GilEAT rilOTOGRArHY. A Picture of Mont E:aao Taken from a Distance of Ect Mllsa. fha Marrl OolroBi of rr Masrths A truly marvelous development in camera work is wLat ba been termed t U photoprapliy, whereby pictures of d'-taDt object ca be made with the Kirae clearness and sharpDesa of dcUil as if they were close at band, tut to secr'e a succtss-ful picture by this rrt.ceiS manv diSecltie bare usn al'v to be contended with, and accord-is- to the St. Louis Globe-Democrat it is "comparatively seldom that the mo t favorsUe conditions occur. The main d Scultv U the presence in the air of minute "particles of dust. In lar?e towns nd evcn in thelT Eeiftb"r" hood, the air is f iled with an incon ceivable quantity of such particles and the result is a frrayiirss of the at mosphere, which, on the photegTapese negative, blurs the outline of remote objects. Where these conditions ob tain it is possible to procure a good rr!K..f only in the mornir? after a noc turnal fhower Las cleared the air. .ch is the a'woruen poaer of dusty air that all attempts at taking distance photographs in the vicinity of Taris where much experimrct ic was done, resulted unsatisfac t.rilv lvond a ranre of thirty-two hundred varus, even when the occawoa wafc apparently propitious. In the neiptborhood of the a and of the mountains whrre the air is much purer. photoprapUs ctn be made at much preaU-r distances; but here a fcinpie obstacle presnt itself in the rneiual density of the various strata o' air. K'jH-cia'Jv in hot weather, cer tain beds of air. heated by the rays of the tun. will be actuated by an up ward m ovement and this imparts a trviublitir appearance to the land scape. The prence of rivers or mtrshf s or land much exposed to the s,.!ar ravs. is lively to gnve rise to v,r tlcai currents of vap-.r of preat absorp tive power. A?ain the humil vapors of the atmosphere clothe far distance Q l.ini-hhaze. which confuses the lines of the picture and obscures the '.:-. -ts of Y.zht and shale. This is rem-e.'i.-d by employicz orthochromatic j. i.scs aiid a yellow plass to neutralize the blue tint. The camera must le aV-.Iut. Iv still, the mot minute vibra tion Win's multiplied indefinitely and o-,,.:;- hopeless confusion in the neg ative. It will thus be s-en that t?lepnotor rapVv is both a dluicuit and a deli-cuu- process. A most remarkable illus tration of its po ssibilities has been achieved by M. lkjisj-'unas. of Geneva, in a photograph of Mont lilacc. taken at a cN'ance of eiht and one-half miles. The proof has been published bv M. Fourtier, who ahso shows in order to surest more stronp-ly the w. .uJerful nature of the achievement, the size the picture would be if ta",cn by au ordinary object plass. The latter measures nine and one sixteenth inches by three-eighths inches a-'- the telephr.tofrraph is five tn2 three-fourths inches by three and three-fourth inches. The lines of the ma-sive, far-off mountain stand out in bold relief, and the details of the in terviewinr country are distinctly shown, buch a picture, however, is net made without almost unlimited pains and perseverance. It cost M. lioNsonnas four month of experi menting before he could determine on tiie txvt place and the best time at which to take it. For the benefit of l Ve w ho may have to tread wearily over the same ground, he tells the ii.n that obtained at the event ful moment. It was sis o'clock in the evening, about twenty minutes before the sun sank benind the mountains. From experience he found that this ws the most favorable moment to ob tain a harmonious proof, and the dis tinctness of outline and details in the clouds was greatly increased from the fact that they were tincred first with pale yellow and then with oracje. A COUNTRY WITHOUT SILVER. la Italy Private lirma Iwrae Token to feoppty the Drmind. It is a strange story which comes fom Italy by way of the London Globe. So great is the scarcity of moa.-v that a private firm at Milan, Messers Gavazzi i Co.. has taken to coining on its own account, and as the credit of the house is unimpeachable the metal tokens for of course that is what they really are are freely ac cepted by the shopkeepers. Italy presents a remarkable excep tion to most other nations in the mat ter of currency. A bile they are com plaining everywhere else of the super abundance of silver, the preciousmetal i actually at a premium in King Hum bert's dominions. Chanp-e for a fire-franc piece can only be obtained on payment of a penny on the transaction. The reversion to tokens carries us back almost to the middle ages. There w as a period in the history of England when such "promises to pay" con stituted almost the only circulating medium. They were made of lead, t in. and even leather, and passed as readily from band to hand as coins stamped with the royal image and superscription. It is stated that in the middle of the seventeenth century as many as twenty thousand different kinds of tokens were in circulation in Knland. Messrs. Gavazzi's coinage will pass freely where the issuers are known and trusted, but will not be looked at twenty miles from the Lombard capi tal. The extraordinary action of the Milan firm has been taken, perhaps not only in the interest of its clients" convenience, but as a means of putting iressure upon the government- Right ly or wrongly, it is contended that ooething might be done by the au thorities to relieve a scarcity which avuioocu almost to a peneral calamity. Besnaaat of a Faaseua tadtaa Tribe. A meeting of the surviving members of the iCarragansett tribe of Indians has jast been called. There are about or.e hundred persons to answer. Ail the New England tribes who, with those of New York state, were the noblest of the red men on the conti nent, are fast dwindling away, and only a few pure-blooded breves and Kjuaws yet survive. These illustrious nations in New England are the l'enob txsAt of Maine, the Mohegans and IV quodm of Connecticut and the Narra pansetts of Iibixie. I.sland. The Penub soots retain their tribal organization intact at Indian island, in the I'enoi jieot river, in the woods near old Town; the Mohegans at Mohegan vil lage, on the river bank of the Tham I river, in the woods three miles south f Nmieu; the Peuods along the ragh hills of North istonir.gton and I-dyard. and the shores of Lantern liill pond, in southeastern Connecticut, and the Najragansetts at Charlestown. on the shore of the open ocean ip Ilhode Island. lti Am1cu Moo. In southern Europe the peasants al ways eat trait in its natural shape and never think of treating it to doses of tngar, salt or other seasoning. Around Naples and in Malaga the people bite a b4e ia the orange, suck out the juice and then throw the orange awav. isorae American people often do the same, but the American must try bis Land at improving nature, so he put." a lr.mpof sup-ar in it- An orange planter thinks snch a thjryr a dese-ration- A ttabbora savaga. Samory, the great Mohammedan chief of interior Africa, is about the last semi-sava?e of the dark country to yield to civilization and the force of arms. The Trench have gradually lriven him into closer quarters and now the Lritish are con J ucting ruidn against bis warriors. Samory is the crc2it bandit king in the world. THE ANCHOR NURSE. A M W tx TwwtJ T Ac n. It Don Very Fto IUt. T see that Ives made g-.vat run at billiards the other day." said the old man as be chafed his cue, "and that l.e did it with the anchor nurse. Now the paners are talking about that an chor nurse as if it was s new thing. I saw an anchor nurse used way back in 72, and the fellow who used it bad used it before, too." Pressed for the story by a BafTalj Ex press writer, the old man said: "I was in hard luck that winter and was act ing as room keeper for a friend of mine. One day a fellow came into the room and got into a game. He proved to be a very good player, and for a week or two he came up regnlarly and laid out the local expert to the queen's taste. Then a match was made be tween hira and the best player in town for one hundred dollars. It was to be five hundred points up, straight bil liards. "The night for the match came and the room was cro-.vded. They began to play, and dubbed along until each one of them had fifty or so buttons. Then the stranger got the balls against the rail and held them in one spot- He ran out the game, making, to be exact, four hundred and forty-seven billiards The last shot be made was a hard drive, from the lower end of the table and it broke the balls up. He was loudly ap piauded, and there were many com ments on his skin in keeping the balls anchored as he did. He got the money and went away. "Next day w e were talking over the game, and or.e man said be didn't be lieve any man could make so many points off two balls without moving them. He talked so much that we ex amined the table. Then we got on to the anchor nurse." "Hid he have a hole punched in the clothT" a--ked a listener. "No," said the old man. "he didn't." "All on the square, was it?" "Well, not exactly. You see be car ried a small bottle of liquid glue with him. and he put a gob of it on the table next the cushion when we didn't see him." The old man picked up his cue and made a carom. "There was a man," he said, "who bad the anchor nurse down about as fine as any of them." THE PRESIDENT'S SIGNATURE. Ooa Hai Get SI.3VO a Tear far Wrltior Urover Cleveland's Kama. Much of the president's business con sists in signing his name, which must be attached to all appointments com missions, promotions and a thousand and one other documents, ho exact i7 is this part of his duty that he can not perform the whole of it, says the s-t. Louis Gl be-Dcmocrat. One em ploye of the government gets twelve hundred dollars a year for writing Mr. Cleveland's name on land warrants. He docs nothing else but that. There are other officials in facie Sam's employ, by the way, who do n. .thing else, practically, but sign their own names. This is almost the sole duty of the register of the treasury, who is kept bard at work signing docu ments from nine a. m. to four p. m. every day. The assistant treasurer of the Vnited States is another slave to bis ov. n signature, which he is perjiet ually engaged in affixing to warrants f .r money. Mr. Cleveland's messages to congress are all written in autograph originally. He does all his writing with his own hand. Such documents be produces on foolscap with pen and ink, turning off sheet after sheet with scarcely a cor rection. An interpolation is rare in his manuscript. In this fashion his most finished speeches are evolved. The literary method pursued by Presi dent Harrison was wholly different. lie found it very hard to write with a pen. and so be would keep by biia pad of paper and a soft lead pencil. With these he would jot down notes from time to time during leisure mo ments and from the memoranda thus made he would afterward dictate to the stenographer. The messages sent to congress are careful copies cf the original. Senator Edmunds while pre siding officer pro tern, of the u',ip.f house, refused to receive a typewritten message from the president. II claimed that the law required a "mes sage in writing." and that the type script was not written in the proper sense. This ruling established a prec edent which has been followed ever since. NOW A DESERTED VILLAGE. Virginia City, Xr, Once Gay and Fraa. pernoa, Kapidly FaUloz to Kaiaa. "A poet could write on 'The De serted Village' w ith Virginia City as a subject and surpass Goldsmith's im mortal production on the same topic," said a resident of San Francisco to a St. Louis Globe-Democrat man. '"The Crst time that I was ever there the population of Virginia City was greater than tuat of the entire state cow. Everything ran wide open. Magnificeut hotels and opera halls, palatial resi dences stores that would have done credit to New York, millionaires who spent money freely, maintaining a so ciety that for brilliancy and paycty could not be equaled in the I'nited States. I was there a short time ago. The hotels and opera bouses are closed, the residences empty, the stores re moved to other and more propcrous places. Dwellings that cost hundreds of thousands of dollars are given over to the bats, and the broken panes of glass, the shutters hanging unon a sin gle hinge or nagging in the wind give a grew some sense of loneliness. In years to come it wi!l afford magnificent spectacles of ruins, and even now in some sections of the town there is a sense to the beholder of being in acity of the past. Millions were made end lost, and the history of Virginia City would be one of the most thriving sto ries ever written." WHY THE PRIEST TREM2LED. AsalatanJ C'hanteC to lilm Iuring- Service Thit Ue Had Drawn a I'rize. An interesting incident has jut oc curreu in Lima. 1 eru, nwakemn equally human sympathy and faaticai fury. A Dominican father celebrating mass in La Merced, having reached the most imposing part of the cere mony, when the Gloria was resounding through the lofty arches of the oldest temple on the continent, was seized with violent trembling and would have fallen but for the service of an as sistant. Investigation shows that while the service was proceeding an altar boy had conveyed a piece of news to the a v-istant and be. profiting by the noise of the Gloria, bad chanted, so as to be heard by the father, "You have drawn the twenty thousand dollars" being the quarterly grand prize of the na tion;.! lottery. The poor friar had been in great pov erty and suddenly saw himself pro vided with the means of supporting the mother of bii children, a joy too great for his simple human soul. Tin assistant has been sentenced to "se-clu.-ioa" for three months and the friar to one month. The woman has already been made comfortable by the friends of the priest, who have taken charge of his fortune to save it from the ra pacity of bis superiors M m f-ectoua uetjc The oldest Christian fan which is in existence dates from thesnth century, having belonged to Queen Theodeliii da, a princess who possessed. a nail of the holy cross, which afterward was set in the iron crownof Lombardy. This is preserved in the castle of Monza, near Milan, and shown to the tourist as a relic. This is an interesting speci men of a folded fan, as it is made in two leaves which shut on each other by means of a spring. It isgilded and ornamented with pearls and rubies snd bears traces of a Latin prayer. The handle is of solid gold, inlaid with gems. The young girls of Milan go to Monza on a certain day in the year simply to touch this magical fan, as it is supposed to brin; about a speedy and Lappy marriage. Two Valuable Friend. L A pbyeician cannot be always bad. Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Braise and Borne occur often and sometime when least expected. Keep bandy the friend of maty households and the destroyer of all pain, the famous Red Flag Oil, 25 cents. 2. Many a piecious life could be Raved that is being racked to death with that terrible cough. Secure a good night'i rest by invesiinjt 25 cents for a bottle of Pan-Tina, the great remedy for coegbs. colds and coneamption. Pan-Tima sold at G. W. Eenfoid e Drug Store. lira. A. "Wasn't it too bad about Mr. Poore? Jast as everybody thought he was recoverine he received an apopletic shock." Mrs. B. "Mercy ! How did it happen r Mrs. A. "Nobody knows. He was found unconscious with his doc tor's bill in his hand." Button Houu bucklen s Arnica Save. The best Salve in the world for Cut, Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rbeam, Fever Sorts, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chil blains, Corns, and all Skin Eruptions, and positively cures Piles, or no pay re quired. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction, or money refunded. Price 25 cents per box. For sale by J. X. Sny der. "Yoa oaght to be ashamed, Arthur ; yon 'annoyed your aunt so much that she has left us." "I don't care; I only like distant relatives, anyhow." A Leader. Since its fret introduction. Electric Bitters has gained rapidly in popular fa vor, until now it is clearly in the lead among pure medicinal tonics and altera tives, containing nothing which permits its use as a beverage or intoxicant, it is recognized as the best and purest medi cine for all ailments of Stomach, Liver or Kidneys. It will cure Sick Headache, Indigestion, Constipation, and drive Ma laria from the system. Satisfaction guaranteed with each bottle or the mon ey will be refunded. Price only 50c. per bottle. Sold by J. N. Snyder, Drngg'sL " Well, the widow sued the editor." "Get anything?" "One hundred dollars. But she didn't have it long." " Why ?" " The editor married her." Guaranteed Cure. We authorize our advertised druggist to sell Dr. King's New Discovery for Con sumption, Coughs and Colds, npon this condition : If you are afflicted with a cough, cold, or any lung, throat or chest trouble, and will use this remedy as di rected, giving it a fair trial, and experi ence no benefit, you may return the bot tle and have your money refunded. We could not make this offer did we not know that Ir. King's ew Discovery could be relied on. It never disappoints. Trial bottle free at J. N". Snyder's drug store ; large size 50c and f 1. A good many men are like cheap the atrical bills. A very little monev caus es them to be stuck up. Buffalo Courur. Don't Quarrel With people for groaning when they suf fer with Rheumatism or Neuralgia; the pain is simply terrible ; no ancient tort ure was more painful ; but people ought to be blamed if having Rheumatism or Neuralgia and won't use Red Flag Oil ; ii has cured hundreds of sufferers and costs only 2-5 cents at G. W. Benford's Drug Stoie. Doctor Well, Johnny, don't you feel better since I gave you the medicine? Johnny Yes; forgot all about being sick. Doctor That's what I thought; and it wasn't hard to take, was it? Johnny I guess so, for it took two of us boys to hold Fido when we gave it to him. A Hard Fight. The combined forces of the weather during the winter season are exerted to destroy health. Coughs and Colds at tack ns, which, if neglected, result in Pneumonia and Consumption ; these dis eases usually result eeriously. Send for Pan-Tina, the great Cough and Consump tion Cure, and save doctor bills Pan Tina sold at G. W. Benford's Drug Store. "There are times hen he is very gloomy." "I den't wonder; be calls himself a self made man." Straight from the East A Sultan of Turkey once naid , An he groaned at the pain in hit head, "Oh, my favorite wife, I am nek of lhi life. And I wth very much I were dead." But hi wife, who wan wise, answered "Fie ! If you will Pierce Pelleta but try. You'll be well in a week Au1 then yoa ill f peak Of tbes Pel leu with prj jus u high." Dr. Pierce's Pellets cost only 25 cents and they are guaranteed to cure all the troubles which spring fixwn constipation, indigestion, and bilious attacks. U you have any of these troubles, why don't yoa follow the example of the Sultan of Turkey ? $00 Reward for an incurable case of chronic Nasal Catarrh offered by the manufacturers of Dr. Sage's Catarrh Fmedy. 50 cents ; by druggists. Air Resitance. A correspondent of the New York Sun inquires which of two solid iron spheres weighing one and five pounds respective ly will reach the ground first if released simultaneously from a height of 1000 feet, and is answered "The five pounder.' The paragraph is headed "Gravitation." This answer, though correct, Is mislead ing, especially in connection with the beading. Gravitation will cause a body weighing five ounces to fall as last as one weighing five pounds If it were not for the resistance of the air a feather would fall as fast as a bullet. The only reason the five pound ball would reach the ground first is because it has less cross section per unit of weight, not be cause it is heaviest Wt. "I have been cured of nervous troubles and catarrh by Hood's Sarsaparilla." J. W. Tospon, Livansville, P. All Sorts. A man is like a gas jet. The more he blows the lese light be gives out Woman may be the weaker vessel, but us always the husband that's broke. The Republican party opens factories; the Democratic party free sup houses. A chiropodist aays: "People don't even have corns under this administra tion." A tooth pick factory is said to have tupended. So many people are living on soup that toothpicks are a drug on the market. rjealioe "How is your new beau ?" Grace" Oh, he promises welL" Rosaline (warningly) - Get Lim to wrii," EXILES FII01I ECSSIA. Remarkable Buocoas of the Men nonltea la Kansas. A Seif-Sutalniaa- a4 ladepeiMieat Peepl Hba Hart XatklBf ta ! With taa OataUla World Ssa la Coaamaerclal Way. Quick as are Americans to criticise the manners and customs of Russia, and inferior as the subjects of the ezar are frequently considered, the settler on the western prairies might well learn a lesson cf the Russians who have their unique settlements among them. The Mennonites, exiled from southern Russia because of their religion, mado as systematic an exodus as did the Is raelites of old, says a Kansas corre spondent of the St. Louis Globe-Democrat. They sent out their agents to spy out the land, and purchased one hundred thousand acres of the Santa Fe and Kansas Pacific railways for homes Then the people packed up their household goods and came to America. On the depot platforms they landed, wearing sheepskin coats the woolly side out, and black kerchiefs over their heads They carried iron teakettles and regarded the gazing Americans with as much curiosity as they themselves attracted. They built their villages of yellow limestone, the bouses having queer hip roofs gTeen blinds and double doors like those seen in a millT Curious ovens in which prairie hay or straw could be burned overcame the lack of fuel, and a street looked for all the world as though it had dropped out of au illustration in a Siberian sketch. Such names as "Cath erine stadt," "Leberthal" and "Pfeif fer" grace their towns and no man not of Mennonite persuasion is allowed in side the limits as a resident, though risitors are cordially welcomed. The Menonnites number several thousand, but they are never heard of in politics. They are busy tilling their one hundred thousand acres raising stock, planting orchards and piling up wealth. The wide-awake westerner, standing on the street corner explain ing the "contraction of the currency" to a knot of listeners, sees a half-dozen odd-looking wagons come toiling up the road. They are loaded with wheat and solemn-faced Mennonnites, who guide the soberer teams pocket the payment and trudge homeward. The orators hold forth in the country schoolhouse, and the eager real estate agent plats additions to the towns but the Mennonites pay no attention to either. They keep on selling wheat and corn and cattle until they have become the richest class of farmers probably, their number considered, that Kansas affords. They take few papers they do not vote, they core nothing whether the government is re publican or democratic in its manage ment. They are as isolated as though they were upon a sea island, except as they bring their produce to the station. It is noticeable that nearly all the lands are in the much discussed "arid belt," ret the Mennonites never a.-k aid or seed wheat. They prosper every year, and their homes are veritable storehouses of garden and field prod ucts To step into them is like a visit to the land of Volga. Curious furni ture, strange garb and peculiar hab its impress one with the feeling that he is in another land and another age. The bouses are for the most part sur rounded by stone walls and old coun try fashions in fencing barns, and im plements are everywhere apparent. They have their own minister, their own church and their own schools. When a "higher" education is desired (and some of the young people are as forward in their ambition for learning as American youth) there is plenty of money in the village bank to send them to Europe or to some eastern col lege to acquire it. During the last year, when common complaint of hard times went cp from the dwellers on the plains when seed wheat has been sent by the thousand bushels to Amer ican settlers, the Russians have con tinued to thrive. Their old-fashioned vehicles have come regularly to the railroads and car-load after car-load of wheat has been sent east. Lumber dealers in the towns where they do their buying say that there has been no diminution in their purchases and that by far the larger portion of their yards' sales have gone to their Kussian customers There is an important les son in their success. They have shown by their works what industry and fru gality can accomplish npon the prai ries and what can be done with the right kind of effort. Still it is doubt ful if the American settler could bring himself and his family to the grind in economy of European peasant life which the Mennonites have trans planted in their settlements. RICH AMERICAN BONDHOLDERS. The Xamea of These Favorite of Fortona Kept Seeret by the Treaaury. The millionaire is commonly repre sented as engaged in clipping coupons from bonds. This is an egregious error, says the Washington Star. Rich men, as a rule, do not hold coupon bonds The reason is quite obvious. Such bonds are not safe property. They are always payable to bearer .like treas ury notes. If lost the government will not replace them. Accordingly, for the sake of security, people are con stantly exchanging them lor regis tered bonds. Thus the sum total of coupon bonds outstanding, which is now about J70.0K,0', is all the time diminishing. They are mostly in the bands of small holders With the reg istered bonds it is quite different. They are rich men's property par ex cellence. At present about ?JOO,000,000 worth of them are held by private in dividuals. Of this great sum 37,000,- 000, or not far from one-half, are owned by 1,000 persons whose holdings average SsO.oJo. The names of these fortunate individuals are kept 6ecret by the treasury. Some of the fortunes possessed in this shape are enormous Some of the greatest belong to the Vanderbilts Old William II. Vanderbilt bad 543,000,. P.Qjg registered bonds at one time. Opium Smoking la China. "Seven-tenths cf the people of China are opium smokers and two million die annually from its effects said a Chinese missionary recently, who has spent twentv-two years of bis life in the flowery kingdom. "This habit is rapidly growing," he went on, "and it is confined to no class or sect, bat men and women, officials and coolies use it alike. As soon as opium smoking be comes a confirmed habit with a Chinese coolie he knows that he has about ten years to live. That seems to be the average. I consider it easier to reform a sot in the gutter, one of your lowest type of drunkards than an opiiur snuuror I'iereing Armor flatea. Armor plating has not been discuyed so much recently as it was two years ago. when it was decided that the'llar veyized and nickel plating were the met t invulnerable yet discovered. Rut no fooner is such a question "settled" than the experiments are resumed to End guns to send projectilescapablc of penetrating the "heaviest and best. The Russians bave now declared the problem is solved by piercing the Har vey and Tressider surface-hardened armor by means of a shell baring wrought-iron cap. and this it is said, has been done without the shell break ing up Proposed Ship Chaaaet la Traaee. The proposition for a great shipway through France, oetween the English channel and the Mediterranean, came before the chember of deputies again recently. The plans submitted at tracted much attention and were re ported as "favorably considered." Na poleon III. was vastly interested it this magnificent project and favorable to it, but the national exchequer was never in a condition to warrant his be ginning the word. The project turns up ev-ry once in awhile, and it is pre dicted that it w ill surely be accomp lished and at no distant d. TALE OF AN UNSIGNED CHECK. Taa Amount Was 34.0 aaal II Was Caeheal by a Saw Tork Buk. The story of a check passing through a number of channels without anyone discovering that it was not s'gned was related to a Boston Globe reporter a fev days ago. It appears that a cer tain Hostonian, while in New York, found it necessary to pay the Union Trust company, of that city, thirty-four thousand dollars which he did by giv ing it a check on one of the Roston banks The check wa- accepted and was deposited in that company's bank for collection. Tho following day it was presented at the Boston bank, when it was discovered that there was to name signed to it to show by whom the check had been issued, as it was written on one of the blank forms of checks of that institution. It looked ns if there was nothing to be done but return the check to New York, when the cashier thought he recognized the handwriting, and going to the tele phone called up the party who be be lieved had issued the check. "Were you in New York last w-cek?" asked the cashier. "Yes" said the man at the other end of the telephone "WelL" continued the cashier, "did yon give the Union Trust company a cheek for thirty-four thousand dol lars?" "Yes," was the reply; "what's the matter? Have you not charged it up to my account?" "1 would have done so," said the cashier, "but there is no name signed to it." '"Great Scott!" was the answer; "can you hold that check until 1 get np there?" The check was held, and in a few minutes a man cam3 in all out of breath and affixed his signature. EUROPE'S NEXT EIG WAR. ButU and Frame to H Arrayed Atlm! Germaar, Austria and Italy. This war of giants will have Eussia and France on the one side, Germany, Austria and Italy on the other. To make this evident, says Klackwood's Magazine, we have only to look at the actual position of the troops during peace in each of these countries As an indication of where the danger lies and the direction which the contest will ultimately take, the disposition of the Kussian army is by far the most important factor. Russia, owing to the immense extent of her empire and the comparatively small number of her railways in proportion to those of any other European state, is quite unable to concentrate pox-, er.'ul armies for of fensive purposes on any point of her dominions with any approach to the rapidity with which this can be done in France, Germany, Italy, or even Austria. She is consequently obliged to mass upon her frontier during peace those forces which she intends at once to throw into action during war. The sore sign, therefore, of where she in tends to striue her blow when the in evitable contest ensues is to be looked for in the present actual distribution of her army. This is by no means to the same extent the case with the other great powers. France and Ger many, especially, bavo a perfect sys tem of railways laid out with a dis tinct strategic purpose. Every prep aration for a speedy concentration of their whole forces by these means on any point of their frontiers ever likely to be threatened, either for offensive or defensive reasons has been so thor oughly made that their troops can be left during peace in a far more dis persed state and much further back than is possible with Russia. CATNIP MADE HER CRAZY. The ClilUisJ Feline Jtsver Forfeta the Smell of Her Favorite Herb. A young married man with a young baby at home recently bought a pack age of catnip, says the Cincinnati Com mercial. He put it in his overcoat pocket and stopped in at a well-known resort to get sometning stronger than catnip tea for himself. In a short time he noticed that the big pet eat of the establishment was manifesting re markably anxious symptoms. All at once he thought of the catnip. Here was a cat brought up in a city, and which had never before sniffed the fragrant herb which is so much a medk-ine for felines in distress So be opened the package, gave a few leaves to the cat, and the crowd was soon en joying an unusual performance, Tho cat was in raptures and rolled about in such a crazy fashion that the bar keeper was suspicious. He declared that "them fellows has given the cat poison." Thereupon he gave the cat a dish of mill: as an antidote, and couldn't get it through bis dull head that an herb called catnip was a spe cific medicine for cats of all climes English Interest la Fireworks. The people of London are very much interested in the whistling fireworks which have long ceased to be regarded over here as a pyrotechnic mr.rvcL The popular notion among the I'ritocs is that gas generated by the combus tion of the liery composition actually blows a whistle, but this supposition is erroneous. So far as can lie deter mined by the pyrotechnists themselves the screaming noise is due to the vis lent combustion of the picrate of pot ash with which the little tubes of the fireworks are stuffed. Experiments have been made with other materials but picrate of potash is the only com bustible substance discoverable that will give anything more than a faint imitation of a whistle. CRIME 'IN GREAT BRITAIN. It Is Derreaauc. Bat the Debtor Lists Are Largely Increasing. There are some encouraging features in the report of tho commissioners of prisons in England and Wales which has just been printed in London. The statistics and diagrams which exhibit the fluctuations of crime during a long series of years demonstrate that "their general conrse and tendency for many years past has been in the direction of diminution;" "that this diminution has taken place particularly in those classes of crime which are committed by habitual criminals viz: Offenses against property with violence, forg ery, and offenses against the currency, and offenses against property without violenoe (which camprise the great bulk of crimes committed); also that this diminution was concurrent ia point of time with the development of various measures intended to bring it about and that it occurred in spite of the great increase in population, which might have reasonably accounted for an increase of crime." It is also pointed out that the number of first convictions has fallen gradually from 103,910 in 13 to OS.HUO in lsy-i, which shows that the criminal ranks are not being died up by fresh recruits. It is further shown that the diminution in the younger part of the prison popula tion is four and five times as great as in the older portion, which proves that the youcprr part of the community is not supplying criminals to take the place of the olJer and more incorrigi ble. It U also demonstrated that there is no such coincidence between the variations in the amount of crims and in the amount of drunkenness as to establish that connection between the two which some temperance advo cates too hastily assert. The com missioners point out, however, that, while crime has thus decreased and the criminal population of the prisons bas diminished, the debtors bave in creased largely and continuously; the number committed in ISTS-'f J was 0, CGl. and in l9i-'?3 it had gradually risen till it reached 10,o:L A Queer Creator. The West Indian migratory crab ia the only creatnre that is born ia the sea, matures in fresh waters aud passes its adult life on land. Once a year these creature3 migrate in thousands from the uplands of Jamaica, deposit their larvai ia the sea, then migrate to the rivers and streams pass through a fresh ivutc-r stage, after which they follow their parents to land uatil the time comes for them to retun. to tho tea to lij their cJS. TRK SVAU.LST IS TBS BZST. There are a doaen weii known liver pi. is but only oue no tf-uw ti,-t rt can be guaran teed to give satislac tion, or Ue money be refunded. IT. rVrce's Pleasant Pellets are smaller, but better than the huge, cl'l-fashienMt ..ill r.A riffiiirinftl agents are refined and concentrated. Fverv one suffers, at some time or stipaticn, Indigestion, ions and Skk relieved and if vou take These Pel- oser, from Con- Hour Htomart Biliousness, Bd- evrvd of thuae troubles, "PP. P.n leu are easy to take, acd .i m ' k . f itKnnl clww-k. act in a nat- BKTb tum ' . Uie 5 I Li,-, rB C52JJ J J , ' . tbey are" pot up ia Iittie glass viais. They're the'rtxaipest, becauie puarantewi U five sat isfaction. Keniemlr, tbst It. IVree's Pelleta are finunnt to tats iMatanl in action, per fect in eSxt. Kct-p tha in mind and you uiv the problem of good beaJLh and goud living. Jacob D. Swank, vr.ttcli maker and Jeweler, Krxt door west of Lutheran Church Somerset, Pa. I am now prepared to sup ply the public with clocks, watches and jewelry of all descriptions, cheap &s the cheapest. REPAIRING A 8PECIALTY. All work guaranteed. Look at my stock before making your pmr chases. JORDAN & HINCHMAN.: We ire now ready with nnr new and large in voire of line Confectionery (.Joods, popu lar braoiis cf B. st uns and Cakes, fancy good' of a:l styi'-s. and everythine else pertaining lo a ri rst cla.- l oue to till or ders promptly, and to supply resident fam ilies to any ex:ent. (Joinis aiways fresb. and always offered at lowest ficures. Call and see one of the finest assortments ever carried. JOEBAS 4 EDiCMi 270-272 Main Street, Johnstown, Pa. GOOD LIQUORS ! and Cheap Liqucrs By railing at the OM Ralls" TJaaor Store. 5o.309 JIaiB St., and 10C Clinton St, Johnstown. 3?a., all kin 1 of the Choktest Liquors tn market can be had. To my old customer this U a well known fart, and to all "thers convincing' proof will be (riven. Don't forget that I keep eu hand ihe greatest variety of Li'i'ior, the choicest brand and at the lowest prices. P. S. FISHER. HARDWARE I HARDWARE I I am now prepare! to an omniO1ates tb pub lic aiiy ami f-Terythinjr in the H an i are Hue ty the addition rcvt-ntlT n.a)e to my former larve iiotk. J ail kinds of artu-it-t in jsr late an1 nij priors ch.t!U-nge oomt?:.ti,D. Jf you aot a (t'ln, a rt-Totver. a kaiie. a aat. a (Timlet, an amrrf. a birTi !. a t-air of ate, hiox e. i'rt!ws, ntuts btp? h riorse blanket, or anything tia; in ii-aX J w are at loweat price c.l on me. Herman Bantley, Clinton St., Johnstown, Pa A. H. HUSTON. Undertaker and tmbalmer. A. GOOD HEAESE aixi I hint pertaininc to fumerais turn wed Somerset, Pa. '91-ly Xothlns On Earth Will LIKE Sheridan's Condition Towderl KEEPS YOUR CHICKENS Strong and Healthy ; Pravcota all Diaeaac Coo d for Moulting Hems. TtfiarNnluTHTraT. HUr-iT c-crrtri-a. Tnr;ai t:t rudU tenth ( m orvt a iay. No other uof-furth a rr-.njr Mn ilv a mUt in. "On Lanr cavn n--1 mm fv- MndBs m'f to m- vrnt Rmi'i." cm? -vudk-r. llyuuran'trtlurndtoHt, Jaak airsa. Si;p for r. ta m umpa. Brparki gl. I-arjfr 1 1-4 b. no. t.j atsail. gl -s- Sit unrf cm., f uprn prrpaxi. Sm:e ooj.vof The B-tH Poolio prrrai frve. J mj-ta-l cm var prpre t ana iauyv cab gl j. Cores thonsanda annually of LdverCom plaints, llilionsness. Jaundice, Dyspha sia, Const i pat im. Malaria. Jfore Ills miiU from an Vnheairhy Li vert han any otbrcnsa. Why fh(Tt when von csa becired t Pr. Panforl's Li vr Invigor aiAr f rl'-M .i f-m iiv rnliirih. Yoi ii Buruuir w ill nirm'tor. TA I ORTATS A PtTEXT? Fop p-orr. anwT and mil boo?t ofMnroa. writ to Ml NX V bare bd Dearly fT reaiV iprHTc In the rtnt bain-ssw Orfnmnnfa ti'ira fxnctlv ermdntiaJ. A llaa4toli of la forms! k-tj cnacerriiuc Pa tr at an1 bow to cb tain t!Hra aent fn-. AImi wlo-gupo! mwhaiv ftcai and Kieutiftc bofcn Hnt rv. PrntfTUa t&fcea tbmacb A. ana ft Co. IWHra trThpoAi nut ice ib .h it tib r American, arnl tho ar bmatrbl win it bernmthe public witlw out ot to tu rnvntnr. Thi wtDd!d pap-r. tMmed wfi)T, exactly t Must rat et. baa bv far th larrft nrculatw .a cm an acMmtitVc worir. in tix Wi'f'd. a Trar. tanipi nrH tent fr. Emld:r. kitiua. tn.mhly, f.' Tr. !ncT enrta. J. centa, rverr namNr contains txaa- i tifal plat, id ookr, and pbotnerapba of d- fcooM. w:tb plana, enabling bander to show to 1&! Ait dvilirn aott crturar a, Addma ML' CO hkW a'Okla, 41 itOAiTAY IMPORTANT TO ADVERTISERS. The cream of the coon try papers U fbaavl In Bemington'i County Scat Lists, fihrevi advertisers thjX themselves of ttfM fcsU, erjry of which can be tad of jmingtoq Broit, of Xev Tort k rhiaburj. BUGGIES at I Prlca CilUS a HAAAi.-" ams I.T. p PVO-.. t W.HJIIM tvA rtjufi-H. ft 4 PRk'ra sn4 :t Kos-1 Ctrl tour at fao. 8& (Ed Bvn HtnMS. SI S tor? and v :"K.nnrj " M.:t MiM' am Jlurssa Saddla, (laCat s Flwa. r. . BTfcfcV aCtlTCa. t s U lawnass av.UaclawaU. Oh ya 3 YOU. CAN FIND .s it rii rs m t tb A l'crtivnr Bureau cj RE2H1TGT02T EROS. wu will cabUkt tt aafwrusuia at Waatf maw T NVC HrLTM THT UVt tiJT t I O0 COPYRIGHTS. V IB .-" CONDENStO TIME TABLES. Baltimore and Ohio BaHroad. Somerset and Cambria Branch NOKTHWXID. Jbfautovn M-S Erpm. Rorkwood : a. ra., Somerset 10. stotowa tii, Hoovanmla :. Johnstown. W. JoluuOmr H tS Erpmui Hock wood II Vi a. m.. eoiMtM 1:14. miwiosi 1:4a, Houversviiia 1:7. Johnstown i-iO p. to. JbtaaW dcrmmoJatirm Rorkwood ?0 p. m., ctomerert 1(3 p. m., Ptoyesrrwn 7:11 p. m-, HooversTiltc '.M. p. m., JoBiutown & 15 p. m. SaaaVr Bockwood V2J& a. av bomerstrl, 1:1a. SOCTHWARD. Mail Johnstown 10 a. ra Hooversville 8:2 Stnyeatowa &s0, Somcnet 11, Koctwood JUji' tm JosnMoww p. bl. Hwvenrv!ll 4-1, stoyestowa sJo, eouenet 6 01, Uuckwoul 5.i. :fTv. Only Johnstown a. m., Hoowrv;ll 16 a. m., Hioywtown a. m, tonieratt a. m.. Roc owl lii.a a. m. i faivfay mmsii'iMsw Somerset S01 p. at. Kockwou4 iui p m., Dailr. "OEXXSYLVANIA RAILROAD. 9CHECn.E IS EFFECT SOW 19, 1A rarrcNN standard time COXDKSSKD 9CHXDT Li. Trains arrive and depart from taw station at Johnstown as (ollcwt : WESTWARD. fmathwestern ExpresB. Wwtern Express-... . Johnstown Acvommcdaiion.. . t a. m . t.vis. m . t a. m , 10 s. m Accommodation PmcS F-iprvm.- J4 a. m 3 a. n ...&.! a m Way Paawngrr. JonnMown Accommodation s ..w I Fast Lina... P- EASTWARD. Keystone Express.. . 5Va. m . 9 0a.ia . .'4 a. m , 10:13 a. m. . 11:10 s. m . liJ p. m . i it p. m Stra Shore Expre. Itaama Accomnv-lAU-jn Main Line Expre . , Day ExpreS Aitonua Accommodation.. Malt Exprtvs -Jobn'ioa n ccoininodadon. t p. m 7 16 p. m 10.J0 p.ai Phi ls-ielpbiii. tast Line... F'W rates, maps. Ae.. fro to Ticket Ajrent or s-1-dres Thw. E. , F. A. W. 110 Flilh Ave nue. FitLHhurirh, ra. a M. FkKVDT. J. R. WOOD. tieu '1 Manager. Oen'l Im. Agt It is to Your Interest TO BUT YOUR Drugs and Medicines OF J. K. SHYDEB. CCCBISOB TO Biesegker k Snyder. Nine bat the purest and best kept in stock, and wkeu Drags become inert by stand ing, as certain of them do, we de stroy them, ra:ber than im pose on oar customers. Yoa can depend on having your PRESCRIPTIONS & FAMILY RECEIPTS filled with care. Oar prices are as low as any other f rst-cl&aa bouse and on many articles much lower. The people of this county seem to know this, and have given as a large share of their patronaze, and we shall still continue to give them the very best goods for their money. Do not forget that we make a specialty FITTING- TRUSSES. We guarantee satisfaction, and, if yon have had trouble in this direction, give us a calL SPECTACLES AND EYE-GLASSES in great variety ; A full set of Test Lenses. Come in and have your eyes examined. No charge for examination, and we are confident we can suit yoa. Come and see na. Respectfully, JOHN N. SNYDER. CURTIS K. GROVE. SOMERSET. PA. Brocrca, BLEiGca, carriages, SPRING WAGOX 3, BCCK WAGONS, A5D XASTER5 AND WESTERS WO EX Furnished en Short Notice. Painting Done oz Short Time. My work Is xeade out jt Ttoreaf Vy Sawrnnf Wood, and the Bat trtm an Sttt, ftubstaatiany Constructed, Neatly Finished, and Warranted to give Satisfaction. Esjloy Osly Fsrsi-Claa Varkaea. Repairing of All Kinds In My Line Done oa Rhort Notice. Prices REASONABLE and All Work Warranted. Call and 'limine e; Stork, and Learn PiVes, I do Wagon-work, and furnish Selves for Wind WWa, Reaesaber the place, aud call In. CURTIS K. GROVE, (last of Court Bocae SOMERSET. Tk. 190 DOLLARS MU pejj MONTH Sm Your Own Locality ma.le easily and honorably, without capi tal, during your spare hours. Any nun, woman, ly, or iru l can do the work hand ily, without experience. Talking un necessary. Not hi n if like it for money making ever offered before. Our workers aiways prosper. No time wasted in learning the tmiuess. Vie teach yoa in ni:;!it how to succeed from y.e first hour. You ran make a trial without ex pense tn yotirnelf. We start you. funnh everything needed to carry on the busi ness urceifur.y, and guarantee yoa against failure if you but follow our simple, plain instructions. Header, if you are in need of ready money, and want to know all about the best paying business before the public, send us your address, and we will mail yon docu ment giTing yoa all the particulars. TRUE & CO., Cox 400, Augusta, Maine. THERE IS KO SUBSHTUTE fOJ EXPEFJEICE? Their plfWP Their Lessens .JS? Sa,es Labor. iEpSSi Money, I T will paj you to examine the QL EEN CINDERELLA RAXg- I fiire von buv. It has all the latest improvement, nn.l . ,n' 1 i J j 4 - - - - 4 - - j " lO . f teed to be a good Laker. It has the direct draft damper, lv ; ; ) can have a fire ia one-half the time required with the oriiiiarv "fjV I I This 14 A toiiiaIiIa fatiirft wlien vnn want a nnl.-lr fmf.i.A.j ""I IT has an extra large high oven, of inflowing and outflowing air a perfect baker, and no burning on jiaic, w lltl.il tuctnuiiuu ui luutcuicuic iiiu tieariliCej. Jj ' pecially durable, having three separate sides, or the advantage nf ' grates in one, ana not easily warpea Ly ine action or tLe tiro. PPrrfRFI? "Thin.m .l.-r ar:l sn.J m-:i ran, omnltk. ... Manufactured by DeHAVE.V A CO., JAMES B. HOLDERBAUM, Somerset, pj j Krissinger fe Kurtz, Berlin, Ta. New York Tribune Somerset Herald ONE TWO JDOXJJJLRS Address all orders Louthefs Main Street, ThisHcdsl Drug Stcrs is Favorite with FBESH AHD Medicines, Dye Stuffs, Sponges, Trusci Supporters, Perfumes, c. TH DOCTOR GIVES PEB30XAL Lontlier's PrescripiioDsiFafflilyBece SRZAT CURS BMIS9 TAKZS TO OiX 0XLT IXXSB ASD flSX ARIIOJS SPECTACLES, EYE-GLASSES, And a Full Line of Optical Goods always on hand. From large assortment all can be suited. THE FfflEST BRAHDS OF CIGAES Always on hand. It is always a pleasure to display our to intending purchasers, whether they buy trom us or elsewhere. J. M. LOUTHER M. D. MAIN STREET - - - - SOMERSET. FA Somerset Lumber Yard ELIAS CUNNINGHAM, sfsjrrTACuuB sjta Duui aso Wholjsau aito Kstailsb or LUMBER AND BUILDING MATERIALS Hard and OAK, POPLAR. 8IDING3. PirKKTS, MOULD F5G3, ASH. WALXTT, . FLOOKINO, A3H, STAIR RAIL. CHIRRY. YELLOW HXJ, SHINGLES. VOOS& BALrWEXS. CHESTNUT. WHITE PINE. L TH. BLIXDS. SKW?i A 8eoeral LlacofaU frades of Lumber and BulMin? Material and Rooflng 9'M t'7'"m Also, cms furnish aaylhliig La tie Use of our busmeas to order with reasoo& promptseas, such as Brackets, OiU-slsed work, etc ELIAS CTJsXN'GHI. Office and Yard Opposite S. &C. S. R. Station, Sorr.erset IT WILL I3 AY YOU TO Itl TOCB Memorial Work WM.F. SHAFFER, SOMERSET. PEXJTA, Msnafsctarer of and Dealer In Xcjicr Wart Arsiihd cm Short SUU In tU C.lo Mil 119 E31IITE 331 Aln, AgaU fortto WEITX BR0ZXI Persona la Bee4 of MOSmrrf WORM will Bad U to tbeir iDierwt loeatl at at soup where a proper sbooliis wij be siren them. ,a.ik tartum Qnanuml a Mxay Out, mtd i-klCKi it Mr LOW. I lsTltc special auentfea to the WriHe Bronze, Or Pyre ZIno Monumen Introrraeed by RKV. W. A. RISQ. as a Declii-i Improremeat ia the point of MATKWaL AS1 CoN-TRrtTJO.-J. and which la !esunl to ba Uis Popalar wonr-nent for oar Chauvula CI sate. AWC1VI MI A CALL. WM. F. SHAFFEB, B . l-- -"-Wl CO." IV .; I J thoroughly ventilated. T; T,, ) can be regulated at will; t;.;3 ,0 ' j the top. It has the Trir,;CI v, Cil..-'. , H .jj l Ltd.. Pittiburtrh. SU and ? jarj.,. s and P. J. Corer fc Sonn Meyers. .VXD YEAR. to The Herald. Weeklj Drue Store Somerset, Pa. Rapidly Esccaing afc: Pecpls in Ssarch cf PURE DEU3S. Toilet Articles, ATTIXTTOS TO THE COMPOUSEISG Cf J M i Solt "WooclsJ VUiisA 11.1. Aa) 1 nrrritl 1 TT laSiWiA ''---1 f Over 500 Beautiful Designs. MONUMENTAL '- 4 5 : ; mm.. . i m a. a i -jm x i IF