1K.OOO CCMX COL.I.IXTOKS A Draicr in curiom Money Talk . A!out UM BMIOPM. n irnn fence in a busy 1. tt) i . t ... . . - . 1, - ....... f ' part of-vew lors eianus iw tnree Darrtiu, uu a ""j -- boards, with coin and medals fas- ,onl ancient Greek and Roman toned to them. Tl;e boards are cov-! m0ney. Then -ome collect odds red with white japer, sod the coins ; anj eni-f like pattern or trial pieces are held in idace t.'V thortnaiis, three jtha were never adopted as curren lo each coin, pressed icto the boards I cy . quePr ghgped eiege pieces or the bit of metal with ! nrovimonal money, the heavy cop- Ihcir beads. Coin stalis are com- j mon in liuroptan cities, ana coping r k 1 that borox-ra the fcine on the Latin side of lVris are placed f i.nmernus cla' casts in w hich coins ; nr ixiMed to view; but in tins : mtn min dealers are lew, ana the owner of ibis particular ouliit h oiit o! the two ho tell their goods -i . ..ir i, Vir Yurie. He Ill Hie I " li was lorui'.riy a circus nuei, uuk I.iuj villi that way of making a ny ii.g, be drifted into the coin trade. Jle is at his pott at ali timee, ex cept in rainy or tnowy weather, for tb coits would Lot stand expos ure to the f l-mets. When a sudden l,ower uial;es its appearance the boards with their ci Uht of DUfiiifUiat ic oddities and treasures are stacked fmether, covered with cloth, and inystf-rioufly variith somewhere in the neighiforhood. Tempting as the display 'may be to thieves, they rare ly attempt to appropriate speci mens. . , - 1 bad one batch of coins sto.en, s;;id the deakr, but il was out of a L.tu in bmlditic across there. It 11 - . I I. a A tLtfrcA : was ihrte while I Was -lia-vlDC uj a caiu Jf'cue. I only know that oue day L y. a .... Thiri w- re worth fl.'AH I didn t leel nothing compared to what los al v ry pood over it, ou may be sure, ca Ides do at every town and village Thieves would take coins if they j in tbe interior ; you cannot go t ru couid pet them, ol course; but there : ty miles witnout being fumigated, are i-o many of them that would be and from Zumarraga to the coast, ot i.o ueeto cnbody but a collector j or to Bilbao, you would not escape ! lOClli ilab lllJUru I'lr cuiv-v.. ..vj j . i ... i, iKiena t.rt ltr silverware or I Mjmethii.g of that kind. A friend of kind." fuineia-t a collection of American After passing through many tun cents a iortnipht or so ago, but the'nels, and eome grand mountain i.nri'lars would never have touched scenery, vou reach Alsasua, the junc- .1.,... ,t i.- hruin'i rollt-d them up and marked the value, $l,iUO on ! them. It was one ol tne best collec tions of cents iu the country.'' 'Ti en a pretty complete coiiec tim. ol American cents is worth 1,')IKI?' " liasi'-y. Good cents are getting scarce tnat is, the old cartwheel m ,ts and some dates, like the 17'J:'. are worth from f 00 to $130 in good 'iililUU()Il It s the condition ot the pitte that makes the woithot it, though youiig colleclois don't un derstand that. Then a complete collection ol cents is more than just one cent ol each date. There were home years when thtre'd be, I sup pose, twenty varieties. The difler ence would be loo iittie for you to notice, may be, Lu: a collector would know them as quick as a wink. There are little variations in the Hi of the IfciK-rs or figures, or stars, or frhape of a leaf or surl of hair, made lit repeating the dies to replace worn or broken on s. Sometimes a trilling thing iike a large or small iiiu' makes a difference in the value oi the coin. Ever Lear about the cow lick ' five franc piece of Napo leon 111? "Whin he was I'rtsident of France in 1 SGI, new coins were struck with his head on them, and the first five franc piece was taken to him for ap proval. He said it was all right and told the mint master to go ahead with them, but a little later he no ticed a still looking lock of hair over the temple, such as we would call a cow lick,' and he seat word to have a new die made, with more orderly hair. That was done, but in the meantime twenty-three of the pieces had gone out iuto circulation, and 1 suppose thirty dollars would not buy one of them from any of the men who own them now," " Is there much counterfeiting of rare coins?'' Well, not much now-a-days. They wouldn't be rare, you know, il they were copied very much and the exact number and ownership of some of tlie rarest are known to collectors so that if one of the same kind ap pears iu a sale it can be spotted as bogus at once. The things that je x elers sell for old coins are so bad that nobody who knew anything at all about coins would ever mis take them for genuine pieces " There was a factory of bogus Greek and lloman money in Padua two or three centuries asio, and the work was mighty good, too ; but this thing has been reduced to a regular science, so thpt an expert will take a doubtful coin and in fif teen or twenty minutes will tell you whether it is genuine or bogus ; whether it is lloman, Paduan, or modern; whether the puatina, or green coating, is the result of ago or acid ; whether it is of the right ma terial and proper weight or not. Still, there are some counterfeits made even now, that are pretty clever." What coins are in most de niand ?" "In this country, Amercican coins. It's next to impossible to get a com plete set of coins of another country, unless it uiiht be sun.e of the South American llepublics, but here the principal coins are all valuable. We're only a little over a hundred years old, and our money has not had time to grow scarce. fcome of our coins are going to be scarce," M Vou can't get them at the mint now ?" "No. indeed, You can pet this year's set, but no other. The dies are smashed at the end of the year. There used to be some funny busi ness at the mint, and a good many ' back numbers ' mysteriously disap ed, but the dies are destroyed now as soon as the year is up. If you are on good terms with thesuperintend entof the mint, though, you can find out just how many coins of a partic ular denomination are going to be f truck during the year, and you can salt away the rare ones until there is a market for them at a jolly pre mium. There are the twenty-cent pieces of 1S77 and 1878, ior instance. They are worth $2 apiece now. I knew just how many were going to be struck, and I laid in a stock of them at twenty-five cents apiece, but I didn't lay in enough and they are all sold." - Hare you any idea how many coHectote there re in this coun try?" " I've heard them figured at 25, XK), and I guess that's none too high a figure. A good many coins come into our bands almost ruined bv ig norant collectors. They soak them in acid and scour them with brick dust, when they never ought to be cleaned, except with soap and warm water, and a soft tooth brush." " Do collectors make a specialty OI gold 7" ' No, it's too expensive. A good deal of silver ia bought, and one or two collections that 1 have seen were entirelj o! silver pieces, mostly of I crown or dollar size. But collectors hobbiea. Some go in for Americ.ri coins altogether, pome for Liielitli, one or two tire maa enouzu i to irv to get a complete collection 01 :rma.n nieces, which wouia till v . r , . i i 3 - ...l rti on I' hnf T du)en of Sweden, live or eix i inchcg gquare and a quarter vi an :nph thich : the kev-shaped and ra zor.Bhaped coits of China, Japanese iu,, itzebus, and tembos; indiau wanipum. African fbell money, fcia mese t.Uiiet money, vneuw. p... - il.. . g - i t , , a : !snj porcelain coins. Some culkct j medal; eome collect paper money. m. . nrr,in rrillfH-til'iil. ' U , UJCirciiuu" . v. . ,j yu once get nariea. -r jv,. IraTVlInK In Spain. i A London Standard correspond ient, traveling in !?paic, writes : On the road 1 was curious to ete how the orders of the home eecreta- r . .... iut were observed, and at every stoppage of a few minutes I inquired how matters stood. At Zumarrago, in Guipuzoca, a station of importance, as it is the head of all the lines of coaches and diligences across a coun try full of bathing establishments . . . I 1 .4. ands in the summer months," I found I and Deacties, irequeuieu uy muus- !... tnr.Mi.ati.iliU I .it Of I ft Tt VITA ; uimcieu iur Kruu uiiijuico jelers, for an hour or so on luggage; !... nrf:i that is ! uu i ..vi . .. I four or five experiences of the' tion sution of the Navarra line to Tamplona in the Lorunda valley, a country famous for being the hotbed ot Carlist risings. At Alsasua pas sengers for Pamplona leave the Mad rid mail train, and woe betide them if they attempt during a long stop page to venture from the station to the little straggling village, where, nine years ago, 1 slept wun tne neau- j quarters ol lon Alphonto, at tne end of the Carlist war. A very little di.-tauce from thestaiion civil guards and civilians lie in wait for travelers or luggage, and they obliite them to submit to the fumes of disinfectants so abominable that women ofu n faint, and men cough, sneeze, and retch under this novel tormeut of the inquisition of cholera. It is use less to remonstrate and tell the tor mentors lhat the Home Secretary forbids this vexation, as you are coolly told that " Es possible is it Iossible but only the Seuor Alcal de and the local junta of health give orders here, and they must be ob served." More striking, indeed, was pretension to inflict fumigation no lens volens on sightseers from the station, and a hasty retreat saved the inquisitive strangers from this village tyrany of 6heer fear. It ie only a short distance from Alsasua to the capital of Navarra, but two hours and. forty minutes are taken to crawl over fifty-two kilometers, and you pass six stations in a long valley between the Pyrenean moun tains and the sierraa of Navarra. in districts yet free from cholera. Your fellow-travelers, mostly well-to-do natives, a burly farmer and an offi cer, talk of nothing but cholera, and here, as almost everywhere in pro vincial Spain, you ind that the ma jority went heartily in lor tne land quarantine precautions ot eno Ko mero Ilomeldo, the last Home Sec retary, aud they are greatly irritated at his successor, Senor Yillaverde, ior suppressing lazarets and sanitary cordons. These Navarrese, for in stance, told me that at the first out break of cholera in South Spain in May and June, they established such rigorous land quarantines, laza rets and fumigations on the Ebro and on their railway lines, and roads that they remained free from chole ra until the month of July, when the epidemic, they say, crept in from the South via Saragossa and Logro no. They confessed 10 re that many villiages in their mountains and plains even still kept up their cor dons, and in defiance of all the or ders from Madrid, threaten to shoot any one approaching their districts, guarded night aud day by the arm ed peasantry. At Pamplona, capital of Navarrs, great precautions were . kept up until very lately, and no one j is anoweu to euier me luruiieu ciiy ; without eubmittiug to fumigation. All the cates but two are cloed, and at these two entrances you have to pass a medical inspection and fumi gate, and your luggage is not allow ed out of the preventive fumes for several hours. IKn t li-xte Your Temper. Mr. Brigs was bothered nearly to death wilti callers, one day, all of them in the cause of some charity oy other, and his temper was aadly crippled. There was a slight ces sation about three o'clock, and just as Briggs began to breathe easier, another man came in. "Well?"' inquired Briggs, turning impatiently toward the visitor. "Mr. Briggs," he began in a gentle way, I want "You w ant, do you," interrupted Well everybodv wants. bnggs. Hell, every It's want, want, want, all day. There has been about ten thousand in here to dsy wanting. I want, too. I want a rest. And I want you to leave." "Pftt Mr. Briggs." continued the gentle voice, I know it, but I want " "Don't say 'want' to me," shouted Briggs ; get out of this quick, or I'll go crazv." "But"Mr. Briggs I want " "Get out," howled Briggs ; I want, too, I told you," and he reached for a paper weight, while the visitor got up and flew. About ten minutes afterward there was a call at the telephone. Briggs responded. "Hello ! what ia it," he asked. Is' that you, Briggs," came the inquiry. "Yea, go ahead." "Well, Mr. Briggs, I wanted to pay you five hundred dollara I've been owing you about a year, and you wanted me to pay it, but when I called at vour place a few minutes I go- Bruga yanked the telephone of! the wall, kicked it out the front door, jimmed hia head into his hat clear up to hia ears, and went out to find a mule to kick him serene. i The Deanut market has received a , severe shock in the death of Jumb. ' About Drrams. A French phyeician, Dr. Delau- tella some interesting iacw about dreams. These are embodied in a communication to the Society de Biologic of Paris. It ia well known when a person is lying down tne blood flows most easily to the brain. That is why some of the ancient philosophers worked out their thought in bed. Certain mod ern thinkers have imitated this oueer method of industry. During sleen. bo lone as the head is laid low I dreams take the place of coherent thoughts. There are, however.dilTerent sorts of dreams; and Dr. Delauaay's pur iru.7t - ' . . ...-viuif brings on a particular kind ot dream. Thus, according to this investigator, uneasy ami disagreeable dreams ac compauy lying upou the back. This fact is explained by the connection which is known to exist between uie organs ot sensation and the posterior part of the bruin. The most general method of lying, perhaps is on the right side ; and this appears to be also the most nat ural method, lor many persons oo- V:t tolvine uuou the tilde of the neart, whicn, it has been more man once asserted, Bbould have free ac tion during sleep. Nevertheless, Dr. Delauuey's statement hardly harmonize with this opinion. When oue sleeps on the right side, that is to say, upou the right side of the brain, one's drtau.s have marked and rather unpleasant characters- 11C8. 1'hese characteristics, however, are ttsentiallv thoee which enter into the nonular definition of Preams. One's dreams are then apt to bf llWicul, absurd, childish, un , certain, incoherent, lull of vivacity and exaggeration. Dreams which come from sleeping on the right side are, in short, simple deceptions. Thev bring to mind very old and niiut remembrances, and they are often accompanied by nightmares. Dr. Delaunay points out that sleep ers treoutntlv compose verces or rythmical language while they are lying on the right side. This verse, liiough at times correct enough, is absolutely without seuse. The mor al faculties are then at work, but the intelligent faculties are abseut. On ihe other hand, when a per son slumbers on his left brain, his : stories, and mteiesting travels corn dreams are not only less absurd, j prised the whole and I found not they may also be intelligent. They j the lejst pleasant part of my visit are "as a rule, concerned with recent i in those quiet moments by the win things, not with reminiscence. And, 'dow which overlooked the great, old since the faculty of articulated lau- fashioned garden. Any housekeep guage is found in the side.lhe words er could spare six or eight books uttered during such dreams are frt-from her library, and almost any quently comprehensible. I guest would bless herfor the thoucht. bhe Obtained a Seat. As sharp a woman as Jake Sharp'1 'e vldllr cares nearly as much for himself, savs the New York 1 1 .,, I for l" PIx.lr.a entered a c on his new Broadway .coverings f he golden rule, which i;..- i f.,.,...i h..rif t(1 s RU'de to all branches of good onlv female passenger. All the t.6l.t.n ThICI,mnV f:.m was flat as though made of muddy paste, with one cheek-bone consid erably higher than the other. A thick noe and a wide mouth, with bluish-black l:p3 made picturesque the lower part of the face, and na ture had enveloped it all with a dark yellowish, freckled skin. The pas sengers saw all this with a single glance, and settled themselves com fortably in their seats. The woman stood a moment at the door. Her small, black eyes glared viciously, straight ahead. Suddenly she strode to the centre of the car, and deliberately planted herself on the lap of an old man. " Madam." he expostulated, " you forget yourself." It you don't like it, get up and give me your seat," she replied, com posedly. A twinkle of mirth, not uuicixed with malice, glistened in her eyes. " Madam, I can't have you silting on my lap," said the old man, and he gave her a pueh. The woman wheeled around and seated herself on the lap of a sickly looking man on the other side of the car. uOb, oh, my toe!" he howled. "Say, you are stepping all over me!" She jumped up and took a seat on the lap of a 300-pound German pas senger. " Excuse me. madam," said he. On his face the perspiration was roll ing down. 44 If you was to got up I give you my place. I was sweating awful." The woman secured a seat at last, end she glanced triumphantly at the passengers. Not one of tbem dared to lifi bis eyes to the woman's face after this. They stared out of the window, or kept their eyes root ed to the ground. The woman sig nalled the conductor to stop at chambers street, and as sheflounced t0 the door willl a Fpitefui i0Ok, Bhe exclaimed " You are nice set of fellows, you are. You can't tell a lady when you see one. Next time I hope you won't forget your manners." The conductor found a small bun dle where the woman had been seat ed. He opened it and discovered a scrub-rag, a scrub-brush, and a cake oisuap. An Absent-Minded Barlter. "Yes," said the proprietor of an uptown barber shop, "Jim was a good workman, but I had to get rid of him." "What wa3 the matter." "He was too absent-minded and forgetful. One old fellow, with a head like a bi'liard ball, he never failed to ask if he didn't want a shampoo. Another bald-headed old ltliaP got mad because Jim wanted ! t0 8eil nm a bottle of 'Elixir' that was warranted to keep the hair from falliu' out; and a young man, who was slightly under the influence of beer, fell asleep in the chair an' Jim shaved oil bis moustache. I had to call ia a policeman then. He cut one man's ear nearly off while watchin' a dog fight in the street, an' sometimes he would rub hair oil oyer a customers face instead of nis head, an' fill his ears full of lather an' forget to wipe it out. Jim didn't mean nothin' wrong, but, as I said, he was absent-minded. "Do you remember when old Dea con Jones died ?" "Yes." "Well, the family aent for a bar ber to shave him, an' I told Jim to go. It was that job that lost him hia situation. He did the work all right, nobody ever found fault with Jim's work ; but when he had put on the finishing touches an' pulled the towel off the poor old deacon, he turned .around an' shouted 'Next!' so that people heard him a block wa?- So 1 tolJ Jim that 1 guessed I'd haye to let him go." Cremation in Japan. The crematory stands a little apart from the main road a building of a single story, with an innocent looking, tall chimney that might be connected with a nottenr. or a small iron foundry. The business ia al- wavs conducted privately, and there! are" few in Tokio, except thoe who j are professionally engaged, wr no nave witnessed the process. But arrange ments made by the omnipotent for eign minister opened the doora and Recured a respectful welcome. We were first received in the house of the manazer. where tea was served to us in priceless porcelain caps of Kutaniware.' The furnace, if so imposing a name may be used for a process so simple, stood a few paces from the house. On entering il there was nothing to be seen but what appeared to be two butter-tubs resting on a few faggots of wood. There were several cavi ties about two inches deep and one foot long in the stone tioor, and those were filled with shavings. Ac cording to municipal law, no burn ing is to be done before halt-past six in the evening. It still wanted ten minutes of that time, but under the circumstances he manager thought he would be safe to anticipate the hour, and the shavings were fired. One of the men kneeling before the glowing flame fanned it with a piece ! of wool. It caught the dry fagots' greedily licked the aides of the tubs, rose high in the air, and then with a horrible thud, the head burst out ward. Quick as thought the man seized a large piece of wood lying by in readiness, and hid from sight whatever may have protruded. It is the boast of the skillful cremator that under his supervision the con tents of the barrel are never expos ed to view. A heavy matting of wet straw is laid over the length of the barrel before the fire is ignited. As the barrel burns away thi falls in and covers the body. Iu three hours the work is done. Every particle of flesh Is burned away, and there re mains only the skeleton. The bones and the teeth the relatives collect and give them burial. Books for the Gueot Chamber At one time I was staying in a house where the guest chamber con tained among the turniture, a little shelf of books. I nave often thought of them since, with a wonder that more careful hostessess did not pro vide the same. Nights when I could not sleep, and mornings when I waited in my room for the breakfast bell, I dipped into the contents a volume or two of poems, some abort A Utile work-batket lully stocked ; pen, ink and paper readv to hand- 'keeping, as to all branches of UUS1UCSS, WJUIM IU OUC O Bill llCie, comes to ones aid and what we care most for in an other's home we should endeavor to give the comer to our own All About Itic) le. A minister in Cleveland rode to churce recently on abicvcle. As he swept up to the sacred edifice a large Newfoundland dog belonging to the senior deacon came lumbering out to ureet the ppstor. The bicycle col lided with the canine under a full head of steam, and ran him down with a shock that could be plainly felt with tne naked eye. 1 he rever ened gentleman took a header and I jammed his silk hat down over his ears so tight that he had to crawl through it to get out of it. The dog made Home howl with his wails, and attracted a crowd of 300 people. The parson's coat was split down the back and his trousers ripped across the knees. He pinned up the knees, and he had to wear a pepper and salt sack coat the sexton loaned to him. When he appeared in the pulpit in this garb, the congregation 1 . , . . , JL- smiled, and wnen ne announceu nis text, II Kings, xii, C: "But it was so, the priest had not repaired the breeches "there was not a dry eye in the conventicle. And now the question before the church ia : "Should a pastor ride a bicycle to church, or has the deacon a Chria tian right to own a dog?" ttlijr He DiHiiol.ed the Partnership. " Judge," he said, as he stood up in the prisoner's box of an Arkansas court, " I don't go for to say I'm in nocent, but there are extenuating circuuistauces." " Name them." "Jim and me was partners in the licker business. Jim was a-drawin' more'n his share. If I gobbled the partnership money and run away I'd have to live and die in Mexico or Canada ; if I said anything to Jim he'd draw his sheer and leave me flat ; il" I asked for a Receiver, he'd beat us both. When I cum tt look it all over, Judge, I concluded that the best way was" " To murder your partner?" " To do him up gently, Judge and to offer his widder a third interest in case she wouldn't marry me. Don't be too hard on a feller durin' such a business depression as this." "Only a baby's cry" U the name of a new song. "Midnight Squalls" would be more expressive, but less appropriate. It one is strictly scientific one can, with Professor Huxley, call a prim rose a " corolliflorial dicotiledyuous oxogen." A wise man will never shut his eyes before he opens hia mouth. A crank i9 usually a man whose head is turned. J T JACOBS a? tV ifEMEOV THE GREAT utur.iAti For Pain Caret Rhewmtisin. Nmraigra, . InlalLalr-tlt. I AT I.KlUi.ltTTI AVT PAJUa3. aMrit-K. nrrv o:ifL TflK TOARLkv A.t4HKlAft CUl. ft Mi MlttE. a. MARK. GUG'.K UWH t aWf hmol Mt lw e Vvm Opiate, JSMfia aoatf fMam. SAFE. rtm SURE. tCtS. PROMPT. CJj? T lt 4WTa Aim DBAA-CM. mi (ijiui km twuh cl, .uimou,n. J , TFT. fC mm TWAOt Vci 1 V IROVALKSSJJk J Nisi P0O0EB Absolutely Pure. Thli Powder neverrri. A nsml of parity, strength and a-)iulesomenM. Mr economical than the ordinan kinds, and cannot 1 old It eoaipf.lt with the multitude ot low tMt, thorn weticht, alum or phihate powders. Sold enjr a t'. Royal Hakis Powdh Co., 10 WaU. St., N. Y. mratf. A Safeguard. T!m fatal rnpulitv with which slicht Colds auJ Cough's frequently tb-relup liilo llie gravest maladies of the throat unit luuex, h a coiwiieration which should :ui-i tricrr prujcul lcixn to keep at liaiiil, a "houM)-li..UI remedy, a bottle of A Y KlfS CHKKltY rKCTull AL. Ninliin' cle Rivi- such iintwdiatc relief and works mj sure a cure iu all tufection of this class. That tmin"iit phynician. I'rnf. F. Sweotzrr, of the Maiuo Medical School. Brunswick, lie, kays: "Mfdicii elenco his produced no other ano ilvm! x!.-ctunint t"-l AVER'S Ciimi rV.iTor.-it. Ill lnviuab!o for tliican-. of t!w liiru:U uuU luu.M Tlio same opinion 1 CTpresMHl by the cl!-!.non I r. L.J. Addison, of Chicago, li... wUj s:iy: I hava never found, ia thirty-five yearn of mn:!nuHt utti-lv and prarttat of mlieinc, any ,ir jtiration . I' no call values A vsa'8 CHEUKT lT'TuR..!, f r iniitment of iliemK of tho tlmat and lulu.'.. It mil only tinak-i up eolda mi.) curen wverc emiL'ha, but ia more effective tlun aiiviliin el, in n lievlm even the moat eriuua bronchial and pulmonary affection.' AYER'S Sherry Pectoral I not a new rlainiant for popular confi dence, lut a medicine which i to-day savins the live of the third jrencratiint wlm have come into bcin miicu it was firt offered to the public. There i not a household ill which this lnaiualilc remedy has once been in troduced where iit use lia ever been abandoned, ami there i not a person who has ever riven it a proper trial for auv throat or Inns di.M;t.e suscep tible of cure, who has not been made well bv it. AVLIS'S CHERRY FECTOKAL ha. in iiuuiIhtIcsr instances, cured obstinaio caws of chronic lSronchitis, Laryncitis, and even acute Pneumonia, and hns saved nitinv patients in the earlier stai-cs of I'tilinonury Consumption. It is a medicine thai onlv requires to betaken in small dosrs, is pleasant to the taste, aud is needed in everv house, where there are children. a there is noihine so pxtd as A V Kit's HKRKY FKCTOKAL for treat ment of Croup andWhoopinK Cough. Tlicee ere nil plain facts, which can be verified bv anybody, and should be re membered' by everybody. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, rUEPAKED BV Dr. J. C. Aycr & Co., Lowell, Maes, Sold by all Druggists. ;EM08 C00KST0VES ALWAYS! EIGHTEEN SIZES AND KINDS ALL PURCHASERS CAS BE SUITED MNPFCTraitr sv l?ac A.Suepr.ard Sl Co..6a!timore,Ii l FtJ? S.M."! nv R. B. iSchell & Co , SOMERSET, PA. msyW-'KS-lyr, OVER 1000.000 BOTTLES SOLD AND NEVER v FAILS TO CURE C0U6HS.C0LDS." THROAT ANO ALLLUNGTROUBLES JUL DRUGGISTS SELL IT PRICE. 25 CTS. mm The mot popular Weekly tifrpTderotwi tn science, mec.tntCH,nKinriiijr disrorrrien. in vnti.nsnd pairnts evr pnbliabed. F.rerjnum tsfT thutraTH, with uplnitid enirravioirn. Tbi Tuihl lfftt ion turmhe a iutY valuahl ncyc! mmhI f information winch no iwnon nhrwild rv w.thnut. The popularity of the N U.STllir Ayfiui ax l :ieh that it n fin:Jnlion nnrW 'iaa'that nf all other napvr ot it c.at coiubined. Prirv $3 'JD Tr. l)iscrnnt toMi:b. S-i!d bv ill! nvl'-Ai Ml NN A CO.. PoWwher. No.3tlftr.dwiy, S. V. afi IT ff M imn " hare mtmmtm m m tir:uxlce bolero :he Patent Offf-e Hid have prriiared nore x'uzn On Hundred Thou sand ap!.iffctunMtrpi4:nt id ihe Lniifi tit.ttcK an.l fttrtiirn errantries. I ' n,.,liiM itrli 4 " ntir. ri it h f . Aoitfnmo'nfa and flil OlhfY T3ters for wwrinj: to loventore th?ir nrhte in the Timed Sttfi, 'acd.i. tuplnd. r ranee. (ermati7 and th?r fnr.'iirn cnntriM, pre parfd at hort notice end (.areatonabie lrma, Information an to obtaining patents chrfw folly iven without charj;i. Hand-booka ol information wnt fl-M. Patents obtained throairh Munn 4 Cn. are noticed in the Sciniinc Amrrican fn-e. Tbo advantaffo of uch notice is welt undfr.tood hr all person who wish Wdja- po of their p.itnta, Addre Ml NN CO., OnW BCXXSTTIFJC Aitrjucaai. 801 Broadway. cw Vork. E8TEY ORGANS 111 TH( Best in the World. AGENTS WANTED. riral-l'laaa Mem. Oaly BaBaitl Fartiea IrM Apply. Jewelers, Fumitxa'a Ken, and Music Teachers can sell our Instruments. We alsa Haadl tar tha Trad tfc BHO!CTfER IIROANS. STfchLlNO- UROXNS. CUll UHa WAKKt.V ORGANS, STORY k CLARK ORGANS. I1KOKKR BROS. PIANKS. VM. KNABK fcCt.'8 PI ANOS. J. . V. F1SSHER PIANO, BEHK BRUS. PIANO. Oar baalneai beta; the 1 arrest In Peanrvlvania. we have labilities ft aupplylna; the trade at bet ter rate than you can posaibly set from the fac tory. )Y-4;urrepndenr Solicited. Specially tll' ruiCES for Fall Trade. S. HAMILTON, 87 Fifth Av-. and ISO First Av eoiT.lm. PITTS BT. BOH, PA. AODITr Bead eenu.er post, r 1 I aa la. a are and receive free a coatly box ot gouos, which will help yoa to more money rijht away than acythlnc t ia tL. world. A II. of either rex. succeed from irat hoe The bread road to fortune epena betor the wor its, aosoiuieiy ura. Atone auore, Tama ro.,aBKutia. jaain. itfSEI DRUGGISTS SEILIT PRIC - BMfjk mm Cwajk." Auk for "Kobkb a fjoairh," fnr Oosurhs, Ooldi. Sora Throat, itoaramaa. Troctaaa, toe. IJijlUd, lM(k M Bate.- Clean oat rata, niea, naclM, Blea, attla, bed baga, akuaiu. culnaaaaki, Kopacra. 15a. Ilrnsglat. Ml Pajata. PalplUUott, Urapatgal Smllinai. DinliMaa, Ia dlnrFKlua, Hewlaena. SiaipleanMaa. cajrad by " Weili'kaallll Kmmwct."' " Batacat Caraa. Ask tor Wollt' " Roa(h oa Ooraa." lie. Uokk, CMuuleta car. Hani or aolt conn, warta, boniona. "Bank mm rBlB" I'll aaaal Plaaier ; S trawl hralsr, hnprrtrvd, tb beat fbr baek aetae, pain, la eaen or aitla, rhaamaUam, Baaral gt. Tata resale. " Weill Health Kmewer " rtnoref health and rigor, earn laptla, Uaauacha, aiarTousaea, UtsHUtf. IL WaaaptBA-CaaKb. and the many Throat Afleetfona ot ebildren, iruiDpiljr, pleaaantlj, and aalely relieved br "Kuutjh uu Uvugha," Trvchea, lie. lialtam, Uao. If juu are failing, broken, worn oat and narrow, urn - w eiu- iieaitn Meneaer. ' 5i. x-ruinruu. Uf aPnaarirar. If Ton arf loetna yont arln on Ufa. try Wells' Health Keoewer." Ovea direct to weak ipota. " leeik aa TnHuxIh," Inatant relief for Nettralitla, Toothaebe, Face- ache. Aak lor "Hough oa Toothache." 14 and it. Prexty Waaaca. Ladlea who would retain freehneas and ylradty. don't laU to try - Walla' Health Kenewer." Caiarrkal Tkramt Atfoctlwaa. Haeklna. IrrlUilna Cotuha, Ovlda. Sore Throat, cured by - kuu.li on Cough." Troche, lie. Liquid, nac. "Bvaajh mm ltB." " Rouah on Itch " cure humor, eruption, ring worm, Utter, alt rheum, (rutted feet, chilblain. Ike Hap ef be Diatlaa. Children, alow In development, puny, Krawny, and delicate, u"Uell' Health Kenewer." WMe Awake. three or four hour every nittht couithlnif. Get tiDuedUte relief and auund reM by uain- Wella' "KuukU ub tJough." Irruchea, 163. Balaam, 'lix "laaiB Oa Pala" Paraaeeel Plaeteri StrenRtbentn, Improved, the best for backache, pain in cheat or ode, rbeumaiiein, neuralgia. anow In Michigan and Illinois. Chicago, Oct 21. A foot of snow is reported from nearly all parts of the northern penDinauIa of Michi gan, blocking the railroads. There was a light fall in Galena and Mon mouth, 111., yesterday. Cura for File. Piles are frequently preceded by a pense of weight in the buck, loins aud lower part of the abdomen, caus ing the patient to suppone he has some affection of the kidneys or neighboring organs. At limes, syrup tons of indigestion are present, as flatulency, uneasiness of tlie stom ach, ect. A moisture, like perspira tion, producing a very disagreeable itching, after getting warm, is a com mon attendant. Blind, Bleeding and Itching Piles yield at once to the ap plication oi Dr. Bosanko'-i Pile Rem edy, which acts directly upon the parts affected,absorbing the Tumors, allaying the intense itching, and ef fecting a permanent cure. Price 50 cents. Address, The Dr. Bosanko Medicine Co., Piqua, O. Sold, bv C. N. BOYD, Druggist, Somerset, Pa. dec..J-ly. Another Gaa Vein Struck. Pittsburg, Oct. 21. An enormous natural gas well was struck yester day in Butler county, along the Pittsburg and Western Railroad. The immense flow of gas was de veloped in the 100-foot rock at a depth of 1,100 feet. When struck the pressure of the gas was so pow erful that it carried 1,000 feet of salt water a great distance into the air. This gas will be utilized for manu facturing purposes. There is no use fighting nature. Dr. Kennedy's Favorite remedy does nothing of that kind. It does 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, jour liver or your kidneys. Does rheumatism pnin and rack you? Is your hetd thick and heavy ? It will charm away these ailments almost ere you 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 il from dandruff. Miss Pearl Aneson, St Louis, Mo. 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 hit patients "This is my favorite remedy for all troubles ot the blood," etc., 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 liver and kidneys and purifying the blood, there is nothing like it, and this is the reason why it so quickly removes pimples and gives a rosy bloom to the cheeks. I have been deaf in one ear ten years, and partially deaf in the other for two months; have been treated by ear specialty doctors and receiv ed no benefit. Having used Kly'B Cream Balm for about a month, I find myself greatly improved, and can hear well and consider it a most valuable remedy. I had also nasal catarrh, with dropping of mucous into my throat and pain oyer my eyes, which troubles also have entire ly disappeared. D. B. Yates, Upper Lisle, Broome Co., W. I. A $10,000 Fire. Beaver Falls, Oct. 23. Oliver Bros', chain-works was destroyed by fire this morning. Loss, $10,000. A number of freight cars standing near were also burned up. About 100 men were thrown out of employ menu Ihe Josa is covered ty in surance. Free Dlatrlbatlon. "What causes the great rush at Boyd's Drug Store 7" The fre- dis tribution f sample bottle? f Dr. Bosahkft's Cough and Lutg Syr op, the most popular remedy for Coughs, Colds, Coiixuuiption and Bronchitis now on li e market Regular size 50 cents ni.il 1 00. Ladies as well as gentlemen now wear traveling caps. It ia estimated that the railroads of Penniylvania employ 70,000 men 'o. W. BEICFOHD. DRUGS G. W. BENFORD & SON'S . DEUG- STOKE, NO. 1, BAER'S BLOCK. We keep constant n hi nJ a stock of PURE DRUGS AND MEDICINES, Chemicals, Dyes, Toilet Articles and Sundries kept in a first-cUss PrtiR Store. PAINTS. OILS, VARNISHES, Trae. Braces, Supporter, and all Icadin; appurtenances wed both by Physictan and Fitr-llle TOHAC:os AUD CKiAKS. the heM In the market frvm Itomestlc to imported "... K, " TioNiiroaPoiKOKn with iake. family ueveipts fillidvoimli i. I y. Ali advertised medicine kept on ham!, if not partiea can depend on ita "7"r1 '?. ahort time, aa we pay areat aiteatioe lo ail auch demand. Our own make ol HOkSL AXU CA T ILK roWVEB I beyond doubt thbe4lnthe market. 'ia eta. per pound. We no to no expense of packin;, labeling;, advertising. 4 . but keep In bulk. Any tneredtent wanted specialty can be added, t'al' and aee for yourself, and be convinced we oiler Bancaina. O. W. BxaroaD A Sos intend dolnc Oare businet. ai want all to see for themselves. No trouble to show our atock. WPure Wines and Ldqaors for Medicinal Use Only." ESTABLISHED 1880. FISHER'S BOOK STORE, SOMERSET, PENN'A. fki. -.li ..,.hii.i..i rJA -i -.ii.v.Iji nrwk and Stationery Store wa moved oe February Id. 184. from Ita old. cramped and Insufficient quarter to the larn. eleirant and convenient new Store-Koom directly opposite Cook A Beerit'. In theeoommodW,usqoriera iecilly aited ut lor Ita occupancy, tne slock ol hooks, new, anu ouiiooery nu i .wj - tentlon will be paid to the Wkolttatt Trmdt. School Book. School Supplies. Pr. Envelope. Ink, Pena, Almanacs, Pencils. Blank Booka, Ac., will hebuoxhtln larnequntli!ee direct from manolae turer. which will enable this establishment to job to town and soontry merchanta at each BRUre a will make It dvanta:eooa to buy here. To retail buyer, an almoat Innumerable line of noode win he uHored. Alwavt lor sale an extensive and varied assortment l puellml W orks. Histories, Books of Travel. Novels, Lutheran and Disciples Hymn Books, Dictionaries, Children a Toy Booka, Magaainoa, Keviewa, Daily Papers, Story Paper, and a general line of reading matter. Day School and Sunday School Reward Cards, LAWYERS AND JUSTICES BLANIS, BUM BOOK, TABLETS, AND MARELGE CEET1FILATES. OTMAILi OBDEKS SOLICITED. CHA8. . FI8HEK. SOMERSET LUMBER YARD. ELIAS CUNNINGHAM, MaafactiirEr and Dealer. Wtolesaler ui Retailer of LDMBER AND BUILDIKG MEBIALS, HARD AND SOFT WOODS, Office and Yard AT Somerset, Op- S- 4. C. R- R. Statloa . OAK, POPLAK. SIblSGS, PICKETS, MOlf.DIJ.GS ASH. WALSIT, YLCORISO. ASH. STAIH RAILS, CHERRY. YELLOW PISE, SHIXULES, DOORS, HAI.ISTEKS CHESTSVT, WHITEPISE, LATH, BLIMlS, A L EL POSTS A General Line of all urade of Lumber and Buildln; Material . and Rooflns; Slate kept in stock. Also, can lunilsn anything In the line of our business loonier with reasonable promptness, such a Brackets. Odd-lied work, Ac. . elias cuisrzsriisrG-s jm:, Offices and Yard Opposite S. & C. R. R. station. Somerset, Pa THE BERLIN MARBLE AND GRANITE WORKS IS THE BEST PLACE TO 13 U MEMORIAL WORK IN THE COUNTY, AND THE ONLY PLACE WHERE STRICTLY FIRST-CLASS WORK true, done go to any Cemetery in the by the Berlin Works with R. H. Koontz is the best man to deal with : First, Because he is Fully Establinked in The Trade, and ia therefore floing a perfectly Reliable Business. Second, Because his Very Extended Experience, and Artistic Skill, en ables him to proportion his work better than others. Third. Because he claims to be, and can prone it by his Work and Nu merous Patrons, the Finest Carver, the Neatest Letterer, anil the Best Gen eral Workman doing business in this section of country. feblS. THE OLD RELIABLE SOHTJTTLEE, W-A.O-02ST. ESTABLISHED IS CHICAGO IN 1S42. I have iutt iweiei two car load of the must co:itilete Western Waion in tbe market tkere is a Hear Brake, to be used wnen hauling hay or arruin, a something that farmers know the necessity of when hauling on hilly lam in stock three years Derire being worked up, insuring the work.to be asoned before being ironed. Being the patentees of the DOUBLE COLLAR AND OIL CUPS. It is the only Wagon made that has this improvement ft avoids the necessity of taking off the wheels to grease, as in the old style; by sim ply turning cap the wagon can be oiled in less than five minutes. This Wagon wants to be seen to be fully appreciated, and parties wishing to buy will do well to see it before purchasing elsewhere. EVERY WAGON "FULLY INSURED. In offering this make of Wagon to tlie public, will say I used the same make of Wagon for five years when freighting across tbe Rocky Moun tains, over roads that were almost impassable, and they always stood the test. I feel warranted in saying I believe tbem the Best Wagon on wheels. Call on Oliver Knepper Wagons. M&-AGEST8 WANTED TBMO'JOHOVT THE COVSTT. F. HEFFLEY. SOMERSET, MAHCH 88, 1885. gXECUTORS' NOTICE. Estate of Alex. afeOrscor, ales'd, lata efSkade Twp., 8oaamt County, Pa., dee'd. Letter Metameiitary a tbe a. bore estate kavteaj been frraated to tb underilinMd by la proper authority, aotle I herebr gives to all person Indebted to Mid esute to make ImaMdlat py saent, aad tkoa havta- elaiias against tho same will present them d.lj anthealleatod tor settlement witbost del. NAMUEI, MrOREOUR, JACOB McUltEOOR. ostT, Executor. A lire school. Imparting a praetleal (daeatloa; enabling yonng aa to enter apoa the aettr duties ol Ufo. Fur etrenlar addreea ftO-tat. T. DUFF SOMSX BEKFORD 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 CHEAP- er according to quality, than any other dealer in Western rennsyivannia. ii you warn to be convinced that this is County, and compare the work that done elsewhere. Sjlf - oilinic Steel-skein Scliuttler Wagons, the for Road or Farm Purposes. On the latter farm, fevery part of the Wood-work of or Henry Heffley, who will show you the FASHIONABLE CUTTER & TAILOR, Having had many years expert en, e in all hraaehe of he Tailoring ha. Ines. 1 guarantee Satisfaction to all wno may eall ap oa m and favur at with their pat ronage. Yoor, ke WM. H. KOCHSTEIXER HaMerael Pa. r I ri man noaey llui at aaytbtng else by V J 1 1 Jtaalo aa (snej fur IB bent eelltna: book oat. leerluArs sawed srraadlr. Ifone fmlL Tarsal u. HaUJBT Book Oo, PortUnd, i- 71 ) - f - - tjjm Tlie approaching soar,n iiuu st-rrit-c itif MOYepn)e u f;tMiiit.- f-iiimut'r VI an c .. necessity for CLOTHlV colder weather is prepar. J a larger scale ior .Mm, You -, Bovs and Children. A. C. YATES & to 602 604 606 Chestnut Stre' rHIL.DKI.Pill WE LEAD, OTHERS FOLLOW. Our SUh U Of Drugs, Medicines, and Cliemicali, Is ihe Largest in thr Ctiuiitv. H-r! iog enlarged my sSiorr-r In:, , now guited to a raj.dSv i!ltrt ing trade. I have iiitrt-a-niv stock in EVERY DEPARTMENT. And Ask a Critical ExatBii-ati,) ..( ' goods ?ixd riu:t KDNE ECT pure drugs mm Special Care Given to Comi-ua.ii Pljsaass PrmnKioa an FA IMS, OILS. GLASS, PUTTY. VArwNlHKS, AND PAINTEIIS' smiF. SOAI'S, BRUS II KS, COM US, SPONGES. PERFUMERY. TOILET A r.TIU.ES School Books and School Supp!ii at Lowest Prices. )wWea8 Speolnl Atten't-n tnil.i i ---- Good Coeds, Low Prices, Ani Fair Zetez i A FCI.L LINK (iF OPTICAL GOOES- tiiPLSOS Kim vsPylY mm y. .11 mtsum iii , C. N. BOYFS, MAailMOTII IJL0CK. SOMERSET PA " OANDEE" BQQTS mm WITH DOUBLE THICK BALL Ordinary Rubber Boot alsravs wear oct ncnn tbe ball. ThcCViithK llNts are dm:'t tti'wk oa the boil, and yivo DOrBLE TTEAK. Vmt tamamcal Rahhrr boot in tbe marUi-t. Last lorurer than any other boot aud Uie PRICE 50 HIGHER. Call and ex amine the goods. rOR SALE BY H. CHILDS & CO., WHOI.ETALE AiiEJH) riEEC ocT.Gui. PITTSBURGH. PA. N vith o-jh ' fi LnTLST SUCCISnTcno er Pi aa Easy Mtig km. 1-50C-C2J BCVE SiKSyUeS 2 AO Tb TTowro. onr ffpra mt,i" ,r '' v'?.- n-l nil trtii -tH. It Ti 'itif- . :. H itch , rm : t X !i ' :ti:ni-i: - ,' ? i rk- -1" Hv; Il:ililftit t;i Vi-n i ; t' T'' ' : . i hip: fvrfft't 4nifh : -.f " - ' rUAJtl IVni iin; , '. i' "' r, ''Ui TiMim unfliT th Ar:i. .n t - I" ''''.' f.-; v In wtthtHit Vt.tnutn't. tbn:i" ii;'';' 'Vj nifiitHfor family vwi'tf. It-n t '' r aty.-t and Uu-Ht c!-s,..'ni. T ,., iptvifiiul, we wan: an A en r 1 ''' . 1 ril U fur t:l:.l:: ; ii IH1 you ian :n:aK" a f 'il""'' 1 ' '' yMi rjin niAkfuTa r, Mi'ftr", .i THE HOWE JRVIM! ' - 1 - c .. i 3: Tha Best Couji Cara yoa cm ese kep mc'mws out. L-e-l lis-.t ' bto"U pure ihe i-ti-rji t; n. i -r : in working orirr. t -2 -(ore it. At b iuil up llie h?.n. If you uiif frm loiiiv. u Couh, Aillima, L'yipu. Jxn Keaule Cumpl-iinl. or anv div-ruer ' ' Siaiiich, liowcl. I.'i u-i r s-:y-tilt jw are ick 1 A ok! iy ITll'txi. i-.tx ;c Zll-lJL mmm HELP IJ. ..ml,'.. In I 'll i'" ' ,. will pat J. in lb war of m.itir ""it it a few days than ?. erer tb-me-.t P" u t bulneM. Capital re.inire.l l 1'" ,, boeM and worfc in Sre time ooi-. '7 " uir. i All of both sexes, ol all ar r'Jn;rl Tr &n cents to easily earned "'T all wno wans work m.j te th (rt nuk this unparalleled t.tter : T IJ a well ! isfled, we . ill nd t-1: ; ofwriiin;na Full P""", " f . sent free. Immense war abm-lutel! ' ST Who start at once. In t deuy. AJor aoa h Co Fortland. alaln. 1 ... V. .11 m ' i ; "ST 1 feM Mm wmm mm c. jmW,