T. A. RERKEY Attorney-at-Liaw, SOMERSET, PA. Coffroth & Ruppel Building. ERNEST 0. KOOSER, Attorney-At-Liaw, SOMERSET, PA. R. E. MEYERS, DISTRICT ATTORNEY. Attormney-at-Law, SOMERSET, PA. Office in Court House. W. H. KOONTZ. J. G. OGLE KOONTZ & OGLE Attorneys-At-Law, SOMERSET, PENN’A Office opposite Court House. VIRGIL R. SAYLOR, ‘ Attormey-at-l.aw, SOMERSET, PA. Office in Mammoth Block. E. H. PERRY, Physician and Surgeon, (Successor to Dr. A. F. Speicher.) SALISBURY, PENN’A. Office corner Grant and Union Streets B.& 0. R.R.SCHEDULE. Summer Arrangement.—In Ef- fect Sunday, May 15, 1904. Under the new schedule there will be 14 daily passenger trains on the Pittsburg Di- vision, due at Meyersdale as follows: Fast Bound. No. 48—Accommodation............ 11:02 A.M No. 6-Fast Line.................... 11:30 A. M No. 46—Through train.............. 4:41 P. M No. 16—Accommodation ............ 5:16 P.M *No.12—-Duquesne Lamited........... 9:85 P. M No. 10—Night Express........... 12:57AM No.208—Johnstown Accommo........8:35 P. M West Bound. *No. 9—Night Express............... No. 1l1—Duquense...........ceoevune.. 0:08 A.M No. 13—Accommodation............ 8:42 A. XM No. 47—Throughtrain.............. 10:46 A. M No. 5—-Fast Line.................... 4:28 P. M No. 499—Accommodation ............ 4:50pP. M No.207—Johnstown Accommo....... 6:30 AM Ask telephone central for time of trains. £@F-*Do not stop. W.D.STILWELL, Agent. Ours, Yours and Uncle Sam’s Favorite.”” THE CENTURY Rural Mail Box A Approved by the P. O. Dept. The Carriers speak of it in the highest terms. The best, largest, most access- ible and safest Mail Box on the market. The best is always the cheapest. Send for Circulars. MADE BY THE CENTURY POST CO., Tecumseh, Mich. + greats wanted in unoccupied territory. J « We alvo usmulacture the Tecumseh Rurai Run Down. When coffee * goes back on” people, their endurance snaps like a dead twig. 9Mocon COFFEE’ The food Drink enriches health’s store—builds up splendid powers of existance. “Go back on coffee” before it fails you. Mocon is the perfect substifute. 1% Rich—fragrant—delicious. RY J al have $ried all the substitutes on le market and I am satisfied shat Mo- It is certainly a vEry pleasant and satisfying food drink.” Name on request. 9% Man's best drink.At thegrocer. ws wm meee Central Gy Cereal Coffee Co, Peoria, JIL, U.S.A. Sour Stomach No appetite, loss of strength, nervous- ness, headache, constipation, bad breath, general debility, sour risings, and catarrh of the stomach are all due to indigestion. Kodol cures indigestion. ery represents the natural juices of diges- tion as they exist in a healthy stomach, combined with the greatest known tonic and reconstructive properties. Kodol Dys- pepsia Cure does not only cure indigestion and dyspepsia, but this famous remedy cures all stomach troubles by cleansing, purifying, sweetening and strengthening the mucous membranes lining the stomach. Mr. S. S. Ball, of Ravenswood, W, Va., says:— I was troubled with sour stomach for twenty years. Kodol cured me and we are now using it in milk for baby.” .. Kodol Digests What You Eat. Bottles only. $1.00 Size holding 27% times the trial size, which sells for 50 cents. Prepared by E. O. DeWITT & 00., CHICAGO. SOLD BY E. H. MILLER. This new discov= | Attracted by Muelc. Patience—Has she an attractive voice? Patrice—She must have. She said while she was singing a bug flew down her throat. Repels the Insinuation. Miss Sharp—They say you spend all your money for clothes. Mr. Gayly—No, I don’t. have ’em charged. I always Perils of Journalism. Monkey—Where’s that saw coming this way? Lion—He’s getting inside informa- tion for his paper.—Chicago Journal. reporter I Anything to Start Him. Cholly (12 p. m.)—I'm not going un- til you admit that you love me. Helen—Why in the world didn’t you tell me that two hours ago! Another Fish Story. vv So you were out in St. Louis? said the postmaster. Did you see the big pike?” “To be sure,” drawled the village fabricator; then after a pause, “but it wasn't one inch bigger than the pike I caught in Hurly’s mill pond last summer.” Had a Taste. She—Were you ever in one of those airships? He—No; in an elevator but I was | when it fell once. A SEA VOYAGE Tommy Burten walked wunsteadily into the dining saloon. It was the Campanlia’s third day out, but since crossing the English channel Tommy had felt a strange aversion to food. An extraordinary fascinatioh for, his cabin had seired him with the fimst tossing of the big boat. The seat to his left at the table was empty. At his right sat a portly old party, who, judging from the alacrity with which he was satisfying a ‘sea- born appetite, never suffered from mal de mer. “Just come to life?’ he asked be- tween mouthfuls, as Tommy sat down. “Just,” Tommy ended abruptly. He had Intended saying mére, but a sufden lurch of the boat checked his utterance. He made an heroie effort to concentrate his thoughts oa the menu. Conversation was impos- sible. The mere thought of the edibles on the bill of fare made Tommy feel at once like a merry-go-round and numerous other combinations unmen- tionable in the highest social circles. “Your neighbor on the left was too strongly lured on deck,” began the old man again. He chuckled and, Tommy though, gloried in the indisposition of his fellow passengers. “Seasickness is—what? Not going?” But his remark was not heeded by Tommy, who had made a hasty, if un- graceful, bolt for the companionway. With the first whiff of salt air Tommy was revived. Here and there, wrapped in steamer robes, propped up with pillows and clinging lovingly to their smelling salts, sat members of the Campania’s family, looking as if they cared little what happened to them or to those about them. Leaning over the railing in the stern stood a woman. The ocean breezes freed her curls from impris- onment and Tommy watched them ex- plore the regions of the red tam o'shanter from under which they had escaped. He studied the symmetrical lines of her figure and wondered if her face was as perfect, With every breath of the invigorat- ing air he fel! more himself. He evén thought he could eat if—well, if that person with the red cap should sit on his left. Perhaps she did. Each time he paced the deck he drew nearer the stern railing. Each time he formed an introductory speech, and each time took one more round of the deck. Shipboard introduction did not need a third party, but he did wish she would turn her head, if ever so slight- ly. It would help so much. Finally, as if draws by a hypnotie power, she moved. Tommy stopped short as suddenly as a small boy wha finds a nail in the cellar door. on the railing. “Helen,” without removing his glaze. “I—" he faltered and passed his hand across his eyes. Surely there were cobwebs in the sea air. Tommy grasped the railing. “May I?—a minute?” nec asked. She did not reply, so he continued to attend by her side. A long silence ensued, during which the woman turned again to the sea. Was she afraid her eyes might betray the emotion that stirred her? “Helen,” Tommy ventured finally, “Il did not know it; this was not ine tentional, believe me.” Slowly the sun was sinking into the space between the sky and sea. The woman's eyes followed it, and Her thoughts? Where were they? The two stood side by side silent, thought- ful. A large, white ses =zull fiuttered past them in its {irregular flight. “The wings of the past” she said at last, watching the bird disappear. “They are white.’ he said, “but they bear much that is?dark—much that is dreary—to reflect upon. ” Her face changed, softened, yet he could not interpret her expression; the play of her emotion had always been a mystery to him. “Helen,” he said, stepping closer to her, “can we not clip five years—the last five—from those wings?” “Call me back again, call me back again,” came from the cabin below in a resonant soprano voice. It was the old song with which she used to sing away his frowns when she had teased him. “Ah, when your love has conquered pride and anger, I know that you will call me back again,” came the voice. “Yes, it had been both pride and anger—pride on her part, anger on his. But that was five years ago when they were—Oh, so young! “ ‘Pride and anger,”” he repeated softly. “Wasn’t it both, Helen! Weren't you too proud to admit you were wrong and I too angry to make you? If I were to talk forever I could not tell of my regret, dear, after I had lost you. Have I lost you for- ever?” She laid her.hand on his arm, and together they looked down into the phosphorescent waters beneath them. “Call me back again: call nfe back again.” The words were wafted over and over again to them. “Will you?” he asked softly. The red tam o’shanter was laid on Tommy's breast, and Tommy forgot his mal de mer in his new ailment— or his returned ailment—of that more vital organ, the heart. Harden Tools with Sealing Wax. Engravers in Germany harden their tools in sealing wax. The tool is heated to whiteness and plunged into the wax, withdrawn in an instant and plunged in again, the process being repeated until the steel is too cold to enter the wax. The steel is said to become, after this process, almost as hard as the diamond and when touch- ed with a little oil or turpentine the tools are excellent. | | l THE LONELY PRAIRIE. ' A Trackless Waste Without Water or Human Wabitation. “I had almost as soon be set adrift in a small boat in midocean as to be dropped down on the vast prairie near the Kansas-Colorado state line,” said a man who is familiar with the west. “One cannot realize the loneliness of the western plains until he has crossed them. There are very few human hab- itations, comparatively little of the land is under cultivation, and water is a scarce and precious commodity. In every direction nothing meets the gaze of the eye except a tracklers, treeless waste which Is bounded only by the lowering sky. Prairie dogs’ are the chief denizens of this regicn, and as the rain whirls past they perch them- selves on their hind legs and sit bolt upright as motionless a8 a statue, There are a few houses, but they are at wide intervals. The one single ad- vantage that a lonely pedestrian has in that region is that by following the railroad track sufficiently far he will reach a town some day. “It is positively tiresome to the eye to ride across the prairies in a comfort- able Pullman car surrounded by «ll the luxuries of life. This being true, it must be next to appalling to have to tranip over this region without food or water except what one begs at the few way stations along the route. 1 have never been able to see anything pictur- esque or inviting about the wide stretching plains.” —Birmingham News, WINDSTORMS. The Distinction Between a Cyclone and nn Hurricane. The term cyclone is applied to a tor- nado of limited diameter and destruc- tive violence. All storms, therefore, in which the wind has a circulating move- ment about a central area of low bar, ometric pressure may properly be termed cyclones. Cyclones occur most frequently in those parts of the world which are subject to monsoons and take place at those seasons when the monsoons are changing. They some- times extend over many thousands of square miles. Tropical storms are known in the West Indies as hurricanes. These vio- lent windstorms are of a diameter of from fifty to a thousand miles, where- in the air moves with a velocity of from SO to 139 miles an hour round the central calm. Hence this term is up- plied to any storm or tempest in whicli the wind blows with terrific violence. In the Philippine Islands and on the southeastern coast of Asia such trop- ical storms are known as typhoons. The general disturbances of the middle latitudes are usually referred to ns sim- ply storms or areas of low barometric | pressure.—London Answers. The woman turned to him, her hand he gasred, | SCOTLAND'S KILT. The Origin of This Ancient Picturesque Dress. Some say that the kilt was the out- come of sumptuary laws enacted dur- ing the reigns of Mary and of her sou. James VI. of Scotland and I. of Eug- land. These laws more or less directly suppressed the ancient tunic. which fell from: the shoulders to below the knees, and had in the remoter parts of Great Britain and Ireland formed the outer dress of men from Roman times. When this was condemned, the wearers evaded the law by dividing the tunic at the waist, the upper part becoming a doublet and the lower the kilt. The kilt, however, must have been of earlier date, for it is shown as a separate garment, neatly quilted from waist to knee, on many mediaeval crosses and memorial slabs, including those at Kilkerran and Kilmorie, which date from before 1500. It is from this plaiting, or “quilting. that it takes its name, and no doubt the sumptuary regulations promoted its general adoption. and ’” Reugh on the Doctor. In the middle of the night not long ago there came a terrific ringing at a London doctor’s bell. “Who's there?” he called down his speaking tube. In response a voice came back asking him to go at once to a house a mile and a half distant. The doctor got up, dress- ed and went out with the man whom he found waiting for him at the door. Together they walked over to the call- er's residence. The disturber of his slumbers told the doctor that he had illness in his house and would like him to have a look at the case. When they entered the sickroom he said, “Now, be good enough to tell me if the case is serious enough for me to send at ounce for my own doctor or if it will de if I wait until morning.” Not Timid. “They say capital is very timid,” re- marked the young man with the gola headed cane. “Well, I guess you wouldn't think 80,” answered the young man with the cigarette, “if you’d have seen the way Mazie Goldrox’s father treated me when I asked for her hand.” —Yonkers Statesman. The Open Door. “I—I would k-kiss you,” stammered the diffident young man, “if I d-dared.” “Oh, don’t be afraid!” rejoined the girl in the parlor scene. “I wouldn't strike a defenseless man.” —Philadel- phia Inquirer. Conclusive, Little Dot—Folks say there is people on the planet Mars. Liitle Dick— There isn’t. Little Dot—Why isn’t there? Little Dick (triumphantly)— How could they get up there? When you meet a friend who is not looking well, what point do you hope to make by telling him so?—Atchison GJobe. Negroes to Colonize in Somerset County. Johnstown, Pa., July 31.—Prominent 1 negroes of this place, at a meeting held in Mt. Olive Baptist church, organized the “Agricultural Exchange and Busi- ness Company,” and application will be filed in Washington at once for a na- tional charter. The object is the colonization of the race. The first step taken will be the pur- chase of at least 100 acres of land in Somerset county, ten miles from Johns- town, and on this the entire company will reside and engage in farming and manufacturing. From time to time branch companies will be organized throughout the Unit- ed States, all the branches to operate under the direction of the Johnstown company. All profits are to go into a general fund, which will be used for education- nl purposes, somewhat after the Booker T. Washington Industrial School plan. The officers of the Johnstown com- pany arg: James A. Moore, president ; Phielding Bundy, vice president; Wm. Roberts, secretary, and George W. Bowles, treasurer. The Hen Was Cn. It was in the morning hours of “bake day” in the little out of the way village. The mingled odors of fresh bread, pies and cookies floated out of the kitchen windows. From one of the smaller cottages at the end of the street came a barefooted «bhild in a colorless calico dress and sunbonnet. With the important air of a heavy buyer she entered the village store and handed across the counter a blue teacup, The proprietor took the cup and said in brisk tones: “Well, Emmy, what does your ma want to-day?” “Please, sir, ma wants and egg’s worth of molasses, and she carefully placed a large white egg on the: count- er. From a stone jug =a little molasses was poured and the cup set before the customer. “Mr Smif,” she said, as she took her purchase, “I’ll be back in a little while for some ginger. Ma said to tell you that the black hen was on.” “A good many people have not stop- ped to think that in order to win the next Presidential election the Demo- crats will have to get one more vote than thetRepublicans,” said Judge W. B. Alexander, of Chicago. “How do you make that out, Judge?” “Well, it’s easy enough. The total vote of the electoral college is 476. If it should by anyj rare chance happen that each party got one-half the total —in other words, if the election result- ed in a tie, the Demcecrats getting 238 and the Republicans the same number —the contest would then be thrown into the House of Representatives. The Republicans in that body, having a large predominance in the number of States under their control, would pro- ceed, of course, to the election of their candidate. “So you will observe that in order to win, the Democrats will have to secure 239 votes, or just one more than half the college, while the other side can make out on 238.”—Washington Post. i at Seriptural Reason. A Sunday school superintendent in talking to his pupils about cruelty to animals said: “Only a coward would abuse a creature that has no way of protectiug itself. Why, children, I once knew a little boy who cut off a calf’s tail! Think of it—took a knife and cut the tail right off! Can any one tell me a verse in the Bible that would have taught this cruel boy thai he should not have cut off the calf’s tail? After a moment’s silence a small boy held up his hand, and when asked to quote his verse. ventured—"“What God has joined together let no man put asunder. i State Bred Frogs Just for the Asking. The department of fisheries is anxious to encourage frog culture in Pennsyl- vania. It is believed that farmers who have swampy ground can by a little attention derive quite a revenue from this industry. The department has propagated sev- eral million frogs, known as the Great Western frog, the best species for market purposes. They are now ready for shipment, and any persons desiring to experiment in frog culture may have a supply on application to the Department ofifFisheries, the County Fish Protective Associations, or their representative injthellegislature. Sr — Largest Tree;in World. The biggest tree in the world so far discovered has justigbeen locatedigin Eshom Valley, Tuler county, Califor- nia, by W. T. Hart, a mill man in that} section. Mr. Hart says that four feet from the ground, fand in spite of a burned spot that decreasesjthe size, the tree is 113 feet in circumference, or a distance through of 36 feet, and that it towers to the amazing heigths of 400 feet. As an expert mill man, Hart says be beleives the tree contains more lumber than any other tree in the world. Jteet. ‘from parties experienced in this class of work, and who have proper facilities and -financizl standing to properly execute the THE SALISBURY HACK LINE «_ AND LIVERY. _» C. W. Statler, - - - Proprietor. ME=Two hacks daily, except Sunday, be- tween Salisbury and Meyersdale, connect- ing with trains east and west. Schedule: Hack No. 1 leaves Salisbury at........8 A. M Hack No. 2 leaves Salisbury at........ 1P.M Returning, No 1 leaves Meyersdaleat 1 P.M No.2 leaves Meyersdaleat............. 6P.M HF@=First class rigs for all kinds of trav- el, at reasonable prices. Notice To Contractors. Senled proposals will be received by the County Commissioners of Somerset County, Pennsylvania, until i - 12 O'CLOCK NOON, TUESDAY, AUGUST 16th, 1904, for the erection and completion of the new Court House building to be erected at Some- erset, Pennsylvania, according to plans and specifications of J. C. Fulton, Architect, Uniontown, Pa. Bids to be addressed to County Commissioners, Somerset, Pa. All proposals must be made upon blanks furnished by the Commissioners or Archi- No bids will be considered, except contract. Each bid must be accompanied by a certi- fied check on a National Bank of Pennsyl- vania, for $5,000, as a guarrantee for the bid, and the successful bidder will be required to give bond in the sum of $125,000, condi=- tioned for the faithful performance of con= tract. Plans and specifications can be seen at the Commissioners’ office. Extra copies of plans and specifications can be obtained at the office of the Archi- tect, upon depositing a certified check in the sum of $100, payable to the Architect, said sum to be refunded upon return of the plan and specifications. The right is reserved to reject any or all ids. 8S. W. POORBAUGH, JoseErH HORNER, Jos. B. MILLER, Commissioners of Somerset Co., Pa. Attest—JoHN R. Boosk. Clerk. - $500 REWARD)! The above amount will be paid to any person who will fur- nish information that will lead to the arrest and conviction of the person or persons who set fire to our large tenement build- ing at Merchants Mine No. 3, on the night of July 12th, 1904, in Elk Lick township, Somerset county, Pa. « MERCHANTS COAL CO., tf Elk Lick, Pa. Valuable Farms and Mineral For Sale! Two Farms of 800 acres each, one of 110 acres and two of 400 acres each in Southampton township, Somerset county, Pa. Also 1000 acres of land underlaid by three seams of coal from 4 to 5 feet thick. For further particu- lars call on or address John R. Fain, West Salisbury, Pa. tf b HOW TO MAKE MONEY. Agents of either sex should to-day write Marsh Manufacturing Co., 538 Lake Street, Chicago, for cuts and pan- ticulars of their handsome Aluminum Card Case with your name engraved on. it and filled with 100 Calling or Busi~ ness Cards. Everybody orders them. Sample Case and 100 Cards. postpaid, 50c. This Case and 100 Cards retail at 75 cents. You have only to shew sample to secure an order. Send 50¢ at once for case and 100 cards. or send 30c. for 100 cards without case. $10 prize for every agent. Mention this paper. 8-11 MEN WHO HAVE MADE THEIR MARK. An Appropriate and Effective Book- let on the Savings Habit. The above is the title of a very in- teresting booklet just issued by the Pittsburgh Bank for Savings, of Pitts- burgh, Pa. The booklet is one of the best ever published for the purpose. It contains a brief but surprisingly complete biography of great American statesmen and kings of finance. It is admirably illustrated with half-tone portraits of characteristic scenes illus- trating striking episodes in the lives of various characters among whom are Benjamin Franklin, Abraham Lincoln, Andrew Carnegie, Stephen Girard, John Wanamaker, James A. Garfield, John D. Rockefeller and others. Fol- lowing each biography is an apt quota- tion appropriate to the matter preced- ing. Typographically it is one of the handsomest little booklets we have seen for some time, and it will repay our readers to send for a copy of the same, which will be furnished free of charge by the Pittsburgh Bank for Savings. provided you mention this pa- per. but not otherwise. BALTIMORE & OHIO RAILROAD. CHEAP EXCURSIONS ——TO THE ST. LOUIS WORLD’S FAIR EVERY WEDNESDAY IN AUGUST, SEP- TEMBER AND OCTOBER. $15.00 ONLY ROUND . TROP FROM BURY JUNCTION. SALIS- Tickets will be good going in coaches only on Specified Trains. Returning, tickets will be good in coaches only on all regular trains, leav- ing St. Louis not later than ten days, including date of sale. Call on Ticket Agent for time of train and full information. 10-27 ———— Foley’s Honey ana Tar for children,safe,sure. No opiates. Son, SEB Pia The a mean the BUSH & CHICKE! STRICK « VICTOR, HOBERT KIMBAL! SHUBER OXFORD We h: Tuner anc will receis