The Somerset herald. (Somerset, Pa.) 1870-1936, May 18, 1887, Image 4

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    THE ANGEL.
A wan tlimujji ruigrwl jwl lis of lift;
His way Utneiitinf; trod,
And aonietinie risiify; fmm the strife.
Hii soul oommunl with (Sod.
" Would that wme anp-1 might," he prayed,
" Be ever at my sido.
One that nhould bring me Ktrvnpth and aid
Wben hujie lias lcen tleniesl."
Time uptwj. An boiwat maiihii rtoh?
Into hisntorni-nx ked heart.
He married. "Ah," the world wid. " fool,
Uer'f in 'thankiew (tart."
Sometimes a ray of brightness stole
From Hcavra through her to him,
And lighta were strengthened in hiit soul
That made the path lew dim.
And " let noiue augel." yet he prayed,
Be ever at my hide.
One that shall bring; me strength and aid
When hoje has been denied."
Aud on and on the dark years siasj
Through paiu- and travel sore,
At last hiti htrt eemed comforted.
He prayed that pmyer no more.
For Oust and i-lime through p"l and ill
The earthly partner stayed.
And mMrtlied that strange, erratic will.
Till sin tthrank bac-k, dismayed.
Perhapa lie thought hi prayer denied.
And yet through all his life
d placed an angel at his fide
In that devoted wife.
DIAMOND HISTORY.
iXIWrAHATIVELV A MOIIKKX 11IMIHIVKRY NO
KECOKII OF THE MAMONI1 TRIOR TO
fllKIKT tTKIOt'H n.UTt'ATIONH.
IN ITS VALt'E.
Stranpe to say the diamond is a modern
improvement. There is no historical rec
ord of the diamond prior to Christ, and
Tavernier aunt-its, probably with truth,
that no large diamonds were in the mar
Vet hefore the sixteenth sentury. The
first diamonds came from India, espec
ially Ceylon; the second larjre supply
from Brazil, which produaMthem so fast
that the rice fell to ?4 a carat, and re
mained for a long time at alxmt $S a car
at. It was pmiiably about that time that
the great royal collections if diamonds
were made.
The collection belonging to the Sultan
of Turkey, which is probably the finest
in the world, dates prior to the discovery
of America , and undoubtedly came from
Asia. One Turkish Pasha alone left the
empire at his death seven table cloths,
embroidere I with diamonds, and sixty
busl iels of fine pearls. In the last war
with Itussia, in 1878, Turkey librrowed
$:!0,i00,000 from the Etonian Rank on
the security of crown jewels. The cashier
of the bank was admitted to the treasure
chamber, and was told to help himself
until he had enough to secure his ad
vances. " I selected enough," said he to
secure the bank against loss in any event;
but the removal of the gems I took made
no gap in the accumulation."
The Russians have the largest diamond
in the world, the OrlofT, w hich weighs
rMj carats and forms the apex of the
Russian scepter. The French diamond,
known as the Kegent, which was stolen
at the famous robbery ef the crown jew
els ie 1792, and was afterward found in a
ditch, is 13 carats, and was valued at f 2,
.500.01111 a hundred years ago. Who on
earth would give $2.."on,0iK) for a stone?
Intimating the value of money at 5 per
cent., the owner would send $125,000 a
year in Kiss of interest. The famous
blue diamond, the Sancy, which was
stolen at the same time, lias never been
rewvered. Perhaps the roblicr hid it
and died lie fore he thought it safe to dig
it np. Perhaps he was killed and his se
cret died with him. At any rate it is
gone. Ixxiis Napoleon invested several
millions in diamonds; it is partly on the
proceeds of these jewels that his widow
has lieen supjiorting herself ever sine
his death. The English Koh-i-noor is
102i carats, but it has tieen so badly cut
that its value is a matter of uncert.iinty.
The English nobility have always lieen
lovers of the diamond. When theluke
of Buckingham was sent to Paris, to fetch
the future Queen Henrietta, he wore a
suit of clothes valued at f 2-V),0il0. It was
made of satin ami uncut velvet, set all
over with diamonds, and the diamonds
were purposely so loosely sewn that they
flew off as the iHike walked, and persons
of base degree picked them up and car
ried them off. Prince Esterhar.y is said
to liave exhibited simil ir ostentation at a
tall at Almack's.
The gem lover will find no such jewels
as these in thiscouutry. Occasionally, in
the east, one leads of a diamond necklace
or a diamond parere selling for 40t000.
There was at one time a purse-proud wr
venu in the United Mates Senate who
wore a (10,000 diamond in his shirt front,
tiovernor Stanford sjient ?S0,0 Nl in dia
monds at Tiffany's some years ago, and
some of the ladies of San Francisco, whose
jewel cases the rejwtrUT is n it privileged
to descrilie, contain gems representing a
sum which would constitute a fortune in
an ordinary family. There are diamond
uecklaoes here for sale at f2,"xt0 to $3,500
which would lie as effective in a ball
room as a string of gems of five times the
size. There is one ring here which con
tains a big diamond weighing four and a
half caratsand two fair rubies; it is worth
$7,fi50, and is no doubt cheapat the price.
But who would like to go through life
with the soubriquet of the Man with the
Ring?
It is curious to note the fluctuations in
the value of diamonds. Alxmt 800 years
ago they were quoted nt 225 j c irat. Fif
ty years later we find them selling at
$105 a carat. A hundred and fifty years
later the supply from Brar.il had increas
ed sj Urge that one-carat stones sold for
$40, and shortly afterward at $4. From
this point they rallied at $.'51 jier carat at
the time of the French revolution; then,
under the pressure of the supply from ex
iled French nobles, they fell again to
f 20; During the first sixty or seventy
years of this century they rose steadily,
and twenty years ago they were quoted
at about $100 a carat. Now, Mr. Henry
I. Morse, of Boston, gives the following
prices of diamonds at the present time :
Stones averaging one-half carat each,
$00 per carat.
Stones averaging three-quarter carat
each, $$0 per carat.
Stones averaging one carat each, $100
per carat
Stones averaging one and one-quarter
carats, each, $1 10 per carat.
Stones averaging one and one-half car
ats each, $125 per carat.
Stones averaging one and three-quarter
caraM each, $145 per carat.
Stones averaging two carats each, $175
IT ctraL
In other words, the value of the gem
increases in the geometrical ratio of its
weight. Four iianRnds weighing to
gether lo ca"U an. worth $120, but one
diamo-i 1 weighing just as much is wort h
?350. rt4fc.- w iguiug over two carats
Mr about the me oric - . two
carat stone; they ah-nld 1 dearer, but 1 nd" B.lmuKncss, Indigetiou,
t-y .re not, simply Ucm C demrnd M . Costi veness, Nervoes
Jbr Uh. is limited. ItUe demand for 1 .re,n !" of the H,-ad, Pal
diamond, were as imperative as the de- VlUUn f the and oth'r dirtWH
nd ir floor or beef the jr- wuetrical sJrnjPtom8- Thre -
. . 7Tm-. m ill nrmwi-A lie a.An,lA..l ..A
tftim 4 again cntue into plav. and i
ri oral atone? ll-i lie valued in the
-rHousnnds. ;
- It t not 1:Vely 'Jiat the diamond of
" -' - r. a w mi. n I wc IUUI.U IOWCT 111
value than it is now. - In the words of a
jH.pular writer: "The Uamond i the very
essence of property. It is riches condens
ed ; too small to be seen by the midnight
burglar; too easily hid to be seised by
the tyrant; too quickly carried awar to
be wrested from the exile or the outlaw
A diamond is a portable empire." It is
no wonder the persecuted ex-monarchs
of Hindustan put their money in dia
monds against British rapacity.
Our San Francisco jewelers buy their
diamonds in Iinrton and Paris. None of
them have yet established connections
with Brazil or oloonla or Cape Town.
There is a firm in New York which cuts
diamonds, and which xrforuied a good
job on that remarkable stone which was
discovered a few years ago on the bank ol
the James River, opposite Richmond, Va.
Rut Amsterdam holds an easy pre-eminence
in diamond cutting, and its work
j goes . to London or Paris for sale, where
our dealers find it. diamonds, like edi
tors, can only be cut by themselves.
Diamond dust is the only material that
will impinge the surface of the raw dia
mond. The tendency of modern taste is toward
simplicity in shape and artistic decora
tion in design. The lielle of the modern
ballroom is amazed to see the massive
handcuffs w hich her mother wore in the
guise of bracelets, with little spikes hang
ing from them, on which the ardent lov
er impaled His fingers when he tried to
clasp Angelina's hand. The modern
bracelet is a plain, narrow hoop of gold,
with a rich stone set in it. When Bu
chanan was President and the gentlemen
of the South declared that they w ere go
ing to die in the last ditch girls wore ear
rings which were ponderous masses of
gold, with a few precious stones set in
them in odd corners, and which distend
ed the holes in their pretty ears, so that
bad brothers could stick a lead encil in
them. The modern earring is a simple
jewel pearl or diamond. It has a set
ting to hold it in place, but the jeweler
exhausts his art to conceal the setting, so
that it slinll not lie detected, and that the
gem, of purest ray serene, shall seem to
hang on lieauty's ear by the attraction of
affinity and rings! Ioesany one remem
ber ttie monstrous cables which old Mrs.
Cm-sus used to wear in the days of our
mothers, in which gold and rubies and
diamonds and pearls were massed togeth
er so that when you shook hands with
her yon fancied you had got hold of a
curtain ring which had Ixt-n battered
out of shape? In the modern ring tht
gold modestly effaces itself, leaving the
gem to shine in solitary radiance. And
think of the chains our grandmammas
used to fasted to their watches none of
your footy little things that the Philis
tine couldn't see as he passed, but solid
massive chains by which a dog could
have been secured in his kennel or a
small boat moored to its landing-place.
WaU-hchains nowadays are modest, un
obtrusive objects, which hold the watch
in pla-e, but w hich shrink from public
view and timidly shun the admiration
their exquisite embroidery might some
times command. Son FraiH-ir dill.
Secrets ot Palmistry.
As many persons want to know how to
tell fortunes by the hand, "just for the
fun of the thing," the following brief di
rections will suffice to enable any reader
to emulate the prowess of the y)sies in
an art which is held to lie peculiarly
their own.
Begin with the line of life.starting from
a jioint an inch lielow the bottom of the
first finger and tracing it to its termina
tion at the base of the thumb. If well
defined and unbroken, it is said to de
note long life ; if cut and intersected by
other lines, illness. Every inch of the
line of life is supposed to stand for ten
years, and a distinct break at any point,
indicates death at that age, estimated by
its distance from the starting oint of the
line.
The line of the head, or as it is some
times called, " the line of intellect," is the
next thing to be looked for. It sweej
horizontally across the iltu, starting'
simultaneously with the line of life. If
clear and unbroken, it is supposed to in
dicate a logical intellect. If much notch
ed, wih lines entering it from other parts
it indicate that this intellect may run
Kiuto many fancies ; as, for instance, if the
tines enter from the base of the middle
finger the tastes will run to weird books
or to solitary scheming.
The line above the last named, run
ning from between the bases of the first
ami second finger to the back of the lit
tle finger, is the line of the heart, indi
cating sociability and affection. When
much broken and intersected, it means
that the owner will be the slave of his oi
lier passions, especially those passions
which are designated as "tender" or
erotic. It is usually the most broken and
irregular of all the line of the hand, ou
which account the ancient palmists prob
ably selected it.
The line which runs perjx-mlicularly
from the resit of the second finger to the
wrist is called the line of fortune, and
the more broken and irregular this is the
better for the possessor. If these broken
and ad. led lines are generally parallel to
the original line they denote streaks of
good luck or good fortune ; it they cut it
across they denote " crosses " or " tips and
downs" in life. Unfortunately, the latter
is the rule.
The " mounts" are the little fleshy
proinincnws at the roots of the fingers
and between the joints. At the foot of
the first finger is the mount of Jupiter;
the second is sacred to Saturn ; the third
to the Sun, and the little finger to Mer
ury. Below the latter and on the right
side of the hand is the hill of Mars ; still
further below is the hill of the Moon. Of
these Jupiter is propitious, Saturn means
ill hick, the Sun, riches. Mercury knavish
ness ami "smartness;" Mars, war or mil
itary genius; and the Moon, moodiness,
crankiness, or a tendency to philosophic
al seculations. According to the extent
to which the lines on these " mounts "
are marked and the prominence, of the
"mounts" themselves, the characteris
tics and fortune of the individnal are
foretold. Three strongly-marked hori
zontal lines at the base of the hand,
when present, constitute the "regal brace
let," and are supjiosed to indicate long
and pros;ien iU8 life, with strong will pow er.
fS'Ulitmtrf Ilimild.
Enjoy Life.
What a truly lieautiful world we live
in ! Nature gives as grandeur of moun
tains, glens and oceans, and thousands of
means of enjoyment. We can desire no
better when in jierfec health ; but how
often do the majority of jieople feel like
giving it np disheartened, discouraged
and worn out with disease, when there is
no occasion for this feeling, as every suf
ferer car. easily obtain satisfactory proof,
lat fivr.' Augn Flomr, will irakelheu
frwe from disease as when born. Dyspep
sia and liver Complaint are the dired
eausirs of seventy-five per cent of snch
' . ,w,v -uniu.
"-
"Is this a rnrnk line?" askd the Sum
mer giil at the railway station. NV re
lied the clerk, -it la brxneh." Ou,
I'm so sorry, for I wanted to take four
trunk along w ith me V
:y . . .c;tv - i ,
Mrs. Fetherbee's Triumph.
It was blue Monday in the! Fctherbee
household. A rainy, dismal, misty, fog
gy Momlay a Monday hereon Biddy
had just given warning, and the sitting
room stove had tumbled over, and the
water pipes sprung a leak. ,
"Ma," said Felix Fetherbee, "where
my lunch ?"
Ma," piped Anna-Maria, "I've lost
my joggerfy!"
"Mamma! I say, mamma!" squeaked
little Tommy, "the baby's a playin' in
the ashes, an' she's got her face all over
black."
Mrs. Fctherbee looked wildly around j
with both hands presm-d to her head.
' I shall go crazy !" wailed she. " I
shall certainly lose my senses, Mr. Feth
erliea!" But Mr. Fctherbee, having swallowed
his coffee at a railroad rate, was now but
toning up his overcoat with si'atrcely less
rapidity.
" Yes, my dear," said Mr. Featherby.
" Sieak quick, if you please. I'm in a lit
tle of a hurry, this morning."
Mrs. Fetherbee's countenance fell.
"If you could only stay long enough,
my dear, to put up the stove and go for
plumber, and keep an eye to the chil
dren, while I run around to the intelli
gence office for another cook."
" I'm really very sorry,- my dear, said
Mr. Featherliee, " but this is an unusual
ly busy day at the office. I've a great
deal to accomplish before noon. I'ts quite
imjiossible for me to give up the day."
"Rut half an hour "
" Half an hour! out of the very cream
and spice of the day!" ejaculated Mr.
Fctherbee. But that's all the exigencies
of business. It's quite impossible. By-
bv."
And out he walked, w hile poor Mrs.
Fctherbee sat down and cried.
" I'd like to know w hat I'm going to
do," said Mrs. Featherliee. " Oh, if I had
dreamed of all thft 1 never, never, never
would have got married."
" Ah ! but that's past hoping for," said
a cheerful, chirpy voice close to her,
And now all you've got to do is to make
the best of it. What's the matter? '
Everything is the matter!" sighed
Mrs. Fetheiee.
It was Miss Hcpsey Hall, a plump,
good-temiered little old maid, who color
ed photographs for a living, ami lent a
helping hand to her neighbors generally.
" Ah !" said Miss Hepsey. " I see. It's
blue Monday, and things in general are
going wrong!"
" Yes," sobIed Mrs. Fetherlee, " and
and Mr. Fetherbee is so hurried by
business that he couldn't stay to help me,
and"
"Uh !" said Miss Hepsey. " Business!"
And she rubbed her nose and looked so
dubious that Mrs. Fetherliee hastened to
answer the tona rather than the words.
' I assure you, 1 lepsep, that it is one of
his busiest days. Monday always is. If
I supposed it wasn't. "
" Well, you can easily find out," said
Miss Heiisey. "Can't you?"
"How?"
".Sell postage stamps," answered the
old maid.
"Hepsey Hall, what under the sun do
you mean ?" demandisl the licwildered
wife.
" I often do it," said Miss Hepsey. 'it's
a wholesome change, after I've been sit
ting three or four hours at m v photograph
easel. I just jump into a stage and ride
down to the business part if the city
Wall strtH-t, Cedar, Exchange place, any
where and sell a lot of stamps. It ays,
in a modest sort of way. Take my ad
vice, my dear ; put on my plaid shawl
and beaver bonnet, with a green veil and
a muff, iio to Fetherbee's office sell
jsistage stamps. I've got a lot on hand
that 1 11 let you have."
"Would you really?" Hesitated Mrs.
Fetherbee, "if you were me?"
" If you want your husband to come
home and help you about things that it
is a man's province to see to, and not a
woman's, 1 would," said Miss Hepsey,
firmly.
"But what shall 1 do about the chil
dren T' asked Mrs. Fetherliee.
" Oh r said Miss Hepsey, "I'll stay
and keep an eye on 'em, while I mend
my company gloves; you'll be back in an
hour or two, I don't doubt."
So Mrs. Fetherbee dressed herself in
the little photograph eolorer's plaid
shawl, bonnet, ami green veil, took a
portfolio of stamps, and set off down
town.
No. 8 Macedon place was the number
of Mr. Fetherbee's place of business, and
into No. 8 Maedoii place Mrs. Fetherbee
walked.
Mr. Fctherbee was all alone in the of
fice, his heels on the baize-covered desk,
and a cigar in his mouth, reading a mag
azine. The fire blazed brightly in the
grate, the daily iaiers lay scattered round
and the office loy was asleep in the win
dow seat, like a cat of large growth.
" Eh?" said Mr. Fetherbee, looking up
with a prodigious yawn. "No nosfums
t'i-day. Tom, you villain," to the boy,
"rouse up and look to the office ; I may
as well go to dinner."
" I'll go, too," said the young woman
who was selling jxistagef stamps, as she
calmly advanced and took Fetherlx-e's
arm.
Instinctively Mr. Fetherbee rex-oiled ;
but she raised her veil, and looked hi.n
calmly in the fin.
" Mrs. Fetherliee !" he ejaculated.
"Exactly," said Mrs. Fetherbee. " Yes,
my dear, we'll go to dinner together.
There's not much probability of my get
ting any at home to-day, so I'll take oy s
ters and coffee, if it's quite agreable to
you, and then we'll go cosily home to
gether." Mr. Fetherliee opened his mouth and
shut it again, like a monster toy, but no
sound issued forth.
" For," adde 1 Mrs. Fetherbee, with a
merciless glibness which no one hereto
fore had ever suspected her of possessing,
" I won't go home till you do ! The stove
isn't put up, and the water-pipes are drip
ping over the dining-room ceiling, and
the children are holding high pandemo
nium." "But it isn't any pleosanter therefor
me than it is for you. The marriage ser
vice says for better, for wore. And I
mean to hold you to it, Mr. Fetherbee.
Business won't serve as an excuse any
longer."
Meeker than any lamb, Mr. Fetherliee
conducted his triu uphant wife to the res
taurant, and treated her, so to sjieak, to
the fat of the land. Milder than a May
breeze, he went home w ith her, put up
the stove, kindled the fire, run for a
plumber, and made himself generally
useful on the sacrificial altar of domestic
ItCseHsities.
, "i, Miss Hepsey," whispered Mrs.
J?ei.b3.lioe, " I'm so much obliged to you.
!?ut here are the postage stamps; I didn't
sell any of 'em."
"I didn't suppose you would, my
tlesr," said the old maid, with twinkling
eyea.
Shiloh'g Cough and Consumption Cure
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If men are so wicked w ith religion:
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That Hacking Cough can be so quickly
cured by Shiloh's Cure. We guarantee it.
Sold 0, y. Benford A Son.
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1 VAD
maw .
J9 I
Mi W M
other
AT
kw mm
AT
AS?
NfflSH
maim
Origin of Cinderella.
There it no fairy tale that i lietter
known or more loved hy young nder
than the rtory of the poor little cinder
wench, who was ho ill tieuted by her cru
el isitttera, had filch e delightful god-uioth-er,
with lirngic wand, and was so lucky
hi Ioho her jiretty glu.1 nlipjer only to
gain a prince, and lieconie a prin
there! y.
lKiking over an old inx)kf we came ttii
on an anecdote that w mid to have been
the origin of thin favorite tale. Cinder
ella's real name, it Beems, whs Khodope,
ami she wan a beautiful Egyptian maiden
who lived T.70 years before the birth of
Christ, and during the reign of Psam
ineticim one o. the twelve kings of Egypt.
One day Khotlojie ventured to go in
bathing in a clear stream near her home,
and meanwhile left her shoe), which
must have been unuwuilly small, lying on
the bunk. An eagle jmsHing above,
chanced to catch night of the little san
dals, and mistaking them for a toothsome
fid-bit, pounced down and carried off one
in his beak.
The bird then unwittingly played the
part of fairy god-inother, for flying di
rectly over Memphis, where King Psam
meticus was dispensing justice, it let the
shoe fall right into the- King's hip. Its
size, lieauty and daintiness immediately
attracted the royal eye, and the king, de
termined upon knowing the wearer of so
cunning a shoe, sent throughout all his
kingdom in search of the foot that would
fit it. As in the story of Cinderella, the
messengers finally discovered Rhodojie,
tilted on the shoe, and carried her in tri
umph to Memphis, where she became
the queen of King Psammeticus, and the
foundation of the fairy bile that was to
deluht lsiys and girls twenty-four hun
dred years later.
A Good Endorsement.
Dr. (ieo. W. Miller, of Clarkson, X. Y.,
underdate of May 21, 1SS3, writes : "After
several months pxperiem-e in prescribing
fiilmore's Aromatic Wine, I find it very
Sicneficial as a tonic an appetizer follow
ing fevers, and in the debility of some
cases consequent upon (-liild birth. I
think it a safe and admirable toni : to
use with old jieople. When used as a
tonic I have noted marked improvement
in the nearly ever jiresciit leucorrlpea.
or female weakness, with which so many
ludies siilFcr." (iilmore's Aromatic Wine
is a medicine, not a 1 leverage, and is the
ls-st tonic and vitalizcr known for men,
women and children.
A Soldier's First Battle.
A veteran of the civil war gives his ex-
perienceof this first battle: The hours did
not crowd into minutes, but the minutes
almost extended into hours. I frequent-
ly. found, on consulting my watch, that
ocecurenees ajipan-ntly of an hour's dura
tion, were really less than a half or a
quarter of that time.
As the sun rose, it jiassed into 4 cloud.
When it emerged, I fully cxjiected it
would K some distance toward the ze
nith, and was surjiriscd to find it hail ad
vanced only a few dejrrees.
There was a lijrht shower that lasted
less than ten minutes ; I judged that it
had lieen twenty,
The evolutions of the troops on the field
apieared slow and awkward. They were
really effected with great promptness,
(ien. Lvon was killed before!) o'cl(H-k,as
j I very well knew. It was some days lie
j fire I could rid myself of the impression
that his death occurred not far from noon.
The ajijiarent extension of the hours
was the exjierience of several persons on
that field. 1 think it has Is-en known by
many, on the occasion of their first battle.
At Tea Kidge, an otlicer told me there
setmed to lie alx ut thiry hours between
sunrise and sunset. Another thought it
was 4 o.clock in the afternoon when the
sun was at the meridian.
It was only at Wilson Creek that I ex
jicrieneed this sensation. On subsequent
battle-fields I had no reason to complain
of my estimate of time. 1 !(' ('tii-
11 UK III.
Croup, Whooj ling Cough and llronchi
tis immediately relieved by Shiloh'sCure.
Sold -by t'Jco. W. I's-nford Sin.
Trees Fed by Fungi.
Among-the numerous forms of fungus
which live ujion higher plant (many of
which are so detrimental to their h sts)
are some, it is now lielieved, which live
w ith these on terms of mutual assistance.
Frank found that the young root-jioints of
some Knglish forest trees, as the, beech
and the oak, at.1 covered with a coating
of fungus (jirohub'y In-longing t the
trullle or allied family), which seems to
help in the nutrition of those trees. An
other interesting case is that of fungi
which live with orchids, and whose mode
of jrojagaf ion lias lately lieen establish
ed bv llerr Wahrlich. .V. Y. W.
What is a cold in the head? Medical
authorities say it iH due to atmospheric
germs, uneven clothing of the body, rap
id cooling when in a perspiration, etc.
The imjiortaut jioint is, that a cold in the
head is a genuine rhinitis, an inflamma
tion of the lining membrane of the nose,,
which, when unchecked, is certain to
produce a catarrhal condition for ca
tarrh is essentially a "cold" which nature
is no longer able to '"resolve" or throw ofT.
Kly's Cream Halm has jiroved its superi
ority, and sulicrers from cold in the head
should resort to it before that common
ailment liecomcs s -ated ami ends in ob
stinate catarrh.
-
Catarrh cured, health and sweet breath
secured by .Shiloh's Catarrh Uemedy.
lriiv "HI cents. Nasal ltiji-ctor free. Slid
by ( ieo. W. ISenford & Son.
Tile for Celery.
Kvery improvement is met with ridi
cule at first from wiseacres who imagine
they oceujiy the jieaks of highest knowl
edge beyond which there is notfiingto
be. learned. Ixt celery -growers and
what gardener does not now grow celery ?
let them try a few short lengths of three
or four inch drain tile, about a foot long,
as a quick, easy way of darkening nj the
stems to blanch them. A jiieee of news
jiaper tied around the tile will check ex
cess of heat, and the ends tucked into
any spare room at the top will render the
darkening more comjilete. We tried the
plan two seasons, and the stalks were
beautifully clean and pure looking, while
there was much economy of ground And
still more of time and trouble. Cur. JV. )'.
Tribi'tif.
Will you suffer with Dyspepsia and
L-ver Complaint ? Shiloh's Vitalizer is
guaranteed to cure you. gold by (ieo. V.
Benford & Son.
An oblong figure, so long again as ide
i the imist profitable shape for a garden,
as the rows are equally Ions and less time
is taken uj in turning the horse. The
size of the same should be in jirojiortion
to the number of the family, bearing in
inind the fact that one-fourth of an acre
well-manured and cultivated will, jiro
duce more and better vegetables .than a
w hole acre not so well attended to.
Sleejiless nights made miserable by that
terri'iliMxmgh. Shiloh'sCnre is the rem
edy for you. Sild by Jeo. W. Benford &
Son.
The Importance of purifying the Wood can
not be overestimated, for without pure
blood you cannot enjoy good health.
At this season nearly every one needs a
good nirdlcuie to purify, vitalize, ana enrich
the blood, and Hood's Sarsjipnrilla is worthy
your confluence. It Is peculiar In that it
strengthens and builds op the xytem. creates
an appetite, and tones the dictation, white
It eradicates disease. Give it a trial.
Hood's Sarsaparilla In sold by all dnifrglsts.
Prepared by C. L Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass.
100 Doses One Do!l9r
' FAHHIO.VABLK
CUTTER and TAILOR,
irvliijf had mail
year exia-ri.-n'.
''V "! " liraiicliwt
" f K 1 ll" Tailonim bn
I Vriiie, 1 iniurunu
wilii'liU'tMin to a
Ituvinj hail ninny
nee
of
irnarunu-e
Mi(tilu4-tHn to all
t I ,:wno limy can up-
Uh their pal-
MrY' Yours, Ar..
WILLIAM M. HOTIISTETLER,
SOMXR.-.IT, Pa.
The Old
Schuttler
I'.stuhlisltetl in
11
K - 7. 1
I have just received two car load of the HF:LF IILIS7. STEEL-SKKIX SCHl'TTLEK WAM I.NS.
the racwl complete Wiitern Wtu-oii iu the market for Koad or F'urm Puriws. On the St Hini.KB
Waoon there is a Hear Brake, to be iwl when hauling hay or grain, a aonietliing that farmers
know the ueeewity of when hauliiig on hilly farm. Fery part of the Wood-work of thi wagon ban
laid in Sl.K-k three yeara latfun! being worked up. insuring the work to lie thoroughly seaxiiied ia-fore
being ironed. Being the patentees of the
DOUBLE COLLAR AND OIL CUPS,
It Is the only Wagon made that hai thi improveiiicnt. It avoids the neeeaity
of taking off the wheel Uign-a.se, an iu the old tyle ; ry ."imply turniug a cap
the wagon can be oiled in less than five minutex. Thin Wagon wants to be
seen u be fully apprvciate.1, and parties w ishing to buy w ill do well to see it
before pnrchuKitig elsew here.
Every AVajon Kully Insured.
In otfertng thia make of Wagon to the pniiKc, will say 1 u.-ed the -tftme
make of Wagon for rive years when freighting acron. the Kocky Miimuins,
over naulH thai were almost ImpA-walile. and they always stood the test. I feel
warranted in snying I trlit-ve them the Best Wag.m on wheels!
Cull on linr Km-jix r or Ilnirii ILjltnj, u hn trill nlmtr i.h llit
Aaeiit. Wanted Thi-onsshont the County.
PETER 1 1 E FFLEY.
FkiMERSET, MARCH -Jt, 1SK7.
Somerset Lumber Yard.
ELIAS CUNNINGHAM,
MiMTAcTi am AP T'EALEK, Wllol f.i.kk and Kf.Taii.kk of
LUMBER AND BUILDING MATERIALS.
Hard and Soft Woods.
OAK. IMPI.AR, SirdXiiS. PPKETS, lM'I.MNii,
ASH, WAI.Xl'T. Kl.dOKlXC, HASH. STAIKKVIIj.
CHKkKY, YKLUiW PINF, SIIIViJ-X. iHMiK.-s KAH STEItH,
t II EST X I T, WHITE PIXE, LATH. lli.IXIK. NEW El. PHXTS.
A General Line uf nil Kmdea of Lumber and Building Muterlal and RoorliiK Slale kett In stock.
Also, ean furnish nnythiiiK in the line of our laisincsa to order with rcasomihli
pnmijitnesa. such as limckets. (ald-sixisl work. etc.
ELTAS CLTvXIXGIA,
a, . , .
Omce and Yard Opposite S. & C. R. R. Station, Somerset, Pa.
- -
ftriL,(D" -atVl1 mEJE
SHAFFER IIOTJS
Patriot Street,
I wish to call the attention of the Traveling Public to the fact
That the sIJAI-TKK Hnl'SK Is closer lo the station than either of the other hotels.
That I tut SIIAr'FfcR 'Itd'SK Ls as convcnicnl to all business p,irti.of tun 11 as the other hon-es.
That the SU A t'PKR Hi H SK otters as
(iOOI) ACCOMMODATION'S
as any other house ill Somerset.
That the SHAKKKK IIOl'SK Iiprielor will
ejHtlGE YOU bESS f Of bODGIjMG
llinn aiiv other hoii-c in Smicrset.
That the SHAKFKR IK U'SK is a temperance house.
That the SH AFKKR IK U'SK is the farmers' himae.
That the SHAKKKK Iltd'SE is the travelers' house.
Farmers und utiier visltinif our Mil will do well by stopping at the SHAKKKU HfU'SE.
K.
April d, 'K7..:tm.
EKDORSED BY
SCIENTISTS AS
rv'IITlrTTl IT I iTfl
CHEAMTHAH
PRACTICALLY
Mesirmtilile
Over 5O0
Beautiful
Designs.
ri 11
J -mtij? g'jrjIJJ
Send for
FflCe List A
tm
WCNUMENTL BH0N2E COilPANY.
HiOEGEPciiX. ccn:;.
Sis
E-.i i! -ar .- i k
Wf
!. v .i3, 1
I.J JSiJ Clrcularo.
Jk HAKDSOME WEOOfXQ, BiHVHDAY OR HOLIDAY PRESENT.
V V WW I
THE WONDERFUL
LUBURG
Combining Parlor,
All fllrnished With
at OUT Wheleaaia Price.
THE LUUURC MANF'C CO..
AMt'Kl, I.AMBKRTK
liLOOD-SKAKCIIKK.
m of the best mwliriuea err.r diaeovered 6
tiie cure ut
roNsi'MPTKix, nKoNnriTfH
HYSPKI-SIA, HKM'IkHHArJE,
llL.itlS, (iiUiS,
INKAMMATION OF T1IK I.tM.S.
SHOKTNKSS UK HKKATfl.
PAIN IS TIIK HHCAST. e., e.
It la not only s grttttt I'uritliT of tlm ilool, but
atw. a certain K-torrr of tiie AppeOtf, aa w.-lt aa
Strentbfiier uf the Mitlre SyIni. mid s iit
tain Ami M-t-lv 'iirv for OHip. iiiito.-rfa. and
putrid Siri' 'lfiniHt. and nhouid tln r ton? be In
.very family. Tbi mciirinr ii maiir iitinly if
l!H., and la perfectly nSv. When all Kli-r r m
edlea have failed, tbia one baa eflW-t'-d a cure.
Many who liMJifj veil up all holw of limine rrtor-
1 to hi'Hllh ML'ttin, rejoice th t Ilu-y bi ar.l of the
rottiptHind HtMit Hyrup, tor by u-iinc one or two
liotilc tbey were rrurel U p.-rf. t lit-allh.
Ai'KI. l..Mni:FT
RHKl'M ATK' I'U IH.
For the relk-f of KheumaliMii. Ncuralirla. Sick
Ilfadacbe, liiphlhcria. TithHctiH, ( rump, ami m
one oi in? ia--( nieilictnea ol me age Kir tlic auive
dlNeunra. Aiidrew
BAM 'FX f.A.MBKliT.
p joilierti.ville, Somi'iM-t Co., I'a,
m:pJ9-1yr,
POUTZ'S
HORSE AND CATTLE POWDERS
nf F0UTZ ,1
FOUTZ
AH8A
Hn will Hie of Colic. Bora or Ixna Fa
tkk. if io.iU!a Pow.lora are rav4 in tim.
loiil'a Fowlf. wlllctirr an. frevni Hon CHU.ta.
KotiVa PoWflfn will prvnt 0pa iv F.ilh.
Fotiu-n Poariii-ni will Inerffi-. the onuntUT I milk
anil cream twenty per cnl and maac tlia butter firm
aii'l R-t.
konu a Powdcta wMl cure nr prerent almnat rraT
DliAiie to winch Horse anl attie are wihjwt.
Foi-rx'a Pnn-Dsa a ill, aiTa aa-ribraoTioS.
Sold everj litre.
DAVIS Z. rOTTTZ. Proprlator.
BAiTIMOEE. MO.
, mS'W-'HS-l,
SALESMEN WAXTEH
HOOD WAVES. Bet terms, stock and I I
niMM-ialticj in the )Hitini-. Wriw at J
once. J. AI ST1X SHAW, Nurseryman, Knch..
tcr, X. y.
Reliable
Wag-on.
Chieajo in 1S42.
-8i2a
SOMERSET, PA.
V. SHAFFKH,"
Trlttpi-jetor.
IT WILL PAY YOU
TO Bl'V Yirt'R
Wm. F. SHAFFER.
'
MttiHira-JtiireTof and iH-alerin
mm m mm mi
'a"1"' " orlc fruinluJim alutrt Xotirt, in ullColur.
Alw, AonUJortl WUtTE UROSZF.:
Persons in ntswl of MOXTMEXT WOKK will
find It to their Interest to call at lne shop, where
a proper showing will be given them. t-s.iti.
fnrtinH (Viominr. tH Km It (Viar. ami
YER Y LO W. I invite wlnl attention to the
White Bronze, Or Pure Zinc Monument
Introduced by REV, W. A. (iRIXci. as a Peeld.-d
Improvement in the point of .MATERIAL ASH
(OSSTRI'CTIOX, and whii-h Is destined to la
the Popular Monument .ir our 1'haiiireable ('Ii
mate. ivr ME A CALL.
WM. F. SHAFFER.
Iltrary, Rmoklag, Reclnln r lavraJfat
a 7 r f
I -t
if
v
mm
vj lArt.iur ur.u, or t III t M.
Prica ,ky on "Ld uj? sv.m """p i 'Whipped t an
L . i P fi,r C-W". I part" f world.
children's CAnniAnrn
the Aotoaaaitaa rmml Rnk. ...a u-.-i-j
ScmlstaniD firraliloi. ana mwu,.
145 W. 8th St.. Phllada..Pa.
AILROAD TIME TABLES.
ll.l.TlKUi: A OHIO U.Ul.HOM).
SOMMtsHTJi fAM):l:H III! AM II
11
DISTAN' E AM FAKE.
Mi lei. Fur--.
ftimcrwt to Sloyijroam I'-", 1 40
.Hninerwt to llnoveiyvillc 17 '
Aimerwt Ut Bethel '. '-'-"j
Honu-raet to.Iobii"t.oti : I !'
Sumctset tl K-aWl. :
S.IUICW1 K, (.iim-ft .'. Ml
Soln. rm-t lo Mcyi-ry lule '.'I i'i
SoMli rci to I linil i Und mi
S.lllcr--t to Uivhinlon JKI h
Horn, ruct to Itnl:iniorc -iVI 7 "ill
im-r-i to I'rxiua 'H
SonH P-ct to ('oTilliicri.e .
Soliu-rict p I riniicINvlllc :, I Si
SollM-lncl to 1'llL.btjrKll 111! .: Ill
The !nr- to Piiibul.-lpliiit h Wit, und to New
Vrk. lILil'i.
Winter Arrangement - In eTecl since Jan. 30, 17.
yoi.'Tii-norsn rn.nss.
.IiilI.V-TnWN EXI'RFK'' -So. '(.
Hi- k mk.I ....
SiiMKKsF.l. .
ieiwr
S!'iylmn
FfiMivi-nriilc..
Pthcl
i. iiii a in
ii -'- a m
a -,K a m
Ic-''.. a in
7 In a in
7:JTi li lu
ifliii-iH it.. ..
MAU.-No.
.lrr(.''v
Pitt. hi rwMi in
Hri kwl, ... 1 In ut
Vjl.orJ.....i I. Si in
Snir?4't 1 -t' p m
Sloy-tou'ii "J : f f7 p ni
H.tv fvl!ie.-:-M t m
lii'lticl Z in
n-t fT
Klllltl.Oil the Nllier-'l .V I ItlllbriU Itl Kim , ,vimI.
SiMKIi.-tT A nMVifiATioN-Vi. !V t
P.a!tlmim- 9 ( a in
Piil.-lnir.'h 1:1U p m
km-k wood (.:o" p hi
Millnr.l ti J' p lo
i!i-:k.i.t...
Pn Tiirvn for Somcr.'t f'im th i-a-r
on tn :ilt.-Min;ii lnvi-ioii, ciiani'f.- cur
WimmJ.
so( Th-i:0(M TKAIXS. i
SIlMF.KSh'T ACt uMMoUATlllVNo. '.. t '
Isnr I Arrii'm 1
Somerset iniiani Ilin kwinHl 'i i a in ;
Miltord '.:r. a lu i i'itt.iiirvh I,Vitii '
Pim-rniK-ni for iiiut.-t -.t chn.-nre c in jl Kik -wood.
'
HALTl.Mi IKE MAIL -.No. :rl. t
7.'ii-i
.1 trr
K.M-kHoo.1 1! -n a in
UtlllrCf iMii.i.. I .1 l hi
U rt.-ii Hilton ip .o j. in
italiiiiiiirc 7 p m
John-tiiMii li 'jn a in
B-thcl :: Vi a in
IbMivcrxviiic..!!' tii a in
Stoytowu ltl:jl a in
..eiirrr .hi is a m
w iM I- H-t'i ln: V. a in
M'l!-.r. 11.07 a m
I'.i 'cuycrM for jiim cn.Ht chairc
UHi.
-up it'. V.itt-k-
A 'iIMiI)ATf'lN No.
.lohri-tott n .';-:i"i p m I K'ti'lcw'i'.t
1'rf'tiicl I h'i p iii j t nmlM-rlund ...
llinAcr-villu... t Ji ii in t'iti-i :n.'h
! p III
7 r. p :,,
. t p in
a in
n i a in
-!oytow ii p m Va-liim;tiiU-...
tir.-ik't r K7 p in I'.nliiiiMirc
1 "Vt.KyT .'i.!. j. m
I .Miiford 'i-lti a in
j rucni'-p. for cdstand l i-hauxt-!
KH'kvviyi.l.
i-uf at
l;i a K V. 1 1 iii A 1 1 i.M M iliATP iX
No. '.. r
l,rtl ''.
s..KBi:r '.tW p m
Milt.-nl 7:iii p in
Afric
K's-kwissi
I" p III
l'.Hsem.'.-rs Icavine on this train enn tunic. c.;-nci-tion
hi K'H-kwotwl witii night Kxpn-is tram
cat and vt est,
Iiaily. t liaily except funday.
BALTIMORE & OHIO IIAII.HOAIK
riTTili I Hi. II I l v'.v.
EA$T-l!OCXI Til A f.
k,,,.
I limn with train- to and from Ikdt'or.i. at i.arrcit
i with tr ims to and from Iter! n. nt ali.-inirv Jiinc
! Hon a ith train- lo and from Si.h-l.ury.
! W. M. I.KMKXTs. Manager.
i. K. i i i;ii, tien 1 P.-i. Airt.
! THE PEOPLE
I U ho htu e is-cQ ii-ip;sjintcd iu the rcsuit. .,1
; taiued iroin the use ,i!' i .k a WIXES HEEF
jWINKand IKnX, or the wh-kM. d KM! I.SH IX ..f
I Ii Mi I.IVKK (HI., sHild n-e
CHERRY MALT
! PHOSPHATES,
j a combination or Wild (.'berry, Extrnct of Mall,
j and the IlyNiph.f ptiine-, a delicious siiiii'ihini
; and ti'iirimcnt
i CiiKKitY M ai r act-on th.- "i.im.nli an I .ier '
j incn-iisinir tlieapjit :!-c, n.-ii-t:n,- ili-tioii. tlo-rc- '
i by timkiii!.' it itiplic.i!!.. for Iiy-pepsin ii its va- j
i riiais lonu- : of Appetite. H -idai-li.-. in-. :;i i
j ni", .enni! U l.ility, Want
Ii'yonr irnt-:-t dis-s nm k.s-p it, -ni,l sl.m f.-r
H. isi'iie or .. t.r sin tamiea. Kxpn-ss paid.
I IKHP, I'liAKM U AL I II .
is Maiden Lane. X. Y.
iii. l.y all iri!o,'i.-t4. umr:Ui-'-7-lyr.
COOO BookJLaems Wanted to Set
y Lyman Abbott an Rsv. S. B. Hallldar.
Aaa't. pastor of liymonth Chnr-b.and dlctatnl
lrirly br Air. Bcechw himarlf. aod ivMvM bia
aid and approval; tiia book also contiiina coa
trthutiona of i'nonrti rcicints(snra from
over 3o promlnMrt write. Tbia ia the riirht
book; don't be in-lured to avt any other, ton
tainsentlr lif of tbe frrpKt, preacher. Air-nia
wanted in evcrv town. ll-i urn bo banler
n. a., we irive SITCIAL. TKIiil.S and PA1T
FKKIHIIT t llAlliiF.S.
NoTil t:. All oi-r Ac..nta nr riven the ftill
benefit of onr I.miiMiv AsiuaiATto. wft.VA ia a
powrrfitt 1,-rrr to aid tbiu la aoliciiinit aubaerW
eers for tNn bo.-ik.
Never twfom h'va anch Rnorportunlty prwnt
to ttaclf fi Aircnts i. h.-r., oHered lu niacin
Willi piihtlcaiion hcrire the poblie.
r.ril" "L ml Pintcnl.-irs) and SrECIAL.
ThHMS, aent fnr to all. or jenrn an aene ak
once by enilin.f l.oo for outilt. look bow
""J'' Addreaa. WlrlTT" - Prbl'sheni.
Croiafleld, Maao.
i kZrdin CO.UGHS.CQLCS
sy-iu4 TROUBLES
-if t. iiJLD BT (ILL 3RUG5STS
if i
E3. tolSST'S 2LC0D S2aE22(
Miikesi TOVEI.T COMMTTinv I- .
SPI.KXDUV TuXIC auid e.irea C kJfPKK .
BJ.II.H PIMPIKS. WKOKlLt." MaMtsi
CtKLAL an alt lil.fXill DsiK.Vj-Ei. I
csiia oy your iraKl.'it.
HaUrm MedletM, t o.. Pll(aoHrK, Pa, .
I Twin hitrr l will rl'ri llr. Mail. s jt,-'-iw.
l-itMiiinrii 1:11 P. m. fi jn a. . '.3ir.M.
Ilmdfi.sk 1::3 " 1."
' McKeesport " H:.V V
j W.-t X-.-wton i-' pi: l'i ' 1 St "
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I'a-M-inian 1J:M
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tiiii.aitiptou i:!7 ' "
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-x-iiii;ttoli 7: 1 7.J.I M
liiuiiiore larrivci s; ii .
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T-fiit Jsvtrt- t'ui'trri't! J, M'fi. & ir".
HallhiH.rt . st ipI .n, 7 4:. m ,
H a-tiii u'tiii Uht0 - Wr
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(t-uti.ii p. i. 6--.V : !
Iirai"h.rk " 7-12 "
Ar. Pitri.unth 1- - T-:. - -iThetiiue
-ifivru i Kii-t-ni Siu:ti.inJ Tirn-r.
VA .
t 5t r
.-t.ur,Tj-, ii.. I i
L..JiiLJs
Nrr Ai
For himI )miiIi
l or Hoy Miit -! liiMPtIK
A. C. VATB k CO.,
It Will Be Clad Tiding ,
'o the
LjA.1 )I Ks
TO KNOW THE
rcr;6BIAT ISPHOTiSfSfs
MALE ii
SEWIXG -IACIIIM;S
'.' I.U.I, j
WHITE
i
I I' liaoa '.. I l:M : liriy ,,. .., ...
IIAM.h! WiTII i t-K. . '
! SELF-THREADING
;. the i-ve o' f . A .
! itive TAKKII- '.V IT1J' i T ', HVl K"
! SELF-THREADING SHUTTLE.
J f; tension ran be rc-.i-i.ai-.,
j from the nil. A new air-! i . :. '
; Stitch Regulator and Indicator
tJ hii.-h iii.y exai t st;!.-.'i . i. ,. ..
Cat'-d ;tho:it c;-r ;n.t;: : .K '
I AUTOMATIC BCBBiM-WINDa
! F.y which a bobbin can ia- h. a. Mtv.
i slad of (b vd witicisit the ;, ,,f ,. . , '
, It i ThK MOST !t !!At:U:.,t T.i',Z'''
" i.HLY r.i ilt V ; m V ''v T"
j KOr.UK La.l!,-. are a-t, ;;, .., "
at, and gr-arlv :
j LIGHT AND QUIET RUNNING
i (ua.Jtie. ami at the iinmi-R vriwy.if ..
j and US.-1U1 aorlc that can V-.io!.1 " "
j this Machj.jp.
! fjKlies of ta.-te and ;:!-!. ,.r :
' tejtaln the though: of h.iying :,y . - i..s
i Mu hinc. after cu-i-fu;-v ,.x i ll.r, .
: the WHITE. IVr,,r i-. f
: should at once addrc-
JOSEPH CRIST, n
Jenner X Roads.
Somerset Co.. Pa.
NOTICE 10 STOCKRAI
? r-r .i i
iltl.
I Will STAND MY FULL BLOOCa
TROTTING STALLION,
YOUNG CHIEF.
At civ K.ir:n. thr-e rc;V. V-t '- U.-.I ii '
TEN D0LIA1RS INSURANCE -s-a-.n
tpru lili.
DESCRIPTION,
Ynt .; ( HIKKis,, llf-.t 'An ;:h
i:d fail He is ri-itm four ihi -ng -m: -:-'
hiiini. hiirh". and wciL-ii-t.-n Luti-ir.d ait-i
tsiimd' : will n.-itii :. -,. it i..:.:r,.. ,. -.
.viicii matured. i 'i i . L I- i i. -t,, m
land ln.-t. he l.y lk o-U.,i i n..-'. iu- .. v-.,, -
l llli-r. I'UM. Il:irtii,..n,!i;.,i, mar.-. i.-..-,' i- M
tried hy loci AI!- n he l.y riii,i v..i-tt. -:i
fss.rd of il V'iI'Xi, , ri! l.y '.- ...i; ;,.! i!K
tic. :i;i. iiim- foi'a fHlllilv hor-c.
H-kvi: KniM..
Kccir.
Walter Heffl-v
SHADELAND"T4?
Pure Bre-i u''
Stock Entable
ment m tte
WorW-
w lniXirtatl
arriviritf ir Mr
time luwin-ii--
ci;! His- r--i K
hr-rdni;-
CLVDf 0L i--i:i
PERCHEON. hORMAI. OB FaEs.CS D-f "C-5
ENGLISH SHIRE HOSES. STiSDARCVsED TI
TERS. CLEVELAND BAVS .5 faE:- CCi-":-
SADDLE AND CARRIAGE HORSES.
ICELAND AND SHETLN0 COS i
HOLSTE!N-FSIAN AND DEVC CT-E
Onr cst..m. r hare the adv.vit.:-..-years'
experience in hrsim .'n -r.- ' "
superior ualilv: Inn;' mnrii .unl "'"
esileetion; '.pi.'rtuni: y of isihiim; r'
breeds; and low prices, hecnu-c f .Mir
eii:lc.l facilitie. extent ! I.ii.in-"-- "
ltw rates of lr;ins.rt:i'n
yo othek t:sT. hi. f t xr
WOK Lit ..tfers such a.ivai,t..;cs ... .n-hJ--
rmcw inrv! tkkm i v-v
Vi.it.r. I m...w.i.,l, m i-
Circular free.
POW I.I I. l-.KDfHli
Sprim;tHiro. i r:il
When you write meulU'O tbi- pn--!
nll.1-'
H, OHILOS & CO.
UTKOiJ:3AI.'
S'511 Wood fe:t IS
PITTSBURGH. H
Our Special Drive j 0
FOR ISS7,
.32.00 IS
jSeamlsssCalfShce
; roR itrr,
in Button, English S,!mon!s ard
I Seamless Top ingress.
! Any Sizv.i. TJiroe TTI.lth!.
SEIfD for SAMPIXS d PWtA
; apr.TMyr. .
j 5.000 AGENTS WANTED ! thaible Quick ' Tj
JBHllinBEEcHER
LIP-IO OK" .
iNrisiTH.v tbe nnM v ill APij: Is. '-- ' y.
s.i ci.sriv from t!ie ia
uiiinv ein-le '"' .... -j-
huH'i el a.-d In a " Ijilsir ot l.n..-.u
'fi:-fi. cl Mirtr:iit. .ic. i!li'-''
M-I'it4 nmii Hii.-. tuw!w1 I.nV !-
Vr.,-AT ilH.1 trttttf rjt ihf. Oi I" K l-
i.rWff-'
Territorv in uitrir dcmaiuL S n i ir ''Ljf
and a cents foroutni lo Hi bkako !!"- .
I h- ntnut Mt., Philadelphia, i'a. ai'-
S ii'-' "2 : ' , : i; 4
C''tt.. .-r-;if .. . J
-. --5 -j . -e. M "