Advertising Rates, Legal Notices TIlO following price foi lsjtal ftclve,r,9 nz has ben adopted bv the Cakuon AOVOOATK. ninrter Notices - - - . $4 00 Vuiltor's Notices - - 4 00 Oommlssloner's Notices - - 4 00 Divorce Notices - - - 4 00 Administrator's Notices - - 3 00 Sreeutor's Notice . - - 3 00 Oi her legal advertising will bo charged for ny r lie square. H. V. Morthism, Jr..PaUlihor. Weisssort Business Directory. jp UNKI.IN HOUSE, EAST WBlSSrOUT, PENN'A. Thl house oilers nrst-chm accommodations trl Iho permanent boarder mid transient guest, l'nnlo prices, only One Dollar ior day. aug7-iy John Hkiiuio, Proprlct.,r. Oscar Oliristman, WKISarOHT, fA. Livery and ExrJimiqe Slallrs. nasv riding carriage mid safe drlvinis liorse. Ilest accommodations tn agents ami travellers. Mall and telegraph orders promptly attended to. Olvo me atrial. nmvsMy The - Weisaport - Bakery, O. W. LACHV. l'llOl'ltUCTPH. Delivers fresh Kriv.i and Cakes in Weisaport. ijcuvers vicinities everyday. In the storel have a Hue Line r Confectionery St ? n..nd.vTr.ul S.n.d.w schools and fe vals annulled at low-st nrlces. deoB-fim R. J. HONGrEN, UCCEHSOll TOCllAlll.F.1 HCIIWKtTZKlt, Near the Canal Itrldge, In EAST WEISSPORT, Ponna, Is prepared to do all kinds ot Blacksmithing and Horse-Shoeing, P. 1 Mast Jioiul Cart, the Cheapest and Uest on the market. feb2-yt Henry Christmas AT THE Fort Allen House. Wcisspnrt, Sells the l'opularand Celebrated Burlington O and O York SIN3I.B Ais'D . OmLS GABEUGES At prices that are considerably less than compe tition. I have all styles nut nullities! which I wish von would not fail to Inspect before making purchases. mayll-3m APPLES AND : POTATOES Received in Car Load l.otsal- rnost every week at O. J. Saeger's Easi Weissport, Pa. Store-keepers, 11 ucksters and nil others can save money by mak intr tiiivc.h,ises of mm. Uther fruits in sensim. Call or write for pices, Dead Men Tell No Tales ... W'Rt AUIVt pur Story's Snort. vehave-nfu'iH'""!"."..-"-- DrV (Joods, Groceries, I rOVIS- ions, Notions, Uorils and hoes,Tobi(:co,(3igar8, &c , &c, &c. ti n.n ifiiii.ii Vnilev. but we have an Klconnt A,aqrtment Jiisttlie Hinio. and the prices are iairiedway down beliw thegieat niajorltyot niircoiniietltors.iuid that's what suits you be- iaiWqUAI.lfY IM'IO llKSr ail'l thermoRR menlwaya.lUVf H!illT, Our slock U enilre lvKew. Prush.eie.il. Coiiiplete and Handsome, an we take pleasuf III asking the people of Weissport and the surrounding community to call and inspect our assortment ol general store gmds, ltesiieetlveiy, A, W. MAUSH, Post-Olllcc Weissport, Ptt Qyev Gail Brite E. Weissport. uKdbrtakbr AND HBAliEl! IN FUUNtTUUE, PARLOR SUITKS, BED BOOM SUITES, .. o. Prices the very lowest. Quality of a-oots the best. Satisfaction guaranteed In every particular. Caskets, Coflina and Shrouds We hive a full lln which we will furnish a the lowest possible prices. ilqur, FeeA &c., ! the eiiiie est rpi atly at very reiisonahle prices rail aim no couvimwu. JOSEPH F. REX, inrli-ly I? AST WRIHtPOHT AL. CAMPliEr.L, J3rtr anil Watctaler. Bank Street, LQliighton, flinna. Kespwttnllv Invites the attention of his friends new stock of Watches, Clocks, aniline CllltUll wtui' ... Silverware, Jevely, at Prtis that defy competition. It wilt pay you .liewhere. IllUPAUUNG Promptly done at lowest charge, and all work guaranteed, Doa't Fonet the Place. JtMtl aTtlAt-vmvtxTlfNCfcYTI SIGN OF THE BIO WATCH, Bank St Lohightoa. losepk FB Rex5 $1.00 a Year in Advance. INDEPENDENT " Live and Let Live." $1 .28 when not paid in Advance. VOL. XVIII.. No 13 Lehighton, Carbon County, Ponna. February 8, 1890. Singlo Copies 5 Cents RHEUMATISM Far Mere than Twenty-five Venn. A Com plete Ilecovery. The Mean Used. I bad Inflammatory Rheumatism. For nearly year I had to be fed and turned In bed. I could And bo relief Mr stomach was ruined and cut to pieces with powerful medicine taken to effect a cure ao that I was compelled to lire on bread and water. I auffered for twenty. fire rears In tula war. I waa In duced to try Dr David Kennedy's rarortta Remedy, mad at Itondout, N. 7., and I Am Now Woll, thanks to this medicine. Dr. Kennedy's Favorite Remedy la my boat friend. With it t am enabled to enjoy a Rood night's test. Also food, such aa meat and pastry, which 1 have been deprived of for years, showing; that the Favorite Remedy has no equal for the cure of Ind'frestlon and Dyspepsia as well If any should doubt this statement I will send the ready proof at once. Uarrett Lansing;, Troy, N. T. It la my pleaauro and absolute duty toward thosa who ar struggling for very life against the deadly Diseases of tiio Kldnoys to add my testimony to the already weighty evl. drnceof the wonderful cfHcacy of Dr. David Kenne dy's Favorite Remedy My wifo waa a hopeless case, abandoned by the physicians. Dr David Kennedys Favorite Remedy was resorted toi not because any hop waa i laced in it, but because nothing; else re mained. All means and medicines had been tested without avail. The effect waa little ahort of a mira cle. At tlio second bottle she had regained strength, and continuing-the treatment has fully recovered, Jay Sweet, Albany, N. Y, Dr. Kennedy's Favorito Remedy, Prepared by Bit. IIAVJM KKNNKI1V, ItOMIOlIT, N. V lpe- .itt'ai StiforSS. By all druuirista. ONSUMPTION, IN Its first stages, can be successfully checked by the prompt use of Ayer's Cherry I'ectornl. Kven in the later periods of that disease, the cough is wonderfully relieved by tills medicine. " I have used Ayer's Cherry Pectoral with the best effect in luv nractlco. This wonderful preparation onto saved my me. i nau a constant rougti, night sweats, was greatly reduced in llesh, and given tip by my physician. One bottle and a linlf of the Pectoral cured me." A. J. Lidson, M. U., MMdleton, Tennessee. " Several years ago I was severely Illt- The doctors said I was in consumption, anu tiiat tneycouiu no Homing lor me, but advised me, as a last resort, to try Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. After taking this medicine two or three months I was cured, and my health remains cood to the present day "James liirchard, Durlen, Conn. " Several vears aco. on n nassace home from California, by water, I contracted so severe a cold that for some days I was confined to my state-room, and n physician on board considered my life in danger. Happening to have a bottlo of Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, I used it freely, and my lungs were Boon restored 10 a neaiiny ennumnu. since men 1 havo invariably recommended this prep aration." J. 13. Chandler, J unction, Va. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, Pr, J, O. Ayer it Co., Loweil, Mats. Sold by all Druggists. Price .l ; six bottles, to. s i9W$ SHUT Horse Doctor, (Honorary (lradu.Ha of Ontario Vet. College Office: Carbon House Bank SU Lenisli'r CASTRATION. DENTISTRY AN ' Difeeases r llHrs(i rii,tl; 8UCCHSSKUI.1.Y TKGAir.D. LAMENES 3 SPAVINS Splints, Uinghone, noon.on,,,- AlldaUd,SPiiai, prevalent amnng Dome-tVat. Ills Horse and Cattle I'ow iris sidil h llll elf and stores generally. Consultation Free charges Moderate. Ca is bytelegranh and telephone nronurtlv at niuiweu vo iiperniiiiuf rfKiimuiy 1-4 r. ...... . rfnrnied Al pu, I ji.pr, S tip l( Qrnr-f I1CW L.IVCI sit? Al OtUl AT PA 'If FH TON. LUOrOM) MKVKItS It l0 fuliv informs t" lieople of l'aekertoii and elmt that he has p. opened a I.IVKItV Si' ill.K oa DUAVIUt Si where pe-sons can be ipplled III) (!ood, S, teams either for Kltneial. Wcildlinrnr fur ll.n nil I'm noses at verv Uiuat Ktlea. lueoniie toht' eie'iylfh In' hits also In tn.'k the vry be hr.trds of VI.OUK mut VKISP, Ahlch liewi jel' it l,ovcl i'riws, Attention, Builders! Thnundersh:ne(l Is sti worklnn tho DOI.O STONE (jUAltltY, ami I, prepared tu aupph, snorieai iinuee itiiii uv -'vesi i rices, perstii. whodeslro with (il)OI) H.ONK for HU11.D1N I'Ultl'OSKS. Call and III ilect the Htnues an learn 1'rlcus lefore iiureliiislng eKettheie. LEOPOLD MEYERS, feb.2-ly raekerlon, Pa. I 4. HISTer Itesect fully nnnoimeus in the nubile that he opened a.S'EW UVUUY Sl'AIII.U, and that he i uw ureiiiiiuu in luruisu luams lur irlineiai Weddiuusnr ltiwlnesM Triiw on the shurteiit n tee an.) most liberal term, orders left at -Oui'Ool lluuse'wlll receive prompt attention. STAWiKS ON N0IITH STUKET irxt the Hotel, Lehlzliton. Iaii2i.v SHOEMAKER'S Horse aCattle Bowier, foshua Shoemaker, Proprieto OaKItltYVIU.K. P. 0 Northampton co., II ltUCTIONS-For a horse, I tablusimoiirul. ti or lliree limes a week; when sick, a talil siniuuaiiii "' rur a vim, I ieaiooiu .. .io, nura .u, mice a nay. i, same for Hogs. For Poultry mix with led. . ..rT'",! ',0,wi'elr If, prerured aflerllierech of the latellr II. O- Wlts.iu.aiid Is tho g n'f iriicit . uvvuers i auovn n lini'd lin ing .. ..... Stoves, Tinware Heaters and Ranges, In Great VnriPiv nt in ureau variety at SA TV rmfl T . d-Tt TJBI 'c? IX.xL U VMXJX V Jlt b Popular Store, Bank Street. Roofing and Spouting a special ly. oiove repairs iuini8hed on snort notice. j9 JH? P. THEY'VE CUT THE WOOD AWAY. They've cut the wood away, Tho cool green wood. Wherein I used to play In happy mood. The woodman's axe has daft Each noble tree, And now, alas, is left No shado for me. The brooks that flow la Hay Arc dry before The first hot Bummer day. And flow no more. The fields are brown and bare, And parched with beat) No more doth boTer the? The pine scents sweet. No more his note Is heard To blithely ring Where erst the woodland bird Would sit and sing. No more the wood flowers bloom Where onco they bloomed Amid tho emerald gloom Of ferns entombed. Fled, now, the woodland sights, The scented air 1 Fled, all tho sweet delights That once were there! And fled th? gracious mood That came to me, When to that quiet wood I used to fleet Boston Journal. MRS. II. "Hero aro my stamps. Now I won't havo to bo forever dipping my pen in ink as I open my letters," and Herbert Am brose tried the little rubbers one by one on the blotter of his desk. "Cashier," "Business Manager," "Foreman," "Mrs. H.," were tho different, types. At sight of the last 0110 ho gave an exclamation, "Mrs. II. I What will she say when she sees that, I wonder? Mrs. II. I Well! welll I wonder why she never did got married thought She's pretty enough. 1 don't know as I would mind marrying her myself," and the proprietor of the Dally Eclio chuckled to himself as he thought of what the world would say if he married his typewriter girl. All the papers would havo three-line heads be ginning, "Married His Typewriter," and their pictures would bo published all over the land probably. No, on second thought ho guessed he wouldn't. "I would like to see her tho first timo a letter is referred to her with the red stamp on tho top. I bet she'll blush like a schoolgirl, and she's thirty if she's a day." With this not altogether kind remark ho took up hisrnorning work and did not think further of rubber stamps nor of his stenographer who sat in her little corner of the big room on the next floor pound ing out orders for metal, tapo, etc., and letters to brother editors on ovory con ceivable subject. Sho was 80 "if she was a day," but her face was ono of those that never grow. old and never grow ugly. Her eyes were a steady gray, her hair dark and smooth, her lips firm and full, a face that you might; pass every day for a year and not notice. Elsie Ilaviey had been in The Echo office two. years, and the managing edljor often said: "It is strange that we cannot get acquainted with that girl." Sho came and -did her work day after day, she answered when spoken to, the city editor had her name and address on his city book, but that was all they knew about her. Carrying put his desire to see what effect tho stamp, would havo pn her, Mr. Ambrose happened to bu in tho editorial department when the first letter with the stamp in bold red letters was banded to her. She took it, glanced at it, then, raised her eyes slowly to the proprietor's face as lio stood by her desk. er glance was, steady but her lips were closed tighter than usual, "Do you know anything about that?' he asked, meaning of course the matter in the letter. "I do," was the answer, and she stuck it on tho hook in her old methqdical manner, but he qotioet) (hat her hands trembled and that her face was, paler ihan' usual. me, next morning fdiss uariey was not in her place, in tho corner. Never before hail she been late when the clock pointed to eight. Sho must be sick, tho manag- ing.editor said. Uirls were always get ting sick just when they wore needed most, and ho sent tho office boy d-wn. to. her address to get her excuse. ",No such person lias ever lived at that number," .was the word he brought back, and the managing editor looked across tho desk at the city editor in a questioning way. "It is very strange," was all lie said, but no took the word to, M,r, AmoToso a as that worthy gen tleman arrived. "Bless, my soul," was that gentleman's ejaculation, "who ever heard of 8U,ch a, tiling? Didn't anybody ever lrnaw where she ived?" Nobody from tho office had ever ueen nt ner tiouse. "Maybe she ha3 sent her excuse to me," ho Baid. "Sure enough, hero it is," and he opened a square envelope ad dressed tn Her bold, round hand. "IJear friend" (she had never called him mat oetore), "i tuantc you, thought you would never know, I do not know how you found it out, hut you have acted generously toward me, ana t am more than grateful, Mps. "Mrs, II. I There 'a a. mystery here, shouldn't wonder if it would make a good story, but we won't say anything against her. 1 bupposo l snail nave to get some one to fill her place, for it is evident she is not coming back. I would like to know what tho thinks I found out) some thing connected with that stump, I know, i uiougut tuose stamps were going to save time, but if they all have the same effect as this one did and. I have to break in somebody new for every one of them l will oe always behind, The new stenographer came, passed through tho ordeal of being "broken in," and in time. IUsie Uariey was forgotten. Forgotten by all save Mr. Ambrose. The look in Iier clear eyes aa she slowly turned toward him tho last time he saw her haunted him, and ho would say to himself: "I would mUs a whole edition of Tho Echo to find out that girl's his tory." In the summer time Mr. Ambrose went to his country home a little way out of the city, running in every day to. his business and back to tho cool green shades nt nlu1.it. One moraine three years after Elsie Barley's mysterious leavetafcing he was coming m on tne moraine train, and as thnv stonned at a morning train, and as thny stopped at station on the way a coffin was taken off BU( pat into a waiting hearse. The con - ductor ot the train knew Air. Ambrose and remarked to him after the train moved on, "That was the fellow we read about in the dispatches a day or two ago who was pardoned from prison. He died ot consumption anil they've brought him home." Mr. Ambrose remembered the ease. f wTm JWv Mtsfli4 a House ana lcuiea an oia matt, was no not?" "Yes, that was tho charge. Ho was a young doctor, the nephew of the man who waa killed. He had married a girl whom tho old man did not liko, and the latter refused to help him in any way. Tho young fellow got slok and the wife worked in an office but could not sup port tho two. Tho doctor nnd the old man had a quarrel one day, and that night the old man was killed and tho house robbed. Tho doctor was arrested and convicted, and it was only tho other day that tho real mttrderor confessed on his death bed. Then it was too late. Consumption had marked the doctor for its prey, and now ho is dead." "And what became of the wife?" "She went away after he was sen tenced and was gono a couple of years. Somebody said they saw her in the city during that time and that she was work ing in. an office there. They said sho passed as a girl nnd that sho was saving up her money, thinking sometime he would be set free, for tho faithful girl never believed him guilty, though tho circumstantial evidence was so strong that it seemed almost impossible that he should be otherwise." "I must look that matter up. It will make a good story for Sunday," said Mr. Ambrose to himself, nnd that after noon ho left his office on an earlier train and stopped off at the little station to look up for himself tho story of tho dead man. Ho was directed to aj little cot tage, and n woman in black opened the door. "Elsie Harleyi"and then it ail came to him. Elsie Ilarleyhvas tho dead man's wife that was the necret of her life. She took him into her little parlor and told him tho story. "I thought you had found out my secret nnd that you did not like to speak to me about it. I scarcely know how I got homo that day. Those red letters seemed burning themselves into my brain. I wrote to you some thing, I do not know what, nnd I came back hero discouraged." That was only a part of tho long sad story. Elsie's life had been a weary ono, and the skies had been over dark for her, but at last there came a ray of light. At first sh6 was offered her old position, but she said sho could not go back to that. Then as timo went on Mr. Ambrose re called what he had once thought about proposing to his typewriter, and he said to himself, "Sho isn't a typewriter now. No matter of blamo can be attached to her in any way, and she is prettier than Bhe was then. If I don't beiiovo I will ask her now." And ho did, nnd today she is Elsie Ambrose, and is happy only for the thought of that grave down in the country tho gravo of the ono whose wrong was righted too late. Katherine Hartman in Dansville(N, Y.) Advertiser. Coffee Planting: In Cuba. I can imagine nothing more delightful for an American capitalist than the ownership nnd management of a coffee plantation in Cuba. He could spend his winters there, in thecliinato of Italy, sur rounded by magnificent scenery, with vegetation full of tropio splendor, and plenty of game, deer, wild pig, fowl and fish for the sportsman. Even American fruits anl vegetables thrive there, and witli small outlay all the comforts of your homes could be transferred to the mountain plantations. The American Who should go there to pass his winters would not lack for agreeable society. The remaining descendants of the old French planters, who still live on" the estates they have been able to retain, are nospttauio anu generous, ana generally well educated and refined. Besides, this sort of winter resorting can be made to pay handsome profits. A plantation that will produce a crop of coffee and cacao worth in market 520,000, tho cost of pro duction being no moro than $1,0,000 or 13,000, can he purchased for 35,000 or .nit rwi. . . . qu.ymjj. xia i-isks oi such an invest ment are small. Droughts need not be feared and labor is cheap and plentiful. From an Interview, Some of DtcUena Characters. A contributor to tho London Literary- World claims to havo identified a num ber of Dickens' characters in real life, He says that Smike is still living In Bury St. Edmunds, where he keeps a toy shop, and he describes him us a tall, hatchet- faced old gentleman, proud of his ro mantic eminence. Corker, he asserts. was connected, through hi father, with an eminent engineering arm, and lived in Oxford road, where he prowled about. a nuisance to all the servant girls in the neighborhood. He, Major Bagstock, Airs. UKewton, wno.se real name was Campbell, and her daughter, were well known characters In Leamington. Some fifty years ago, he says, the Shannon coack, running between Ipswich and London, was driven by a big, burly old ble elder Weller. Ho docs not, how ever, introduce us to the real Sam Wei ler, or his immortal master, Pittsburg bulletin. A wonderful fact to reflect upon, that every human creature is constituted to do a proiQuna secret and mystery to ev erybody, A solemn consideration, when I enter a great city by night, that every one of those darkly clustering houses incloses its own secret; that every room in every one of them incloses its own se cret; that every beating heart in the 1 3 1 il 1 - - , 1 . , . -'.' iiunureua m iiiuucuaua pi preasis inero, is, in some of its imaginings, a secret to the bean nearest it! Dickens, MEN OF LETTERS. William Hartpole Locky, the historian, has bright red hair, is 01 years of age and dresses like a parson. Wilkie Collins' drama, "The Frozen Deep," was instrumental in giving Dick' ens his idea of "The Tale of Two Cities. Jules Verne's real family name is Ol ohowltz. Tho novelist is now 03 years old and engaged in tho production of one ot his greatest works,, F. Marlon Crawford, the novelist, who is to become a resident of Washington is a very handsome man, in perfect health, and is known all over Europe at an accomplished swordsman. The late Dr. Edwin Hatch, of Oxford, 54 years of age, was ono of the most fa miliar figures of the great English unl vereity. He waseditorof The University a Gazette, and held the post of secretary to the board of faculties and of studies. 1 Objects discovered in and near Rome by exoavatoni will henceforth be placed in tho Baths of Diocletian, there to form a Museum of Urban Antiquities, while those found In Etruria, Latiura and elsewhere) will bo plared at the Villa Glulla, on the Flaininian Way beyond the Porto del I'opolo, named from the famous en patron, Poyit Jitllai HI FIRDUSI. Then died upon their ears a soft refrain. And Persia's monarch, surfeited and pay, Leaned hack aod bade the minstrel slug the lay Which he bid just concluded, once again. ' He sang, and plaudits praised tho tender strain, "Who Is the bard who) versa we hear today" "Fli-dust," said the slntrcr, "poor and gray, in Tous thy servant languishes In pain." "Ill nnd In need!" tho tic In wonder, cried. "The greatest poet of our time and state I Bear unto him at once our words of love And richest presents our esteem to prove." Obedience followed, but as mocking fate In want, the day before, the bard had died. Fell N. Oeraon In Philadelphia Ledger. LETTY'S LESSON. "A masked ball! My dear little girl, what can you be thinking of?" Letty Ogilvie flattened her fresh, round cheek against the window pane, making belie vo to watch, tho gambols of tho cat with a wind swept autumn leaf in the garden patli outside. A moisture dimmed her eyes. She bit her lip. "Thinking of!" she repeated, impul sively. "Why, just exactly what I nm talking oft to bo sure. I never attended a masqucrado ball in my life. And I've always so longed for a chance; nnd now and now " The cat, tho red leaf, tho serrated line of tho fence, all mingled in one blur bo fore her eyes. Dallas Hall looked gravely nt her. "Tastes differ," said ho gravely. "What a woman can find to fascinate hor in assuming tho dress and personal ity of somebody who died and was buried a century ago, in putting on a mask and mingling in an indiscriminate crowd" "Mrs. Laddon Lloyd's guests can hard ly be called an indiscriminate crowd," pouted Letty. "In five hundred people there must be some jarring element; and, under any circumstances, I'd rather choose iny own associates," retorted Mr. Hall. "You can do as you please." "And you? Dear little Letty my 'queen rose of the garden of girls!'" coaxiugly quoted Dallas, "you, also, will do.oa I please in this matter? I can't en dure tho idea of your mingling in this fashionable crowd, in a black satin mask, and an outlandish costume. Promise me, love!" "I suppose I shall have to," un willingly conceded Letty, still with the fresh young face turned away. It was only half a victory, yet, with such as it was, Dallas Hall was forced to be content. When he was gono, Letty Ogilvie went up stairs, and looked sorrowfully at a coquettish little costume of black velvet, plentifully slashed with pink satin, and accompanied by a Gainsboro' hat of black velvet, overshadowed with pink plumes. A lace uiantilki and a monster rose colored fan lay beside it. "It would havo mado such a lovely Spanish maiden," said Letty to herself. "And now there's an end of it." Sho took up her scissprs to rip tho gay little combination apart; for Letty Ogil vie was no pampered child of- wealth, who can afford to keep a pretty thing merely to look at it. In thA-.Ogilvle, family things were twisted and turned in a variety of ways before they were pronounced to havo outlived their usefulness. But she dropped them again. "I can't do it!" said sho. "It's too pretty. I'll wait until Bessy Mordaunt has seen it and I.ulu Payne!" So sho folded the bright colored trifles away in lavender and rose leaves in her bureau drawer, not to count a tear or two that fell among tho pink plumes and glittered on the silver lacings of the black velvet bodice. "What a ehanie!" cried Lucetta Va- nan, "Xowre not going, after all? Good ness me, I wish 1 were two sizes smaller! I'd go as the Spanish maiden myself. But what sort of a fud has Mr. Hall got ten Into his head now? They say he. ia a genius, but geniuses do get into such un, comfortable grooves! Q( course, he's coming to read poetry to. you all the evening?" "indeed hoTa notl" said Letty. "He haa got to work day and night nt his law business, to get tilings in shape for for tho wedding." "Oh, I see!" cried Miss Varian, jump ing up and executing a low courtesy. Niagara the rapids of the St. Lawrence Montreal Quebeo aH that sort of thing. Don't I wish I waa you? Well, good-by my dcuv! U my Neapolitan flower girl's costumo is to be ready, I must prod up that snail of a dressmaker." that same evening Lucetta came back, her big, black eyes glaring, her lips curv ed in sarcastio smiles. "Letty Ogilvie," said she, "I've cot such a joke to tell you.1 Where do you supppose Mr, Dallaa Hall is going to spend Thursday evening?" "At work, I suppose," said Lettr. al most inclined to be offended at Lucetta's tone and manner. "Oh, yes pretty work indeed! But, Letty-mlnd, this is a pro-found secret! Vd no business to be prying and listen ing; but, out ot triendbhip to you, I got close to the shadow of the stair door, wnere uaiias uau was telling some young man good-by. You know Miss McCracken, my dressmaker, has her rooms on the top floor of the Belknap ouiiaing, wncro air. f inu-ot-per(oction s law omce is locnteur "But, Lucetta." 6tammcred bewildered Letty, "do you think it is quite honor able to" "Honorable, indeed! Oh, you egregious goose!" cried Lucetta, "do you know what a dupe you are? Listen! This is what I heard the knight errant say to his friend as they parted: 'Very welli on Thursday evening next, at the Laddon Lloyd a. And a friend answered back, 'On Thursday evening next at the Lad don Lloyd's.' So you see, Letty, he's going to the masquerade, and he means to have a lolly good time a sort of wind- up to his bachelor bliss, I suppose while you are moping at home, because mas querade balls aren't the proper thing, mueeiu wii a nerce satirical em phasis. Letty's eyes flashed, her cheeks Ted' dened, t'lf it's proper for him, it's proper for me,Msald 6he, "I'll go, Lucetta. The Spanish ccstume sha'n't be wasted, after all" Lucetta clapped her hands, with a gay peal of laughter. "Will he know you?" the cried. lHas. he any idt-a what you are golnlgto wear?" "No, I had mettnt it for a surprise," "My dear," whUpered Lucetta,"things are happening providentially. If I could only be by at supper time, when every body unmasks, and see the expres sion of his face! What character do you suppose he will represent? Edgar ItaT enswood? Ivaahoe? Never mind; I've been to a lot of these masquemdes, and I ssvvr yet taw a dUauUthat I couldn't unravel, now-nuinzea no win cw. m call foryou, dear, at nine. "Thore'll be plenty of room in our carriage, nnd nobody will suspect that you'rp not in bed and asleep." Of all tho guests at Mrs. Laddon Lloyd's that night there was no more graceful dancer, no moro exquisite cos tume than that of tho "Spanish maiden." Close to her hovered tho "Neapolitan flower girl," with her shallow wicker tray of rosebuds and her scarlet Bash. And a stately Austrian halberdier had attached himself to their party with a certain pertinnclty. The Spanish maiden said never a word she hardly darnl to trust her voice but her heart beat high as tho halber dier stooped liis plumed helmet to whis per in her car. "You are well disguised but I know you." She shook her head. Tho rosy color flooded tlio round chin, tho curve of the milk white throat, that were visible be neath tho satin mask. For whom did ho take her, then? To what other woman besides herself did he daro to spoak in accents of such honeyed softness? At last came tho moment of unmask ing. Letty flung nsido tho black satin domino nnd stood revealed, with eyes alight nnd checks dyod with angry crim son. - In the samo second the Austrian hal berdier dashed his tinsel helmet on the floor. Ho was a lierfect stranger! With a smothered exclamation Letty vanished in the crowd. It was some time before Lucetta could find her. "Oh, Lucetta," cried the girl, "we have been laughing and whispering with a man we never saw before! This is what comes of masquerades!" "Well, where's tho harm?" breathless ly retorted less punctilious Lucetta. "Don't everybody do the samo thing? Come back, you silly child wo haven't found Dallas Hall yet?" "I don't want' to find him," almost sobbed Letty. "I'm afraid to stay here alone. That halberdier looked so inso lently at me!" "Nonsense, girl! ho can't eat you. We aro all Mrs. Laddon Lloyd's guests. Come back to tho supper room, I say! There's such a crowd and everything fit to eat will bo gone directly." But Letty refused to stir. In the shadow of a group of monster palms in the hall she cowered, a brilliant bit of color, whilo all tho hungry pleasure seekers were converging toward the sup per rooms. If it had not been for her fantastic costumo she would havo hast ened home at once. As she stood there, perplexed and ter rified, a step sounded on tho now desert ed stairway. A tall figure dressed in black, came swiftly down, with a roll of papers in its hand. "Oh, Dallas! Dallas!" "Letty, can it be possible that this is you?" "After all your advico to me!" shi wailed. "After your promise to me, Letty,' ha said, glancing with a strong disap proyal at her rococo dress and clustering pink plumes. "Dallas, what are you doing here?" "I came, Letty, to receivo instruction) for the last will and testament of olu Myron Lloyd, Mrs. Laddon Lloyd's un clo, who is now lying ill upstairs, ant who desired tlio document to be exe cuted as prlvately.as possible while his niece's attention was absorbed with hei guests. And you, Letty?" She flushed to the very roots of her hair. How waa sho to tell liim that she had come thero to defy his authority to be a spy upon his actions? He looked keenly at her. "Havo you a cloak here?" he asked. "Yes," sho murmured "in the dress ing room." "Ga upstairs and get it quick, before tho crowd comes back to interrupt our egress. I must take you home." As obedient as a child sho complied. and clung, half laughingi half sobbing, to Ins arm as sho related tho story of how she had allowed herself to. be influenced by Lucetta Varian's officious tattling, of her injudicious resolve and of her own hearty repentance. "And nil the time," she said, "you were only in the path of your.profes- sional duty." I certainly wasn't attending Mrs. Laddon Lloyd's masqucrado ball in any historical capacity," said ho dryly. "Dallas," sho murmured, "will you forgivo me?" "My own dear love, there is nothing to forgive," he answered. "You have learned one of life's lessons, that is all. Now kiss me, and let's forget all this nonsense." "But I will nover disobey you again," she pleaded. "1 wish I could bo certain of that," said he, with a laugh. And tho next day Lettv Ogilvie ripped the Spanish maiden's dress apart, kept the black velvet to trim a winter gown, and sent tho gaudy pinksatintooldAunt Jemima Berryfield, up the street, who was making a crazy quilt of the craziest description. "For I never want to seo the hateful thing again," said she. Helen Forrest Graves in Philadelphia Saturdav Night. No Tim a Lost. Scribbler When is that review of my novel coming out, Scather? When I brought the book to you, you assured nie that you would lo no time in reading it Soather So I did. Well, I have lost no time in reading it yet. America. Pride llvs on Itself. It iz like a rao- ooon in winter keeps fatt hi sucking its claws. We should awl aim at perfeckshun. but no one hut n phool will expekt tew reach it. A lie iz good for a tiiort race, but It takes truth tew run the heats "blood will tell." All happiness iz like gold quartz thare iz four quarts ov stone to one ounce ov gold. Hope and Debt are partners in trade llopo hunts up tbe customers, and Debt skins them, He who spends all his substance in cnarity win unaouoieqiy Kit nis rowara hero and hereafter; but hiz reward here will be the pool house. Thero iz a huge number or souls per ambulating around the world who liav bin straining for years after a camel, and finally had to swallow a nat, Give a smart ohild a pack or kards and a spellin book, and he will learn tew play a good game ov Hi Lo Jak long be fore he kau spell a word ov two Billables. A man haz got about done going down hill when he giui whar he brags on hiz lazynew. mien a uritter it ov no more use tew himself nor others than a frocen-tw-dath iootr iu a barn vtvrd. Nw A citizen of Holland Citv, Michigan, bought a horte one day for four bushels of ear corn and sold it tho noxt day for twelve bushels ot rye. When a man has a business that doscn't pay he usually begins to look nround for a partner to share his losses with him. 100 Ladles Wnntcil. And 100 men to call nt druggists, for n free puckago nf Lane's tnniily Medicine, the great root nnd herb remedy, disenveerri by Dr Silas Lane whilo in the Kooky moiin tanins. For diseases of the blood, liver nnd kidneys it is a positiyo cure. For comtipti tlonand clearing up the complexion it doe Wonders. Children liko it. Everyone praises it. Lurgo-sico package, 50 rents. At till druisU' An unruly stomach is not to be tamed by lectures. WortH its Weight In flold. If you feel deprcesed.Tour appetite Is poor and nio tloubled with Dlztlnets of tho head, Ktlllonsnesa or Dyspepsia, nr. Leo's Liver Ke ulnr will cure vo.. Trial size bottles free. A nell.kmiwn pluslclon in New York adtlses all his patients that suffer with Coughs and Culdstouso Pnrltsn (Jough end Consumption l uro. At T. 1). THOMAS' Drug Store. In York county, this state, a party of tramp recently emptied a water tank nnd converted it into a bed-room. Happy the bride who docs not hear all the comments and criticisms of her dear friends who make up the audience at the wedding. A Woman's Discovery y' s been lftad u ,e: i ti, Tn,,w,on I,'1 ul:c.0Tri V has been made . V,uV..7.i r:. ' ""? my- msease v'e-,r iim chitches upon her and for seven t.,Uwi occut il'ms, mil iicr"A'iiai !r;:i!,,,s,weP! nndennliicd and death seemed Im- ! Ji?.-' . i'eflhreo months she coughed Incess-l,LmiK,"la,l)?UIt-cr- Hhi) bought of us ii nn.i'oPf' K1"8 9 Now Discovery for con i JMon.a.',d.w,!ls 80 ,nurl relieved on taking iS0.8 1 "lt S'H "'en nil night and with one lottlo has been niliaciilonsly mied. Her imiue 'lek-f1.'Utlie,y',',,f-" x-,Jlll"s "rltu W. K "lam uKoSA'Sb'fe1'- c-,:ft ! "," hMWa An autopsy on a Wisconsin man a few days ago revealed five jack-knives in ills stomach. A JUSTICI! OF TUB PKACE 8AYH. Hon. John Nealy, justice of the peace ind ex-mctnber of the House of Itepresen atiqes from Meredith, N. II., was for welve years a terrible sufli rer wieh rlioum ilsm. Ho says: I cannot obtain uny nedicins which docs me iw much good as our Sulphur Bitters, and I think it is. tlio jest medicine made. An Iowa clrl named Flora Loalc. shm. a man dead for serenading her grandfather on tne occasion of his latesi, marriage. You havo often seen women with marked dueness or paleness of face, vitiated appe ites, and a craving for unwholesome food. These are signs of a dibon'ered liver, and lie trouble must be corrected or worse re ults are sure to follow- Hushind6 and athers cannot afford ton-eat this matter ightly. Dr. Kennedy's "Favorite Item-.-dy, which dispels liver disease, costs leas ban sick wives and daughters. You will -ind it a very profitable investment. A Inninnf iiiim la..l n..... - i . . . fu.w it.au .mo leucuuy iHKCn out the ground near .Tnnlin. V Ir .... J00O pounds In weight. Some Foolish l'eople Allow a cough to run nutllitgets beyond he reach of medicine, 'i'hev often say, ' Oh, it will wear away, but in most cases t wears them away. Could they bo in luced to'try tho successful medicino called .emps Balsam, which is fold on a positive .uarantce to cure, they would immediately ee the excellent eflect after taking the fint lose. Price 50c and 11.00. Trial size free. At all" druggists. In Seyler county, Arkansas. Nathan o'annon, aged 83 jears, uiulwtook to kick dog. The dog dndged and Cannon was picked up with a broken leg and wrist Tnis H est medical writers elalra that theeuo eesrul remedy for nasal caltarrh must bo non- rrltfttlniT- HARi- if flnnllnotlnn .... reach all the remote -nrus hi.iI ,iln,.vnaii ., uces. The history f the cuVite to treat -attarrh dujtng the past obliges us to admit hat only one remedy has met these conditions, m) that, la fr.lw 1 in ii.i.. n.t.i- ... Z remedy has mastered catarrh us nothing else has -.v. u-...v, ... uvtu )BicjituB mm nauems renlT ennppdn ,til. To a Ph. ...... ,n. . symptoms yield toll. With a record of bavins burled 1.100 oersous, George Moaie, an aged under- aker of Uuthercvllle. this slate, has at last oeen laid under the soil himself. Sudden Death. If you get short of Lre.ilh, J,ayo flutter ng, jwin in side, faint or hungry spells, wullen ankles, etc., you havo heart dlicase, uid don't fail to .take Dr. Milos New Cure. h)U at Hiery or Thomas' drug stores. Marcel Bernler reccnt'y died at home n Now Aukum Prairie, Washington, aged d'J years. He was tho first white child oorn In Washington, then Oregon Terri- ory. A spring medicine Is needed by everyone. Winter food, largely consisting of salt meat and animal fats, catties the liter t become disordered and the blood imnure, henuo the necessity ol cleansing medicine. The belt Is Ayer's Sarsaparllla. The world forgets a million men where it Immortalizes one. Fame Is a fine thing, tays the Texas Sittings, but It Is harder to ;et than a prize In a lottery. Be sure and oxll for Dr Hull's Cough Syrup, if yon are troubled with a bad cough or cold, Mr. L. B Klefer, of Lancaster, Pa., wrote us: Having a sprained leg or almost thirty naje standing, and after trying half a doien adver i Ised preparations in the market without satis factory results, I tried Balvatb n Oil, and In less .han three days my leg was all right "gain, there's neihlna like It. It Is said that "men aro tbe architects ot their own fortunes." This explains why so many of them fall, for but few get beyond the nave. bait lthenm With its intene itching, dry hot skin, alien broKen into painini crnoks, and the iti-e watery pimples, often causes indescrib- ibie suuentig. noons r-rMjarii:a na .vonderiui power over this disease, ji unrifieu tbeblood and ox pels the humor. ind the skin heals without a srar. Send or book containing manv staumenls ore, io (J. I. Hood & Co., Apothecaries Luwell, Mass. The poorer a man Is, the more apt be Is to refute tbe pennies yon give bim in change. catbartlc IMlls are Whips To the liver and bowels, but give no strength. The more you tale the mere you need. Miles' Pills positively strength en. The longer taken, the IM renuired Samples frw at Biery nt Tlirroas' Drug store. The Carbon Advocate An iKDKPitKDKirT Pmii Nf wsi'rFH Pub uifieu eTt'ry nniuruav ill l.eiiiemnn, Carbon County. HeiinsylMinlB, li Harrv V. Morthimex- Jr. -HANK HTKKKi'. $1 00 Por Yoar in Advance ! Host advertising medium In the county. Hvery description of Plain and Fancy JOB PRINTING very low prlc. We do not hesitate to nay that we arebettnr equipped than any other printing establishment In thlsseotion to do (1 rut -class ob-woik, In all Its branches, at low prices, MEN YOU HEAR OF. Senator Piorco. of North Dak-ntn. In iha author of several novels. Senator Ciiaco is mid Ui lm Mm Quaker now in puhlio lifo nt Washing ton. Col. John A. Cookeroll has been ro- oleoted president of tho New York Press club. nenrv M. Stanley 1ms Rnhl bin nw book on Africa to his Loudon publishers for 6)200,000 cash. Tho now Chinese minixtnr nt Wnahtnrr. ton is a reoltise, and much moro fond of his books than of society. Marshal MacMahon's memoirs will ha printed for a nrivnto elrr.ulntimi onlv. and the edition is to bo 'limited to twenty copies. Commander Green, of tho RnhnnTnhfa Saratorm. nt Philndnlnhla. Is tr I, salary of 2,000 in addition to his naval salary. Professor Tuckor. of Andovnr. limits iVinericnu oritrin.il thlnlrnra In .Tnnntlmn Edwards. Beniamiu Franklin anil Nn- thaniel Hawthorne. Austin Corbln paid S13.000 for a herd of Manitoba buffaloes with which to stock his lllintinir mrk in tho mminlritna of New Hampshire. Mark Twain'n inivmie h.iIiI tn lm $30,000 a year, derived from royalties on his works nnd from tho publishing house in which lie is a partner. Mr. A. P. Benson, of Excelsior Sririntrs. Mo., has iust had removod from hla skull a minie ball, which had lain im bedded thero since tho battlo of Cedar Creek in 1801. Senator Pierce, of Brooklyn, has been adopted by the Cayuga Indians as a member of their tribe. His Indian name "Hah-Y'nh-Nay-Shaw-Nace," which moans the Island Law Maker. Speaker Iteed is tho largest man in tlio house. Ho weighs as much as ox-Presi dent Cleveland and is tailor. Ho is an accomplished French scholar and reads every new book published in Paris. Thero is n strong probability that-both Mr. Stanley and Etnin Pasha will enter tho service of tlio British East Africa company, and that Emin's companions will settlo in tlio company's territory. M. Meis3onier is at work on tlireo co lossal panels for tlio Pantheon, which will represent in an allegorical compo sition the triumph of France from Clo- vis down to tho revolution and Napoleon. Emanuel Louis Cartigny, of Hyores, is supposed now to bo the sole survivor of tho battlo of Trafalgar. Ho was a cabin lxy on board tho r reach ship Redoubta ble, whicli carried a crew of 800 men, of whom tyily 180 survived. 'James S. Carlton, an aged luau now living in Baltimore, Md., claims to have been tlio discoverer of tho peculiar offect of cocaine. Ho says that as early as 1849 ho know tho properties of tho drug, and made uso of them iu his own family. THE GENTLER SEX. Tho wifo of Dr. Schliemann knows her Homer word for word. Emma Nevada has been carrying everything bofore her on thelyrio stage in tho principal cities of Holland. It is said that the placo to see tho pret tiest girls ot New York 13 the steamship wharves on the days that tho big ocean greyhounds sail. Miss Ellen Green, who has been travel ing for a St. Louis paint house eight years or more, is ouo of tho best paid und most successful drummers in tho United States. The oldest daughter of Senator Allen, of thpnowstato of Washington, although but 15 years old, is an expert typewriter, and for souio timo past has acted as prl vato secretary to her father. Mrs. J. C. Croly (Jennie Juno) has been elected president, and Mrs. Sara J. Lippincott (Graco Greenwood) and Mrs. Mary E. Bryan vice presidents of tho New York AVomen's Press club. Miss Bislaud, Nellio Bly's rival globe tourist, is a pretty, soft haired, bright eyed girl, with a tall, slender, distin guished looking flguro, nn air of thor ough good breeding, and a qulot self confidence that never degenerates into boldness. Mrs. Lclnnd Stanford, of California, has obtained tho permission of the Em peror William II to havo a copy made of tlio "SUtino Madonna" in tho Dresden gallery. The only condition tho emperor imposed was that he Rhould name the artist to do tho work. Miss Drcxel has decided to build jO. convent near Torreedale, about twelve milss from Philadelphia, on the Now York division of tho Pennsylvania rail road, of which sho will be the head. Its purpose will bo to educate, and train a sisterhood to work among tho colored and Indian races. QUEER AND CURIOUS. Tlio latest musical prodigy is a young boy in Luzerne, N. Y., who is said to be able to play "Parsifal" on a blade of grass held between his thumbs. A Meadville, Pa., young lady has a peculiar craving for matches, which she nibbles with as much gusto as some girls display In masticating caramels. Recent ly sho masticated several red headed lucifers, and, very naturally, was taken violently ill, but recovered. An express train in Alabama going at full speed struck a woman and threw her SO feet in the air, landing her outside tho right of way. When picked up she was dead, but there was not a bruise any where on her body, though the soles of her shoes had been cut oft as smooth as if done by a cobbler. A Dubuque, Iowa, man invented an arrangement by whloh a runaway horse could be detached from a buggy, and before offering it to tbe publio he decided to give it a personal trial, lie procured a vicious horse, encouraged him to get up and dust, and then pulled the lever. It didn't work, and he was flung into the ditch and had his neck broken, Americans aro not great eaters or mus tard. The latest omelet is served in crescent form. The 'possum is the Thanksgiving bird of Georgia. Scotch toast i sometimes called "High land el Ices." Broiled cope should be served with Spanish aauoe. The Paris exposition haa brought forth several new sauces. A Ketffer pear from Florida weighs sVOe pound and tbiitecn OOBOM.