GOOD YEAE FOII IELLAXH Toaca end Prosperity the r.Ua During 18Sa ITarr - Were Abundant ssnd the Art raltaral ! Enjojca Msuir of the Comfort or Life. The roar nhich has jast drawn to a c!.!-o f.as l-n Tt-cnarkaMe as one of the tr.ot pt-aocaMc anl irosjxro;i n!,i,-h has passed witLin the century. Ia vk-w of recent oecurrem-es it can liarllr le considered nnevcrtfuL fca.v the London Tiraei, lint the occur renee- were rseeji!i'mal and Ao not af feot it-, jr. iu ntl cL-iracl r. The a a v. uA; have never V-en freer from (".ir tn ss. ai;i the evils which follow in its c urst. Since the year 120, which ii treasured in remembrance, they hare net l-een favored with so dry a rummer ora season more favorable to n.Tri.-iikural pursnits. AlthouU the t-.tal area under cultivation showed a f'l-en-csc of 5.S- sv-res in eerral crops cud in frreen crops, and some ol the crops were lipht and thin for want of rain, yet the drought was not ft It so Mwrcly in Ireland as in Knjrland, the Miii retainieff a lai-e store of inoisr tare from previous years, which was omvn to t'ne surfacear.il preserved ths viiaiity of the seeds and roots. The tvsu't was that the harvest was savoi in i-o-h prv-d condition and so v.Kch tarlii r as to more than corapon sate for any deficiency ia the acreage under cultivation, which, after a!L was hut Ci-ht. The total extent under cereal crops was 1.4y.."y:J acres tnd under frreen crops, l,l vi..iJT acres. The extent under clover and prasses v. as O.J.UVi acres, boinc an increase cf 1 -.170 tcr.js, and under hay or per rmner.t pasture 1..Vj5,1; acres, show ir.g i,n increase of C,:-4 acres. There is slso an abundant supply of sound po tatoes and of turf, which arc appre ciable dements of comfort in the small farmhouses and laborers" cabins. '1 l.ese advantages have had a tranquil iir jr and encouraging effect upon the r.j.'ricultural classes, who are heartily tired of p .'.itieal agitation, and dis poscl to apply then;slves to more profitable pursuits. There are many satisfactory - (-ijnis of a beneficial eliaiip? ii: tin- moral as well as the ma t. rlal condition of the poople. Not ti.e least impressive of these are the wi'llnness and comparative punctu ality v ith which rents arc per.erally ym:. tlie rtter failure of the attempts which have been strenuously made to revive political excitement, and the f-r 'atcr readiness to adopt the practi al s;ifTrctions of those who are coin p tent to p-ive p,d advice and have no .-ellLsh object to train. Ani'ir.;' the m-i-l active ami success ful of the ajrencics which are endeav oring to teach them lietter methods Did habits are the congested districts b-.ar.l, the Royal Dublin society, the various educational Institutions and iii'iustrial companies for employing t' acbers to point out the best systems of dairy farming and butter makinp, establish in? creameries, and eneour ti i: jr small manufacturers and cot taire work adapted to the circum stances ; ' the ctuntry. The well di rected clfortsof these several orfatiiza tions are effctii;ga marked improve lTi. ut everywhere, although no reduc tion has In-eu eiTected in the amount .f actual pauperism, which represents a stajre of almost hopeless destitution. It apiH-ars from one of the hist weekly rcturnsf .r the year that the number receiving relief in the workhouses was i'J.ltrti. and outdoor relief 5-l''5. which is a few hundred more than in the cor r.;vndinff week of the previous year. The general trade of the country has i:ot shown much enterprise, but. though limited in volume, it has been sic.ind and steady. Except in two or dree instances there have been no heavy failures during the year. Two of the failures were those of contract or, one of whom was carrying out li-ht railway work in t!ie west of Ir. land. As a rule, credit has been well maintained, and all the banks have liecn able to pay food dividends, espe cially the lister companies, which liave fjiven as hi'h as from 10 to 'JJ per cent. GERONIMO ON THE DENCH. The Fimnui AparSe Actin as a Justice of the f'eee Id A!a.SauiA. J aim P. Hum, a po-t fjev in petor. who sp"nt (n:oc time recently in the c:::.ip of the renegade Apaches at Mount Vernon barracks. Alabama, re ports that they have made creditable pro;,Tess in the arts of civilization. Mr. t'lum should 1-ea competent j ide. f r he spent several years with thex? Indians on the San Carlos reservation in Arizona, and afterward it became his duty, in April. Is77, to assist in the capture at Ojo laliente. X. M., of 'ieronimo. I'ranci.sco and other Apache renefra les. Siuliseouently (Jerouim es cajHil arain, and after a new career of blood-died and rapine surrendered to tien. X. A. Miles. This was in Iso.i. loiter the Apaches cf tieronimo's band, men. women and children, were sent to Alabama- l or the lirst year or two the mortality aaion them v.a-s very ITcat. but. according to the Xcw York livening 1'ost. they have now K-eomc uceiiuiate'L Each family has a frame house, equipped with cookinjr ranirc uud necessary furniture, to live iu. The Indians have adopted a civilized style of d:css; the men weave baskets and the women wah clothes. A com pany of infantry has been formed out of the youn;? m -n. and their barrack s is a part of the Indian village, tieroi-.i-rio has !.-cu elected un akalde, or jus tice, and tries minor olTcuscs reported to hi:u- His sentence.-to ti-rms of i:u prixmntcnt in the truar ihouse seem to r-ve general sati -faction. This once td.skithirs'.v chief is now content to make an honest penny by scilin;; bows and arrows and also photographs cf himself. The your. children are bc-iv-i; educated in the settlement, ami thj older ones attend the t'arluJe school. W hile these Apaches are pris oners of war, they are virtually oi. l aix'h x and cotuc.and as they please i" he climate of Colorado is so exceed ingly dry in the greater portion of the Mate that ordinary objects, such as po tatoes, vegetables of various sorts, and t fen small animals petrify when cov ered with sand. A considerable source of revenue to the puides and venders iu the Grand canyon and vher famous resorts is the sale of petrified woo-.l and other material to tourists. Human bodies have been known to undergo the petrifying' process in numerous in stances. The body of Wild 1:111, the famous di -spcra.'.o. is to-day solid stone, lie was buried in a sandy country, near Tclluride, and the Washington Post says that about foar years aro his friends decided to put up a monument to his memory. They went out to his :ravc, which is in the open prairie, and one of the P1-'.11'. an old scout, was taken alonjr to exactly V cate here he was buried. The saud ha I shifted and blown in (Treat heaps, as it djes all through that country, and the scout had a (rood deal of diffi culty in absolutely locating the spot. I iaaily he struck a mound that he said had Wild 1U11 under it. Owing to the uncertainty of the situation and his hesitancy, the party decided to di; down and tee whether he was rhjht They didn't want to put a monument over a sand heap unless it had V jld Hill under it- So they du? down. Ireseutly the spade ran into a rock a fccarce thim? in that couutry. They bhovcled all around it and soon re vealed the petrified image of Wild Dill, as perfect as the day be died, with not m trace of decomposition. Even the clothes and shoes w ere turned to stone. Some of the party wanted to take the body up for purposes of exhibition. Hut one of Hill's old pals. Shorty Jack, as he was called, remarked that the first man who tried to do so would find a bed in the hole that Pill filled. So the idea was abandoned, liut if some adventurous museum man wants the frcatcst drawing card on earth, he can lli.d it under Wild Hill's tombsUma. .tlat-t B3Jtl33 Tliat Aro AtlracteJ t3 lha Cit:e3. Uammoth lVluscil TUat l okaosra I'rert ms to the latrodac llos of the Nw liio suto&tor. Electric tuffs lave made their an oearancc in Pittsburgh and have led .he Dispatch of tlt city to make a study of them. " These bus were in America ht the country was first discovered and ire verv common in European conn tries. "P-cfore clectrio lights were Viiown the bu-s were M ldoia seen and lot often were fpcciuicus of them ol ained. As soon as electric lights ap-pca.-ed in a city, so did the bujrs. The lmfrs resemble fiies in shape. They have six lejrs or claws, pl.tssy in?s a lody like a beetle and rather larjre eyes. Directly letween the eyes Ihey have w hat is calhsl a spear. This heir only weapon of defense, is alut three-eighths of an inch long in a full rowa be?. Their sting- is very pain ful, but it is not poisonous. They never fight unless interfered with. Electric bugs do more gixxl than Siarm. They eat np the smaller in-' lects. and it's a novel way they have, too. of catching them. If they had to fly after insects to catch them they would never capture any. They lie :yxn their backs with their six tiny .laws in the air. Then they move I'.scm slow !y to and fro, and thus at tract the attention of their prey. As soon as an insect alights upon one of the claws it is promptly seized and de voured. The bugs make their appearance as soon as the warm weather sets in. They arc rather small at first, but in less than a month they attain their full growth. Some of them measure over three inches in length and are nearly an inch wide. They lay their eggs in the bot tom of rivers. It isestitaated that one female bug will lay three thousand eggs in three mouths during her life time. The eggs remain in the mud during the winter and are hatched by the fiist warm wave. Toward the end of the summer when iasccts lx-eome scarce the bugs kill small fishes and eat them. A swarm of the buL's will go after a small fish and f.tab it to death with their spears. They then carry the carcass of the fish to the bottom of the river and it lasts them for food many days. These buirs can propel themselves through the water faster than a fish. 1 ishes fear them, although they arc never attacked by theia when insects ere to Ik; caught. Tlie.se bugs have been known to kill some good-sized tinny specimens. The first cool wave that comes drives the bugs to the river, where they re main until the frost kills them. When they die they are eaten by the fishes as a sort of poetical retribution, no doubt- Thev are more numerous in the city now than at any other time. If the lmgs remain away from the watif until daylight they cannot find their way back to the rivers until night sets in arain. iJaylight has the same effect on them as electric lights, only they fly hifj-h in the air instead of In circles or airaiust lamp gloWs. and consequently do not die from exhaustion. A MARITIME COXFER EXCE Mr. William Hosea llallou. of Ne York, whose work in connection with the suppression of cruelty to animals in transit at sea has attracted so much attention during the last few years, has at last succeeded in getting a bill into congress calling for an interna ' ional maritime conference to regulate jud punish such abuses, says the llov ton Globe, The object of the maritime confer ence is ,-to make, devise and amend the rules, regulations and practice concerning the transportation of ani mals at sea and their lives and slaughter in j larantine; for the proper construction of vessels for ani mals in transit; for the punishment of navigation companies or vessel own ers, their officials and employes, for cruelty to animals at sea; to make r.avigati'v! co!::;.ai:ics or vessel owners liable iu damages for destruction of or injury to animals in transit: and to formulate and submit for ratification to the governmeuis, of all maritime rations proper international regula tions, laws, penaltiesand punishments for cruelty to animals at sea." Mr. r.allou was in Poston recently and talked very entertainingly con cei cing his work and the abuses which led him to take up the cudgel in de fense of t'ae animals. Said he: "Ail animals sailing froin a port usually sail under the fia'of that port Couse'incntly they reach the port of destination under a foreign Il ig. The country of entry has no jurisdiction over the animals or any acts that may le committed on them while under the Ca? they sail under. "'I he party shipping them is obliged to sign u manifest ceding all rights to the property while at sea. and on arrival is obliged to take the animals dead or maimed without damage or redress. I have Wen two and a half years ascertaining officially from each government that it has n jurisdiction nor law b.- which it could punish navi gation companies or their employes uiaimi::g cattle in transit Of the forty-six million dollars" worth of ani mals v. hieli hae passed to an! from the ports of the I'nited States in one year, six million dollars' worth have been destroyed by cruelty. "The stK-'.s interests of various ra tions are so enormous financially that it is i:u; i.vible to estimate the amount of an.iuals destroyed ia transit be tween cations by cruelty. No nation has denied the charge of cruelty to animals by their subjects which I have preferred. Nor has any nation failed to express its horror at the crime com mitted at sea and its desire to suppress it by international legislation. Conpres.-man t ummings has now introduced into the house of repre sentatives my bill for an international maritime conference, to 1k invited by the president, to be held at Washing ton, with seven delegates from this country and about one hundred and fifty delegates from other countries to enact legislation for the better care and protection of animals in transit "An appropriation of fifty thousand dollars has Wen called for, and Sen ator Hill, of New York, has agreed to take charge of the bill when it reaches the senate. "Secretary Grcsham. in behalf of the government, has made an argument giving the government's unqualified indorsement to the bill, and stating that several other governments have communicated with the state depart ment for this very legislation. ""Such a maritime conference will have larger financial interests involved and mote legislation to enact than has heretofore been internationally en acted." LOOK OUT for breakers abesvl when pirn plus, boils, car Luucles anil bxs Tnnnii estatlt us of impure blood ap pear. They wouldut appear if your blood srera pure anal your vystom in th rit:bt condition. Tbey show you tat tou need a rood bkxd-pu-rilWir; that's what Ton pet when yon take Dr. Piurce'a Golden Jlnlical lnCOTery. It can-is bealia with it. AH Blood, Skin, and bcalp Ducascs, from a common blotch or eruption to the worst Kcrof ula, are cured by it It invigorates the ber, puruis and enriches the bluud, and rouses every organ into healthful action. In the most stabuoru forma of Skin Diseases, such ae Salt-rheum, Ecaeiua. Tetter, Erysipelas, Carbunclca, and kindred ailments, and with 8erof ula in every shape, and all hlood-tainU, if it fails to fcene fit oi cure, you have your money back. And that makes it Ui cJuajKJt blood purifier tukL Thirteen Tears Experience. Miu.ek's Fai.i-s, Mask. "At dif ferent times during the m- thirteen yenr," kuM Mr. A. Joliit-son of tin place, "my wife ha Ut-n viek from lung trouble, kidney ami liver com phi tat, ulceration, of the stomach and spring debility. At each time he Inw taken Iw. David Kennedy's Favor ite Ih mcdy. and it cured her. It w a family medicine with u and many of our iieighliors."' Forgot He "Was Marriei From tbc Sathmid HoUl lb-porter. A slorv is Johl of a iit-wly-weUdeU couple who wcrcgct-s at the Kennedy llou-, Chattanooga, Tciin. The man nifistered like this: "August Buerger and wife." He remained one day, and hen he stciicl un to ask the amount of hU bill Clerk 1 lay less uil it would W ti. "Four dollars T' Mr. HiM-rger Kiid. "Why, your rates are rather high, aren't they?" "No, I gue- not ; that's only i2 a uav." "But I have lieen hen-only one day." "I know it, but it is f4," Mr. Bay les repIic-1. "How do you figure that?" the new-lv-wcd.hil man sikcd, a lie leaned over the counter w ith a frown of per plexity on his otherwise blissful feat ures. "Well, there's yourself, one day, $2 ; and there's your w ife, one 'lay, 2 ; two and two make four." Then the fellow slummed, his fist dow n on the register, w hile a crimson flush of blood sufl'used his chocks. "Well. I ll sw.ar. he cried, "if I didn't forget all aWit her, I'll cat my hab Here, take this , kc-p the change ami say notliing alKut it, please." But the clerk didn't keeithe change, ho he didn't think there was any reason why he shouldn't tell the story, which he diil, and thus it's told. A "Snn-down" ami "u.-sl-up" feeling is the first want ing that your liver isn't doing its work. And, with a torpid liver and the im pure blood that follows it, you're an easy prey to all sorts of ailments. That is the time to take Dr. Pierce's (lohh-n Medical Discovery. As an apju-tizing, restorative tonic, to repel disease and build up the nevdeil flesh and strength, there's nothing to coual it. It rouses every organ into healthful action, puri fies ami enriches the Mood, braces up the whole system, and restores health and vigor. For every disease caused by a disord ered liver or impure blood, it is the on y ytttti-fittml remedy. If it doesn't Wiicfit or cure, in every case, you liave vour monev back. c-VK) is offered, ly the jiroprietors of Dr. Sage's Catarrh Kemedy, for an in curable case of 'atarrh. Their remedy lerfis-tly and penmuieiitly cures the worst cases. She Had Bead to Him of Lincoln. "Stanley," said his mother, "I do not like to see yiHi jilaying with such dirty Uiys. The Lutguage they use, loo, is not lit f-ir your cars. They are not the Uiys fory.u to ass4eiate with." The liy looked at his mother a mo ment, and then us his little head was thrown Isick lie gravely asked : "Who am I that I should not as sociate with those Uiys?" Tlie mother was perplexed an instant, ami then she said : "But, Stanley, dear, that is not it at all. They Uiys are not clcjin. Their clothes ure dirty, and they " "Mother," suit! Stanley, ijuick as a flash, "you have lnvn reading to me aWut Abe Lincoln. Now, lie wasn't dean w hen he was a ly, and he didn't wear tine clothes, and he was presi dent." The mother looked at the hoy. She had nothing to say, and in two minutes Stanley was chasing "p the alley with three of tlie ragged, dirty, but plucky urchins with whom lie was so fond of play i ng. Ciitfifii Trili um. Fain in the Side Dyspepsia. "I was troubled with a terrible pain iu my left side which the doctors said wits caused by neuralgia of tlie heart. As a last ho- I used Hood's Sarsapa rilla and have taken 4 bottles. I am entirely free from jain. I also had dysieps:a but I got U-tter every day and can now cat anything and my stomach docs not refuse it." Daniel A. llKIsrlt, Stcclton, Pa. Hood's Pills are the U-st after-slinner pills. Too Much Mouth. From the T;;iii!!i:oiy Timn. A New York gcntieinaii who has a remarkably large m mth, almost as ig as that of a river, but whose name we siippr.-ss out of regard for our own p r-oiial safety, was visited on his own birthday by a liiunVrof his little neph ews and n'ui-.-s. "Which of you all did your uncle kiss first ?" asked the mother on the return of thechililivu. "We all kissed him at the same time, rude has a nice big mouth, you know, mamma." A Sanitary Sng-f e3tion. The young man had stayed so long that sweet evening that he had talked every subject out except iiis health, and he 1'mally got around to that. "I don't know," he said, "why it is, but I am U-ginning to have that tired feeling we read of ill the advertise ment." "So am I," she responded rather heavily. "No?" he exclaimed repturotisly at the thought of a flvling in common. "I wonder why it is?' He looked at her tenderly. "Ih-ally," she murmured, "I can't say, but have you noticed the dock?" Taking No Chances. From ihf Wjisliiinrton slur. "Madam," said Meandering Mike, "I'm terrible hungry." "Poor man !" exclaimed the sym pathctic housewife. "I wanted to ask you t-f ye have any work thet I could dor' "Why, yes ; I could give you some thing to do." "Much obliged. I-staskcd fur in formation," and he moved along to ward the next house. Maud Frank Plutus 1ms propo-sil to Carrie, hut slie s;iys he has more nioney tiian brains. Kdith CarU- doesn't s-'ni to consid er that if he had more bruins than money it is not likely he would ever have proposal to lier. limtlim Triut- " Oh, mamma T' said four-year-old Annie, "the liaby's got a tooth upstairs iu its mouth." 3IATKI3IOMAL ITiOELEM. It Is One That la Sorely Perplex ing Match-MailnfflMcmmaa flow do men propose? Do men maka up their minds to marry or do they drift into marriage, so to speak? Does propinquity oropportunity bringalxmt greater number of proposals than does actual intention, asks the New York Advertiser. This is the problem that greatly perplexes mothers with lutrriageable daughters, and they aro at a loss to understand why it is that their daughters' admirers do not de velop into suitDis. The 'girls are pretty, well-dressed and of ages ranging from eighteen to twenty -eight, aud they experience no lack of attention from the men of their different sets men who ride, dance and play tennis with them and with whom they are on the best of terms. Mothers looking backward to their own girlhood are dismayed at the dif ference between the past and the pres ent, and ea'-h matron rem-mlcrs that she was wooed and won within, say, a feiv weeks of a first meeting, wheieas her daughters are still unsought after months of constant companionship. Is it that in former days men were im pulsivc as well as impressionable, aud that in these days they are impression able but not impulsive? Or i.s it that the comradeship that is now estab lished between young men and girls robs the situation of every shale of ro mance, while this footing of frank friendship induces girls to assume a sort of brusque, self-reliant, indepen dent bearing, the reverse of senti mental and confiding? This may ac count in some measure for the position that firls occupy toward men, but hardly sufficiently so to be the only cause for the gravity of t'ae situation. Anyhow, it is humiliating to their pow ers of attrac-tion to find that, after months of pleasant social intimacies, the most valued acquaintances cool off. From statistics gleaned from confi dences and careful observations, it may be laid down that very young men are less prone to propose from del i!e rat ion than are older men, youth and fancy going hand-in-hand as against experi ence and hesitation. On the one hand they fall in love, as the old-fashioned phrase goes, and propos?. Oa the other hand, they rather drift from lik ing into affection, bnt are not always ready to propose until some pressure is brought to lcar from without. This is, perhaps, one of the most delicate oper ations in social anatomy. Sometimes the father operates upon the heart and feeling of the laggard in love. This is rather an a-.vkward moment for both, but it generally results in a satisfao t -ry arra::g"iacnt of the matter and the propj.sa.1 is duly made. Many men require this paternal touch before tak ing the final leap. A mother's inter ference is rather resented than not, and she seldom ventures upon such an ex treme coarse. ' A warm-hearted mutual friend Is, perhaps, one of the best anxiliaries a girl can liave. She can say so much .for her and can say it so well, and she can hint at a preference, which is flat tering to most men if not to alL Ily the same token a mutual friend can do untold mischief and convert a dawn ing adiiiiration into a studied avoid ance. In her eagerness to thro-.v a couple together she rouse3 in one of thcui a fear of leing made ridiculous, most antagonistic to a sentiment akin to a proposal. It is not to much to say that otllcions kindness on the part of a tactless woman mars many a bud ding inclination, which, butor her in terference, might have resulted alto gether differently. Men verging toward forty, or even a little beyond it, often make premed itated proposals, actuated by various reasons, considering that if they do not marry at forty they are not likely to marry at all. They wish to settle down and enjoy their possess ioDS. They are matrimonial prizes and much coveted by mothers for their daugh ters. Men who have arrived at this age must have done one of two things either lived a society life and num bered all the young beauties among their acquaintances, or have come fresh from exile on mine or ranch, ready to propose to the first pleasing girl they happen to come across. They fall iu love at first sight and the pro posal is made within a week or so. Many proposals are the re nit of cir cumstances and arc surprising alike to both sides. They were not. nor ore. each other's ideals, but they drifted to gether nevertheless; these proi nsals cannot be called prcmeditat-d; they come about from the force of events, which often brings together the most A RARE OLD SILVER DOLLAR. X Wealthy rmlwlor llecomes Ownrr of tbo serenlli Know Cola ol 18 l. Until recently it was supposed that there were only six silver dollars of the 1S04 issue in existence. These were in the hands of rich coin collect ors c.r museums, and naturally were prized very highly. The last time an lsot dollar was sold at auction it brought twelve hundred or fifteen hundred dollars. James V. Ellsworth, who amuses himself by spending fifty thousand dollars or more a year in making additions to his various col lections recently came into possession of a seventh li(M dollar that has an interesting history, particularly so, as its existence was unknown. A negro in Alexandria. Va,, received the dollar from his dying father, who had kept it as a means of rcmcinlering the year he became a freedmun. The younger negro kept the coin for forty years, and finally sold it for a song to Julius Driefus, of Alexandria, Va. Mr. Driefus owed a large sum to Isaac Kosentlial. of !'J3 Ilerks street, Phila delphia, which he was not able to pny. He prevailed upon Mr. Rosenthal to take the coin for five hundred dol lars. Mr. Ellsworth learned of this transaction from a note iu one of the New York papers, and commissioned Superintendent IJosbyshcII. of the Phil adelphia mint, to buy the coin for him if its genuineness could be established. The dollar was rigidly examined by Charles E. Uarber, engraver of the mint. II. McClure, curator, and also by Superintendent Itosbysheli. Jacob IJ. Eckfeldt, assayer, and A. Loudon Snowden. all of whom pronounced the coin to be genuine. Mr. Ellsworth then sent his check for the purchase, completing his collection of American silver dollars. Ede-oiub, lle Was to llavo U-en the Hum of tlio Kxlfo! f'rloccs. There i.s a building in Edgveonib. an old square, white house, concerning which an interesting story is told, says the Iwisttin Journal. This tra dition is that at the time of the French revolution CapL Samuel Clough, the iwner of the house, who fcilcd a ship between Maine and France, was en gaged to bring to this country no less valuable treasure than the unfortu nate queen, Marie Antoinette, aud that quantities of rich stuffs, furni ture and silver were put aboard his ship for the use of the exile, whose destination was to have been this same house, which then stood in West port, it having been removed to tlie main land on a raft sixty years ago. It Is yet occupied by t'apt. dough's de scendants. . " One circumstance which lends coa--finnatiou to this story is that a similar legen I attaches to a house in Dorches ter, 'la .s., the famous Swan mansion, then owned by Col. Swan, who spent inu .h of his time in Paris, but who set tled HTLnanently in this country after the Trench revolution, his house being adorned ia princely fashion. Now Capt Clough aud CoL Swan had money dealings together in Paris, Capt. Clough in 17'JI having had a contract to purchase fifty thousand dollars' worth of lumber for the colonel. What more likely than that CoL Swan, who was a warm friend of Lafayette, should have engaged the Maine cap tain to aid him in a plan of such great importance as the attempted rescue of the French queen, with which he ia credit!, d. L01TY JIOl'NT LUG AX. For nearly a quarter of a century it was assumed tiint a splendid mountain lying near the sea, where the one hun dred and forty-first nicri-!i::n cuts the southern coast of Alaska, was th? highest on the continent of North America. The first civilized man to see this was Vitm Ik-ring, after whom the great sea recently invohed in in ternational controversy was named. F-ering first saw it oa July CO, 1711, and as St. Elias was the patron saint of that day the mountain received his name. Its summit is thirty or forty miles from the sea and at its foot is the famous Malisnina glacier, the greatest of its species in all the world. Mount St. Elias stanls nearly upon the Hist meridian of longitude west of Greenwich, which meridian forms the Kmndary between the great IhitLsh Alaskan peninsula and the Pritis.h pos sessions. In the execution of a survey for the determination of this boundary line it became desirable, therefore, to determine the location of this meridian at its southern extremity, ai 1 this in cluded, an accurate determination of the geographical position of "the sum mit of Mount St. Elias. Accor'.inciy the I'nited States coast and geodetic survey in lSDi sent a prrty. r.m'.cr the direction of J. 11 MctJrAth to the foot of the mountain for thh. work. An ex tensive series of obscrv-iti us was car ried out. including numerous measure ments of the angular elevation of the mountain as observed from various points. The distance of the summit from these points of observation was determined with an accuracy far ex ceeding any previous work aud the al titude of the summit was determined with a precision that h aves nothing to be desired- The mean of results ob tained from five or six in-h -pendent stations was ls.OiO feet, and no sin;la result uiiTcrs from this by more than ten feet. A variation in height in dif ferent seasons fully as great as this might occur through the varying depth of the snow which rests perpetually upon the greater part of the mountain. The announcement of this definite value for the height of Mount St. Elias made it necessary to revise conclusions which had long Wen accepted us to its position among the great mountains cf North America. It happened that j'lst at that time IS".1-"'J-J a new deter mination of the altitude of a famous mountain in Mexico v. as undertaken by Dr. J. T. Scovell. and was so suc cessfully carried out that the height of this mountain, t-" '.-i''-. b---ame known with a degree of ac.-tiraoy exceeding any previous determination. I!r. S-;o-vell's measurement gave f rthe hei,"ht of OrUu'-a H, :;.; feet, thus putting it nearly So-J feet alove Mount St. Llia.i. Only for a brief year or two. how ever, wus. (.riiiba destine 1 thus te- out rank its fellows of the far north, for in one of the companions of SL Elias a mountain has been discovered which, in altitude, ;-o far exceeds cither of the two recent disputants as to leave little probability that the glory of the first place iil ever again go to the south. The story is brieflv this, says the Chicago News: While Mr. McCrath's party was at Yakntat bay and else where in the nchrhlxirhood of Mount St. Elias. iu addition to taking hori zontal aud verdical angles on that peak, all other prominent peaks in that vicinity were observed upon, thus accumulating material for the calcula tion of their heights and distances. Among these was a group of three summits, possibly belonging to the same mountain, which had been : cen by most explorers in that quarter, and the great height of which Lad especi ally attracted the attention of Ka.-o.ell. Concerning it he said: "The clouds parting toward the northeast revealed several ciant peaks Cot In-fore seen, some of which seem to ri'.al he'., l.t SL Elias itself. One stranger, rising in three white domes far above the clouds was especially magnificent." In honor of the founder of the geo logical survey of Canada Uusm-U named this Mount Logan. For some months Mr. Mctlrath has been en gaged ia she reduction of all observa tions made by his party in the St. Elias region. On computing the dis tance and height of Mount Logan his astonishment was great to find that the altitude of the mountains was I'j.sw feet. At first he was inclined to at tribute the result to erroneous compu tation, but a careful revision disproved this theory. Fortunately there were two entirely independent stations from which this raountaia ha 1 been observed, the distances and vertical angles Iseing quite dinVrcnt. The re sulting heights from those two widely separated stations diller by less than twenty feet, being VJ,VH feet and 1'.', 514 feet resjiectively. An observation was also made on another of the three peaks somewhat lower than the first, giving for its height 10.-J".5 feet- It thus appears that there can be little doubt that Mount Logan is 1..V.-0 feet higher than Mount St Elias. The fact that it isabont twelve miles nearer the points from which they are usually ob served has enabled the latter to main tain a superiority, which was only ap parent for so many years. Mount Logan is about l.io-t feet hieher t'iau Orizaba, and. whatever discoveries may be made in the future, it seems likely that tiiC credit of possessing the highest peak on the continent must henceforth remain with the far north A FRIEND SrM-nkj tkronch the Kootlihay (Me.) Bt fitter, ot Hie l-ei.eCci:.l results Im- lias rroeived fruni a ri-rilar kv of Arrr's Piili. Hajrs: -1 r.-. !.--:ii's i,-k ami tired aiat my Mi-marh vemiNl all out of onler. I trU a niimler nf r"im-iliM. hut none wotnrcl to pim m reii.-f i-.n il I lrl! t-l to try tlie old re!ia I'ie Ayer-s li!!. I have taki-n only one !i -x. lint I f.-el liUt a new man. I tliius they an? Wif nit I'l 'jtml ni.d easy to talteof iiythine I ever 1-eine v finely stigar-.-.miffl t!:::t t-Vfn a cliiM wiil take thenu I nr: -uiM.n ail w!i..-.re in neo-l of a laxative t'jr Aver's IM!. Tliey will i!o govl." I'r disra- oi lUr stomach. I.ivrr, ml ll.iifls, tak AVER'S PILLS n-j.ar.-.-Sv :r. J C. Ay.-r SCn.. t.o- II. Mak. -..-ry rose Effective tR Jr. 4) 7 with-' c- o. xzr r: !bun,t.mir nm-fVea ilia. ' ;! k If f IrA f w r i STIVENSCN COjOL sv; fail1"1 - Furnaces.- ACTIVE FORTUNE RANGES Plso's Remedy fur Catarrh H the Bit. Ecsh-at to re, sad Chespeat. U Sold by DrisTltucs or sect by msC Kc. 5. T. llMciUcf. Wsrrca, Fs. 13 J? 13 I DO not be deceived. The following' brands of White Lead are still made by the "Oil Dutch" process of slow cor rosion. The tre sUr.dord, and Strictly Pure White Lead The r.-cc;r:ir.cnduilcn of "Ar:H3tTor.s & McKelvy," " Beymer-iJauman,"' " Davis Chambers." "Fafcnt-tcck," to you by your merchant is an evidence of his reliability, as he caa sell ycu cheap ready-mixed painta and bogus White Lead and make a larger profit- Many short-sighted dealers do so. F"-K Coioas National Lud Co.'t Pur Whitt l aJ 1 u.la-y Colors, a or.e-poumj can to a as-pir..! k-; ol Ix-jd an-l mt vair wn patina. Snvs unit: and anno-aucc in matching -MbACr. a:- :.tes the L.u imt Utal it is l-us ;:: U ft:t i n mckaI. SrtiJ a po-Uil i iril an.! prt our book on pa mis auil oi;.i-iaiU, fr-r; u w.U irulibly ytru a k-am1 suaiiy liwiiais. NATIONAL LEAD CO . Yolk. P ltbarir Bran. h. German National iiaiik EuilUm FiUsbcrg. cwEATS.TRADE MiaKsJf C0PYFUGHTS. 1 OHTUt A PATFXT? Fat rr.m.pt irwiT a:1 n bmn t f.ptnt(H. write to M t NSiVHL who have had nearly t'tt t Twir' t4n strl.-tlT twtfltlfiiii!. A llanrftMiwk ul !o f(rfTnalMn conimiof ratrtiiM aiit bw to otu tin tbera tnt fn-m. A?o a catalogue oi iucnii leal ntl nci! ttift lrv-l(i fK-Dt r-. Ftnt tfcn throtutti Mtiim Co. rerelT ivvithe Srirpf.Hi- Amrrirnn. mnJ thou re tntht vuJf'T lMrfrtiie pubtcwuii out to tia friTrnt.-r. Thu M'"r.dil MKT, U'-vest cirrtatiu of rf cieotiac work iu tia Baiidirjc E-l:tio, mr.if.lT. frinffl ftpie. ."i cents. r'Tery nuniiwr er ntaitt beau tiful piatetv, in colon, and botnrmphs of new hou!. with ptan.t, en.nb.inK baIrttra to t rnw tM itt fttirns and Mnir otrarts. Artdivs ML'NN JE CO, MvW Ii'uujm U01 BoaiWA DOLLARS PER fVIONTH En Your Own Locality ma.lc easily and honorary, witliout capi ta!, (Ir,rit! your spare hours. Any mail, W iiiii.iii.liny. or c-;tndo tiie unrk h:iiil iiy, witli'fUt -xn-rio!irf. Talking uu-liorc.---.-iry. Notiiin like it fur inoney-makiiitit-viToiri-rt-tl U fore. Our worker ahvny- pro-;-r. No time w:ir-ti-il in learning the businos. We teacli yon in a niulit how t :;m-cc-e.i from the first hour. You can make a trial without cx pene to yoiiisclf. We start you, furnish evciytliiu iii--i!-d to carry on tlie busi ness suc-es-fn!!y, r:id '.larantee you against f.:i!:ne if ynu biit follow our siiu;jf, l-i.iiil iri.liiutioiis. I!.-atler, if you are in nexl of n-:nly tnoni-y, and want to know all alo:it the best fayin? biisUL-3 lrfore the public, send us your a.Itlress, and we w:U mail yon a docu ment giving you ail the i.arikiilars. TRUE & CO., Box 400, Augusta, Maine. IKE any OT J STRinTLY For FAMILY Use. Propped on tuenr snucrinjf children love to take iu Every Mother bhotiid have it iu tl-e hotio. it quickly relieves t:I cur- all aches ni paiu, asthma. lrot:cbtu. colds, cotihj c.UTTh, cuu.'cUap-;. clniLlaiti-. ct!ic. cholrra morbus, earache, hea-iache. fcoopin ccuj:h. iniiain:ii-atioa, la gripi-e. lnment, mtinp-, muscular orene.-s, neuratrria, nrvoei fae.fU ache rlienmaUsin, rtte, burr. rn:ics. strain, sprains, sriu, swelltns. e:it joints ort- Ihrtit, ore !unr, tuothache, tousi;itU and wind colic. Originated in i":o by the late Vr. A. Johnwn, Family Fhwicinn. Its merit c. :d excellence bav sati:lrd everybKiv for rcariv n cet.tnry. All wliouseitareariiazcd at it-.v-nuJrr.ul t r. It ii safe. fyHuili)?. sav-fvin; t-O vv svlc, eusiuve fiuiferers. V-ed Inte.-ai.Iaud LUtrrai TS IVrtori "SirMtan nd ar-cns on evry L-xila. What is this anyhow It is the only bow (ting) which cannot be pulled from the watch. To be haJ only with Jas. lkss Filled and otutr watt It cases stamped with this trade mark. A posUI aill bring job a atch cast opsns. Keystone Watch Case Co., PHILADELPHIA. MINOT'S o o DENTiFF.ICE. 3autifie3 the teeth, preserves thz gums. Sweetens the Breath. Bene fits the Throat. SAFE AND AGREEABLE. Ertrybody oe it. Everybody nraises It. Tbe Trcth. .clhing tvr.t liccr-J .trn th 1 - in v qutckly and tslrlv as Misktt lSKr I. km It is free Irom ai.!. nt ani oil daa-p-t'ias subtunces. and cn be utlwidl plcn result, even wticrc UK lcctl seem iilctt ia spiciiucs. It whitens and polishes Tlit enamel beautifully. Tbe Gums. Soil anil spcrpy rums inter? -rt- wittl the nu:th by preeu!!n U:e ( rcper use ol teeth, rrud.r tbe tt-r-lh lit-i-ltlhtlT ml Clibs-de raV bf shrinking lt.--ai t!.e rnameL Min,7's 1'kmukki is a ccit.tiu catc K'r auuetthy It hardens and pr-;ive J The gumi periccily. Ths Brenth. M rjfar'i l)inTtiK- nr.-etn.tihs breath, fifivluces the viulct-nkc .! hh is so siiTcmire o nntuu anj cleanlme-M. jnj leaves a sweet pute ta.tr tu the mtMith. Its sjuud om the throat is ptruliails tec.-u-.al Zt sweetens the bteath And strenKthcna the threat. 5ie and Aff-eeable-. tu compnnetits :r- per fect.? urs and harmless. aJ ; re tfi-9 het k riowa touM. for the svulh an.1 gums. hitens t.'ie teeth wi-h-it in oy to the ecnnirl. and is t.le beu Dentifrtce that can b: used. It is ab . soiutely puie to quality. pmmjA in e3Hrt, eaa ills' to use and surtrriMnKtv liw r:cci. Zt is absolutely safe TJader all clrcnntataaces. Price as Cents per b-tile. Sol 1 hr .lme.-nts fenerallr. or scut u vaiy sOUscss ou nceipt il S3 ccuu. SOi-S rOS-.iSrOaia. w;nx:lmnn a brown drug oo. BALTIUOHC. Ul, U. 3. A. the FARGUHAR PATENT VARIABLE BICTIX, FEED. SAW MILL & EFIGHit SKXT ssT sOBSs I. TMK SlHtLS. TsrrsS rs jeM Hiss. Snnila Sttta, Mvanssry, m4 t ulirt smmural lapte- ssli tt Sea. Mluj as ksat pri Majfirai r,taNiia n. r Mistt tUmt t eaifaca. Jl. E. J XUiH HaBCO LU.,lort,.a. r Liniment imffl g-.- r'.-.-:a, SkV, - - -" unJ i S t H ta-oesT capactTv t - I at r-?A U'l . "5 4btaS M CTsbtsV rens rsna. THE PEOPLE'S STORE. Come ! Or Write ! ! For !I.e greatest Uirtfaius in new Summer Silks ever niT--rel in tl . r-i?i'f'rh-l ! A silk ciNrlnnity tliu like of hit-h you haveiM-vt-r won! Thrte prii-o nh'ak for tht-iiirielvP!! Come, or senl fwr muii-1-s. an-1 the ju:ilitifS an.l Btyli-a will si-iik Ht ill more clearly ! 100 Putt f Printcl Clina Si!ks in ifeat varit-ty of Jutttt-nm itiul col- o orings, t tht" g've away price of iIC 7 I'iff of 22 inch Lynns Print eil In-iia Si!kx, i lat-st Paris si-.'iis, in stri-s, oik:i dots; a!s- nicitiimi ami larjie utterns; rt-'U oq lar iiia!ity, at C ."0 pit ti cf Piititod Surah ?ilks, ir siua1!, nfat jmtu rm au.l i!:tioty col'irinj.-s ; a n-:il buniiiiiT ut OOC To riit-s of 24 inch Cliiita Print-elt-iits, i: t-x.i'-.i-i ti- ik.-itfrs uii.Iqq oi'.oriu.; a tv:iutrk::Me Uirutiin Oi7C (y Pi.-ivsof 21-in.-t; fine Pi int-il Imlia Silks, iinportvtl to reiail at . fl; tLLt lot only 170 2i pii--. of fatin Durht-s' in all tht-r.i-i-.s' an-1 um-t (it sir.il.'t-r-r ali:i'li-s; t:ie n-ular (1 -luaiity, attJcC t.-'rixl Yar.'s .f C'lii-nt-y ton.' 27 inrh Pr'.ntisl lntiaSi!LV; ullfv eryw ht-re at Jl a yrl; our priiv f..r this rule " lOC Equally great values in WOOLEN DRESS GOODS. Values ami nty't-s that will psty you t romeanil sit-or write t ils alont. We willtiiakeit worth ynar while to hiy-mr shopping ut this store. Summer Suits. The tit. style, tpulity anl pri-v ofonrsniis all fi s t: li-iiiniistnite that ill "n-j-ly I" wear'' suits we le;i.l, as w" always h.te iline. Wash Knits at f 1 JV", f 1 .7'; f 2 j' janii up. Wo. .1 Sifts frootfl up to .ish::,'h as you wish to pay. Our Mail Or-h-r IVi.iirti!i-nt w ill si-rve you as well as if y.m d me t- the stor.-. Tr- it: Campbell & Smith, Successors of Camplicll t Dick. 8U3.85.8U83 Fill Ateilr, PITTSBURG. GOOD LIQUORS! and Cheap Liters Uy falling at the OM krhahie Li'pi-r Store, .309 Xain St, and 106 (liulcn Ht, Johnstown, l3a., all kinds of tlie ehoi.-est liquors in mar kt t t-tn I- li:nl. To my ol-l custom ers this U a we!l-kiuw-ii fat-1, an.l !) all otiitTs t-invini-iiii? proof will U iiiveit. I hurt fnrir-t that I kvp oil lialul the v'feaU-st variety of Liquors, the choieest hraiul- ami at the Iov.t-t pl'ii-es. P. S. FISHER. W. S. BELL & CO. 431 W0( St., fiiPITTSBURGH I'KALKK IX PHOTOGRAPHIC CTippi irC VIEW CAMERAS. OUIILILO, DETECTiVE CAMERAS, anil ttu- tinnMis KODAK -vi-i: siyli-s Wrile fur ctilalii-u-. I nr. CURTIS K. GROVE, SOMERSET, PA. linjriries, SUiirhs, Sprinir Wajrons, t'arriasjes, liiit-k Wa.oiis anil Ha-tern ami Wes-era work fiinii.-hel on short iiotiee. Pahti-g 2:n9 Siwt Had: Mi wrli i- !ii".(ln of Tlnnrtiiiitv si-i--il 't t! Kil l III" !r, ;.n,i t- Slll- fiauti,' liy .n,i.tniitfl. ri-:i'Jy lin.-ii -.1 uiitl w.irniuU-l tusivf .ii.lh-ih-!i. Eap!o7 Caly nrst-Clisi Warkasa. H .lrinj ifa!l ki:ul in tuy tin:' cl.m im sliiirt imlicc. l-ri-s ttiii.iiutlili ami al! work Call ainl examine my Stock ami h-arti prii-.-s. I tlo wairoii-wurk, an.l fur nish sieves fur Wtini Mills. lU-nti m U r the phut-, ami t-all in. CURTIS K. GROVE. Som rt?t. Pa. CONDENSED TIME TABLES. Baltimore and Ohio Railroad. Somerset and Cambria Branch "t..KTll'VHI. J.ilinstowu Mall Frprvs. It.-kw-l S:i a. iu.. smiii-rsi-i 4: lis. Mny,-o n lij, lim.v- 1'O.vllli- .Via. Ji.lili-ti ii i:lil. Jtuilu n Mail I-pri-s. .lt.M-kwiuHl lHi) is. in., r-sniii-r-..! ll:j.k. s.tiivis.twti 11'. H.hiv- tr illi- lJ:-i, Jiitiii-.tiu-u i'J:.V p. tiu Juht:-i!iu ti Ai-i-iiniiiHMlafion. KN-kwMl V i". i. siiii-rsi ! 11:10 s.i tnwu ti: Itmiv- i-rsviil itili, JiIi1isUivi-ii 7:W. D.iil.v. Kill THW Attn. M.iil. Jhiiliwn ssrrtii t. iii., H-.vi-rsvilIi-T:lt. STovis-tiiurii 7i Siiiii.tsi'1 7-Vi, Ki-kwiMHl S:Jli Kri-is. JnliiiHt.iwn p. m., l!Hv-rivtlli-.VII. M.ii.iiiirn ijfi, rim-rss-t k SVIMnI 4:Sk SuiiiIiiv t inly. I.iIhi-Iowti til, S, .i,,,t.-i Hia'kwoiKl KXNSYLVAXIA KAII.IU AI. CaSTIRN STAN0AN0 TIKI. nSIKSsKI S I1KI1-LE. Tmlns arrivi- mi.l tli rt froin llu-siatlnu at J.hr-tiu'ou isA roiloM ji: WtsrWA RD r-Mnillivsti'm Ksi-n-is. W inli-ni Krvw Ji!iu?i:iihii A i r-itiiiniMhi; AiiMltiiiiiHLili.ilt fl Kx;nw Wuv l-:i.ssliKi-r Mill .. J.!iii--timil .oiil:iiin.l;tli.iu...... l axt lam- bastw van. K-yione F.x(r.- s.M.lnrv Kiiin-k. A It.Hinai Ai-isiiinii.titiiHi M tin I Jin Kxi-n-ss . lhiy K r AltiMiiut Artiiiintiinlution Mnil Kxpris Jolmstuu'it Ai'i-HiitiiiMlutitii l'hijil.'lilius Kxrtni..... Kust Hue ... 4: 'i m. .... " .... .iu .... tf:J ' 1 C- - .... .'.:! - .... - f p. n. 'XX . in. -cl - H Jl am; ..11: Hi 4:11 .. l: Vi p. m. . 7 I Fim-nit-. inntM, Arn ri lo Ti--kcl A?.-nt ir u.l.l -I-t . Lr II.... I. . .1- a. . A--ini I'm-liurv. II. K. M. I'revisit. J. It. Vim1. Jtu'l Muiiarft-r. iKu'l I'ui. A-i QUEENS l -iTt a. i -r- IIP i.-.-JT?ye- 'SrrTfp QUICK TO ACT! EASY TO BAKE 2 V.,fa. tutv,l hv IH IIAVKX A JAIES B. II0LDERBAUM, Somerset, P2 Kri.-ii?er& Kurt. ISerlin, Ta., ml I. J. 1-v. r Mm, -M.-y i-l ,!,, ?x New York Weekly Tribune Somerset Herald ONE YEAR. TWO JDOTjTjJLZIS. AiKlrer? all orders Louther's Drug Store, Main Street, Somerset, Pa. This Model Dmg Stcreis Rapidly Bussing aGr::: .ia, s?i PfiASStlfl im f FRESH AND " U afaf Supporters, Perfumes, &c. THK DiH-roK OIV.2S 1-F.KS.iMAL AITKNTH.S Tu THK ll.f M-IMi V Low presenilis oiii'T r vi:k keivo takks to i sf. om.t fkksh aji it kf. .p.Tn i.rs. SPECTAOLEsS, EYE-GLASSES, And a Full Line of Optical Goods alwaj3 on Land. From suJ large assortment all can be suited. THE FffiEST BBAHDS OF CIGABS Always on hand. It is always a pleasure to display our gooc to intending purchasers, whether they buy from us or elsewhere. J. M. LOUTHER M. D. MAIN STREET - - SOMERSET. PA Somerset Lumber Yard elias c ucisnisrGi-iAM, M isi r inruKS ami If.alkk and Wuoi.ksai.k am ItirrAiLKK Lumber and Building Materials. Hard and Soft "Woods, Oak, Poplar, MIitiK. Walnut, Yellow I'inc, Flooring. C'berrj, Milnsleti, Iioor, I.alb. While Tine UlinU, A nt-r.i! tiitt-.f :tll ru !. if I.;nn V r .:n! lisiil liru Materia! an.l KMifiii l.it- k'-W 8 si. k. A I-, rtui furiitli anyt in liar ur Iniiiit"? lr l-r with n-.if'-r !! irsiiiiiiu'v-s u--h Hn k' t til-.iy.t-il urk, lc. Elias Cunningham, OOlce anl Yard OppDsite S. Jt f. K. R. IT WILL PAY YOU Ts HL'Y Yl'l K lIiMiiorial Work WM. F. SHAFFER, S-.MKllKT. rHXN A. M.inur.ii-turvr t and r in Kati-rn Wi.rii Kurni-liol on !iort Nnt-.i MiSBLE m EMII1E MI. Al-N A'. nt fur the WHITK 1;I;i iZK l'.-rviHi-t in luvit 11 M.iaimi.-iit Work will tlii.l it lo llulr inl.-ni to c:ill at niv lni wli.-n- a nMT tnwin; will u- eiv. ii Hmhi. S .-NiIlLii-ti'-n uuanintisil in i-vvrv i-it-.-. uii-l rmi-iviTj Im, 1 in . lie -ii-nl uili-mioii III Hi.- Whit Bronze. Or Pur Zino Manumant liitnuluii-i hy ll.-v. W. A. Kiiiif. h a (. i.l.il lmpni-iiM'tii in i in. iMiint i.f Mm, ml un.! 'iiiilrti-llili.sliil wlm-h l it.-.tin..l ft In- lln iiiilar Mmiuiiii nl Hir i liuni.-iili- I li-iimU-. liivr uj is nsll. W3I. F. SHAFFER, . S Br-- jskjw'v Mm Condition It Is nhanhitai- nr. Ti nl. . iM i . In qim.ei ,i r.-ss te'lhu jr. I au. ,r m -, .t- l.nr . ivl n, -l i s...iv l J'T svsurvaplai. uaus"as.Si:MUsisvs-. ll Uj isri.;.aj. gruoer. aj (.a ilaslsrs kiuUMSM'1"'' It You Can't Cet It Hear Home. Send to Us. Ask First Us. bus l-a- IH-.- s- tsil . -., s-s i. i. U.w) e. to., ; LassvSB UamTmX s.1'. Ask Any Woran! the CinJon-na I;an,,e . it.- aJvantae? are over t!.e '- " cookin? raiiire and slie wi! tt-liT .i if.-. t.i ' :' mai it is an e.eu naiver, tirovrji., ly on top bnJ liottom, and Uecf'. fcal ii tc use of tue!. It dam it. work qiiciker, ly and witli the lrat eip.sf any Itange apoa the market. Their Economy Sim hs Co., I.t.t., I'j:!.. S-H jt'wrai.t.r.1 ! v AND to Tiie Herald. PURE DRUGS. J M. J 7 ' Toilet Articles, rUkrt, 91uldiax Sai.li. Himr Hulls Italnnter!. ClieMtnub Xewel I'oclis, Klo. Station, SOHFIMT fl. EisiijAs'J El wi.iii-r w 1 lH ill i-'- scentis-iS is f Resins: FsUi sUCTICALLYPn ten iSMSMU Over SOO Ceautiful Designs. Prir e ' til Crci' ' 5 mus-m. rrf..-M I . ; i t cr, . ' M0KUMNTL PRCXZ? f 0"- HataaXiSPClssr. CC.1 .' eep Chickens Strong .inJ hralihv: it ccts vour pu!Vts to t;" T7-T AMtiril.- -s. Family Recent! 1 I I . sjain? early; it is worth iu uc-S-.t in g- "E-3?fcsvk'.cn hens moult : it prevents alt c; Cholera. Roup. Liarrhia. Lc-r-weakr.c-ii .' WILL ml U I IK "HromV s. - -f illiL CQNQIT10M POWC ??4TTierefire, no matter what ltinJ cf tJ you uc. m:x wit!, it dai:y M.t-ritv- I owdcr. Otherwise. yi:t yzw-i full an J u inter will be when t.e price for ci;;: is very hiyh. It a---5"- perfect assitr.ilatinn cl the food elcnKr.3 rtedcil to crtxluce health and form tgf . u . . . . . . t.Mtfrc-1-