c 7 i 1 1 t j if:! Ml N 5 M : I U TERillOL She Saw Her Little Girl That Will Touch the Heart 01 Every Mother. Some Instances, too, of Neuralgia It is a jym the Journal, Detroit, Mich. A T7 prateful mot her in Mrs. A. L. ITart noss, of ?). Jranily Av.nuc, Ivtrvit, f th wonderful cure which ber dauphttr has re ceived by the use of Ir. Williams' Pink FilK Said Mrs. Hanaess: " Yes, .ny daugh ter's life has been saved ly nxing Pink Pills, thanks to a kind friend who recommended them to me. " Blanche was Kirk for over three yearn. She had the care of the best physicians pro curable, and no exnent "r trouble was spared to Rive her ivlief. She was so thin that the was feiriv skin and bones, her dign tmn was out of onb-r and she had the most awful headaches. We pave up all hope of her recovery. Her Jon:;, thin, listless face made me nearly crazy, and we did evTythiiiir in our power to five her strength and induce her to take an interest in anything. "One d.iv a friend told me about Pink Pills, and Mr. Hartnesg w.-ut down town and pot three Iwxes. She had taken atut one box, when to mv amazement, one moraine I heard her playing on the piano. I could hardly believe it, for it had been over a year since the piano had leen opened. "Soon she liecan to take short rides on her bicycle, and soon she went sinirine around the boiise, our own happy, hearty, little daughter once more. She thinks nothine of a spin on her wheel over to Mu Clemens or I'ontiac, aud is as well as she ever was. "I had a rirl livinjr at onr house who was a trrmt sufferer from impoverished blood, and who received instant and permanent relief from the use of one I Kir of the pills. "If this information can le of any ose to help some poor, sick one, it is given with the greatest of pleasure." SEXRAIXilA SO U)CER TERROR IZES WOMEX. A Story of Twi Waatra. From the Evening Timet, Buffalo, .V. Y. Women have no lnnper need to fear that dread enemy Neuralgia. tHenee has eon- Suered. and woman is relieved of a (Treat bur en of pain. Prominent among the many who stand as living testimonials to the new remedy and its efficacy in eurimr neuralpia is Mrs. Pi.iinski. a widow lady who lives with her father. Christ Steltzer, in a pleasant home jut beyond Gowanda. BelieVine her experience would prove of wide interest amoDg women, a reporter railed at her house. Seat-i in the cosy little parlor, furnished in true country style, Mrs. Polinski told the re porter her story. I am nM a sick woman as yon can readily aee," she said, and I never have leen. I do not like newspaper notoriety and have never had my name in the papers lefore. I would certainly not say a word this time, but I think it is my duty to tell women what I have found. " I used to be troubled with frequent bead aches. Tney were not serious I think they must have been neuralgia but they were just bad enough to. make it decidedly un pleasant for me. I was able to work, but in a sort of a listless fashion. " I heard of Pink Pills made bv the Dr. William' Company and was persuaded to try them. I did so and now all is changed. I have not had a headache in manv months and have such faith in the pills that t do not think I ever will again. They did me a world of wd and I knov they will do as much for other women." OharW S. Phelps, the well-known Go wnda druggist whose pl4r of business is on Vain Street, said to tiie reporter that be had THE OVERLOADED FARM- Too 11 neb. Ground is as Unprofitable as too Much Live Stock. To many acres on a farm is claimed one-of the curs the farmer has le--ause he must cultivate morelaiul than is iKfVA'jiry in order to obtain a crop that might lie gotten front less land niton w hich all of the manure can be a'lvatitueouly spread; but too much land is no worse an infliction than too much tock of an inferior kind, yet Lundrcdsof farmers feed animals that jrive no profit because they will not procure good breeds and grade up their 1-tock. When land is badly infested with wire worms, cut worms, root boreiv, etc., pMw the land, then plow again late in the fall, after frost appears, fol lowing by another plowingearly in the spring. Ily so doing the lan will be kept loo.-e and the insects and other enemies which remain in the ground for the next year will lie destroyed to a large extent One of the most useful appliances on a firm nd which costs but very little oomparAl with the many uses to which it can le put, is the windmill. It grinds food, provides water for stock, andean be used for irrigating small plots. They are now lieing adopted for .uriosesof irrigation on many large farms, two or more windmills being - tuflicictil to till a large reservoir and keep a constant supply of waU-r. The odor of the hog pen is very diss greeable in summer, and yet it can K av,:d 'l by cleanliness. The time has jim.- l wheu liit'uy food is regarded as suitable f-r fwino, and fanners have pai I dearly for experience by loss of f ieir herds from hog cholera, (.'lean th pig p?n every day during the warm days of summer and throw dry dirt on the floor. iry earth is an alis-orbeiit and its use daily makes it an easy matte;- to clean the pen. Strawberries are now throwing ot:t runners, and the rows should le kept clean, as recent rains will aid the woods to crowd out the runners. The ground should le loose aud soft for the runners, as they will get a much better st irt on soft ground and grow rapidly. If rutmers are set out in August or ear ly in Scptemlier, it will save perform ing such work in the spring. The farmers should not allow the pastures to be gruzl too closely. It is p ssih:e to destroy the trass entirely by keeping it constantly pastured, as grass tuut have an opportunity to re new its roots and make growth. Veid will spring tip on any land j thutTsnot cultivated. If the land is not waMed for a crop the weeds will sc'.d m ba destroyed, and they send out sx-eil-i bnKidcast and double the work of the farmer next year. When farmers take an interest in od roads and cease objecting to them ; en account of an increase of taxes, they : will find that not only will thev save lalior but the farms along the roads win improve in apiearanoe aud lecome j more valuable, as good roads lead to or- j numeiiUtiou and indues th resi-! d.-nt- along the lines to make the farms j omparewith the, mads. Creamery butter is superior to that made on the farms liecause the cream cries are fitted with all the latest appli ances for producing butter of uniform ' quality. The fanner cannot oomtM-te with the creamery because be has not the facilities for so doing. Individuals, however, who make s specialty of, choice butter, and who are supplied ' with all thut assists iu the lc&st-ning of i E ORDEAL OF A MOTHER Fading Away-A Story the Modern Treatment for Woman's Disease. a large sale for the Pink Pills. " They are a popular medicine," be added, ana uo mucn II It Freeman, of N'o. 97 Mam Street, Springville, X. Y., the well-known aud popu lar photographer, was called upon by an other Timet reporter who leami-d that he haj likewise heard something about Pink Pills and their efficacy in curing neuralgia. " Yes, he said, in answer to questions, my was iresilv benefited by the use of Ir. Williams Pink Pills for Pale People. She does not like newspaper notoriety, ana so i do not like tosav mucn on me sunjeci. WW wu her ailment. Mr. Freeman T" " Widl. nartlv neuralgia, but that will do. I will not euter into details, and what I have said must suffice- Just put in your paper for me that she was greatly benefited; cured by the pill when doctors tailed and let it go at that. The remedy was recommended to her bv Mrs. Dean Jones, ot tins place w ho, i n .lMnnd was also iTea.1v lienefited. I will Im pleased to tell anybody who calls all about the pills." . At Prior's drug store, Springville. it was -1 -i .i i? r ik. it-; it rsnir saia tuai mey sen iumic ui " Pills than anv other patent medicine. Ir. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People r nnt n. nxtent medicine, but are a thor oughly scientific preparation, the result of years of careful stuitv on tneparioi an emi- nent grauuate ot jhuiii .mhiiihi vom-r-, M.mtreal. and of Kdinhurg I'lliversity, S-"t- land. and they were successfully used by him in liia vervdav nractice for Tears before be ing offered "for general sale. The merit of Dr. Williams' Pink I'Hls is attested ny me hundreds of marvelous cures they have wrought in all parts of the country, and now their sale far exceeds that of any other pro prietary medicine. This is thebest test of th fact that Dr. Williams' Pink Pills perform all thcirniakers claim for them, and in seeking an effective nerve food which would nourish, without over-stituulatinfr. and would build op naturally the wasted, flabby and diseased nerves, and which would at the same time vivr. a sukuIt of blood at once purer, richer and redder, "and more capable of carrying nutriment and oxygen to every nerve and muscular fibre of the lody, Dr. Williams struck at tlie root of all disease, and it is em inently proper, therefore, to give a list of the disuses lor wnicn iiiigpn-paraiiou wimeuucu, which we do herewith: All diseases arising from a poor and watery condition of the blood, such as pale and sal low comolexion. general muscular weakness. 1r of appetite, depression of spirits, lack ft ambition, ana-mia. chlorosis or green sickness, palpitation of the heart, shortness of breath cn slight exertion, coldness ot naiKis or wet, swelling of the feet or lirohs. tain in the lawk, iDmuiB hilai4i (lirririHsK Iiins of niemorv. fW-blencss of will, ringing in the ears, eariy de-ay, all forms of female weakness, leucor- rh'tsi. tardy or irregular periods, supression of menses, hvsteria. paralysis bxvmotor ataxia, rheumatism, sciatica, all diseases de pending on vitiated tin mors in the Mood, causin? scrofula, swelled glands, fever sores. rickets, hip-joint diseases, hunchback, ac quired deformities, decayed Imnes, ehronio erysipelas, catarrh, consumption of the bowels and lumrs, and l-o for invigorating tha blood and system when broken down by over, work, worry, disease, excesses and wdiscre tions of living, recovery from acute diseases. such as feveri, etc., loss of vital powers, per matorrho'a. early decay, premature old age. They act directly on the blood, supplying to the blood it life-giving qualities by assisting it to absorb oxygen, tnat great supporter ot all organic life. Pink Pills are sold by all dealers or will be sent post paid on receipt of price (50 cents a box or six boxes lor yj.irtJ they are never sold in bulk or by the 1UU) by addressing Dr. Uiiama' Medicine Co., Schenectady, T. Ialnir, can usually secure better prices than is obtained for creamery butter. There is a difference of at leut 10 in the value of a well-fed grade steer and one that is a scrub. The first may give a profit, but the other rarely does so, .(ecaiise it cannot le possibly gotten to that condition for market in which it will be considered "choice." Quality can only be secured by breeding from animals jMssc.ing characteristic essen tial to the production of the article de sired. When stock animals have the free usef-f a pasture it will be greatly to their advantage to give them salt. It is a corrective of the injurious effect of too much young grass, and Ls also a substance required by them to promote digestion. A small quantity of salt once a day will he highly relished. A lawn is more ornamental to a resi dence than shrubbery, and is easily made, but there is nothing more un sightly near a dwelling house than a lawn that is not well kept. Il.t.'v s. lil. mi :it':. l; shu n ifotie mem U-rofthe ibx-k has a MI, as sheep killing dogs are suspicious aiid disiike the iioiseor alarm, lireeuers who have tried 1-clls retort favorably to their use. IVt in the turnip crop now, as the raias have made the condition verv favorable. A crop of turnips will le fouud a wry ueful addition to the winter foods. Cabbages require good working in order to produce fiue heads. ThestB' son has lieeu excellent for cabbage, and late plants have already !een set out. The more they are hoed and cultivated the better they thrive and to allow grass or weeds to grow among them is to ie idee the si.e of the heads. n t DOCTORS ' OFTEN FAIL To cure disease because they attack the disease itself without thinking; of the cause. Back ache, lame back, stomach troubles, dizziness, for instance. are all every-day symptoms of kidney troubles can t be cured except by bringing the kidneys back to health and vigor. DOAN'S KIDNEY PILLS frequently cure diseases of these delicate organs after all else has failed. They are the natural enemy of every form of kidney disease. One Pltt-hnrger who has been blee4 by them fe (.eor F. Chnrt, of the firm cf Chri S hffcr. asne Butler street. He suffered from kidney trouble, for ix years. "Theiini In m trk were xrry severe at times." he said a U w days bo. "While stooiaug over my work they would catch me w severclr sometime that I would imoC drop. The ;im were almnst constant. I never teemed to rrt rented. Mr urine wss bady affected. I nrd dotent of sn-cailed renwdifc, mt sot no reiief unul I saw Ixn's kidney 1111s ad Tertis -A and rt box at Fleming' drug store The rt few doses pave me relief, and ins short time I wss romfletelT cured. The rs sn.t was simp! wooierful. "sj j enndiUon to dr i rpectlr healthfuL I am recommend ing Ins kidnejr Pills lo all my friends." Don's Kidney Pills CMt S Csats at mny Drwgstsrs. Foster-Kilburn Ca., CLAY DISAPPOINTED. HIS DEFEAT FOR THE PRESIDENTIAL NOMINATION IN 1839. Th Fart Takes by Thnrlow Weed and Botsm Ore ley A Plot Admitted Bow tb SewaAor Kctied th ws of tb CeaveattloBi's Actios. The Whig convention of 1839 was held in a new Lutheran church in Har risbnrg, and it is a safe assumption that never before or since has a house of God been made the scene of so much and so adroit political maneuvering as went on there for the purpose of preventing the nomination of Henry Clay for the presidency. The chief manipulator was Thurlow Weed, who appeared there aa the friend of Governor Seward, and the future member of the powerful firm of Seward, Weed & Greeley. This firm was .indeed the outcome of the ensu ing campaign. Greeley was at the con vention, little dreaming that the cam paign which was to follow would give him the opportunity for developing the qualities which were to make hiia the first editor of his time and lead to the foundation of a great newspajxr to be forever linked iudissolubly with his name, Weed went into convent ion with the determination of defeating Clay, lie says in his autobiography that he had had the New York delegation in structed for Scott to keep it from Clay, his real candidate being Harrison. He entered into au agreement with friends of Wefster, ou the way to Ifar risburg from New York city, to act to geter for Clay's defeat. "Webster was iu Europe at the time and bad sent word to his friends declining to lie a candi date, primarily because of Weed's re fusal to support him. After detailing these facts Mr. Weed goes on to say that, on reaching Harrisburg, "wo found a decided plurality in favorof Mr. Clay," but that, "in the opinion of the tlele pates from Pennsylvania and New York, Mr. Clay could not carry either of those states, and without them he could not be elected." Weed admits a bargain in favor of Harrison with the friouds Loth of Web ster aud of tJ.ott, and pays the "fiual vote was intentionally delayed by the friends of the stronger candidate (Har rison) for 24 hours" in order to plaeato the angry friends of Clay, "whose disr appointment and vesatiou fouud excited expression." Greeley makes frauk admission iu his "Recollections of a Busy Life" as to the plot by saying that the parties to it. chiefly Weed, "judged that he (Clay) could not be chtscu, if nominated. while another cou'd bo, and acted ac cordingly," adding, 'lf politics do not meditate the achievement of beneficent ends through the choice and uso of the safest and most effective means, I whol ly misapprehend them." This somewhat Jesuitical view did not strike Clay and his friends as an adequate justification of the methods by which au admitted majority of the con veution had been prevented from ex pressing its wilL John Tyler of v ir giuia. one of Clay's moot ardent friends iu the convention, was so overcome with grief ut Harrison's nomination that he shed tears, and after several unavailing efforts to get some one else to take the nomination for vice president Tyler was named for it, his tears having con vinced the convention that the placing of so devoted a friend t-f Clay on the ticket would go far to heal the wounds that the methods of the convention had caused. Clay's rage at tho outcome was un bounded. He had been assuming iu the senate a lofty indifference to tlie presi dency, his famous saying, "I would rather be right than be president, "hav ing been made public only a short time before the convent iou met. There was nobody ia the senate at that time of suf ficiently nimble wit to think of the bit ing retort which Speaker Heed many years later niad to a congressman who for the thousandth time was strutting about in Clay's cant off garmeuts: "Don t give yourself the slightest un easiness. You'll never be either. " But Clav had given himself great uneaai' uess, for he was most desirous of the nomination, ne had been a candidate eight years earlier, when be had no chance of election, and he believed firm ly now that if nominated he could be elected. When the news from Harrisburg reached him in Washington, he lost all control of himself. "He had been drink ing heavily iu the excitement of expec tation, " says Henry A. Wise, who was with him. "He rose from hu chair. and, walking backward and forward rapidly, lifting his feet like a horse stringhalted in both legs, stamped his boots upou the floor, exclaiming: My friends are not worth the powder aud shot it would take to kill them. It is a diabolical iutrigue. I know now, which has betrayed me. I am the most unfor tunate man iu the history of parties always run by my friends when sure to be defeated, and now betrayed for a nomination when I or any one would be pure of au election. " "Humor aud Pathos of Presidential Conventions, " by Joseph It. Bishop, in Century. LITTLE CUT AMBER NOW. A Pip Mouthpiece Thrw Inches Long Worth From SIS to mis. "la that real amber?" at-ked the man as he held up a pipe before the dealer. The pipe was a handsome brier wood oue. and it had a clear amber mouthpiece nearly three inches long. The price mark was f3.50. "Yes, it's real amber," said the deal er. "That is, it's as real as any amber you can get nowadays in a pipe. It is not cut from a piece of amber, but ia made by a melting process. Ninety per cent of that mouthpiece is amber. The other 10 percent is a composition used to harden it and make it stick together. Some years ago amber was plenty, and a pipe like that would have a mouth piece cf auiber cut from a block and nev er melted. Bat tho umber mines have practical? given out, and yon can't get any lucre big pieces. A piece of cut am ber as Ioum as that ou the pipe you have there would bo worth from fl2tofI5, aud it wouldn't be a Lit better than the manufactured amber. It wouldn't be so dnraMti and would not feel any better between the teeth." "I was in England a year ago," said a man who had listened to the conver sation, "aud one of the largest pip manufacturers there said that there bad not been a piece of amber as long as three inches in the market for five years. " "That's so," said the pipe seller. " You may get a pipe with a genuine cut amber mouthpiece in some stores in New Yoik, but if you look up its record you will find it was made eight or ten years ago and has been in stock. This couipoiitiun is used today in expensive meerschaums as well as iu brier woods. " New York Sun. IMae Larki la Bawawsta. PbysiciRus aver that there are disease aud death fu storing woodeu blocks from old pavements in cellars for fuel. Sev eral cates of typhoid aud diphtheria have been traced to this cause. It is well to remember a single decaying cabbage or a bushel of turnips iu the basement has poisoned the air of the entire bouse. Damp cellars aloue are sources of dis ease. Millions cf fungi grow in a night upon damp walls, ripen, and pass off in the air aud often are the direct source of fatal epidemics. Fire that will dry the walls of the house is the very best of disinfectants. Chicago Inter Ocean, All There. Mr. J. (Ideal ) My love, did yon have a finger in this pie? Mrs. J. (Practical ) Why, no. In deed. Noue cf my fingers is missing. " Detroit Free Press. The orchids are true parasites, grow ing on other plants aud drawing their substance from them and from the air. TRYING A CURIOUS PLAN. Teccklaf Madera Setose la tb Oldest f Oriental Vmngmga. The Punjab province of India has been for some years the scene of an in teresting academical experiment, that of communicating western science, phi losophy and literature to the peopl through their mother tongue, and to tha educated through their learned lan' guages, and not in an English dress, as elsewhere. Sixty-three years ao Macaulay and Duff destroyed the very different perm tious system of bribing native students of Sanskrit, Persian and Arabic to read their own sacred books. Gradually the learned classes came to be left out of our state system of public instruction. with evil results. Sir Donald McLeod accordingly devised . and Sir Charles Altchison carried out the plan of at once attracting these, in the Punjab at least; by oriental titles and degrees, and of examining all students for the ordinary university degrees through the medium of their own vernacular. The Punjab university and its oriental col lege were founded at Lahore for these two ends. The latest report of the Edinburgh graduate, Mr. J. Sinie, M. A., who is director of the department, is not very favorable to the success of the double experiment, now some 18 years olL Ho declares that "theprospecUof advanced education through the medium of tho vernacular are uot Improving" at least aud Sir Dennis Fitzratrick, the lieuten aut governor, has ordered a special re port ou the subject. Iu tho Oriental college last year only 6 students wero readiug for the titlo of ghastri, or hou ors iu Sanskrit; 14 for Yisharada, or high proficiency in the same ; 1 1 for Manlavi t aziL or boners iu Arabic; 7 for Manlavi Alim, or high proficiency 7 for Muushi FaziL or honors in Per sian; 7 for Muushi Alim, aud 7 for the Gurmukhi title in the Sikh vernacular. Of the 117 candidates in the local uni versify in Sanskrit a third piisscd. Of 33 in Arabic two-thirds pas.sd, and so iu Persian aud GurmukhL The only en couragiug fart is that every year tho number of the Pundit class who tako houors and degrees in Sanskrit is ris iug. and more than half of them go to the Punjab examinations from tho cth er provinces where there are no6uch tests. Edinburgh Scotsman. LEGAL PLEA FOR HER KAND. AM Arffamant of Counsel loTolvlna; Per Bonal Interests. The judge's daughter was perturbed, "Papa, " she said, knitting her pret ty brow, "I am in doubt as to whet lie I have kept to tho proper form of pro cedure. In law oue can err in so many little technicalities that I am ever fear fuL Now. last evening George." The judge looked at he r so sharply over his glasses that alio involuntarily paused. "I thought you had sent him about his business," he said. V I did haud down an adverse t'eci siou," she answered, "and he declared that ho would appeaL However, I con vineed him that I was the court t.f last resort iu a case like that and that no appeal would lie from my decL-i.u." "Possibly the court was assuming a little more power than rightfully be longs to it," said the judge thoughtful lv, "but let that pass. What aid he do then?" "He filed a petition for a rehearing. 'The usual course," said the judge, "but it is usually nothing but a mere formality. " "So I thought," returned tho girl, "and I was prepared to deny it without argument, but the facts set forth iu his petitiou were sufficient to make me hes itate and wonder whether his case had really been properly presented at the first triaL" " Upon what grounds did he mako the application?" asked the judge, scowling. "Well." she replied, blushing a lit tle, "you see, he proposed by letter, and his contention was that the casc'was of that peculiar character that cannot be properly presented by briefs, but de mands oral arguments. The fact that the latter had been omitted, he held, should be held to be au error, aud the point was such, a novel oue that I con m uted to let him argue it Then bis ar gument was so forceful that I granted his petition and consented to hear the whole case again. Do you think" "I think," said the judge, "that the court favors the plaintiff. "Chicago Post Sh Was aa Abstainer. A lady, who is a strict prohibition ist, was one of a private party at Fair- view last summer. They were taking supper in the pavilion, and had given orders, when one of the gentlemen turn ed to her and said : "Will you have some piepercut, Mrs. X.?" She drew herself up rigidly aud felt grossly insulted. "No; I thank you, sir," she said. ' uever drink anything stronger thau lem onade. Then the gentleman pointed to the post, aud, while the rest of the crowd laughed, she read : "Pie, per cut, 5 centa" Indianapo lis SentineL Corset and Electricity. A new objection to corsets has been discovered. In a California high school, where electrical experiments were being performed, the professor was so annoyed by the effects of the steel in the girls corsets upon his delicate instruments that a rulo was made forbidding the wearing of corsets in the electrical de partment. Of Coarse. "Duffies is always talking about his library. How large is it?" "Oh, his library is in his head." "Bound in calf, then, evidently." New York Sun. Gatherers of tea leaves in China re- reive 0 cents a day. Longer Life Ia tb Country. The less cf pure air, sunshine and other "free" goods and its effect on the physique cf city dwellers ia not ade quately compensated by hygienic re- fc mis of town life itself, while the in creased number and complexity of sen sations impose a greater strain upon the nervous system. The nervous degenera tion which thus accrues may perhaps be checked in time by further hygienic im provement of the town aud by a gradual readjustment between the nervous sys tem and its changed environment But meantime grave physical injuries arise directly from those very economic changes which have raised the economic condition of the great mass of the work ers and have probably reduced the quan tity cf purely economic poverty. rt ben wo reflect that tlie physical injuries of town life, attested by rates of mortality and impaired muscular activity, fall most heavily upon the poor, we shall sec grave reason to doubt whether the modern conditions of industrial and so cial life are generally favorable to the physical vitality of the low paid worker or the "residuum," that is to say, whether ho gets any net vital advantage out of the higher rate of real wages which ho obtains when ho is working. The conclusion applied by Mr. Charles Booth to the whole body of workers thnt "in one way or another e-ffective working lifo is ten years longer in the country than in the town" has an impor tant significance when we remember that each decennial census shows a growing proportion of workers subject to the conditions of town life. Con temporary Review. Jy. Joy ia the mainspring in the whole round cf everlasting nature; joy moves tho wheels of tlie great timepiece of the Icrld; she it is that loosens flowers orm their buds, suus from their firma ments, rolling spheres in distant space ecu not byhe glass of the astronomer. Schiller. BttttttttttttttttrttttttttttttTtttttt t Hosts of people go to -work in J the wrong way to t St. Jacobs Oil Again the. New Woman. "Are you doing anything with your camera now, Madge?" "Yes, indeed. A bi'rglar got into our room the other night, and Nan held him while 1 took his photograph by flashlight." Free Pills. Send your-uddrees to II. E. Bueklen & Co., Chicago, and get a free sample box of Dr. King's New Life Pills. A trial will convince you of their merits. These pills are easy in action and are particularly effective in the cure of Constipation aud Kick 'Headache. For Malaria and Liver troubles they have been proved invaluable. Tl.ey are guaranteed to Ik? perfectly free from every deleterious f uhttance and to le purely vegetable. They do not weaken by their action, but by giving tone to stomach and bowels greatly invigorate the system. Regular size '20c. per bos. ro!d at J. N. Snyder's 'drug store, Somerset, or at Brallier's tlmg store, Berlin. Revised. Man wants but little here blow, As some one said luTore, Hut when he gets it, dou't you know, He wants a little more. Truth. AU Free. Those who have used Dr. King's New Discovery know its value, and those who have not, have now tlie op portunity to try it Free. Call on the advertised Druggist and get a Trial Bottle, Free. Send your name and address to H. K. Bueklen & Co., Chicago, and get a sample box of Dr. King's New Life Pills Free, as well as a copy of (iuide to Health and House hold Instructor, Free. All of which is guaranteed to do you good and cost yoH untiling at J. N. (Snyder's drug store, Somerset, or at Bwllier's-drug st re, Berlin. Exceptions. Doctors who ngreet Always wise parents. levers w ho never quarrel. Cieiiius without opjiortunity. A great character, flawless. Keuse that attracts as soon as beauty, The tattling tongue that tells the truth. One who passes rightious judgment on a rival. Tlie road to success that is not par ticularly tttep. Tlie occasion when it is better to be rich than honest. A failure where sonic one did nut say 'I told you so." The time when justice finds no diffi culty iu adjusting the scales. A selfish pcrton who gives away the biggest share of the licst. Aflidavits as to personal character may be necessary to allay suspicion or to attract the simple-minded; but what has the manufacturer's private charac ter to do with the efficacy of his so- called "cure?" Ely's Cream Balm ele pends solely upon its reputation of jearsas a t-uetturful cure for catarrh in all its stages. It is alsolutely free from mercury or any other drug in jurious to.the system, lieing applied directly to the diseased membrane it affords instantaneous relief and will effect a perfect cure of catarrh. .. An occuaional scattering of wood ashes around the sweet pea vines will help them, but strong fertilizers should be avoided now, as they will encourage the development of vines at the ex pense of bloom. For earache, put a couple of drops of Thomas' Eclectric Oil on a bit of cot ton aud place it in the ear. The pain will stop in a few moments. (Simple enough, bm't it? The "life tree" of Jamaica ls harder to kill than any species of woody growth known. It continues to grow and thrive for months after being up rooted and exposed to the sun. Insist on having just what you call for when you go to buy Hood's Sar- saparilla, the One True Blood Purifier and nerve tonic The beggars of Paris have a "Direc tory of Benefactors." Elephants are killed off iu Africa at the rate of Go.OOO a year. Wasps rank nest to the highest classes of ants in ioiut of insect intelli gence. A race horse galloping at full sr-ed clears from twenty to twenty-four feet at every bound- SDuriDg 7 mouths out of the 12 the temperature tif the sea is higher than than of the air. It is computed that the distance tra versed by the earth every year Is of9,- 5(0,7(W miles. GIRLS IX STORES, offices, or factories, are peculiarly liable to female diseases, especially those who are constantly on their feet. Often they are unable to perform their duties, their suffering Ls so intense. When the first symptoms present themselves, such as backache, pains in groins, beau ache, dizziness, faintnesa, swelled feet, blues, etc., they should at once write Mrs, Pinkbam, at Lynn, Mass., stating symptoms; she will tell them exactly what to do, and in the meantime they will find prompt relief in Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, which can be obtained from cny druggist. "Mi DkarMrs. Iixkham: I am so grateful to you for what your Com pound hasdonc forme For fouryears suffered such pains from ovarian trouble, which caused dreadful weak ness of the limbs, tenderness and burn ing pain in the groins, pain when standing or walking, and increased pain during menstruation, headache and leucorrhiea. I weighed only 92 pounds, and was advised to use your Vegetable Compound, which I did, I felt the benefit beforo I had taken all of one bottle. I continued using It, and it has entirely cured me. I have not been troubled with leucorrhoea for mouths, and now I weigh 115 pounds." Lilux Habtsox, Flushing, Genesee Co., Michigan. Box C9. IT cure a ZZYXZ&ti IS! The Tront at Fault "You didn't stay long at that hotel which advertised a fin trout stream in the vicinity?" 'No, the hotel man explained that it was a fine trout stream, but he couldn't help it if the trout hadn't sense enough to find it ouL" Chicngo Itecord. Bucklen's Arnica Salve The Best Salve in the world for Cuts, Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Kheuin, Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin Erup tions, and positively cures Piles,: or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give n-rfcct satisfaction or money refunded. lViee i celiU per box. For sale at J. N. Snyder's drug store, Somerset, Pa., or at Brallier's drug store Berlin, Pa. ' The Sort of Love It Was. "D you love me?" she asked fond- "Dearly," replied he. "Would you die for me?" "No, my precious one. Mine is an undying love." She hud to make the best of this. Town Topics. Last summer one of our ehgnradil elren was sick with a severe bowel trouble. Our dctor's remedies had failed, when wc tried ChamU'rlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Itemedy, which gave very speedy relief. We regard it as the test medicine ever put on the market for bowel complaints. Mrs. 11 U. Gregory, Frederickstown, Mo. ( This certainly is (Tie Ust medi cine ever put on the market for dysen tery, summer complaint, colic and cholera infantum in children. It nev er fails to give jirompt relief when used in reasonable time and the plain printed directions are followed. Many mothers have expressed their sincere gratitude for the cures it has affected. Iror snl; by Bcnford's Pharmacy. The Adroit Photographer. "What gave Mrs. Crotsgrain the lovely expression she has iu her last photograph?" "The jihotographer told her she had niore pegative beauty than any woman he ever taw." Detroit Free Press. ChamU-rlain's Cough Remedy cures colds, croup and whooping cough. It is pleasant, snfe and reliable. For sale by Beu ford's Pharmacy. The Financial Question in Abeyance. Th only persons who are not dis cussing the financial question at pres ent are those bli-ful June 1 ridal couples. They will eliscuss it later. Rochester ( N. Y. ) Union. Mrs. Bhodie Noah, of this place, was taken in the night with cramping pains and the next day diarrhoea set in. She took half a bottlo of black berry cordial but got no relief. She then sent to me to see if I had any thing that would help her. I sent her a bottle of Chamlierlain's Colic, Chol era and diarrhoea Itemedy and the first dose relieved her. Auother of our neighbors had been sick for about a week and had tried different remedies for diarrhoea but kept getting worse. I sent him this same remedy. Only four doses of it were required to cure him. He says he owes his recovery to this wonderful remedy. Mrs. Mary Sibley, Sidney, Mich. For sale by Ben ford's Pharmacy. SUCCESS IN EYE SUHGERY. Cataract and Crooked Eyes Restored. Mrs. Mary Morrison, Venicia, Wash ington Co., had a cataract successfully removed last month at the age of 70. Miss Mattie CarjM-nter, Koewn, Al legheny Co., has suffered for years with weakness of the muscles of the eye, causing constant headache and soreness without ever learning tle cause. Dr. Sadler recently made an operation that gave instant relief to the strain. Mr. James Sling, packeT for the Macbeth Glass Co., Charleroi, after two unsuccessful operations to straight en his eyes, and au opinion that noth ing more could be safely done, has ha them made perfectly straight by Dr. adlcr, 801 Penn Av., Itttsb urp, Pa. Wanted Him to Eeep WelL There was much sickness in the house, and Essie, in her evening prayer, commended each invalid by name to the care of the iK-ity. Then, after giving some particulars regard ing individual symptoms, she wound up with; "And please, dear (Sod, take good careef yourself; for if you should get sick what would beoomc of us?" New York World. A Slean Business. "My dear fellow," wrote lloliert L'uis Stevenson in his last days to a young relative engaged iu a hot politi cal canvass, "polities is a vile and bungling business. I used to think meanly of the plumber; but how he shines in comparison with the politi cian." Boston Transcript. Births and Deaths. A statistician who has leen interest ing himself in the population of the earth says that 3,214,000 die annually; that is, an average of t,40 a day, 40J0 an hour and 07 a minute. The annual number of births on the other hand is estimated at 3C,7yi,000, au average of 100.SO0 a day, 4,13X1 an hour, and 70 a minute, so that the population . is in creasing at the rate of three to the minute. How the Heart Rests. When one is lying down the heart makes about 10 strokes less a minute than when one is upright. That means a saving of (U0 strokes per hour, or about 5000 heart leats during the eight hours spent in bed. The heart pumps six ounces of blood with each beat. It therefore lifts 30,000 ounces less of blood in a night of eight hours spent in bed than when one is in. an upright posi tion. The blood flows just so much the more slowly through the veins when one is lying down, therefore one has to use extra coverii'rr to supply the warmth usually furnished by circula tion. The First Amencan Dentist. The art of dentistry was introduced into New York by John Greenwood in 1788. He is said to have made the first artificial teeth ever manufactured in this count ry. OMEICSET MAItKET KEPORT, coaaKCTKU wuklf ar Cook & Beerits, WedntKtltty, April tS JSfiS. i per bn A pplc.-( driest, t I (-vapurul-d ., 75 to 11.00 Ac 1'ie Apple Butter, p-r io 1 - ,, M to t I roll. p-r . i ,, Butter. 1 fmth kx. P-r .. . Ine I erenuiery, per ,, a Beeswax, per t . country ham, per S S to lJe ,, J luitarcunsl bam, per B.11 to li'-je hiufd-r, p-r S) . uier, per m 7 to M Si ( 1.1 L uut, tier ., i:.fr. lren, per B , , . irunxteU. per lb J to JUC ,.,,., It'uiiiberlaiiil. per bbl SIjO eemeni. j I.ortlnnd bt i u0 eorntueHi, per ae KICK, per u .. .. ..l'c Finn, lake herring" j-- - Honey, white clover, per t 1," Lard, per .... ! IJme. per Mil Jl.l MolmuieM, .N . O., per (ful OuIoiih, per bun. 40 to Sue 1'olaloea. per liu. ...... .)0 loan I'eMclien, evHporaUrf, per .-. 10 Lo :)c I'ruuen. er ....iu w i .. i r iitH .fi.i' litt-l.uii, per Mil i.ui Salt, lairr, ', ouh k k. 44 4 bus wiekH. , . ft. crollli'1 alii in. 11 lb nueka !' lliupie, per B lo -' mi xirleil yellow, per It Sugar. while, A. per lb enimilMteU. per B. .. o (cube. r pulverized, per se Syrup. I per kuI i-its 1 niapie, er KuI . jU loo) Stoneware, cullou H' Thllow, per if. S to Vinegar, p.-ri:il ,iW to :: iimoitiy. tier uu clover. er bun... SVO to . VI criiiinoii, per bun S. 'iO " i.!lu!lii. per ous 'HI " llVlveper bU..-... 7.. Seed. Millet, dermal), per Imit , lKir;-y. while liearule, fx-r Uua l.'St imh'kw iieat, per im .. :. eorn, eiir, -r -us ......! to -e (jmln Klielle'l, per bUS. to 4 i oals, Ik r bun Si to :w I rye, per bus .....; it freed j w lust, per I. u-. .... 7'ic I bran, per !( tt. Ke i eorn uml 1h chop, per !' !bs... Wie lli.ur, roller prucena, er bbl...LTj vi...,, J Fpniij; pnlenl ami limey Hour, j nll Rm(il. i4.in, to SI.2S tl.tlir, lower Kllile, perllu S fl.Mt Middlings. t w Inle, p. r l i E. sl.iw I red, per loO PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD. CASTCHN STANDARD TIME. IN EFf EGT MtY 20, 1835. COSDwKtilD 8CHEDCLB. Tralut arrive ui.d depart from tbe station a Joliuklowu an follows: WKSTWARD Western Kiuren .... a. m. Southwestern Kxprevn . rS :.-.7 Johnstown Accommodation.. " AcoHinnoiliitioii.. :i le-J4 Pailllf Kxpi-KH......... Way lM.-;i, r Khs( Line I D. ra. Jolii.iilowu AocouinHKi.iuou...:. v:ou - EsrWAUD. Atlantic Fxnress 5:"'l a. to. Nn-thore KxprcH 5;ii " :;-t - teni AHoon.i AccomniouulKi hv Kxpr- . Main Ijm; Express Altoona AcconiiiioduIK m p. ra. Mail Expr.-M Johnstown A'ioiiiiiiimL. Philadelphia Kxprevk... 411 li.il " 7;ltt . Hiuki Don.. Kat Lane For ratea, mitiv. Ac, cr.I! on Ticket AsentHnr addrvwt ThiM. iL vVati, i A. W. !., 3 r iitii .avenue, niinuur, i u. M M Hrevct J. R Woofl lien. Ma nbMer. (ieii'l PaM Ag CONDENSED TIME TABL3S. Baltimore and Ohio Railroad. Somerset and Cambria Branch. NOHTHWABD. Johnstown Mall Exprena. Rockwood Tm a. m., Soineri-t ":!, toy-towii IrJCJ, Uoov ei.iUel:,"U, JohiiKtown 11.-0U. Johnstown Mail Exprc. Rockwood lft-TO a. in Sonierx t 1 1 : 1 "V. Sloveslown 11:0, Hoot- Afs.-lllu 11--J l.ilmstnwn t'f,HI n n. 'Johnstown Accommoilatton. Rock wood C:00 p. m., Somerset t: JS Stoyestowu &i3, lioov ervvllle Johnstown 7:ju. Dally. HOtTU WARD. Mall. Johnstown 7:40 a. m., Itooversvlll R:29, Stoyeatown U.-13, Somerset ir.lJ, Rockwood MS. Expresii. Johnstown 2:S0 p. HooversTllIe 3:l,StoyrsUwnai3, Somerset X'Z, Rock wood ilia. Sunday Only. Johnstown 80, Scmerset 1M Rockwood lOS. YOUR EYE! Wewantto catch It! EVERY FARMER in Somerset County who baa a cord of Hemlock Bark or a Hide to dispose of will find that the CON FLUENCE TANNERY Co., will pay the highest rash prices for the aatue. Write for quotations to WINSLOW S. COBB A CO., Confluence, Pa. Salesmen Wanted on Salnrv, to sell' Pcnnsvlranla crown Kur sery St.ick, which hj thebest I thewerW. All the new specialtii as well aj tbe standard vatie ties of fruits & Ornamentals. A fine outfit fur nished and all tntveluiK expenses paid. Sala ry dates from day work Is couimenced. Write for terms, staling age. Hoopes, Bro. & Thomas, Maple Arenue Nurnerica, Wvt Cheater, P. THE ONLY PERFECT FOR For Sale By J. B. HOLDERBATJM, Somerset. Pa. YOU CAN FIND THIS PAPER a iU la hmH'ft.H at tb Adertis:or Kureau af ear nthor- T?SJ iTTTTrt frlTT TST n.C b Vm asBvasa 1m( adnutiaua at lwwrt rafast S THE BEST Is None Too Good When You Buy . -.MEDICINES.- It ia Jut aa Important to Secure FRESH, PURE DRUGS, A it is To IIav Confidence in the Fhysician. Who Preterit Them. AT SNYDER'S You are always sure of getting the freshest medldnea PREBCRIPTIOX9 Carefully Compounded. TRUSSES FITTED. All of the Best and Most Approved Trusses Kept in Stock. Satisfaction Guaranteed. OPTICAL GOODS. GLASSES FITTED TO SUIT THE EYES. CALL AND HAVE YCU3 SIGHT TESTED. JOHN N. SNYDER, Somerset, ... Louthefs Drug Main Street, This Model Drag Store is Favorite with FBESB . IID . Medicines Dye Stuffs, Sponge.), 'jrvsi Supporters, Toilet Articles, Perfumes, &c. tri ikktor niTaa psk.soai. attesticn to THmiiporsi)i.'ii or LoMer's Pre-SGriptionsSFainily Receipis GKKAT CARS RKI!i TAKEN TO TSK SPECTACLES, And a Full Line of Optical Goods large assortment all can he suited. TEE FIKEST BBAEDS OF CIGARS Always on hand. It is always to intending purchasers, whether they buy frcm us cr elsewhers. J. M. LOUTKER M. D. HAni STREET Somerset Lumber Yard elia-S cTJjsnsrnsrGiiM, MA!rrACTTBKa A!(D Dkalek and Wholesale i.id Retailek or Lumber and Building Materials. Hard and Oak, Poplar, (tidings. Walnut, Yellow Pine, Flooring. Cherry, KhlDjtlea. Iooi-m, Ijtlh. Uhlle Pine BiUd, I feneral line of all cradr of Lumber aad lock. Also, can furnish anything In the line of our busineaa to order with reasona ble promptness, snch.as Brackets, oddnilxed.worketc. Elias Cunningham, Office and Yard Opposite S. A C. R. R. PREPARATIONS FOR The Great OP XOVKMBER 3 AKK ALREADY WILL I'XPER WAT. AM PRESIDENT of the UNITED STATES IS TO K KI.KlTKn. AND TUB NEW YORK WEEKLY TRIBUNE will, sh always, 1 round in the tiiii kest of the fight, battling vigorously fr .Mm Dnnni-A liurip!ex, whivh wiJl tring pr'H'perity to the tfttiim. The Xtnr York Weetty Tribune is not only tbe leading RepnV lit-an paper of the country, bui is pre-eiin. nt!y a miHtm-il tmuf tteuxjKtpsr. Its campaign news ami disrasMon wi!l interest every Ameri can citizen. AU the news of thed.iy, Foreign Correspondence, Agricultur al 1) partnicnt. Market RiMrtx, Short Stories complete in earh nuuilier. Comic Pictures, Fashion Plates with elaborate descrip tion, and a variety of items of hmisehold iuterest, make up an Ideal J-'ami!f ltper. A SPECIAL CONTRACT enables us to The Somerset .. Herald ONE YEAR FOR ONLY $2.00. CASH IN ADVANCE. SUBSCRIPTIONS MAY BEGIN AT ANY TIME. Address all orders to THE HERALD. Write ynr name an t a Llrem an a postal inaune iiuiicmr, new lark CHj, and sample copy arThe Sew Tail Weeklj Tribune will be nailed ta jom IT WILL PAT YOU TO BUT YOUR Memorial Work i or WM. F. SHAFFER, SOMERSET, PENS' A. Manufacturer of and Draler la Knstern Work Pnrnlshrd on Hhort Notice Hiii it mmww Tin Also, Ajent tor the WHITE BRONZE ! IVraons In need of Monument Work wlil find It l- thir intm-ot to full at my shop win re a (.Hp rh.win wi!l f Kivra thro.. V-t-atiklartion Uk;Ki.lto in -ry ki,u Friers very low. I iuvttv special alU-uUun to Vrlftt Prcrie, Cr Pure lire Vrriirin rcdsndry livV A Hi,u e. tc' . v UllirtV4UM'nt 111 til nikltil rbf U.II.M..I . liustructlia,and wbi. b Isdmttned to be the popular ilonuinrnt for our cbangatble i ll M.. F. SHAFFER, Pa Store, 1 j Somerset, Pa. Rapidly Becoming aGrea1 People in Search of PURE . DRUG O.NLlf FRfH ASf O PrKI ABTIC'tr.S. EYE-GLASSES, always on hand. From scch a pleasure to display our oci - - SOMERSET. PA Soft 'Woods, Picket a, Monldinr Saab.. Mar Rail-, Balusters. CnetnuU Aewel PoMtn. Y.ic. Building Material and RooflnirIate kept In Station, SOMERSET, Battle offer this splendid journal ami rJ, send It U Ueo. W. Best. Room SSESTISlSiS mCTKilLlP l2aTILt!!l2s Over BOO Beautiful Deslcns. MONUMENTAL BRONZE COMPANt, aaoaoKPoai coatii. V '0 4 STC5E. lid SendfoT J jPrlceLiatl - f 1 1 1 Circular. J f v7 m i i 1