WASHINGTON LKTTKrt. Wasiiinoton, D. C. Feb. 1, 1890. 'Jo Hue Hditor of tlw Johnxtovm Democrat. •' The Czar " is the title given Speaker Reed, since ho, in accordance with his threats, ruled that a visible quorum was a constitutional quorum. Never has greater indignation been expressed by the Democrats of the House than was con tained in the vigorous protests of Messrs. Carlisle, Crisp, Breckenridge and others against this revolutionary proceeding on the part of Mr. Iteed ; and never was the Honse in a greater uproar than when it was seen that the rights ot the minority were being so ruthlessly taken from _ them. The only Republican that pos sessed the moral courage to even iiu.i rectly disapprove of the proceeding was Butterworih, of Ohio. Mr. Reed at tempted to defend his action by quoting from decisions made in the State Legis latures of New York and Tennessee. The ruling was made for the purpose of taking up the contested case of Smith vs. Jack son, which was opposed by the Demo crats because the House had not yet adopted a code of rules. Senators Vance and Hampton have re plied to the speech of Senator Ingalls on the race question, The administsation silver bill, recently introduced in the House, is meeting much opposition from Republicans. Senator Teller, in making an argument against it before the House Committee, character ized it as a " Wall street measure," and Senator Morrill, in introducing it in the . Senate, took special pains to say that he would ask to have it printed and referred without committing either himself or any "member of the Finance Committee in its favor. The administration seems to lack influence with its party in Congress. One negro is satisfied with Mr. Harri son's views on the negro broblem. Thai is ex-Senator Bruce, who has been ap pointed Recorder of Deeds for this dis trict. A very silly rumor was current here this week, to the effect that the Republi _ cans would not pass a tariff bill at the present session because they wished the question to remain open for the next campaign. They will pass a bill because they hope to close the question, knowing very well that the tariff is their weakest point. No bill, however, that they will pass can close this important question. Tariff reform us preached by the Dem ocratic platform the last campaign is daily making converts, and in the most unex pected quarters, and the fact is apparent that if voted on by the people now it would sweep the country. It is rather early to expect Congress men to express tlieselves as to the candi date in '92, but the following shows the feeling in a portion of the South: Rep resentative Blount, of Georgia—" The people of Georgia are for Cleveland.' Representative Crisp,of Georgia—" Cleve land and Tariff Reform are good enough for Georgia folks." Representative Dockery, of Missouri—"As Tariff, Reform is to be the issue of '92 we naturally look upon Cleveland as the mau to lead us." Representative Davidson, of Florida— " The sentiment of my State is now over whelmingly for Cleveland." Representa tive Kilgore, of Texas—" Texas is for Cleveland against the world, the flesh and the devil." The rumor that Secretary Nobis was to be appointed to a seat on the United States district bench to succeed Justice Brewer, recently appointed to the United States Supreme Court, lacks confirmation, but the Republicans who have been work ing so hard to get him out of the Cabinet hope that it will turn ont to be true. The district tax bill refunding about $20,000,000 to the States that paid the *4 direct tax levied in 1801 —which was 1 vetoed by Mr. Cleveland, passed the Senate again with only seven votes against it—live Democrats -Berry, Call, Coke, ' Vance and Vest —and two Republicans, | Messrs. Blair and Plumb. It will shortly become a law and the Treasury surplus Jill be $20,000,000 less. The Montana cases will be henrd by the Senate Committee on Elections Feb ruary 15th. If surface indications count the two Democrats have little show for yetting seated. , The World's Fair question still drags. The House Committee is engaged in per fecting a bill with the site left blank, and the Senate Committee is waiting tor the House to act. 'Tne House has ordered the Committee on Reform in the Civil Service to investi y gate the Civil Service Commission, and the Committee will decide Monday when it will begin. I The publication by the newspapers of the new extradition treaty with England before the Senate has acted upon it, has angered the members of the British Lega tion here. They should remember that . in America the newspapers always get I the news and print it without asking any body's permission. The G. A. 11. has a strong lobby here working for the passage of a service pen sion bill. The bill they want passed will A)st the government more than $110,000,- Xlayear. Difference In Brothers. (ew York Weekly. Mr. Highup—" I don't see why brother illiam doesn't prosper.- He has as good lusiness as mine, and an excellent lo ion, but he is constantly having re pots. No matter what he attempts, he ms to blunder. Mrs. Highup—" But you must remem ber, pi.y dear, your brother William has fe to advise him." ,3 Citizens National Bank will be / for business during the coming A. T. STEWARTS GOLD. R END OF THE CONTEST OVER THE J ' GREAT MERCHANT'S MONEY. 0 3 I •40,000,000 Have Shrank to W15,000,000. A Brilliant Succohh, but a Sad Sequel. The Helm aud Jndge Hilton Agree at Last —Characteristic* of A. T. Stewart. 1 The Stewart will case is settled at last. The remains of the forty million dol lars, or thereabouts, left by the great Scotch-Irish New York merchant have been divided between tho church and the lawyers, the executors and heirs of Mrs. Cornelia Stewart. The greatest "will case" ever brought to suit iu America (for the Vanderbilt case was only on part of the estate) fails to come to trial, and some $15,000,000 are dis tributed by agreement. But the mystery as to how $40,000,000 shrank to 1)15,000,000 is not solved, and §by agreement of all parties no more questions are to be asked. The $15,000,000 is only an estimate; the residuum may swell a little beyond that or shrink a little be low it, but in any event a dozen per sons and one church will be at STEWART greatly enriched. A. T. STEWART. Rum awarded would seem enough for reason able desires, and the amounts are briefly as follows: The Garden City cathedral (on Long Island) gets SBOO,OOO. Other specified legatees get about $2,200,000. Judge Hil ton gets—well, no one knows how much, but he keeps all that A. T. Stewart gave him, all that Mrs. Stewart gave him, and all that he had obtained before the suit began, and all in consideration of simply surrendering his further claim against the estate, which is a little matter of $987,857,861 As he cheerfully surren dered this in order to keep the rest, read ers will draw their own conclusions. It is no libel to say that of successful ad ministrators Henry Hilton h the modern champion. The residue of the $15,000,- 000 goes to Mrs. Stewart's heirs in these proportions: Charles J. Clinch $3,600,000 Mrs Sarah N. Smith 3,600,000 Miss Anna Clinch 1,300,000 Miss Emma Clinch 1,300,000 Rosalie Butler 390,000 Helen C. Butler 390,000 Virginia Butler 390,000 Prescott Hall Butler 390,000 Maxwell A. Butler .. 390,000 Lilian L. Swan 390,000 Lawrence Butler 100,000 Charles Butler 50,000 Four of these Butlers are children of another, so it will be seen that it is all in the family and a very nice plum. All this was agreed to, and all the heirs signed the agreement in the office of Elihu Root on Broadway, and all suits, now two years pending, were withdrawn the same day. The articles of agreement covered twenty-six large pages of printed matter, and represent the work of four eminent lawyers for many weeks—ex-Judge Horace Russell THE STEWART HOME. and Leslie W. Russell for the executors, ex-Judge William G. Choate and Joseph H. Choato for the contestants, assisted by ex-Surrogate Daniel G. Rollins and | Elihu Root, Esq. By it 134 parcels of real estate are conveyed and their titles settled, including the Stewart store on Broadway, the once noted Stewart man sion on Thirty-fourth street, two large | hotels, Niblo's Garden theatre and many other important properties. After all, so complicated are the de rails that three months more must elapse before tho last steps can be taken, there being suits in distant states, sales or dered by courts and property in the hands of trustees and receivers; but practically the great case is settled, and the expectant public is to remain for ever disappointed as to learning the de tails of Judge Hilton's management. Enough is known, however, to make the serial story of Stewart and Hilton the great financial drama of the age. Of Alexander Turney Stewart the world has heard much, and but little of it need be repeated. He was bora near Belfast, Ireland, Oct. 2, 1802, studied at Trinity college, Dublin, but did not take a degree, landed in New York in 1823 and two years later opened that cele brated store at 283 Broadway, which gradually expanded into the greatest dry goods business under one man in the world. Until the civil war began he confined his charities strictly to his own countrymen, sending a ship load of pro visions to Ireland during the famine of 1846-47. The civil war, so his few inti mates said, "touched his heart;" he was an ardent Unionist, donated liberally, and, once in the habit, thereafter gave large sums to worthy objects. In March, 1869, President Grant appointed him secretary of the treasury, hut tho law forbade an importer to hold that place. April 10, 1876, ho died, and troubles too hard to bear began for his gentle, affectionate but unsophisticated wife. None of their children had lived more than a few days, and Mrs. Stewart had become almost a recluse. lie often de clared that he had not a relative in the world, and did not like any of Mrs. j Stewart's relatives. Some ot them he cordially detested. His mien was rather forbidding. He had sharp features and an unfriendly, suspicious air. His busi ness was his darling and liis pride, and he wanted it continued under one man agement. But it would be folly to sup pose that a man by tho name of Stewart could die leaving some $.'10,000,000 and no "relatives" appear. The New York city directory alone contains two pages of "Stewarts." The "relatives" came "not single spies, but in battalions." Mrs. Stewart and Judge Hilton received letters from every part of the globe, ohiefly, of course, from Great Britain and Ireland, and tho countries thence settled, but some in al most every written langung \ One claimant, a Russian, was specially im portunate and finally threatening. Ho claimed to be able to prove that A. T. Stewart was his brother, an e.iile who changed his name on coming to Amer ica. On tho night of Nov. 7-8, 1878, the remains of Stewart were stolen from the vault in old St. Mark's churchyard and $25,000 reward was offered for their re covery or information to convict tho robbers. The whole country was con vulsed. A new crime had been invent ed. Double guards were set at the tombs of Commodore Vanderbilt and others. The bodies of several million aires were in tho next few years buried in the center of immense blocks of ce ment. The robbers sent the usual hints for a "negotiation." Judge Hilton peremp torily refused, and the public blamed him severely. He insisted that Sexton Hamill was the guilty party, and this raised a storm of indignation. For two years the search was maintained—a ro mance in itself. At last the judge yield- GARDEN CITY CATHEDRAL. Ed to the pleadings of Mrs. Stewart and "negotiated." The robbers sent from Canada pieces of the coffin and cere ments in proof of their possession of the bones—for these alone remained—and demanded $250,000. Judge Hilton re fused, but Mrs. Stewart employed her own agents and the terms were at last arranged. Full particulars are not known, but it is conceded that the sum finally paid was SBO,OOO. In the summer of 1881 a secret agent of Mrs. Stewart drove a one horse wagon alone at night into the most se cluded hollow of Westchester county, N. Y., met the robbers, paid the money and received the remains, with satisfactory proof of their identity. They now lie in a secure vault under the cathedral the deceased had donated, and it is said that if robbers should succeed in reaching the vault, a touch on its railings would start a hidden spring and set the great bells in the tower ringing and alarm the sleeping village. All this time the business left by Stew art was running down, and the widow was falling more and more under the control of Judge Hilton. At length, so say her relatives, it reached a point where she could not employ or discharge a house servant or give $5 to her church without his consent. On his behalf it is alleged that, in tho prime of life nnd with a large and growing law practice, he gave F f A up all else to car- / ry out the wishes of A. T. Stewart |V J X~ wtjl that the business f should be contin- I ued under management, an d that in consii'era- iMj' w tion therefor he mllw/jlj was to be mag- / / / ificently reward ed. The public JUDaE nlLToN know to a certainty but two facts: Judge Ililton has received much, but tho business is not continued. His first notable performance was an order that "Jews" should not be admit ted to the hotels in his control. The Is raelites in return did not admit goods from tho Stewart-Hilton establishment into their stores. It is scarcely necessary to add that they had tho best of it. Tho old Stewart business was soon abandoned and the executor devoted his energies to Mrs. Stewart and the estate. No one knows its real value then. Judge Hilton puts it as low as $15,000,000: the contest ing heirs put it at four times that. Third parties place it at from $30,000,000. to $40,000,000. Of the ,- gifts" made by Mrs. Stewart to Judgo Hilton no estimate can be made. They aggregated millions, and still he held an acknowledged claim against her estate for nearly a million more. She was nearly seventy years old when her husband died. She gave also $1,100,000 to her own relatives. In due time it ap peared that but four days after her hus band's death she conveyed all her inter est in "the business of A. T. Stewart & Cq." to Judge Hilton. This is the con veyance which he in the recent suits claimed to be absolute. Her will also made "important concessions" to the judge, but gave the "residue of the es tate of Cornelia M. Stewart" to her rela tions. There was a suit, of course, and after two years it is settled as above de tailed. Tho millions so laboriously gath ered by the great merchant are scattered, and the sensation loving public is never to know bow. THE LADIES OF THE CORPS. Information Concerning the Wives of Dlplomates. Tho ladies of the diplomatic corps at Washington form no inconsiderable ele ment in social life at the capital. Ba roness de Fava, the wife of the Italian IP!! J§j- W \E.4 BARONESS DE PAVA. MRS. RKIJO MUTSD. MRS. YE WAN, minister, is now first lady of the corps Her husband came to the United States as King Humbert's representative in ISSI. The baroness comes of a Lombard family distinguished in war, diplomacy, politics and science. She was born in Milan and is the daughter of an eminent physician, who was greatly interested in and identified with the unification of Italy. She was a great beauty in her girlhood, with a magnificent voice and so marked a talent for music that she at one time studied under instructors, who wished to fit her for the stage. Her family, however, opposed this design, and it was given up. Subsequently she married the Baron de Fava. The baron has long been in the diplo matic service of his sovereign, and his wife has been admired at the various courts at which she and her husband have resided. She is no longer young, having a son, Professor Francis Fava, who occupies the chair of engineering and architecture at the Columbian uni versity. Mrs. Mutsu, the wife of the minister representing the Imperial archipelago, comes from among the aristocrats of her native land. She is a native of Tokio, the capital of the mikado. Her name is Reijo, meaning dragon, the emblem of good fortune. She married Mr. Mutsu in 1871. They have a daughter about 15 years old whose name is Saiya, which means constancy. She is being educated at the best schools at the capi tal. They have also two sons. The minister and his wife are -efinod and cultivated people and have become imbued with notions foreign to their own country. The wife has abandoned her native costume and fashion of dressing her hair, and when she appears at re ceptions dresses like any fashionable American woman. The Corean legation only recently broke down the barriers which keep their women from the outer world, and not long ago two ladies of that legation ap peared at drawing rooms and receptions. The Corean reception was one of the fin est given during the last season. The wives of the officials received and ac quitted themselves with grace. Tho Chinese government has per mitted the wives of its representative and hi 3 secretary to come to America. Mrs. Tsui Kwo Yin, the wife of tho Chinese minister, is quite a Mongolian beauty. When a Chinaman really has an ances try to trace it goes away back to the time when Romulus had not been heard of. Mrs. Tsui Kwo Yin does not trace her lineage back of the flood, but to a time when the land could not have dried out and the walking become good, Mrs. Geong She is lady of honor. Then there is Sirs. Wang Ilung Ting, wife of the secretary of legation, who is a very at tractive woman. These ladies, though they are permitted to reside in America with their husbands, are not allowed to go to balls and recep tions. They go out in closed carriages, but have not yet tasted the sweets of in dependence enjoyed by the American woman. Dunn Cutler Investigation. "It never rains but it pours." Sergt. Dunn, of the New York government signal service, is painfully aware of the truth of the adage, for during six months he has had nothing else than rain to pre dict. For all this he suffered the ana themas of the Gothamites, but he was not destined to get off even with this punishment. Very recently a squall came up upon which the sergeant had not calculated. A fIfST ' second lieutenant 'Li'i of the signal ser- \ vice appeared in the office at the , top of the Equit- (/ able building and thereupon there )f was a "blowing" rrMSgW which sot all the ' wind gauges re volving like tee- SEROT - Du ™- totuius. The lieutenant camo to investi gate the office, and when a second lieu tenant asserts himself there is no end to the terror he can strike into the breasts of non-commissioned officers and pri vates. It is not the wretched weather the sergeant has been giving the citizens of New York that the lieutenant com plained of, but the fact that the discipline is lax. Perhaps, being interested in scientific work, the men engaged in signal duty forgot to rise and stand at atten tion every time the lieutenant entered. In other words, one's attention may not always be given to Boreas and a second lieutenant at 'he same time. Miss Francos Willard comes out strong sometimes. She says: "Catch Edison and constrict him inside a wasp waist coat. and he sure you'll get no more in ventions; bind a bustle upon Bismarck, and farewell to German unity; coerce Robert Browning into corsets, and you'll have no more epics; put Parnellinto pet tiooats and home rule is a lost cause." The Gift or Gab. George Stephenson was a strong aoa I original thinker on many scientific sub jects, hut lie ha<l not always sufficient fluency of speech to defend his views. One evening he held an animated discus lion with an acquaintance, Dr. Buck- Land, 011 the theory of the formation of coal, and as Buckland excelled him in tongue fence. Stephenson was completely silenced. Next morning he was walking thoughtfully through his grounds, when Sir William Follett came up, and asked what he was pondering. "Why, Sir William," said he, "I am thinking over that argument i had with Buckland last night. I know iam right, and that if I had only his command of words I should have beaten him." "Let mo know all about it," said Sir William, "and I'll see what I can do for you." The two silt down in an arbor, and the astute lawyer entered with zeal into the points of the case. When he had com pletely mastered the subject, ho said: "Now lam ready for him." After din ner Sir Robert Peel, who had been ac quainted with the plot, adroitly intro duced the subject of the controversy, and tho result was that in the argument which followed tho uinn of science was overcome by the man of law. "And what do you say, Mr. Stephenson?" asked Sir Robert, laughing. "Why," ho re plied, "I say this: that of all the powers above and under the earth, there seems to me to be no po.v r so great as the gift of gab."—San Francisco Argonaut. llouscm ami tho Death Rat**. Mr. Noel A. Humphreys read a paper of much interest before the Statistical society on "Class Mortality," in which ho drew attention to the fact that in the Peabody but l lings in London, which now accommodate some 30,000 persons of tho poorer classes, the number of infant deaths has been reduced seven per 1,000 below that of infants in London gener ally during the hist five years. This shows, he said, how much housing has to do with our rate of death; and this is confirmed by the fact that the poorer classes who live much in the open air, like gardeners, nurserymen and agricul tural laborers, attain an average age al most as good as that of clergymen them selves, in spite of their much greater privations. It is impure air, in the long run, which shortens life even more than any other cause. It is a pity that insurance oitioee and benefit societies cannot inspect the houses of their clients, and charge a higher fee for insuring the lives of those who live in ill drained and ill ventilated houses than they charge for insuring the lives of those who live in well drained and well ventilated houses. What a re form in house structure that might bring about.—Boston Transcript. Wcbsterlana. An interesting anecdote of Daniel Web ster is given by Hon. Charles K. Tucker man in his article on "Bygone Days in Boston" in The North American Review. Webster was delivering an address in Faneuil hall on the necessity for indi vidual exertion and unflinching patriot ism to avert the dangers that threatened the political party whose principles he espoused, when lie perceived a terrible sway of the packed assembly (consequent on the rush of those endeavoring to enter) and noted the danger that might ensue. The orator stopped short in the middle of a sentence, advanced to the edge of the platform, extended his arms in an authoritative attitude, and, in a stento rian voice of command, cried out: "Let each man stand Arm!" The effect was instantaneous. Each man stood firm; the great heaving mass of humanity re gained its equilibrium and, save the long breath of relief that filled the air, perfect stillness ensued. "That," exclaimed the great orator. "i 3 what we call self gov ernment!"—so apt an illustration of the principle he was expounding that the vast audience responded with deafening cheers. llitriie-Jones' Greatest Work. According to the London correspond ent of The Liverpool Post, Mr. Burne- Jones is nearly approaching the comple tion of the greatest work of his life. It is a commission he undertook many years ago for Mr. Agnew, and upon which he has bestowed an infinitude of loving care. The subject is found in the old legend of the Briary Rose, which Tennyson put into verse nearly sixty years ago. Every one knows the story as told in the dainty verse of "The Day Dream," with its pictures of the sleeping palace, the sleeping beauty, the arrival of the fairy prince with "joyful eyes, and lighter footed than the fox;" how he broke the charm that lapped his love in sleep and how: Over the bills anil tar away Beyomt their utmost purple rim, And deep into the dying day The happy princess followed him. Mr. Burne-Jones tells the story in his own way in four pictures of colossal pro portion and infinite beauty. The work is so far forward that there is hope of its being exhibited in Bond street next year. Masculine. Tom, who had been forbidden to climb trees in his new trousers, had disobeyed, and was receiving a lecture from his father for injuring his clothing. Fearing that a flogging was to follow, Tom sought to create a diversion. "Pa," he exclaimed, "my teacher says some plants are masculino gender and some feminine; now I know which trees are—do you?" The father's curiosity was excited; he was fairly trapped. "No," ho said, "which are they?" "Masculine," said Tom, "'cause they wear boy's pants,"—and for that time he escaped the switch.—Youth's Companion. What We Should Say. A little boy—instead of a little wee boy. A silver dollar—instead of a large sil ver dollar. lie drove the horses—instead of he drove tho carriage. Ho came through the doorway—in stead of through tho door.—Good House keeping. "Try Ayer's Pills" For Rheumatism, Neuralgia, and Gout. Stephen Lansing, of Yonkers, N. Y., says: " Recommended as a cure for chronic Cestiveuess, Ayer's Pills have relieved me from that trouble and also from Gout. If every victim of this dis ease would heed only three words of mine, I could banish Gout from the land. These words would be —'Try Ayer's Pills.'" "By the use of Ayer's Pills alone, I cured myself permanently of rheuma tism which had troubled me several months. These Pills are at once harmless and effectual, and, I believe, would prove a specific in all cases of incipient Rheumatism. No medicine could have served me in better stead." —C. O. Rock, Corner, Avoyelles Parish, La. C. F. Hopkins, Nevada City, writes • "I have used Ayer's Pills for sixteen ?'ears, and I think they are the best Pills n the world. We keep a box of them in the house all the time. Tlioy have cured me of sick headache and neuralgia. Since taking Ayer's Pills, I have been free from these complaints." "I have derived great benefit from Ayer's Pilis. Five years ago I was taken so ill with rheumatism that I was unable to do any work. I took three boxes of Ayer's Pills and was entirely oared. Since that time I am never without a box of these pills." Peter Christensen, Sherwood, Wis. * Ayer's Cathartic Pills, PREPARED BY Or. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mast. Sold by all Dealers In Medicine. HOW IT WOfiKKD. Good morning Jack ! why 1 haven't seen you for a month past. What in the world is the matter with you ? You seem to have renewed your youth." " Well Pliil. I have. Don't you remem ber the last time I saw you. how misera ble 1 was ? Sick and blue, and in that sort of mood a man gets sometimes when lie feels the most noble thing in life is to go straight to I lie devil." " Nof SO bad as that, I hope ; at all events you didn't go that way you arc looking far too happy and hearty." " Thank goodness, no ! or rather, tbank Vinegar Bilters. Do you rememeer that day 1 saw you last, when you recommend ed that remedy to me so persistently, and 1 was first vex al and t lien half convinced." I remember it perfeclly, and you needn't suy another word upon the sub ject ; your looks tell me that you took the medicine." "No doubt of it: everybody remark* upon my improved looks and temper; but I must really tell you all about it. I got the old style, as you recommended, and didn't mind the bitter taste at all. I fin ished the bottle in about two weeks, and was greatly improved, so much so that I determined to change oil and try the new style. " Well, how did vou like it?" " You tolil me your wife preferred th new style, I believe; well, I must say lagre with her. 1 like tne olci style very much but the new is a finer, smoother, more ex pensive preparation." " I believe it is: in fact, I have heard so, and 1 wonder the McDonald Drug Company sell it for the same price tliey do the old style, because it is really a very costly preparation." " well, that dosn't concern us Who was it said thai people fancied themselves pious sometimes .vneu they were ouly bilious ? No matterl was ouly going to say that I believe people often seem wicked when it is only their liver, or their stom ach, or some other cantankerous organ of the body so out of order they couldn't be good if they tried." " And if all the miserable dyspepsia, and victims of bil.ousncss, headache and the thousand and one ills that fiesh is heir to would only tnxe Vinegar Bitters, what a happy world this would be ! " "I should recommend the new style." '• I never go back on the old style." '• Well, they can nay their mo icy and take their choice for doth kinds work ad mirably." Only Temperance Bitters Known. Tiie Great Blood Purifier anil Health Restorer. Cures all kinds of Headache within thirty minutes—Try it. The only Temperance Bitters known. It stimulates the Brain and quiets the Nerves, regulates the Bowels and renders a perfect blood circulation through the human veins, which is sure to restore perfect health. A beautiful book free. Address, It. H. McDONALD DRUG CO., 532 Washington street, New York. jams Cm In .our Imm.for •. '"it." who ma, J? *•'"' < " MiSamplyj. minion ete Co., ll' l * SI J* " AUDITOR'S NOTICE.—In the Orphans' court o( cambrin county. In rcaccotSt of l-oter s. Fisher, administrator of lluirh McMonlgle, deceased. Having on motion "f Jacob Zimmerman. Esq., , n l , P"'-"'f<f Auditor to report the distribution of funds In hands of said accountant to and among those legally entll led thereto. Notice Is hereby given that I will sit at my orilce. No. ! Franklin street In Johnstown, for the purpose aforesaid, ON TIIt'HSIIAV, THE 23rd Of JAN I illY, lMiiu, at. 10 o'cloek A. M., when and where all parties Interested may appear, or txi forever do barred trom coming In on saKHuni MABTIN Johnstown, January 4,1880. AUUIIUS.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers