TOM REED'S , WARNING. i His Speech at a Gather ing at Alfred, Me. THE EVIL OF THE TIMES. Caused by an Unwise Tariff Re vision. xrsHRooa of the silter riKir. Hard TIikm Greatly ActTratd by thm Im of Rewtt Th Con o try Needs Mori- Capital, bat Sot MoT Money 1"h. ItraiarrBlle Aimlnltrmtk Scored Mr. Rn4 Ki plains How Prosperity Cast Again It EmcM- The Tariff and The firt pun of the campaign In Maine v, as fired by Hon. Thomas B- Kd the other Air. He Fpote as follows: If I wore pdnfc to pive pwd advice to the jieoj.lc of the whole I'nited states, I tUioultl tate this time to do It. Just now thi-re is a great doal of froth and f.:i in tlic air. and some time is really needful to disclose clearly to every eve how much of it is the result of the temporary bnx-ze which ptills at nightfall and how little there is of that heavy pround Fwell which shows that great ele mentary forces Jire at work. How very suddenly all this rush and stir has set it self into action! Two months apo no man of any sumdir.p would have risked his rep utation as a jirophet by hinting the slight est d.u!t of licj.uMioan success. Four years of actual trial of the oppsition, un der the guidance of its Jxst and twice trusted It ad.-r. liad left no shadow of ques tion as to public duty. However far the liopu!)lic.m party might have fallen short of perflation, nevertheless ull nu-n felt that it was the best party just now to draw ... & 'vfc ml HON. THOMAS E. KZED. niph to for whatever is to be left to us of nound government, commercial success and business prosjuTity. On tliat we were all agreed, some of us who were Democrats regretfully, for we all liate to lie classed with the unsuccess ful whiwe condemnation is at hand, -ven if we gain by tlie change; others of us who were KrpuMicans cheerfully, but without exultation, for we know how hard the task must le to rebuild out of the ruins of the List four years tlic stately mansions of na tional liappincss. prtisperity and self re-six-ct whiavin our people lived until that unfortunato eiiMtion of 1892. Tttr Siiwrr M tuhroom. Two months have slipped awcy hardly time to rii-n a grrawlnrry, uiiuUi less a system of t'nance and there are those who us that all thii.gs have chanvl; tliat those very men who were being arrayed fur decent burial liad burst the cerements of the grave, and, transfigured by some new arrangermiit of crowns of thorns and cmsstv of gold. wtb to lead us to a new happiness snd even repair all the damage they themselves liad wrought. Now, this may lie sj, but to me it does not seem proliable. Human exiTieiicc in exery walk of life twhes us tliat those who have blundered will blunder again, and tUit the wisest course is not toomploy a ship ca;.tain who liat not yet emerged from liis last shipwreck, but tlie safe sail or who lias nci r lost a ship, a passenger or a letter, but who has sailed safe through every sea. lie may Lave lost masts and sails and even been rudderless fir hours, but if he lias every lime cotne Kife to shore I utter Lave him t!ian all the landsmen who are forever snouting wliat th'y can do and iH-ver dare to tell what they have dunc. iJiasters are worth nothing Deeds are .'.icts and are forevtT at:d ever. Ti.lk dies on the empty air. li-tter a pound of jier femuiuix' tliau a sl:iplKid of lai:guage. Hut i it isi- or just to class all Demo rais tnp'ther nt:d to deckire them all wri;ig, 'lien announce they must lie lieat n ht.iii.s- they are JK'iuocmts:- "i'lu:t wou'.d Ik very unwise, very unjust and setiwh-x Bit-igi-ther. it would flout j.11 l::".4.-ry, a::d esje-i;illy our .v.-n. l:irties ure o.ie thiii; their imlividn.-il ntcmiiers t:iay l- amithcr. I'arties stidoni follow tiHir!.t null. TiK-y follow toeiraverage M PS lu ;xmi aeiioa tin re c;in never lo but two ; -..-tkT the creating party ami the re-l.inli:.,- i art v. Tlic pn :l.'iiss! e i;jtr nuiv t. :oive'i iti ltimtTTii: fii'd t r.t -.nl. ! rg jeirty may lie ur.wi-" in its conserva tism but lith scire a good purose, and N-rwcen litem both the world slowly a!:;! ..fi5y nieves a!i?td, di-e::(if ;.l!y slowly sonieames. but it d' -s always move aliuid. IVrlu.ti some one will s;ty here v liav a crca:ie party whieh hs sprung up in a iiigh:. bUe a mushrooiD. and created u new f stem of finance. !y friends, you will liuj that that mushroom is not good to ojt. and tluU that progress will Liud you in the dith. Now, all prpr'. avouls ditches. I have s;iid tluit it would 1 unwise, un just ami senseless t coiifound tite Demo T;;tic cxgiitiiition with individual Demiv ' r.i.'s. I li.c said also t!:t that would lie lloutirg a J :irt of our ov, n history, and a g!orio;;s ,-ari til iur hist, .ry too. Why, it j within the memory of a third ami per I taps. a half of this very audience which liter.s to me tliat when the terrible Warof I :e n-U'Uioa iiroke forth ten of thousands .f iKnuK-rats, .iliticians, sUiing Iwrty men. sprai.g ti their Uvt, representing Linirireiis of thousands, aye. millions, and henceforth and ain.ivs wer? part and par cel of t!ie itotic and siu'v of lia victorious n J -.iMic. Wliat matter if the party h.ul Ij.me wring? They were riglit. t ne man among them, one man ulone. hy i single m'::U :i'.x.' gave aid and suexxir to t his g.iv- rnuu-.'it which outweighed a wlsile arm; 'oi j-s oi v-t.Tans, miisLet ou shouhlcr. WIk ii Stephen A. I V mglas d x-larxxl afUT r.'.aU-r as hnxl on tlx "tlienceforth ilicre could l but two i-artii iatriotis !id traitors" he won the respect even of f.ies and an i:niTislut!ile ,lvv in history. W e sliall certainly welcome all such men ttd.iv. not ttuit th.-y ure to le 1-public-ri;. hut Wvause taey are iitrioU, for ta:,t tin y must W. 1 wo moiitiis a?o, os I have already iid. every !idy cuKxxied the el-.x-tion of tlie ll.iulilicaii ticket Wliat bus ltai- i sinoe Uienr Have tlic f.mr years of liist ry buen il rtW out? Not one inp of them. Is our condition tM-ttor? lather wor.. Has tlie lwty changtxl any which taitsed the most of our ui.happin.-ss? Yi-s; there lias lx-n a cliange, but It Las been for the worse lis best men arc leaving it If this nation has thrire at the polls cou 1 :i.:hxl this I Kitty when it was luttor, are v.e now piing to place it in power when it has p 4 wur If tliey blundi-ml on busl ines with tlx-ir lxt men present, arc tlicy F .in? to be a sueocse on Lriuuoc with their b.-st i:ira absent? Hi.t v,c arc tSl in a 1-od vxy, and some thia must lx- di ac. Yes. xve are in a laid rt. and s..mrth:ug tmist U Cjue. Lut nnnl mate the IiDstaKeof thinking tht any aomethir.g will da A sick man in proper cases had lienor take medicine, but he had U tter he careful whist medicine lie takes. There arc some political orator who think if titer can draw a rose colored picture it ought to convert a conti nent. What a rosy picture we had painWd for us in I.S92! WItat millions wo were t cxiwet ! We wcro to sell iu the dourest and buy in the e'.cnpest market. We were to have Kith en.s of tlie hiirgr.ln. We took their word lor it, and here we are. And now the Vt credible part' of these same gentlemen nre nie:4ring the canvas with another picture, fur which they want us t.i pay another four years or perhaps ten of this nation's life. !en deceived once are human; men deceived twice by the s.ime men nre fooLs. There is another class of political ora tory which deserves reproltation the ora tory which paintx tliecnemy In deep black. If anybody liad curiosity to sue what I said of our ojxmrnts in 1S92, they would find tluit I did not ventuTO any dentmcia tion whieh depict one-teeth of the evil which lias har!'"ed- Wlien I told you two years api what we lU-puMicans would do If clMisen, I drew no fine picture, but sim ply snid to you that nil we cuUl do would lie to prexent evil. That we did, audit takes a good deal of sense sometimes to do no evil. We tried to do I-iter, and had the IVmocrata from the n-j-tit risen above party for g"d as the wi silver wnators sunk U'low iiarty for evil t!ie revenues of this country would have been equal to It expenditures, and we should have been two years nearer prositerity. Grtvtinp you this time with the same frankness, I am bound to say that the evil which has come to us by an unwise revi sion of the tarifT has Ix-eu greatly agrravat ed by one of its consequences our loss of revenue. Had there Wvu no deficit, then titW.W)0,000 of borrowed pld would have carried us through the crisis sfe :snd sound. As it was, tlie constant drain of t!ie di-llcit, contiiiuu!ly confounded the redemption of gold, lias so aftli -t - iuiagiiuttion of our people tliat co:.:'.. . cannot coinnience to lw restored until our te v Dues equal our exjitusva. IH Sew Cor For Kara Iiuim. Feriods of depression are common to the lUnian race. Koubtless you and I think tliat if we liad had the world tJ make would have liad human progress nrranpud on a continuous upgrade, ten feet or liet ter to the mile, liut God knows human nature more perftictly and knows we could never stand such i ionotony and must go up hill and down Lile. But while depres sions are common they have their aggra vating causes, which must lie removed. Then, when confidence comes, prosperity ttVi WA It - -mm lonows, now x tiiiiiK tnat can be reaccu. I will tell ytiu sixtn. Meantime let us six? what is proposed by those gentlemen who within the last two mouths liave discovered a new cure for ail the ills 11111 is heir to and who priKlaim, ks tlicy did four years ago, that they alone hold prosperity in their grasp. Their remedy is the coinage of idlver at 16 to I. Wlit does that mean? Heretofore whenever gold and silver Lave stood toi tlicr it Las been at the market value. When we tried to make goM and silver circulate together, we have always married them according to their market value. Today we find them notltttol, but 31 to 1. ar.d we are going, tlicy say, to lift silver to twice its value, not by the universal sense of mankind, which alone makes values, but by the statute of the I'nited States, single banded against the civilized world. Why should the United States try to do this alone? If the demonetization of silver is a dis rate at all, it is a world disease, I defy anytiody to find a single argument whieh proves that the remonetization of silver would lie good for the United States that d.ies not prove that it would lie good for the whole world. If it is a world disease, how can it lie reached except by a world remedy? International bimetallism I can understand, but this driving out of gold ulid sulistitutiou of silver Is only silver monometallism for the United States. It is not bimetallism for the world and stable currency, but the shifting from gold currency and civilized Kuripe and going over to silver and Mexico, Japan, India and China. Oh, but China and Japan, India and Mexico are prosperous just now! Yes, but what kind of prosper ity? The prj-';xTity of cheap labor, grow ing chc-v.xT every day. Manufacturers there may 1? prosjterous, and traders may l! jirosvrous. but the people are not pros perous at all. Up here in Maine and New Hampshire p:i:er pulp is made cheap. How? liocause the manufacturer is close to c1hp labor. In silver countries labor is cheap and kept cheap by the silver dol lar. I'.r my part 1 do not want that kind tif prosperity. 1 want a vrosjierity which by good waj.'e to all is shared by all. We want a broader life, broadening every tk;y for all our people. I won't dix -.tss the question whether the fre.- coinage of silver will raise, it to par or Hot. Very few xjople claim tliat it will, and if they Cid 1 c tuld not lielievc them. 1 was told in 2:i) by two of the most sincere r.s uell as the ablest l ien that the pun -'.Mm of 4,0(i.(j)0 euviM a mont'i would raise silver to par. and when wc did buy it silver went d vu like lead. Silver V en hve nni Leea good prophet i:i the pOi-t. If, tiien. we tiro going to have a dollar inferior 1 1 vv u.it we lu.ve today, what will bothe effect of it? Higher prices, they say. Not for everything. If you have tHK) in the savings bank today, you can get 100 gold dollars from the bank. If this wild project su-eeed and you are paid in silver, you will get floO, but they will 5 o'i or 60 or Tu cent dollars. If you liave a jx-nsion. that ninst lie scaled down. If you have a Ixind, tliat goes down too. Will the wage earner lie any better off What you buy will pi up. Will your wages go up too? There you liave expericni to puidu you. Wagesduring greenback times, measured la g ild, did not go up ns other things did. They went p-art way, but not ull tiie wy up, and were very slow alv.iut that Hut wouldn't business belxtter for more umiim'T? It might be after a terrible crash with liad currency, and then wc wculd have to get hack again. Brandy may seem to strt-ugthen, but plain bread and Jncat aie the surest lz:t v.e want is not moro money, but more capital. Money always come v ith canitiL Wo liave money now, more than wc can use, lying idle. We have just ex jxirted a lot of it Money Is the transferrer ef capital, as a hayrack and horse is a transferrer of liay. More liayracks will never make more liay, but more hay will require more liayracks and is sure to get tliem. A Look at tha rut If I sell you my house in Portland or 1uortga2v.it for fu.OOO and i.nd tlic result to a Washington state coal mine and it is sfx-nt and comes lack to Casco liank, my ti.noO worth of capital is in Wasliingtoii just tite same. What this whole country nwxls is capit'il from abroad, from the whole world. I expect some of you will Ixt surprised and at k whether tlie world of tho I'nited States is not immense and sufficient Immense, yes; sufficient, no. tlur capital is great, but tho United SuiU is ery much greater. There are millions of square miles and TS.OOO.otK) of pef. pie and undeveloped riches without 6tint Hut there is not capital enough to keep 75,000,000 of people at work. W hen are we the most prosperous? It Is when tlie 7i,OoG,000 are all at work, and when that happens we burrow erf the rest of the world thousands of millions of dollars. Let me give you one plain proof of the tact that money conies with capital. -in lCWwo were prnsjxmns. our peo ple were all at work. Consequently there were good wages, and wealth greatly in creased. At that time tlic figures show that In that year we had 1 1W, 000,000 of gold more than we had in lshl Every bit of that had been imported or kept, the product of our own mines. It was busy transferring this vast capital wo liad bor rowed and that which we owed ourselve. Now, just as soon as this election Is over and the future position of the I'nited States is assured, both as to money and to the employment of our people, capital Is ready to come to us from abroad and front our own people, and we shall again be prosperous. I know this plain, tempera to statement does not seem so highly colored as will be given by sjieekcrB who are not really re sponsible for what they say, but it has one advantage it will Ixj found to lie true. God keeps the future for himself. Only his eye can sec In tite fullness of truth the days to come, but he has left us some glimpses of them in tlie jwist and if men will only tako guidance from cxpc.rhnca they will, as they can do In no other way, show tltelr superiority over the brutes which perish. You and I, my friends, have been to gether for 20 years, two-third the life of a generation of men. It would be singu lar if the past could give us no hilp in this crisis of our affairs. But it can. We have been hroiigh all this once before. Tho groeubackcrs of 1ST, were not bad num. They were sincere and had a better rase than the silver men of today. In fact, It was much the same case. We must have irtiflcial inflation and chper money, I icy said, or blackest ruin awaitod us. It was a hard time. Prices were low, and work was scarce. Taxes were high and debts hard to pay. liut we persevered and resumed specie pay ments. From that moment the capital nf tlie world was at our disiosaL Wo h;ul k good tariff, which nimki us do all our Dwn work, and, from 1S7U to ls3, 1 i yiars prosperity, which placed the United States in a great position in the world. If we do the like thing today, like things will follow. With revenues equal to our fmcrgencies, undue eiixirt of gold will rxsise. With the certainty tliat the dollar paid will lie eqiud to tho dollar lent will some credit and commence with that ther certainty, tliat we are to do all our own work, will come the earning of wages, itcadily increiuiing. which is the liasis of that prosperity which is alone worthy of this great nation the prosperity of the hole people. GREAT MEN AS LOVERS. Hot a "Whit Less Silly Than Their In tellectual Inferiors. When Hume fell in love his friends liecame aware of the fact by his sport ing a rose iu his buttonhole. 8heri.lan fell in love w ith Miss Lin- ley, nnd tohl the story in "The Rivals," whieh is a true account of his court, ship. When Heine was in love, he was m jealous that he poisoned a parrot lie- longinjr to the mistress, for fear it would elaim too much of her all'ectioii. Byron was cra.ily jealous of every woman he ever loved. His loves were almost innumerable, and sooner or later he made every one miserable. Thorias Moore was always in love. The names of no less than 14 different ladies to v horn he vowed eternal fidel ty are to be found in his poems. Waller wrote hi most pleasing poet ry of Saeeharissa. After she rejected him, he, in a letter to a friend said, "She is only a red-headed drab any how." Alfred de Mussvt fell in love with George Sand, and when she tired of him, as she did of every one else, he took to absinthe, and soon succeeded in drinking himself to death. When Sterne was in love, he sent his sweetheart, Mrs, Draper, "a pot of sweet-meats and a pot of honey, neith er of whieh contains half the sweet ness jieeuliar to yourself." Beethoven almost went crazy altout Tie Countess Oinlietta (Juieciardi. He calls her "My Immortal Beloved," and concludes his letters, "Ever yours ! Ever mine! Ever each other's! Amen." When (ioethe was first in love he carved upon a tree in a neighlioring forest a couple of hearts, united by a scroll, and a little later received a sound thrashing from the forester for damaging the tree. Allien fell in love with a noble lady of Turin, and. determined to effect a cuTi, had himself tied in a chair and remained thus for a month, during which time he wrote "Cleopatra," and established his reputation as a jntct." When Burns was in love with High land Mary the twain went to a brook, stood on either side, clasped hands and swore on a little Bible to lie eternally true. Mary Caniplfll would doubtless have kept the vow, but judging from the subsequent eonductjof Burns, his doitig so is highly improbable. Israel I'utnam, the sturdy American hero, fell in love with a young girl at a festival in which the paring of apples for drying was the leading employ ment. He tossed one long jteeling over his -houldcr, after the manner of the fortune-tilling then common, and it fell in the shajie of the initial of her name. St. Ixtuis i loin-Democrat. Eucklen's Arnica Salve. Tlie Best Salve in the world for Cuts, Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chilblains, Corns, ami all Skin Erup tions, and positively cures Piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction or money refunded. Price Co cents iter box. For sale at J. N. Snyder's drug store, Somerset, Pa., or at Brallier'a drug store Berlin, Pa. A Great Problem Solved- Alade "(ireat luck, old man. Only three weeks married and last night burglars filtered my house." (.Irasse "I don't see w here the luck is." "Why they carried away almost of our wedding jiresenU." Life. A Growing Babe. Mamma "I think the baby is grow ing very fast, dont you ?" Papa "Decidedly. I thought he weighed three pouuJs more at 4 o'clock this ru nning than he did at 2." Ttuth. Brother and Sister. "Now, darling, you know how strong is my love for you. Do not say you will be a sister to me," She "No, ieorge;I will not say so. You-" He "Then you will" She "You may be a brother to me, ieorge." Judge. Just a Smack. "I am j-oor," he fold; "It would lie many years before I could give my wife a yacht." "Well," answered the girl of 9C; "couldn't you commence with a little smack?" j And it came to pass. puck. sTHE K1HQ CURE OVER ALL FOR nyflv IH..i-iJbLS UMATISM. jVfrllj . 1 Bismarck's Pipe One of the greatest pipe collectors who ever lived was the Marquis de Waterville, whose smoking room In Paris had the walls covered with cost ly pip.s, some of them worth, it is claimed, as much as 2,000, and all ar ranged with great beauty of design. The other was the well-known Captain Bragge, of London, whose collection was valued at 100,000, who had agents in every known part of the world and whose collection was deemed worthy in lss! of Iteing made a special exhibit during the summer season at the Crys tal Palace. Prince Bismarck is a great pipe col lector, and the gem of his collection has a curious history. Many years ago, as Bismarck was strolling in the sub urbs of Frietlerichsruhe with his two hounds, he was accosted by a Bohemi an peddler and asked to buy a plain meerschaum pijte of tlie type that Bis mark most affected. At ilrst Bismarck declined, but the peddler claimed for the pipe a power of forecast and told him he would serve three Emperors as Minister, and that three important changes in his life would lie foretold by accidents befalling tlie pipe. Laughing, Bismarck bought the pile. He has since served three Em jterors. Two days before the historic moment when he was refused au audience the stem of his pipe separa ted and came to pieces. Iater he chipped a piece from the side of the bowl and within a month he was practically dismissed by tlie present Emperor. The third sign has yet to come. Loudon Tid-Bits. Since 1ST8 there have been nine epi demics of dyseutery in different parts of the country in which Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera aud Diarrhoea Remedy was used with iterfect success. Dysen tery, when epidemic, is almost as se vere and dangerous as Asiatic cholera. Heretofore the liest efl'orts of the most skilled physicians have failed to check its ravages; this remedy, however, has cured the most malignant cases, Utth of children and adults, and under the most trying conditions, whicli proves it to lie the liest medicine in the world for Imwel complaints. For sale by Bcufortl's Pharmacy. The Elight of Insects. Many insects can fly faster than birds, Tlie common house fly can or dinary fly twenty-five feet a second. But when it is alarmed it has been found that it cau increase its rate of speed to over ItW feet per second. If it could continue such rapid flight for a mile in a straight line it would cover that distance in exactly thirty-three seconds. It is not an uncommon thing when traveling by rail iu the summer time to see a bee or wasp keeping up w ith the train aud trying to get in at one of the windows. A swallow is con sidered one of the swiftest of flying birds, and it was thought until recent ly that no insect could escape it, A naturalist tells of an exciting chase he saw between a swallow and a drago n fly, which is among the swiftest of of insects. The insect flew with in credible speed, and wheeled and dodged with such ease that the swallow despite its utmost efforts, completely failed to overtake and capture it. Science. Six weeks ago I suffered with a very severe cold; was almost unable to speak. My friends all advised me to consult a physician. Noticing Cliam licrlain's Cough Remedy advertised' in the St. Paul Yolks Zeitung I procured a liottle, and after taking it a short while was entirely well. I now most heartily recommend this remedy to anyone suffering with a cold. Wm. Keil, 7S Selby Ave., St. Paul, Minn. For sale by lienford's Pharmacy. Waiting For The Bird. A small boy who had a great dislike for school returned home for dinner a little earlier than usual. "Tommy, you naughty boy, you have lieen playing truant," said his mother; "a little dicky bird came in at the window and told me so." The next morning Tommy set out for school as usual. During morning his mother heard a noise from the far end of the kitchen and, looking around there, suw Tommy crouched under the table. "Tommy, you rascal, what are you doing there?" Seeing that he was discovered he crawled out and, holding up a brick which be had by him, said: "I was wailin' to croak that dicky bird." ( 'hieago Times-Herald. My little boy, when two years of age was taken very ill with bloody flux. I was advised to use Chamlterlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy, aud luckily procured part of a liottle. I carefully read the directions ami pave it accordingly. He was very low, but slowly and surely he began to im prove, gradually recovered, and is now as stout and strong as ever. I feel sure it saved his life. I never can praise the Remedy half its worth. Iam sor ry every one in the world tloes not know how good it is, as I do. Mrs. Lina S. Hinton, (rahamsville, Marion Co., Florida. For sale by Benford's Pharmacy. She glided into the office and quietly approached the editor's desk. "I have written a intern," she began. "Well!" exclaimed tlie editor, with a look and tone intended to annihilate. But she calmly resumed: "I have written a p:tem on 'My Fa ther's Barn,' and" "Oh," interrupted the editor, with an extraordinary suavity, "you don't know how I am relieved. A poem written on your father's barn, eh? I was afraid it was written on paper and that you wanted me to publish it. If I should ever happen to drive past your father's barn I'll stop and read the poem." Mr. Chicago Newlywed "Who (.s that old gent who appears to take sui-h an interest in you?" j Mrs. Chicago Newlywed "Oh, fre is only the lawyer who attends to nijy di vorces," Texas Sifting. of ai J. "Whats the cause of aft this twaddle altout elevating the stage, I'd like to know?" F. "Want to get it above the level of the women's hats, I suppose." Tit-Bits. j Addison fell in love with the Count ess IViwnger Warwick, but ; she did all the eourting and gnve hiny no trc.uble iu that rtg:trL I I Bryan's Eastward Trip LixextLX, Neb., July 31.-, Mr. Bryan this evening completed the iutlnerary of his jonruey to New York, Pittsburg is the only large city where the uight of a week day will lie spent, and Mr. Bryan may be prevailed on to address an audi ence there. Mr. and Mrs. Bryan will leave Lincoln Friday evening, August 7, on the train due in Chicago Saturday afternoon. They will remain iu Chicago over Sunday, leaving there just before 12 o'clock Sun day night, via the Pennsylvania road. Monday night will lie spent in Pittsburg, and the departure for New York will be made early Tuesday morning, so a to reach there at ii:M o'clock that evening. The National Committee will meet in New York at the time of the notification and Important campaign work will lie discussed. From Now York Mr. and Mrs. Bryan will go to Bath, Mo., to visit Mr. and Mrs. Sewall. The return trip will not lie arranged until after the New York noti fication. Delta Rather Than Whisky. N'kw Oki.kans, Ia, July .'!). John Fohley, a native of Ireland, living in Venice, about seventy miles lielow New t rleaus, died at his home, the victim of fidelity to principles. Fohley was a zealous apostle of temperance, and head of the prohibition movement iu that par ish. A M eek ago he wan severely bitten by a rattlesnake. There is no physician at or near Venice, and it required so much time to send to the nearest physi cian, who lived a considerable distance away, that all idea of medical relief was abandoned. The usual remedy for snake bite, whisky, was suggested, and pressed upon Fohley, but he refused it, declaring that he would much rather die than al low a drop of the accursed liquor to pass his lips. He died after three days of ex cruciating agony. Forbid the Marriage. FaKiiKitK Ksiu Ho, Va., July ISL Atthe marriage of Miss Kmma Anderson and Mr. William Iiarismr, iu Stafford coun ty, the groom's father created a sensation by risiug in the middle of the ceremony and forbidding the marriage because his son was already married. He read sev eral letters from his son's wife, and the preacher refused to go on with the mar riage. All the parties are of high social standing, and the excitement iu the coun ty runs high. Newt Items. Two hundred persons of Stoulienville, Ohio, are homeless ns the result of a cloudburst that occurred there Thursday night. The presid.-nt on Thursday issued a procliiiu.'-tioii warning citizens of the Ciiited States against filibustering or otherwise violating neutrality laws in connection with the Cuban revolution. A powdf-r magazine at Funfkirchen, in Hungary, exploded Thursday. More than m persons were injured, many fatally and the town hall and a number of other buildings were demolished. George Hotzter was shot and killed in his saloon in Cincinnati by two masked men who came in aud demanded money. All the whisky distillers in Kentucky have consented to an almost total suspen sion of production for 18 months. Houses In Tree-Tops. One's interest in the Guiana "untry naturally centres about the nmst fer tile region, that which commands the mouth of its great waterway. As you approach the Orinoco from the (Julf of Paris, you still see that picturesque sight to which Humboldt refers in his travels, "innumerable fires in the tall paim trees" the dwelling places etf the peaceful Guaraunos, The legend that this strange trilte of Indians, once the masters of the Ori noco, live in trees the entire year re sults from tli great annual rise of the Orinoco. At Ciudad Bolivar, three hundred mile-s up, this amounts some times, in a contracted place, to ninety feet. On the broader delta it is always sutlicient to cover islands and low ground; therefore the inhabitants very wisely build their houses well above the ground. For this purpose four tall palm trees are sele-cte-d, ami the cptsspieccs which form tlie foundation for the houses are lashed to the main support by pieces of a tough vine in digenous to the delta. I'pon these U laid the flooring, and then the sides and roof are thatched with large palm leaves, to whicli the Indians have given tiie pin-tic name of "fc:Uher-of-the-sun." There nre many advantages that this particular palm leaf jxtsscsscs over others of the same family, the princi pal one being its similarity to asbestos in the quality of resisting lire. In the location of his house the Guarauno takes another wise precaution in build ing, and it is one that carries with it a lesson for the government under whose sovereigaty he lives. Century. "You must nrt run the machine so fast, Katie," said her mother. Katie, who was making d ill e!oths after the manner of grown folks, sewed very slowly for a short time and said: "Let me trot it just a little bit, mamma." When Farquhar was in love with Mrs. Oldtleld, the actress, he told her, "My head and my he-art are at fisti cuffs about you." A Those Who Heed it Not liave Much to Fear. A note of warning. At hrt the faintest echo. It strikes the hack. A M-ciiliar w:iruin? not heard, but felt. The buck cries out tvliels. The aches, pains and lameness Make life a niiuerr become unbear able. Do yon nuuerstund the wn ruing T The ki liH-js are on a strike; They have been overworked. ' Nature intends you to know this. And has only one way to warn yon. Ihe kidneya are located near the aiuall of the hack. .' They are composed of delicate fibres thnt filter the blood. Stoopiuj positions, a strain or cold often clops the iilters. Backache is the beginning; lame and Wenk back follows. The Iilters fail to do their work. Kidney disease derelons. The urine is too frequent. The calls of nature wake you up at Bight. A brick-colored deposit shows the trace Of failing kidneys. Rheumatic iaiua and many aches ap pear. All this from a ama'-l beginning. So easy to cure, too, when you know how. Get at the cause Break up the kidney blockade. IVmn's Kiduey Pills do this. That's their specialty for the kidney only. Doan's Kidney Pills are sold by all deah-rs. Price, 50 cents. Mailed by Fos-ter-Milhurn Co., Bnffrilo, X. Y., sole agents for the I nited States. WARNING PTE A Neat Bit of Sarcasm- Some years ago there lived In Ala bama a judge who was noted for the sarcasm which he dispensed lavishly duriug his administration of justice. On one oi-casion during a term of court at Montgomery a young mau was tried for stealing a pockclbook. The next ease was for murder. The evidence in the larceny case was slight, but in the other seemed to the judge conclu sive. To his amazement and wrath, however, the jury convicted the young man c ad acquitted the murderer. In passing sentence upon the con vieted thief, after the Wise-barge of the other prisoner, the judge said: "Young man, you have not been in this country long?" "No, your honor," replied the pris oner. "I thought not," said the judge. "You don't know these people; you may kill them but don't touch their SK-ketUioks!" Ou another occasion w hen the evi dence seemed to point conclusively to the prsioner's guilt, but when the judge, from long experiem-e, distrusted tlie jurymen's wisdom, the counsel for the defendant said: "It is U tter that !W guilty persons should escape than one innocent man should sulfcr." In his charge to the jury, the judge admitted the soundness of this propo sition, but he added impressively and severely: "Gentlemen, I want you to Is-ar iu mind that !! have already e-scajHHl." Youth's Companion. A Deception Easily Practiced is the offer of a reward for "any case of catarrh not cured" by certain "cures" or "blood medicines." Nothing is said regarding the number of bottles re quired, and therein lies the deception. The makers of Ely's Cream Balm, have never resorted to such devices. Cream Balm is an elegant preparation, agreeable to use, and immediate in its tieneficial results. It cures catarrh. You can rely upon the fact that it con tains no mercury nor other injurious drug. 50 cts. A Judge's Opinion. Balzac tells of a counselor w ho had a great fondness for sentence's of death. The president of the tribunal with which he was connected having asked his opinion on a case which had just been concluded, he started suddenly from sleep and said that the man should have his head cut otf. "But," said the president, "the question is alsiut a meadow.'" "Then let it lie mown!" Comhill Magazine. Electric Bitters- Electric Bitte-rs it a medicine suited for any season, but terhais more gen erally needed, when the languid ex hausted feeling prevails, when the liver is torpid aud sluggish and the need of a tonic ami alterative is felt. A prompt use of this medicine has of ten averted long and perhaps fatal bilious fevers. No medicine will act more surely iu counteracting ami free ing the system from the malarial poi son. Headache, Indigestion, Consti pation, Dizziness yield to Electric Bit ters. oOc. and f 1.00 per bottle at J. N. Snyder's drug store, Somerset, or at Brallier's drug store, Be rlin. She (angrily) "What do cooking for you ? Nothing I get by , t He "Dear me, you are fortunate. I always get indigestion." Boston Globe. Marvelous Results. From a l.-tte-r written by Rev. J. Gundcrman, of Dimondale, Mich., we are permitted to make this extract. "I have no hesitation in recommend ing Dr. King's New Discovery, as tlie results were almost marvelous in the case of my wife. While I was pastor of the Baptist Church at Rives Junction she was brought down w ith Pneumonia succeeding Iji Grippe. Terrible paroxysms of coughing would last hours with little interruption ami it seemed as if she could not survive them. A friend recommended Dr. King's New Discovery, its was quick in its work and highly satisfactory in results." Trial Itottles free at J. N. Snyder's drug store, Somerset, or at Brallier's drug store, Berlin. Regular size 50c. and vl.0. Different Now. "You used to say when we were hrst married that I was the light of your eyes." "Yes; I was blind then." IVtroit Free Press. Vacation Time Is at hand and is gladly welcomed by all, especially those whose duties iu life have caused them to greatly run down their system to meet the require ments, physical and mental, forced up on them. With these and others, it is important, whether at home, at the seashore or in the country, that some thought be given to diet, and as fur ther assistance to Nature, a good building-up medicine like Hood's Sarsa'par illa had liest be resorte-d to. If the di gestion is jxtor, liver de-ranged and fre quent headaches seem to lie the rule, Hood's Sarsaparilla will change all this and enable everyone to return to their home and business in a refreshed state of mind ami bodily health. She Do you really think au Ameri can ever broke a bank at Monte Carlo? He Yes, I have heard of several American 1 bank cashiers who broke their own hanks there. Restores the Appetite- R('Kvmih, Pa., July 4, 1S!HJ. Geo. Miller of this place writes the follow ing voluntary statement: "I have tak en Hood's Sarsaparilla and heartily recommend it to all as a b'ood puriiicr and restorer of the appetite." George Miller, Box 50. Hood's Pills are especially prepared to be taken with Hood's Sarsaparilla. Farmer Jones What hevyer larned at yer college, son? Son Why, dad! I can throw the hammer farther than anyone there. Farmer Jones Thet's good. I guess you'll hev no trouble in gittin' er job iu er blacksmith shop then. Kicky "Wife, can you tell me why I am like a hen?" Mrs. Kicksy "No, dear; why is it?" Klcksy "Because I can seldom find anything where I laid it yesterday." San Francisco City Argus. Out of Sight "I don't thiuk this lonely place is doing me any good." "Why not?" "I feel so unmanned T' Life. 'OMKRSKT MARKET REPORT, ) coantCTTtu w ttctti.t av Cook & Beerits, WalnrjHlnif, April SS ISM. ( pfr tiu . Z Apple itrt.il. ft o " ( evponitel 9 -.lor. Apple Butler, pr khI. V0 to i roll, per ft . l-'c Mutter. fresh keic, per ft l"e (eivuiiiery, per .'J ltveswax, per ft - - .ViwiiiiJ iiimin, " ........ " J Mieur cun-ti luu, per ft 11 to 11': a' 1 si.le, per ft 7 U K tli(ukler. per ! 7 tow country nam, per si ... i - Bacon. so ue. Brans. ConV-e. f white navy, per bun I Lima, tier ft ..... ic iKm-ii, per ft. 1 nalMteU. iM-r ft .JS to Juc . ( l iinilieriuiid. per bbl...ll-'i0 Cement, ...n,, pbbl 4.' Cornmefil, per ft .. Jc KitfS per J'H Vi Fish, lake hcrrinrl l:;;!;:"--"; Honey, white clover, per ft.... l ie Ltt.r.1, mt ft Htojim; I.inie, pcrl-bl - Li t M1h ... per Kl Onion. M-rlus to 'tn t-uiaOie. x-r t-us J lo Ieuelies, evalxiniteU. per ft 10 to Lie fruncs. per ft 10 to l:ic . f V ..... 1.1.1 1 1. 1 . i ..-.-.-..-..- I'lio-biin;, per blil l.') itairy, ', Itus sucks... . . Halt, I ; i " " u 4 Ull suck ...t ground alum, I so ft Kick , Stic maple, per B- Jb tosc liniortc.l yellot, per ft .V- winte, A. ier ft... ... erunuljili'l, n r ft ....tie t'uln. or vulvcrliu.fi, per ft c Hujjar. Kyrup. f per sal A' 1 maple, tier Kl lo Nr Stoneware, ualloli X Ti. How, s-r b i to Vinegar, per Kul auto :jlc tiiiiomy, per nus clover, per bim.. Vi.OJ to crimson, per bus. ... 4.ii ulrillu, per Itus. . ti.KI ulsyke. per bus ".' Seed. Millet, ierman, r bus .... Iwrley, bile Un nl less, mt bus. l.-ii I buck bent, per bus ;tc I corn, ei, r. per Itus ill to k Grain sbcllol, per bus lo lo 4.V J, out. t- r bus , U .ioe rye, per bus ...-V A Feed wheat, per bus Tite I bran, mt ln fts sue Scorn aul cmUi chop, per 1") !... Sic dour, roller process, per bbl. .;.7.i spring patent anil fancy . Iiijih jrnt.le M.Ut to H.35 I Hour, lower itnwle, per lkift llJi!.') ,, I while, per 1UI fts Hie SlhldUiiK. fts Wc ENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD. EASTERN STANDARD TIME. IN EFf EGT McY 20, 1895. COSDINSED SrHEDCLK. Trilnn arrive and depart from the itatlon a J oh Usui w ii aa foilowi: WESTWARD Western Expresn. Vt a. m. :.7 " V-M " 9:4 - X-C " 5:1. " Sox p. m. V-..S0 " Southwestern Kxpress Johnstown Accommodation... Accommodation... Pncin F.xpress ..... Wav i-Rsseiigcr...... . - Mail Fast Line Johnstown Accommodation.. EASTWARD. Atlnntic E Dress ...... 5,-ot a. m. 5:W " :H - !el " Uhl.i " lr p. m. 4:11 " .:.-'. " 7:I " 10:30 " Sea-shore Express A I lis ma A(comiiiooaiioii .. I my Express Main I-ine Express l!iMiut Artftnimodalioii Johnstown Atfoinmodatioii rnwticieipiiiii t.xpress Fast Line For rates, man, Ac, call on Ticket Auents or OftilnM Tlt.Mi E. Watt, 1-. A. w. tt., J trail Avenue. Plttsbuiv. t'lL. 8. M. Prevost, . R. Wood. Oeu'l Pawl Ag Ueu. Manager. CONDENSED TIME TABUS. Baltimore and Ohio Railroad. Somerset and Cambria Branch. KORTH WARD. Johnstown Mall Express. Rock wood TfW a. in.. Somerset Sf 11. Ntoyesttiwu Hoov ersville ih'i). Johnstown 11:00. Johnstown Mail Express. Rock wood MV'O a. ersvilie l: A, Johnstown 1-2:10 p. 111. Johnstown Accommodation. Rock wood 6:00 p. in.. Somerset tt:'J5 stoyestown Ikit, lioov prsviilv 7.-04, Johnstown "M. Dully. SOUTHWARD. Mall. Johnstown 7:10 a. HoovemvlIlel:J!t. Stoyestown S:l Somerset 12, Uovkwuoa St-..li. Exori-ss Johnstown 2:30 p. m Hoovemvllle 8: IS, stoyestown 3:-tt, Somerset t.trA Kock wMSi t:t. Sunday Only. Johnstown &30, Somerset l(h0 lUs-kwood 10-3. YOUR EYE! Weantto catch It! EVERY FARMER in Somerset County w ho hr-H a cord of Hemlock Bark or a Hi.le to dispose of will finil that the CON FLUENCE TANNERY Co., w ill pay the highest cash prices for the same. Write for quotations to WINSLOW S. COBB A CO Confluence, Pa. Salesmen Wanted on Salary, to sell' Pennsylvania frown Nur sery stwk, which it the best i the work. All the new sif laities as welt us the standard vurie-ln-s of Fruits i Ornamrntalt. A fine out til fur-lO-ln ' and ail tmvelnix eXf-elises mil. sla ry d fn.in iliiy wnric is commenced. W rile fw terms, stating tore. Hoopes, Bro. & Thomas, Maple Avenue Nurseries, West Chester, Pa. ti ItsWS k NEW " ' . "La 7HE ONLY PERFECT FOR For Sale By J. B. HOLDERBAUM, Somerset. Pa. YOU CAN FIND THIS PAPER a U In lrrTBr..u t tb Artrti.lB llurosu wEEiaiTGTOlT BROS. 2Q .V PI lifilf uv wui cataLntu lur unnuiu at kM THE BEST sils None Too Good When You Buy -r: MEDICINES.::- It 1st Just an Iintsirtant to Henire FRESH, PURE DRUGS, A it i To Have Confidence in the Fhyaician Jt ho I'rencri Them. AT SNYDER'S You are always sure of getting the freshest medicines- PRESCRIPTION" Carefully Com pounded. TRUSSES FITTED. All of the Bent ami Moat Approvetl Truea Kept In St'k. Stitlifttrfion Gunntnteetl. OPTICAL GOODS. GLASSES FITTED TO SUIT THE SIGHT JOHN N. Somerset, Louthefs Drug Store, Main Street, Somerset, Pa. This Hods! Drug Store is Favorite with FRESH. AHD . Medicines, Jye Stuffs, Sponges, Tmses, Supporters, Perfumes, &c. THI DOCTOR GIVC9 PIKSCSAL ATTESTIOJI TOTHI COMPOODISO 0 Leather's PrescriptionsiFamily Receip Q ft SAT CARE BEING TAKES TO CSE SPECTACLES, And a Full Line of Optical Goods large assortment all can be Euitea. THE FIHEST BBAHDS OF CIG1BS ! Always on hand. It is always . a to intending purcnasers, wnetner iney Duy i from us or elsewhere. J. M. LOUTHER M. D. MAIN STREET Somerset lumber i ard MASCFACTCItEB ASD DEALEB AMD HOLES LE AND KETAILEK OF Lumber and Building Materials. I Oak, Poplar, Hidings. Walnut. Yellow Pine. Flooring. Cherry, hhinglea. Doors, Lath. White Pine Blinds, l'AfenemlIlneor!!fra4Mori.umberanlBiiilltnR Material and Eooflnlate kept la luck. Also, can furulnh anything In the line of our busine) toonlt-r with reajioiia ble promptness, uch as Brackets, oil d-s:et.worki;tc. Elias Cunningha m, Office anil Yard Opposite S. & C. R. K. PREPARATIONS FOR The Great OK NOVKMIll'.R 3 PRESIDENT IS TO NEW YORK WEEKLY TRIBUNE j will, as always, Ih foiinl it th tliickewt of the finht, batllH "J vigttntasly for Jiuaiiici 7i ,,irlf.i, which w ill l r.:. j -A prttsiM'rtltf tit the n.t'. The .'nt Yt,rk HVr-i,' Tri'iuti is not only t lie leaditiR Kep'i-' lii-un pnper of the cotsntry, but is jre-ri.i:ni Ht a H't!itl " " J urtrptijrr. I Its :mijKti!i uews and disc'iist-ions wl! interest every Arurr.-1 oan -iti.o-i. J 1 AU the news of theilay, KoreigJi Correspondeiu-e, Agrifiutu.- al liejiartnient. Market KeiHtrts, !tort Stories complete iu ea.j. r nuiiilter, t'omie Pictures, Fashion Flutes with elal"rate tiesT'.p-1 X tions, and a variety of items of ht.iisehi-ld interest, make up a Jiltul Family Faprr. t I ! A SPECIAL (.XJNTRACT enables ua to offer this splendiil journal and The . Somerset .'. Herald ONE YEAR FOR ONLY $2.00. CASH IN SUBSCRIPTIONS MAY Address all orders to Write your name anl adJress an a postal eirJ, send It to Ueo. W. liest. R" Tribune Ruildins, New Trk neckly Tribune will be mailed to IT WILL PAT YOU TO BUY YOUR 3Ieiuorial Work or WM. F.SHAFFER, SOMERSET. PENJTA. Manufacturer of and Dealer in Eastern Work Furnished on Short Notice hi hie m Also, Agent for the WHITE BRONZE f Persons In need of Monument Work will And it to tbeir interest to rail at my shop where a proper showing will be given thrill. (TSatlsfm llou Eoaranteed In every case, and Price Yury low. 1 invite special attention to he Whita B lie, Or Pura Ziro Monumen rod need by Pt. W. A. Kinr, ss a d.cid.d niproveiitrnt in the point of Material and Construction. aud which tadestlitcft to be the popular Monument lor our changeable til mate, Utveusaeall. 31.. P. SHAFFER, EYES. CALL AND HAVE YOU? TESTED. SNYDER, Pa Rapidly Becoming a tea People in Search of PORE . DHUGSj Toilet Articles, r into 05LY FRESH AID PCKE AETKLES. ! EYE-GLASSES, always on band. From such a pleasure to display our i.i .1 t i - - SOMERSET. PA Picket, 9lonllin Sash. NtarRailis BalaHtenu Chestnut, Aewel Iontt, YAq. Station, SOSIESIT Battle ARE ALREADY WELL t'XPKR WAY. A t of the UNITED STATES' BE EI.E-rEH, AM THE I ADVANCE. BEGIN AT ANY TIME THE IIKKALU flty, and sample copy afTheSewV'' you. SuEITKlS AS FEACnCALLI PV 1 W'Y r S 1 Over BOO Beautiful qjj SendW! II' !I Price LislJ; Designs. fil! 1 Circular lis MONUMENTAL BRONZE COVIMNi s&L&osfcax. ooa v. f BZTTI2i.-J ? 1 A ( 6, r
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers