—— i A IA simon A500 a] A HERO AND HEROINE, He was a grim old fellow, As stern as a man could be, Who did odd jobs for a living: A washerwoman was she A shabby, forlorn old couple As ever the world has seen; Yeti he was a noble hero, And she was a heroine, He fought with the largest army That ever marched out to war, fn the world-famed “Battle of Dollars and Cents,” To keep the wolf from the door: B3he ruled o'er a growing kingdom, Nine riotous girls and boys, And faithfully bore the burdens Of a sovereign’'s cares and joys. And when, at last, were van- quished, | This queen and her soldier brave, i They patiently started adown the hill Which leads to a pauper's grave— A shabby, forlorn old couple As ever the world has seeng Yet he was a noble hero, And she was a heroine. they | Clear out!” sald Simon, grufily. And the door was shut unceremoni- ously {a the traveler's face, Old Paul smiled sardonically to him- self in the storm and darkness, “I'l try my luck a little further,” sald be, half aloud. “My nephew Si mon evidently doesn’t believe in scripture theory of entertaining unawares. Well, well or two further on; and for me. My old bones ache and my head feels dizzy-like, Let us see now what Herman will say to the old way- faring man? This must be the house, where the light shines out so cheerily through the red curtains.” And once more Paul Copperfield knocked on the panels of the door upon whose sill the snow had already spread a mantle of ermine, it's but a step it, with a candle in one hand. “What's wanting?” inquired, unkindiy. come in and warm myself?” “It's an bleak night missed my way.” him come a volee that fi score of and Paul she “Can 1 asked the stranger, and U've somehow “Yes, tell Phoebe!” called out like Paul Copperfield’s own, years younger and fresher, obeyed the summons. .& was a smaller and less pretentious in, WaS yo! to UNCLE PAUL'S NEPHEWS. By Ruth Ransom. One stormy winter twilight at a soli- tary little Gothie gabled railroad sta. tion, four passengers alighted, as the train made momentary pause—a stout, elderly man, in black, with stout, elderly wife; a tall, stooping young man, with eyeglasses, and a book under his arm: and an erect, griz rle-headed personage. in an ancient butternut-colored coat and a mangy fur cap. “Eh-—-what?”’ gentleman, as the driver of the one horse team—who had come down in the forlorn hope of turning an honest penny out of somebody—proffered his services, “Ride! What should 1 ride for? Haven't 1 got a pair of legs of my own?" “Why—yes—sir,” man, slowly fimhs, “1 unl iss its his crustily demanded this Jethro © the sturdy Most said am surveying Jou hey've t with ¢ aave, spose have, heen nate as it's comin’ now “Let it interrupted Mr, ain't of I'm every ways able way!” So saving. he fur cap inch and set off up the Jethro ( $ nd Squire Te walk te was likewise Pipford, the t} theories on the to mee on storm.” for a SNOW H Paul afeard Snow! pulled the brim an or two more eyes, hill, ‘amman got drove away, spliff and iles than pay wife nn its, and Percival had xX well aware that weological student subject of ercise that precluded all hire, “Humj Copperfield up the hill took away sh! humph!™ to him whose his breath, is made up of contrasts! gale pattern they Here am 1, after and ten in Europe, back again the very old huckleberry stone walls I used to know as a r barefooted It's rising little things changed! only one that steepness Flo years in as SAY in twenty pasiure boy! Up have Is changed Thirty years! I'd give all made—yex, and bartfooted boy three red nothing was rich then welcome—to Ie once more bringing OWS at n pocket but heles! | rich in a thousand things that have melted away from me gince like morning mists “un shine—-Faith, Hope, the better part of one's life! was that a flake of snow?’ Blow and soft, the floating flakes he gan to cloud the air, and the winter night was settling down over the bleak Inndscape in earnest “I don’t care!” said old Paul Copper fleld. plodding on “There's a warm welcome waiting for me, if 1 may trust my nephew's letters. There's—let me gee, do I turn off here? or ought I to go on to the next cross roads? Things have changed hereabonts, the old stone mill the finger post taken down--nothing as it ured to be Well, I'll risk it. Whew! how fast it snows! [I believe it's settling down for a northeaster.” Ax the old man stood, puzzled and undecided, light streamed from a farm house window across the bleak fleldse. “I'll go there and inquire,” sald old Copperfield. “It can’t be far, anyhow, and both the boys live night together somewhere.” Climbing over the stone wall. not quite as briskly as he used to do fifty years ago, Paul Copperfield hurried fieross the fields to the house and rap- ped on the door. It swung open on creaking ninges, revealing an interior | of ruddy eandlelight and blazing logs. “Who is it, Simon?’ squeaked an shrewish female volce, go about his business! nothing for tramps!” Bimon Copperfield, a sharp nosed, scant whiskered individual, hesitated, with his hand on the door. Old Paul eyed him keenly beneath the brim of the mangy fur cap, and | sald: home ight, with in his the and all Heigl Ho in Charity, #0 just qoue, Ed We've only a night's lodging.” “And our best bed room all made up for Uncle Paul!” shrilly ottered the woman by the fire, “A pretty notlon that would be! Simon, why don’t you | shut the door? Go about your busi ness, man! We don’t keep tavern, me and my husband!” : 't you hear what my wife says? Where a bright hued rag carpet had adorned the floor of Simon Copperfield’s kitchen, there were only whitely-scoured boards to be seen here, and the supper-table bore marks of extreme economy. But Her wan Copperfield rose up with a cheery, welcoming face, and his apple-faced wife drew forward a cushioned wood rock Take this en ET. seat by the fire, sir,” said “we're just sitting down to sup- per. I'll get you a bowl of hot tea di- rectly. Phoebe, take the gentleman's cap, amd put another log of wood on the fir “Bad night, ing nearer come ‘Unite she; sald Herman, draw blaze. “Have you sir," to the some ways?’ avert gaze; road somehow, stay all night?’ said Herman, refle expectin® | a relat but he hain't put In till he you're weleome to h & room. Eb, tit ly, sald Mrs rightly t ain’ 3 1 of a place said Paul, ing his face from the curious and I've my Perl MIPS | you can let me “Well, Hp a distance,” missed ctively, was ive from abroad. an See, ariel COIMes wife?’ “fort: Copperfield, it, and our all the fall the “Job's to work it, all of ' to make | We he ways did squeeze He tice m wouldn't + ft eTrust of iy, not resthed. bre: a-dyin’ Rij il to before his face! VW get ont in Life di fe ret 1 hung the ‘Bally, there from thi is was and Ww hen door on its hinges, shan't no one door,” and Simon says that's what's kept but I'll risk that and will they iar Nally rent Ray he turn there neve? has, us HOOT “ey Sally.” fut your uncle? persisted Paul “Well, folks do say iderable 0° property it to him he's got I don't He's worked for it, aud | he'll live long to enjoy It 8i different now He's ecalenlatin’ how he'll fall heir to it money, vith Simon! | believe he'll have comfort heaven, if there ain't savings banks and compound interest there! And Un- Paul's of life ought to be as Nj He's only G1 years hope mons a'ready it's dan't R011 money, cle lease as god old.” “You're wrong there, old Paul, “i in" March, day.” mon s, said com Herman,” this thirteenth am sixty-thiree if I live to see the honsehold, began Herman, “it ain't pos youre my Uncle Paul?” “No one e anid the old laughing. “Come and Kiss me, assembled “Why,” gible fou 18, man Phoebe, Troubles’ bed quilt. It does a lonely old man good to know that somebody's been a-thinkin' of him.” The sudden cheery lustre, but fits lHght was nothing to that in the faces of family groun guest, “I'l go over and fetch Rimon” be ‘gan Herman, starting ap and grasp. {ing hig hat. . you needn't,” sald Uncle Paul “I have seen quite enough of Bimon” Thus the rich old exile came home {to his Kindred, and thus he wag re Leelved. And Mr. Simon Copperfield’s hopes of an inheritance are consider. | ably diminished since that stormy | night in December, Hereafter bells that can be heard a distance of H00 feet must be attached to all scavenger wagons in Chicago, and those bells must be rung conting- ously while the wagons are in service, which may be between sunset and sun- | rise, | A barometer thirty-six feet long has been placed on the tower of a Paris Church. NOTES AND COMMENTS. The Matanzas mule is eclipsed. | bardment of Kimberly smashed ‘‘one cooking pot.” i Oregon that in an emergency case a physician may drive across a bridge to ordinary trafic, A jury in Chicago has just awarded 500 to a woman injured by a street while she this instance, at was getting off. In After the convict has served out his Maine Pententiary, and him by the State, he is required to sit for his photograph, and it is kept for future reference. Mississippi is without a Bureau of Statistics or any board of the kind, and consequently the State officers are much hampered in their efforts to give adequate replies to persons hav- ing to settle or make investments in the State, Premier Seddon of New Zealand, worried by the unemployed and the decreasing birth rate, has announced will bind himself to marry inside of six months he (the Premier) will find him immediate work, The question whether the ancient Egyptians made porcelain seems to have been settled at las’, Specimens heretofore found were pronounced of Chinese origin by experts, but a fray ment of a recently found near Memphis is declared to be real Egyptian by Chatelier, statuette The New York m killed in his bull ance, because the loaded, fell a take which all sooner agician who was ‘atehing perform gun fired was really to the fatal mis- men of his pre throu failure of mem: ete vietim ion make inter lessness or 8 or th care The trans equal to Arizona she was in flectest of the lantiec. In an capable of Ix into a powerful ted trans 1 to be in the world port Hancock ship afloat, her day or greyvhoun quick ily re-cOonairn is believe Conduits are gn Europe through perseverance : { combined Sooner will be Europs and to be at l¢ with later, the rule 1n but « Or Ne business bai Ast a © A ¢ } by the Sup A Jewish me his mother ti upon the ¢ Conrt of the rew a (gus fin and said, lived, striven: we shall more,” For this expression arrested for blasphemy, that hie had denied belief in the future life. Int court did not take this nd he was acquitted. (Crermany of earth have ant at funeral tity of “Yon Bo you ne be on the "as charge 3 the The Chicago City passed an ordinand for the examining engineers, Couneil has o which provides establishment of a board of who will pass upon the qualifications of all appli- cants for a license to run an elevator. Prior to this action it was shown that most elevator accidents due to incompetency on the part of the op- srator, were The death of Ottmar Mergenthaler inventor of otype” machine for setting type, removes a man whose the *‘i1 revolntion ing fg press, made In fact, Gutenberg him- no more important tribution the “art preservative of all arts” when he invented, or put into practical use, the movably types con- to There is no question that the Hol land submarine torpedo boat will revolutionize harbor defence, if it can be successfully handled. And there is very little question that the recent trial under the supervision » the Naval Board of Inspection wid Sar vey was measurably successful and full of promise for future achieve- ments. The government will un some of these boats, and continue the experiments and perfect the plans, ventor, whose private means are not able to maintain the costly enterprise. It is said that an eccentric under in California advertises that ‘children will receive as careful at- and as a eateh phrase he uses, “You'll be glad you're dead if 1 bury yon,” which seems a questionable compliment This, however, is not much worse than the New York doetor who adver tises, ‘Come to me before life is ex- tinet.”’ Another instance of modern advertising is the following placard which ie hung ontside of the entrances to a Methodist church in Northern Towa every Bunday night during the regular services: *‘Souls saved while you wait—step in," Sessions, With the introduction of motocycles and motor carriages the terms * “hicy. ele,” “bike” and “wheel” are threat: ened to be abolished ina new classifi eation that is, coming into vogus for the purpose of the motive For the begin- 0. Behwarzkopf of the i Automobile Club & responsible, In the latter a hippo-mobile. ber, cycle is, therefore, a homo-mobile, The Boston Herald says: ‘A was brought into the with neglecting to support his wife, He pleaded guilty and was fined $20, Thereupon his neglected wife stepped her, under the provision of the law relative to non-support cases, which provides for the payment of the amount of the fine imposed on the husband to the wife when the so directs, The law appears to be operates queerly sometimes, as in this case,” The attention of the Audubon So. ciety has been called to the practice of blinding finches to make them sing, and this modern cruelty has been brought to the attention of the Min- ister of the Interior of Belgium, where the practice is most common, He has sent ont a warning and has asked that a law be enacted forbidding this inhuman practice, This extra- ordinary cruelty has been in vogue, it seems. for years, Finches natu- rally sing, but it is said that their singing is greatly improved by blind- ing them, It has been the practice, therefore, to have singing matches between blinded birds and those that uid as well as between blind singers, The best singers were, of course, more valuable, hence the co see, and hideous practice. Thirty years ago the Florida orange was stil unborn, During that period hundreds of been evolved Florida soil, purely A varieties have on result of intelligent A hundred of these least have su- perior merit, In grapes we have veloped in less than : wild Ame erican activity. A century rican Wigs, origin i int almost endiess of newhat longer period 3 app ex 3 devel is : i s lave given wide repu- ee of Old DIAS roll ting in the bottom of CAVES, va, level rive raminage Bpeciluens Opes and fix sully bodies, for tros earth winters aria, Ail 1 auiQ {« tains and descend into 1 When the nee ted, if they to Mars 3 G0 we fers, fal 1 re ever are £4 fue to it, shall go into the of the earth, iless of dangers, for the purpose ignorance ax to there. And inven shall be found down soar Way miles bowels regar of dissipating what actually exists every part of the surface of this sphere, including ! North Pole and the millions of sq. .ro miles of now unexplored and which surrounds it, within human ken our be Lirvngnt Wealth in the Great Lakes. The G Lakes have become the great artery of our riches: commercial blood. One-third of the population of he United States is dependent on these — « for their export amd import trade This waterway taps the richest and Most prosperous agricultural territory oni this continent of ours, together with our nu productive mines, and it worth while noting that within a ra dings of 400 miles of Cleveland one half the population of the United States. It is a well established fact that deep water transportation is, and necessarily must be, of transportation by rail; reat ysl iu indesd, it is when the voyage is of any is only oneoighth of the latter, As this question of transportation deter and enhances in proportion to its efficiency and econ and the sea” Is no great problem to account for, passed through the Sault Ste. Marie canal no less than 21.234.064 tons of Canadian freight, alone having a value of £200,000,000, while American ship moved some 1085.000,000 tons through the same waters for the same length of time. The total traffic throngh the locks of this “Boo” canal, for less thay eight months, is five times as great ip number of vessels and slightly less than twice as much in actual tonnage ax passes through the Suez canal dur Ing an entire year.—Alnsiee’s, Oregon newspapers want a law cgainst “salting” mines. KEYSTONE STATE. LATEST WEWS GLEANED FROM VARI. OUS PARTS. WILLIAMSPORT TRAGEDY. Murdered Mother and Children The Step- father Disappears Bodies Under sa Straw Steck Company Stores Will be Discon- tinised by the Lehigh Valley Coal Company. The murder of a woman and her three children was revealed on a farm near Mont- gomery Borough, Lycoming county. The bodies of two children were first found hid- den beneath a straw stack, Thersupon a warrant was fssued for the arrest of Abram Hummel, a stepfather of the murdered chil- dren, who is missing. Three weeks ago Hummel married Mrs. Yoagle, a widow, who had three children, A few days later the nelghbors noticed that the eldest two chil. dren were missing, and on Tuesday the Hummel premises were deserted. A party of neighbors made a search, They found a blood-smeared piece of burlap near the barn, Disarranged straw attracted thelr attention to the stack, and under this the bodies of the two children with their heads crushed were found. The bodies look as though the chil. dren had been dead for two weeks, A tele. gram to District Attorney O, G. Kaupp states that the bodles of Mrs, Hummel and her other child were found in an outbullding. The dead were horribly mutilated, the mur- derer evidently having used & ciao in carry- ing out his flendish crime. Montgomery and vicinity was In a state of utmost excite ment as a result of the ghastly discoveries, It is belleved that Hummel has made good his escape. No motd juadruple murder has yet been The erime Is without a parsilel in { Ly ing county. ve for the found Hist the 1 ory No More Company Stores, On Decer 1 ner 1, % Lehigh Valley Coal ( from the’ Lehigh region. In this istrict three stores where HN PAO YO0S Lehigh Valle) y / bad fers Jeanesville, { and Has= COQ rn asunounced, tho yapany will gtore” Was cut loose business SHEL in thers pany are of the honored, laton. OF solicit basis the Ie Iyees Of these stores trade, but The bills will not high Valley pay the company will bx It Is said that ntinue to the miners different here they pauy wiil als dViKIG ang Fail Delayed Wedding I East : it agninst Wi njaries allege iy i ¥ {nner im low falling enrre wa that Aside dent Fell Fifty While walking over Feet from Bridge. wi m Th yr Ele pans the Shenandoah, he stu aged tric mas 268 YOArs, wis Haliway Bridge tracks fell to whichs Lehigh Valley mbled at the fort, break. his side and His inju and fifty tracks below, a distance of Ofty arm, orus otherwise injuring himself, believed to be fatal. ing his left hing in aries are Flush Mill at Hazleton. The Hazleton Board of Trade purchased 45,000 square feet of land on which the Har leton Pilash, Velvet & Silk Manufacturing Co, willeroot a large mill. It will be of the largest plush p lants in Amerion and will give employment to nearly 1000 hands one Train Kills Aged Man. Bernard Carvill, aged 83 years, of New Castle, was killed by a Pennsylvania passen ger train, The safely gates were lowered, but he failed to oleerve them and walked 4) rectly in frout of the locomotive. He leaves an estate worth $200,000, News in Briel. A deed was recorded at Media covering the transfer of the property of the Berwyn Water Company 10 the North Springfield Water Company. # George Horn, of Emaus, made an attempt to end bis life by swallowing a dose of pols. on, A physician administered an emetic and James Horgan, an Irish laborer, made two desperate but wishooesstul attempts to end his lite, st Cornwall Station, by throwing ger train, Josso Clifford, of Johnstown, has been fost in the fastnesa of the Laurel Hill Mountains, above Laughlinstown, and a searching party is endeavoring to find traces of him. The finishing department of the F. J, Rich. ards Manufacturing Company, of Blooms- burg, caught fire and was totally destroyed, together with contents, The loss will amount Aanoe, Judge Dunham, at Towanda, sentenced Samuel Heoman to a term of five years in the Fastern Penitentiary, and to pay a fine of $500, for killing Jacob Capwell, on May Heoman was convicted of voluntary manslaughter, The Board of Health is taking measures threatens to become epidemic in Altoona. The East End and Pottagrove schools, in suburbs, have been closed on account of the disease, II — Rorry She Retuased Mim, Dou bother, Haury. becanse 1 won't marry you," e. “There are just as good fish in the sea as over wers canght,” ‘‘Better,” said he, shortly, as he i Be fh Tham hop Tn w ¥ ennsen him so that she go might make him suffer for his herd “rear s=Har- per's Bazar, There's nothing so bad fora cough as coughing. There's nothing so good for a cough as Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. The 25 cent size 1s just right for an ordinary, everyday cold. The 50 cent size 1s better for the cough of bronchitis, croup, grip. and hoarseness. The dollar size the best for chronic coughs, 8s in consumption, chronic broa- chats, asthma, etc. Feeding the Flephants. Elephants in the Ir twice a day Wi gv Jian mealtin they are awn ine of piles of food 1 ! inci {ast nudes done up in fis The rice | with grass tion!” each elephant and a package is thrown cious mouth By this ing not a single grain of rice is wrapped At the wn a $8310 3% method of feed 8 wasted 118 sister ACTS GENTLY ON THE KIDNEYS, LIVER AND BowELs CLEANSES THE System 2 EFF ECTUALLY BUY THE GENUINE « MANTD BY Q@URRNIA JIG RPE 8 haw Wie te * cl 0% > TRA TAAL A ne have bg Saluane CASCA- tect. Couldn't do ners Rhy iy have al them for some time and biliousness and am now com: them, to every one, never be withoul them in will ied ros ¥ W. A. MARX, Albany, N. Y. the family. CANDY CATHARTIC