OMTCA&L. MRS, CATHERINE MATTES. Mrs. Catherine Mattes, wile of August Mattes,©! the Sixteenth wutd, died at bur home on Bioad street at 5 o'clock on Thursday evening. The deceased was aged about fifty years and was horn in Germauy She leaves a large tamily ot children, mostly grown up. Catherine the eldest, is married to Patrick McKer. man, George and John are both married, August, Conrad, Joseph, Maggie, Mary, Elizabeth, and Rose are at home. The funeral will take place on Sunday after noon ; interment iu Lower Yoder Ceme tery. Her brothers, Peter Dusman, of New York, and Joseph Dusman, of Shamokin, and her nerthew, Ed. Dusman, of Sha mokin, are here to attend the funeral. MRS. MARY NBARY. Mrs. Mary Neary died at her home No. S9 Walnut street, on .Thursday night about 11 o'clock. She came here from Ireland after the flood with her husband. She leaves a husband, but no children. The funeral will take place this morning, when the body will be interred in Lower Yoder cemetery, after services t St. John's Church. MARRIAGE LICENSES. The Following Have lleen Granted Since Our Last Report. (Joseph Keese Johnstown (Aggie Davis Johnstown (Abner Krancls Shank Stonyereek twp (saute A. Kelper attains twp (Frank Blair Joanstown (susan Koust Johnstown (Henry Deltz Stonyereek twp (Amelia Wldtlershetm Johnstown i William Bundle Johnstown (Lille llerdman Johnstown (W. A. ltodda Gallium (George Llngenfelter GalUtzln (wiuiam 1). Barrlnger West Taylor twp (Ida M. .Mangus Johnstown (Joseph Harigh Indiana co. Pa (Annie C. ilunt Cambria co (John Moore Johnstown (Elizabeth severing Johnstown IGuy S. Rloebolt Johnstown (Mary E. Jones Johnstown JWlHlam 11. Ilert7n „ , . ar 01l twp (tllzubelh Landgratt Susquehanna twp (John E. Dixon Keade twp (Susan C. Gallagher White twp (Joseph M, Mtllan .Portage (Annie Baker Portage I Harry Klnebolt Johnstown (Florence Hughes Morrellvllle (John C. Pender ...Johnstown (Martha Yost. .Johnstown ijf s - Gelsel Moxham ( Barbara suck Johnstown (Juliusßishop Johnstown (Ameua Moshgot Johnstown ('h'Kks Johnstown \ Elizabeth slnco Johnstown (James c. Uclman GalUtzln (Mary C. Landls Blair co (Stephen Koad Mlllvllle (Watzl wratskl Mlllvllle (James Thomas Mlllvllle (Mary 8. McGough Stonyereek twp (Edward G. King ....Johnstown (Annie E. Brazlll Johustown (Fred. Idenback Brownstown (MaggieKubrltz Franklin (Clark J. Thoinas Carrolltown (sylvanla C. DlShart Carroll twp (Thomas Splsak Brownstown (Anna Bassy Johnstown One Dollar lor Fifty Cento. Competition and Improved methods of manu facture nave reduced the cost of drugs and other commodities fully one half within the last ten years. In view of these facts the Proprietors of Van Wert's nalsam for the lungs have decided to give their patrons the benetli of the savlug which they are thus able to make In the produc tion of their remedies, and have tberetore re duced the price of the Balsam and oiTer the bo.- tle which ha- hitherto been sold for SI.OO lor fifty cents. The Balsam can be obtained of W. B. Tlce, corner franklin and l.ocust streets. Not a ICeligioiiK . c-■••ration. According to an opinion just rendered t>Y the Supreme Court of Illinois the ouug Meu's Christian Association is not a religious corporation within the mean- ing of the law. In Macon county, a man named Hamsher on his death left a will , by which most of his property was to he bequeathed to the Young Men's Chrirtian Association of Decatur. Heirs contested , the will on the ground that the statutes of Illinois holds that a religious body cannot hold ovr ten acres of land. In the opin ion of the Court the Young Men's Chris tian Association is not wholly a religious body, but is largely a charitable and be nevolent organization, and therefore the law restricting the amount of properly to be held by religious corporations docs not apply to suid association. This is the first time the question has ever been tested in the courts. Hibbard'S Throat and Lung GHISHIU. FOI throat and lung troubles this remedy has no equal, it is gua.anteed to cure consumption .!.? stages, and even In advanced stages ot that disease it relieves coughing and Induces sleep. You may have a cougn or a cold at any time, ther fore no liouselioid, especially with children, should be without It. Fur all affec tions of the throat, lungs and chest, croup, whooping cough, hoarseness, spitting ot Itl .od ana all pulmonary diseases It has no equal. Prepared only by ltheumatlc syrup to,, Jack son Mich, A k your druggist forlt. For sale at Slater's drug store, corner of .Main street and Park Place, Johnstown, Pa. feb-iB-sd-w-ly, For Auditor. T* W. C Berry, of Wilmore borough, announces himself to-day us a candidate for County Auditor, subject to the action of the Democratic primary election to be held on June 7th. He is a good account ant, and would make an efficient and careful Auditor. Mr. Berry is au active aud energetic Democrat and deserves a favorable consideration at the hands of the Democracy. Many people think that gutta percha and India rubber are the same or very similar gums. This, however, is a mistake. India rubber is the solidified sap of a South American tree. It. is of a soft, gummy nature ; not tenacious, but very elastic; is easily decomposed by oily substances, and does not stand acids well. Gutta percha winch is found only in the East Indies, is obtained from the Gutta tree. It is brownish gum, which solidifies by exposure to the air. A Ilruddock Newspaper Man Dead. Editor Charles Mills of the Daily New of Braddock died last Monday evening at the home of his mother at Mills station. He was forty-two years old and a grad uate of Bethany College West Virginia. Mr. Mills suffered from overwork. His widow survives him. ! THE FATAL ROPE Puts an End to the Life of Charles . Carter, the Murderer. HIS EXECUTION AT EHENSHURG YES TERDAY. The Drop Fell at 1;32 O'clock, and in Fifteen Minutes the Condemned Man Died of Stran gulation—The Warrant of Ex ecution—The Trial and the Jury—A Detailed Description of Ills Last Moments and of the Execution—llls Burial and His Will. Wednesday shortly before 2 o'clock Charles Carter, colored, was executed by Sheriff Stineman in the jail yard at Ebcns burg, for the murder of Joan Matthews on the 4th of last Novembef. The murder took place at the house of John Henry Roberts, in Conemaugh bor ough. Roberts is colored, but has a white wife. Their house was the resort of some people of bad character, among whom was oneMamc Dunn, white. The trouble is supposed to have resulted from jealousy. In a quarrel Carter shot Matthews with a thirty-eight calibre, double action revolver, wounding him so badly that ht died. Carter was arrested in Harresburg and soon landed in jail in Ebensburg. THE JURY AND TRIAL, The case was tried in December, 1889, the conviction beiug on the 6th, and the sentence was imposed on the 13th. The men chosen to serve as jurors in the trial were John L. Singer, Tobias Blough, Lincoln Roberts, James Rcnford, J. Blickeuderfer, Nelson Fearl, John Kopp, J. A. Shoemaker, John Sharp, James Driscoll, Michael Murray, W. A. B. Little. The trial consumed only one day, and two hours served for the jury to arrive at a verdict of murder in the first degree. The Court appointed Prank J. O'Connor and Frank P, Martin, Esqs., to defend the accused, he not having any counsel. John Fenlon, Esq., was district attorney, assisted by Chal. L. Dick and Ed. T. McNeelis, Esqrs. F. A. Shoemaker, Esq., on February 18, 1890, presented the case to the Board of Pardons, but it met with no favorable consideration, and the warrant of execu tion issued as follows : Pennsylvania, ss: James A. Beaver. (Seal) [n tlie Name and by the Authority of the com monwealth of Pennsylvania. James A Heaver, Governor of the said com monwealth, to Jacob c. Stlneman, Esquire, High Sheriff of tho county of Cambria, or to your successor In office. Sends Greeting: Whereas, at a court ot oyer and Terminer and General Jail Delivery, held at Ebensburg. In and for the county of Cambria at December Sessslons. 1889, a certain Charles carter was tried upon a certain Indictment charging him with the crime of murder, and was, on the sixth day of Decem ber, A. D 1889, found guilty of murder In the first degree, and was thereupon, to wit, on the thirteenth day of December, A. D. 1889, sen. tenced by the said court, that he, the said Charles carter, be taken to the prison whence he came, and thence to the jail yard, and that he there be hanged by the neck until he Is dead. Now, therefore, this Is to authorize and re quire you, the said Jacob c. Stlneman, lllgh sheriff of the county of cambrla, as aforesaid or your successor In office, to cause the sentence of the said Couct of Oyer and Terminer and Gen eral Jail Delivery, to be executed upon the said Charles Carter, between the hours of ten A. M and thiee r. u., on Wednesday, the ninth day of April, Anno Domini one thousand eight hun dred and ninety, In the manner directed Dy the seventy-sixth section of the Act of thelGeneral Assembly of this commonwealth, approved the thirty-first day of March, A. D., 1860, entitled " An Act to consolidate, revise and amend the laws of this commonwealth relating to penal proceedings and pleadings," and for so doing this shall be your sufficient warrant. Given under my hand and the Great seal of the State at Harrlsburg, tills twentieth day of February, In the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and ninety, and of the common wealth the one hundred and fifteenth. By the Governor. J. H. LONGECKEIi, Deputy Secretary of the commonwealth. After the reading of the death warrant on Fcbruury 22d, a death watch was kept over Carter all the time, Fred W. Davis and Harry George, the hitler a piisoner, doing duty in that capacity. CA if rail's LIKE. Carter, according to his own statement, was born in Chesterfield county, Virginia, of parents \\ ho had formerly been slaves, in 186!), His father died when he was seven years old, and his mother soon re married. She died when he was nine years of age. He lived with his step father until thirteen years of age, sup porting himself and the old man. He left home and worked in Richmond, Va., and Hocking Valley, Ohio. Later he worked at the Diamond Steel Works and Solar Iron Works, Pittsburgh. From Pittsburgh he came to Johnstown three years ago. First he was employed at C. A. McAteer's saloon, then at the Ameri can House, and at Ben Sulka's saloon. Lastly he worked for Alex Adair at Hon ey moon Row, where he carried the hod. On tho evening of Monday the 4tli of November, be in company witli John Matthews, colored, went to the house of John Roberts in Concmaugh borough, now Tenth ward, Johnstown, and there in a row lie shot Matthews, as staled above. Matthews died at the Seventh Ward Hospital within twelve hours after tile shooting. He made the following ante-mortem statement: "I, John Matthews, say, that I was shot by Charles Carter, colored, at the housfe of Mr. Roberts, on corner of Church and Main streets, Concmaugh borough. I did not give cause for the shooting. Was not under the influence of liquor when shot. I have been here since August 10th. I did not have hard feelings against Carter. Was shot on account of Miss Emma Dunn. I board at J. D. Landis'. Have been at Roberts' house four or live times." Carter left the town, but was caught in Harrisburgh several days later. He had been arrested for riding on a freight train and had written to a friend here, W. H. Cooper, who informed on him. Constable Josiali Waters went to Harris burgh and brought Carter here, who after a hearing was committed to jail. The trial was heid at the .December term of Court as stated above. AT Tns JAIL. Things moved along without exciting much interest until the time of the exe cution drew near. About 200 tickets of admission were issued by Sheriff Stine man, and most of the holders were pres ent, they being admitted at 1:30 o'clock through the front entrance to the jail and conducted to the yard on ihe South side of the jail. TUB SCAFFOLD Stood near the North-west corner of the jail, about ten feet distant from the build ing. it was a temporary wooden struct ure and was constructed by ex-Sheriff James Myers aud Joshua Parrish. It was about twelve feet square. The plat form was eight feet from the ground with the trap doors in the center. They were together three feet square, the trapping being done by a lever. The beam was eight feet above the platform, supported by staunch uprights. It was examined by Carter on Saturday and pronounced a good job. A wire drawn across the yard twenty feet away from the scaffold kept the spectators at a distance. THE NIGHT BEFORE Carter retired at 2 o'clock and slept soundly until 7:30 when he arose. He took a light breakfast and spent most of the forenoon with his minister, Rev, E. M. Bowman, of the Ebensburg Presbyter ian Church. He seemed penitent for his sins aud the minister stated that his peni tence was without a doubt sincere. Short ly after noon he and the minister took DINNER WITH THE SHERIFF, Eating and talning freely. He then made a round of toe jail and bid all the pris oners good bye. Preeisely at 12:48 Sheriff Slineman en tered the cell—No. 9—and again read the death warrant. There were present, be sides the Sheriff and Carter, the minister and the representatives ofjtbe press. The Sheriff's voice was sympathetic. The prisoner sat unmoved. It was a touch ing scene. On the opposite side of the cell from where Carter sat stood a large pot of blooming calla lillics. A light burned on another stand. Everything was neat and orderly. After the reading of the warrant was concluded Carter was again lett AI.ONE WITH HIS MIKISTBK. The hymn, " Nearer My God to Thee " echoed through the jail building. The effect win mournful indeed. The doomed man bore up better than some on whose ears the sounds fell. About this time the Sheriff's jury com posed of F. H. Darker, Web Griffith, B. P. Thompson, John S. Miller, D. P. Parker, A. E. Bender, Samuel Ludwig. Frank W. Uurley, Harry Lloyd, Joseph Browu, A. T. Pindle, George Soulsby met in the Sheriff's office in the jail and were sworn. After the hanging they certified to the execution. At 1:40 Sheriff Stineman repaired to the .cell of the doomed man. The jury stood at the door. Preceeded by two deputies, the Sheriff and the Minister led the pris oner to the jail yard, going out by the north door. The juiy followed ns did the officers present and the press represen tatives. Carter wore a black slouch hat, dark and light mixed coat and vest, and black pantaloons. His step was firm. Only be, the Sheriff and the minister went tip on the scaffold. The minister offered a short prayer, after which Carter stepped to the ratliug and addressed those present as follows : Ffllt/fB Cit i tt'iix; Tills Is the last time I shall see you on earth. I am going to my home In Heaven, there to llv forever. I hope to meet you all there. I want to say to you that I have no hard feelings against anyone. I hope to meet you all around ray Father's throne some day. Good-bye. He then stepped back upou the trap, holding his hut in his hand, while his h gs and feet were hound. His hands were then secured behind his back with strong handcuffs. Tlio black cap was pulled over his face and in a moment the Sheriff adjusted the noose, the rope having liuen previously secured to the beam, and at 8 minutes of 2 o'clock by Deputy S. W. Davis' watch, the drop fell. The body came down three feet and rebounded a few times. Tliere was some writhing and struggling for about two minutes, after which the hody huug motionless. Dr. Chas. V. P. Kennedy, the jail physician, assisted by Dr. F. C. Jones and Dr. Dav idson, watched the pulse till it stopped beating, which was just fifteen minutes after the trap was sprung. In ten min utes more the body was cut down and put in the coffin furnished by Undertaker Evans, of Ebensburg. The body was then examiued by the physician, who stated that the neck was not broken, but that death resulted from strangulation. The body was viewed in the jail cor ridor by a large number of people. The Sheriff then made out certificate of execu tions which was as follows: HUKKIFF'B CEKTIFICATB OF DEATH. "oinmon wealth ) In the court of oyer ami Ter vs. ' miner anil (piartorSessions Charles carter. ) of the Peace for county of Cambria. The said defendant convicted of murder In the tlrst degree ; Alllrniatlon of J. C. Stineman, Esq., ShcrltT o the county of Cambria, In compliance with tho provisions of Section 7 of an Act passed March 31, 18(10, entitled "An Act to Consolidate, revise, and amend the laws of this commonwealth re lating to Penal Proceedings and Pleadings." Cambria County, ss: J. C. Stlneman, snerlfT of the county ot Cam bria, being duly alllrmed, according to law, salth that In obedience to the command con tained in a warrant of the Governor of the Com monwealth of Pennsylvania, dated the ifOth day of February, In the year of our Lord, 1890, and directed to this alllant, as sheriff aforesaid, he did cause the sentence of death by hanging by tbeneck to be executed upon the body of the above named Charles Carter In the yard of the county Prison, In the county aforesaid, on the 9tli day of April, A. D„ 1890, at 1 o'clock and 52 minutes in the afternoon. J. C. BTINEMAN, Sheriff. Affirmed and subscribed belore me this uth day of April, A. 1)., 1890. J. C. DAKBY. Clerk of over and Terminer, etc About 3 o'clock the body was taken to Lloyd Cemetery and buried there. A few days before his death Carter made this will: HIS LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT. COUNTY JAIL, Ebensburg, Pa., 4-5-'9O. I, Charles Carter, do will and bequeath all my personal property as below : My revolver, which Is In the hands ol Mr. John lenlon, I will and bequeath to the Hev, Bowman, my spiritual adviser, My lamp, which Is In my cell, I also will and bequeath to Kev. Bowman. My trunk, which is In my cell, (No. 9) I also will and bequeath to Harry L. George, acting day watch, My clothes I leave for Mr. James T. Young, warden, to Jdlspose of by giv ing to those In the county Jail who are in need. Tills Is my last will and testament which only comprises one sheet of paper. his Witnesses: CHARLES y C'AHTEK, 11. L. George, F. W. Davis, mark. THE IDEAL OE WOMANHOOD. The Woman's Congress is doing no work more important than that of recon structing the ideal of womanhood. The Sculptor Heart told me. when I was visit ing bis studio in Florence, many years ago, that be was investing his life to work into marble a new feminine type, which should " express, unblamed," the twen tieth century's womanhood. The Venus de Medici, with its small head and but tonhole eyelids, matched the Greek con ception of woman well, lie thought; but America was slowly envolving another and loftier type. His statue, purchased by patriotic women of his native Stale, Kentucky, adorns the hall at Lexington, and shows • " A perfect woman, nobly planned To warn, to comfort, and command ; A creature not too bright or good For human nature's dally food, And yet a spirit still, and bright, Wlih someihlug of angelic light." She is the embodiment of what shall he. In an age of force, woman's greatest grace was to cling ; in an nge of peace, she does not cling much hut is just as tender and sweet as if she did. She has strength and individual'ty, a gentle seriousuess ; there is more of the sisterly, less of the syren ; more of the duchess, and less of the doll. Woman is becoming what God intended her to be —what Christ's Gospel necessi tates her being—the companion and coun sellor. not the toy and encumbrance of man. To meet this new creation, how grandly men themselves are growing! How con sidcralc and brotherly, how pure in word and deed! The world has never vet known half the amplitude of character and life to which men attain when they aud women .ive in the same world/ II dotli not yet appear what (key shall bo,— or we either. With all my heart 1 believe, as do ihe best men of the na'iou, that woman will bless and brighten every place she enters, and that she will enter every place on Un round earth. lis welcome of her presence and power will be the final test of any in stitution's fitness to survive. PKAKOKS E. WILLAKD. Nup't of Dep't for Promotion of Socio I Purity. IN purchasing medicines, don't try ex periments ; the first and only considera tion should be geuuinencss. Avei's Sarsaparilla has stood the test of forty years, nnd to-day it is in greater demand tliau ever—a triumphant proof of popular approval. Aii Electric IMg. In front of a butcher's shop in St. Paul, a half pig, nicely prepared and of appetizing appearance, was hanging on an iron hook a few days ago. A dog came running up the street, aud happen ing to see the little pig, went up to it and longingly snuffed around it. llordly had he put his nose on the pig when he ut tered a cry of pain and ran howling away. A second cur soon appeared and fared no better; he ran away howling as if a ghost had laid its hand on him. Gradu ally as a third and a fourth dog had shared the samo fate a crowd gathered and every one looked with distrust at the porker. One of the owners of the shop, who wanted to find out the cause of the trou ble, at last went up to the pig, touched it, and also flew back as though a taran tula had stung him; he had received an electrical shock. An investigation proved that an electric light wire had come in contact with the hook on which the meat hung, and thus the pig was completely filled with electricity. Philadelphia Times. The Muscle Shoals Caual. The obstruction known as the Muscle Shoals, in the Tennessee river, which covered about 23 miles out of the 453 be tween Chattanooga and Paducah, at its mouth, are at lengtli overcome by moans of locks and dams built by the general government, and the river is now open so that boats loaded at New Orleans can at all times proceed to Chattanooga, and most of the time to Knoxville. The dis tance from Chattanooga to Now Orleans is 1,001 miles, as against 2,007 from Pitts burg and 1,507 from Cincinnati, and it is claimed the coal freights from Chatta nooga to New Orleans will be between 80 and 90 cents, as against §1.05 from Pittsburg. The improvement of this short piece of the river has been more or less under construction for sixty years.— New York Telegram. The Ebensbui|{ liur* Closed Yesterday. On Tuesday evening Sneriff Btinemen recived bv telegraph from Judge John ston the following : It Is ordere ' that all public bars In Ebensburg bo closed until 3 o'clock on Wednesday, the 9th of April, HY TUK COUHT, K. L. JOHNSTON, President Judge. A great many people were in Ebens burg, hut evi rything was very quiel. The Sheriff was highly pleased at the Court's action, as it ltad a good effect ou the crowd, many of whom had they known of the order would no doubt have come provided. WHITHBR! O! WHITHER, OLD WOMAN, SO HIGH! WITH BLACK DIAMOND ROOFING TO COVER THE SKY. WHY GO SO EAR FROM TUB LAND OF YOUR BIRTH? BECAUSE IT ALREADY COVERS THE BAKIH. Send for illustrated circular to M. EHRET, JR., tes a new growth. "To restore the original color of tnjr hair, which had turned prematurely gray, I used Ayer's llair Vigor with en i tire success. I cheerfully testify to tha Efficacy of this preparation."—Mrs. I'. 11. David sun, Alexandria, La. " I was afflicted some three years with scalp disease. My hair was falling out and what remained turned gray. 1 was induced to try Ayer's Hair Vigor, and in a few weeks the disease in my scalp | disappeared and my liair resumed ita ' original color." —(Kev.) 8.- S. Sims, j Pastor U. B. Church, St. Berniee, Ind. " A few years ago I suffered the entire loss of my hair from the effects of tetter. I I hoped that after a time nature would I repair the loss, but I wailed in vain. I Many remedies were suggested, none, l however, with such proof of merit as i Ayer's Hair Vigor, and I liegan to use it. The result was all I could have desired. A growth of hair soon came out all over my head, and grow to tie as soft and heavy as I ever had. and of a natural > color, and firmly set."— J. 11. Pratt, Spofford, Texas. • Ayer's Hair Vigor, FUEPARKD BY Dr. J. C, Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mm Sold by Druggist! nd Perfumers. EDatuljn & Co. lined, / fife, /OF 'ftLiFu fi \ . ! i mr-F / < ;• THfi SOIEI'.'CC Cr L.rE I A Scientific nnl Sum'uri 1 •. I ntthe Ernes f . y. . sell Physics! i-i- : i i liiouil. UesiJMng from Fully, ' . Ignnmi ItraMssr Owmunnl HI, K ei ..i b._- . t. v : ii.- , , fi.r <• >ik, It >. • • < 'ii ■•> VS.. I lilt L ... , ... . , . bill ling, c IIHMI I, i ..t . . , • .1., mall, |M*t|> il.l. n,!:••.' .ii-.t i ip' aw r. Plus, ruhe Pros .iv s F.-r- if ~i re |... n *. e • in-ii:, -. i ,v: ~j -i 'l", .1,1111 I :• \ li. .. ! ... ~, i:tii.- i l p i, i'i.:•/•.•: •••A-. i.i. ? I'ilYNie.t:, DIBK.Ut ,t)r.l'iirkermidae< rpt ' I issbijtil i ..lis may I v..esii', rt. penll iMtl i hi ill I! or 111 1. mm, ,: t . of TUP PI:AH'!V .■IP'IICAI. iM/riri'Ti:, No. ■I liiiillrii'b si. '-.iwion. PW., tan red me- \^Jy -KX -rn ra.raudlioboxM.fiMdutWithbluvrib* At IfruicifUl-*. Accept \j / fJY no other. All pllU In pa*to- v 1 yfr board boxes. pink wrapper-, are a d finder. ' otin counterfeit. Send 4e. i.tamirtJ for /7 pnrtioulnra uml "Ifellef for l.udleM,**/h "V f Utter, by return mail. IO,(MU) loMU tuoiilul* ir;n LADIES w> 'ohmve uaod ttioiu. Nuiue Paper, p Chicbi-alrr lla-mical('u.,lludi(JuSi|.,PbiUi- CARPETS -AN IMIIENSE STOCK OF- Body Brussels From SI,OO to $1,25. AN OVER STOCK OP -TAPESTRY BRUSSELS,- At 45c,60c,75c, and 85c A VERY LARUE AND VARIED LINE OF INGRAINS At 40c,50c,60c, and 75c Our Curtain Department is the largest in the city, in every grade of Lace and heavy Curtains. Fluor Cloths and Mattings in all widths and Qualities BOVAED, ROSE & CO,, SO. 87 FIFTH AVE., PITTSBURGH, PA, JOHN DOWNEY, en 11. BXOISKEIt. OBlce on Stony (-reck street. Johnstown, Pa.