Punxsutawney Spirit, 1895-07-17 |
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NO. * WINSLOW BLOCK, PUNX'X. WE HAVE PICKED OUT ALL LM9MT CuLQBS, BURIED IN JEWELS. YOUR GHOIG6 NOW FOR CD rati*. for the Wreck* Pnl- TO-DAY " 3F The following are only a few of the many lines cut, but will show you what we are doing and whit we can save you : ; V t. :• : ; , r ' ■ _ - t! r We commence our Mid-Summer Clearance Sale of all Summer Goods. Great Gleam BAPTI8T0 T. P. VKIOK. PUNXSTJTAWNEY, PA., WEDNESDAY, JULY 17 US-J5. MH IT CHERRY HILL MJKXSCTAW.VItr, PA. _ , Cyclone's Work Viewed by Thousands of Visitors. Three Deaths and Another Victim MajrBe Added to the Measures WHICH TO Till mmiMmtti PUHX8UTAWHET, PA. ~vol xxiri. AM OBJECT OF ADHHATION i " v.— Iia pretty foot eaoased In a pratty ■hoe- No other ooTerlag 1* worthy of ■uoh association. Here are shoes that (ulfllU all a woman'* heart, or her husband'* pocket book, can desire, and they all go la this great HERB WR GO : July .*. Clearance Sale 'Twill surely puzzle you, but it is the kind of puzzle which pleases. Never was there a better time to get the best goods at low prices. Among the innumerable rare (bargains in Dry- at this great 1 Cbm MOO full Xadlam Dark Prist* at 4 mala a fart. SOS yaida Drtaa OlnfUaai, S oanti a j«t SMS yard! HIM Unblaaehad Jt««ll». 4 et». a yarl. HOS iJd* BlaaMono Blaaeta Ma*lla, •*. a yard. Um Omrtala* wortk ILK at SO Mala. LadlM' Saaalw* Black Hoaa, IS ami*. .Bair'a Laador Oortat. 4t oaet*. IMS Yald* B—t Oil Oloth at 11 oakt*. 'Ladlat' Bilk UmbrallM. wortk SUM at Sl.U. LadlM' Silk wortk 11*J at Sl.iO. All Wash Goods cut in Price. LadlM' O legate Oitorda 00 oaata a pair LadlM' DoaeoU Oxford* SI M a pair. LadlM' Potest Tip all Solid Moat SI.JS a fair. LadlM' Pattet Tip all Solid SkoM. Battoa aa d ISO p5?Ai*dKoM at SI.0S * pair. M Pair of N.M SkOM at SI M a pair. f0 Pair ol SS.W SkOM at SB OS a pelr. Ckild*' Brgt. Doecola Pat. Tip, M, at IS«. a pair, it •» 8M-I9 ftt 800. ft Mir* Yovth'i Soil* Dnm Show, ll-f »t $1.99 a pair. And a full line of Tan Shoes cheap at E3 AIR'S. JOHN E3 $5.00 Suit Sale Will Krect 1,000 Coke Ovens. Johnstown, Pa., July 15.—It has just been announced that the Philadelphia company, which is opening a new coal mine at Hastings, this county, will erect 1,000 coke ovens. It is proposed to equip the mine with electric lights and machinery driven by electrical power. Chorus or BOO Voiced. The platform from which the speakers will address the audience is provided with seats for two hundred. Behind the platform rax tiers of seats will be used ny a chorus of five hundred voices and an orchestra of fifty pieces, under the direction of Professor H. W. Porter. Twenty-two Simultaneous Meeting*. Twenty-two simultaneous preliminur meetings in Baltimore churches and mismons will be held Wednesday evening to pray for the Divine Spirit to re*t upon the deliberations of the convection. Over one hundred separate meetings will be held in four days. Opening Exercises. The convention will be opened on Thursday morning at 10 o'clock by President John H. Chapman, of Chicago. After devotional exercises, lead by the Jlev. C. A. Hobbs, of Delavan, Wis., the address of welcome will be made by Eugene Levering, on behalf of the Baltimore churches. Dr. H. M. Wharton, of Brantlv church, will deliver the welcome of the Baltimore Young People's societies. The response will be made by the Rev. Dr. A. C. Dixon, of Hanson place church, Brooklyn, N. Y. "Minute Osa" Speeches. A feature of Friday morning's convention session will be the salutation of state flags and "minute guns," by representatives of state and provincial unions. Preceded by young ladies bearing banners, the chosen speakers from the state unions will march to the platform to the air of a stirring march hymn. After the flogs have been arranged across the platform, the speakers will deliver "minute gun" speeches reviewing the work of their unions. A IrtMnte CiatherlDi Predicted M Their Mcetl|||a Baltimore. Baltimore, July 15.—It is evident that the fifth Resrion of the international convention of the Baptist Young People's nninn of America is to mark an epoch to Baltimore; for it is predicted that it win be the lawest 'gathering of Baptists that the world has ever seen, ana, numerically, the greatest convention ever held in the Monumental city. Within the next three days 15,000 of the flowers of young Baptist manhood and womanhood will have assembled in the city, where everything is to readiness for their monster convention. RallH s and Prayerplecttag*. The oou -pntion will be in session fonr days, during which time there will be rallies and prayer meetings in aU of the Baptist churches of the city an' houses of worship of other denominations, besides the gatherings in the mammoth tent specially erected near the main entrance to Drnid Hill park. The tout will comfortably seat more than 10,000 parsons. E. CUNNINGHAM & SOU Lawns were 6 cents, now Challies were 5 cents, now Challies, were 6, 7 and 8 cent9, now Good Apron Gingham, Dark Prints, Light Prints, - « ««• • - A large quantity of all the above goods now on hand, but at these prices goo<ls go quick, so cyme early. Boys' Waist9, were 50 cents, now 25 cents eael All Linen Toweling, worth 10 cents, at 4 1-2 cents a yam! Summer Dress GiDgbams, were lOand 12 cts., now 7 cents a yard Dr. Stuart's Buttermilk Soap - - 12c. a box (3 cakes.) He. a yard 3c. 4c. 4c. 4c. 34c. a yard a yard a yard a yard a yard London, July 13.—King Humbert, replying to the message sent to him by Queen Victoria, expressing her pleasure at the visit to England of the Italian fleet, has sent her majesty an enthusiastic dispatch thanking her majesty for the reception accorded the squadron by the British naval officers and people. King Humbert Thanks Victoria. Johnstown, Pa., July 15.—For the first time in several years the large plant of the Qhost Creek Coal & Coke coinry at Qhost Springs, this county, is full operation, ovens burning and every mine working full. The company has orders ahead for several months. Again in Full Operation. To Invcttigale His Sanity. New York, Julv 15.—A man, giving his name as Charles J. Gould and reported to be a well-known theatrical man, was taken to Bellevue hospital last evening, to be examined as to his sanity. He was committed to the insane pavilion. ___ APPEALCOR AID. Thousands Visit the Scene. Upwards of 85,000 persons visited the scene of destruction Sunday, some driving from New York, Jersey City, Long Island and Nyack. Rev. A. Duryee, pastor of the Reformed church, which was blown off its foundations, held services in the open air yesterday afternoon and fully 8,000 persons attended. Clearing Away Dangerous Wrecks. Tonight a mass meeting will be held in the Hackensack open house to devise means of establishing a fund for the relief of the needy sufferers at Cherry Hill. All the churches have promised to combine in the work. The Bergen hook and ladder company of Hackensack was on hand yesterday and cleared away the dangerous wrecks. Curio seekers and camera fiends were out in full force. Tents for the Homeless. The damage to property will reach about $75,000. No insurance policies cover damage by tornado. Tents have been sept here from neighboring towns. About ten families are in dire circumstances through the loss of their new houses, and prompt attention will be paid to these. <«* Injured by a Falling Tree. William Hudson, employed in the statistical deportment of the Fidelity and Casualty company in New York, was rowing on the Hackfneack river near Cherry Hill when the tornado struck this place. He got out of the b mt and attempted to reach the outskirts of the woods, but a falling tree .struck him and severely injured his .spine and head. His friends put him ii.to a boat and rowed him to Hackensack, where his home is located. led Down. Cherry Hill, N. J., July 15.—Three dead ana about six seriously injured is the result of Saturday afternoon's tornado, not including the homeless condition of About fifteen families The dead are Conrad Friedman, the hotelkeeper; 'Anton , one of August Mund's laborers, and William Ahrens's eightmonths-old baby. Six persons were taken to the Hackensack hospital, but two have since been discharged. Edgar Chinnock, the decorative artist, whose skull was fractured while he attempted to save bis brother Frank's horses, is still in a critical condition. He was able to recognize his mother yesterday afternoon, but his recovery is doubtful. Relief Fund Formed. The Cherry Hill relief fund was formed at Hackensack yesterday, with Jacob L. Vanbuskirk as president; E. M. Sturm, vice-president; A. R. Beatly, secretary, and John O. Qrode, treasurer. Cigar boxes were displayed on all the prominent thoroughfares and collections taken at Cherry Hill all the afternoon from the mau of visitors. About $1,000 was collected. SllltS §0 Men's and Boys' Drought Broken In liTichigan. Bejiton Harbor, Mich., July 15.—The drouth was broken last night by a heavy storm, wliich waH general in this section. All brush fires have been extinguished. formerly sold lor $10.00. Fifteen Houses Wrecked by the Tornado at Woodhaven, h. I. Brooklyn, X Y„, July 15.—At a meeting yesterday o4 the citizens of Woodhaven, L. I., which was badly wrecked .by the tornado Saturday afternoon, an appeal was issued to the people of Brookl-.-n, New York and elsewhere for funds .to help repair'tin damaged dwellings. Poor Pcujile ibe Hnffsren. Tha appeal »ys that fifteen houses .-are demolished aid twenty-five or thirty others were badly damaged, all homesteads of poor working men who are not only homeless but helpless. A conservative estimate fixes the amonnt needed to rebuild the wrecked houses at $50,000. The WoodJjaven bank. William P. Wiekoff, president, is authorised to receive any-donations for the suffieWrS. niTKGIiAR IN HIS BEDROOM. VICTORIA'S REVISION. Many Articles Placed on the Free I<i«t—Increased Duty on Spirits. July 15.—The British coli ny ofvictoriahiw bean revising its tariff, and proposes to admit the following articles, among others, free of duty: American miners' gum boots; horses; carpeting and felt druggeting; re"tuin drugs: bleached Hessians (boots); military hosiery; India rubtfer glovfeg and skin rubbers, special preparations of infant.; and invalids foods; breast drills and bncfcet ears: numerons articcles of iron holloware; parts of pneumatic tires: catridgo paper: brown rock salt; rough and unbent nickory: staves, dressed but not shaped; sycamore, not cut into wises for boxes or packages; toe tips: cotton twine: wine presses: elm hubs and wooden buckets. A reduction is proposed by both the government and tariff board on the duty now assessed on nearly every article in the Sresent tariff law. liie government, owever, proposes to increase the duty on spirits to almost, if not quite, a prohibitive figure, namely fifteen shillings per gallon. Drowned Near Ocean View. Norfolk, Va., July 15.—B. J. O'Ntill, manugor for D. C. Kennedy. wa> drowned near Ocean View yesterday while bathing. His body was recovered. A FORGOTTEN KING. One* Urn FUlnd a Piano, SU H* b Frances II., once king of Naples, passed snsy up in the Austrian Tyrol recently, says the Buffalo Courier. It is a striking commentary on the march of events that few people of this generation remember anything about him. For thirty years he has had no more to do with shaping the course of Naples tliait had a citizen of the United States; for he belonged to the old order which pa.wedaway when Garibaldi fought and Cavour planned. After his overthrow in 1401 be attempted to organize revolt? against the new Italy, but success <lid not attend him. IIo became forthwith an anachronism in Italian history. Francis was born in 1830 and succceiled his father, Ferdinand II., as king of Naples in 1853. Like the young czar, he began his reign by liberating prisoners, but hopes that he would remove the abuses of his father's reign were soon disappointed. Then came the onset of Garibaldi. The king fled before the attack of the republican soldier, and, with his queen and fam- Ity, took refuge in tho fortress of Gaeta, which fell after a siege, during w)iiyh the queen, a Bavarian princess, displaced notable courage. Francis' reigg yras short and aryl its sudden Termination was a deep disappointment to an ambitious man. The misfortune of this king was tjiat he appeared on th£ segno at when the Italian national spirit was ' ready to express itself in action, under the lead of Sardinia. Particularism h:«l had a long day in Italy. The little states were extremely jealous of one another, and up to this time no cohesive force had been found. That the states of the peninsula did well in drawing together into a more powerful kingdom there can be no question. Italy is still in u bad way in many respects, but she is far better off than she would have been had she continued to divide her strength by upholding a group of small states like Naples. \Uu ON BOARD RESCUED. Hi om* Was Ordered To Produce Hie Valuables, But Got His Revolver. Fired in the Dark. Newark, N. J., July 15.—Alfred J. Stone, upholsterer, of No. 918 Broadway, New York city, and living on North Arlington avenue, East Orange, was awakened at 8 o'clock Sunday morning by a burglar in his bedroom. The burglar struck a match and held a pistol over Mr. Stone and his wife in their bed. He ordered Mr. Stone to get up and hand over his money and watch. Stone arose and went to the bureau, but instead of getting his money got a revolver. In the meantime the match had gone out. Stone, however, fired in the darkness, but missed his mark and the burglar fled from the room and got away. The intruder effected an entrance to the house by cutting a pain of glass with a diamond in the piasza window and pushing back the catch. TO MAKE DAMASCUS STEEL. ffhe City of Mexico Foundered In the Straits of Belle Isle. Montreal, July 15.—Word reached here yesterday that the steamship City of Mexico, owned'by the Elder Dempster cotmiasy «tf London, England, foundered in the Straits of Belle Isle and is a total wreck. The City of Mexico was valued at $85,000 and carried a large cargo of cattle and merchandise, including the first cold storage consignment of butter from Montreal. The crew was saved. There were no passengers on board. ss.oo. liEKT STRANDED AT HAVANA. Worried the Visitors. One is not permitted to drive a carriage, or ride a bicycle, or ambk a cigarette in Ooean Grove between nridmght Saturday and the iuit«v of Sunday. Thla awl of thing nXttmJlf Worried fte worldly-wi»e vtoitora ttttattMlf ghd racked the Denverifcs *pM|JlV, ttfr iwf Inge aaE Although Several Bicycle Races Are To Be Run at Anbury To-day. Asbury Park, |N. J., July 15.—The sixteenth annual national meet of the League of American Wheelmen officially ended when the clock struck t\ reive Saturday night, but many conditions conspired to carry the affair over Sunday and to-day. In the beginning there was 'the postponement until to-day of the final' neat of the two mile Clara B handicap races rendered necessary by the terrfiic hail, thunder and lightning outbreak which struck town just before the men were put on their merits Saturday. Then came the announcement that Harry Maddox, the pride of Asbnrv Park, would ride to-aay for the five mile record and, on top of this, the race committee yesterday opened entry lista for a number of events for to-day. Few Strangers hett. But these races must derive their spectators for the most part from the summer guests at the vanons hotels and the local population rather than from the L. A. W. members who have been present as delegates to the meet, a majority of the latter having been compelled by arrangements previously made to leave for their homes. Too Sedate a Spot. There was, on the whole, not so much real fun at the meet of '03 as is usual at league affairs, and this lack is attributable to the fact that Asbury Park ia A more sedate spot than any heretofore selected for the annual round-up. The restrictions of this seaside town chafed upon the free-and-easy inclinations of the visitors, and the sacred composure and reserve of Ocean Orove annoyed them greatly. A Des Moines Man Claims To Have Discovered the Process. Des Moines, la., July 15.—S. E. Dawson, of this city, has discovered a process of making Damascus steel. Xhp best skilled metal workers declalMlM edge instruments to have even property of the old Damascus b&QBs. He seeps the process a secret, but Kays it is cheap. A company has been organized by local capitalists, with •500,- 000 capital, to develop the industry. The steel made by this process is flexible and holds an edge longer than that made by any other method. Mr. Dawson has worked on the matter for years. Palace Restaurant, Poor Success of a Party ofNe'w York Ballet Olrls. New York, July 15.—Twenty-two cabin passengers from Havana on the steamer Ciudad Condal were not provided with acclimatisation certificates -and aro held at Hoffman island. They w ill bo released this evening. Amoiitf them are twelve ballet girls,. mostly New Yorkers, who left this city about two months ago to Join the Louis Calderone Dramatic Company in Havana. The venture was not a success from a financial standpoint and the ballet girls were left stranded in Havana with little besides their return tickets. LOEB, H. J. ST. • - "•* • p :M0 STORe Exclusive Men's and Bogs' Furnisher. DID NOT GO TO CHTJKCH. MNlMI MMftMM UMMW IMMKN. ■ WPfttt.. a»l»nrjy4«,.■..■> iara* ssst3£S£'-v^i FIHDIJST STREET, JIHN A. WALLACE, Pro*. w«8cswnauA ess The Hagallcrat earthed MimnM af Soma D»» The following most curious account of a remarkable discovery appears in the Academy, which says: "II. Villiers Stuart writes to the secretary of the Egyptian exploration fund from Cairo, under date March 4, as follows: 'A few days ago there were discovered at Dashour the graves of two princesses of the twelfth dynasty Intact. The coffins had moldered away, and the mummies lay each with a coronet on her head, and wearing other jawelry. When an attempt to move the mummies was made they fell to fragments. The jewelry is very beautiful. One of the coronets was, in fact, a wreath of forgetme-nots, and of precious stones, mounted in gold stems. At intervals occurred Maltese crosses and precious stones set in gold. This lovely wreath was as perfect and looked as fresh as on the day It was made—a er of centjurioa before the time of A'ir.-lv.m—more than four thonsand igo. It illustrates a passage in the poetic epitaph on the funeral pall of Queen Is-em-Khcb: "She is armed with flowers every day." I visited Dashour and saw, in situ, the sarcophagus in which these treasures were found, as also that of the other princess. She also had a lovely coronet, fitted with a socket in which was inserted a spray of various flowers made in jewels, with gold stems and gold foliage. Besides these, there are necklaces, bracelets, armlets, anklets, daggers, charms, etc. These most interesting discoveries are due to the energy and sagacity of M. de Morgan, direator general 6f the Egyptian antiquities, ably rfaeonded by Mme. da Morgan, his gifted wife.' * Ex-President Harrison Spends a Quiet Sunday at Old Forge. Old Forge, N. Y., July 13.—Although Rev. A. F. Earn ah w, a Presbyterian clergyman of Lowville, conducted services here yesterday, ex-President Harrison did not attend them as his camp ia over two mQea from here. General Harrison spent a vary quiet Sunday. He was at brsakfast early and after that meal was eaten ha went out on the veranda and sat there untQ late in the evening. I«r •«!«. Big Fire at Northampton. i Northampton, Mass., July 15.—A brick block owned by A. McCallum, , dry goods dealer on Main street, this 1 city, was gutted by flie last evening, the entire stock being practically de ; stroyed by fire and water. The fire raged for four hours, the entire department being called out. Loss about 473,000. ■a oaxruan xroos or jct- IHljlllli uUak* o* >M<H< So» till skm mam Mf ' ■BM • ™ P j A,'J mfwi? a? > -■ T V-
Object Description
Title | Punxsutawney Spirit, 1895-07-17 |
Volume | XXIII |
Issue | 6 |
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 | 1895-07-17 |
Location Covered | United States; Pennsylvania; Jefferson County (Pa.); Punxsutawney (Pa.) |
Type | Text |
Original Format | Newspapers |
Digital Format | image/tiff |
Identifier | ps_18950717_vol_XXIII_issue_6 |
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, 1895-07-17 |
Volume | XXIII |
Issue | 6 |
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 | 1895-07-17 |
Location Covered | United States; Pennsylvania; Jefferson County (Pa.); Punxsutawney (Pa.) |
Type | Text |
Original Format | Newspapers |
Digital Format | image/tiff |
Identifier | ps_18950717_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 2876.92 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 |
NO. * WINSLOW BLOCK, PUNX'X. WE HAVE PICKED OUT ALL LM9MT CuLQBS, BURIED IN JEWELS. YOUR GHOIG6 NOW FOR CD rati*. for the Wreck* Pnl- TO-DAY " 3F The following are only a few of the many lines cut, but will show you what we are doing and whit we can save you : ; V t. :• : ; , r ' ■ _ - t! r We commence our Mid-Summer Clearance Sale of all Summer Goods. Great Gleam BAPTI8T0 T. P. VKIOK. PUNXSTJTAWNEY, PA., WEDNESDAY, JULY 17 US-J5. MH IT CHERRY HILL MJKXSCTAW.VItr, PA. _ , Cyclone's Work Viewed by Thousands of Visitors. Three Deaths and Another Victim MajrBe Added to the Measures WHICH TO Till mmiMmtti PUHX8UTAWHET, PA. ~vol xxiri. AM OBJECT OF ADHHATION i " v.— Iia pretty foot eaoased In a pratty ■hoe- No other ooTerlag 1* worthy of ■uoh association. Here are shoes that (ulfllU all a woman'* heart, or her husband'* pocket book, can desire, and they all go la this great HERB WR GO : July .*. Clearance Sale 'Twill surely puzzle you, but it is the kind of puzzle which pleases. Never was there a better time to get the best goods at low prices. Among the innumerable rare (bargains in Dry- at this great 1 Cbm MOO full Xadlam Dark Prist* at 4 mala a fart. SOS yaida Drtaa OlnfUaai, S oanti a j«t SMS yard! HIM Unblaaehad Jt««ll». 4 et». a yarl. HOS iJd* BlaaMono Blaaeta Ma*lla, •*. a yard. Um Omrtala* wortk ILK at SO Mala. LadlM' Saaalw* Black Hoaa, IS ami*. .Bair'a Laador Oortat. 4t oaet*. IMS Yald* B—t Oil Oloth at 11 oakt*. 'Ladlat' Bilk UmbrallM. wortk SUM at Sl.U. LadlM' Silk wortk 11*J at Sl.iO. All Wash Goods cut in Price. LadlM' O legate Oitorda 00 oaata a pair LadlM' DoaeoU Oxford* SI M a pair. LadlM' Potest Tip all Solid Moat SI.JS a fair. LadlM' Pattet Tip all Solid SkoM. Battoa aa d ISO p5?Ai*dKoM at SI.0S * pair. M Pair of N.M SkOM at SI M a pair. f0 Pair ol SS.W SkOM at SB OS a pelr. Ckild*' Brgt. Doecola Pat. Tip, M, at IS«. a pair, it •» 8M-I9 ftt 800. ft Mir* Yovth'i Soil* Dnm Show, ll-f »t $1.99 a pair. And a full line of Tan Shoes cheap at E3 AIR'S. JOHN E3 $5.00 Suit Sale Will Krect 1,000 Coke Ovens. Johnstown, Pa., July 15.—It has just been announced that the Philadelphia company, which is opening a new coal mine at Hastings, this county, will erect 1,000 coke ovens. It is proposed to equip the mine with electric lights and machinery driven by electrical power. Chorus or BOO Voiced. The platform from which the speakers will address the audience is provided with seats for two hundred. Behind the platform rax tiers of seats will be used ny a chorus of five hundred voices and an orchestra of fifty pieces, under the direction of Professor H. W. Porter. Twenty-two Simultaneous Meeting*. Twenty-two simultaneous preliminur meetings in Baltimore churches and mismons will be held Wednesday evening to pray for the Divine Spirit to re*t upon the deliberations of the convection. Over one hundred separate meetings will be held in four days. Opening Exercises. The convention will be opened on Thursday morning at 10 o'clock by President John H. Chapman, of Chicago. After devotional exercises, lead by the Jlev. C. A. Hobbs, of Delavan, Wis., the address of welcome will be made by Eugene Levering, on behalf of the Baltimore churches. Dr. H. M. Wharton, of Brantlv church, will deliver the welcome of the Baltimore Young People's societies. The response will be made by the Rev. Dr. A. C. Dixon, of Hanson place church, Brooklyn, N. Y. "Minute Osa" Speeches. A feature of Friday morning's convention session will be the salutation of state flags and "minute guns," by representatives of state and provincial unions. Preceded by young ladies bearing banners, the chosen speakers from the state unions will march to the platform to the air of a stirring march hymn. After the flogs have been arranged across the platform, the speakers will deliver "minute gun" speeches reviewing the work of their unions. A IrtMnte CiatherlDi Predicted M Their Mcetl|||a Baltimore. Baltimore, July 15.—It is evident that the fifth Resrion of the international convention of the Baptist Young People's nninn of America is to mark an epoch to Baltimore; for it is predicted that it win be the lawest 'gathering of Baptists that the world has ever seen, ana, numerically, the greatest convention ever held in the Monumental city. Within the next three days 15,000 of the flowers of young Baptist manhood and womanhood will have assembled in the city, where everything is to readiness for their monster convention. RallH s and Prayerplecttag*. The oou -pntion will be in session fonr days, during which time there will be rallies and prayer meetings in aU of the Baptist churches of the city an' houses of worship of other denominations, besides the gatherings in the mammoth tent specially erected near the main entrance to Drnid Hill park. The tout will comfortably seat more than 10,000 parsons. E. CUNNINGHAM & SOU Lawns were 6 cents, now Challies were 5 cents, now Challies, were 6, 7 and 8 cent9, now Good Apron Gingham, Dark Prints, Light Prints, - « ««• • - A large quantity of all the above goods now on hand, but at these prices goo |
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