the in formation is that of 120 men stationed at Fort San Jacinto, Galveston, only 15 escaped. Further infromation is that the captain In command is among the victims. Lieut. Col. C. S. Roberts, adjutant general, department of Tex as, is in Galveston on a tour of in spection. It is not known if he is among the small number at the fort *ho escaped. No report has been received from the Catholic Orphan asylum, down the isl and, but it seems impossible that it could have withstood the hurricane. If it fell all the inmi.tcs were no doubt lost, for there was no aid within a mile. The bay front from end to end is in ruins. Nothing but piling and the wreck of great warehouses remain. The elevators lost all their upper works,, and their stocks are damaged by water. ' The life saving station at Fort Point was carried away, the crew being swept across the bay 14 miles to Texas City. I saw Capt. Haines, and he fold me his wife and one child and one •if the crew were drowned j:nouu!i Wrrckiiup to UclmHil a nty. The shore at Texas City contains ■enough wreckage to rebuild a city. Eight persons whom were swept across the bay during the storm were picked up there alive. Five corpses were also j picked up. There were three fatalities J in Texas City. In addition to the liv- ' ing an t <lea«t wait a t"be storm cast up I nt Teian tVy « ;«sk**tp and frou* li-.i**! ( ;* of th«* w.iUr ! tb*r<- Sun ; In th* IHi* n**i* portion of th«- city i pied by K i-i p U- tl««rs. and the oth-r i£J2r s; J 1<..» " • . \*,ni 1.". ins. Most I oft! Til • t*p to the till! I hft c.-'v. nt'iii khiec 1 T J t* ».i ! 1 ruin?. They v,-. •*: sj j. S-> vc -. ns-a --1 ag« "oi :h !*• 1 : * r wi.-hip J eompiny; li 1 «! ••'. st: a | ag«r l»r C< ■ . I Charles h . .1..m oi i.i nurs t; . liiit. How m <ay i.v c< • • are thti will n be kno>-:j u'.iil 112 s i: ais | fin: ' j T: • t •, a Dim. the ha ft ton th Ktu . • ligf I works md » irly :i • iu.\ .stri -1 e - ! tab! : ' - ' . ;i' v.; I.:. I \or <ri| c ■ left a slime I «ity. : * ; ' • ' j in burying corpses aiiti cart animals there is dang r of ; .ce. S<'n»e of th stories of the escapes are miraculous. William Nisbett, a cot ton man.was b iri» d in the ruins of the I Co't' ii Exchange saloon, and wh«"n dug I out iii tfc;.- mcrniiif; ha»l n . ''::.!iC*r in • jury than a f«-w bruised fingers. i»r. s <t Tone amniUfr "112 the ■ Cotton Exchange, was knocked setise ! less when ti.» h u.-< collasped, but was j revived by th«- water and was carried ! ten blocks by the hurricane, i A Momau uliu had just given birth to a child was carried from her home to a house a block distant, the men who wr-re carrying her having to hold i her high above their heads, as the water was five feet deep when she was j moved. Many stories were current of houses falling and inmates escaping. Clarence H. Ouley. edMor Of the Everying Tri bune. had his family and the families of two neighbors in his house when the Hw t.IK crumbled and the upper > part slipped down into the water. Not one in the house was hurt. Of the I-avine family six out of seven are reported dead. Of the Rurnett family only one is known to have been saved. The family of Stanley G. Spencer, who met death in the Cotton Exchange saloon, is r» ported to be dead. Thirteen were killed in one building on Eighth street and Broadway. Dom inick Porretto is the only one of the party who lives to tell the tale. Among the dead arc James Wren, his wife and j six children. Dr. I. M. Cline. local forecast of ficial of the United States weather bu ' rc.i'i his brother, Joe Cline, and three children drifted about in the raging torrents for three hours on a roughly constructed raft. They were all bruis ed and cut from their struggle with i flying debris. An entire family living on Thirty fixth street was swept away. The fam ily consisted of Angeline Parker and grandchild. Tommy l.esker, Sullivan Parker a:id his wife, Lily, and their three children. Tlx* bodies of four white persons and 1 scv» n colored were found in the first , 112 of w. J. Ri itmever's residence Sum'.iy morning. Reitmeyer and fam ily w< rein the second story and es caped. M'.- J. B. Tr-id well and infant. Mrs. j C. T. Clark and infant. Mrs. A. Ix)ng ! necker. Mrs. Beveridge and two chil ; dren. Mrs. George M. Schroeder and ' four children and the mother of United States Deputy Marshal Wood were all lost in one building. Mr. Longnecker J escaped with serious injuries. I "Francois," a well known waiter, re ports the loss of 22 persons who took refnre in his house, six of them being memlters of his family. Thi' Mist rot House, in the West End ! was turned into a hospital. All of the ! regular hospitals of the city were un available. Of the new Southern Pacific works little remains but the piling, j Half a million feet of lumber was car ! ried away and Engineer Boschke says as far as the company is concerned it \ might as well start over again. Ocean Stp«mrr» Stranded. Eight ocean steamers were torn from their moorings and stranded in the bay. The Kendall Castle was carried ovr the flats. Thirty-third street wharf, to Texas City, and lies in the wreckage of the Inman pier. The Nor wegian steamer Gyller is stranded be tween Texas City and Virginia Point. An ocean liner was swirled around through the west bay. crashed through the bay bridges, and is now lying in a few feet of water near the wreckage of the railroad bridges. The steam ship Taunton was carried across Pell can Point, and is stranded about ten miles up the east bay. The Mallory steamer Alamo was torn from her wharf and dashed upon Pelican flats and against the bow of the British steamer Ked Cross, which had previ ously been hurled them. The stern of the Alamo is stove In and the bow of the Red Cross is crushed. Down the channel to the jetties two other ocean steamships lie grounded. Some schooners, barges and smaller craft are strewn bottom side up along the slips of the piers. The tug Louise, of the Houston Direct N tvigation com pany, is also a wreck. It will take a week to tabulate the dead and the missing and to get any thing to an approximate idea of the monetary loss. It is safe to assume that one-half of the property of the [ city is wipfd out, anil lhat one-half of the residents have to face absolute poverty. At Texas City three of the residents were drowned. There are but few buildings at Texas (.'ity that do not tell the story of the storm. The hotel is Oik Nan Saved From a wreck will attract the world's attention to the life-saver. Yet let the life-saving be continued every ilay, and very soon it attracts no public attention. If the scene of the saving of one life by that life-saving remedy, Dr. Pierce's I would be in my grave today." writes Mr. Moses Miles, of Hi'.liarrt. I'inta Co., Wyoming. " I had asthma so bad I could not sleep and was compelled to give up work. It affected my lungs so that I coughed all the time, both day and night My friends all thought I had con sumption. My wife insisted on my trying 'Golden Medical Discovery I have taken four bottles and am now a well man, weighing 185 pounds—thanks to Dr Pierce." The People's Common Sense Medical Adviser in paper covers, is sent free on receipt of 21 one-cent stamps to pay the cost of mailing only. At'alress Dr. R. V. lHerce, Buffalo, N. Y. ;i complete ruin. The ofl'.ce of the Texas City company was almost n tirelv de.-'r< > d Nothing rental • •>! the piers «.\- ■at the piling. The v..1 «- age from Galveston litters the >iiu «» for miles, and is a hundred yards or , morf wide. For ten miles inland from the shore it is a common sight t » see small ci 'lt. 1 such as steam laun« h« schooner and oyster sloops The lifeboat of th< life , saving station was 1 . ried half a mile inland, while a vessel that was anchor ed in Moses Bayou Is high and dry ; five miles up from La Marque. : FM nKK'SMI 101. Austin. Tex., Sept. 12. —Official re jmiris from Galveston to Governor Say ers are that 400 bodies have been identified, 200 more are in an impro vised morgue awaiting identification, and many more are thought to have i drifted out to sea and their identity will not be known for weeks. A tele gram from Adjutant General Scurry, who is at Galveston, to the governor, is as follows: "Have just returned from Texas ! City with several Galveston parties, ! who assure me that conditions there j . beggar description. Accounts have not ' been exaggerated. One thousand lost , is too conservative. While a portion of j 1 the provisions have been destroyed by water sufficient on hand to relieve 1 immediate necessities. The citizens ' seem to have the situation well in i hand. United States troops and Com pany C, volunteer guard, with citizens, 1 patrol the streets to prevent looting. I respectfully suggest that the distress is too great for the people of Galveston, 1 even with the assistance of Houston. 1 1 to stand, and that a general appeal for : help would lie welcomed. The estimate of 10,000 destitute does not seem to be excessive." From reports reaching the governor 1 it will be necessary to co-operate with 1 the federal troops to place all the mainland opposite Galveston, as well us the island, under martial law. If reports reaching here are true thieves have begun to enter the city for tha | purpose of pilfering the bodies of the 1 dead. The governor has been inform ed that the commander of the Texas troops has been ordered to Galveston | by the federal authorities and ihe gov ernor will lend him every assistance possible with state 1 to keep vandalism down. According to reports to the gover j nor the work of recovering corpses ' continues unabated, and while a nuni | ber of them are so nritilated that they i cannot be recognized, they are being held as long as possible in ihe hope ! of securing their names. Quite a num | ber of children arc noted aiiio::g t:ie list. A large number of state militia tents ' were shipiied from here to Galveston for temporary use on the island, j Governor Sayres received upwards 1 of 1,000 telegrams during the day from ! j parties in the west and east offering j assistance to the flood sufferers at Gal veston. and from various portions of the state reporting the collection of money and supplies. A telegram from j 1 New York informed the governor that ! two relief trains of supplies had left : New York for Galveston. Approximately one-third of the resi- j denee portion of the city has been swept away. There are several thou- , sand people who are homeless and des- { titute. How many there is no way of finding out. Arrangements are now j being made to have the women and children seat to Houston and other j places, but the means of transportation are limited. Thousands are still to be cared for at Galveston. More bodies have been picked up on I the beach at Virginia Point and Texas ! City, and searching parties are now , getting into the country between the j two points. One member of the life | saving crew says he believes that not 1 one-third of the dead bodies are being | recovered. Many sank before reaching , the beach, and he believes that a week will pass before the bay gives up all the dead. A man just arrived from Galveston ■ says that bodies are being cast into the ! gulf with weights attached as the best I method of disposing of them, while ' others are being buried In the sand where found. Many of these are un identified. and so the death list will never be known. Scores of people are trying to get into Galveston. Many of them claim relaives there, but It is not possible to reach that city at pres ent. All of the small boats and tugs in the bay have been taken down the bay to be used in ferriage. The great storm covered a large area of the cotton growing section of Texas and did tremendous damage to the crop. A traveling man who covers 1 a big area of the state reports that for { a hundred miles west of Houston the wind and storm have wrought great havoc, and all chances for a crop have been destroyed. Southwtst of Houston the fields are ruined. In large cotton growing counties around Houston it i 9 said crops have been beaten into the ground and are worthless. AN APPEAL FROM GALVESTON. It Nuy» the I.oa* of l.lfe Will Iteaeh Three ThouMnnd. Galveston, Sept. 12. —The following statement of conditions at Galveston and appeal for aid is issued by the local relief committee, headed by Mayor W. C. Jones: "A conservative estimate of the loss of life is that it will reach 3,000. At least 5,000 families are shelterless and wholly destitute and the entire re mainder of the population is suffering in greater or less degree. Not a single church, school or charitable institu tion, of which Galveston had so many, is left intact. Not a building escaped damage, and half the whole number were entirely obliterated. There is im mediate need for food, clothing and household goods of all kinds. If near by cities will open asylums for women ' and children the situation will be I greatly relieved. Coast cities should ' send us water as well as provisions, in cluding kerosene oil, gasoline and can- ; dies." '• Some order is being brought out of ' chaos, and something like a systematic ' attempt is being made to clear the • debris and remove the dead. Idlers are 1 being pressed into service at the point ' of the bayonet and made to work, and a military cordon is being drawn tighter and tighter about the place. 1 Every horse and mule that was left ' In the city Is In service. Supplies are ( coming in from Houston, and the first ( line of communication with the outside world was opened yesterday via Texas City. Large forces are working on the ] railroads, and in a few days the people j of Galveston believe the situation will ( be greatly improved. Among the saddest of many sad In- | cidents of the storm was the loss of the families of two police officers while the j husbands and fathers were engaged in rescue work. Officers Joe Bird and 1 John Rowan were assigned to rescue work in the East End early Saturday t afternoon, and together with other oft fleers they worked faithfully to succor ( waterbound families near the gulf. | They rescued about 100 people from the , fury of the storm. They returned to . the station only when the high water j floated the patrol wagon and threaten ed to drown the team of horses attach ed to it. They had no idea that the , waters of the gulf had invaded the p western portion of the city, where | they lived, until they returned to the ( police station and heard the report. \ Rowan and Bird started immediately ;i for their homes, but their families had 112 been swept away. Officer Bird lost his wife and five children and Officer Row- u . an his wife and three children. Confirmation of Massacres of Chris tians by Regular Troops. EMPRESS DOWAGER IN SHAH-SI. Troop* "till I* i* r«ia li»u Flrrlnts M HI«T— % iiK-rirn na >• nil Hrlt tuli Xn> Trminlt'r llirir Si»|»|»ly to \«-ur SliaM-llnl-Kwan. Tien Tsin, Sept. via Nagasaki. Sept. 10. —The Americans and British are considering the feasibility of transfer ring their winter supply base from Tong-Ku to a point msar Shan-Hai- Kwan. on the Gulf of Liao-Tung, which 1 is free of ice and is also a railway ter minus. The chief difficulty in the way of the project is the lack of troops to guard the railway. Itoxers are reported massing along the grand canal. A Christian refugee from Pao-Ting- Fu. where I'ekin officials were enlisting j troops when he left, asserts that he I saw a large force of Boxers between Pekin and Pao-Ting-Fu. He also brings authoritative news of ' the massacre by provincial soldiers of ; the American missionaries at Fen- Cfcow-I : \ng. 15. Mr. Atwaterand his wife, with their two children, Mr. Legren and his wife and Miss English were beheaded. He also ion firms the report of the killing of 'l'.', members of the English mission :n Tai-Yuan-Fu. At Tai-Ku, where Miss Coombs \\&t> throwu into the flames of the burning mission buildings, and where ten French priests were killed, all the members of the American mission were exterminated, the men making a gallant defense un til their ammunition was exhausted. He says there is no doubt that Miss Whitechurch and Miss E. E. Searell were Burdered at Hsiayo, and he con firms the reported massacre of Miss French and Miss Palmer, as well as hundreds of native Christians in the Chi-Shien district of the province of Shan-Si. The same refugee, giving further de tails as to the condition of the party of foreigners already reported as under siege. Aug. 25, by Chinese regulars in the province of Shan-Si, says that the party consisted of four priests, five nuns, five European engineers and sev eral missionaries, and that they were surrounded by troops who had retreat ed from Pekin. On the date in ques tion the foreigners were entrenched in the French cathedral. The latest reports received here from Pekin say that the empress dowager is in th • province of Shan-Si, and that the Japanese are pursuing her. The British marines and two naval I guns have been withdrawn on ship board. Thirty-five villages in the vicinity of Tien Tsin have petitioned the pro visional government for protection. 11l ASIA'S I'lt I'.DOM I N \\C|.; I\ PEKIN Will Soon Outnumber tho Combined Force of the Allien. London, Sept. 12. —The Times pub lishes this morning additional advices from its i'ekin correspondent, Dr. Mor rison, under date of Aug. 31. "The censorship, which is under Sir Alfred Caselee's control, makes it difficult," says the correspondent, "to convey a | true picture of the present situation in Pekin. Today the foreign community was thrilled with horror at the news of the massacre of the missionaries at Pao-Ting-Fu, who were under the pro tection of the imperial troops. Chil dren were butchered before the eyes of their parents. White women were ravished and carried into captivity. Parents were tortured and murdered. "Massacres by red Indians never call in vain for vengeance. Yet the troops remain here inactive. Their one thought and wish are to be given work or to be recalled from Pekin. Surely the civilized world will not suffer this cruel massacre to remain unavenged and make no effort to ascertain the fate of the poor martyred Christians and white women. "Since the relief of the legations one feature stands conspicuous—the prom inence of Russia and the overmaster ing position she is now asserting here. The pageant in the Forbidden City on Aug. 28 was a triumphant entry by Russia, followed by the other powers. Russia did the honors, greatly to the chagrin of the other ministers. "Russian troops are pouring into Pekin daily. Nineteen hundred came yesterday and 2,800 the day before. Al ready the Russians outnumber the Jap anese, and they will soon outnumber the combined forces. Their stay is assuming every characteristic of per manency. Cossacks daily raid the country and drive the Chinese peasants and laborers in herds through the de serted and dismantled city, setting them to build their military camp." Iliiiiintie ('ln lin M From lliiivnli. Washington, Sept. 12.—Claims ag gregating $2,300,000 or more have arisen in connection with the efforts made, principally in Hawaii, to prevent the bubonic plague from securing a foothold in this country and its out lying possessions by burning down a considerable part of the Japanese and Chinese quarter, where it was thought the disease might find lodgment. Two thousand Japanese residents are said to have lost their homes, furniture and practically all their belongings. Their ioss is estimated at $300,000. The Chi nese loss was estimated at about $2,- #OO,OOO. The authorities here feel that It is a matter which Hawaii should ad- Just, but it is hoped that some means may be adopted by co-operation be tween Washington and Honolulu for adjusting the matter. l>o IT YOI KSKLF. You can tell just as well as a physician whether your kidneys are diseased or healthy. The way to dois to take a bot tle or glass tumbler, and till it with urine. It there is a sediment —a powderlike substance —at the bottom after standing a day and a night, there is something wrong with the kidneys. Another sure sign of disease is a desire to urinate often, and still another sign is pain in the back. If urine stains linen, there is no doubt that the kidneys are affected. Any anil all diseases of the kidneys, liver, bladder and of the urinary passag es and constipation of the bowels are cur ed by Dr. David Kennedy's Favorite Remedy- There is noqnestion about its being the best and surest medicine in the world for such troubles. It quickly relieves and cures inability to hold urine and people, young or old", who take it are not compelled to get up a number of times during the night. For putting an end to that scalding pain experienced in passing urine, nothing is MI good as Dr. David Kennedy's Favorite Remedy. It corrects the bad eilects of whiskev and beer; is pleasant to the taste, and does not scani to be medicine at all. Diseas es of the kidneys and the bladder often require the u eof instruments to push back the sandy matter so the urine can be voided. In such cases Favorite Rem edy should be taken without further de lay or the disease may prove fatal. It is sold for one dollar a bottle at all drug stores. It is well worth many times its price. Sani|»l« M Km- If you wish to test Dr. Kfiuip «ly s I«avorite hYnmly before buying to send your full post office address to the Dr. David Kennedy Corporation, Kond out, N. 'l ~ and mention thi- paper. We will then mail vou a sample bottle free, as well as circulars giving full directions for its use. Every reader of the Mot Torn AMKIMCAN can depend upon the genuineness of this liberal offer and all suirerers from kidney troubles should ake advantage once of it at , HIE MIMW j rho President at Somerset to Wit ness His Niece's Marriage. A TORTUNE IN WEDDING GIFTS. Iho ln<*laa<li* n lllizttly Pol- INIMMI uitrtcr-On l* < Filled W ith Sil*«'r THI»ICU nrc I'roin "I ««- WiilijtiH ii•• <1 \iint I«!««.** Somerset, Pa., Sept. 11.—The presi j dent and party arrived here over the | Baltimore and Ohio road at 5:30 j terday afternoon to be present at the wedding of Miss Mabel M< Kinley, ihe I president's niece, and Dr. Hermanus ! L. Baer, which takes place tomorrow. !In the party were President and Mrs. McKinley, Mrs. Katherine Mat- I thews, of Washington, sister of Mrs. ' Abner McKinley; secretary to the president, G. B. Cortelyou; Dr. P. M. Itixey, medical inspector of the navy j and the president's physician; A. J. i Leonard and N. P. Weaver, stenog- I raphers; S. B. Hage, general agent of i the Baltimore and Ohio passenger de , partment, in charge of the train. Among other guests expected from a j distance are Secretary and Mrs. Gage, Postmaster General and Mrs. Smith. ! Adjutant General and Mrs. Corbin, j Comptroller of the Treasury Dawes. Surgeon General and Mrs. Sternberg, i Rear Admiral and Mrs. Crowninshield, ! Quartermaster and Mrs. Luddington, I Governor and Mrs. W. A. Stone, Mrs. j Helen McKinley, Miss Grace McKinley, Miss Mary Barber, Miss Sarah Duncan, l Mr. and Mrs. Charles It. Miller, Mr. | and Mrs. John Wilty of Canton, Con ! gressman and Mrs. John Dalzell, Mr. and Mrs. William Gibson of Pittsburg, i Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Cheney of Bos ton and Frank A. Munsey. i It will be a plain, simple wedding. Said a relative of the McKinleys: "If it MISS MABEL M'KINLEY. had been desired to have a swell wed ding it could have taken place at the home of the McKinleys in New York city." President and Mrs. McKinley's pres ent to the bride is a highly polished quarter-oak chest, with silver mount ings, filled with magnificent table sil ver, including everything that Mr. and Mrs. Baer will need in the way of | spoons, forks, knives, carvers and off pieces during their lives. The plate on top of the chest bears the following inscription; "From Uncle William and Aunt Ida, Sept. 12, 1900." Other presents received by the bride include a generous supply of brilliant jewels, a bewildering assortment in silver and cut glass tableware, unique specimens of the celebrated Favritte glass, solid gold soup spoons with the bride's monogram. M. A. M„ artistical ly moulded in the specially designed pattern, rare pieces of bronze and marble candelabra of wondrous beauty and design, hand decorated china of great beauty and value, almond sets of silver work, salad sets both in silver and china, boullion set of painted china with delicately chiseled silver holders, silver bread trays of artistic patterns and great intrinsic value, pieces of an tique China and Japanese ware, a mass of table cutlery, weighty pitchers of hammered silver of unique design, sil ver toilet and manicure sets, an end less variety of rare pieces of bric-a brac and numberless odd pieces of sil ver. from bonbon dishes to massive urns. In addition to the presents mentioned Miss McKinley has received a large number of articles for her per sonal adornment, valuable oil paint ings, engravings and etchings, table linen of the finest texture and choice spec-iments of embroidery. Saturday it was thought that all of the presents had been received, but yesterday the single expressman of the town was obliged to make two trips from the express office to the McKin ley residence in order to deliver Sun day's accumulations of some fifty packages, large and small. One large room in the McKinley house has been found inadequate to hold the mass of presents, and everything that has ar rived since Sunday has been placed in an adjoining room. It would be hard to tell which room contains the largest number or which lot is of the greatest value. There are enough, however, to crowd an immense vault. It is a notice able fact that all of the presents with few exceptions, those which came from old Ohio and Pennsylvania friends, came from the close New York friends of the family. Less than twenty are from Washington. Many of the pres ents are unique in that they are not to be found in jewelry or silversmith establishments, but have been made from specially designed patterns. A Victim of IteliKioiiN Mania. Lewiston, Me., Sept. 11. —A large aumber of men are searching the woods in this vicinity for Miss Lizzie Bell, daughter of a citizen of Topeka, Kan., who is thought to be suffering from insanity, due to religious excitement. About a week ago Miss Bell, who had been at Shiloh, the institution in Dur ham, conducted by Evangelist F. W. Sanford, disappeared, but a few days later she was found wandering in the Woods ten miles from Lewiston, de mented. In a day or two she apparent ly recovered, but without warning she again disappeared yesterday. Miss Bell is about 21 years of age. Fiitnllt)' NL IIIIIIIM in*N Work*. Philadelphia, Sept. 12. —One man was killed and seven others were seri ously, some perhaps fatally, injured and a number of other men slightly hurt by the bursting of a four-inch steam pipe at the Baldwin locomotive works yesterday. The dead man is James Mulcachy, aged 21 years, and the most seriously injured are Dennis Delaney, aged 38; Andrew Burns, 48; James Kelly, 32; Harry McQuinn, 29; Adolph Hoeschler, 34; Patrick McCon agle, 36, and James Smith, 25 years. All the injured men, including Mul cachy. were either scalded by escaping steam or burned by live coals, which were blown out of the fire boxes of four boilers by the force of the ex plosion.* Xo I'rize Fiuiitiiiu in \i'« Jersey. Jersey City, Sept. 12. —Supreme Court Justice Gilbert Collins, in charging the Hudson grand jury yesterday, referred to reports that had reached him con cerning the alleged intention of New York sporting managers to pull off prize fights in Hoboken and adjacent towns. Collins declared that prize fighting in New Jersey was il legal. and read that portion of the crimes act which makes it a misde meanor for any one to engage in such sport, whether with or without gloves, or assist or abet such exhibitions. iSmmmiISIiATIIEIL The Anthracite Miners May Be Callc ! Out Tomorrow. PRESIDENT MITCHELL'S VIEW. l,en«l« r of HM- I Mine Worker*' Orunn i/.n 112 i«»n Sny* 'i'littl t lie Slriko Or«l«*r SPIMIIN I NOV«IIIHI»I«'— Th«« lM«*n Confident of Victory. liazleton, Pa., Sept. 12. Benjamin James • ' ' st night that the United M : r ~ , s would not back down, and that the only outcome would lie a strike or a satisfactory adjustment of the miners' grievances. Father Phil lips left yesterday afternoon for Phil adelphia and Washington. While hr refused t< say that his mission was to confer with the officers of the National Federation of Labor at the capital, it is believed here that he will make fur ther efforts to have the trouble in the anthracite coal fields settled in an am icable manner. There is a rumoi afloat that Father Phillips has had a conference with President Mitchell in Philadelphia. It is reported that about 125 men em ployed at the Scotch Valley colliery, 15 miles from Hazleton and inacces sible by either telephone or telegraph have gone out on strike for highoi wages. They are not members of th? United Mine Workers' organization and it is expected that the trouble will be settled in a few days. The superintendents of the Mineral company and of the Philadelphia and Reading Coal and Iron company, at Shamokin, were notified from their re spective executive headquarters yes terday afternoon that if the men at the Cameron, Burnside and Henry Clay collieries goon strike in sufficient number to cause the operations to be closed down, then the mules and iron shall be taken from the operations and the latter be abandoned. For some time the collieries had not been pay ing investments, according to state ments by the companies. If the three operations are shut down 3,000 men and boys will be thrown out of em ployment. National Organizer Fred Dilcher, of the United Mine Workers, arrived at Scranton yesterday direct from the ses sion of the national executive board in Indianapolis, and after learning from District President Nichols and Secre tary Dempsey of the unrest and mut terings of discontent regarding the de lay of the strike order, framed and gave out a statement in which he says: "I ask all men to be patient and to not discuss your matter.-; on the street, but do your business in your hall, which is the proper place. So please remain at work untii called upon to stop, and then let all quit and remain idle until your rights have been grant ed and justice done to all. "The matter is now absolutely in the hand" of President Mitchell, to whom was delegated all the power necessary to act in behalf of the board. No man can yet say what that action will be, but we have confidence enough to know that not until the very last effort at conciliation fails will there be a move on his part not inconsistent with the situation." "How about the funds for the sup port of the men?" he was asked. "That is a matter about which we are not yet bothered," responded Mr. Dil cher. "We will dispose of that when the actual necessity arrives. There is no condition yet which demands of us any levy, and the present conditions are substantially provided for. We con trol absolutely the bituminous region, and not a pound of coal therefrom will be allowed to enter into compeition with the anthracite market if any con flict results." STIUKE OKi)i:it IMtOIIAIIL.B. President Mitchell Declare* It Seems Xow Inn voidable. Chicago, Sept. 12. —"I will leave for Indianapolis tomorrow night, and if upon arrival there Thursday morning I fail to hear anything from the oper ators in New York indicative of their willingness to meet us in conference, I shall immediately order a strike." These were the words of John Mitchell, president of the United Mine Work ers of America, last night. "it is with the greatest reluctance that 1 take this step," continued Mr. Mitchell, but nothing else remains for us to do. It is possible that the oper ators will at the last moment agree to arbitrate our difficulties, but I must say the prospect is most encouraging." New York'* Democratic Ticket. Saratoga. N. Y., Sept. 12. —John B. Stanchfield will be nominated for gov ernor by the Democratic state conven tion today and his name will be pre sented to the convention by Judge S. S. Taylor, of Chemung. This is the ticket which seems most probable of final acceptance: For governor, John B. Stanchfield of Chemung; lieutenant governor, William F. Mackey of Erie; secretary of state, John T. Norton of Rensselaer; comptroller, Edwin A. At water of Dutchess; attorney general, George H. Palmer of Schoharie; treas urer, Guy H. Clarke of Madison; en gineer and surveyor, Russel A. Stewart of Onondaga. Five ConKrreaaioiial Nominee*. New York, Sept. 12. —Conventions to nominate Republican candidates for congress were held last night in the eight congressional districts of New York county. The results follow: Eighth district, Richard Vancott; twelfth. Alderman Herbert Persons; thirteenth, William R. Wilcox; four teenth. William H. Douglas; fifteenth. Alderman Elias Goodman. The ninth, tenth and eleventh districts failed to nominate. Jniti**<! His rii-..fher in Jail. Atlantic City, Sept. 12. —Richard Mathis, I'K' santville, who was wanted on the charge of being an ac cessory to the murder of William Matthews, colored, ne r Ploasantville, last Frldaj', yest> i day walked into the local police station and surrendered. He is a L.r> her of John Mathis, now in Jail, Charged \>iiii having killed Mat thews. lit was tent to the county jail to join v '" brother. DIAMOND DIGEST TABLETS Do Destroy Dyspepsia and restore the bowels and liver to perfectly natural action promptly, or money refunded tiy aiiy drug gist. Gentlemen:—l have been taking your DIAMOND DIGEST TABLETS for two months past and am practically a well man for the flrxt time in 10 years. Everything 1 ate dis tressed me, more or less, and 1 was all run down from lack of proper nourishment. I am eating everything that comes my way now, without the slightest inconvenience. Two tablets after a hearty meal and one after a light meal seem to thoroughly di gest everything, and I am daily gaining flesh. My daughter commenced taking them about two weeks ago for constipation, and while they do not act as quickly as some powerful cathartic, they arc punitive. and much more satisfactory, because they do not gripe or distress her in any way, and the relief seems to be of a permanent nature. All other medicines have left her in worse condition after taking than before. D. V. BERGEN, 27 Boyd Ave., Jersey City. Dear Sirs:—l have taken one box of your DIAMOND DIGEST TABLETS and they are the only remedy I have ever found that stops the HEARTRTTRN. I enclose r>f)e. for another box. MRS. HENRY CUMMINGS, Pelican Rapids, Minn. Free sample package for two cent stamp. Diamond Drug Co , 84 W, Broadway. N, Y, i D>, L, &W, RAILROAD. TIME TABLE, ! In Effect September lr t, 1899 i GOING WEST ! i'' As j ! V \1 \V YOKK. j P.M..A. M. iA. 11. I ~ M liuivl.'iy SI I.v. H :to, : IU «io! •••• Crlstopber St.. ggg j 10 oo: .... Ilolxik.-n 9 45 i |,j |J .... S«t:iml.»h \ri | | : f >\ I dallyj \.W ".M. S< immtoh JO !H> 3 ..5 Belienw j i 1...: 34j_ S(J Taylorvlllo j io'ift 203 j» f■- LacKawauna ,u 23 2 i<» 3 •>- ■' ' I'uryea 10 2 j;{ 3 Is|» Pitlstoo , 111 ;j 217 ■' Suf<jiielianna Avc... 10 .; 22U ■'"2" Went Pittston 8 6 Id 1.1 221 ■* ' '' • |W y oui iuir 7i) lo M 220 ' l '' '*' | Forty l-'ort .... 1 '3 [ llenuctl 711 in >2 230 • ' ' A ' ! Kingston 7 I 111 OH! 242 <2> Kiimsii.n 7 1 In ..ii> 'ill 4 - s Plymouth June..... 7 1 i | 247 4 Plymouth I 7 3 1 11 osl 352 4 Avondale 7 2 2.7 •••• Nanticoke 7:; 11 13 302 •••■ Hunlock'f i 7 3 11 111 310 Shlckshinuy 7 5 11 :;o 321 ■••• Hick's Fe-ry s n fu i:; 336 JBeach 1 lvon 8 I 11 4i 342 .... Ilcrwick 8 1 11 ."iI 349 Briar Creek fs 2" I 3 >0 .... Lime liidtre I 8 3 fl2 09 4 0-1 J&j'jr 83> 12 15 411 Jlloomsburg hj" 1222 417 .... Kupurt j8 60 12 27 423 j (la iwlssa 8 ttf, 12*32 420 .... Dacvillc 1 9 in 12 4; 442 ...J Chulasky ! 4 40 .... .1 Jtj Cameron 9 2ii 12 67 464 y NOHTBI'MBEBLAND 0.(5 110 608 .... M Ar. Ar. A.M.: V. M. P. M. P.M. '.Oils'G EAST. 1 1 ! r~ GTATIOWS. |, AS PAS. j PAP. | TAB. PAS New y-j'tn rinr'p nil a.in! a.m. n 111 Barclay St. ,\ r . 3301 50u | I 04u Christopher St... 3 00' 1 6."i !.. .. 635 ] Hoboken 247 44s !.... 6 26 Scranton 10 Oil 12 551 jl 10 a. 111.i P.m. j am dally 1 P.m A .M. P. M. P- « p - M- <Jly Scranton 9 42)12 35 4 50! 5 li'ijo 07 Hellevue 9 jsi 4 SO: 5 3" 002 Taylorville y ;j;;j 4 45] 6 25 857 Lackawanna 0 :>•; 1 4 371 6 ; 147 liorvea a 2!l| ! 4 Pittston 0 10, 12 17 : 420 6 18 44 Susquehanna Ave.. 016 12 14' 424 6 8 s>o West Pittston . . , 4 211 5 ; 8:>0 Wyoming 008 12 Ox 4 l'»i '">o 822 Forty Fort 00.; ..... 4 id; -1 82s Bennett y o<i ! i 4On 1 0:821 Klnjcston, 8 57' 12 02 ' 401; 1•) 'B2l Kingston 8 .V» 12 ou 402 4 . 8 111 Plymouth Junction 8 50- i 3 6"' 4 1 818 Plymouth 846 11 52: 351 441 801 Avondale 8 4o| I 3 4>i s IM > Nanticoke 8 3.V 11 4.'. 342 7 .»l Hunlock's 827 1 3 34 ' 40 Shickshinny 8 lf» 1130 324 J Hick's Ferry 8 04 3 13 • 2> Beach Haven 7 53 : 3 o7 7 12 Berwick 7 4-V 11 04] 3 011 700 Briar dreek 7 ■' 8, j 1 ~ V-' Lime Kitlije 7 30 i 248 65 - K»py 7 •£•: 10 46 242 i tf 13 P!oonisl)urx 715 10 11 233 '' Kupert 700! 10 3i; 231 j®*'' Catawlssa 7U3 10 32 228 °7B Ilar.ville 650 10 21 212 8 " Ohulasky ' 0 Cameron 6 38 j KoHTHUMCIiKX,'D... 825 10 00 150 0 LvIA.M. A.M. P. M. I p - M - Ip.M Connections at Kupert with Philadelphia & Reading Kailroad for Tamanend, Tamaqua, Williamsport, Sunburv, Pottsville. etc. At Northumberland with P and E. l>iv. P. H. K. for Harrisburtt. Lock Haven, Emporium, Warren Corry, and Erie. PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAO? TIME TABLE In Effect May 28th, 1900- ~AM A.M. PAI.P. Ml Scranton(l)&H)lv 6 4"| ;0 38 2 IS ;4 27 Pittston " " '7OB 112 iooo s2 12 4 •>2j„.... A. M. A. M. P. M. P.MI Wilkesharre,.. 1v <i 7 30 ijlO 5."), 308 is 00l Plym'th Ferry " 112 7 38 fli 02t 3 16 I'e 07!_*"*'| Nanticoke " 746 il 10j 326 6 171." Mocanaqua .... " 804 11 32 546 6 37:"" Wapwallopen.. " 8 13 11 42 356 647 Nescopeck ar 824 11 52 407 7 A.M. P.M. P.M. Pottsville iv § 5 50 >l2 30 \ Hazleton " 705 1 200 550 "" Tomhicken " 7 '22 218 •> 10 '" Fern (ilen " 7 2!> 227 <> IS Rock (Jlt-n "| 7 35 234 625 Nescopeck ar 800 300 C'atawissa.. .ar! A. M A.M P.M.P >1 Nescopeck lv Ji 824 §ll 52 407 00 Oraasy "I 833 12 12 4n; 700 Espy Ferry "If 8 43 12 I" I 4 21 7 - E. Hloomsburg, 847 12 14, 4 2!I 7 2"'/ ""' Catawissa ar| 856 12 21' 4 :!5 7 32: Ca tawifSa lv 855 12 21 435 732 South Danville " 9 14 12 38 4 .'|3 7 51; Sunbury ''l 935 100 515 sls |A,M. P.M.IP. M'iui.J Sunbury lvjjl 9 42 (j 1 lOij 5 4". s 40 Lewisburg.... ar 10 13 1 4"i 0 ' Milton " lu OS 13!) 614 9 oi| Williamsport.. " 11 00 230 7 10: 950! Lock Haven... " 1160 34 * S 071 ! Kcnovo '• A.M. 4 10; 9 IX) Kane " 8 2.5j ' P.M. P.M.! Lock Haven.. 1 v'; 12 10 3 15' llellefonte ....ar] 1 05 11 4 II Tyrone " 215iti on Philipsburg " 423 is 826 ! Clearfield.... " 617 909 | Pittsburg.... " 0 55:11 30 j A.M. P.M. P. M. P M Sunbury lv 9 14) S 1 >5 •"> 2> i.s 31 Harrisburg.... ar; 11 30 § 3 15 , li 55 10 10: |p. M. P. M. P. M. A m Philadelphia., ar 5 3 17 !! 6 23 ||io 20 4 25 Baltimore "5311 ji 6 i'o 4»2 30 Washington... " $ 4 10|, 7 15 10 55 i a") I A.M. P, M. *" Sunbury lv 5 9 57)jj 2 031 L« wist»iwn .Ic. ar II 10 3 50J ; Pittsburg "j 655 §ll 30 j A.M. P, M P. M. P M _ Harrisburg.... lv 11 45 346|| 72u >IO2O P.M. A.M.AM Pittsburg ar U .55 II 113" 150 ."> :>o P.M. PJIA M AM Pittsburg lv 7 lo 1 s3u 250 |S 00 . . , A.M AMI J P Mi Harriiburg.... ar 155 3 4i>> 01013 10 ' P M A Ml Pittsbmg lv | j 8 ou P M; •••• i.ewistown J;. " 7 30 5 3 10 Sunbury ar s y j 5 00 P. M. A M A >1 A M Washington... lv, lrt 40' 7 4f> in "mi Baltimore '• II 41 4-V s4 > li 45 Philadelphia... "j U2O 4"5 s -hi 12 2i [\\\\ IA. M.| A -Mi A. M. P Mi - Ilarrisburic lv, « 7 11 lu - 4 t«i' Sunbury ar 5 !)■'< u :in 1 10'. 5 40;"" **" I P.M. A MAM Pittsburgh i ; 12 45 2 50 ; K oo| Clearfield " * 1 00 ' I* 0 2Xj I'liiitpsburg.. " 100 ;10 12 Tyrone " 715 I H 10! 12 30! Heikfonte.. " N :>1 it 32 j 112 lyock Haven ar » ;i0 jlO 30j 2 43|;"" IP. M. A M A M P M Erie lv, 112 :«» i Kane, "j 755 •> 00' 1 Kenovo " II J.", , 4u 10 30' |""' Luck Haven 03 7 1125 3 (HJ iA. Al. P Ml ; Willlamsport.. " Ina 83D 12 40 400 Milton •• 1 .'l6 il lit:1 27, 4>2 "" I-ewisburg "I I «05 1 15 447 Sunbury ar, 227 a 4ti 165 6 21' A.M.' A Ml' M P M , Sunbury lvU 050 »55, 200 54* Snutii Danville "l 7 Catawlssa ••! 7 3.'!| 10 3a 2 -Mi 6 271 K Hloomsburg.. " 7 10 43 243 632 Espy Perry " 7 4:; 110 47 Itf 36 Creasy " 7 .Vi II) 56 255 046 Nescopeck " 803 11 05 ■'! 0"i 665 I j j A 51 A M l'. M. P a j" Catawissa lv 73S Neseopeck lv II . 110 705 Kock CJlen »r 8 21: 12 21 1 :»i 731 Peril (Hon •• n :u; 12271 142 737 Tomhicken ", sl2 12 ■<■'< 151 745 "" Hazlelon "J 1' 02 12 .'5 512 805 Pottsviile •• II 30 2us ii :;o !i 05 "" AMAMP M P 51 Nescopoek lv 58 03 11 I's . .: 05 855 • ... •Vapwallopen..»r 818 11 20 :l Hi 7ov Mocanaqua .... " 828 li 82 29 721 •••• Nanticoke " 8 P Ml Plvm'ih Kerry t 12(2 :i 57 1762 .... . Wilksbarie ... • »06 12 10 406 8001 All P M P M 1* M Pittstotii I>A 11) ar »?9 12 4'.i 482 836 | Seranton " "1 1008 I is 20 '--9 05 \ Weekdays. 1 Daily. 112 Flag station. Additional Train leaves llii/lcton ">.ir» p. ni., Totehieken 5.35 p.m., Kern (lien p. m , Hoi k ( ilen 5.50 p. ni., arriving at (.'atawissa Pullman Parlor and SleojHny t':irs run on through trains between Sunbury. William-port and Krie. between Sunbury and Philadelphia and Washington and between Harrisburg, Pitts burg and the West. For lurther information apply toTieket Agents J.Ji. IWTCII/A'SOX, ,/. It. WOOD, j Geri'l Manager. Gen'l Past'nW Ay GOAL!O , COAL!6S COAL! 7 mi Hill! ton ' | —AT— Pegg's Coal Yard. Sa.nplcs of Coul - may he seen at Brown's hook Store, No. 229 Mill Street, where orders may be left, and all desired in formation obtained. Local telephone line con nects Brown's Book Store with Coal Yard. OJ 1 ick, Removed to Yard ;; on Canal slip, off Ferry St. ' (formerly Wool ley's yard). Robert J. Pegg, COAL DEALER. " T ■_ 1 ! PHILADELPHIA & READING RAILWAY IN EFFECT JUNE 30, 1900. I il " TRAINS LEAVE BANVILLK 'weekdays onlyj I For Philadelphia 11.2", am. [ For New York 11.2: a in, , For Catawissa 11.25 a. m., H.Ol p. m. s For Milton 7.42 a, in.. 4.00 pm. I For Williamsport 7.42 a. m„ 4.00 pm. ; 1 rains for Baltimore, Washington and the I south leave Twenty-fourth and Chestnut ; Streets, l'ln ;i I-iiOna, weekdays—323, 714 , 10-22 a. 111., 12.11), 1.33, .!.«{, 4.12, 5.03, 7.311, 8.20 p. ' !" rr' s 7.11 a. in., 12.10, » 1.12,6.03. , :y,, 5.20 p. m. ATLANTIC CITY RAILROAD. . Leave Philadelphia, chestnut .Street Wharf and South si raet Wharf. t For ATLANTIC CJTV- Weekdays-Kxpresp, • S.iki. 9.00, lu lIA. M , (1.00 Saturdays only) 1. 30, 2.00, ;-,.tiii 3.40 sixty mlnntesl, 4-00, 4:10. 5 (...0(1 no Minutes), I.im, 4 :10 (5.00 sixty minutes) I s.4o(Soutil St„ 5.30) 7.15, 8.30 P. M„ Aecoin -1 015 A. .M , 5.40 (South St., 5.30) 0.30 P. M., Sun -1 days Express, 7.30, S.OO, 8.:», 9.00, 10.00, 11.0, 1 P>/ ' 45 ' 7I > ''' " M " Accom - ®' ls A - M.,5.00 Leave ATLANTIC CITY-Weekdavs—E.\press O. li Mondays only), 7.00, 7.45,(7.55 from Mas sachusetts Ave.,l (8.20, sixty minute) 9.00, j0.1.1. 11.00 A. M., 3..30, l.:nj, 5.30, 7.:|0, 8.3(1, !Uio 1 Accomodation 4.20, 7.05 A. M., 3.50 P M Sundays—Express, 8.45 A. M., :j.;in, 4 30, sooi O.IKI, 0.30, 7.00, 7,30, s.oo, 9.30. P M. Accom. 7.15 A.M.. 4.32 P. M, Parlor cars on all express trains. For CAI'K MAY -Weekdays—B.4s. 9.15 A. M„ 2.15, al. 10, 5.30 P. M .Sundays—B.4s, 9.15 A.M. For OCEAN CITY-Weekdays -5.45, 9.15 A. M..d 1.50 c 1.20, 5.30 P. M Sundays—B.4s. 9.15 A. M .. 5.00 P. M. For SKA ISLE ClTY—Weekdays—9.ls A. M. 2.1' e1.20, s'lo, p. M. Sundays-8.45 A. M., •">. 112 P. M. a South St. 4.00 P. M.; h South St. >■■*> P- M. c South St. 4.15 P. M.; d South St. 1.45 P.M. sl-00 Excursions Atlantic City 7.00 A. M., daily additional Sunday 7.30 A. M. For Cape May. Ocean City and Sea Isle, Sun days 7.00 A. M„ additional Ocean City, only Thursday, 7.00' NEW YOKK AND ATLANTIC CITY EXPRESS. Leave NEW YORK (Liberty Street) 3.40 P. M Leave ATLANTIC CITY, 5.30 A. M. Detailed time tables at ticket offices. I. A.SWEIGARD, EDSON J WEEKS Oen. Superintendent. General Agent. JOHN W. FAENSWOETH INSURANCE Life Fire Accide&t and Steam Boiler Office: Montgomery Building, Mill Street, Danville, - - PenvT'a Tuts Cki:/. • '* <>• 1 t'n:K promptly curct where all others fail, Cougho, Croup, Sorv Ihicat, Hoarseness, whoopinr Cough and Asthma. For Coneumption it ras co rival; has cured t'lousanrts.Brul will crnF. TOO If take:!in time. gold by Dmpgists r.n a antce. Kor .1 Laino Hack or Chofit, uso SHILOH'ii ESLLADCNNA F'LAw i PHH.O;i'S/»CATAR«a 3 N %S^^REK£W Have you c .turrit ? This romrdr!"injaraa« teed to euro you. Price. CO eta. Injector irea. NERVITA PIUS Will Restore Strength, Energy And The Ambition that Nature Intended All to Have A Nerve Tonic and Blood Builder. 112 Brings the pink glowf—^— —" to pale cheeks and M(J .restores the tire of youth. By mail 50cts PILLS 11>» r box, 6 boxes for m '52.50, with our bank- Ml able guarantee to cure .or refund the money Cla. spaid. Send for circular - ~~ and copy of our bankable guarantee bond. NervitaTablets^S (YELLOW LABEL) Positively pnaranieod cure for Paresis, Loco motor Ataxia, Nervous Prostration, Hysteria. Fits. Insanity, Paralysis and the Results of Excessive Use of Tobacco, Opium or Liquor. By mail, in plain packaee, SI.OO a box. 8 for $5.00, with our bankable fruarantee bond to cure in 30 days or refund money paid. Address NERVITA MEDICAL CO. Clinton & Jackson Sts., CHICACO, ILL For Sale by Kossman & Son.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers