DEATH OF EX-GOVERNOR ENGLISH. A Career In Which Wealth and Political Preferment Were Acquired. The death of ex-Governor James Ed ward English, of Connecticut, at New Haven recently, removes from the scene of worldly activity a prominent figure in political contests of former years. He was reputed to Ik- the wealthiest man In Connecticut. At the time of his death Mr. English was 78 years old, having been born in New Haven March 18. 1812. lie began j% 1 life as a carpen ter and builder. but laid the foun- /3)\ K dations of his -XsJfsM| k>"^& large fortune in the lumber trade. '• '■W'df\n> He first appeared in politics as a UUIOI member of the (| # New Haven com- HX-GOVERNOR ENGLISH won council. Then he went to the assembly, to the state senate, and, in war times, to con gress, where, although a Democrat, he supported the policy of President Lin coln. In 1867 he became governor of Connecticut, and was re-elected the suc ceeding year, and again in 1870. In 1871 the gubernatorial contest was very close, so close, in fact, that Mr. English refused to take the seat, saying, "No man can afford to bold an office the title to which is in the slightest degree tainted with fraud." In 1875 lie was appointed to fill the vacancy in the United States sen ate caused by the death nf Mr. O. S. Ferry. After the expiration of his term he lived the life of a wealthy man of leisure and affairs. He leaves a widow and one sou. MUMMY CATS SOLD AT AUCTION. The KOVPI UiiAineHH In Which h Liverpool Merchant Has Kugageti. Mark Twain once asserted that on the railway to Cairo inunimies were used for fuel, nnd that an engineer had been heard A SCENE AT THE CAT SALE. to say to his fireman: "These chimed plebeians don't burn worth a cent; pass out a king." This flight of imagination has almost been equaled by actual fact, for recently a Liverpool merchant cre ated some excitement and a great deal of amusement by offering for sale at auction an assorted cargo of 180,000 mummified cats, imported from Beni Hassan to England. The sale called out a large attendance. One specimen, of which the auctioneer declared that its head was a perfect study for a sweet face, realized Bs. 3d. Of another it was asserted that, though not handsome, it was better than beautiful; it was good. This animal went for 4s. od. Mummified cats bring about S2O a ton in the country where they are found, and are used as a fertilizer. The Liverpool merchant netted a large profit by his curious venture, and no English home hereafter, no matter how humble, need be without an Egyptian cat of per fectly quiet habits. IScii/.on the "I'lunßer" in I'ririou. "Coal Oil Johnny" was thought until recently to he the type anil exemplar of reckless extravagance, but "Coal Oil Johnny" wasan economical and prudent man as compared with Benzon, the En glish "plunger," who is now in legal and financial difficulties. Three years ago Benzon attained his majority, and came into a fortune of §1.500,000, accumulated by his father, a colonial capitalist. It was jubilee year, the queen of England's jubilee, and Benzon soon wore the title of "Jubilee Juggins." lie threw away his money in every conceivable extrav agance of vice. Then he published a book detailing the way in which he bad squandered his inheritance, and thereby realized a small fortune, which supplied his wants for just ten days. Now he is undergoing three months' imprisonment for forgery, the sentence being mild be cause of the court's belief that Benzon is weak minded. The young fellow is not destitute, however, for §250,000 of his capital, of which he can only handle the interest, Is held by trustees. It is not often one learns of such a shameful and wicked misuse of wealth as that for whicli Benzon is responsible. Cinili>tiii Marrlugo of The clandestine marriage at Milwau kee of Charles Hamilton Eliot, aged 15, and Lizzie Nugent, aged 10, would seem again to bring into prominence the ne cessity for some legal regulation that will serve to prevent those armed with the authority from uniting the lives of children solely for the sake of the fee at tendant on performing the ceremony. The Milwaukee bride and groom are mere school children, dependent on their parents for support, and tiie dis covery of their foolish exploit has brought sorrow to two homes, and given the husband and wife a good deal of un pleasant notoriety. The lifeline of the Circus clown. Dan Kice, famous twenty years ago us a circus clown, is living now in retire ment at Long Branch. lie is a hale, hearty old man who delights to talk about the palmy era of bis "business." He attributes the decadence of the clown to the fact that the "funny work" of to day is' monopolized by the professional humorist and newspaner paragraohor. NOVEL OLD IS SPLENDORS. THE MANHATTAN CLUB TAKES THE FAMOUS STEWART MANSION. Its Niirble < oliimiiM, Lofty Oiling, Self Supporting Slttlrcane uml llngnlllcent Koonirt- "Gnu. Grant'. Kuum"—How A. T. Stewart ItoNigiKMl and Huilt tin- Mansion. The finest cluli house on the American continen'., perhaps the finest in the world, iB that now occupied and enjoyed by the Manhattan club of New York city. The lowest estimated cost of the bare con struction is $1,000,000. But this does not include the wonderful inlaid work, the mosaics and scroll fixtures, or even the finest set of steps, which aro reported to have cost SIOO,OOO. Verily club life is lookinjwup when an association of private gentlemen can afford to maintain such an establishment as this, merely for their leisure hours. However, they did not build the house. It is the once noted Stewart mansion and possesses all the historic interest attached to the Stewart estate and its semi-tragic, but altogether romantic, history. In it the visitor is shown the curious apart ment the merchant prince designed for GEN. GRANT'S ROOM, himself, the modest room in which his quiet and almost unknown widow died, and the truly royal apartments which Mr. Stewart lmd constructed and finished expressly for the entertainment of Presi dent and Gen. Grant. The favored few who have been invited to see it say that it is a long and not very easy day's work to take even a general view of the mansion, and that a week would be scant time to study it. The floors, except in the top story, are laid in marble. Polished gray marble every where lines the walls, and were it not for the luxurious furnishings and elaborate carvings, fretted work and other reliefs, the effect would bechilling, but the build ing is now furnished in the most elab orate and luxurious style. For three years after the death of Mrs. Stewart the mansion remained shut, and not even a curtained window was opened, and even while Mr. Stewart was alive and while he opened his picture gallery to visitors the rest of the mansion was seen by but very few. No one knows just what the mansion cost him, but the lowest estimate of architects is above $1,000,000. Every door frame and every window recess is of polished Italian mar ble, and towering columns of it support the ceiling. Seven years were consumed in building the house, as the workmen on several occasions had to wait some weeks for the arrival of pieces from Italy. There is no strict adherence to one style of architecture; constant changes were directed by Mr. Stewart as the building progressed, and as a result the structure presents very different appearances on its several fronts. The grand entrance is on Tiiirty-fourth street, and the noble flight of steps there is considered the finest thing of that kind in the city. Each step is thirty feet long, but tiie size of the whole building and the proportion make thein look smaller. At the foot of these stairs be gins the inclosure about the grounds; tliis, a mere "yard fence," so to speak, is a work of art in itself and cost $50,000. The great white slab at the foot of the stairs is the largest single piece of mar ble ever quarried and is the result of the third attempt. Two slabs of the same size were broken by the workmen before they acquired the skill to set such a mass safely. BUCEPTION KOQM. Ascending these steps and passing the elaborate doors one finds himself in the main hail, of which tiie ceiling is twenty five feet high, with curiously ornament ed beams, supported by six pillars of the largest size. In the intervals between the pillars are four notable statues. At the back of the hall is what archi tects consider the masterpiece of the building, the "self supporting stairway," of polished gray marble. It winds along the wail of a rotunda (which is lighted by a dome) to the third floor, and with some thirty steps to each story. Before this stairway was accepted from the con tractor 100 tons of iron were piled on the steps to test it. Its cost was $90,000. The two rooms, however, which at (ract most interest, are the one In which Mr. Stewart best loved to stay—the fam ily room —and that in which Mrs. Stew art died, "(haul's room," so culled, oc cupies the entire Fifth avenue front of the third floor; but (ion. Grant himself never occupied it. The Manhattan club, as is well known, is a "swell" organiza tion, with a fixed income of over SIOO,- 000 a year, owning considerable rental property and other investments. The one cent stamp in the now United States postal series is the object of tuuch artistic criticism. It is said that Frank lin's profile portrait on the stamp is a "putty faced personification of senility," and a libel on the good old printer whosj memory all Americans delight to honor RUSH AT SPECIAL SALES. Thfi Way New York Merchants Draw a Crowd of Eiitliualaatlc Nhoppera. "Special sales" are a feature of New York commercial life in the retail line, and they contribute more to woman's pleasure and caprice than any other one phase of shopping experience. Those who have never been to one have missed a heap of fun. In one of the large up town stores recently there was a "run" on gloves. They were of a superior quality, and sold for forty-five cents. The sale started at 9 in the morning, and directly there was a spirited scene around that counter. Women rudely pushed one another away in their wild endeavor to get a pair of gloves. One gave a $5 bill and clamored for her change. Another held a pair over the heads of the crowd and endeavored to give her money to one of the salesgirls. This woman, after patiently waiting for a time and seeing no chance of getting up to tho girl, quietly put the gloves in her muff and sauntered off. She 'had a bargain. After a while the change from sls was brought back. The salesgirl had by this time become rattled with the confusion and rapidity with which the gloves were being bought, and handed the money to the wrong woman, who put it in her purse and walked away. The lady to whom the money belonged, getting un easy at tho long delay, finally elbowed her way through the crowd, demanding her change, and creating no little excitement. The rush was so great that the girls behind the counter grew frantic, and began to cry. The floor walker ordered the sale closed for three hours, announcing the time of reopening. Then a scene of wild con fusion was dispelled, and the glove pur chasers dispersed themselves over the store and were soon busied with other purchases. Three hours later the glove sale began again, only to find even a greater crowd clamoring for covering for their hands than in the morning. It continued only thirty minutes when it was again stopped because the clerks could not wait on the anxious customers. It was never re opened, but the establishment, all the same, got a first class advertisement out of the attempt to sell dollar and a half gloves for forty-five cents. —New York Star. Locked Antlers. "Locked horns are becoming quite a fad with some of the swells at the me tropolis," said a gentleman the other day, "andsoraeof the Adirondack hunters and guides are making nice little sums by occasional sales of the curiosity that is demanded. You see, tho old story about the bucks that fall to fighting, and in some manner get their horns locked so they can't get apart and then starve to death, lias taken a strong hold upon the romantic natures of many people and if they can only get a set of locked horns mounted they aro happy. "So the hunters select nice horns tiiat correspond as to size, and by the use of a twisted cord and case spring them to gether as if locked in their deatli em brace by the maddened thrusts of fight ing bucks. Then, 011 account of their great rarity and the difliculv of finding them, they are sold to the rich curiosity hunter for a big price. His friends look in wonder and envy at them, while he recounts the story told him by the guide who found their skeletons held together by the horns :.i:d the earth ail trodden down around the place so solidly that vegetation had not grown there in years, etc., and the guide goes back to the woods and fixes up another pair for tiie next curiosity seeker."—Utica Observer. The Longevity of I lints. The swan is the longest lived bird, and it is asserted that it has reached the age of 100 years. Ivuauer, in his work enti tled "Naturhistoriker," states that he has seen a falcon that was 102 years old. The following examples are cited as to the longevity of the eagle and vulture: A sea eagle captured in 1715, and already several years of age, died 104 years after wards, in 1819; a white headed vulture, captured in 1700, died in 1820 in one of the aviaries of Schoenbrunn Castle, near Vienna, where it had passed 118 years in captivity. Paroquets and ravens reach an age of over 100 years. The life of sea and marsh birds sometimes equals that of several human generations. Like many other birds, magpies live to he very old in a state of freedom, but do not reach over 20 or 25 years in captivity. The nightingale lives hut 10 years in captiv ity, and the blackbird 15. Canary birds reach an age of from 12 to 15 years in the cage, but those flying at liberty in their native islands reach a much more advanced age.—Detroit Free Press. VI lu> Patronize .Savings Hanks. Mechanics and storekeepers have the largest savings bank accounts. Natu rally we do not have many professional nier. as customers, hut among the com paratively few that patronize savings banks doctors seem to lay up the most money. Lawyers generally keep their money in national hanks, as the nature of their profession requires them to have their funds where they can draw checks upon them. Many professional men, though, keep money in a savings hank as a side investment, upon which they can draw for a rainy day. Some classes of men, from tho nature of their employ ment, are unable to accumulate much money. Painters, for instance, and actors, usually live through tho summer upon their winter's earnings. lnte rview in flrooklyn Eagle. Treatment of Stutterer*. It is said that stammerers rarely if ever show any impediment to speech when speaking in whispers. On this fact a new method of treatment has been advocated by Dr. Cocu, which is as fol lows: In the first fen days speaking is prohibited. This will allow rest to tho voice, and constitutes the preliminary stage of treatment. During the next ten days speaking is permissible in the whis pering voice, and in the course of the next fifteen days the ordinary conversa tional tone may lie gradually employed. —New York Telegram. TALK OK THE LOST EXTRA. A SUSPICIOUS YARN OF RAILROAD ING IN THE NORTHWEST. An Oprntor Kt'culvwl OnlerN to Look Out for n "Extra" That Never Arrived—An Old Farmer Furninhea a Clew, hut It Waft Never Fully Worked Out. "Yes, that's considerable of a story, if it's true; but you can calculate with a wonderful degree of accuracy that any thing a printer says is considerably warped. Now I think I can see you and go you a few better in the story line, and what I am going to tell you is absolutely true." It was a picturesque group of old timers The Hawkeye reporter had stumbled on in the course of a news gathering ramble down in the "Q" yards. They were seated about an old stove in the round house, and had been swapping various railroad experiences. The conversation had drifted around to snow blockades in the west. The reporter had just finished an elaborate account of his experiences in a bloceade on the Rockies which called fortli the above remarks from one of tho old engineers whom we will call Highie, out of respect to his feelings. The reporter hastily sharpened a fresh lead pencil and selected a fresh spot on his cuff. Higbie knocked the ashes from his cigar and continued: THE "EXTRA" ANNOUNCED. "It happened this way. I was doing night duty for Bob Carew at Little Jim ville, fifty miles west of Limestone, on the Northwestern. It was during the winter of 1878-79, and of all the dreary places Jiinville was the dreariest in win ter time. It had been raining and snow ing and sleeting all that week, and the ground was covered with a sheet of ice. Night operating is nothing to passionate ly long for. I prefer hod carrying. I sat in the desolate box of a depot, the cold winter wind howled around the corners with a drearisouieness and rat tled and slammed the shutters in away that would give some people a fit of the blue shivers. But I had got used to that, so didn't mind it much. I had stirred up the fire, for it was bitterly cold out side, witli the frost an inch thick on the windows, end sat watching the flames flash and roar up the chimney. I must have fallen asleep, for soon I began to hear the most infernal racket, like death dancing a double shuffle on the roof, and I started up with a jerk that nearly dis located my backbone, to find the train dispatcher calling me. I answered and received the following order: " 'Hold No. 11 till extra passes you.' "Just then 1 heard the whistlo of the passenger. It was 10:80 when I side tracked here. At 10:4.7 I received a dis patch from Bunker llill saying that the extra had just pulled out. It would probably take her thirty minutes to make the run from Bunker Hill. I waited— -11:80, no extra; 13, no extra. What could it mean? 1 telegraphed to Bunker Hill and received the following: " 'Extra left here at-10:42 O. K.' "The train could be heard from no where else along the line. I awoke the section hands and sent them over the track to Bunker Hill to see if they could find anything of the extra. At 2:80 1 re ceived n dispatch from them at Bunker Hill: " 'Track clear. No trace of extra.' "Bcfro I could express my astonish ment 1 was joined by the conductor of No. 8, who was swearing fluently. " 'What does it mean, ffigbie?' he asked. "I was nonplussed, hut finally told him to pull cautiously down to Bunker Hill, and if he saw nothing to go on as usual, and make up as much time as possible. At 3:10 I received the follow ing from the conductor at Bunker Hill: " 'Just arrived. Could find nothing of extra.' "I ordered a track walker to search closely between Jitnville and Bunker Ilill. He found nothing except what looked like traces of tho train having jumped the track. But nothing further, rim FARMER'S STORY. "Days passed into weeks, until the weary months dragged their slow lengths along, leaving the tantalizing mystery wrapped in still more impenetrable gloom, until one day an old farmer drifted into the depot and asked if I had been losing any trains lately, 'For,' the old man chuckled, 'I saw one runnin' 'round loose last winter. It ran up to my farm yard and tho engineer axed me if lie might fill his hilar tank at my well. I said he might and got him a bucket. After lie had filled up he axed me the road to the nearest town, borried a chaw o' tobacky and lit out. I never seed him sence.' and the honest farmer shuffled away. "Well, that was three years ago. I have not seen tho lost extra, hut I have heard from it, several times. It was seen by a belated hunter one stormy night, when it rushed by him like the wind, its headlight gleaming like the evil eye of some demon. Others have heard its un earthly shri. k mingling with the howl ing storm. .Sometimes it startled the lonely farmer iu the dead of night, when the engineer will ask permission to take water, and inquire the direction to the nearest town. It is seldom seen by rail road men, who call it the Flying Dutch man of tho plains, and consider it an evil omen when seen by one of them. It is said that poor Billy Yates saw the specter train coming down the track just before lie struck the broken rail that hurled him and two others into eternity." lligbio threw the stub of bis cigar into the stove and ceased talking. There was a dreary silence for a few moments, and then a tall, gaunt figure arose out of the shadow in the corner and remarked in a sepulchral voice: "I believe that's a prevarication,"— Burlington Ilawkeye. A Michigan postmaster has been so pestered b\ young men gossiping with his pretty female clerks that he has placed over each delivery window a printed card which reads: "This window for P. O. business only! Not for visit ing." Thrown frm RII Iceboat. I remember the first time I ever climbed into an iceboat. It was near Suugerties, on the Hudson, about thirty years ago. Three other passengers -were there, too, hut I was the only novice. I was horribly afraid of air holes, for 1 had heard a great deal about them. See ing one about fifty yards in front of us, and directly in our track, I nervously drew the steerman's attention to it. "Do you think 1 am blind?" he replied, angrily, for I had bothered him that way once or twice la-fore. A second later he shouted, "Hold on, ail!" and I, who had not held on fast enough, as the boat spun away on another course, was shot out of the craft and went sliding along over the ice at a wonderful rate of speed. There was a splash, and I felt the water close over my head. I thought we were all lost, for, in my fright and confusion, I had not noticed that 1 had left the iceboat, but when I rose, splut tering, to the surface, I saw my com panions 200 feet away, and quite safe. It was I who was in the air hole, and I was there alone. It was a quarter of an hour before 1 was fished out, half drowned and two thirds frozen. Since that day I have never attempted to offer suggestions to the steersman, but have devoted my at tention exclusively to my own business, and chiefly to holding on when lie tells me.—New York Sun. An ObHcrvuiit Hoy. The boy of whom I write is never at a loss to find something to observe. Last year a heavy shower caught him while ho was fishing. Front his retreat he kept an eye out to see whatever there was to be seen, and shortly after observed the dragon flies, great and little, settling in the tall brook grass for shelter from rain. Before the shower was fairly over lie saw the cedar birds come and drive the dragon flies from their covert, hunting them down in all their lace winged finery. The great three inch dragon fiies, pointed with black and yellow, were too strong for the birds, but the little slender fel lows, done up in fancy colors—brown, green, blue and dusky—became meat for the hunters. Some time ago I remonstrated with him for throwing stones at a king bird, but I was told that he was doing it only to please the bird. True enough, it did please the bird. From his perch on a high tree the king bird calculated the curve of each stone, chattering defiance as the missile whizzed by, rising u few feet when it came too near, only to settle again in the same place, As it amused both bird and boy, for sev eral days the king bird returned daily to enjoy the sport.—Cor. Forest and Stream. Will the Earth Fall to Pieces? Professor Jones, the English scientist and other "F. K. S.'s," "L, B. A.'s" arid "B. C. D.'s" are discussing the dangers our American gas well drillers are sub jecting the whole population of the world to by tapping nature's great gas retorts. Jones thinks the earth a gigan tic baloon, held up, in part at least, by internal heat and gases, and believes that a continual drain on nature's great gas main will eventually exhaust the supply and cause the earth's crust to break in and perhaps fall into millions of pieces as it collapses prior to falling through space everlasting. It is reason able to suppose that there is souic founda tion for the alarm this prophet has been sounding for the past two years. The steady belching forth of millions of feet of gas every hour in the day is surely causing a great vacuum somewhere not far beneath the surface. That the com parative thin archway over this fast emptying cavern is more than likely to break and cause great havoc on the sur face there is but little doubt.—St. Louis Republic. I'in.*m|,l,S4 ill lllu/.l I. The most delicious fruit to be found in Brazil is the pineapple. Northerners who eat this fruit weeks after it has been picked in its green state have only a faint idea of its sweetness, lusciousness and delicious flavor. Here the pineapple is picked when the tropical sun luis per fected its chemical work and the fruit is ready to melt itt the mouth. It would be an affront to nature to sprinkle sugar upon it when sliced. It is mellow, over running with juice, and of incomparable flavor. The finest pineapples arc those found in Pematnbuco, but the fruit grows almost everywhere in Brazil. There are other fruits, such as alligator pears, melons, chirimoyas and sapotes, and a great variety of tropical nuts. Fruit is cheap here, tho finest pineapples being sold for three or four cents to the experienced native, and for ten cents to the unwary traveler.—Cor. New York Tribune. A Vexing l>ui!Hliii. There etui be only so many ihivcrs, so many clerks, so many salesmen, so many young lads in offices. The end of that employment tether is very soon reached, and the n.-'. what arc they to do? and what arc we, their guardians and their teachers, to do for them? Nothing is more wearing upon a thoughtful nature than the reeogiiition of its inability to answer with eontinon sense the question. "What would you advise uie to do?" It occurs and recurs daily, and daily the heavy foot of disappointment descends the stairs, walks upon the hardened pavements, whose stones are less hard than the hearts of ordinary men toward their fellows.—Howard in New York Press. \ Whaling Experience. Some of the experiences of whaling are not pleasant to remember. One es pecially is impressed upon my memory: I was bow oarsman in a boat fastened to a big spernt whale. The line was going out so fast that the liarpooner was pour ing water on it, and he turned to me and handed me the cup, saying, "give me some water." I dipped it overboard and turned to give it to liiin. To my horror, he was gone; not a man saw him go over, and not a sound did he make. The rope in some way took a turn about his leg, and he was jerked over so quick that he no doubt never knew what hurt him.—Letter iu Philadelphia Times. Common Sense In the treatment of slight ailments would save a vast amount of sickness and misery. One of Ayer's Pills, taken after dinuer, will assist Digestion; taken at night, will relievo Constipation; taken at any time, will correct irregu larities of the Stomach and Bowels, stimulate the Liver, and cure Sick Headache. Ayer's Pills, as all know who use them, are a mild cathartie, pleasant to take, and always prompt and satisfactory in their results. •' I can recommend Ayer's Pills above all others, having long proved their value as a Cathartic for myself and family." —J. T. Hese, Leitlisville, Pa. " Ayer's Pills have been in use in ray family upwards of twenty years, and have completely verified all that is claimed for them."—Thomas F. Adams, San Diego, Texas. " I have used Ayer's Pills in my fami ly for seven or eight years. Whenever 1 have an attack of headache, to which I am very subject, 1 take a dose of Ayer's Pills and am always promptly relieved. I find them etjuallv bcneticial in colds; and, in my family, they are used for bilious complaints and other disturb ances with such good effect that we rare ly, if ever, have to call a physician." H. Voulliemd, Hotel Voulliendl, Sara toga Springs, N. Y. • Ayer's Pills, PREPARED BY Or. J. C. Ayer Ic Co., Lowell, Mass. Sold by sll Dealers in Medietas. £ru fcssi'iiii! Curtis. Henry H. KUHN, Attorae7-.it f.'iw. office opposite First, National u* WO. 186 LOCUS! Street, Johnstown, pa. JAMES M. WALTERS, A TTOKSXi'.A T-LA tf. Oflica No. Aim A Hull. Main street, Joliaß town.Pa. All businessjjiven fait hfulund prontat attention. JMJF K. J. O'CONNOR. j. H. OYonMQBL Q'CONNOR BROTHERS, A TTOBXE K.S-.t T-I.A H . Office on Franklin street, over Petrlktua Mil ler's store, opposite Postomce, .Johnstown Pa. mars JOHN S. TITTLE, JUSTICE OF THE EE ACE A Sit SOT A III' EIIHUC. Office corner Market and Locust streets, S ' l -' Johnstown, l*n. jRVIN RUTLEDGE, JUSTICE OF THE PEACE. oniceon Itiverstreetnearthe Kernvtlle Bridge in the Fifth ward, Johnstown, I'a. collect loss and all other business promptly attended to. mar.j N. WAKEFIELD, M. D., THYBICIA .V A SI) EL'IIGEOA office No. 43 .Morris street, Johnstown, P.;-, A YEAGLEY. M D, PUYSII'tAX AS) (J 110 EOS. Office No. SSI Locust . Johnstowu, PoJ. O A. PEDEN, SURGEON DEN TIST. onice In Border's new building, on Franklin street. All kinds or Dental work so licited. novi4 J I\ THOMPSON, M. I)., SURGEON DENTIST, JOHNSTOWN, PA. Has had a professional experience of over 36 years. tVFilliiig Teeth a specialty. Office KOOIQB, No. 114 iNupuieuu street. JOHNSTOWN SAVINGS BANK NO. 192 MAIN STREET. ' .1 , ( i; |ji '• fi'il •• • ''Vv ;• . u ' ' 'I '-J* - -vy->, '■ ■ * C.VRrjR ED SEPTEMBER 12. 1370 DEPOSITS received or one dollar a lid upward, no deposits exceeding a tomlor la,ooo will be received rrom any one person interest Is due In the months or June and December, and It not witlidrawn Is added to Hie deposit, t in,s coin pounding twice a year Hit hour troubling the de positor to call or even to preseni Hie deposit book. Money loaned on Real Estate. Preference with liberal ran s and long time given in oorrowers offering II tst morlgugt s on i.irms wort It four or r tore times lite amount, of loan desired; also, moderate loans made on town property wtmre ample security Is offered, GOC.II reference per reel inn's.eta,required, ThtscorporntfonlsexctuslvoH ~ s.v, mgs Hank No eommerclal deposits received, nor discount made. No loans on personal seearll'. lllank applications for borrowers, oopples of the rales, by-laws, and special acts of i lie 1 egls lattire relating to deposits or married womee and minors can bo obtained at the Hank. TRPSTKKS— Herman Haunter, n. 1.. Ycagley, .fohti llannan. John Thomas, r. it. Kills, pear son Fisher, James ,1. Kronheiser, John Bowman \V. 11. bowman, James MeMlllen, James Outun Howard J. Roberts, Win. A. Stewart Geo T. Swank. Jacob swank, w. W. Walters. James Mc.Mlllen. President ; John bowman. Herman Haunter. Geo. T. Swank, Vice Presidents; W. C. be wis. Treasurer; Cyrus Elder, solicitor marK SALESISEN~S=^ wn 1 traJe . We m the larcrak Literal ualary paid. I*m MM ■entpotllloß. 9onryadanre