Jmmbo. It npe now, from a inlerriew ll&IUi, Ui IMl j 1. A ooa m Jam bo ui the train, which wu OUJJ wueu lb waa -.- j v.v -r i - i - ..j. . t,.. .. r.rotw null, lie iuwjc a usu I J " - n him away acrow the track, as if he t.i i-.i - Tk-fcJ- low landed aeainst box car and a,, i(h Vf 4 SJBVJ - num . nhow, that J am bo wu killed ot cottoi,wBeu uu cu.u while ir tom, tb.babj ek- led. fb . th. i jidd h..- lay there whining like a wLippea cotwn mus iax,.v u w puppy. Jumbo Usta tried to get out , to the producer $o0 per bale ; and of the way himself but it was too late when it has produced over JjOU, aod he was crushed betsveea the en- OJ bushels of wheat, as the . e- trice and the e cars, lie roared tern- bly, but hi agony only to iocomouve, uuv cars were crowded off the track. Tom Thnmb a leg was broken and be wu shot the next evening. Sir. Ilajghteeyi Uarnum refused flOO, OJJ for Jumbo. It was yesterday reported that the elephant had been led into the car, which was waitir. by the tracks. Larnum has pensioned Matthew Scott, the English keeper of the ele phant Jumbo, who has had charge of .him ince the elephant was three vears old. V. T. Larnum, the veteran show man, was found at the Murray 11 ill HoteL New York, yesterday, look ing as hale and vigorous as a man of forty, although be has turned seventy-rive years. The news of the death of Jumbo had buen a great shock to him, but with bis usual energy he had shaken off the firct feeling and devoted himself to calcu lations in regard to the future with out Jumbo. The death of Jumbo," be said. " will make necessary a complete change in our plans for the future. We haye been announcing at all our stands this sea-ton that we should not make another trip through the Kast or in Canada. Our intentions for next season were to travel through the West as far as Califor nia, then through Australia, and from there we were to eo by way of the Swt Canal to Europe, where we intended to remain for several years. All of Europe was waitinz to eee Jumbo. He was no lunger a great attraction here because everybody had seen Liu, but he would have been the feature there. His death robe us of our main attraction for a European tour, and we shall not go to Europe now. But let me say to you: No Jumbo can take away with him the great show. The show cost us over 13,000,00.), and it pays from 15 to 20 per cent, every year, and we mean to make it better than ever, in spite of the death of the elephant. Was Jumbo's life insured ?" the reporter asked. No; the loss is a total one, un less the railroad company is liable, and 1 am not sure that 1 would sue for damages in any event. I'oor Scott! I don't know what he'll do without Jumbo. He cares nothing for human companionship. Jumbo was all the world to him. The af fection manifested between him and the elephant was simply wonderful. I remember, a year or two ago, when our elephants stampeded, and Scott was in a position where he was in danger of being trampled on and killed, Jumbo saw the peril, and reaching out with his trunk, snatch ed Scott up and drew him between his fore legs, and kept him there in safety until the herd was quieted. They loved each other dearly. Scott waa the elephant, and the elephant was Scott They slept together, ate together, and drank together. Scott used to get a bottle of botr jut be fore going to bed in his bertb in the car. He generaCy drank half him self, and gave the other half to Jum bo. One night he drank bis half and forgot to serve bis friend before going to bed. Jumbo waited for what he thought a reasonable time, and then quietly reached over to the berth, lifted Scott out, and sat him tenderly on the floor. Scott remem bered the beer then. Jumbo got Lis drink and dozed peacefully oti.'' What is to be done with Jumbos remains?" 1 telegraphed at firs to give the skeleton to 1'rofeesor Baird, of the Smithsonian Institute, and the skin to my museum at Tuflo College. That will be the ultimate disposition of them, but my wile suggests that I have Jumbo mounted and continue to exhibit him -in the show for the present This is what I shall do. If 1 can't have Jumbo living, 111 have Jumbo dead, and Jumbo dead is worth a email herd of ordinary el epharits." " What was Jumbo's food ?" "Four hundred pounds of hay, one barrel of potatoes and one nush el of onions daily. It cost me $30 a day to feed him. He drank wa ter and beer. Jumbo was never un manageable while be was in my cir cus. Scott, his English keeper, who had been with him since be was three years old, ruled him by kind ness. He never used a prod on jumoo. lie laugui iiiiu u'uuiiig exoent to carrv children on his back." Not M It M Fatntrd. "New Orleans should be called the City of Disappointments," Blakely Hall writes. "I lie visitor w bo ar rives imbued with the vague but charming impression which has gone abroad about the Crescent City it is really in the form of a parallelo gramshould prepare himself for a Dumber of disillusions that will be extraordinary and abrupt Cable and an army of romantic, gushing effeminate writers have cast a curt oat mantle ol encnantment over New Orleans, and iieople come here dreaming of magnolia trees. Creole girls, orange blossoms, languishing eyes, voluptuous figures, hammocks, and other Oriental, tropical, poetical and iraceful things, only to find mud, colds in the head, scrawnev and weak-eyed women, with round shouldera,hand-organs innumerable, miserable brass bands, damp roams and prices that would make the tra ditional back men of Niagara torn green with enyy. The stretts here are muddy, and the mud is of a onsistency, dcp;h and tenacity that would reduce the mud of other cit ies ia comparativs dustiness. It is only by the use of raised board crossing (bat citizens are enabled to cross tbe atreets, and the sewer ape is execrable, ine gutters sre veritable pilfulls, many of them be ing waist deep and tiled with mud dy water, refuse and garbage. The smells arising from the gutters in the morning knock all the allusions about magnolia trees and orange blossoms out of tbe vieitor s bead, and after he has had a short exper ience with the climate, be eits, with chilly frame, sneezing and wheezing miserably, and is usually in condi tion to pass remarks upon the ro mancers of New Orleans which are whole-souled, far-reaching and com plete." Tie of Cora. i Corn if Kid-, cndonbtedij. if the - "f- I e!, and even if only 2M cent per huhel hoold be realized by the - . .. . . nroducer. less man corn a tuuuwru r , , hoes, such a crop would be worth A4fft.fr)0.000. When the country has produced over 6,000,000 bales of irn iarmers weu iuuw, mc was short. ot;pnceto tne proaucer nas not u- ceeded 7-3 cents per bushes Last jear with unueall large crops, the Dareau wUinitc of the value to pro ducers waa about 2C3,00T.OX for cotton, 8330,OiJ.fX)D for wheat and WO.W.fJO foi corn. The esti mates of the bureau may perhaps be rather higher thaa the actual return to the producers, but they neyerthe leet illustrate with tufCcient accur acy the relative importance of these ereat crojr. Hence the reports of Injury to thk most important crop have been watched with unusual in terest. The Chicago TrOmne of Septem ber Srd expressed the belief that the Southern half of the corn crop waa out of danger.but that the Northern half was in a doubtful condition ; a very lare proportion of the plants were au;i pee., th sMvailii mois ture haviLg kept them back from maturity, so that a severe frost would be a serious blow to 2rt:ral business. Since that date a severe front has co Die in tome parts of the Northwest, but it is too early to judze how far the apprehended in jury has resulted to the corn crop. The only tiiu.g quite certain about it is that the speculators or both sides will make the most of all re ports favorable or unfavorable to the crop, according to their interest Dispatches published expressed the belief, based upon quite extensive information, that the frost thus far had proved harmless in the greater part of the territory still within the ricb of danger, so that fully three quarters of trie crop might be con sidered ont of barm's way. If so, the yield this year will undoubted ly be the largest on record, even though late icjury should cause it to fall somew bat below the antici pated 2JUO,0,000 bushels. The front ll Pen a llailroatd. A good deal of unnecessary un easiness, says t&e Aitoona lnuune, grows out of the fear that if the pro ofed sale of unnmsned wort on the ine of the South Tenn is not pre vented, by the success of injunction suits instituted at mrnsourg, mat railway project will be "strangled forever. Tboe who labor under this hallucination imagine that par ties who are reported to be willing to pay about five millions of dollars for the uncompleted tunnels, upon which large expenditures have been made, will leave them to occupy the useless position of being only "holes in the ground," in all future years. If they do, they will g;a little cred it for sagacity, as a comparatively slight additional expenditure by the reported purchasers would create one useful line leading eastward from Mt. Dallas, the northern ter minus of the Bedford and Bridge port to a convenient connecting point on the Cumberland Valley, and another useful litie leading westward from pome point in Bed ford or Somerset county, eo as to form a connection with existing ines in the coke regions of south western Pennsylvania and points ad jacent to Pittsburgh. The trutn about the bouth renn appears to be that its completion as part of a competing through route between Pittsburgh and Philadelphia nas been definitely abandoned by its original projectors, and for such pur poses it is a dead enterprise. W Petti er tiie injunction suit iaus or suc ceeds the proposed competing through route will not be establish ed, because the Vanderbilt interests that control the western and eastern connecting limbs of the proposed new line are determined that it shall not be established. This decision, however, will not prevent the com pletion of a very large part ot the South Penn, as originally surveyed, by new owners, who will naturally desire to employ it in useful lo cal development, and in promoting the interests ol all the residents along its line. Cora for IMIea. Piles are frequently preceded by a sense oi weigm in me dock, 101ns and lower part of the abdomen, caus ing tbe patient to suppose he has some auection oi tne aiuneys or neighboring organs. At times, symplons of indigestion are present, as flatulency, uneasiness of the stom ach, ect A moisture, like perspira tion, producing a very dicagreeaule itching, after getting warm, i n com mon attendant Blind, Bleeding and Itching Piles yield at once to the ap plication of Dr. lioanko h Pile Ilern- edy. which acts directly upon the parts auected.abeorl'ing tha Tumors, allaying the intense itching, and ef fecting a permanent cure. Price oO cents. Address, I he Dr. Bopanko Medicine Co., Piqua, O. Sold by C. N. BOYD, Druggist, Somerset, Pa. dec3-ly. Brutal A wan It. Massillon, Ohio, Oct 4. A few minutes before midnight last night, as Dan Kitchen, one of the proprie tors of the West Side mills, came out of a Main street saloon with a party of friends, he was struck a vi olent blow in the face by William Ames, generally known as "Fish Billy," keeper of a West Main street saloon. The blow felled, him to the ground, and Billy followed U up by kicking him repeatedly in the face and on the body. No provocation was given at the time for the brutal assault. Ames was lying in wait for Kitchen, and no words passed between them. This afternoon Jus tice Folger went to Kitchen's resi dence, took bis statement and pre pared legal papers for the arrest of his assailant to-morrow on a charge of assault with intent to kill. Flame Sweep Dakota's Frairira. Traverse, Dakota, Sept 2S The most destructive fire ever witnessed in this vicinity occurred yesterday. A man living in Lake township set fire to some straw. A south wind was blowing at the rate of sixty-five miles an hour and in an instant the flames were beyond his control and traveling northward with frightful strides. The fire consumed every thing in its reach, including houses, barns, hay, grain and machinery. It is estimated that a thousand tons of hay were destroyed. Ait Borlc btaad. Ankerwyke House, Buckingham shire, the ancient bouse of the Har- 'court family, including "Magna t . i v : l. t nart ltianu, on or near waitu King John signed the bulwark of British liberty,'' in 1215, is announc ed for sale early next month.., The estate comprise nearly 700 acres, with a rental of a little over 2,000 a year. Ankerwyke ia xn the parish of Wrayebury, "between Stainea and Datcbet, and is celebrated for the picturesque beauty of rta trees which form a conspicuous figure when seen from the river side. Anxerwyke was ouce a Benedict ine priory, founded in honor of St Mary Magdalen by Sir Gilbert Mont fichet in the reign of Henry II. It was afterward given by Edward VI to Sir Thomas Smith, who re sided there. Of the monastic build ings, according to Murray, only the ball remains. In the grounds is an immense yew tree, beneath which, according to local tradition, Henry VIII made an appointment with Anne Boleyn. Dion t Keed an lovifatloa. A bard drinker, one of the regu lars who hate to go to sleep at night because it makes the time so long between drinks, was introduced to a man one day who had recently bought a saloon in his neighbor hood. "Glad to' know yon, sir," said the new man, shaking hands vigor ously. " thank you ; same to you." was tbe reply. " I hope to know you better, sir. and would be glad to have you call. 1 believe you pass my place on your way Lome." -Ab! Where is it?" u Where Johnny Bloomer used to keep." 44 Ob, yes, I pass there sometimes, but never when it is open." " That's strange : I thought it was right in your way." "So it is, but when it is open I always stop." Merchmt Trar. tier. Tbe LoA Wallet. "I am going down town," said a citizen on a Woodward avenue car, to"return a lost wallet to its owner." Every man in the car pricked up his ears, one of them moved up eloper and inquired : "You found a wallet, eh f "Yes. sir." "On the street V "Yes." "In the daytime?" "No ; at night." "Anybody see you pick it up?" uNot a soul." "And you would have been per fect v safe in keeping it?" "I would." "Well, sir, let me shake hands with you. I have wanted to live long enough to find an honest man, and I have found one." They shook. Many of the passengers were vis ibly affected. "And how much money was in the wallet? ' "Not a blamed cent!" Then the curtain went down and the audience filed out A Itlvrr Filling l'p. The Sacramento River is now so filled up with debris washed down from the mines worked during tbe past year that passenger and freight boats can no longer reach Sacramen to. The passengers and freight have to be transferred to light draught barges at the bend in the river be low the city. All the grain from tbe upper valley if shipped by water has to be lightered down if the barges draw more than three feet Tbe shoaling of the river has increased so rapidly during the last three years that unless measures are promptly taken by the government to dredge the lower basin thorough ly there is every probability that Sacramento City and the great grain growing valleys of Northwestern Cal ifornia will be cut off from water communication with San Francisco. What to tbe Bible like? It is like a large beautiful tree, w hich bears sweet fruit far those who are hungry, and affords shelter and shade for pilgrims on the way to the Kingdom of Heaven. It is like a cabinet of jewels and precious stones, which are not only to be looked at and admired, but used and worn. It is like a telescope, that brines distant objects and far off things of the world very near, eo that we can see something of their beauty and importance. It is like a treasure house, for all sorts ol valuable and useful things which are to be had without money and without price. It is like a deep, broad, calm, flow ing river, the banks of which are green and flowery, where birds sing, lambs play, and dear little children are loving and happy. Farm and Firi'fiih'. Farmer Fatally Stabbed. Harkisbl-rg. September 23. It is probable that John P. Hocker, a far mer, living about five miles above Dauphin, will die from a stab receiv ed at the hands of a resident of this city. On Saturday five young men left Harrisburg with a keg of beer, which they proposed to share with a number of friends in the country. On the way they discovered Hocker and his son on a wagon, from which they tried to violently remove a bedstead. Tbe elder Hocker knock- lid one of them down and was stab bed in the back by another. Hiram Devcnbaugh and Marcy Miller, two of the young men, have been arrest ed. Tbe person who did the stab bing is at large. Floor and Onions. It may not be known to some housewives that if Hour is kept in a closet with onions or cabbage it will absorb unpleasant odors from them. You may not notice this until tbe flour is cooked, but then you wilL A large chocolate and cocoanut cake was prepared for a tea party not long since, - It was not tasted until it was passed at tea tuna, when tbe mil tress observed a strong onion fa vor which, though an excellent one in its proper place, was here a thing of evil. It was discovered that a basket containing onions had been left for two days in the store-room with the flour, and everything, even the bread baked from this flour had the onion flavor. "Crowded out to make room for more interesting matter," said the editor, as he shoved aside a plate of beans and tackled a pie. It is estimated that sixty-eight churches in Paris possess works of art valued at $1,715,0001 laftnuUoa for MraBfers. A party of English tourists were coming from the Yosemite. when one of them, who had been dubbed the interrogation point of the crowd, espied a pair of brogans sticking in the face of the bluff, toes down. Nudging tbe coach driver, who chanced to be old Bill McClenathan, he asked: "Ah, driver, I wondah what the doose those boots are doing up theah ?" Old Bill scarcely glanced up as he replied : That's a man buried up there, and tbe boys were in such a hurry that they did not dig deep enough U' get his feet in." " Bah Jawve, that's very strange, ye knau ; 111 make a note of that But I say, driyer, the toes point down. He must be buried os his face, d'ye knau." "Yes," said old Bill musingly, "he was an Irishman. " But what's his being an Irish man got to do with his being buried face down? ashed the now thor-. onghly aroused Britisher. Old Bill looked at him in a pity ing manner for some seconds, and then in a tone of deep sorrow and astonishment at the tourist's igno rance, said : Well, do you see, we've got sort of a superstition out this way that on election day every dead Irish man gets out cf his grave and votes, and so lately we've got to burying 'em on top of the hill, face down, so that the more the cornse tries .to dig out the deeper he gets in the ground." Oh, ves, I see, said the English man gravely. I'll make a note of that for my book." Lynching With Diflicoliy. Denveb, October 1. Information has reached here to the effect that Marshall Clements, the murderer of his brother and bis brothers wife, at Sagnache, was taken from the jail there by a party of masked men and hanged. Clements had a knife, with which he cut two of tbe masked men quite severely. Before he died he stated that bib father and sister bad nothiotr to do with the matter. The lynching occurred last Saturday night, but the location is remote from all telegraphic connection and the residents of that locality mani fest a desire to suppress all informa tion. Sqnasb Pie. Five pints cf stewed and strained squash, two quarts of boiling milk, one and a halt nutmegs, lour tea spoonfuls of salt, five cupfuls of su gar, nine eggs, four tablespoonfulsof Sicily Madeira, and two of rose wa ter. Gradually pour the boiling milk on the squash and stir con tin ually. Add the nutmeg, rose-water and sugar. hen cold add the eggs, well beaten, and just before the mixture is put in tbe plates add the Madeira. Butter deep plates and line with a plain paste. Fill with the mixture and bake in a moderate oven for over forty minutes. Brother' Fatal Quarrel. Philadelphia, Sept 29. A dis patch to the Time, from Chambers bug, says: Jesse and Levi Lightner, brothers, residing in St Thomas townsbiD. got into an altercation last evening over the alleged im proper intimacy of Levi and Jesse's wife. Levi picked up a lence rail and struck Jesse a blow across the back, breaking his back-bone. Isaac, another brother, who bad lust then arrived on the scene, picked up the same weapon and assaulted Levi, breaking his ' arm and collar-bone. A physician was summoned, and pronounced Jesse's wounds fatal, and those of Levi serious. The Dude of the Olden Time. The American dude of 1800 is thus described : The pantaloons of a beau went up to his armpits ; to get into them was a morning's work, and when in, to sit down was impos sible ; his hat was too small to con tain his handkerchief, and wa not expected to stay on his bead. His hair was brushed from the crown of his head toward his forehead, and looked, as a satirist of that day truly said, as if he had been fighting an old-fashioned hurricane backward. About his neck was a spotted linen handkerchief; the skirts of his green coat were cut away to a mathematical point behind. Veteran at Cannonsbnrg. CAXSON8BCRG, Oct 1. The reun ion of the 10th and 85 Ih Regiments Pennsylvania Volunteers, held here to-day, was a most successful affair. Tbe exercises were held in Provi dence Hall. Rev. W. F. Brown, principal of Jefferson Academy, de livered an address of welcome to the yisiting comrades, and General A. J. Warner, the Ohio Congressman, re sponded. A history of the 10th Regiment was read by Captain Cy rus Elder, and General Warner de livered an J drees. The ladies feast ed the veterans at the skating rink. A camp-fire was held at Providence Hall. Solitary Confinement. " I was never exactly buried alive," said an old clerk, recounting his experience, 44 but I once worked a week; in a store that did not ad vertise. When I came out my head was almost as white as you now see it Solitary confinement did it" We often svmnathize with a Antr r - n when we think of the man who owns it This would be a better world if the people in it who lose their tern-1 pers would never find them again. BOO M nrmfrmm Vftntm, Ami mint tm J-MmM BQXL tMEEs SURE 4-fc.l WsTQ,,,,., ,,.rJL4 FCr mil -rJSS WIJ CVni. At DrwcxleU sm1 OasJen. ty"1""-- - -"r iir riiiiBnisjiiMirt i mm lis Absolutely Pure. Thtt Ftnrder htcttuIH. A mure! of parity, strength u4 boleao. Mora economical tba tlx ordtntrr klooi ao4 nan b tuid It eojUtln with tho maltltode of low trt. thorn vcUhL. clan or ptxwphi-.e powdor Soli onlf i Ctt. Koval hKiis fenrDU Co, 10 Wau. St.. K. Y. mtr-t- BROWN'S IRON BITTERS WILL CURE HEADACHE INDIGESTION BILIOUSNESS DYSr ErSIA NEIl VOL'S PROSTRATION MALARIA CHILLS and FEVERS TIRED FEELING GENERAL DEBILITY PAIN ix the BACK & SIDES IMPURE BLOOD CONSTIPATION FEMALE INFIRMITIES RHEUMATISM NEURALGIA KIDNEY AND LIVER TROUBLES FOP. SALE BY ALT. DRUGGISTS The Ocsinc his Trade Mark and erased Red Liaes ca wrapper. TAKE NO OTHER. UZ ZLE. o 5 la. Upr mm $K M OHSUMPTiON COKSUitfrTIGsf LusWencur ! tiaics vithout number by iLe time ly use cf Do-xd3 Elixir. H will cure Croup, Jirouchitis, Asthma, 1'leuriny, Mliooinng-CoiiQh, Lung Fever, ami all U .scases of the Throat, Chest and Lungs, when ether remeiiie ail ' l -SICK 1 Psj-j, 3ir., Vt. Fob Bali Br C. N. Bovd, Somerset. A Safeguard. Tlie fatal rapidity with which s!i"ht Colds and toughs frequently lievilop Into the gravest maladies of the throat ml limH. is a consideration whk h should impi ! cvtrv jrud-nt person to kep at hand, as a bou'li"id n-nirdv. a bottle of A V Kil'S CH LKKY rKCTOkAL. Nothing 'ie fives kuih imnH-diate rtiitf ai;l works so sure a cure in ail anVt-tions of this class. That cniincnt pbyiirian. l'rof. F. Swietjwr, of the ilaiuu Medical School, Brunswick, Me., says: "Medical ariencc !;- product bo other ano dyne riperUirAiit so Rood a Area's Cherry I'xcTORax. ll ! Invaluable fur fiUacaacs vf Ura Mirual atHi luupt.' Tlie same opinion la oxprcwed by the wrli-Lnown lr.l J. Addison, of Chicago, 111., who Kiyi : MI hire wrrr fucr., in thirty -(iro Tears ot rontiuuoaa Uidy awl practice of medicine, any lrf.iar,ti.n of irrcat vaiur a ATEa's CuEHKT rcfToaaf.. for tnntmcnt of diwM of the lliroat aud lull.'.. It tint obly brcaaa up colda and cure evtn' c.u!is. but ta more elTet-tive than anyihins In r Ing even tbe tmiat eertuua bronclUal a&d pulmonary affections." AYER'S Cherry Pectoral Is not a new claimant for popular confi dence, hut a medicine which is to-day saving the lives of the third generation who have conic into leinj; since it was firt offered to the public. There is not a household in which this invaluable remedy has once licen in troduced where iis u-c has ever been abandoned, and there is not a pernn who has ever piven it a proper trial for any throat or lunjr tUx-ase suscep tible of cure, who has not been made well hv ft. AYfcR'S CIIEUBY FECTORAL has, tn numiierlcns instances, cured obstinate cases of chronic Bronchitis, Laryngitis, and even acute Pneumonia, and has saved many patients in the earlier stages of Pulmonary Consumption. It is s medicine that only requires to be taken in small doses, is pleasaut to the taste, and is needed in es-err house where there are children, as there fa nothing so (rood as A YEIfS CFTERRY PECTORAL for treat ment cf ("roup and Wboopini? Cough. These are all plain facts, which can be venlied bv auybodr, and thould be re membtrcai by everybody. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, PREPaBEDBT Or. J. C. Ayer ft Co.. Lowell, Maas. Sold by all Druggists. EXCELSIOB C00KST0TES ALWAYS SATISFACTORY EIGHTEEN SIZES AND KINDS ALT. PURCHASERS CAM BE SUITED aMHCTaC-TTmXP T Isaac jLSiiepp&rd & Co.,BaJtimore,Ei AN VOn SALE BY B. B. Schell & Co , SOMERSET, 1 OVER L000OO0 J (BOTTLES SOLD AMD NgVEB fM$ TO CURE COUGHSJOLOS. maVraWAUUrWTrftUBUS DRUOfiiSTJgBilT PRICE.. n 15 CTV B SALE. Pnr JerseT Cattle, anlkl colors Cows. half. Sam. A J ill Sim ers sad ball, tne latter raagtn; from six months to three Tears otl. Pedla-rees tarnished. M. HOBL1TZIXU FoaT View Fab. spue 1m. train, Somerset LSo Pa. Arte for "Botch a Omghs," far Oomrtt, CeM. So TfM. Bwmwl Ma, )c Osatrs oa rata. amie. racfee. Bars, aata. W bnga, akaavaa, eaipaaaJu, atsfKra. Im. ltranM. Palpi ta Un. DrafarldU Swsaliaa, OiazlMsa, Iav sUgnuoB, Hsaalaeft. MMpiaaaaeas, ears by hoa Cans. Ask lor WellS "Bosch oa Coras." lie. UaJek, coai (.lata ear. Baor aaoraVa, wsjt tmasoaa. "Baasrb Pavta" fmssK Plsaaesw t " - .. . . - .v.. a. - - -- ache, puns ia coast ur sMe, rheewatlfsa. swarat- Taslsi a !. " IT ells' Realtfc Beaewer " restores health and tut, carts l'iprpala. Headache, Nfromaes, lscoiiaty. L W aVMBvlaSS Casassrfc, and the aucy Throat A Section as children. p rota out, pit illy, sad safety reuered br "MMm e lvttg&a. Tnehe, lac f-trnm. Sac Me era. If yon are faille;, broken, srora oat and aerroo. au - w eUj tleauta ttsoeerer." fi. afrutYwa. Ufa If yos at tostea tost grip oa Ufa, try Wells' Health Kenesrer. ' Gwa oireet la weak sputa. M Beafh TeMaUseke." Instant relief lor Jfearalaia, Toothache, Face- acne, am lur "tum-a on liwuiacfce. aaaaazae. Prsxtr Wasaeau Ladies who wuoM retain freshness and TiTaerty, eao l iau w trj - t eus ueaita Meaeaer." Cavuarrssal TfeveMtf AsTeetlaas. Hacking, britaitna; Coirhl, Cold, Sere Threat, eared bj "twagit ea Couch." Trochee, lie. liquid, zac. - Knkl Itch." KoBftta on Itch " eon humors, eruptions, ring worm, uuer, salt rhsiuo, (rusted feet, chilUaia. Tata Ilea f k Sanaa. Children, slew in derelopmeat, pony, serairny, Bod delicate, tue-W ells' keaiih jteoewer." Wltta Awake, three or fear hoars ererr night coughing- Get Immediate relief and tuond rest by Bains: Wells "fefcucu on uoogbs." troches, 193. Bauam, zac "Kauai Oa fala" rerease flaater t Ktrenirtheniaz, improred. the best for backache. pains ia cnest ur siae, rncnmaufm , Benrajcia. Attempt to Wreck a Train Fail. PoTTSTovv.v, Pa., Sept 30. Last night some unknown person screw ed a plank on tbe Wilmington and Northern Railroad track at a dan gerous curve known as Point Look out. The entrine attached to tbe train reaching Coatee rille at 8 p. m was thrown off the track. I he en gine went off on the side next the embankment. If it bad been on the other Bide, it and probably the whole train would have gone into the iJrandrwine Creek. Tnis is the third attempt to wreclt, thin train. There is iiO Use fighting nature. Dr. Kennedy's Favorite remedy does nothing of that kind. It doen not make the sufferers who trust in it worse under the pretense of doing them good. It acts tenderly and in sympathy with what nature herself is trying to accomplish. Do you have trouble with your digestion, your liver or your kidneys. Does rheumatism pain and rack you ? Is your head thick and heavy? It will charm away these ailments almost ere ycu are aware. An old and intimate friend ot mine is Parker's Hair Balsam. I have used it five years, and could not do without it. It has stopped my hair from falling, restored its natural black color and wholly cleansed it from dandruff. Miss Pearl Aneson, SL Louis, Mo. Costiveness is tbe cause of the in tolerable "bad breath" of multitudes. Dr. Henry Baxter's Mandrake Bit ters remove tbe cause and prevent the evil, and cost only 2o cents. t For Sale by C. N. Boyd, tbe Drug gist, Somerset, Pa. i " A century of progress has not pro duced a remedy equal to Ely's Cream Balm for catarrh, cold in the head and hay fever. It is not a liquid or a snuff, but is perfectly safe and eas ily applied with the finger. It gives immediate relief and cures the worst cases. Queer reading would be the his tory of names. We cannot, howev er go into the subject now, except, so tar as to say that Dr. Kennedy's "Favorite Remedy" was called by that name, in an informal fashion, long before the Doctor dreamed of advertising it for public use. Speak ing of it he would say to his patients "This is my favorite remedy for all troubles of the blood," &c and its success was so great that he finally spelled the name with capital letters. A smooth complexion can be had by every lady who will use Parker's Tonic For promptly regulating the i liver and kidneys and purifying the blood, there is nothing like u, and this is the reason why it so quickly removes pimples and gives a rosy bloom to the cheeks. The history of Down's Elixir is identified with the history of New England for the last fifty years. It cures coughs and colds. For Sale by C. N. Boyd, Somerset, Pa. I have been troubled with catarrh from boyhood, and considered my case chronic until about three years ago I procured Ely's Cream Balm, and I count myself sound to-day, all from the use of one bottle. J. R. Cooley, Hardware Merchant, Mon trose, Pa. Any man who can umpire a base ball game and please both sides, has in him the main qualifications of a successful politician. Arnica and Oil Liniment is the best remedy known for stiff joints. For Sale by C. N. Boyd. "He never ba4 bu.t one genuine case in his life," raid a lawyer of a rival, "and that was when he proser cuted his studies." Tbia Idea of Going West to Colorado or New Mexico, for pure air .to relieve Consumption, is alia mistake, Any reasonable man would use Dr. Bosankos Cough and Lung Syrup for Consumption in all its first stages. It never tails to give relief in all cases of Coughs, Cclds, Bronchitis, Pains in the Chest and all affections primary to Consump tion. Price, 50 cents and 11.00, Sold by C. N. Boyd. The girl f hp loves William never asks her father to foot her bill. Many furiret that the l.air and scalp need t leaneuig as Weil as the hands ai d f-tt. Extensive use of Ayer 'a H,.ir Vigor has proven that it is the Ikm t lt-ausing agent for the hair that it prevents as well as re moves dandruff, cools and soothes the scalp and stimulates tbe hair to renewed growth and beauty. Gold worth 830,800,000 waa dug from Uncle Sam's rich soil in 188 4 a. w. BEJCFOBD. DRUGS. G. W. BENFORD & SON'S DKTJ Gr STOEE, NO. 1, BATIK'S BLOCK. We keep constant on band stock of PUKE DKUGS AND lyIOENES,! CbemicaU, Dye, Toilet Article and Sundries kept in a first-class Drup Store- j PAIXTS. OILS, VARNISHES, Trasses. Brace. Supporters, ant! all leadlns; appertenancrs aed both by PhrslcisBS sad FsmC.lee TOKJCOJiJIi iiujst the N-t in the market fnm Ixmestic to impnnerf FBslM all. tlOk COIPvCIDED a IIH C AKE. fAMILi BLCEiPIS FILLED lOkSt.L t. Lt'. All atlreniaed medicine kept oa haa.1. If Dot parties can deptxl on it imil in a , short time, as we par rrr-at attectloa toall saeh eemaada. Oar own make ol HOBSk D C4TTLE POWDLU Is bejoad uoebt Use te.t la tbe Buraet. cts. per puond. We tsuie expense of pact In, labeling. sjiTerutlDfr. Ac-, eat keep la bulk. Adt Inamiirat wasted specially can be adue-1. Cal a.R-1 er for yourself, and be cooTiaeed we flar BarcajB. ii. W. BurciBD a So Intend 4eiac a ,jare bosinexs. aa-l want all to see lor themsetre. No trouble to shew oar stock. ; aa-Pure Yinesi artel Liquors for Menlicinal U Onl t." ESTABLISHED 1880. FISHER'S BOOK STORE, SOMERSET, PENS' A. This well established, eld and reliable Book. Ifews and Stationery Store was mnred on Febraarr id, iwii, frcm Its il. cramped and insn indent quarters to tbe rarae. eleirant and wmvenient new Store-K.m dlrectlT oppna lie Cook a Beerit'. In Uses commodious quarters. speeial.T fitted op for Its oecapancr. tbe siotk of Books. News and Stationery has been r-ry ttrnitlt jjn.anre.l. t!U' at K. .! i it ii,.L, Trade. School Boo. School Supplies, Paper. fcnTeiope. Ink. Pens. Almanacs. Pencils, Blank Books, ae will bebomtht ta large quantities utrect lrv siamia j tarer. whk-h will enable this establishment to job to town and eo..ntrr taerchants at sucii Ca-urrs as . will make it sdrantaveous to boy Here, lo retail ooyers. an uum -" he offered. Alwars tor sale an extensiee and Taried assoruaeat ot Poet teal orss. Hifne, ks ol TraieU NoTete, Lottie ran and Iueipie Hymn Books. LicUunarief. Children's Ioj boo Maajaitocs, Beritwa. lllj Papers, Storj Paiwrs, and a general line of reading matter. Day School and Sunday ScJiool Reward Cards, LAWYERS AND JUSTICES BLANK, BLANI BCCIS, TABLETS, AND MAEEUGE CEBTlFitA.TS. tTMAIL ORDERS SOLICITED. CHA8. U. FISHER. SOMERSET LUMBER YARD, Cffcs and Yard AT Somerset, Op- S. 4 C. 8. R. Statis . OAK. POPLAR. SIV1SGV, PICKETS, MOIT.DISGS ASH. WALXLT, ILOOH1SG. SASH. STAIR HAILS, ( HiHir, YLLLOW PISE, iHISGLKS, bOOUS. t.K-.'t' cMtATA't'T. UHWW.Vf. LATH. HLI.US, f.kH LL POTS a "i im ".f r.nmhar and i u nni i. uttiiimi in tk, lies ol onr business lo order with reascnable lir-'mtiuieas, snch as , Braeksu. Udd-sised'work, Ac. blias ouisrisriisra-ia ajvt, Offices and Yard Opposite . &C. R. R. station. Somerset, Pa THE BERLIN MARBLE AND GRANITE WORKS IS THE BEST PLACE TO BU X MEMORIAL WORK ix the covsrr, and the oxlt place where STRICTLY FIRST-CLASS WORK f-.vA -airSffl true, go to any Cemetery in the County, and compare the work done by the Berlin Works with that done elsewhere. R. H. Koontz is the best man to deal with : First, Because he is F ally Established in The Trade, and ia therefore doing a perfectly Reliable Business. Second, Because his Very Extended Experience, and Anistic Skill, en ables him to proportion bis work better th in others. Third, Because he claims to be, and can prove it by hi Work and Nu merous Patrons, the Finest Carver, the Neatest Lt-tterer, and the Best Gen eral Workman dointt business in this section of countrv. feblS. THE OLD RELIABLE SCHTJTTLER WO-OIEsT. ESTABLISHED IN CHICAGO IS 1S41. saiijjsa-m-i jwass-jasa' m aws jay r I have just rw-nreJ two car loaj-i of the 9elf-oi!in) Sel-skein Schultler Wagons, tlie moHt complete Wejlern Va3011 in tlie market for K-jaJ or Farm Purposes. 0: tlie latter tbere U a Riar Brake, to be used wiiea lnulini; hay or irrain. a sonie:hinr that farmers know the necessity of when hauling on hilly farint. Every part of the Wood-work of wagon has laid in Stock three years lefore bein worked up. insuring the work to be u a hi y seasoned before being ironed. Jioin the patentees of the DOUBLE COLLAR AND OIL CUPS. It is theonly Wagon made that has this improrenient. It avoids the necessity of taking off the wheels to grease, as in the old style; by sim ply turning a cap tbe wagon can be oiled in less than five minutes. Th is Waon wants to be seen to be fully appreciated, and parties wishing to bny will do well to see it before purchasing eUewhere. EVERY WAGON FULLY INSURED. In offering this make of Wagon to the public, will say I used the same make of Wagon for five yean when freighting across the Rocky Mun- tains, over roads that were tha Uf4- feel warranted in saying I believe them the Ilest agon on wheels. Call on Oliver Knepper or Hen.y HefJJey, who will show yon the Wagons. SWJCE.VrS WASTED THkOVGHOCT THE COVICTT. P. HEPFLEY. SOMERSET, 28, 1885. J.tMKs o. i:,Mr,r uHni'l;,i,a Outsells i l otlx-r tm.kx. Lj.n. J. S. H UAtat Va..f.:v ;: Uhoer r Uikr, it up o matirr tHuttrlu br Ur. Btalitr', friend or mots, will amr put dmm amHI C hat nad. Ike whale." Hon. Aili-n . t. Thnrman. aars "A eLum aj-. sa cmr political hIMory " f Asrnts make from it 2 on to a 1 faOSS jcr month. d1rcn. The Iknry hill . cv.7 ' - . Sorteidt Omm. 'Bei4.J nr.- A Ifre scbool. Impartlns; a practical baslnes daeatloa; ntabllaa; loac as en to an ter apoa the actlr dalle ot ills, lor circulars address Mptxa-atn. P. 1)1' 'F i SONS. C. TriL BE5FOBD ELIiS.S CUNNINGHAM!, MaiifiJlsrj El Dalir. WKtalti cl Kitr nf LDHBER ASD BUILDIKG MATIBIAB, HARD AND SOFT WOODS, Kaildtnsr Material and Rooflnc Slate keM In Stock. Can be purchased at a rea sonable price. We claim to do BETTER WORK, set it up better, proportion it bet ter, and SELL IT CIIEAP- er according to quality, than any other dealer in 'Western f ennsylvanma. ll you want to be convinced that this is almost impassable, and they always stood I FASHIONABLE M CUTTER & TAILOR, C5 h F Having had a, I vVS-'-'W years ezperteov . r-'f &i 1 In a'l branches of ' L I V h Tallorwisi bo. I 1 fiL lnes. 1 raaraote SaUsfactioo to all j iao may can np- oa ate and taru 4 oie wltb their pat- rucaa-e. ' " Years, Ae,, wm. m. nocnsTin.KK, J)meret, Pa. 1 1 a a Bsora moaey tha at aerthinf els hr f 1 1 Jtaaina an afeacy for ui best sellioar book 00 L Be-innrr saeceed craaiilT. Ka fall. Terms ire. Uiujt Book Co, Portla., i The approaching season - into service the stovepipe a gentle reminder of aa necessity for CLOTHEft Our stock for coo! and j colder weather is prepaid a larger scale lor Men, Yor i Boys and Children. A P YflTFQ K n " " - ' - w vt. Vy 02 604 606 Chetnnt rHlLADKLPHli. ' WE LEAD, OTHERS FOLLOW 4 ft ui KfssL- nr Drugs, Medicines, and Chemical Is the Largtet in the Coucty. gj. ing enlarged mv Store-r oora, t now suited to a rapidly kcitii. ing trade. I have iscracci my stock in EVERY DEPARTMENT. And Ask a Critical EiiBicatls GOODS .V.Z? PRIt'Ei NONE BIT PUEl DRUGS DISFiM Special Car Qitcb to Conavsn-iisf PA IM S. OILS, GLASS. PUTTY, VARNISHES. AND PAINTERS' ilTILH SOAPS, BRUSHES. COMBS. SPONGES. PERFUMERY. TOILET ARTICLE. Srhnnl Rnnbaanr! Srhnn! i at Lowest Prices. J sr-W ask SpeHal Attention to tits !)-pi-a.a: - I - J VaJltJOiJ VUUUds Low Prices, Fair Ssalizj il A FVLX, LINE OF OPTICAL GOODS- JsiyUS MHO'S mm k'.tifS I I I I CSV I J. J ',,rl" Vi'SSJ C. N. BOYD'S, MAMMOTH CLOCK SOMERSET PI "OADJDEE" Eubber BOOTS sriur DOUBLE THICK BALL Ordinary Rabbcr Boots aiwnrs wear out Crt n the hall. Thel .lSULK B wis arc 0umU4 Ihi k oa the bll, aod DOUBLE WE.VS. 3fot ewnomirai Rhbcr in the mar -c. I.ots loo-rtfr th:jl ar PUICE S ALE BY H. CHILDS & CO., WUOLET.11.E ACEXT9 O ocT.Cm. PITTSBURGH. PA. LATEST SUCCivCNo Easy Mm Ssng Hafl ani uli ifi t It .. -:.: Hu'U rm: H 1.11; Kiuri. Uv; tE: Jit f jl in r.!i'i; I ufaii): lvr Sri!-a : i-lf-t.i ! iw :?1 its with s.it Vibraii'-). II t'' 1 mont. f.ir fa-nily iri j Its -.;.. . rfprv-ntd. we wnnt un Att'tt 1 A- W.-iit as fur c:iun-v ' " :i : !;r"r'f ,' - -im( t -i rro m:tfe- a t -t " I ' A ' , jthi mo iiit'.pr. f r. -'iir .!. t i -s- tbisi'f v li-a you ! .' . .-' - 1 TUE ncvE sEwr:i :::: t T 3m i -Xlll i - t - " ' X PARKER'S HAIR BmLS"" he popubr fa." ri : iatnehjur.KcMi-n- Jniif. It c!vu.. ." atns the hair " -I i si'' ' ' Its Jest Cangli Cn yw c the lx: iwwii prcooii ,J V wkei'i Tonic kept in 1 hoir 'f'"u i p.:re a.l turn SMmaica. . . x orini OfUv-r. toun anJ v I'Jl T . it t;.uU Up UK fcCil.s-. tr.otL s r cin.uc it.ni iji ni., .,V.t any i ,nc.'f " bll or N--"- " ""r llcJ.hit sJ'"'",' St'-m.irh, lii -T-i-i, S.:j ' y r-1 :.:. sii '-!' - III p. t j.m . ia the w.y of auskta "lbk 1 a sew says waa j" t- a n ir-' hasiai as. Capluil m Troirt-L 1 M h. .m.1 w.k la flr Urn onlr. ",. hnns a-1 w.4-k la sir Ail of tana sen. 01 ail aajw . easily amrnau , ,!;). ail w want work mMT lei a. saa iau a.rellell uBcr .- To ' "tr well s-.uo.l... wlllad 1 1. F rn nartlcDlars. dirKi'v, J kr nan iiort. 1md t delay. Jurlf4ar mm? 'mm ifcfi :hcr boot and the LfX,.. V,'-. SO RIGHTO. f; s'3iJ CM,! and ex- JFrt Tl '"i 3 tea . J&!3e&$ii 1 4 I ml t staiD. mv 4 a vva a viiiss"i
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers