Tlie Johnstown Djuiuciat. PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY MORNING, Nr. 138 FRANKLIN STREET, JOBfSOwJf, CAMBRIA CO., PA. TERMS—BI.so per year, payable In advance ; outside tho county, fifteen cents additional for postage. It not paid within three months 82 wIU be charged. A paper can bo discontinued at any time by payfug arrearages, and not, otherwise. The failure to direct a discontinuance at the k pi ration of the period subscribed for will be considered a new engagement. .Ww SuJbscrtp lons must be necompanfed by the CASH. 1,. D. WOODRUFF, Editor and Publisher, FRIDAY APRIL 4, 1890. THE Fair of 1892 will he held in 180:1. ♦ + IF one-half the population of the earth were to be killed off by fooling with fire-arms, thero would still be some who would he foals enough to point guns at other people. CARDINAL MANNING, whose work among the laborers in the recent London dock stiiUcs is remembeicd, has beer, giving at tention to the condition of working women in London. lie says : " I think the time has come for stcrnuous and proper efforts lo he made to protect the working woman, anil lo insure them equal fairness in the mailer of their hours of work and their wages as the men now ob tain. The time is peril 'ps not far off wen the sight of young, ill-fed girls, ac quiring permanent injuries through long hours of loil, breaking their backs bend ing over machinery in ill-ventilated rooms, will be regarded as an act ot bar barity, and wiil be punished as such." 1 A THE APRIL CENTURY. The Century for April is remarkable lor the variety of its contents. Two of .Mr. Cole's charming artistic engravings ac company a paper on Giovanni Bellini, by Mr. W. J. Still man, in tlie series 011 Italian Old Masters. One of these engravings is printed as a frontispiece, and the conduc t >rs ot the magazine claim that American wood-engraving has never before been put to such important use as in this seriis. Mr. Jefferson's Autobiography readies the Rip Van Winkle stage of his career and tells the reader .exactly what Lc wishes to know—how Mr. Jefferson came to play the character. Three striking engravings of Jefferson as " Kip " accom pany the paper, which a'.so contains a dir. quisition on guying by actors, with hi.- morons incidents. Three time articles are " The Late . Siberian Tragedy," by George Kennan, m which is given a new account of the out rage at Yakutsk : " Suggestions for the Next World's Fair," a practical and help ful paper, by Georges llergcr. Director of the French Exposition ; and " The Slave- Trade in the Congo Basin," by E. J. Glave, one of Stanley's pioneer officers, with text and pictures from life during Mr. Ghive's, rcsid. nee <>t twenty mouths among the natives. Three articles of special Interest anil authoritativeness are " Au Artist's Let ters from Japan," by John La Fargo, with illustrations beautifully engraved by Murslt, Ktngsley aud Whitney; " The Serpent Mound of Ohio," by Prof. F. W. Putinan, of the Pcabody Museum, (,'aiti briilge, Mass., an exhaustive treatment ol the facts and arehieological signiticanccof these curious remains ; and " The Old Poetic Guild in Ireland," a special study by Charles de Kay, with illustrations by Alexander and Bacher. There are three short stories, giving al together much variety iu subject matter and treatment. " The Hcrr Maestro," by Elizabeth Robins Penned, with picture by Joseph Penned, a story about Venice j " That Yank from New York," a story of Mexico, by John Heard jr.. with pic tures by Allen C. Redwood ; and " A Dusky Genius, a story of the South, by Maurice Thompson, illustrated by Kcniblc. Mrs. IJarr's novel, " Friend Olivia," reaches the sixth part. The central West comes 111 for attention in " The Non-Irrigable La.ids of the Arid Region." by Major Powell, Director of the United States Geological Survey ; aud " The Shoshone Falls," by Captain John Codman, with two beautiful illustrations. There is a short literary essay l.y Col. T. W. Higginson anil a curious special account from Captain Charlt-3 Bryant of his experience " In the Fur-Seal Islands," Alaska, Captain Bryant having instituted the present motnod of catching these seals. An article iu the series of Present- Day Papers is contributed by Profess ir Richard T. Ely, under the title of "A I'rogramme for Labor Reform." Other articles of public discussion in Topics of the Times are entiticd " Longer Terms and Less Rotation," " The People," and " Loyalty in Employment." Open Letters ore contributed on "Judge Holt aud the Lincoln Conspirators," by Horatio King ; on " The White League of New Orleans," by F. R. Soutlimayd and George W. Cable, and on other topics. There remains to be considered the poetry, which is furnished by Celia Thax ter, Frank Dempster Sherman, Charles G. D. Roberts, Margaret Crosby, Ellen Burroughs, Helen Cone, James Whitcomb Riley, Lizette Woodwortli Reese, Aubrey de Vere(on Robert Browning), Katharine Lee Bates, and, in a lighter vein, by De Witt C. Lockwood, William Page Carter, Orelia Key Bell, and Braincrd Prescott Emery. A wrecked freight car delayed the Mail Express east,about an hour at,Packsaddle ast evening. ! tOST ON SANDY HOOK. I A WEIRD NIGHT TRAMP THROUGH CEDARS AND SAND DUNES. j Wandorltig A tilling the Itilin or I Ships, What the Waves Seem to Say The Shat ' tered ToinliHtnnri—Safe at East in the Ho ; tel McGlnly. Lost on Sandy Hook! Portentous enough is llie word "lost" at any time, but coupled as it is in this instance with a waste of sand dunes bristling with the bones of lost ships and dead men, it becomes doubly portentous. Yes, I wag lost on Sandy Hook, and in the darkest night that ever threw a pall over lonely sea and shore. How I came to be a wan dering wayfarer on that lonely, aye, God forsaken strand matters but little. Suf fice it to say that late one afternoon I had paid a visit to a little grave far up on the hillside of the eternal Highlands of Nave sink LOOKING BACKWARD. As 1 stood beside that tiny tomb recol lections of another sainted one came over me, and so real did her presence seem that with her hand in mine we two wandered in the spirit down through the old drives and by the old alder trees, which she once knew so well, and on by the twin lighthouses and across the dark, flowing river to th sea beach, where we two had so often strolled before. And she led me thus unheeding my where abouts, only heeding her presence and the same old love light in her eyes. 'Twas thus she led me down these old paths, her memory floating back out of the past like a half forgotton song, until sudden ly the deep diapason of the surf swelled up and swallowed the song of our loves. That sweet voice was lost. I called for her in vain. The waves roared a mock ing reply that sounded like "Nevermore." In vain did I plead for that sweet voice Again did the great-organ of the surf respond remorselessly in a grand chorus, "Nevermore." In inane rage I flung myself 011 the strand. Then cooler moments intervened, and there on the wet sand, with none hut God and the rippling river to hear, I poured out my soul in- sorrow. And the starlight fell like a benediction 011 my upturned face, and the running river sang a dirge. Had 1 been laboring under a s|>ell? Had she really returned to me, or was it all a1 In :::ii? What it was I know not. Only this. 1 was lost on Sandy Hook. Alone there oil a desert shore, alone with my conscience. 1 remember 1 thought of my situation as likened to that oi Robinson Crusoe, but my night was darker than any of Juan Fernandez, ren dered doubly dark by the black wings of remorse that flapped about me. Dark as divine wrath was the blackness about, unillumined by Btar or lights far out at sea, for the dwarf cedars hid both from me. Yet now and then there came float ing in over the waters the sound of sig nal hells at sea, ringing out warnings to the wanderers of the deep. At last, worn out with exertion, I half tumbled upon what had been the spar of a lost ship. Placing my hand for sup port upon 1 he sand at my side, it touched something. The knowing nerves of the hand telegraphed to my fevered brain what that something was. It was a human skull, the melancholy memorial of man's mortality. Aghast, I threw it from u:e. The spot seemed accursed, and I rose and tottered on. human will prevailing over the weakness of the body As I mounted a big dune a cry of joy is sued from my lips. There, like diamonds set in the ebon lield of night, gleamed the twin lights, and beneath them in a sable bank lay the everlasting Highlands. Endeavoring to keep those jewels ever in my view, I wandered 011, but they, alas, were again lost behind the veil of cedar and sand. I.OST 200 YEAItS AGO Recollections of the wrecks of other years came over me, and 1 thought 1 wandered through a vast cliarnel house. Again 1 fell and my hand struck what seemed like the base of a shattered tombstone. Although I had never he fore visited that spot I knew that the shattered marble wa3 erected in mem ory of a British frigate's boat's crew which, led by a young nobleman, was lost in the snow in the same place almost 200 years before. With sympathetic fin gers I traced out the graven words near the base of the stone, "Erected by his mother, Lady ,"and there the legend ended. But right roundly in that dark and lonesome spot I cursed the vandals who had desecrated that cemetery and destroyed that everlasting tribute of a fond mother's love. Somewhere near by 1 knew from history lay the bones of several refugees killed soon after the re treat of the British from Monmouth. 1 am uncertain that 1 found the place of their burial, but ijuito near at baud 1 found a section of human frontal hone, which 1 carefully placed in an inner pocket of my peajacket. Again I wandered on crying for human aid until I entered a tiny grove. Sud denly a light blazed full in my face from the hastily opened door of a habitation and a rough voice exclaimed: "What's the matter? Lost?' "Yes," was the hesitating reply, fori half leared the place was a pirates' den. "This is the Hotel McGinty and I am Pierre Troutman, the proprietor. Way farers are welcome, aud we still have a few rooms on the lower floors left. Come in, stranger, and welcome." Too dazed to speak, I accepted the in vitation and entered the Hotel McGinty, which was a rude one story frame shanty, perhaps 12x10 feet and lined with rows of crude bunks arranged as on shipboard. Troutman said that he and his men, who were all asleep, were saving that portion of the cargo of the wrecked bark Germania that had washed ashore on Sandy Hook. The Germania was wrecked at Long Branch, he said, on the night of Nov. 27. After a hearty meal, a friendly smoke, a yarn or two and a song, the writer was tucked snugly in a lower berth to seek rest for his weary body and overwrought brain in a deep and refreshing sleep.— New York World. Pillows Made of Lore Letters. Tho latent device of girlhood is a fancy for stuffing pillows with their old love letters. There is one thing about the contents of these pillows that can be de pended upon with a marked degree of certainty—they are sure to bo soft. Now, the question naturaliy arises, must the pillows 1)0 stuffed with letters from a single person, or may missives from John and Jack and Algernon be tumbled pro miscuously in together? Is it a test of loyalty that when once a girl really falls in love, or thinks she does, she discard from her pillow all the letters save those of the object of her deepest affection? And how does marriage affect the fate of the pillow? Do husbands enjoy hav ing their wives' faces buried in a mass of soft nothings that other men have written to them? And what dreams may come, and what skimpy, flat little pillows some poor girls must have; but how nice it is for the men to reflect that their adored ones slumber softly on their words of love. —Chicago Tribune. Ills Only Haven. All women are in league against the bachelor—the married women from sym pathy with their unmarried sisters and the unmarried from a desire to lessen the number of spinsters. With this league against him, offensive and defensive, the unmarried man may find peace in heaven, but lie can scarce hope to find happiness on earth—this side of marriage. How ever, once married, all the bachelor's troubles are over. He is no longer the subject of interested or designing atten tions—except the attentions which pro ceed from love. True, tho bachelor be comes on his marriage, if not an object of commiseration to the knowing ones, an object of comparative indifference to all women but one; but tho superior love of that one atones for all, and his added dignity and completeness as a man and citizen make him wonder how he pre viously existed, as one-half a pair of scissors without the other half.—Wo man's Cvcle. All F.ng la'nnan on (lie Bowery. A cockney went into a cheap restau rant on the Bowery, one of those places that have been aptly called beaneries. He sat down and adjusted his monocle and beckoned to a waiter, who came for ward. He was in his shirt sleeves and a dirty towel was slung across his arm. He scowled at tho stranger. "Weill!" "Aw, waitah, dontcherno, I want a brace of chops, an' a poached egg, an some buttered toast, an' a mug of 'alf an' 'alf, an', aw, waitah, I want a napkin, also." The man with the dirty towel over his arm moved back a step or t' o, put his hand to his mouth, and yelled to the cook in the kitchen: "Soy, Chimmie, tell der hand to play 'God Save der Queen;' der Prince of Wales is come."—Marshall P. Wilder. A Kin; Dethroned. A well known mad doctor has just died at Vienna. Professor Leedesdorff was the great king dethroner. No other med ical man has had so large an experience. When, in 1870, Sultan Mourad the Fifth was to be deposed and Abdul Aziz set up on the throne, the professor was sent fot to Constantinople, examined his royal patient, and promptly declared him mad. There was no appeal from that decision Later on, when Louis the Second of Ba varia was getting unusually eccentric, his ministers sent to Vienna for the pro fessor. Sometimes lie would be sent fot to Petersburg. The Romanoff family had failings, anil the professor had tc give iiis verdict.—San Francisco Argo naut. A New Invent lon. A nickel-iu-the-slot machine in Doston confronts the equestrian who alights at the sidewalk with the legend written across its front: "Drop a nickel in the slot and I'll hold your horse." He puts in the nickel and the iron hands unclasp the bridle rein is dropped into them and they close again. There you are. The horse is held. The rider goes off about his business. In half an hour he returns. There is the machine and there is the horse. But the first legend has disap peared and in its place is the inscription in characters of living light: "Give me a quarter and I'll let him go."—Cor. Chi cago Herald. • Cost of Heating Water. Water is one of the hardest of all sub stances to heat. This furnishes a good illustration of the law of the conserva tion and transformation of forces. To raise one pound of water one degree in a minute is required a heat which, if ap plied to an engine, would raise 772 pounds of water or any other substance one foot high. To raise eighty-six pounds one degree in a minute would he equivalent to raising eighty-six times 773 pounds to the height of one toot in a minute.—Washington Post. A ClieiniHt'M Feat. A foreign chemist lately performed quite a feat. The explosion and fire at Antwerp reduced to a charred mass a bun dle of 1,000 florin Austrian obligations. Without presentation in some identifi able form there could be no payment. The imperiled obligations were given to the chemist, and he succeeded in separ ating the whole of them and finding out the numbers, and upon his report the money was paid.—Exchange. A Wine Demurrer. It is related of Bishop P that he was once taken to task by a few of his denominational brethren on the charge of exhibiting a conceit of himself at vari ance with the spirit of humility. "It is not conceit," said the bishop, with that ponderous bearing that silenced opposition—"it is not conceit, brethren; it is the consciousness of superiority."— Harper's Bazar. lii tlie EIIBHHII Literature O'IIISA. Mabel—Hogg wrote pastoral poetry about lambs and sheep. Young Miss Wagg—And Lamb got even with him by writing an essay on "lionst rig."—Harper's Bazar. Drawn on a Jury. In New York some years ago u sum mons commanding Thatcher Magoin to present himself for service in the jury box was returned to the commissioner of jurors, witli the information that it had been served on the wrong party. In such cases, however, as is well known, no ordinary excuse is accepted. "Magoin," said the commissioner, "must appear in person and show cause why he should not be a jaror." "Ho can't come," was the reply. "He's too busy." "Such an excuse will not help him. He must come or suffer the consequences of fine and imprisonment," said the com missioner sternly. "If lie did come he'd make things hot for you! Besides, it'll take a derrick and truck to bring him here. He turns the scales at five thousand pounds." The commissioner expressed the opin ion that the sjicaker had been drinking. "I'm as sober as you be," said the rep resentative of the absent juror. "Thatch er Magoin is a steam engine located at the foot of Fletcher street. Years ago I was employed by a man named Thatcher Magoin, and I called my engine on Pier 19, East river, after him. When the di rectory man came to the dock to get names lie saw the name on the engine, and he thought 'twas the name of the boss, so lie put it down in his book." It is needless to say that "Mr. Magoin" was excused from jury duty.—Youth's Companion. Cuiiteutment in tlm Army, "Fifty cents a day?" "That's all." "And you are liappy?" "Happy and contented—yes, why not?" So spoke a high private in Uncle Sam's army, referring to his official income foi standing in readiness to save the country. "\Y liy shouldn't 1 bo happy?" he went on. "llero lam well fed. well clothed well cared for, my every want supplied. In sickness they give nie care and medi cines. My fooil is wholesome and well cooked. My quarters are comfortable and kept with scrupulous neatness. My friends are in tho same social scale with me. We know no rank, no higher 01 lower. We have our common duties and, these over, our common amuse ments. We travel around the country in our special trains and get to know something of life in every clime. What more, pray, can a reasonable man de sire? Our duty ends with the orders that come to us. We obey and have nc further responsibility. We take life easyi Why not? in addition, we have an al lowance of fifty cents per day, with the prospect of an increase from year to year. This, with the conditions just mentioned, often leads one to think that we are. after all, getting about all there is of the gocd in life with but little of its burdens or annoyances."—Detroit Free Press. A Visit Buskin Paid Carlyle. I heard a pretty account once from Mr. Alfred Lvttelton of a visit paid by Rus kin to Carlyle in the old familiar room in Cheyne Walk, with the old picture oi Cromwell on the wall, and Mrs. Carlyle'f little tables and pretty knickknacks still in th-ir quiet order. Mr. Raskin had been ill not long before, and as lie talked on of something be cared about, Mr. Lvttelton said bis eyes lighted up, and he spenied agitated anil moved. Carlyle stopped him short, saying the subject was too interesting. "You must take care," lie said, with that infinite kind ness which Carlyle could show, "you will be making yourself ill once .more." And Ruskin, quite simply, like a child, stopped short. "You are right,"hesaid, calling Carlyle "master," and then went on to talk of something else, as dull, nc doubt, as anything could be that Ruskin and Carlyle could talk about together.— Anne Thackeray Ritchie in Ilnrper'i Magazine. Tattooing Algerian Gli-lit. In Algeria every girl born of native parents is tattooed on her forehead be tween the eyebrows and just at the root of the nose with a cross, formed of sev eral straight lines of small stars running close together. These tattoo marks are a dark blue color. Algerian women are also considerably tattooed on the backs of their bands, their forearms and chests, as well as on their shoulders—their wrists being especially adorned with tirawings representing bracelets and flowers strung together. As a rule women are the opera tors, and it is principally on children be tween the ages of 7 and 8 that they have to exercise their art They use some times a needle, bnt more frequently a Barbary fig tree thorn. They employ kohl as a coloring substance. It is a kind of fine powder made from sulphur of an timony. which is also in great request by tho Algerian women for the purpose ol face painting.—Chicago Herald. About the Teeth. You can't save half of your teeth by making the other half do double duty. If you don't wear your teetli out nature will throw them out. One cause of toothache is the inactivi ty of the teeth. All the brute creation munches from six to twenty hours of the twenty-four. Their teeth are often bad, but for the most part they are good. The only treat ment they get is self administered. Gum chewing may have its advan tages. If one chews on both sides of hie mouth and moderately there ought to be no evil results. It is all nonsense to re strict one's food to mush and other soft stuff simply because harder food hurts the teeth.—New York Telegram. A Transfer. Mrs. Optimist—How vastly improved dear Jennie is since her marriage! She has quite lost that unhappy, discontented look of iters. Mr. Pessimist—Not lost it, tny dear madam. It will shortly appear on her husband's face.—Pittsburg Bulletin. Nationality Doubtful. First Little Girl—ls your doll a French doll? Second Little Girl—l don't know; she can't talk.—New York Weekly. THE SUFFERING SIOUX. THE SEMI-CIVILIZED INDIANS OF DEVIL'S LAKE, NORTH DAKOTA l'hcy Suffer Uotli an Willi.- Man anil a* Indian.-; with the Former They Share the Drought and a Indians Tliey Have No Surplus and Few Frlendx. Once more the country is up[>ealed to for contributions to aid a starving tribe of Indians. The 900 or more Sioux on the great reservation in Ramsey, Benton and Foster counties, North Dakota, share with their white neighbors in the gen eral misery caused by the drought and crop failure of last summer; but, unlike the whites, tliey have no personal friends and relatives in the east to extend aid quietly, tliey have no surplus as many of the whites have. STARVING SIOUX. To add that they have no friends would be an exaggeration, but not a very great one, for the Devil's lake Sioux are the remnants of certain bands which have the reputation of having been "mighty bad Indians." Not quite a mile south of the southern bend of the lake stands the well built Fort Totten, from which hardy regulars have gone on expeditions against the Indians when the mercury was 30 degs. below zero. A little nearer the lake is the village, comprising the residence of Maj. Cramsie, long the efficient agent of those Indians, the other houses and shops of theagcncy, the store, hotel and United States signal service office. Maj. Cram sie is among tho best informed men in the nation on Indian affairs, and iiis in telligent wife (herself boasting a trace of ludian blood) is an efficient interpreter and devoted friend of their dusky wards. Half a mile further north and on a ridge rising rapidly from the lake is a fine Catholic church and largo school and boarding bouse, in which ten sisters of the order of Gray Nuns of Montreal teach the young aborigines. And if one wants to hear the three typical views of the "Indian question," in all the purity of plain language, in spired by enthusiastic conviction, he can hear them at these three adjacent cen ters. At the fort and agency store, hotel, etc., he can get the straight western view: "Good Indian, dead Indian, etc." If tho tourist insists on debating the matter lie will hear some philosophy like this: "White man and Injun may be of the same species; so are the dog and the wolf —anyhow, they will 'cross.' But the dog will guard sheep and the wolf will kill them. Maybe these Injuns could be ci*-ilized—in a long time—but they'll all he dead before the time comes." At the school "Sister Page" or "Sister Franklin" will tell the visitor in musical French or choice English that their charges aro most promising; "the only trouble is when we get through with them they have to go back to the smoky and dirty cabin. Oh, the government ought to see to it that more help is given. There is no need of soldiers and a fort here now. All those pretty buildings ought to be made into an ludian home. Then we could educate every boy and girl on the reservation, and start them in life able to work at a trade and make a good living. We long to do the work, asking only room and rations—it is our life work—if the government will only give us the chance." Maj. Cramsie takes a practical man's view of the matter, viz.: "The Indians are just as capable of being civilized as any other race, but, like any other, they must take time. The impatient Ameri can cannot wait—he wants it all done in two or three years. So the Indians are living in tight log houses and haven't yet learned how to live in them. They are working and learning, but under so many difficulties that in half the cases by the time a man has mastered farming he dies of lung disease." In times of plenty the Indian still ex hibits the childish trustfulness of the natural man. The halfbreeds often appear in this respect even more improvident than the. Indians. Their dances, feasts and social life are picturesque and pleas ant; but they do not "keep the wolf from the door" in winter and times of scarcity. About the rude log cabins in which most of the Devil's lake Sioux live one may see much suffering any winter; for there is a great deal of scrof ula and pulmonary disease among the half civilized, who have lost, or been compelled to give up, all the habits of wild life, and have not well acquired new ones. This winter the suffering is terrible. The poorly clad and worse fed women and children shiver about the cabins, while the men are away in the woods, chopping for a mere pittance. Much has already been done in response to their appeals. The children at the Carlisle Indian school have sent $550 —all their savings. Many others have given small sums. Indian Commissioner T. J. Morgan has advanced $3,000 of the com ing year's appropriation. The sisters at the school have furnished medicine at their own expense. Maj. Cramsie has secured small contributions from other sources. Still there is much suffering. The "grippe" has swept the reservation and left a fearful amount of pneumonia in its wake. And in the face of this destitu tion the fact is presented that the govern ment still owes these people $1,000,000 on their lands taken by the railroads; congress is merely slow in making ap propriations. Those theorists who want government to "do everything for every body" might learn something by observ ing how it does the small bit of humani tarian work now committed to it by the constitution. J. H. BEADLE. Gosm:) Sense >n Ilie treatment of slight ailments would savi! a vast nmount of sickness ami misery. One of Ay fir's Pills, taken alter din iter, will assist Dljy-iort; t ikeu at night, wili relievo Constipation; taken til any time, will correct irregu larities of t lie Stomach and Bowels, stimulate the Liver, ami cure Sick Headache. Ayer's Pills, as all know who use them, are a mild cathartic, pleasant to take, and always prompt ami satisfactory in tlmir results. '• I can recommend Ayer's Pills al>v< all others, having lutig proved their value us a Cathartic for myself and familv." J. T. Hess Leilhsville, I'm ••Ayer's Pil . hate !;■ mi e, e familv n| ; - v el 'i 111.5e'...:. Ie t> . , .1.. situ l'liV '< . 'IV As. ' I lime list iV . I ■ • ly tors.-, en . ~ ~. am' ■ m y • .i'A P .Is and . :■ I'• .1 lli. . ■ a . hh X', '' < •• • -Willi Mill Jv . y •'. lia\ vto fuil i I' VottUn mf. llc.ic! v\. . . ... toga Springs, N. Y. Ayer's Pills, FKBPAItKD BV Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass Sold by all Dealers iu Medicine. 3?ro fmtona! Cards. LIENRY H. IvUHN, Attorney-at ' 1 l.aw. (imco opposite First National Honk No. !'. Locust street, Johnstown, I'a. .JAMES M. WALTERS, A TTORSEY-A T-LA office No. s, Aim A Hull. Main street, Johns town, I'a. All business given faithful and pree.pt attention. Janlß F. J. O'COVNOK. J. B, O'CONNOB. Q'CONNOR BROTHERS, .1 TTOIIXEYS-A T-LA W. Offlce on Franklin street, over Petrlkin Si Mil ler's store, opposite Postofflce, Johnstown, I'a. mars JOHN S. TITTLE, JUSTICE OK THE PEACE . A .YD SOT A R Y PUB LIE. office corner Market and Locust streets, Johnstown, Pa. jRVIN RUTLEDGE, JUSTICE OK THE PEACE. Office on Ktver street.near the KernviUe Bridge In the Fifth ward, Johnstown, Pa. collections and all other business promptly attended to. mars N. WAKEFIELD, M. D., I lirslCIAX AST) SURGEOS Office No. 43 Morris street, Johnstown, Pa. YEAGLEY, M D, PU YSIC lA SA.V J PRO EOS. office No. 2VI Locust . Johnstown, p> JOHN DOWNEY, CI t //, K.WIS'KKJI. office on stonycreok si reel, Johnstown, Pa. SA. FEDEX. SURGEON DEN • TIST. oiTlce tn Border's new building, on franklin street. All kinds of Dental work so licited. novH J F. THOMPSON, 51. D., ' SURCJSON DENTIST, JOHNSTOWN, PA. Has bad a professional experience of over JO years. JW-FilllnK Teeth a specialty, olllce ltooms. No. lit Napoleon street. JOHNSTOWN SAVINGS BANK ZRO. 192 MAIN STREET. ,* -Wft, ... a*. 3ABTEH ED SEPTEMBER 12, 18T0 DEPOSITS received Of one dollarand upward, no deposits exceeding a total or ss,ooo will be received from any one person. Interest Isdue In Ibi' months of .Mine and December, and If not withdrawn Is added to the deposit, thus com pounding tw ice a year without troubling the de positor to call or even to present the deposit book. Money loaned on Heal Estate. Preference with liberal rates and long time given to norrowers ottering first mortgages on farms worth four or I lore limes the amount of loan desired; also, moderate loans made on town property w tie re ample security Is ottered, uood reference, per fect titles, etc., required. Thiscorporat ion Is exclusively a savings Bank- No commercial deposits received, nor discount made. No loans on personal security. Blank applications for borrowers, copples of the rules, by-laws, and special acts of the Legis lature relating to deposits of married women and minors can be obtained at the Bank. Tkustkks— Herman Baumer, B. L. Yeagley, John liannan, John Thomas, 0. B. Ellis, Pear son Fisher, James J. Fronhelser, John Lowmun, W. B. Lowman, James McMUlen, James Qulnn, Howard J. Koberts, wm. A. Stewart, oeo. T. Swank, Jacob Swank, W. W. Walters. James McMlllen, President; John Lowman, Herman Baumer, oeo. T. swank, vice Presidents; W. C. Lewis, Treasurer; Cyrus Elder, Solicitor marlt DISSOLUTION OF PARTNER SHIP.—Notice Is hereby given that the partnership heretofore existing between JOHN I). EDWARDS and A. ADAIK under the ilrm name or J. D. EDWARDS A CO.. was dissolved on the Stub day of February, 189(1, by mutual consent, all debts due to the said partnership are to be paid and tbnse due from the Bame will be discharged by John 1). Edwards. Business will be continued by the said John 1). Edwards. .1. D. EDWARDS, marl-tf A. ADAIR. 1 EXECUTOR'S NOTICE. ES- Pi TATE OF JANE 11. HESS, DECEASED.— Letters Testamentary on the estate of Jane 11. Hess, late of Coopersdale, Cambria county, deceased, having been granted to the under signed, all persons knowing themselves In debted to said estate are hereby notltlod to make Immediate payment, and those having claims against salt! estate are requested to pre sent them duly autiientloatcd lor soot lenient to 1). R. HESS, Executor. 109 Seventeenth st„ South side, Pltttburgh