Punxsutawney Spirit, 1888-11-14 |
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♦ 4 „ r « P. » ? %£ i?\ -r *% it -Hi • f S 'Jot I ■ mH 1 i Mi y ' A ' ai 'A. X J^k-'" J/^f' *■> IjdHui I' £?f t1 Ayap'sHf; iHJBi jH| j^n| WB MB i * / * - 1 t r*I>*l^^^KiflH -. H H " - || I" NO 24. VOL. XVI. iMtriww*. Uwttw Wmui M4;IWI ■•rrlMjr llUbM. VwiMmtmMM* Arid*. iffiiMm iriit wiintit. for the A exi Four Years ! PfMttolnff Attorney In the aeTeral eourta In Washington and etoowlier*. Pioeeeetee iWni bJoNiUth*BoTenimentMpwbnnti. Abo Ik* p«iek*M Mid Ml* ol real *at*t*. 14-11 T"|ANIEL BAMEY, A TTOBNE Y-A T-LA W 1J0T Fit. K.-W., Waehlngton, D. C, g A. CRAIG A TTOBNE T-A T-LAIV, BROOKVILLE, PA. Ollce In Opera Homee Block. Oct. 1,1889. . I a Spirit. Outwitted Cade Nun, HE IS THE MAN ! PUNXSUTAWNET, PA., WJHUNEBDAY. NOVEMBER 14, 1888. ■MM* Uhm*I»» ■■■'■>■« DMldaaltma Terrllery. THE PEOPLE HAVE DECLARED BY THEIR VOTES THAT A LEX. J. TEU1T1', A TTOMJ/M T-LA Wt mam«nr. fa T TAYLOB BXU* * AXTOKSMT-AT-LAW, IXSUXA, PA, TMTtt jr«. Ml, Tedd betiding, Mala Street. PVKMCTAWirrr, Pi. OflM on eilpln atr**t, two toon north of HHf—"—— f\ M. BBXWXB, A TTOBNE T-A TLA W, ■TOWARD A. CARMALT, ATTOBNEY-ATLA W, Bbooktoxb, Pa Ofloawtth Jndga Jenka. Legal boalnaaacar*- (■Uy attended to. Shall Stand ai the Head of This Nation for BBOOKTOXl, PA la Mataon Block, oppaait* the pnblle TXNKB * CLARK, ATTOBNE YS-A TLA W, |f>OOce with Hon.'A. C. White. l#-» Pa. JOHN W. BELL ATTORNEY AT-LAW, TT C. CAMPBELL, A TTOBXE Y8-A T-LA W, BuoimiJ, PA. OMot In If ataon'a offloe, Mataoa building, oppodto the Court Bona*. NORTH & MORRIS TttE ONE ?*ICE ClOTttlEW, Q C. BENSCOTER, DISTRICT ATTORNEY, Pa. Have stood at the Head of the Clothing Trade in Punxsutawney for almost Two Years and the people have said by their Patronage they shall Lead the Procession. London, Not. 9.—The murder Head ha* added Another to bia list of victim*. At 11 i o'clock this morn log tho body of i woman eat into pieces, waa diaoorered in a honaa on Donet street, SpiUlsfield. The police 1 an endeavoring to track the murderer with the aid of bloodhoonda. The re maina were mutilated in the aame horrible manner aa were thoae of the woman murdered in Wbitechapei. The appearanoe of the remaine waa frightful and the mutilation waa even greater than in the previoua caaea. The head had been severed and placed beneath one of the arms. The eare and noee had been cut off, the body had been diaeinboweled, and the llash waa torn from the thigh. Tbe womb aud other organ* were miming. The akin had been torn off the forehead end cheeks. One hand had been pushed into the stomach. The victim to-day, like all the others, «u a woman of the town. She was married and her hnaband vu a porter. They had lived together at spasmodic intervale. Her name is believed to have been Lizzie Fisher, but to most of the habitues of the haunts she visited she was known as Mary Jane. She had a room in the house where she was murdered. She carried a latchkey and no one knows at what hour she entered the house last night, and probably no one saw the man who accompanied her. Therefore it is hardly likely that he will ever be identified. He might easily have left the house at any time between me and six o'clock this morning without attracting attention. The doctors who have examined the remains refuse to make any statements until the inquest is held. Three bloodhounds belonging to private citizens were taken to the place where the body was and placed on the scent of the murderer, but they were unable to keep it for any distance, and all hope of running the assassin down with their assistance has been abandoned. inothrr SIjateroua Nnielde at Klsxra. m WM. ALTMAN, physician and subomon, FmausYAinraT, Pa. Offer* kl* profeealonel «errtce» totheeltuen* ■f PvnxratftwneT Mid vicinity. T>R. W. F. BEYER, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, PumracTAWMT, PA Oflee two doom eut of the Poet Offloe. P)B. S. S. HAMILTON, PHYSICIAN AND SUEOEON, PB*mo*AW*BT, PA afloe In dwelling. Offer* hie »erTlce» to the Mopie ol Pnnxeutowney and the •urroonding SoXtry. , i I Remembering that we were the first One Price Clothers ever in Punxsutawney, we believe in doing right because it is right. It makes us laugh when we see some of our competitors advertising *nd calling themselves the only "one price store." It reminds ua of the anecdote of tlie bear when the man went upstairs while his wife kills the bear, and then says, "Didn't we do it." After we had established a One Price business and conducted it so successfully that no one can dispute it, then they chime in and call themselves the only one price store because they believe it right after doing business ior more than ten years. It has always been our ambition to give our customers the very best value poasibie. Our motto always has been, "Live and let live." We have been grieved many times because we were not able to wait on our trade, and people had to go away on acco%nt of our room being too small. But, thank fortune, in a couple of weeks more we will be in our new room where we we will be able to wait on all. And not alone this, but we will have a new stock of Men's Suits and Overcoats which will be «o good and cheap that you will wonder where we got them. Men's Suits from $3 to 125. Boys' Suits $2.50 to $12. Children's $1.50 to $7.20. Men's Overcoats $2 to $25. This comprises a line of Milton's, Curseys, Chinchillas, Beavers, Widewalee, Corkscrews, Mountainacks, and everything found in a first-class establishment. WAsanraroir, Hot. 11.—The polltioal [■pnrtaaee o< tfca Bio Grand* U greater than ita commercial, doee, white It locma • well defined bounder/ lor more than a milee between oar repablio nod Mexioo, ita man/ ihoela and eandbew prevent Ita aeoent by large Teeaala (or more than a mall fraction of ita oonroe. This phjiioil feature of the river ha* been the hum of trouble lor many yeara. Being lordeble through *o muoh of it* length, it baa been infected by outlaws, who oroee to one aide or the other to plunder the ranchee, and then baffle pursuit by recroving. For imoggling also, this ahailowncaa of the ri ver fnrniahea great advantage*, and the eeoape of Mexioan deeerters aoroea the river ia facilitated. Bat the aompUlnt now made by M»j or Lightbody, of £1 Paao, ia of still another character. The menage he haa aent to the Governor of Texaa declare* that the If exi- cana on the right bank of the river, opposite El Paao, are building embankments which are intended to change ita channel, and will invetiably cause it to enoroaoh on the Amerioan ahore. He even thinka that they have built far enough into the river to oroaa the international boundary, and are already within Amerioan domaina. He adda that unleaa thia work iaatopped at once the frontier will be artificially changed and aerioua injury inflioted on Texaa landowners, and meanwhile, he would like to know what to do in order to proteot the territory of the State and of the United States, aa the urgenoy of the caae will hardly allow the delay necessary to obtain redress by the ordinary diplomatic channels. He had already urged the city council to stop the work at once. If the situation is not exagerated by the local anthoritiea, a oauae of trouble of more praotical interest than the Cutting affair is furnished to the excitab'e people of El Paso. Still it, is only reintrkable that the liability of the river ton'iftits ohannel and encroach upon one sb >re or the other haa not led to more difficulty hitherto. When the purchase of the Ft. Brown eite came before the last Congress it was argued that one of the reasons for the anxiety of ita owners ti sell the land to the United Statea waa that the erosion of the river threatened to rednoe ita area. Hitherto settlements on the Rio Qrande have been ao sparse, and land in that neigeborhood so abundant, that slight changes of this sort have probably passed without much effort to prevent them. But when the growing importanoe of river towns beoomes such as to justify banking in order to check the enoroaohments of the stream, the matter can hardly fail to be of more consequence. Such an effort haa now been made by the Mexican town opposite. A few weeka ago ita name waa formally ohanged from El Paso del Norte to the City of Juan, whioh was again in the point of diatinguiahing it from the Ameriean town oppoeite, aa well as> deserved tribute to the great Mexioa patriot Thia ohange waa acoompained with feativitiea, and probably by an increase of offloialand local enterprise, one form of whioh seems to be that of protecting the water front. ? » ); H" TXR, BYRON WIN SLOW, PHYSICIAN AND SUBGEON, CLATTILLB, PA. aa-Oflce end residence one square beck of J, wTBlUeeplee atore. is-7-iy. TVR- CHARLES G. BBNST, PBTBIOIAN AND 8VBQX0N, rvB. 8. C.'ALLISON, PHYSICIAN AND 8 URGE ON, PtnnuoMWMST, Pi. Offers hli nrrioM to the peoplaot Fanxm- IftlMT *nd Tlolnlty. Fallowinglethelletof Iadleaeooenty Juror* drawa for December term of eoert: oband luaeae. Beake-GeorgeProthero, foreman; L. 8. Fql« ler, William Smith. White—H. J. Cannon. Coaemaunb-BVa bHUtr, W H Kennedy. Ctaerrybill—Steele Darr, John Boweath. Indiana—Harry Coleman, J Xi Haxlett. ■ Ureea-Merlin Cameron, .miam Reynold*. John Lute, J W Uoapber. Center—J Ernna. BlairsviUe—Samuel Ferguson, B M Wilson. Rayne—Alex Kimmel. f .West Mahoning—Samuel Steer. Mechanicsburg—9 H Truby., llit Mahoning—A M Hopkins. Armstrong—John bowman. second w((x, commencing tad Monday . East Mahoning—Samuel Black, John H Nichol, Adam Tiger. Washington—Robert Small, NoahKUTer, W L Carnahan, Silas Fleming, Jaoob Sadler. Cherryhill—Lowry Strong, William Boucher. Saltsburg—W C McConneil, George W Davis. Green-John Elwood, William Bagley. Blacklick—Wm G Gilmore, Quown Stewart, J M Henderson. Armstrong—Ellsworth Walker, Augustus Uneapher, W D Btissell. Montgomery—Alex Irwin, D A Buchanan. 8. Mahoning—J 8 Hamilton, B F Lydick, Austin McCall. White-Anderson Kelson, Sam'l Hilcman, James Boreland, J W Uncapher. Indiana—A T Moorehead, John Hasinger . W. Wheatfleld—J M Mack, Eobert Kissinger, Jacob A Crops. W. Mahoning- W M Bouser, Ueorge Crisa: man. Buffington—J acob SUults, E M Moody. Jacksonville—W J Lowman. Canoe—Adam Henry. I N Mahoning—David Coy. West Indiana—Horace Dowry. Center—Joseph Pounds. Burreil—I W Stahl. Blairsvillo—Henry Calhoun, J M Hossack. |«s<n week, commencing Doc. 17, Indiana—S M Cunningham, J G Fleming, U W Graff, J W Sutton, Sam'l McCartney. Blacklick—Wm Knuckle, Alex McCrackcn. 8. Mahoning—Aaron Steele, D W Schrockengost.Blairsvilte—Peter Oaks, Sam'l Bepino, East Wheatflold—W H McConaughcy. Pine—E W Hammond. White—W I) Ferguson. Young-J L Ashbaugh. Green—J W Haduen, W C Hattcrson, Jonathan Iluterbaugh. Armagh—J D Drips. Chcrryhtll—J A Foyck, James Simpson, W A Groft, J FKay John Cameron. North Mahoning-W Neil, J C Piter, B N Mar - tin. Concmaugh—A McCleary, Thomas E Marshall.Cherry tree—A W Creery. Bunks—William Cessna. Wort Indiana—J S Fleming, David Lockard. Brush valley—David Cunuingliam. West Wlieatflel 1—Albert Cable, Addison Pal - mer. East Mahoning- 8am'l McCroery. Smlcksburg—Frank Elkin. boitrth week, commencing 1st Monday of January. Blatrsville—J M Marshall. Burrell—Thos Lapflloy, J N Keener. Rayne—Frank Mc Ilenry, Solomon Black, J Oliher, Samuel MoGara. Smtcksburg—A C Cassidy. Pine—Joseph Glenn. Cherryhill—Arcliy Stawart, Levy Shank. Saltsburg—J C I'earce. Washington—Lewis Wallace. East Wheatfleld—William Trindlo, J N Elder, Abraham Cunningham. Homer City—David Boyd, Canoe—George Hugus, Sam'l Crawlord. West Mahoning—Solomon Dibler. Grant—John P Kerr, E Pardee, U Roley. Bufllngton—William Stewart. Montgomery—Isaac Goss, A C Rankin. Greene-Georga-Bimpson, Tonng-A 8 Stewart. Armstrong—Samuel Wolhcr. North Mahoning—Fred Walker. White—William Stormer. West Wheatfleld—Joseph S [Gray! Brcndlinger.Conemaugh—David StelTy. Center—F M Clawson. Indiana—Adam lUUriegel. Biackliek—William Bankin. Marion—J K Wincheimer, fifth webk, commencing Ind Monday, January.Rkdwisg, Minn., Nov. 9.—Great excitement prevails her® over the report of a terrible orlme committed by the Winnebagos on their reservation near this village. At the beginning of the hunting season each year It has been the cat torn of the Indians to hold oeremonies and orgies to propitiate Qitohamaintou, and to procure a good season's hnnt. A few days Grant—Horaca Thompson, M C Buterbaueb, ago several of the savages went over to Henry Able. Trenton Wis to purchase When they returned to their reservation Mahoning—s MoCail. Elijah Work, they were drunk. They danced and went Mahoning—w H Lewis, A Colkitt. howled nntil a late hour at night, when Buffington—Adam Hoffman, Samuel Stewart, several of the old men draw to one aidafor Biairiviiie-John eolback. bad and they decided that something had Q w ,)rummon(, to he done to propitiate the gTeat spirit. wa»hington-E a Edwards. Finally) all being intoxicated and fever- galtsburg— Androw Oetty.Wm stiffy. ish with excitement, a yonng bnck with a West indiana-David Mullen. hunting knife clawed in his hand leaped into the center of the ring of danoers, and goath M,hon,ng_jame(1stuoheii. B s Pierce, seizing a young girl by the hair, stabbed Young—J L Jewel. bar several times In the breast. He then Rayne-N B Short, B A McKlhoee, Austen dabbled his bands in the blood and smear- Condron. . by several others. John Walker, a oivil- caaoe-John Knox. iaed Indian, told 'Squire Barclay, of this Montgomery- John Bennett. oity, of the murder, and the police are now B'ackiiok—w b Long. in pursuit of the buck. , • BhelocU-Uri Manpower. "I oould come a groat deal nnarertliin any boat," satd the stranger. The acton did not reply, and the man Hang away a cigar he was smoking, jumped on to the stone wall, and dove sideways into the stream, with his back toward the oataraot. It was done so qniokly that there was no ohanca of interforenoe. Ex-United States Marshal John C. Level was within u few feet, and a dozen other persons who saw the man j amp were horrified when they found that they had witnessed a real tragedy. Nothing exactly like it had ooourrad for) ,<reral years, and the saicide created quite a sensation. Tom McCloy and dill the other gaides went down to the waters edge, and were sorpaised to fiud the body wedged between two rooks just outside of the sweep o! .ho falling torrent. The spot was a danger* ons one for experiment, bnt the gaides recovered the body late this eveuiug and took it to the undertaking roomt of Joeph McKinua. When foand the body had on two undershirts, stockings and shoe* and part of the trowsers. When the men jumped in he wore a derby hat and a good •nit of blue serge, with a tightly buttoned overcoat. The torrent almost stripped the body. The only injury was a smashed jawbone. The Uesii was slightly broiled, bat i he bones inside »er« ground in * palp. There was nothing left on the body by wbioh it ocnld be identified. • "I don't believe any man will ever bo able to stop that water," the young man ■aid. Miles made no response, bnt tho stranger looked aroand them interestedly. Niagara Falls, N. Y., November 9.— Saioides at Niagara Falls always have more or less mystery about them, and one thst occurred early this e veiling is in keeping with the record. At about.5 o'clock a yonng man, well dressed and apparently not muoh interested in anything else, stood on Prospect Point and watched the mad torrent dashiug over the precipice. Edward Miles and Robert Trebor, actors who are playing at the Falls in Dunoan Clark's Femalo Minstreil troupe, walked over and stood beside the man. "I wonder how far a boat could come down that torrent without going over?" said Miles. NECKWEAR HOSIERY, LUMBERMEN'S OVERSHJRTS, LUMBERWENS JACKETS, LUMBERMENS' PANTS, UMBRELLAS TR UNKS, VALISES, SATCHELS, BOYS' FLANNEL WAIS1S, SHORT PANTS, 55c. BESTIN TOWN. BO YS<md CHILDRENS O VERCOBTS, $1.50 UP. in tha Gordon Brl«k Blook, with—t j%i, M.w. novum, dxntibt. fll i.'.MOIUUIOK, D. D. 8. DtyTAL S00M8, rmutmAwmy, ta. OSmIb JOhtunb BmUdlai, ow mnmrv i*m, Pa. UpOMw in hi* reridene#, InUe W—t Ii.d. TO. W. J. CHANDLER, 8 US 01 ON DENTIST, TYR. 8. J. HUGHES, 47 aVSOXOK DMNTIBT, nrnoumr, pa. OCh natt and ol rindley itnet. Men's Underwear, all wool, $1 a snit; Cotton, 50 cents a suit, this line we can save you at least 25 per cent. We have the c< ebrated Switz Conde Underwear from $2 to $5 a suit. Our Shirts for men and boys, all the latest styles at lowest prices. Hats—the Yeoman, Dunlap and Stetzer, and everything in the market. Caps—Fur, Wool, Scotch, Plush and Seal for men, boys, and children. Gloves—Buck, Hog, Seal, Dog, Kid and Caster Buck, all styles and prices. la * Dllrau Wic<» *<**«*. JOHN T. BULL. M. rv*jsvr*wjrxr. NORTH * MORRIS, TlwOrieifial One Price Clothiers It TakM Tine. JVBTICM or TBM TMACM, tMW •" Md«thf r •* jgf Nortb & Morris will shortly occupy the corner room in the Hotel Pantall Building. Umiomtowh, Not. 9.—From 16,000 to $10,000 til bet here on the re»nlt of the late election, ud the winner* aud stakeholder* are troubled by a ramor that Information* will bo ml* to tbe B w) of Poor dirroton to collect thl* Borpy under the Bute lew, forfeiting nil each sum* to tho inpport of tbe poor of tbe dimriot, »nd holding tbe stakeholder liable foi ibn M,m wagered, whether be paid it "»«r t.< me winner or not. If half tbe mouuy b»t In tbleooou'y conld be oolteuicd it would the poor borne for n»ie than » yeir. Lucki'okt, N Y , Nov. 9.—About. four Wf*k» » J>»rly o/ Ohinauit-t, f«;nr in nnin>'*<r, •»<iniict from San Ft tiwi to way to .N. Ha ri»n urDtmint £ini« r & i-o- mi *fn Nuiiou I H- •! S4 Ne Y>><k, p«mi»-<t through Uanwl. nr. the To floiih work of m; kind, in Gr» k fl ,u DoUuit *» he photograph lino take. time. If yon »ri ° »-aouiu« Niagara H ,.n. Ontealre any w .rk before tke holiday* it u" i to th« Slut. - r». would be w*M to leave yonr negative at ,J* ' '«e • au on Qkotainger & L«>Wa m aoon M poaalble. th* ir 1 •> '*uie UL" ItK- Woh»»«»BV'r>''ilngln good ahepe to do v1m "" ,<>"1 one work i» k>; ' v aud always do oor beat ®'1 "tU 1,(1 'r* to pleano. (" <1 nee quality, style and tol '•» iu..kK mprices of ,'.u r- 'tirta. Anything yon P* ° ■ ''®" w>»t frv'H m •••■iswi , mtype to a ltfeirre a utovi.. day ot'ttr.vu. o < Uoiiar crayon fiaiatud % ...-. le. <• r\ Hj.-i for the uioocy and ..t , v»i»L# h I<i i\ pnwentn. l>roi.< S m | s . i ■■ J .s. w v.ii~,,>wvu.fcat Port JUBXICM or TXMrMACM, pQlQRfiWVlTi * A' B.MOBWB, " ~ PummvAvmr, Fa. PgpfSi ol Fension Kxaaunen. Laiaera rairjwau aoau. OBowoura a little . i X F I
Object Description
Title | Punxsutawney Spirit, 1888-11-14 |
Volume | XVI |
Issue | 24 |
Subject | Jefferson County -- Newspapers; Punxsutawney Spirit -- Newspapers; Indiana University of Pennsylvania -- Newspapers: |
Description | An archive of the Punxsutawney Spirit weekly newspaper (-1911) from Jefferson County, Pennsylvania. |
Publisher | Smith & Wilson; Spirit Pub. Co. |
Date | 1888-11-14 |
Location Covered | United States; Pennsylvania; Jefferson County (Pa.); Punxsutawney (Pa.) |
Type | Text |
Original Format | Newspapers |
Digital Format | image/tiff |
Identifier | ps_18881114_vol_XVI_issue_24 |
Source | Microfilm |
Language | English |
Relation | Property of The Punxsutawney Spirit. Use of the microfilm Courtesy of the Indiana University of Pennsylvania Special Collections & University Archives. |
Rights | http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NoC-US/1.0/ |
Contact | For further information contact mengle@cust.usachoice.net or call 814-265-8245 . |
Sponsorship | This Digital Object is provided in a collection that is included in POWER Library: Pennsylvania Photos and Documents, which is funded by the Office of Commonwealth Libraries of Pennsylvania/Pennsylvania Department of Education. |
Contributing Institution | Mengle Memorial Library |
Description
Title | Punxsutawney Spirit, 1888-11-14 |
Volume | XVI |
Issue | 24 |
Subject | Jefferson County -- Newspapers; Punxsutawney Spirit -- Newspapers; Indiana University of Pennsylvania -- Newspapers: |
Description | An archive of the Punxsutawney Spirit weekly newspaper (-1911) from Jefferson County, Pennsylvania. |
Publisher | Smith & Wilson; Spirit Pub. Co. |
Date | 1888-11-14 |
Location Covered | United States; Pennsylvania; Jefferson County (Pa.); Punxsutawney (Pa.) |
Type | Text |
Original Format | Newspapers |
Digital Format | image/tiff |
Identifier | ps_18881114_001.tif |
Digital Specifications | Archival image is an 8-bit greyscale tiff that was scanned from 35mm microfilm at 300 dpi using a Nextscan Eclipse film scanner. The original file size was 2701.6 kilobytes. |
Source | Microfilm |
Language | English |
Relation | Property of The Punxsutawney Spirit. Use of the microfilm Courtesy of the Indiana University of Pennsylvania Special Collections & University Archives. |
Rights | http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NoC-US/1.0/ |
Contact | For further information contact mengle@cust.usachoice.net or call 814-265-8245 . |
Sponsorship | This Digital Object is provided in a collection that is included in POWER Library: Pennsylvania Photos and Documents, which is funded by the Office of Commonwealth Libraries of Pennsylvania/Pennsylvania Department of Education. |
Contributing Institution | Mengle Memorial Library |
Full Text |
♦ 4 „ r « P. » ? %£ i?\ -r *% it -Hi • f S 'Jot I ■ mH 1 i Mi y ' A ' ai 'A. X J^k-'" J/^f' *■> IjdHui I' £?f t1 Ayap'sHf; iHJBi jH| j^n| WB MB i * / * - 1 t r*I>*l^^^KiflH -. H H " - || I" NO 24. VOL. XVI. iMtriww*. Uwttw Wmui M4;IWI ■•rrlMjr llUbM. VwiMmtmMM* Arid*. iffiiMm iriit wiintit. for the A exi Four Years ! PfMttolnff Attorney In the aeTeral eourta In Washington and etoowlier*. Pioeeeetee iWni bJoNiUth*BoTenimentMpwbnnti. Abo Ik* p«iek*M Mid Ml* ol real *at*t*. 14-11 T"|ANIEL BAMEY, A TTOBNE Y-A T-LA W 1J0T Fit. K.-W., Waehlngton, D. C, g A. CRAIG A TTOBNE T-A T-LAIV, BROOKVILLE, PA. Ollce In Opera Homee Block. Oct. 1,1889. . I a Spirit. Outwitted Cade Nun, HE IS THE MAN ! PUNXSUTAWNET, PA., WJHUNEBDAY. NOVEMBER 14, 1888. ■MM* Uhm*I»» ■■■'■>■« DMldaaltma Terrllery. THE PEOPLE HAVE DECLARED BY THEIR VOTES THAT A LEX. J. TEU1T1', A TTOMJ/M T-LA Wt mam«nr. fa T TAYLOB BXU* * AXTOKSMT-AT-LAW, IXSUXA, PA, TMTtt jr«. Ml, Tedd betiding, Mala Street. PVKMCTAWirrr, Pi. OflM on eilpln atr**t, two toon north of HHf—"—— f\ M. BBXWXB, A TTOBNE T-A TLA W, ■TOWARD A. CARMALT, ATTOBNEY-ATLA W, Bbooktoxb, Pa Ofloawtth Jndga Jenka. Legal boalnaaacar*- (■Uy attended to. Shall Stand ai the Head of This Nation for BBOOKTOXl, PA la Mataon Block, oppaait* the pnblle TXNKB * CLARK, ATTOBNE YS-A TLA W, |f>OOce with Hon.'A. C. White. l#-» Pa. JOHN W. BELL ATTORNEY AT-LAW, TT C. CAMPBELL, A TTOBXE Y8-A T-LA W, BuoimiJ, PA. OMot In If ataon'a offloe, Mataoa building, oppodto the Court Bona*. NORTH & MORRIS TttE ONE ?*ICE ClOTttlEW, Q C. BENSCOTER, DISTRICT ATTORNEY, Pa. Have stood at the Head of the Clothing Trade in Punxsutawney for almost Two Years and the people have said by their Patronage they shall Lead the Procession. London, Not. 9.—The murder Head ha* added Another to bia list of victim*. At 11 i o'clock this morn log tho body of i woman eat into pieces, waa diaoorered in a honaa on Donet street, SpiUlsfield. The police 1 an endeavoring to track the murderer with the aid of bloodhoonda. The re maina were mutilated in the aame horrible manner aa were thoae of the woman murdered in Wbitechapei. The appearanoe of the remaine waa frightful and the mutilation waa even greater than in the previoua caaea. The head had been severed and placed beneath one of the arms. The eare and noee had been cut off, the body had been diaeinboweled, and the llash waa torn from the thigh. Tbe womb aud other organ* were miming. The akin had been torn off the forehead end cheeks. One hand had been pushed into the stomach. The victim to-day, like all the others, «u a woman of the town. She was married and her hnaband vu a porter. They had lived together at spasmodic intervale. Her name is believed to have been Lizzie Fisher, but to most of the habitues of the haunts she visited she was known as Mary Jane. She had a room in the house where she was murdered. She carried a latchkey and no one knows at what hour she entered the house last night, and probably no one saw the man who accompanied her. Therefore it is hardly likely that he will ever be identified. He might easily have left the house at any time between me and six o'clock this morning without attracting attention. The doctors who have examined the remains refuse to make any statements until the inquest is held. Three bloodhounds belonging to private citizens were taken to the place where the body was and placed on the scent of the murderer, but they were unable to keep it for any distance, and all hope of running the assassin down with their assistance has been abandoned. inothrr SIjateroua Nnielde at Klsxra. m WM. ALTMAN, physician and subomon, FmausYAinraT, Pa. Offer* kl* profeealonel «errtce» totheeltuen* ■f PvnxratftwneT Mid vicinity. T>R. W. F. BEYER, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, PumracTAWMT, PA Oflee two doom eut of the Poet Offloe. P)B. S. S. HAMILTON, PHYSICIAN AND SUEOEON, PB*mo*AW*BT, PA afloe In dwelling. Offer* hie »erTlce» to the Mopie ol Pnnxeutowney and the •urroonding SoXtry. , i I Remembering that we were the first One Price Clothers ever in Punxsutawney, we believe in doing right because it is right. It makes us laugh when we see some of our competitors advertising *nd calling themselves the only "one price store." It reminds ua of the anecdote of tlie bear when the man went upstairs while his wife kills the bear, and then says, "Didn't we do it." After we had established a One Price business and conducted it so successfully that no one can dispute it, then they chime in and call themselves the only one price store because they believe it right after doing business ior more than ten years. It has always been our ambition to give our customers the very best value poasibie. Our motto always has been, "Live and let live." We have been grieved many times because we were not able to wait on our trade, and people had to go away on acco%nt of our room being too small. But, thank fortune, in a couple of weeks more we will be in our new room where we we will be able to wait on all. And not alone this, but we will have a new stock of Men's Suits and Overcoats which will be «o good and cheap that you will wonder where we got them. Men's Suits from $3 to 125. Boys' Suits $2.50 to $12. Children's $1.50 to $7.20. Men's Overcoats $2 to $25. This comprises a line of Milton's, Curseys, Chinchillas, Beavers, Widewalee, Corkscrews, Mountainacks, and everything found in a first-class establishment. WAsanraroir, Hot. 11.—The polltioal [■pnrtaaee o< tfca Bio Grand* U greater than ita commercial, doee, white It locma • well defined bounder/ lor more than a milee between oar repablio nod Mexioo, ita man/ ihoela and eandbew prevent Ita aeoent by large Teeaala (or more than a mall fraction of ita oonroe. This phjiioil feature of the river ha* been the hum of trouble lor many yeara. Being lordeble through *o muoh of it* length, it baa been infected by outlaws, who oroee to one aide or the other to plunder the ranchee, and then baffle pursuit by recroving. For imoggling also, this ahailowncaa of the ri ver fnrniahea great advantage*, and the eeoape of Mexioan deeerters aoroea the river ia facilitated. Bat the aompUlnt now made by M»j or Lightbody, of £1 Paao, ia of still another character. The menage he haa aent to the Governor of Texaa declare* that the If exi- cana on the right bank of the river, opposite El Paao, are building embankments which are intended to change ita channel, and will invetiably cause it to enoroaoh on the Amerioan ahore. He even thinka that they have built far enough into the river to oroaa the international boundary, and are already within Amerioan domaina. He adda that unleaa thia work iaatopped at once the frontier will be artificially changed and aerioua injury inflioted on Texaa landowners, and meanwhile, he would like to know what to do in order to proteot the territory of the State and of the United States, aa the urgenoy of the caae will hardly allow the delay necessary to obtain redress by the ordinary diplomatic channels. He had already urged the city council to stop the work at once. If the situation is not exagerated by the local anthoritiea, a oauae of trouble of more praotical interest than the Cutting affair is furnished to the excitab'e people of El Paso. Still it, is only reintrkable that the liability of the river ton'iftits ohannel and encroach upon one sb >re or the other haa not led to more difficulty hitherto. When the purchase of the Ft. Brown eite came before the last Congress it was argued that one of the reasons for the anxiety of ita owners ti sell the land to the United Statea waa that the erosion of the river threatened to rednoe ita area. Hitherto settlements on the Rio Qrande have been ao sparse, and land in that neigeborhood so abundant, that slight changes of this sort have probably passed without much effort to prevent them. But when the growing importanoe of river towns beoomes such as to justify banking in order to check the enoroaohments of the stream, the matter can hardly fail to be of more consequence. Such an effort haa now been made by the Mexican town opposite. A few weeka ago ita name waa formally ohanged from El Paso del Norte to the City of Juan, whioh was again in the point of diatinguiahing it from the Ameriean town oppoeite, aa well as> deserved tribute to the great Mexioa patriot Thia ohange waa acoompained with feativitiea, and probably by an increase of offloialand local enterprise, one form of whioh seems to be that of protecting the water front. ? » ); H" TXR, BYRON WIN SLOW, PHYSICIAN AND SUBGEON, CLATTILLB, PA. aa-Oflce end residence one square beck of J, wTBlUeeplee atore. is-7-iy. TVR- CHARLES G. BBNST, PBTBIOIAN AND 8VBQX0N, rvB. 8. C.'ALLISON, PHYSICIAN AND 8 URGE ON, PtnnuoMWMST, Pi. Offers hli nrrioM to the peoplaot Fanxm- IftlMT *nd Tlolnlty. Fallowinglethelletof Iadleaeooenty Juror* drawa for December term of eoert: oband luaeae. Beake-GeorgeProthero, foreman; L. 8. Fql« ler, William Smith. White—H. J. Cannon. Coaemaunb-BVa bHUtr, W H Kennedy. Ctaerrybill—Steele Darr, John Boweath. Indiana—Harry Coleman, J Xi Haxlett. ■ Ureea-Merlin Cameron, .miam Reynold*. John Lute, J W Uoapber. Center—J Ernna. BlairsviUe—Samuel Ferguson, B M Wilson. Rayne—Alex Kimmel. f .West Mahoning—Samuel Steer. Mechanicsburg—9 H Truby., llit Mahoning—A M Hopkins. Armstrong—John bowman. second w((x, commencing tad Monday . East Mahoning—Samuel Black, John H Nichol, Adam Tiger. Washington—Robert Small, NoahKUTer, W L Carnahan, Silas Fleming, Jaoob Sadler. Cherryhill—Lowry Strong, William Boucher. Saltsburg—W C McConneil, George W Davis. Green-John Elwood, William Bagley. Blacklick—Wm G Gilmore, Quown Stewart, J M Henderson. Armstrong—Ellsworth Walker, Augustus Uneapher, W D Btissell. Montgomery—Alex Irwin, D A Buchanan. 8. Mahoning—J 8 Hamilton, B F Lydick, Austin McCall. White-Anderson Kelson, Sam'l Hilcman, James Boreland, J W Uncapher. Indiana—A T Moorehead, John Hasinger . W. Wheatfleld—J M Mack, Eobert Kissinger, Jacob A Crops. W. Mahoning- W M Bouser, Ueorge Crisa: man. Buffington—J acob SUults, E M Moody. Jacksonville—W J Lowman. Canoe—Adam Henry. I N Mahoning—David Coy. West Indiana—Horace Dowry. Center—Joseph Pounds. Burreil—I W Stahl. Blairsvillo—Henry Calhoun, J M Hossack. |«s |
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