111 g CAmBRIA FREEMAN I rabllsbeU Wttklj at jtySDVllG, Cambria Co., Fa., llV II. A. MoI'IKK. jranteed Circulation - 1,116 fCKURIPTIOS RATES. , one year, csisb la advance IIJV) . " " If not p'd within 3 mosj. 1.75 it If not p'd WTthln 6 mos. S.HO H " if not p'd within year.. 2.25 The large and reliable elrculatlm of the Caw BRt A rmii ommendt It toh fT'rr.:e con sideration x .irwiMT. wbnMt fcTors will te In serted at tn. Miowins; low rates : 1 !reh, t ttnm Eo' 1 " 3 months , ... J no 1 " 6 mantbs.... . ......................... .v inWAvI, WW .... ""O v innoi o., ......... . S " 1 year 8 6 months..... ...... 8 " 1 year 14 eol'B 6 months L " 6 months U " 1 yer . e.ro . lo.oc ft 00 H.no lO.f'O t.oo Hw. 1 00 1 " 6 months 1 " 1 year rto persms residing outside the county ,t fiiTt'o"1 Per year will be charred to i-Tno event will the above terms bp de t .i from, snd thofo who don't ooqsiiH ihelr 7S (11 Aomraftrwr s ana rjwiior s notices j 5 Andir's Notices t.M Stray and similar Notiees .m Hnsineoi Hems. firt inert(n 100. pr line ; each sntiiteqnent Insertion fro. per line. Rnolvtiont or proceeding of any corporation or toeitly. and eommvnicalinnM ittrtonrri to call atten tion to ny mutter of limited or individual intercit. wnut be paid for at advertisement,. Job riuwTijfo of all kind neatly and expediti ously executed at lowest prices. Don't youftujret It. H. A. McPIKE, Editor and Publisher. -tffiWIS UJ pnj Nik 1 1- aiivnuiT mUPl nOL "HB IS A FEIKKAH WHOM TBS TRUTH MAKES FREE, ANB ALL ARB SLATES BESIDE. SI.50 and postage per year, In advance. VOLUME XYI. EBENSBURG, PA.. FRIDAY, MAY 12, 1882. NUMBER 10. C , Ml 1 4 fn fiM'tVM 4MT i r . r n i.d to be placed on the iimi footing as those i, Let this fact ha distinctly understood ' i . lime forward. I ir'iv f 'r yl" Pper before you stop it. if 1 j iu must. None but scalawags do oth . ! Don't be a Sualawa life' too short. I I til :u 1 1 t f v.: 1 " 1 , r! ;:vl 't f 1 ! ! 1 v i ".. i 1 r ".'li? ... I 1 ' 1 ti t'J a REMEMBER That You are invited to visit OAK HALL, S. E. Cor. 6th & Market Sts. Philadelphia. !?f?C X7 Cr. U T i. T i pSj and Cheapest stock of Clothing for Men & Boys in the United States. 1 I 5- I , 4 5 P i - , r , r U '-ys "n -..n'w V" . i.luhii iniJ.n-11.. - I - . . Our original system of One Price and a Guarantee gives every buyer perfect protection. REM OVAL PORTER fk DOWALDSOiM, WHOLESALE MILLIXERY, Have Removed to . 3 H-r- ixgi rr ----- -t h; f - it r-jir1 -ei t l-W trm - 1 wt.'i 1 - J . I y - cH 1 ri ni:v ih;ii.iinc. f, 252 and 254 LIBERTY STREET, PITTSBURGH, PA, ELLVATOR ENTRANCE, 264. ilaltinllou ehfu tf Pattern lionncts and Trimmed Hats. Fall line oT Straw tiootl, i:il)!)on., Silks, Flowers, Nets and Laces; ? Shirts, Cornets, Crape and L,aties'i rck H ear, SVECIALTIES. -V Iartlrnlor .llteutin I'aid to Orders. 3m. LOWEST PRICES. tEST stock, latest styles. 5EIS. fo: STER&QUINN, 113 & 115 CLINtOX STREET, JOHNSTOWN, PA., AI.WAYN HAVE TIIE- LtirgeHt iintl Choapost Stock of piy rxxicl Dress GroocLs, NOTIONS, MILLINERY, CARPETS, ETC., fcn.l in Cambriii r nujoinins counties. I-ef Fjrpot not the street and numbers ami fail not to cull, buy and be liappy. J m 4 M W W m aWwm V iaiFaw Mr ,l V" A-iVy- V V - -A- -i 1 I 4 I - cas 1 1 ui:ALi:it ix xia, kini of -ATING AND COOKING STOVES, -AND MAMJI'ACTIJKKU OF iX AND SHEET-IRON WARE, lU)ui lilfsvoiitli Avo., Altoonn, r,,r-.Fr.-r PLUT. IX THE ITT. Hooflnir, Kponllnf and Repalrina; ol Promp(r anil natlarartorll y atten1ed to. 10-24,'79. tf. THE OLD ESTABLISHED HOUSE OF 1882. JAS. SHIDLE & SON, Smitlifielcl Street. Iitt wljiifgh, !?.. JVr Hangi?jgs, Fmbosscd Bronzes, Dados, &c v g nay Lsm !""h!'.,1r,';'1 """"nir-.l m:it-r' - K;,i. ' ,',,'1-"ver.n. l.rM.!, - "I 7Tr ,f r'"t rnle..,V.,.,r ur, ,r eatule cat.1 an-l t. ,v j :-H.-t.l ' y roi tbs ccb or CONSU3IPTION Fr 'tiog ol Birx)d, Bron iliir:, Ojni'ln, CiAS., Cntarrh of hent. and all I, wanes of UiC 1'ulmonsry 1 T'.. e, 50 cut" and 1 OOl k yfnr 1'riiiTKSst fur 1S UlLMUiB A. CO. litlabarBbu TRADt '-iViAR K . BROWN'S IRON BITTERS vt'lcdre dyspepsia.heartbum, mala ria, kidney disease, liver complaint, and other wasting diseases. BROWN'S IRON BITTERS enriches the blood and purifies the system ; cures weakness, lade of energy, etc. Try a bottle. BROWN'S IRON BITTERS Is the only Iron preparation that does not color the teeth, and will not cause headache or constipation, as ether Iron preparations will. E2 BROWN'S IRON BITTERS Ladies and all sufferers from neu ralgia, hysteria, end kindred com plaints, will find it without an equal. R' CELEBRATED svtt 5 -..V. fS-V STOMACH Among- the medicinal mean of arresting disease, Hostetter'i Stomach Bitters stands pre-eminent. It checks the further progress of all disorders of the stomach, liver and bowels, revives the vital stamina, prevents and remedies ehllls and fever, increases the activity of the kidneys, counteract? a tend ancy to rheumatism, and is a genuine stay ana soiaoe to agsu, inurm anu ncnoui par sons For sale by all Ih-njfgfsts and Dealers gcuclllMjr. THI HtlU inl l D03FSTII: RFSBDT! Projrio:s: BifCS KH013S5S k VBITK. Fttta4iphi Kxtkunai t v it 15 nd f.f a'i V;n.l.i ,.I ir.jun9: rrhrving nii, inJ-tllt'tv. ft-.'t mi'i'I'v t"nl'nr tho Mftiir.'iri parti fi:vr, ',.( a: I - -.v,.:riX t-h'f in lit F: J. S('AI.O", C:iIi.i '.AIN-. VK.NU.Mi'l S MINOS or IiiTLi), CUTS in ' ' ' V . ( tf rrrj i'.(.i'u'i'-. l-.rKHr.Li t - It i luTjl-.nt.il) tti CU'll.MlA.Ytl.LOW, r I'll; S. I VIM' JID. S.CAH1.KT. ml - tlu-r Fcvrrs. I i ".ASAI. ( A i-Al.nil. f r'i i -i -.- ''" EAR. HZ.t.NA. l-..-;i. r. , .- A.N I KI M. CA.SCKRol'S At t K 1 I' -:s. It '5 n t r'. ''vi. n-i- liMfn r r Si- K 5;..MS. 11,1 ail I VI T I! I. and rMIF.AI.niT l.l K' M.I I I i. vl " . CU.MAGION, it i tii UIS1.M KCTA.N'r kn.ma. 'Ahri.v.-r inf.o -Iti'.-cu it .st(,ii:il.c itself u a favont DOMI-STIC RKMKHY. fOS SL BY PRUGllSTS S0 CfltfH M'RCHAIDISE DEAUKS. A UDITOIl'S NOTICE. The under- JL. siKned and Itor.appoi ntod by tho Orphans tlourt ol C'ambiia county, to rt iort distribution of the fund in tho hands of Valentine Cramer, sur viving executor of the last will and U-.naraont of James J. AlcOouth. deceased, as shown by his first and partial account, hcrehy notittcs all par ties interested, that he will fit nt his otrice in Kr enslmrif, on Tuesday, Ma 16. US' at 1 o'clock r. M., fur the purpose ol attending to the duties of sani appointment, at wnich time ana place all persons lnterestea mnv attend, n tney see proper. M. I K I IT HL, Auditor. Elenburg, April 21, lgW.-3t. ADMIN I.STH ATOR'S NOTICE. Ksl.ite of Mart An Bradlkt. dee'd. Letters of Administration on the estate of Mrs. Mary Ann Bradley, Info of Iorctto borough, de ceased, having heen Issued to the nndarsigned by the Kciristcr ol I amnria conntv. all persons Know ing themselves indebted to said estate are hereby jiotihed that Immediate payment is required, and those having claims or demands against the same will servo their own Interests by presenting them properly pronnten nr settlement. .IiisKI'll HOUUK, Administrator. Loretto, April 21, 18S2.-t. ADMINISTIiATION NOTICE. Estate of Patrick Smith, dee'd. Letters of adtnlnintatlon on the estate of Pat rick hmlth, late of luniicuitll borough, dcecased. having been granted to the undersigned by the Register Of Cambria county, all persons indebted to said estato are hereby r.oti lied t hai I loir.ot pay ment must bemitile. and thoso having claims or demands airainst the same will pre.-ent them pro perly auinenticat.o lor seiticment. .11 MA SM1IH, A.lmintstratJ-ii. Tunnelhlll, April 14, lHW.-t. ADMINISTllATOR'S NOTICE. Estate of Jon- Diiadlit. dee'd. livirg been appointed Administrator de bonis non ol tliO estate ol John liraillcy. nte of lAiretto boningh. Cambria county, ip '-ea-c!, the under signed herei v notifies all person Indebted to said estate that payment must be made without delay, and those having claims against the same are re quested to present them in legal lirm for settle ment. JliSKI H HIKH'K, Administrator. Iiretto, April 21, 1882. -St. WM. H. SF.CHl.ER, Juhnttovn, Pa. M. Vt. K1TTELL, Ebenibvrg, Pa. SECIILER & KITTELL, ATTORNKYS-A T - I. A W, JOnXSTOWN ANI EKKNSHiCRO. OF KICKS In Tfttier t Oreens largo brick build iBg. corner Jnain and Clinton sts., Johnstown and In Co-lonade Row, Kbensbnrg. 7-1,'st: vz- CIVE AWAY. Zimmerman Fruit Dryer II i,w ana for Term., Addres. ZIMMERMAN FRUIT DRYER CO., Cincinnati, O. April 14, 1SK,-Im. OPIUM EATING speerly cure PtNT r RKK. Da. J.C oirHA)(,F.O.Bo 13s,Chicao,lil. k noarnnii! Treatise on thefr BKATTY'SOReASH,27So.s. lOset Reeds, only D. Piano. up. Bar Ilolldsf ladacerasnts Reaiiy. Write or caH on BtATTI, Waihington. M.J. D01XG HIS DUTY. It was noon and close upon the hour of 12. Scattered over a large buildinfr In course of erection were a number of workmen car penters, masons and bricklayers most of whom kept their cars upon the stretch in ex pectation of the bell ringing to proclaim the dinner hour, Ilard by was the river, whero a baree was moored, and laborers bringing planks from It to the building with the regu lar ptep characteristic of all work with method in it. The laborers numbered about twenty in all, and they were headed by one who filled the post of "runner," that is, a man who regulated the movements of the rest ny lead ing to and from the works. The man em ployed for the office In this case, was one Robert Ryan, a steady, earnest, sober man. Ryan was only a laborer, and It was as much as) be conld do to read good print and write his name occasionally when it was re quired ; but he was a man with a strong sense of what was right and wrong, and with a decided loaning toward the right. It was this feeling which prompted him to abandon drink and join the temperance society, "I may like beer," he 9aid, "and I may like loafing about In a public house with my mates ; but it is not right for me to do so when my wife and child must be the suffer ers." So he gave up drink, fought out, by Divine assistance, the fitrht with temptation until he conquered, and then settled down, a sober, happy man. Sobriety led to something better. As he had not the public housi to spend his Sun days in, he wisely sought a seat In God's house. Such a man could not long pass unnoticed, and Ryan was soon selected from the mass of laborers and appointed to the post of "runner," for which he obtained an extra sixpence a day. Mr. Collins, his master, would have done something more for him, but Ryan's education was very defective, and the post of foreman was for the present out of the question. Ryan, however, was content, and worked on, receiving his week ly wages thankfully and spending them on domestic comforts like a prudent man. The laborers were matching from the barge, each with a plank upon his shoulder, when the bell suddenly rang. The man next to Ryau immediately threw down his plank, but Ryan walked steadily on. "Hold hard, Ryan," cried the thiid man ; "did you hear the bell ?" "I heard," said Ryan, "but we have only a tep or two to go ; why pitch the stuff about in the mud in that way ?" The man who had thrown down his plank took it np with a surly air and fell into the ranks again. Ryan walked to the building, put his burden on the top of the pile, and the refct, more or less sulky, followed his exam ple. "There," he said, "look at the clock not quite a minute past and we have saved our selves no end of trouble, and the master ten minutes time by bringing our work to the proper place." "But time Is time," urged tho man who had thrown down his plank ; "the master expects us to be here at the minute, and we like to leav9 off at the minute, too." "Still, stretching a point in his favor now and then does us no harm," returned Ryan, and I think it the more manlv thing to do." The men did not stop to discuss the sub ject then, bnt buiried away to dinner. Many of them were far from home, and some had their dinners brought ; others bought some thing at the cook shop, but nearly all went to the public house. There in the tap room the conduct of Ryan was discussed, and Richard Morgan, the man who had thrown down the plank, led the van In a tirade against the "runner." "It Is bad enough to be nigger-driven by the master," he said, "bat for one of our own lot to go against us is more than I can stand." "But you must go with the runner," said one of the listeners. "With a runner," returned Morgan, "but not with Ryan. If I headed the gang you should have easy times. I can tell you-" "Until you gotthesack,"said the previous speaker, with a laugh. Morgan had a certain power of speech "gift of the gab" his mates called it and until it was time to return to work he held forth on Ryan's base conduct, and found many villing ears. From that time Ryan became a marked man ; the men followed hini as of old, but they did all they could to annoy him. He was a powerful man and conld easily have beaten any one of his assailants; but he steadily refused to fight, and bade them go home and think, and then return to their work wiser men. After a time Ryan's patience bore fruit and many of the men ceased to annoy him ; but Morgan, with theraneorof a little mind, only grew more furious as he saw the chance of ruining Ryan slipping away. Day and night, in work and out of work, he kept his tongue going, calling his fellow laborers "slaves," and was very great on the subject of "division of property," which would ena ble every man to live in peace and comfort "without work." The men often laughed at his extravagant assertions ; but some of his ideas took root, and a feeling of discontent gradually be came general. Misunderstandings were de veloped into deliberate assaults upon the liberty and comfort of the men, hasty words magnified into studied insults, and the train was laid for one of those suicidal movements called "a strike." While this was impending, Ryan was call ed to account before a committee of the men, who held their meeting in a field close to the work. Morgan attended as an accuser, with the majority of the men employed as audience. Ryan's answer was as follows : "I've heard Morgan," said he, looking that man boldly and honestly in the face ; "and I can only 3ay that it isn't true in the main, and, although I can't exactly point out where, it Is untrue. Morgan's got a good head, and I've got jost sense enough to know what's right, and that's all. According to my notion of things, I only do my dnty, and as I am paid for it I shall do it while I have the health and strength to keep at my work. I don't say that the masters are always right, because they are not," continued Ryan ; "but when a man undertake! to do his work he ought to do It, and if he dees some times cairy a plank half a dozen yards when the bell is ringing what's the odds ? Look here, mates, we are always talking about the mas ters showing us consideration, and it comes to this, if we take we must give too. I'll not stand up against those as works with me, and I'll not say a word behind your backs. The masters must fight their own battles, and they are able to do it, but I must speak to you as mates. I take my stand on right, and no man can be right unless he does his duty," Ryan's notions were not particularly pop ular, bnt his words carried weight with them. More than one listener felt that he only act ed as an honest roan ; but Morgan and his followers were the stronger party, and at a private meeting in the evening it was deci ded that a round robin should be sent in against the 'runner, demanding his dismis sal. It was drawn up, signed by the com mittee and put before the men on the mor row. The! majority signed easily enough ; but a few did it partly against their will. Mr. Collins received the message from his men and said he would consider it. He laid it before bis partner, a gentleman who had money In the business, but no practical knowledge of It, and the pair weighed over the consequence of refusing the unseemly request. Mr. Collins knew the character of Ryan and liked him. In his branch he was the best man upon the works, and it was much against his desire to part with him. "If we give way this time," he said "we shall soon have another request one Impossi ble to comply with, perhaps. I have seen the feeling growing among the men ; we have too many talkers, and a strike is Inevi table ; it may as well come now as a month honce." And so it was decided. The answer was sent to the men, and it was "NO." This brought the storm down. A hurried and angry meeting was held, with Morgan and others fr speakers, and they al! advo cated one thing "Strike and bring the mas ters to their senses." Notice of the strike was given, and on Saturday the works were closed. Then followed the nsnal state of things. Rickets were posted in every avenue leading to the works to stop men from coming, and the men not so employed stood about in groups talking over the strike or lounged abont in the. bar of the public house discuss ing the same thine. There was little or no violence at first ; the men were for the most part disposed to be peaceable, and were im bued with a firm conviction that they were in the right ; nr.d Ryan, who was still kept on at the works doing odd jobs, went to and fro without molestation. This did not suit Morgan, who, being a thriftless man, soon began to feel the want of the nsual watres. lie had an allowance from tho society, but that speedily went, for people like him who talk all day cannot do without drink, and Morgan had a most decided weakness for beer, nis rancor increased with his penury, ard it was not long before he persuaded himself that all his deprivations were the work of Ryan. Morgan did not want for men whose thoughts coincided with his own, and a threatening letter anonymous, of course; your threatening letter fellews are always cowards was sent to Ryan, warning him not to go near the works. Ryan treated it with contempt, and went as u?nal. Four days later he was struck from behind on the road home and fell Insensible. Mr. Collins himself discovered him there and had him taken to his own home and an eminent sur geon was sent for. lie was pronounced by the surgeon to be severely hurt, but not dangerously so, and the next day he was removed to his home. His master, who entered it then for the first time, was astonished at its neatness and comfort ; but he was still more astonished when, on asking Mrs. Ryan if she wanted money, she answered qnietly : "No, thank yon, sir ; we have nearly sixty pounds in the saving bank. It's a bad job for Robert, but we can, with God's blessing, pull through." Ay, sir," said Ryan, turning his pale face toward his master, "we shall, I believe, pull through ; but we thank you all the same." As Mr. Collins walked home that night he tried to think of some plan by which he could benefit Ryan without breaking in upon his independence. Pecuniary help was not what he wanted, but surely there were other ways to put him up the ladder of life. The problem puzzled him all the even ing, but he hit upon the solution before go ing to rest On the morrow he visited Ryan again and found him much better, sitting by the fire, with his child upon his knee. After a few remarks about the injured man's health, Mr. Collins said, "Would you like to be better educated, Ryan ?" "I should like it very much, sir. 1 have tried to Improve myself, but I am very slow." "Self teaching Is very slow work," return ed Mr. Collins ; "you want somebody to help you. Now my son Is a smart young fellow, and would give you a few lessons with pleas ure. What do you say to his coming here an hour or so every day while the works are closed ? I shall not let you work while things are in the present loose condition ; but when we go on again you can still have your lessons in the evening." Ryan was highly pleased with the offer, and so was Mrs. Ryan, and even the littlo one laughed and crowed as if it understood all about it ; and it was settled that the less ons should begin in two days from that time. Mr. Collins, Jr., found that he had rather an apt pupil than otherwise, and the way Ryan got through the rudiments of reading, writing and arithmetic was equally astonish ing to both teacher and pupil ; and when Mrs. Ryan, "with her own eyes," as she re majked to a neighbor, "saw Robert work out a rule of three sum, she thought she must be dreaming ;" and as for his writing, she declared that it "might be a little large, but It was almost as good as print." Ryan himself was so amazed at his progress that he could think of little else, and a piece of chalk In his hand was all he required to be set to work upon the nearest board, working out all sorts of arithmetical questions. The fact was that Robert had, to use a homely phrase, "a turn for figures," and his latent talent was now being developed the foundation of his future fortune was being laid. All this, of conrse, took up time, and all that time the strike bad been going on with the inevitable consequences men de moralized, homes ruined, wives and families made miserable, and the public houses the only gainers. So several weeks passed, and then atern necessity took many of the men away. Morgan was the last to go and then the works of Collins & Co. were opened again. Ryan went to work, but not as a "runner ;" Mr. Collins put biin into the office to work out "quantities" that is, to calculate the quantity of material required for certain work so as to enable the firm to send in esti mates for contracts. He did little things at first, bat he proved to be so correct that he was soon intrusted with more important matters. Ryan'a heart was in his work and he did his duty like tbe good, honest fellow he surely was. "Ryan Is a wonderful fellow," said Mr. Collins to his partner, abont a year after his first entering the office. "I seldom look over hia figures now, for he never passes them to me until he feels certain that he Is correct. I have only discovered one mistake In four months, and that was an unimportant one." "A very valuable man," replied his part ner ; "he belongs to the class of men who are sure to make their way in the world. Some even rise to be partners in greatfirms." num 1" said Mr. Collins, thoughtfully ; "there is no telling what time will do for such a man." Time has ticked on ten years since the events above recorded, and we beg to Intro duce our readers to the final scene of this simple story a room In a well-built, sub stantial villa in a suburb in the south of Lon don. The room is well and substantially f or nished ; all that comfort could demand is there, but no useless ornament or attempt at display. By the fire sits a matron dressed in dark gray, and a cap upon her head made of excellent materials, quiet, neat and nice. A little girl about 12 sits by sewing ; a boy of 10 is busy at the tahle with a slate full af fig ures ; and a younger child, a boy also, is ly ing upon the hearth rug, talking to a wooden horse. Soon a footstep Is heard upon the doorstep, and a latchkey ratties in the lock ; then by one Impulse they all dash out into the hall, where a hale, hearty man, with just a sprink ling of gray hair to show that he is past his youth, is divesting himself of his great-coat. ' nold off a minute," he says ; "now, then one at a time." nis coat being off he kisses them all round, beginning with his wife, and then goes into the room, where he exchanges his boots for slipper,, and sits down by the fire. There is an evident curiosity on the part of the mother and childron to hear something he has to impart ; but he Is in no hurry about it, and sits there with a quiet smile upon his face. "Why don't you tell us the news, Robert?" says the matron, "yes or no?" "Well, then, it's yes," replied Robert, wbose other name was Ryan, "and I'm a member of the firm of Collins A Co." Upon this there is a great commotion, the children cheer as lustily as their little lungs will permit, and the matron gees np and fid gets about for a moment in an undecided manner; then sits down and begins to cry. "Come, Tolly, thi9 won't do," says Rob't, "yon ought to be pleased." "So I am, R "rert, and these are the tears of joy. Who, ten years ago, would have be lieved this?" "If I had never been made a partner I should have rested content," Robert replies. "Collins & Co. have treated me very hand somely ; for many years they have treated me well ; but as such good fortune has fallen to my lot, I say God be thankful for all his past and present mercies." "Amen," responds his wife, and then there Is a minute's silence. "It's rather odd," continued Robert, "that I should to-night meet the man to whom I owe all this." "Who is he ?" asked his wife wonderlngly. "Morgan it was his attempt to ruin me that by God's merciful providence was over ruled to bring about this prosperity to us. 1 met bim down the street by the works, stand ing close to the wall to keep off the wind and snow ne had scarcely a rag to his back, and for all the good the bits of boots upon his feet were he might as well have been without them, ne did not know me, but I knew him at once, and hailed him. He could scarcely believe that I was the Ryan he once knew, and when he did credit it he wanted to sheer off at once, but I stopped him. ne was tired, hungry and penniless, 30 I took him into a coffee shop, and while he had some bread and butter and coffee, we had a long chat together. I don't want to spin a long yarn about it, but the upshot was that he confessed to me that It was his hand which struck me down ten years ago." "It was always my opinion that he did it," said the wife. "And mine too," continued Ryan, "but there was no proof, so I held my tongue. He was so penitent and broken down that I could offer him no reproof, even if I had been inclined to. ne worked nobody's ruin so surely as his own, for he never did any good by his prating ; he was ju.st clever enough to make mischief, but had not the brains to work himself into any position in the trade societies, so he lost his work again and again nntil he became what I saw to-night. Poor fellow I he must have suffered much. He Is coming to the yard to-morrow." "Will you give bim work, Robert ?" "Why not, Polly ? I think the man is not too bad to mend. There are the materials of a decent man in him if he will only give up drinking. At all events I will give him a chance ; I think it is only doing my duty to do so." Just like Ryan always thinking of his duty, and acting according to his notions of what is right ; and this conscientious mode of life has met its reward. Prosperous in his business, happy In his domestic life, and above all blessed with the peace which pass, eth all understanding, he is a man whose ex ample men would do well to follow. British Workman. Country Paieks is-the Citt. Every established local newspaper receives occa sional subscriptions from large cities which puzzle tbe publishers to account for, but which the New York Times recently threw some light upon in the following : A whole sale grocer in the city, who has become rich in the business, says his rule is that when he sells a bill of goods on credit to immediately subscribe for the local paper of his debtor. So long as his customer advertised liberally and vigorously he rested ; but as soon as he began to contract the space he took it as an evidence that trouble was ahead, and inva riably went for his debtor. The man who is too poor to make his business known Is too poor to do business. The withdrawal of an advertisement Is an evidence of weakness that business men are not slow to act upon. It is pleasant to remember that not an hour passes In the increasing march of time that there is not a half-dressed man some where on earth calling for a clean shirt. Otjr Johnny had been given up to die (diphtheria), when we Rave him Per us A ; he Is welL At James' drag store. SPOILED MARIUAUES. SOME HITCHES AT THE ALTAR. The question how near a couple can come to being married without actually becoming husband and wife was answered in a very extraordinary case reported not long ago from Lyons, in France. All the prelimina ries, including the marriage contract the bride being an heiress had been arranged with the utmost harmony, and the day had arrived for the civil marriage which, under the law of the Republic is the binding one on the morning, and for the blessing of the priest at the cathedral altar in the afternoon. The parties were before the Mayor, and what a Chicago lawyer, addressing a divorce jury, called the "fatal question" had been asked of each, and duly answered ; whereupon the Mayor had tendered his personal a9 well as official congratulations, and placed before them the attesting document whieb, when signed, made them lawfully man and wife. At this critical moment the proceedings were interrupted by the entrance of a telegraphic messenger. The couple paused, pens in hand, the witnesses stared in surprise, and the Mayor dropped his spectacles in a ner vous fit as he handed the message to the bride's father. The telegram ran as follows: "Monsieur (the bridegroom) has al ready been married in Germany, and his wife lives. Vouchers are on their way to 3'ou by post" The Mayor, as he Is bound to do under the civil code when a warning conies, postponed the authentication for a week. The week passed, but no vouchers came. Everybody agreed the telegram was a malicious trick, perpetrated by some revengeful rival--every body except the bride, who had been brood ing over the telegram, and, to the surprise of everybody, believed It She sent back the diamond ring, the silver candlestick, the gold-mounted prie-dien, the breviary of the lady who was almost her mother-in-law, and annulled the settlement. The Jude de Paix of Lyons and the Mayor had a consultation with the lawyers and the notary, and it was unanimously agreed that the couple, as the English peasantry put it, were still a couple and not a pair. All inquiries instituted by the bridegroom with regard to the sender of the telegram proved fruitless the only Infor mation ever obtained being that it was paid for by a "veiled woman in black." A still more recent hitch at the altar oc curred at a fashionable English watering place. A large party had assembled in one of the churches there to witness the nuptials of the niece of a prominent citizen, when it was discovered, at the last moment, that the Registrar, who had the license in his pocket, had not arrived- At the suggestion of the officiating clergyman, the ceremony was de layed for a 6hort time, while one of the party went in search of tbe errant Registrar, nis office was the first place visited ; but he had gone out, and nothing was known of his whereabouts. Thence the messenger re paired in hot haste to his residence, which happened to be some distance out of town ; and meanwhile, the party at the chapel be coming impatient, other scouts were dis patched in various directions. At length it was ascertained that the worthy Registrar had left town by an early train, and as it was Impossible that he could return In time, the wedding had to be postponed until the fol lowing day. The hitch, it appeared, had oc curred through the Registrar having received no Intimation of the day and hour of the in tended marriage. One morning. In the depth of last winter, a lady reached Inverness, Scotland, from the south, in one of the morning trains, intend ing to proceed to Wick in the 9:40 a. m. train. During the night, however, there had been a heavy snow fall, and it was found that the line to Wick was blocked. On being told that she could not proceed, the young lady appeared to be greatly disconcerted, and im mediately inquired for the station master. Ts there no possibility of getting to Wick to night?" she asked. "None," was the answer. "Not by coach ?" "No ; not even by coach." "Nor by boat?" "No ; nor by boat" "Nor by" "No ; it is impossible ; you cannot get there this week." "Well," said tbe lady, "this is awkward." "I'm sorry," said the official. "Will you be greatly inconvenienced ?" "Inconvenienced ! Yes, i was to have been married in Wick to-night." We will conclude with a case in which a somewhat serionsjobstacle to the celebration of a marriage was removed at the eleventh hour by the intervention of a beneficent flash of clerical jealousy. In a western Scottish town, one evening, there were so many mar riages that an unfortunate couple who had arranged to be united at the minister's house were unable to procure a cab to convey them thither till long past the hour appointed, and when at last they stood at the door of the manse and rar.g the bell it was approaching midnight. A loud and somewhat indiguanl voice presently responded from a bedroom window up stairs demanding to know who was there. The situation was briefly ex plained, but the voice, that of the Rev. Mr. W., minister of the first charge of the Abbey Church, proved inexorable. "I can't help it," was the ultimatum re ceived. "You must just go home, and come back to-morrow." "O, Mr. W., ye ken we canna gang hame without being mairied," struck in a female voice. "But what would you have me do ? Call up the whole house because of your bungling?"- "Could ye not dae't ower the window, sir?" "Nonsense. It is impossible." "O, ye micht, sir. Ye ken we attend the Abbey on your day, and no on Mr. B.'s." This final stroke of policy proved irresist able, for between Mr. W. and Mr. B., minis ter of the second charge of the same church, there existed a good deal of professional Jealousy. ThQ window was put down, the gas lighted, the door opened, and the mar riage of the triumphant diplomatists duly solemnized. Examine for j'ourselves Dow the goods upon the shelves Disappear; And gaze upon the throng That all the hours long Persevere In crowding In the door But ere we tell you more Let us say, 'Tis because the firm is wise And with us advertise, And thus they realize It will pay. A FAITHFUL HOKKMA. Several years ago a large number of men were employed, not far from Boston, to fill some unsightly salt water flats and raise them above the tide water. One day it was eleven o'clock in the forenoon the contract or went out to where a separate gang were at work building a sea wall, ahd v. on bo reached the spot he found a sollv-.y man busy on the face of the wall. L had a bucket of eemebt and a trowel, ami was en gaged In "porting" the said wall-that is neatly filling In the seams and Irl itires with bits of stone and cement It w.s nice work and required a competent workman. But why was this man here alone? "Where are the rest of the workmen ?" "It's eleven o'clock, sir, and they've gone over to old Caffcrty's after their beer." "Don't yon ever go with them ?" "No, sir. In the first place, I don't want the beer ; I'm better off w ithont it. And in the next place, I can't make it seem quite right to take time that Is not mine." "You are right, young man perfect'y right." And then the contractor looked the workman over more critically, ne was young not more than two or three and twenty ; a strong, well knit, handsome youth, with an intelligent face and an eye as bright as a sapphire. "Tell me, my friend," the contractor pur sued, after his survey, "if you have fixed upon this course from any principle that Is, if you have a reason for it. The workman looked for a few moments a little puzzled. He did not at first catch the contractor's meaning. But presently his face biightened, and he seemed to gTow tell er as he answered : "Ah, I see. You mean to ask me if I do this because I think it is right?" The gentleman nodded, whereupon Uie other went on : "Why, no, sir I can't say it's exactly that. I'd do right, anyhow, simply because it is right; but I do this because I want one of these days to be somebody to succeed in business to do something better than work ing on the street with a gang of navvie3." 'Yes, yes," nodded the contractor. T think we now umWsitand one another. Do you know who I am ?" "No, sir." "Well, I think I once hired the man that hired you. However, you know where the contractor's office where the paymaster's office is?" "Yes, sir." "Then, my man, do you call there this evening, half an hour after you have quit work here." At the appointed time our young work man presented himself at the office, where he found, first, that it was his employer who had spoken with hint that afternoon ; and second, he found that said employer, or con tractor, was In want of a trusty agent. Into whose hands he could consign the entire charge of overlooking the workmen and the work. In less than a year the young man owned stock in the enterprise, and In ten years from that day he was one of the load ing citizens of New England's metropolis. Ireland. We knrw. of course, that Ire land is called the "Emerald Isle," and the color of the emerald is green, but never had it entered Into our imagination that there was anywhere in this world to be seen such verdure as it charmed our eyes to look upon in the rural districts of Ireland. The slopes, the knolls, the dells, fields of young grain over which the breeze? creep like the plvful spirits of the beantif nl ; the pastures dotted over with sheep of the purest wool ; the hill sides, rising up Into the ini-.t-shrou.led moun tain, are all covered with tKrk carpets of smooth, velvet green. But Ire'and should be also called Flowery Isle. There is not a spot in Ireland, I believe, where blessed na ture can find an excuse for putting a flower but what she has put one not only in the gardens and in the meadows, but upon the very walls and the crags of the sea, from the great blooming rhododendrons down to the smallest flowret that m.-xlestly peeps forth from its grassy cover. The Irish furze, so richly yellow, covers all places that might otherwise be bare or barren ; the silkworm delights everywhere, from thousands of tiees, to "drop its web of gold ;" the bloom ing hawthorn, with the sweet-scented pinks, and especially the white variety, adorns the landscape and the gardens ; wall flowers or every hue and variety, clamber to hide the harshness of the moral supports ; the beetled cliffs of the North sea are fringed and soft ened with lovely flowers ; and if you kneel anywhere almost on the yielding, velvety carpet, you will find little, well nigh-Invisl-ble, flowetcts, red, white, blue and yellow, wrought into the very woof and texture. Ireland ought to be called the Beautiful Isle. The spirit of the Beautiful hovers over and touches to living loveliness every point. An Editor's Strange Experience. naving read the story of James Rowe, the miner who was pearly killed In an explosion at Virginia City, and who every night since the accident has dreamed of dying, the editor of the Nevada Transcript relates a much more curious experience of his own. When a boy, ten years ago, a gun accidentally dis charged, sent a load of small shot tearing into his richt arm. The wounds were sev eral months in healing and ugly scars were left A longtime afterwards he was describ ing the accident to a party of friends when one of them picking up an empty pun and capping it. snapped the cap. To the ear? of the narrftor the sound was like that of a small cannon exploding In the room. no. saw the bright flash and felt the horrible sen sation of being shot to atoms. lie fainted and on recovering consciousness found a physician bending over him. ne felt severe pain in his right arm. Examination showed that the new skin had broken and the wounds were bleeding as freely as at the time of the accident About a year after ward he underwent a similar experience. As be was walking along the street he heard the report of a pistol shot. Instantly he felt what seemed to be a ball crashing into hia forehead, norror stricken he placed his hand to the supposed wound. Though he could find no mark upon his head, blood was dripping from his fingers. He looked at the scars and found that they were bleeding afresh. Since then he has dreamed repeat edly that he was a target for riflemen prac ticing at short rant'e. It is well known that the most virulent diseases, small pox, scarlet fever, diphther ia, etc. are contagions. If you have sickness of this sort in vour house, "the ue of Phenol Sodloue as a disinfectant will preserve the health of the rest of the family. For sale I. ,- dmoeists and general storekeepers, bee ad vertisement, ir 5.-t.j M i t