Q You Would: have wholesome, utritious Bread, ooononondnd go for the brain, bone, nerve and muscle makings FINE FLOUR OF THE ENTIRE WHEAT As ground by the Franklin Mills. ponononononvueuenvovd “Iya send us his name and yo rorder we wilisec that youaresupry lied. } See that the Flour delivered bears our label: avoid substi- tutes. Send for Booklet. g The genuine made only by the digs QC FRANKLIN MILLS CO., LOCKPORT, N.Y. o ocononendndr gooonodnendndal 00000uOLOEOIOaOUONOUOO NOTIN ANY TRUST Many newspapers have lately given currency to reports by irresponsible parties to the effect that THE NEW HOME SEWING MACHINECO had entered a trust or combination; we wish to assure the public that there is no truth in such reports. We have been manufacturing sewing machines for over a quarter ofa centu- ry, and have established a reputation for our- selves and our machines that is the envy of all | | Harmony, Theory and Sight never been rivaled as a family machine.—It | others. Our ¢ New Home” machine has stands at the head ofall High Grade sewing machines, and stands on its own merits. The * New Home?” is the only really HIGH GRADE Sewing Machine ’ on the market. Tt is not necessary for us to enter into a trust to save our credit or pay any debts as we have no debts to pay. We have never entered into competition with manufacturers of low grade cheap machines that are made to sell regard- less of any intrinsic merits. Do not be de- ceived, when you wantasewing machinedon’t send your money away from home; callon a “ New Home?” Dealer, he cangellyoua better machine for less than you can purchase elsewhere. If there is no dealer near you, write direct to us. THE NEW HOME SEWING MACHINE CO ORANGE, MASS. New York, Chicago, 111, St. Louis, Mo., Atlan« ta, Ga., Dallas, Tex., San Francisco, Cal. STEVENS Single Barrel © a ——— a Gun Ces 0, om "a2 THE MOST POPULAR GUN HADE This gun is fully up to the quality of our rifles, which for 38 years have been STANDARD. It is made in 3 styles, and in 12, 16and 20 gauge. Bored for N1TRO Powpker and {fully guaranteed. No. 10C . . $7.50 No. (IO . . 8.50 No. 120 . . 10.00 Send stamp for large catalogue illustrating complete line, brimful of valuable information to sportsmen. J. Sevens Arms arp Toot Co. P. 0. Box 3275 CHICOPEE FALLS, MASS. 50 YEARS EXPERIENCIZ i$ Ve TrADE MARKS DESIGNS COPYRIGHTS &C. Anyone sending a sketch and description may quickly ascertain our opinion free w ether an i i bably patentable. Communiea- tions strictly confidential. Handbook on Patents sent free. Oldest gency for securing Efetenis, Patents taken through nn & Co. receive special notice, without charge, in the «po Scientific American, A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest cir- culation of any scientific journal. Terms, $3 a ear; four months, $1. Sold by all newsdealers. MUNN & Co_s18resawer. New York ‘Branch Office. 625 F St. Washington, D. C. W. H. KOONTZ. KOONTZ & OGLE Attorneys-At-Law, J. G. OGLE SOMERSET, PENN’A Office opposite Court House. ERNEST 0. KOOSER, Ho06060000800000000600800¢ | f | a | a ee |2 AD6060O0O0ONOnAnonendndondnoa OF SOUTHERY PENNA. Man Shall Not Live By Bread Alone! That is what our Saviour said when the devil tried to tempt him on the mountain top. No one wants to live by bread alone. Good MEAT wanted by all us, and even The Devil Is Going About like a roaring lion, seeking whom he may devour. But don’t let the devil put it into your head that you can buy better Meat than is sold at my shop. I kill good cattle and al- ways sell as low as current is prices will allow. For the best | MEAT prices, servant. ===]. T. Smearman. and the always lowest living call on your nil) | The College of Music cal, Stringed Instrumental, Parson’s Musical Kiedergarten System, Elocu- tion and Physical culture are taught. Read- ing a specialty. For further informa- tion address Helen ‘Harrie Junhin, Mgr. E. A: Cook, Director. KIDNEY KIDNEY CURE Is 8 FOLEY'S Guaranteed Remedy or money refunded. Contains remedies re i oy $7 nent physicians as the for Kidney and Bladder troubles. PRICE Sc. 10d $100. Eugene Field’s Views on Ambition and Dys- pepsia. “Dyspepsia,” wrote Eugene Field, “often incapacitates a man for endeavor and sometimes extinguishes the fire of ambition.’ Though great despite his complaint Field suffered from indiges- tion all his life. A weak, tired stomach can’t digest your food. It needs rest. You can only rest it by the use of a preparation like Kodol, which re- lieves it of work by digesting your food. Rest soon restores it to its normal tone. Strengthening, Satisfying, Envigorating. Prepared only by E. C. DEW1TT & CO., Chicago. The $1. bottle contains 2% times the 50c. size 2OLD BY E. H. MILLER. <1], B. WILLIAMS CG. FROSTBUIG, MD, Cr .ape.t place to buy E.E.&L. CODER, Jewelers. Fine Wateh. Clock and Jewelry re- pairing. We guarantee good work and prompt attention. SALISBURY, PA. |alisbury Hack lane, SCHRAMM BROS, Proprietors. SCHEDULE :—Hack No. 1 leaves Salis- bury at 8 a. m, arriving at Meyersdale at 9.30 2. m. Returning leaves Meyersdale at] p. m., arriving at Salisbury at 2.30 p. m. HACK No. 2 leaves Salisbury at 1 p. m.,ar- riving at Meyersdale at 2.30 p. m. Return- ing ledves Meyersdale at 6 p. 1. arriving at Salisbury at 7.30 p. m. B.& 0. R.R.SCHEDULE. Attorney-At-I.aw, SOMERSET, PA. J. A. BERKEY Attorney-at-I.aw, SOMERSET, PA. Coffroth & Ruppel Building. Districr 2. E. MEYERS, ATTORNEY Attorney-at-l.aw, Si SET, PA Office in Court House. A. F. SPEICHER, Physician and Surgeon, Winter Arrangement.—In Ef- fect Sunday, Nov. 23, 1902. Under the new schedule there will be 8 daily passenger trains on the Pittsburg Di- vision, due at Meyersdale as follows: Hast Bound. 10x—Night EXPress............. — Accommodation .... 6—Through Mail..... 46-Through Train............. 4:48 | g@ WEDDING In West Bound. g stop. xFla 7. D. STILWELL, Agent. office. A nice n | fingers it came, | found | could not understand questions. Final- This college is now open. Piano Vo- | 15 she got the drift of the conversation. | S g . ano, | { had DISEASES ——————————— are the most fatal of all dis- Ze HER FRENCH A FAILURE. The Tragedy of a Blacking Bettie In the Latin Quarter, She was spending her first month in the Latin quarter of Paris. She spoke English fluently, with a Boston accent; also she spoke German, could make a fair stagger at Italian and knew a few words of Hindoostanee, but of French not a syllable. One morning she found herself in a wrestling match with a bottle of French shoe blacking. The pesky bot- tle, understanding that it had to deal with an alien, refused to give up its cork. She had no corkscrew of her own and did not know how to ask for one, even if she dared suspect that her next door neighbor might be possessed of the luxury. The tine of her pet fork she had bent on the obstinate plug, the point of her best penknife she had bro- ken off short, and nothing remained except to throw the bottle out of a window to get at its contents. She de- cided as a last resort to try breaking the neck off the bottle. With a “stove lid lifter” she administered several cautious taps in the region of the jugu- lar of the obstinate neck. doin’.” Then she tapped hardes still, and the blacking came. All over her all over her light wool- an skirt and over much of the floor and window sill. She decided to have the skirt cleaned und. packing it into & bundle, tripped off to un establishment where she embarrassment because she The cleaners wanted to know what caused the spot. Fortunately a bottle of shoe blacking was standing pear by, and she pointed at this and wouid” and ‘“ouid” until she left in heightened spirits. feeling that she was not helpless and that she had made the cleaners understand. When the skirt was duly returned the following week, it was dyed black.—New York Tribune. ANIMAL ODDITIES. Breton sheep are not much larger than a fair sized hare. The mandarin duck is one of the most | beautiful of aquatic birds. The queen is always at the mercy of the bees and is a slave instead of a ruler. : A beetle one-third the size of a horse would be able to pull against more than a dozen horses. The greyhound, which can cover a mile in a minute and twenty-eight sec- onds. is the fastest of quadrupeds. The giraffe. armadillo and porcupine have no vocal cords and are therefore mute. Whales and serpents are also voiceless. The glowworm lays eggs which are themselves luminous. However, the voung hatched from them are not pos- sessed of those peculiar properties until after the first transformation. To escape from dangers which men- ace them starfishes commit suicide. This instinct of self destruction is found only in the highest and lowest scales of animal life. Hebridean Proverbs. The daily talk of the Hebrideans has a shrewd picturesqueness. “Let the loan go laughing home,” they say. That is, ‘Be careful of whatever you have borrowed.” If a person were to be met coldly on going to a friend's house, he would say: “The shore is the same, but the shell- fish is not the same.” The impossible is denoted by “black- berries in midwinter and sea gulls’ eggs in autumn.” «Better thin kneading than to be empty.” That is, “Half a loaf is better than ne bread.” “Phe man who is idle will put the cats on the fire.” “He that does not look before hin will look behind him.” “A house without a dog. without a cat, without a little child, is a house without pleasure and without laugh- ter.” Homes In Italy. Speaking of homes and ways of liv- ing, Mr. Luigi Villari in “Italian Life In Town and Country” reveals a curi- ous state of affairs. In Italian cities there are no slum districts. The poor- ost of the poor may be lodged in the same palace with people whose income runs over $25.000 annually. The poor are packed away in the garrets or in the cellars, to be sure, and their mis- ery must be rendered all the more acute by the sight and scent of such lavish living, High class Italians have no objections whatever to dwelling over a shop or place of business. Forgot Himself. Mrs. Henpeck—We hev bin married twenty years today, Hiram. Hiram (with a sigh)—Yes, fer twenty years we've fought— Mrs. Henpeck (scowling) — What? You old wretch! Hiram (quickly)—Life’s battles to- gether, Mirandy.—Judge. Too Valuable to Lose. Mr. Grogan—Sure, Moike, an’ what did yez do wit’ yure dorg? Mike—Oh, he wuz wort’ $10 an’ Oi kep’ tinkin’ if some wan sh’d stale am Oi could ill afford th’ loss, so Oi gave um away, Db’gorra!— Chicago News. A~xviully Benighted. Dasherly—Is he so very ignorant? Flasherly—Ignorant? Why, actually, he doesn’t even know a cure for colds! ~Txansas City Independent. 1 wonder why it is we are not all | kinder than we are. = | done! ations at THE | stock just re- | if. How instantaneously How infallibly Drummond. it is “Nothin’ | i orders, How easily it is it acts! | remembered!— | *" ALMACK'’S OF LONDON. A Famous Woman's Club of a Cen- tury or So Ago. About a century ago ®e seventh heaven of the fashionable world of London was a club known as Almack’'s, of which the patronesses were Lady Castlereagh, Lady Jersey, Lady Cow- per (afterward Lady Palmerston), Lady Sefton, Mrs. Drummond Burrell (after- ward Lady Willoughby), the Princess Esterbazy and the Countess Lieven. Their smiles or frowns consigned men and women to happiness or despair. It is hard for us to conceive the impor- tance which was attached to getting admission to Almack’s. Of the 300 offi- cers of the Foot guards not more than half a dozen were honored with cards to this temple of the beau monde. The government was a pure despotism, as every government by woman is bound to be, and a host of intrigues was set set in motion to get an invitation. Very often persons of rank who had the entree anywhere were excluded from the club. Such as were admitted had to dress in conformity vith the edict of the tyrants, no gentleman Be- ing allowed to appear at the assemblies except iw knee breeches. white cravat and crush hat. On one occasion the Duke cf Wellington was about to ascend the stairs to the ballroom dressed in black trousers when the guardian of the establishment stepped forward and said, “Your grace cannot be admitted in trousers,” whereupon the duke, who had a great respect for quietly walked away.—New York Press. Haas IER, A Pun That Failed. At a public dinner a careless waiter stumbled when bringing in a boiled tongue. The tongue slipped over the edge of the dish upon the tablecloth. “Never mind.” said the chairman cheerfully, “it's only a lapsus lingu” (slip of the tongue). The joke was received with a burst of laughter. A gentleman present, who had no knowledge of Latin, yet saw what boisterous merriment it caused. secretly determined that he would repeat the whole performance at his next little dinner party at home and give his guests a great laugh at his wit. The occasion arrived. There was to be a leg of mutton, and the host had instructed the waiter to let it fall when coming in. The waiter did so, to the great dismay of the guests. «Qh. never mind,” cried the host cheerfully, “it's only a lapsus lingua.” To his great disgust and astonish- ment, however, nobody seemed to see it, and now he is suspicious that some- thing must have gone wrong some- where.—Pearson’s. Appealed to the Powers. The lute Joseph Medill, editor of the Chicago Tribune, besides being an in- defatigable editor, had a decided vein of humor in his composition. During the last years of his life, as his strength permitted, he watched over his paper as zealously as in his younger days, and it was his custom to scan the columns of certain favorite exchanges and clip from them ex- tensively, marking them on the wmar- gins, J. M.—Must,” meaning that the extracts must go ip. It was one of his great griefs that there was not aiways room for all of them. even when col- amns of live editorial matter had been crowded out, as they were sometimes, to make room for them. # One night Le went up to the room of {Le night editor with a bundle of clip- pings in his hand. «yr. Ransom,” he said to that offi- cial. with a twinkle in his eye, “I wish vou would use, your influence to have these printed in the paper tomorrow morning.’ —Youth’s Companion. A Nourishing Drinl. The whites of raw eggs are very nourishing. A good way to prepare the drink. according to one who knows, is to break the white into a jar with what milk is desired and shake the two thoroughly together. A pinch of salt should be ndded. An English special- ist recommends to adult patients suf- fering from anemic condition the daily consumption of eight or ten egg whites. They can he taken clear and with ease if the eggs are kept very cold. broken into a cold glass and used at once. Another excellent drink is made by beating the white of an egg to a froth and adding a tablespoonful of rich cream and a spoonful of brandy. This fs a very nourishing cordial for an in- valid. ! Economical. Farmer Skinflint (reading sign)— «Fyesight Tested Free of Charge.” .Gracious! Mandy, in I go an’ find out if it’s hurtin’ my eyesight tew read the paper. Mandy—An’ if it is are yew goin’ tew squander good money on spectacles? Farmer Skinflint—No; Tm goin’ tew give up the paper. eee Gold Only For Royalty. It is a notable fact that in Abyssinia none but those who are related to the monarch is permitted to wear gold in any form. They may deck themselves with diamonds ands other precious stones, but the jewels must not be set in gold. The penalty for infringement of this law is death by decapitation. Sb SRC Thanked. She—Yes, I told you I'd always be a sister to you, and I'll be glad to hear anything you have to say to me. Tre—Six months ago you told me rd thank you some day for refusing me. Tet me do so at once. You can’t hold a candle to the I'm engag now. girl Ils Emblitered Exi: Checks—You're the tempered man in town. Black—Well, you see, to a public school.—Chicage {is of i —'Tit-Bits. PERSISTENT LOVERS. WOMEN WHO WERE MARRIED SPITE OF THEMSELVES. IN Some Matrimonial Experiences That Would Seem to Justify Voltaire’s Cynical Declarstion That “Any Man Cen Wed Any Woman.” “Any man can marry any woman,” Voltaire once cynically declared, “if he only pursues her long enough.” This, at any rate, was the experience of Ja- cob Halliday, a well known character in the north of England a couple of gencrations ago. Never did a lover win a wife under such discouraging conditions as Jacob, for after his first proposal he was soundly horsewhipped by the young lady's father and ducked in a conven- ient pond. * «p11 ask her again next year.” Jacob spluttered as he emerged from his bath. the fire of his passion not a whit quenched by his cold douche. ‘““Regu- larly once a year. on the anniversary of Lis first proposal and immersion,” Nicholson says in his biography of Mr. Halliday, “Jacob attired himself in his finest raiment and presented his peti- tion, always with the same negative re- cult. When he presented himself, now a midéle aged man. for the twenty- fourtu time, the lady greeted his ap- pearance with a peal of laughter. ‘It’s ne good, Jacob. I see’ she exclaimed. ‘I may as well give in now as later, but what a faint hearted creature the im- portunate widow was compared with youl’ ” ’ Sheridan took