The Democrat. FRIDAY, MAY 80. IHIH>. ACCUSED HIMSELF FALBKLV. Anil wh Seutenoeil to ih Weilti # Peniten tiary— Klrange (:e of Nicholas I'arel. Lust weak tliere died tit the Western Penitentiary uu Irishman who had a his tory. Ha was sentenced to the i>eniten tiary under tl e name of Nicholas Pare), hut his real name was Herman Fitzger ald, and he was the son of a well-to-do farmer in Ireland. Last spring he drifted into Perry county, Pa., and afterward fell in love with the the ninteeeu year old daughter of his employer. Their court ship was clandestine, as botli feared the farmer wouid disapprove of the match. But they could not keep their love hidden for any length of lime. Among those who noticed the attachment were several neighboring swains who had east their nets for the heart and hand of Fitzgerald's fiance, and who had all made water hauls. They began to sueer at Fitzgerald for his presumption in aspiiing to a marriage whicli they thought was far above him. One day he met two of his tormentors •n the highway, and a sneer from them sent all the Irish blood in his veins to his hoad. He knocked one of them down and the other felled him with a stone. The two then jumped on him and gave him an unmerciful beating. Notwith standing the odds, he felt that he was forever disgraced by permit ing the two men to defeat him so easily. He was afraid to face his sweetheart, thinkug that she would chaff him about the fight, so he turned his face sadly away from his employer's home and left the girl he loved without saying even farewell to her. He bad no money and he staitcd to tramp through the country in search of work in some retired place where he could forget the joys and sorrows of his Periy county career. He stopped at a farm house and heard the owner talking about a couple of mysterious (Pes in that neighborhood a shore time before. He was discouraged and concocted the idea of getting up a story of him being the inceudiary, not knowing that arson was a peni tentiary crime. Assuming the uame of Nicholas Parel, he accompanied the farmer to the home of the Justice of the Peace, where she made a fu'l " confes sion," which he had already prepared in his mind. He was sent to the Juniata county jail, where he awaited the next term of court. At his trial he entered a plea of guilty, i nd when the court sen tenced him to teu years and six months at hard labor in the Western Penitentiary he was speechless. He realized too late that aison was a very serious crime. When the Sheriff led him back to jail he broke down completely, and he confessed the deceit he had practiced. He said he never thought for au instant that he would be imprisoned longer than six months, or he would have never made the confession of baru burning. Lite only motive, he said, was to get out of the way temporar ily of his Peiry county friends. His friends in Perry county were called on and efforts made to have him par doned, but before it could be done he died of typhoid fever. Like due Coine Hack From Dent i. Athens banner. Last week Miss Polly Luusford of Qaddistowu,.Union county, aged sixteeß years, was taken suddenly ill, and Dr. Jones of this city was summoned to her bedside. He pronounced her illness due from cold and exposure, and told the mother of the young ladv that there was Utile chance for her daughter's recovery. For three days the young lady grew worse, and on Tuesday morniDg she to all appearances died. The neighbors and friends of the family had gathered in, and the body of the dead girl was .prepared for burial. Her arms were [crossed over her breast and her eyelids closed. No color of life was visible in her cheeks. Her hands and face were cold, as if dead. Her pulse had ceased to beat. The coffin was sent for. But as the mother and friends of the deceased sat around her inanimate form and mourned her as dead, she suddenly returned to life, Unaided she arose from her bed and went to the water bucket and drank a glass ot water. Then she asked her mother and brother to kneel with her in prayer, which they did, to gether with all those present. The girl made a fervent prayer, asking God to direct her mother and, brother in the paths of r'ght. After the prayer she sang and talked with her mother for about an hour, when she told those about her that she was going to die—that she felt the death angel's touch. Hardly had she uttered the words than she fell back upon her pillow and expired. Those about her were astonished; the mother was loath to have her daughter buried, thinking that she might yet be in a trance and return to life. But she was really dead this time, and on Wednesday evening was buried, Subscriptions for a Disabled Fireman. Subscriptions are being taken up for the lelief of Mr. Queer Seymour, who lives in the lower end of Roxbury, just above the Eighth ward. Mr. Seymour formerly was employed as a fireman for the Johnson Company. While at that employment about six months ago a disease set in on one of his arms, soon totatly disabling that member. He has a wife and family depending upon him, and their situation is certainly not encouraging. Considerable money has already been raised, and more will likely be, as ibe c ase is a worthy ooe. ttubsrriba for th Democrat. HEAD FIK*T INTO A WELL. A Hoy Climb* Out of One Forty-Five Feet Deep. A lively fourteen-year-old lad named Jones, of the country town of Preston, Conn., had an experience the other day, the memory of which will abide with him. In the rear of his home, uear the Sbe tucket river, is a very deep well, the curbing of which is of seamless s ctions of big drain tile smoothly dove-tailed to gether. In leauing over the well curb to recover his jacknife, which had fallen on the edge of the well, lie lost his balance and, like a plummet, plunged head first down the dark cylinder. It is forty-five feet to the water aud fourteen f.'et farther to the bottom. The boy caught the well rope, btoke it, and boy and rope went to the bottom in an instant. 'I hen he came to the surface, aud, being an expert swimmer, easily kept himself afloat. He called tor help, but evidently his voice barely soared to the surface of die earth. He swam around the sides of his perpendicular prison a few nines, and tne desperate nature of his condition was apparent. But he was plucky. If he kept on swim ming, he reasoned, he w< uld soon be ex hausted, and sink. So he managed to fix his head and shoulders against one side of the well aud his feet against the opposite one, and in that position rested several moments. He gazed upward. The tail shaft narrowed lik a tunnel above, and at the top was capped by a round segment of blue sky, which seemed immensely far uw ay. The boy decided to make the effort to climb to the top of the well. The well tile is very wide, but the boy was burefoot, and his muscular toes and fingers stuck to the curb like the feelers of aleeeh. He began to crawl upward- Up he went slowly and without a slip, until he ws witlnu a foot or two of the shaft, and then sud denly his clutch slipped,and a second time he shot down the wall, going to the bot tom. He came to the Mirface of the water quickly, and alter a moment's rest again began his toilsome upward climb ; and agaiu, when within a foot of the lop, he lost his hold and pluuged again to its bottom. A third time he essayed the feat, aud that time was suecesslul. He pulled himself out of the shatt, stepped over the well curb, and fell brenthlcssand exhausted ou the giound. Tlie flesh bad been stripped from his fingers by the cut ting grain of the drain tile, and his finger nails were worn to the quicks. Stephen It. ElLlns's Ninety-room Castle. Batlinore sun. The ninety-room house that Stephen B. Elk ins is buiiding uear the town of El kins, Randolph county, West Virginia, will be finished about Juue Ist, It is one of the finest country residences in the South, and is at the top of a high bill — about ten minutes walk from tbe railroad station. In front is an extensive lawn. Around tbe buiding is a wall three feet higher than the first ficor. At a distance the house, with its towers, does not look unlike a European castle. It is an extensive three-story structure, with shingled sides and slate roof. On the first floor is a large, hall which will be lighted with six ornamental torcheres, which will cost about S2OO apiece. The parlor, dining room, aud library, all about I the same size, are on the same floor, and will be fitted up luxuriously. The chil dren's room is also on tbe same floor, but is smaller than the other three. All the rooms are finished in hard wood. The fire places are massive. The walls of some of the rooms are ador nrd with hand some paintings. On the ground floor are the sleeping apartments, and about half a dozen bathrooms. The bathtubs are of solid porcelain. The kitchen extension is a two-story building. The first floor contains the kitchen proper, and servants' dining room, and the floor above their sleeping and bath rooms. What Paresis Is. " Paresis," said a physician last night, as he lighted a cigar and told a patient that smoking was u dangerous vice, "is a disease ol which men, particularly men of affairs, are very much afraid. It is a h ipelcss disease, and physicians have never been able to cure it. The fear that it excites is due to the tact that it is a malady that[men measure as it grows from day to day. Paresis, is popularly kuown as softening of the brain, but it is quite the reverse. The brain hardens and con tracts. Tlu; popular idea that this awful malady is due to excesses of an im proper sort is altogether wrong. The great cause is worry, overwork, a too con stant application of the brain along the one idea that is dominant in the United States a desire to grow rich. I saw an article in the newspapers not loug ago that stated that the man of undisciplined mentality, the self-made man, in fact, the man whose brain was not trained and tbe working of whose brain was not system atized by a good education, was more susceptible to paresis than any other type of man, and it has been my observation that this man is true. Men who cannot stand success, men who, to use a popular vulguiism, have the 'swelled head,' fall quicker thau others. Yes, it is true that no newspaper man has died of paresis.- - Cincinnati Commercial. ViAlting Prientn at Bt. Columba'M Churclr Fsther Farran, pastor of St. Columba's Church, Sixteenth ward, requests us to announce that the visiting Priests expected at his church will arrive on to morrow (Friday) evening to enable the members of that congregation to prepare for holy communion at the high mass on Saturday morning at 8 o'clock. WON ANOTHER MAN'S WIFK. Bret Hnrt'i Son Musi I'ay an Injured Han band 910.000. N. Y. World, May 27. A Sheriff's jury, over which Gen, Sickles presided, yesterday found a ver dict of SIO,OOO against Francis K. Harte, a son of Bret Harte, in a suit intstituted by James J. Smith for the alienation of the affections of his wife, Eliue B. Smith. The suit had been tried previously in the Supreme Court, where judgment had been in favor of the husband by default, the Court ordering damages to be assessed by the Sheriff's jury. He sued for SIO,OOO, and the verdict was for the full amount claimed. Mr. and Mrs. Smith were married in 1879, and lived together until 1888. They have two children, for the possession of whom Mr. Smith has been lighting legally ever since they were spirited away by his wife. Mr. Smith's application to contirm the report of a referee, who recommends that the children be given to him, was ajgued before Judge Lawrence yesterday. The dicision was reserved. These pro ceedings were referred to before the Sheriff's jury when it began its iuquiry late in the afternoou. Mr. Smith is a real-estate dealer, and several of his business friends testified how happily he and his wife lived to gether prior to the separation. The troub'e seems to have dated from the time the family went to board with Mrs. Detley, in Pittsfield, Mass , where young Harte was a guest. Mrs. Detley testified that Harte's attentions to Mrs. Smith became so marked that it caused comment among the guests aud compelled her to sneak to him. When she upbraided him for his conduct Harte told her that lie was obliged to leave Blo"k Island because a married lady fell in love with him. Laura S. Kerrison testified that Harte and Mrs. Smith live together at Kockland Lake. She was a nurse iu the Smith family, and when Harte aud Mrs. Smith went abroad togetl er in November, 1888, Mrs. Smith plac id the children in her charge and told her not to tell any one where they were. Mr. Smith said that he had remonstrated with his wife. He is a cripple, and says that he experienced mental anguish and passed sleepless nights. He bid not learn of his wife's departuic for Europe with Harte uutil long after they had gone. He made every effort to ascertain the where abouts of his children and, after spending about SSOO for detectives, succeeded in locating them. Then he began the pro ceedings to get possession of them. Emma Coburn, a witness for Harte, testified that Mrs. Smith had told her she was tired of living wi'li her husband and would have to leave him. Harte did not put in an appearance. The jury was out but a few minutes. ♦ ♦ ♦ WOULD KILL AN ARMY. A Dynamite Gun Weighing 23,500 Potimls LvpUxh'h Into a Tboumiml Piece*, PERRYVII-LB, N. Y., May 28.— A large number of people from all over Central New York came here by the special and regular midday trains yesterday to wit ness the public experiment of the Doctor Justin dynamite gun. The cannon was fired at 8 P. M. and exploded into a thou sand pieces. Nobody was hurt, but there were many narrow- escapes. Huge masses of iron were thrown hundreds of feet. A piece of the cannon, measuring about four feet through, came Hying through the air and landed within a few feet of a Syracuse Herald correspondent, who was watching the proceedings from behind a tree. Auother large piece went in the opposite direction, tearing a large chunk from the counter of a temporary refreshment stand about five hundred feet away. The keeper of the stand was in side, hut the missle grazed iiis head aud scattered the contents of the stand. It is said the dynamite aid not explode the guu, but the charge of powder. Among the visitors who arrived this afternoon were Lieutenant Commander Washburn Maynard and Lieutenant Davidson, of the Navy, and Commander Theodore F. Jewell, of the U. S. Naval Station, Newport. The cannon used woighed 28,500 pounds. The Oore is twelve feet long and nine inches in diameter. The targent was a bluff about oue-third of a mile from the gun. Dr. Justin and his assistants this morning loaded the six shells with dynamite. Two of the shells were charged with eighteen pounds each of dynamite and four had twenty-five pounds each. Young Wing, represent ing the Chinese Government, was here during the day. Narrow KMPIIPP, Our versatile cons'able, Mr. P. If. Miller, reports havi g had a very narrow escape from the electric fluid Tuesday. He was driving along the road in a dog cart, when a bolt of lightning struck a tree close to him. The shock seemed to paralyze his horse, and as he puts it, al most bending the poor brute double. But the horse being very spirited, soon recovered, and started off at lightning speed, throwing Mr. Miller out of the cart and dragging him quite a distance, and finally getting away from him. When the constable got himself and senses to gether he found his injuries to consist of a few surface bruises and a considerable quantity of mother eaitli distributed over his anatomy. As a lightning conductor he says he is n>t a success, and that is how he accounts for the horse escaping so easily. Cambria Iron Company workmen are constructing a wooden truss foot bridge across the old canal, just north of the P. R. If. railroad bridge at the station. It is presumed that the gate opposite the railroad signal tower will be closed and a new one opened at the corner of the yard next to the crossing. Four Young FiencD. HAMILTON, 0., May 29.—The lady man agers of the Western Female Seminary some time ago forbade tl e students of Miami University to visit the girls of the seminary. On Tuesday evening three of the female teachers drove to Oxford to at tend a Methodist Church social. When the social was over their SSOO horse and carriage were missiog. The horse wa9 found yesterday morning, dead and fear fully mutilated Four Miami University boys have confessed to President War field (who refuses to give their names) that-they did the work. Opponetl to Compulsory Education. CHICAGO, May 29.—A large meeting of Germi n Lutherans was held in Gentral Music Hall, last night, to protest against the Compulsory Education law of this State. Speeches were made in English and German, in which suggestions of po litical action against those who favored this law were received with much favor. A resolution was passed calling on Gov ernor Fifer to include in his call for a special session of the State Legislature, to take action on World's Fair matters, the subject of the repeal of this law, also. The object of this was to eliminate this question from the next State political campaign. Liquor Debate in the Senate. WASHINGTON, May 26—The Senate again discussed the original package bill yesterday, but failed to reach a vote. Blair asserted that the usually dignified body was iu no condition to decide a temperance question. The constitutional points of the measure were argued at length. Senator Blair, from the Committee on Education and Labor, reported favorably, with some amendments. The House bill for the appoinlment by the President of a commission of five persons to he selected solely with reference to their personal fitness aud capacity for an honest, im partial and thorough investigation of the liquor traffic. Died on ll.* Child's Grave. MKROBK. Gal., May 29. —The body of Frank M. Ostrander, ex-District Attoruey of Mercer county, was found by his child's grave iu the cemetery yesterday. He had quarreled witii his wife on MOll - and went to a drug store, where he purchased laudanum. He went to the cemetery yesterday, and after watering the flowers on Ins child's grave, lay down and committed suicide. Killed by a Freight Traiu. GKBBNSBUKG, Pa., May 29.—Silas Ben sou, a brakimanou the soutnwest branch was struck by a freight train near Paint ersville this 1111 ruing aud instantly killed. His body was horribly uuingkd. He leaves several children io mourn his death. His wife died about a year ago. MAKIUAGK LII'KXSES. The Following Have Been Granted Mure Our Last lt<*port. jSamuel 1.. IWUT . . . .lolmatown (Katie L. Price. .. .lohnstowu j August iu >pei#elUalter uuUltxiu IKminu lines ualiltzln I Earnest BlsholT lohi-stown (Aiollie ttellei lohnsinwn t Frank G. Connor toopersUatc (Annie E. WuilaniK coopeuctaie (AbramL. \\elglc -outli Fork t Mary J. \ aiiier south Fork JJohn Bllttlicr Morrellriu, (Mary Bock Morreilville j Bernard t.lancy Leiiulngton, lilutrco (Mary money lunnclhll. I A ' c i '.'-' n ' y I httadeliPliiu (Martha J. MCCaOe East coiic-mnu li (John Mudildgu SI)U ,,. , t hilly Dingle .. , .souili Folk i Francis s. Ylugiliig Aitooua, bialrco (MatUe E, (.uiitiuu c.essoii (Charles Yae..vtl Jo'anstowu (Autue llarneit lotifistowi, I v!"V. l ~u, Johns! own (1 tolia Brutoisky lunnston n I Wtlltam it. I'luinmer Asliviu<- (Minnie A. Johnson Ashvillt motor E. Gill ijlleal iwp (Laura uassldy ( ieurneiJ iwp i James T. I'latt ashviiie (Muiy Miller chest Springs JAmbrose D. Johnston cslivllie i -nnle c. Toole Delaney ) Thomas Branagan Johnssow" t Mary Ellen Gallagher west Taylor l w l J I Andrew Worlk Scooptown ( Mary t reiesnk scooptown J John G. shoemaker lohnstown (Mury Madden Johnstown JW' sle y •'•aclgh Johnstown (Mury K. shomo Jounstown (Thomas K. Delaney Johnstown (Mary J. Watklus— lohnstowu IJohn . Bowman lohnstowu 1 Annie J. Bowers lohnstown MARItIEIJ JOHNSTON—BRADLEY.—At the olllce or the omclatlng Justice, Irvin liutledge, Esq.,in the Ftrtli ward, city of Johnstown. Mr. Andrew Johnston and Sarah Bradley, both residents of said city, on Thurseay, May isyo. MJIRRAY—OILPATRJCK—At the residence of Mr. J. B. Junklns, at Nineveli station, West moreland county, Pa., 011 Tuesday. May cr isoo, by Rev. s. B. Laverty. as-Is ted by'liev' A. 11. Kendall, Mr. James Murray anil Ml-s Laura J. ollpatrlek, both of Nineveh. CRAMER— HAYNES.—On Thursday evening May sill. 184)0, at the residence of the bride's father. No. 85 Haynes street. South side In- Key. 11.1,. Chapman, l>. li.. Mr. John w. Cramer and Miss Florence Haynes, both of Johnstown Pa. DELANEY—\V ATKINS.—At the First Baptist church In this city, Thursday, May 38, tsuo by Rev. A. J. Furman, Mr. Thomas K. Delaney and Miss Mary .r. Watklns, both ot Johnstown. SKIGH— SHOMO.—Thursday, May aa, isoo at the residence ot the Reformed pastor. No ls't soni orset street, by Rev. W. H. Hates, Mr. Westev J. selgli to Miss Mary E. shomo, botli of Johnstown. DIED. RUHR.—on Thursday evening. May an, IH.HI, at IMS o'clock, at tils residence, No ~l Morris street. Johnstown, Pa., Mr. Benjamin F. Robb, In the 6lßt year of his sge. Funeral arrangements later. DAVis.—on Friday, May as, 1890, by accident. Charles Davis, son of Dr. W. 11. Davis, of East conemaugh, aged la years. Funeral arrangements later. When Baby wai sick, we gave her CaGoria, When ahe waa a Child, ahe cried for Caatorla, When ahe became Miae, ahe clung to Caatoria, When she bad Children, she gave them Caatorla, NO HOUSEKEEPER | Should be without one of Bohlinger s improved! LACE Curtain Stretchers) The Curtains can be'done up as well as new ones, and with ORDINARY.CARE THE^STRETCHER .twill last a lifetime. By doing] UP YOUR CURTAINS ONCE YOU SAVE THE PRICE OF;THE STRETCHER. R E E F F v R We have R I just received a I O large stock of G E - SEFHIQERATOSS- E R in Antique, Oak and Cherry R A with and without Sideboard A T Backs, with and without Water T O Coolers which we will sell at O R Marvelously Low Prices. Twelve dif- R S ferent styles to select from. Come S T) early and get the ciiolce of the lot. Rift . mi f sis, ,. R R -RANGES, STOVES TINWARE,- R I AND J G HOUSE-FURNISHING G E _ GOODS E R No. 78 Franklin Street, R A JOHNSTOWN, A T Pcnn'a. T O O R R s Common Sense In the treatment ot slight ailments would save a vast amount ot sickness and misery. One of Aycr's Pills, taken after dinner, will assist Digestion; taken at night, will relieve Constipation; taken at any time, will correct irregu larities of the Stomach and Bowels, stimulate the Liver, and cure Sick Headache. Ayer's I'ills, as all know who use them, are a mild cathartic, pleasant to take, and always prompt and satisfactory in their results. " I can recommend Ayer's I'ills above all others, having long proved their value as a Cathartic for myself and family." —J. T. Hess, Leithsville, Pa. " Ayer's Pills have been in use in my family upwards ef twenty years, and have completely verified all that is claimed for litem."—Thomas F. Atlanta, San Diego, Texas. "I have used Ayer's Pills in my fami ly for seven or eight years. Whenever I have an attack o! headache, to which I am very subject. I take a dose of Ayer's Pills and am always promptly relieved. I timl them equally beiietieial in colds ; and, in my family, they are used for bilious complaints and other disturb ances with such good effect thai we rare ly, if ever, have to call a physician." H. Voullieuif, Hotel Voullietm 1 , Sara toga Springs, N. Y. • Ayer's Pills, PRRTAKED BY Or. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mast. Sold by all Dealers In Medicine, " >:3JI IIJIMUI JM asa— Vt;. \ SUfttfl; for.v.. l ! J-.NRY il. KUHN, Ationi.-y at ' i l.iiw. Mflicc* opposite rirsi National HiinK No, 105 Locust 8t iv**i, .lohnstown. Hi. JAMBS M. WALTERS, .1 TTO/iXK J'-.l T-LA If. oillcj No. j. Alitia Hall. Main smvi-i, lohus towi,,l'a. All fait lirtilunci prompt attention. j i 9 K. J. O'CONNOR. .1. B. O'CONNOR. Q'UONNOR BROTHERS, ■t TTORXKVS-A T-I.A II . ofHceon Franklin street, over l'etlfktri A .Mil ier's store, opposite Postodice, Johnstown, Pa. mars JOHN S. TITTLE, JI'S'I ICR OF 77/ A* PF.ACF. A .YD SOTAIT)' PUBLIC. mice corner Market and Locust streets, -> : Johnstown, Pa | KVIN RUTLEDGE, JUST ret: OF run PKA CF. mice on Itlver street, near the Keiuville Bridge In the Fifth ward, Johnstown, Pa. collections and all other business promptly attended to. mars SA. PEDEN, SURGEON DEN . TIST. Oftlce In Border's new building, on Franklin street. AH kinds of Dental work so ltcl ted. no vi t TRIAL LIST.— JUNE TEK.M, 1890. Indiana Co. Dep. Bank. vs. Anna. Anna vs. llarter, et al. Bet vs. Oaks. Fisher, et al vs. Kager, et al. llorner vs. Klchardsnn. Christy vs. .Mitchell, et al. Horner vs. Barn hart . Chapln vs. cambrla Iron Co. McKay vs. Anderson. Neary vs. P. it. it. Bannnn vs. McAteor. lllleman vs. Troxell. el. al. Mcintyrc vs. Mclntyre. Knepper vs. K nepper, et al. Botts vs. Ashvllle borough. Ftndley vs. Haywood. Bowman vs. Barnhart. Crcsswell vs. Cole. Farber vs. Haywood. Irvln vs. Gill. Irvln vs. Kutrufr. Kline vs. Elliott. Ilagan vs. Lltzlnger. Rum-Its vs. Custer. Barnes vs. Hheam. J. c. darby, Prothonotary. Prothonotary's office, May 5, isoo. A DMINISTRATOR S NOTICE.- ix ESTATE OF MARK DREW, DECEASED. —Letters of Administration on the estate of Mat k Drew, late of the city ot Johnstown. Cam bria county Pennsylvania, deceased having been granted to the undersigned, all persons in debted to said estate, are hereby notified to make payment to me without delay, and those having claims against the same will present them duly authenticated tor settlement. HA pry DREW, Administrator. Dick and Murphy Attorneys, Koom No. 1, Alma Ball, lohnstown. Pa. mayg-ntd3tw I EOHLINO-SE'a ——{IMPROVE DJ t T1 lace Curtain Stretchers g] £" |j|l WMITJP OUR or ROUXNO riujrr. Will Save you Money. Time and Labor. EVERT HOUSEKEEPER SHOULD HAYS UMJ •ay lady ctu> operate them. For Sale By JOHN STENGER, L MAIN STREET. 12 Foot, Price s•*$ •* 75 14 Foot, Price. if 59 -ID O IsPT MISS IT. If you dou't want to Throw Your Money Away: Asllriip's Store For it Surely is the place to buy CAKPET, OIL CLOTH, MATTING, KUGB, .MATS, WOOl) WAKE, \v ILLO W WAKE TIN WAKE, DISHES, TRUNK? UMBRELLAS, GLASSWARE, ' KNIVES, PORKS, AND SPOONS, ANYTHING, EVERYTHING. Lots of goods (all kinds) and it is the place to get your carpet woven, seven looms now running, and can make your carpet as we DID BEFORE THE FLOOD, AT THE OLD STAND,l3lFranklin St. mm (iff SALE: OF v. 5 liable Real Estate. It. virtue of an order issuing out ' ' nhe orphans'court or Cambria county, j or! the ;Ki' " X[M>S " p " bUc 3n: "- SATURDAY, MAY 17, 1890, Al j u 1 J.< t'K J', M. Ihe following" described Heal Estate: AH that certain "LOT OF GROUND ;!; WW; ;u,fl be Dig 111 the Fifth ward of 1 lie thy of .lohnstown, county 01 Cambria, ana Minc ot 1 cnns>lvania. fronting three rods on .V' I JV. ra f . VP®*' weale aly side, 00untied on the s !! now or late of c. Hooker, on the north by an alley, and extending back west nii'.T[- L.i. <,n -, pel ' cl,ed 10 John <, Alexander. I KKMS OF SALE: Ten per cent, of bid when I* ? old, balance of one-third at eon- Mi mat lon of sale; one-thlrd In six months, and the remaining one-third in twelve months, from dat e of confirmation of sale, deferred payments ArtmlSator. 1 "° W ' ° r mort tfafe, at option or I)'' 1 ' Intormatlon can be obtained rrorn •RUIN M. ROSE, lioom a, Alma Hall. Johns town, Pa. \y # haHNETT Administrator of .1.