:jr&t&wk "tfW-&;: THIS IiANCABTtiK DAl-tY INTElAtfrENCEB, TIIUBSPAY, APBIL 1, 188G. AjvV HS- $ ? ' m t&L eft a- vE S.5. r-i rT svss x IgtiBiHtGar. tnwm m the Yeah ;( (mmm mth) mtwanuM khnbhu JOMR BUILDING, HfcW. OWMT Centrct 8na, :'.. tmnmMte, r ISWtK. rVW DaUJUHU YUM " - feSTMf FMf. I Fata Ta r ttm Cmn a law. S& "" . T DfTEijiauiuwufitt, V- - (ENHTPMES.) r Wed&Mday Morning, iS Tn Deuam Yu m Amahm. ENCE toucme rt.rf tvtRY iust or thi t te mam twnwmii i utew te wit. UWMM t)M Of TMt f ft OMT T TMCIN CHMM, Mf POII rWUCAtlOS, VT IS MOO, Of 0000 fMTM. ML t UTTIM Welt M COattMf Tt TM VUTI WHIT I til Lattera and Telegrams te THE INTELLIGENCER, Lancaster, Pa. v the nn(O0tet Intelligencer. xVAMCABTXB, Al'Jtll. 1, IS86. &' The Nen Pener. The are moving tlmea, ami tlie move Mint is an advance. The relations of em ployer and employed liave taken en a new ve6mlltien. An organization of labor has ', feriien which has demonstrated its control pet it ; and it has been treated with by tue nnileyer as having such control ; and has , .brought employed and employer te accept arbitration of their differences. It prom ties further te secure the obedience of the f employed te the result of the arbitration ; tfnd if it docs this it will obtain 4?Wh recognition of lis power as will R A. .1f .. J 1 fnn. 41. n nn- secure great ueiercuuu iu ii. Hum mu em ployer ; and net only in the case new at m lBBue, nut in an cases iu arisu iiuieaiiei. ur . ... ,. , 1 tt $ Tne executive eiucers ei me organization fit the Knights of Laberinthe controversy Urith the Missouri Pacific have acted figf with such discretion and success as te have l& raised their order into the control of the j A Industrial situation. Tli.it tlin result w ill '&, be geed for it, seems most probable. As we have been lleating along, the smaller organizations of the several labor unions have had a very dis. turbing effect upon our industries. Em ployers have never been certain as te the conditions under which their business was te labor in the future. "Workmen's strikes were likely te happen at all times, with or without reason. "With the control of the labor clement in the hands of these dis posed te avoid violent measures te secure the rights of labor, and who have an intel ligent understanding of what these rights are, it is manifest that capital will have a protection which it has net had, and which will be secured te it along with the protection that is obtained for labor. It will be a practical recognition and enforce ment of the obvious fact that the interests of capital and labor are the same. It is te the true interest of the employer te pay the employed all that their labor is fairly worth under the conditions of the market for their joint product. Te secure this for the laborers is the aim of their organization ; and the aim can only be accomplished by demanding no mere. The practice of arbitration is the sensible method of determining t hat this is,when there is a natural difference of opinion about it between employer and employed ; and either will leso less by con ceding something te the ether of their opinion than by shutting down the works that provides for both their emolument. m Profit and Less. It is no doubt tnie that the managers of tLe street railway lines in Philadelphia can get all the men they need te drive their horses and conduct their cars, who are willing te work from fourteen te seventeen "hours a day for from $1 .75 te J2.2-1 wages. It is likewise trr.e that at six cents per passenger they can de a very large and profitable business, and that se long as they have sole occupancy of the streets the peo ple will have te patronize their lines and they need fear no competition. They will certainly make mere money by continuing the present system of pieflt and expense than by putting up the wages and putting down the fares. But the public has long known that the street car lines make inordinate profits out of their privileges. They make them oft the workingmen and working women who hang te the straps and crowd the platforms in the two hours of the morn ing that people go anxiously te work and the two hours of the evening that people come wearily from work. The street car fare stints the breakfast coffee and reduces the evening tea. The passenger railway business is net open te competition. Its proprietors have a monopoly. Their tracks gridiron every avenue of travel. They have the right of way ; vehicles that meet their cars must turn out; and theso overtaken by them must pull off the track. Hut all of this they obtain by the sufferance of the peo ple whom they overtax. "When the peo ple strike for lower fares and the empleyes strike for higher wages aud shorter hours something will break. There is a profit that is less. Why They De It. Wonder is manifested that the actual re ceipts of the state treasury, according te Treasurer Li vsey's report just made, were 0,3I,ta2.03 for 18S3, when the fiscal au au tueriUes estimated them at only 41,475,000. 3?rem this experience is deduced the lessen ,Af that " the estimates of fiscal officers as te the Income of the state from given revenue la vara epa 9 wr 1... a. a . """ " u "u iwue wuaiever." We believe thishas been true of the nast. i,, In a measure, because these fiscal autheri- ties misrepresentcu what they knew te be ' the facts. They have been Interested in -'"' procuring the largest possible balances se Has te give the benefit of them te their "favored depositories. The exposures In ;(tbe Nutt-llally case show what the V; people who contiel the state money de jwtthlt. g When the Jenkins bill, te divert the lle'wMO moneys from the state te the county taaMHfles was pending, Livesy and his as. i falsely represented te the leglsla- i that this money could net be spared. Experience has shown that .the measure atlrely practicable, under the new r Jaw a large addition te the state reve. i will be made, The llcenie moneys JBBMild be turned back te the treasuries of eeunues in which uiey are coiieeeu. t tWMiiry balances must be cut down. The Chief Mae Apaches. We de net quite understand the perform ances of enr soldiers and Geronlme down In Arizona. Captain Crawford found him, we believe, and fought him, and then a Mexican force appeared and shot Captain Crawford. Shortly afterward Geronlme carne te an Interview with General Creek under a Hag of truce, and when he could get no better terms than an unconditional surrender, he very sensibly departed under his white flag, as he was sure te have been hanged if lie liad net. "We next heard that he had reconsidered and had surrendered with his whele kind te Lieutenant Maus, who had succeeded te Captain Crawford's command. And new the last dispatch is that Geronime has es caped from Maus, who has started In pur suit. Apparently Geronime does net knew his own mind. He seems te have heard something since his surrender which has returned him te his former opinion that he will be hanged. As a hard man te catch and hard te held it w ill be a great economy te let him surrender en his own terms. What 'ctl The Jury inquiring into the recent ijnch ing in New Jersey, find what most jhtseiis strongly suspected before, that "Samuel Jehnsen was willfully munleied at the Eatontown lock-up en the night of March 5, 18S0, by being beaten en the head with clubs and by hanging by the neck, said blows and hanging having been done by some person .or persons te the Jury un known." Will'the sovereign state of New Jeisey, which has acquired something of a repute for the celerity and certainty of its justice, let it rest there V Are these murderers te remain unknown when their identity is se thinly veiled ? (Julie .Natural. Sonie surprise is expressed that Judge Kelley, en the tloer of the Heue, should have denounced a bill as a fraud and trick, and then announce his purpose te vote for It. There is nothing for wonder in this. Kelley has been supporting that kind of measures most of his political life, lie is a statesman from Iluncembe, if ever there was one. Tun policy of coercion baslieen soelten tried In lrelatid, hew would it de te conquer the isle by fair play? e- Astui:New erk Ifcrahl eben ca, the people of this country cannot understand the deadly terror with which no many l'n glishmen regard an Irish Parliament. Cier urnny, after acquiring new territory, has made it her policy te cnceuraRO local legis lation, and within very wide HuilK Silesia and Helsteln are largely their own masters Iu provincial atlairs, anil even AKiee and Lorralne have a restricted liberty or action. Fifteen of the provinces of Austria, includ ing HebPnila and Oallcia, each with a popu lation as large as that oflrelanil, have local assemblies with no narrow control eer home affairs. It Is the fettled policy of great empires te preserve Jeace and unity byKrantlng autonomy whorever it Is practi cable. If the Knights of Idleness could be organ ized, they would fur oerslmdov tlie Knights of I-l)or. Pout YVhittiek has set n geed example In destroying Roveral thousand letters Indis criminately. His explanation of this general bonfire Is that many of thein were confiden tial, and that he had net tlme or strength te assert the mass, and preferred that all should perish rattier than take responsibility for leaving them me that by mlschance an Im proper publicity eer should beglien te any of the number. In a lecture at Trenten the ether night, tx. Assemblyman t'ater, of the New Jersey legislature, alleged that for tfuWOa msjerity of any Heuse that liad evorasseinbled could be bought. A better time for giving this information would hale been whlle Mr. Cater was occupying a legislative scat. Tin: I'lrst or April Joke played by the treasury dojartmeiit en the country Is the announcement that there has lieen a reduction of about $l,zr.0,0u0 in the public de lit ilurlug the month of March. Tin. well-known new spaper correspondent, Geerge Alfred Tewnscnd, relates en the au thority of Sonater Jehn V. Jenes, of Nevada, that Conkling was ery nearly casting the seventy-slx votes of New Yerk for Ulaineat the Chicago convention in 1S&0. He hesitated tee long and Garlleld was nominated. Conk Cenk ling said iu explanation ofhlsprelerencethat he could locate Illaine whereas Garfield no body could locate. This incident will be ro re meinlHired as lixing the nearest approach of the Maine statesman te the presidency. Till: bravest are the tcuderesL Airs. I'eter Scott, of Cambridge, Iud., recently gave birth te triplets three line little girls and wrote te l'resiileut Cleveland apprising him or the fact. The return mall brought aflM note from the b.icholer occupant of the YVhite Heuse. Oi t of the multitude of Irish landschemes one will perhaps be evolved te meet all emergencies, and In the meantime It Is a geed thing te discuss in their ditlerent phases theso presented. The Dublin Freeman's Journal has created some stir by declaring that the Gladstone measure will enact the right et any owner of land In Ireland te claim from the government of Ireland, after home rule has been granted, the privilege or being bought out ut a sum regulated by law. This Bum will be arrived at by multiplying the aniountet the rout, w lien It is judicially fixed, orefu f.ilrrcnt, when It Is net rated Judici ally, by a term of years te be agreed uieu by Parliament. In aUcdses where the owners put In such claims te be lieught out the im perial exebequer Is te provide the purchase money. 'Jhe Irish government is te guar guar anteerepayineut and attend te the business of reimbursing the empire for all these out lays by disposing of the purchased lands te occuplers, and collecting in the shape or pay menta therefer Huch rents as will recover the whole sum Kick in torty-nine years. As at present framed, Mr. Gladstone's bill, accord ing te the Journal, Uses the rents te be jnld by the tenantH at four per cent. ier annum en the amount of the purchase. When the tenant has in rent paid te the Irish govern ment the amount the land cost the gev em inent he is te l)0oemo the owner. I u this way without driving KnglUhmen from Ireland, and In an easy aud reasonable way, it is pro pre posed te end theso ancient troubles that have existed between the peasantry and the land owners of the Green Isle. m - A heed First of April Joke for a debter te play: te pay his creditor. Ir It Is necessary ler this country te have blg-bore guus, plate-armor, and first-class "ngmes ler war ships, the ordnance commis sion Is right in giving the United States Iren men a chance te make them. . m m it is a mournful commentary en Hemo Heme Hemo cratle autearaenihlp in the Heuse that the bTC, '", "? Lb'' Reduced by a m. xwj.uuucan Jrem New iiamnghire. ,. taiued no many et thn tw..,...... , .. favor en U test vote the ether day. The ai. proprlatien et $70,000,000, me,tot wuici, wlu go te Democratic constituencies ba, bllnd Ing effect en their legislative virtue, causlnu them te forget that "mg "Cursed la thogeia Hint gthU The atralKUlcevd fymbeuu of the feel," SISTER TABEA X Story ' ' !! ' ' " t:i'firt Stvrutli llnjr lUplUt Ceiuiiiiiiilt), KJwant Knsli'ten In Lenlitry. Twe weather-beaten atene buildings at Hphrata, In Pennsylvania, remain as monu ments en this slde of the water of the grevt pletisllc movement In normally In the early part of the eighteenth century. One of theso was called "llcthsny," the ether ".Sharen." A hundred anil thirty or Terty years age therowero ethor buildings with these, and the softening hand or time had net yet touched any of them. The doorways were then, as new, en the geund level, the pas sages wero Just as narrow and dusky, the cells had the svme llttle square windows te let In the day. Hut the stones In that day had a hue that reminded one or the quarry, the mortar betvveen them was fresh, the shingles In the roer had gs'here.1 no mess nnilrerv llttle weather-stains the prlmeval forests were yet within the horizon, aud thore was everywhere an air of newness, of advancement, and or prosperity nbeut the Ouukard convent. One sees new neither monks or nuns In these narrow lnllways monks and nuns are nowhere about Kphrata. eTcent In the grav eyard where all the breth ren of Itethany, anil all the sisters wtioeuco peopled Sharen, sleep tegether in the meld. Hut In the middle or the eighteenth century their bare feet shullled upon the stairs as, clad In white heeded cloaks desceuding te the very ground, they gilded in aud out of the low deer, or assembled in the llttle chapel called ".Ien" te attend service under the lead or thelr rounder, Cenrad lieisseis. In the con vent, where he reigned supreme, llelsselswas known as Hrottier l'reklsaui ; later lie was roverentlv called Fathcruni Gettrccht, a name that, like all their convent names, had plenty et mjstlcal significance attached te it. Hut monks and nuns are men and women ; and neither cloister life, nor capuchlu heeds and cloaks, nor lure feet, nor protracted mid night services can prevent heart-biirnlucs and rivalries nor can all of thee together put down what Is most te Iw dreaded in n mon men asterythe growth of atlectten between man and woman. What could be done te tame human nature Inte submission, te bring It te rejeice only In unearthly meditations and a contented round or scir-deniat and psalm slngltip, ltretber rrledsam had tried en his followers with the unsparing hand of a re ligieus eutmisiasu no uau loremuen an animal reed. Net only was meat cr evll tendency, but milk, he said, made the spirit heavy and narrow ; butter and cheese pro pre duced similar disabilities; eggs excited the passions; honey made the eyes bright and the heart cheerful, but did net clear the v oice for music. Se he approved chlally or these plain things that sprang direct from the earth, particularly of potatoes, turnips, aud ether roots, with a llttle bread soup and such-llke ghostly diet, l'er a drink he w euld hav e nothing but w hat he called "In nocent clear water," Just as It flowed from the spring. Hut even ndlsli or potatoes and turnips aud lieets and carrots eaten from wooden trenchers without milk or butter or meat, was net sufficient te make the atloctiens and rasslonsei men and women as ethereal as rrledsam wished. He wedded his people in mystic marriage te "the Chaste I.amb," te borrow his trequent phrase. They sang ecstatically of a mystical city or brotherly nnd sisterly affection which they, in common with ethor dreamers or the time, called Phil adelphia, and they rejoiced In a divlne creature called In their mystical jargon .Sejind, which I suppose meant wisdom, wisdom divorced Ireiu common sense. Thee anchorites did net eschew social enjoyment, but held little leve leasts le which the sisters new invited the brethren, aud next the brethren entertained the sisters with un un huttered parsnip and draughts or innocent Clearwater, no doubt. II. That which was most romarkable nt Hphrat.1, and that out or which grew a my story, was the music. Hrother Knedsam, besides his cares of organization, nuance, and administration, and ids mystical theological speculations was nlse a poet- Most or the songs sung In the little building called " V.ieii " were written by him songs about "the louesemo turtle-dove in the wilder ness," that Is the church ; songs In pralse or the mystical marriage or virgins with the chaste Lamb ; songs about the Philadelphia!! brotherhood or saints, about the divine Sephia, and about many ether things which no man can understand, I am sure, until he has tlrst purified hluiselt from the grass humors et the flesh by a heavenly diet or turnips and spring water. Te the brethren and sisters who bolleved thelr little com munity iu the Pennsylvania weeds te be " the Weman In the Wilderness " seen by St, Jehn, these words represented the only substantial and valuable, tilings in the wide universe j and they sang the songs or Cenrad Helssels with as much ferver as they could have sung tlie songs of heaven Itself. Helssels the Friedsam or the brotherhood was net only the ioet but the composer or the choral songs and a coiupetor et rare merit. The music he vvrote is preserved as it was copied out w ith great painstaking by the brethren and sisters. In looking ever the wonderful old manuscript note-book the first Impression is ene et delight with the quaint symlKilIc illuminations wrought by the nuns of Kphrata upon the margins. Hut these who knovvmusledeclaroth.it the melodies are lovely, and that the whele structure of the harmonies is masterful, and worthy or the rame they had In the days when monks and nuns irrnrmed them under the lead or Hrother rrledsam hlmself. In the gallery of Zleu house, but concealed from the view ei the brethren, sat the sisterhood, llke a company or saints In spotless rebes. Helnw, the brethern, llkowise in white, answered te the choir abeve in antlnhenal singing or the loveliest and most faultless sort. Strangers journeyed from afar ever rough country reads te hear this wonder 1 ill chorus u'id were moved iu tlie depths or thelr souls with thelndoscribableswoelnoss and loftiness et the music, and with the charm and expres siveness or Its rendering by these pale-faced othor-werldly singers. Hut thelr ierltien of execution was at tained at a cost almost tee great. Hrother rrledsam was a fanatic, and he was alie an artist. He obliged the brethren and sisters te submit te the most rigorous training. In this as in religion, he subordinated them te his ideals, lie would fain tune thelr very souls te his own key ; and he exacted a pre cision that wasdilllcult of attainment by men and women or av erage fallibility and careless ness. The men singers were divided into flve choruses of five persons each ; the sisters were classified, according te the pitch ei their voices into three divisions oaclief which sang or kept silent, according te the duty assigned te It iu the uote book. At the lovo levo love fcasts these choruses sat side bysldeatthe table, no as te be ready te sing tegether w 1th erfect precision whenever a song should be announced. At the singing school Hrother Krledsam could net abide the least defevt; he rated roundly the brother or sister who made any mistake ; he sceurged thelr lagging aspirations toward perfection. If It is ever necessary te account for bad tenier in musicians, one might suggest that the water gruel diet had impaired his temper and theirs ; certain It is that out or the production et se much heavenly harmony there sprang discord. Tlie brethren and sisters grew dally mere and mere indignant at the severity or the director, whom they reverenced as a religious guide, but against whom, us a musi cal conductor, tliey rebelled in thelr hearts, in. The sisters were the first te net at this cri sis. At thelr knitting and their sewing they talked alieut It, In the kitchen they discussed It, until thelr hearts burned within them. Kven in illuminating the note-hook with pretty billing turtledoves, and emblamatle flowers such us must have grown In piradlse, slnce nothing or the sort was ev or known in any earthly garden ev en In painting these, some of the nuns rame near te selling thelr colors and their page with tears. Ouly Margaretha Theme, who was known In the convent as "Sister Tabea," shed no tears. She worked with pen aud brush, and heard the nthers talk ; new and then, when somesevoro worder Hretlier I'rleds.uii was repeated, she would leek up with n signifi cant Hash or Uie oye. "The Jlefcavaller doesn't talk," said Sister Thecla. This Thecla had given the nickname or "Hefcavaller," noble courtier, toTabea at her first arrival in the convent en account et her magnificent figure aud high carriage, "Yeu shouldn't glve nicknames, sister Thecla." The last speaker was a sister with an aus aus tere face and gray eyes which had no end or cold-blooded religious enthusiasm In them. "I need net glveynu a nickname," retort ed Thecla te the last seaker ; "Hretlier Much or IhU little story Is fact. 11m suu- Jilled ilBtalla, Olilngup, and pasalnn Cor tee acta width coimtltute the giuuiulnerk 1 am cbletly Indebted te Hr. Onuld W. brldeustlck ersvery valuable monograph, entitled "Kph rata, etrie aiuurtkantachu KletttrKt'BcrdchU." IhereiuKrwMiluaabrWieraccounrefitioiiion. ?tSr fr!"u. th8 illnl0 learned aud able writer, in J7i Ltntury uigntlnu ler December, l&si. Vrledsam did that when he called you J sol. Yeu are Just the kinder a person te drtve n tent-nail through a man's head." "Ulie were the enemy of the Church of Ged," said Jael, In u xolce as hard as It was slncere. Then the talk drifted back te the slnglng- Hatu seiioei ami nretner 1 rieusain's seventy. " Hut why doesn't the llefc.vvalier spesk ugsln persisted Thecla. "When the Hofcavaller speaks, it wHIIk te Hrother rrleds.uu hlinspir," answered TaIhm. The temerity of this preposition took q'hecla's breath, but tt set the storm -glug mere v Igoreusly than tsfore among the sis terhood, who, having round somebody reuly te bell the cat, grew eager te have 'the cat boiled. Only Sister Jael. who mr lick el voice was net Included In cither orthe three choruses or the sisterhood, stoutly delended Hretlier l'rleiKvin, thinking, rhaps that It was net a bad thing te hav e the conceit el the singer reduced; Indeed, alie was es(svially pleased that Talsu, the unsurpassed singer et the slsters' gallery, should hav e suffered rebukev At length it was agreed that Tabea should tell Hretlier rrledsam that the sisters did net Intend te go toshigiug-scheol again. Then Tabea lifted up her dark head and re garded Ihecirclenf women In white giriueuLs about her. "Yeu are all brave new, but when Hrntltci 1'rledsam shakes his linger at you, j mi w 111 ev cry ene of you subiult.is though von w ere a set (rrcdomptienerslougtitwlth hismenev. When I tell Hretlier rrledsam that I hall net ceme te singing-school, 1 shall stick te It. He may get his music porferiued by some oue else. He will net call me a 'tiinnv ' again. "There speke the Hefcavaller," giggled Thecla. "Sister Tabea," said Jael, "IT you goon as you are going, you will end by leaving the cenv out and breaking your vow's, Mark my werus." " 1 am going te finish this turtle-dove first, though," said Tabea, gayly. It was finally agreed Mist irTubei would sneak te the director en behall et the sister heed, the sisters would resolutely stand by their threat, nnd that they would absent themselves from Hretlier rrledsam' music drills long enough te hav e thein understand that they were net te be treated llkechlldren. Te the surprise or nil, Tabea leU her work at ence, covered up her head with the heed at tached te her gew n, and sought the ledge or Hretlier Friedsam, w hlch steed txitw ecu Bethany and Sharen. When Tabea was admitted te the cell, and steed be for e the revered FrksKvm, she lelt an unexpected palpitation. Ner was Heltel any mere com posed. He could never speak te "this girl without some mental disturb ance " Hretlier FriiHlsam," she said, " 1 am sent by the sisters te say that they are very Indig nant at your treatment of them In tlie rehear sals and that they are net going te attend them hereafter." Helssels' sensitlve lips tpilveied n mo ment; this sudden rebellion surprised him, and he did net at first see hew tejneet It. " Yeu suggested this course te liiem, 1 sup pose " he said after a pau& " Ne, Hretlier Friedsam, 1 had nothing le de with it until new. Hut 1 think thev are right, and 1 hope they will keep te their word. Yeu have been altogether tee bird en us." The director made no reply, but wearily leaned his pale, refined face upon his hand aud looked up at Tabea. This leek or in quiry had something et unhipplness in it that touched the nun's heart, and she was hair sorry that she had spoken se sharply. She fumbled for the wooden latch of the tloer presently, and went out with a sense el In w ard deleat and auneyam e. "Tlie Hofcavaller docs net come back with head in the air," murmured Thecl v. " A Uul sign." " I gave the message," said Sister Taber, "and Hretber Friedsam did net say whether the tour tarts snug bv the men would Insuffi cient or net. Hut I knew very well what he will de ; he will caw you all back w ithm a week." "And you will leave the convent nnd break your vow s ; mark mj w ertls," said Sister Jael, w ith sharpness. " " It will be alter 1 get this page finished, 1 tell you," said q'abea. Hut she did net seem In haste te finish the page, for net cheesing te show hew much she had been discom posed by Hretlier Friedsam's wis. nil and inquiring leek, she gathered up her brush, lier colors and the noto-beok page en which she had been ut work, ami went up the stairs alongside the great chimney, shutting hcretf in her cell. Once there, the picture of Friedsam's f.ve came vividly bolore her. She recalls her first meeting with him at her mother's house en the Wissahickon, and hew her heart had gene out te the only man she liad ever met whose character was out et the common. T de net say that she had consciously loved him as she listened te him, sitting there en the home undo steel iu her mother's cabin aud talking of things beyend comprehension. Hut she could have loved him, and she did worship him. It was the r r senal fascination of Hrother rnedsain and her own vigorous hatred of com monplace that had had led her three cirs before te join the sisterhood iu the Sharen house. She did net knew te what degree a desire for Ueissels' companlensip had drawn her te accept his speculations concerning the mystical Sephia aud the Philadelphia fellow ship. Hut the convent had proved a disap pointment. She had seen little of thegrcit Hretlier i'riedsani, nnd he had given her, instead of friendly notlce and approval, inly a schoolmaster's scolding new and then ler slight faults committed Iu singing a new piece. As she sat thore in gloomy meditation Jael's evil prediction entered her mind, and she amused herselt with dreams or what might take place ir she should leave the con vent and go out Inte the world again. In putting away her pa(ers a little note fell out. "The geese at it agiln," he siid. She liad that day received some blank paper from the paper mill el the community, and Daniel Scheible had put this llttle lev e letter Inte the fuckagenf which he was the bearer. He had sent such letters lofero, and Talea, though she had net answered them, had kept them, partly because she did net wish te inform theso iu authority or this breach et rule, partly Imxiuise se much dell dell ancenfthe law or the place gave a little est te a monotonous life, and pirtly because she was a young woman, and therefore net ills, pleased with allectleu, even from a youth In whom she had no niore than a friendly in terest. IV. Scholble's p-irents had been Dunkards per secuted In Hurone, who liad sought refuge lrem thelr troubles by the bad expedient et taking ship for Philadelphia, witii ah under standing that they were, according te custom, te be sold ler a term or years te pav the rare. Among a multitude who died en the passage from the overcrowding and liad feed were Daniel's father aud mother, nnd the little lad was sold ler the rest et his minority te pay his own fare as well as that of the dead mem bers of his family. Asa premising boy, lie liad been bought by the Kphrata brotherhood and bred Inte the iratemitv. With the audacity of youth he had conceived n great passion for Tabea, and new that his ap prenticeship was about te oxplre he amused tier with surreptitious notes. Te-dav, for the first time, Tabea began te think of the jkis slblllty of marrying Scheible, chlelly, perhaps, lrem a vague desire te osiape from the convent, which could net but be irksome te ene el her spirit. Scheible was ambitious, and It was his plan, as she knew, te go te Philadelphia te make his fortune ; unit she and he tegether, what might they net de' Then she laughed at herself for such a dry dream, anil went out te de her share of household duties singing mellillunusly, as she trod barefoot through the passages, a mystic song of hepe nnd renuncHtien, " Welt, packn dlch; Icli Kcliiieinich .Nur nacli ilcin illiutnel. lienn diebeii 1st l.aclien nnd l.h'ben mid la tipu , lller mi ten 1st Alien dem Klulu eit'clicn Which rendered may read : " vverld, cot you gene ; I 8trlv uiene TeutUilu Heaven. 'I linre abeve Is laughter, life, and love , Here below one must all vanity Ien-go. ' V. Hut though te-day she sang of the laughter that Is abeve, uhe was less unworldly en the morrow. Hretlier Friedsam, as she iiad fore seen, began te break down the rebellion about the singing-school. He was tee geed a strategist te attack the strong point orthe in surrection first. He began with geed-natured Thecla, who could laugh away yesterdav'H vexations, and se one by one he conquered the opposition in detail. He shrank lrem as sailing the Hefcavaller until he should win the ethers, knowing vvell the obstinacy or her resolution. And when all the rest liad Vielded he still said nothing te Tabea, either because he deemed It of no use, or liecailse he thought neglect might de her rebellious spirit geed. Hut II this last were his plun he had miscalculated the vigor or her dcierinlu dcierinlu tleu. "De you knew," said the goed-heartod, gossipy llttle Sister 1'ersida, coining Inte Tabes's cell two or three davs later, " that the sisters have all yielded te Hretlier Fried- T He coaxed aud managed them se, x ou iv. Has lie talked te you T" Ne." knew, " Ne." "You'll have te give up when he elsxJy can resist Hretlier Friedsam." " 1 can." doc. oil lllwaV'N Kiurn ,n u., l.'l,.. tiv.l... . 1 wmildti t dare held up my head nsveii Hut when 1'ersida had gene out, the high head of the llercavalier went down a little. She fell that the man w hein lit In seinn sort worshiped had put upon hern public alight. Hedld net account it worth his while loin lein vlte her te return, she had missed her chance le reluse. .lust whit roiiuccline Hrother rrhsKuu's slight had with Dvnlel Scholble's love-letters I leave the reider t" determine. Hut In her auger she fished these notes out or a besket used te held her changes et while raiment, and read them all ever slowly, line by line, and ler the first time with a lively Interest hi thelr contents. They were very ingenious ; mid theyverv cleverly pictured te her the jevs f a home or her own with a devetcu b.. .... . found evidences or very amiable tniit in the writer. Hut why should 1 trace Iu detail the curious but familiar process bv which n girl endows a insn with all the qil littles she w Ishiw him te pwsesii? V I. The very next d ty Scheible, who had been melancholy ever since he Is-gan te send te 'l'abei letters that brought no answer, was observed te lie In n mood se glee hi I th-it his companions in the tuper-mlll doubted his sanity. The fountain or this Jev was a nole from Taltvi stewed away Iu the pocket or his gown. She had net signed It with her con vent title, but with the initials M. T., ter her proper name, Margaretha Theme. There were many tluctuatlens In Tabei mind and many eruisive notes from Scheible liernre the nun nt length premised te fersake the convent, new grown bitter le her, for the Jey or a home. Kven then Daniel could net tieip liciliig insecure iu tegnrd te n piece el geed fortune se darzllng, and he sent nole nfier nole te urge her te have the da v for the wedding fixed. .Meantime the young man created but llttle sensation by lenv mg the mill, as hi term el apprenticeship hid expired, and he had never iiretcwed linii h attachment te the brotherhood. sister T.ibea had persistently emitted the rehears vis and se the grand choral w ere new given en the sabbaths without her voice, nnd Jael hud felt no little exultation nt this state or things. At length alter much wavering, Tabe.i in ule it liii.il resolution te leave the convent, nnd te accept the love el the ad venturous jeutli who had shown se per slstent nil atleotlen hir her. As seen as the day or the wedding was ar ranged by mean or the surreptitious notes which she continued te exilinnge .vlth Schelble, iie prepared te leave Sharen anil Kphrata. Hut nothing could Ik farther Ir.mi her plans thin the project proposed by her lev or that she should elei w ith him at night. i.ieeii meant te m.ircii out w Ith nil tier color living. First of all she went te soe the sinister prophetess, Sister Jael. " I've finished that turtle-dove, Sister Jael, and new I nm going te leive the sisterhood, and marry Damel .soheible." Nothing Is se surprising te prophet as the fulfillment of his most confident prediction. .iaei iuokeu an nguasi, anuner iace splintered into the most ontradictery lines in the cltert te give expression te the most conflicting emotions. " I'm astonished at yen," she said reprev -ingly, when she get breath. ' h, 1 thought veu expected It," re plied T.ilv. " ill you break veur vow ""' " 'Ws. Why shouldn't a woman break a vow in vie by u girl" And se, geed-live, Sister Jael. Can't you wish me much je;;" Hut Jael turned sharply aw ,iy hi n horror that euld find no utterance. Thecla 1 liighed as washer went.and wished Tabe.i happiness, but intimated tint Daniel was a bold man te uudertike te subdue the lleu-avalier. Sister I'ersida's woman's heart was set all a-flutter, nnd she quite forget that she was trying le Ih a nun, and that she le longed te the solitary and forsaken turtle dove In the wilderness. She whispered In 'label's ear: "You'll leek e nice when you're married, dear, nnd Daniel will Iki se pleased, nnd the j'eung men will steal jour shpsr oil your loot nt the dinner-table, and hew I wish 1 could be there te ee you mar ried. Hut eh, Tabea ' 1 don't see hew you dare te taee thorn all. I'd Just run away with all my might If! were In your place." VII. And se each one took the startling Intelli gence according te her character, and seen nil work was suspended, and every Inmate cf Sharen was gathered In unwonted oxcito excito oxcite mont in the halls and the common room. When Tabea passed out or the lew-Uirred deer of Sharen she nut the nidl-int fa a of Scheible, who had tied ids two .saddle-horses a little way off. "I ome quickly, Tabea," he said with im im im pitiome, "Ne, Daniel , it won't de te le rmle. I niut tell Hretlier Friedsam goed-byo." "Ne, don't," said Diniel, turning pale with terror, "ir j-nu go Iu te sts the diiocter, jeu will never come with me." "Why won't I -" lauglud the defiant ulrl. "II )'s n w iard, aud has charms that he gets out et his gnat books. Don't go iu there; you'll never get away." Daniel held en te fhe IVuiisvliaiiia Dutch superstitious but Tabea only I iitghed and said, "1 nm net afraid of wiards." She loektsl the llef.-avalier morn thin ever as she left the trembling fellow and went up te tlie iloerot Hretlier Friedsam's ledge. "She isn't alrald el the ilertl," muttered selioible. Tabea knocked at the deer. "I'eme in and welcome, vvhoeverlhou.irt," said the director lrem w Ithiu. Hut when she had lifted the latch and pushed hick the deer, squeaking en Its wooden hinges, 'I abea found that Friedsam was engaged iu some business with the prier or the convent, the learned l)r. I'uter Miller, known st Kphrata us Hretber Jabez. Fried sam did net at first leek up. The delay om em lurrassed her; she had tlmotesee, with paln ful clearness all the llttle articles in the slenderly furnished room. She noticed that the billet el weed which lay for a pillow, according te the Kphrata custom, ou a burn Isinch used for a bed, was worn upon ene side with long use; she saw new the bell-repe by means or which I'reldsain called the brethren and sisters te prayers at any hour in the night, hiingdang ilng near the bench, se that the bell might be pulled ou a sudden Inspiration even while the director was rising from his wooden couch : she noted the big books; and then a great reverence for hlsplety and learning foil uien her, nnd a homesick regret ; ami Schulhle and the welding frolic did net seem se at tractive alter nil. Nevertheless, she held up her head llke a defiant Hele waller. Altera tlme Hrother Jabe with a kind greeting passed her, and the director, look ing up, said very gently : " 1 w Ish j-eu a very geed day, Sister Tabex" " I nm no longer Sister Taben, but Marga retha '1 home. 1 have said adieu te nil Iu Sharen, aud new I ceme te say goed-byo te Hrother Friedsam. I am going te lay aside these garments and inarry Daniel Sehelble." She held out her hand, but Friedsam was tee much stunned te see it. " Yeu have broken your vow I Yeu have donled the l,erd 1" There was no soverlty Iu his desjiendent robiilte ; it had the v lbratleu or an luv eluulary crv of surprise and pain. Tabea was net prepared for this. Severity she could have defied; but this cry of a prephet awakened her own conscience, and she trembled ns though she was In the light or a clear-seeing divine Judgment. " Veu cm speak se, Hretlier Friedsam for yen have no human weaknesses. 1 am net suited te a convent ; I never can be happy here. 1 am net Kilbmlsslve. 1 want te Imi necesssary te Homelxxly. Nobody cares for moliere. Yeu de net mind whether 1 sing in the chorals or net, mid you wilt lie latter pleased te have me nway, ami ttm ijeimi." Then, finding that the director remained silent, she said, with dilution : "Hrother Friedsam, I havea great leiereiue for you, but I wish you te knew something of the In firmities of a heart that wants te leve and In be loved by someliody, and then uriylw) you would net think se very hardly of Tabea idler she hus gene." There was a tone of beseeching in these last words which Tabea had net been went te use. 'I he director looked mere numb new than ever. Tabea'H words had given jhlni a nole blew and he could net at once recover. Ills lips moved without speaking, and hlslice assumed a leek betokening Inwaitl suuer- llllT. "Great Gisl or wisdom, must I then tell her r" said Friedsam w hen he get breath. He steed up and gimsd out or the square w In dew In indecision. "Tabea," he said presenlly, turning full upon herund looking in her new jkjIe face upturned te the light, "1 thought my secret would die In my breast, but you wring It from me. YOu say that I have no lullrinl ties no desire for comjianlenslilp like ether men or women. It is the voleo or Sephia, the wisdom or the Almighty, that bids me humble myself before you this day," Here he jviused Iu vfslble but suppressed emotion. "These things" he said, pointing te his woedon couch, "these hardsuljw of the iKxly, Ihose self-denials of my vocation, glve nie no trouble. 1 have ene great soul-alllle-lion, aud that I what you reproach me for lacking; namely, the longing te leve and te bolevoil. And that trial yuu laid upon me the first time I mw jour face and heard your wenls Iu j our mother's honse ou thn W Issa Issa hlcken. On, Tabea, you are net llke the rest' j en are net llke the rest! Kven when you go wrong, It Is net llke thorn!. Ills the vision or the llle I might have led with such iv woman as jeu that troubles my dreams n the nlght-tlme, when, aero Iho iipaiihli gull of mv Irroveoablo vow. 1 have 'stretched out my hands In enlreityte jeu." This dcvlnrallnti changed Instantly Iho ...Vr ''i1" thoughts or llle. llanlel Scheible and hi llttle leve scrawls seemed te her lnrty spirit n, nothing, new that she kivv horseir In the light thrown iisin her by the leve or the great master whose spirit had evoked Kph rata, aud whose genius uttered ItseH lu angelic harmonies. She loathed the llttle Ufa Hint new elH'ued lieferu her. Timrn Mitnixml nothing In heaven or eartli se doslrable as te possess the esteem or Friedsam. Hut-she steed silent and condemned. " I hvve bad ene louifert," proceeded Hrother 1'rledsam after iv while. "When I hsve erceiVisl your strength or character, when 1 have heard your exquisite voice ut tering the melodies with which 1 nm In spired, 1 have thought my work was sweeler locause Tnben shared II, und 1 have Iieh1 that x'eu would vet inoie and mere sham 11 as v ears nnd discipline should ripen your spirit," The director fell faint; he Kit down and looked dejectedly Inte the corner or the room farthest away from where Tabea steed. He loused hlmsclr Iu a few moments, ami turned alsnit again, te find Tabea kneeling en the llagstencs liefore hint, " 1 hive denied the Lord I" she moaned. rer h r Judgment had new coine completely round te Friedsam' staiid-selut. Hi con demnation scented bltteier than death. " Hretber Friedsam, 1 have denied the Lord I" 1'rledsam regarded the kneeling figure rer n moment, and then he reached out his hands, solemnly placing them en her head with a mother! v tenderness, whlle a tremor went through his frame "'Hum, dear child, sh.-iltde thv first work ev or again," he said. "Theu shall lake a new- vow, und when thou art converted then shnlt thou "likol'eter, strengthen thoetl-ers." And withdrawing tils bauds he said: "I will piayforveu, Tnbca, every night of my llle w hen 1 hear the cock crew." Mil. ' Tabea rose up slew ly and went out at the deer, walking no longer llke a Hohivvidler, but llke ene iu a trance, Dimly shesaw the sisters standing without the deer of Sharen ; thore was Thecla, with hair-amused face, aud there was I'erslda, curious as evers there were Sister l'etreiiellaaml Sister Hlan illna and ethers and behind all the straight, lall form or austere Jael. Without turning te the right or lelt, Tabea di rected her steps te the group at the deer or Sharen. "Ne' no 1 ceme, dear Tabea''' It was the volceot Daniel Scheible, whose ex Istcnce she had almost forgotten. "Peer Haldel " she said, pausing and leek- ing ni mm vviin puy. 'Don't say iJr Daniel,' biitfeuir." "Peer boy I" said Tabea. " 1 1 ii are liewitcheil," he cried, seiring her and drawing her aw ny. "1 knew Friedsam would put a charm ou veu." she absently allowed him te lead her a few- steps , thou, with another leek full of tender pity nnd regret at his agitated race, she ov ev trlcated herself trem his embrace, nnd walked rapidly te tlie deer, ijulckenlng her steps te escnH) his pursuing grasp, she pushed through the group or slxters and lied nleng the h illway, nnd up the stair, closing the deer of her cell and fastening down the latch. Scheible, sure that showasunder some evil spell, rushed after her, shook hiiuseir loeso from the grip or Sister Jael, who sought te step him, and reached the deer or Tutiea's cell. Hut all his knocking brought net ene word et answer, and after a whlle Hretlier Jabez 0.11110 In, and led the Kr fel low out te the great grief of Sister I'erslda, who In heart th night it a pity tesjsill a w (si ding. tx. The slsters who came te call Tala te sup per th it ovemng also failed te elicit any re sponse. Kate In the night, when she had Is", ceme calm, Talsra heard the crewing of a cook, and her heart was deeply touched nt the thought that Friedsim, the revered rrledsam, new mere than ever the be be be leved of her soul, was at that monient going te prayer ler the disciple who had broken her vow. she ro-e from her bench aud fell 011 her knees ; and It she mistook the mingled foelings or cu!leucu and human pas-slen rer pure devotion, she made the commonest mistake or enthusi astic spiriLs. Hut she was net left long te doubt that Friedsam had remembered her; by the time that the cock liad crewed the second time, tlie sound etthe monastery lcll, the rope of w hlch hung just by I 'ried.uii'a bodside.breko abruptly Inte the death-like stillness calling the monks and nuns nt Kphrata toaselomn nlght-service. Talxu loll sure that 1 rUslsam had called tl e meeting nt this moment by way et assuring her or his remembrance. . Daniel Schelble, who had wandered luck te the neighborhood In the iilmlessness or dis appointment, heard the monastery belt wak ing all the reverlnrillens orthe forest, ami saw light after light twinkle from the little square windows or Itethany and Sharen; then lie saw the monks and nuns ceme out or Kelhany and Shaien, each carrying a small patier lantern us they hastened te Ien. The iieil ceased, and .Ien, which liemre had been wrapped In night, shene with light from every window, ami thore rme upon the si lence the v niccs or the choruses chanting an antipheual song ; aud disconsolate Scheible cursed Friedsam and Kphrata, and went oil Inte outerdarkucKS. i. When the hrst strophe liad lieen sung ls)lew ami the sw eo'-veiced sisters caught up the imtistrephe, Hrother Friedsam, sitting in the midst, listened with pilnhil attention, vainly trying te detect the sound el Talsvi's veice. Hut when the second strephe had licen sung, and the sisters Is'gan their second res(ense, 11 thrill orexcitomoiit went thieugli all as the long silent voice or Sister Tabea rose distinctly nbove all, with even mere or Its old fervor and expression. And (he next Saturday, ter tlie seventh day xv.'ts the Kphrata .Sabbath, Tabea took a new, solemn, nnd Irrevocable vow ; and from that tlme until the day of her death she was called Sister Auastis.1,1 the name signifying that she liad been ro-estibllshed. What seu rce or consolation AnasUisIa hid tlie rest never divined. Hew should they guess that along aleng along slde her religious fervor a human leve grew ethereally llke an air-plant? Don't Ilauk, Hpll, Couch, Hutfer dizziness, Indigestion, lull iniliiatlen of U111 cji-8, licudiiche, lassitude, Inability te lci- renn uieiital work and Indisposition for hedll) labor, and an ney and disgust jour Ii lends and iiciiuiuniunci's wim jour nu'.u inng and offensive lirentli anil constant effort te cltiiu your nrv-e and threit, wliuu Dr. baye's " Catarrh four iie-e unci mreat, wiien nr. barn's " C'ntarrli Iteincdy" will nreinnllv relluve veil of disceui fuiliintl siitlc ring, ufid your filciuls et Hindis giistiiiKiiuil needlcsl Inltlctlen.s of your Ie.it he- some disease. disease. m.iKS JI.Jh.Vw home et our most pieinlnent citizens hive been ruled of chronic rheumatism by the won derful pain banlshcr, Hulvutleu Oil. Piitu Ji tents "Why, Jenes, whit a hnfuirsii J'eu have In your tlefull lis, 1 raised it 110111 n celjclil ininytnail. I've lis, much livestock " Well, like ciiica like , lu. lIuirCeiiKhHyrupwIllcure jeu. 'Ilia Hull will quickly scare the )io(a)rse away." Tlcllnijs of comfort and Jey. nevtr tails lociirerheuiiiutlsui. St. .lucebs Oil femethlng iinwls Hit IIamc's Teething botleii te bathu liable gums. It relieves all pain ami Is Imrmlc. Price, S3 cents. l'arvnls reiiieinber Ha. Hand's Cough and Croup .Medicine relieves Inllniumatleu of tlie threat and tubes or tlie lungs unci cures tough and cieup. Ir. Hand's medicines for sale ut Cncnran's drug store, 117 and 131 N, Ojicen street Price. SI cents. ml linilAw siii)i)i:.v ciiAMir.s If the body re reives dally a proper amount of nutrition, ami expels tlie wrrn entpaits, health I the certain conseciuence , hut by n sudden change of weather, Hie poles of the skin may net perferin their olllce well, and matters are retained which should have pissed oil hy that avenue All mines which Impede lusunslUle perspiration ate fraught with danger, because uiatlers whli h should have passed aw ay through thu skin are turned again Inte circulation llruiulnth's Pills will remove all Impurities, from whatever cauue they may ceine, curing pain, Inltainimdlen and reldsiulalng from ubeve cause Inn few hour. l'er an liimllte l.lcer. I passed through a severe spell of ulckness two years sge, sliiui which tlme 1 have hud much trouble wlth'ieydlf;e8t!nu (llycr I suppose) being liuldtuully mnstlpatrd. At the suggestion et iny druggist 1 tried Dandelion I. her Pellets (taking ene every night.) 1 urn new ut the second ytal and leel entirely re Moved. It. b. l)BVau,fiuiUutcndent Cejilay Iren Ce., C'eplay, Lehigh county, J'a, fcljs-JnjdXvi,Th,B KI'XVIAL MOT1VKH. Thrrn Must ln mi (lirii ltesil between thn feed we eit nnd Iho nilistniire of which our bodies are composed. If Ilia renil Is cleguccl or clefeil wn sicken, faint nnd din. Thin rend la undo up of tlin organs of cllKcstlen and iisslinlln iisslinlln tleu. III ttiese tint Ktenmcli iiiul liver urn chief, Most poenle have morn or less in pertence of thn honors el censi Ipntlnu I'lnveut It.Hnrt nil tl fcarrul sciiiences hy iislnu Hi henmnll's" Ka Ka Vel He Itelneilv." It Is tlie II rst step tint costs limr.e-linccslAw tlalUnt Itrsrurs. I hem cm he seiimllilug heroic III a inecllcliin as welt a In liidlvldtials ItunlMk llloerf lilt Irrs linveellectcsl tiiiitiyn gallant rescue among tlin nuircrlii slelr. i hensanilslmv e escaped tlie uilautltt 01 dysHM)slt and nervous clehlllly thuuiKh (lie n.e et fill w nuclei fill medicine. It Is cm patiently llm l.eslstenmch unci bleed tmilr In the world 1-cir side by It, It. Cochran, driuj Klst, 1.17 nnd I.Ti .North ijticmi silent, l,nii(nstir A Nnuiir Killinr. t l llolceiill.e, of lllneuiv life, Ohie, ilseste explain "llnd Hint terrlhlndUc-nincivlnrrti, for ;-""'J jearsi eiiici scnrreiy irtste or muell, and hKiulug was falling. 7'Aemm' Krteetrtv Olt eured tue. these are lint v eltintnrlly KHcu icirtilntt a iiMiimr eii'jciiiice 01 picieiii 11 I'V II. II Cecliiiui.driiKKlst, medicine." Fnranln 137 and 9l North 111-s-ic mnsii, iinciisier. CftllMl te I'rrnrli. VVe leel ended upon te iireveh a few gospel fact fuel that am wertli k new I in; W.i wnnt evervbistv te oney nil tlmtls possible In tills world Wn wnnt all these who icre siilterlUK Innii rheunmtlsin. ni.iimlKl 1. nnd nit nclies. spniliis and pain le knew tlmt Thttmat' Kclre trie (in Is an iiutnlllnii and aiiinmim , r mdn by II 11. Cochran, druggist, ii; nod I5J .North IJuism stivet, Ijvncnster. leu a cough or Mini threat, the Oct medicine Is Hale's Heney of llorehniiud nnd Tnr, 1'lku'a toothache lliiips ciilelu one luluiiln. liu'i-lwdeedAw I'cir Dysprpsls. Damiklien ltitTKits Ce Uc.ir Mr I lulce lilcasure In recommending te the public jour Vidiishle Hitters 1 have been 11 nuiterer from lys)Hipsiiuncl l.lvei t'nuiplnlut ler j ears 1 hare tiled everything, but w llheut nvnll, until Flrled your Hitters, 1 have ucd two bottles nnd 11111 new In a Inlr wny of lecevery ; by using a few bottles mere I expect te be cntlrclycurcd A.T. 'KIIK,;mierc1nu8t .Alh'iitewu, Pa. lcts3indTu,lti,S Krelii ClevrUlict, lllile. Come a let lei slgm-d T.Watker.snjlng "About six luciulli nge coinmenrrd tnklug lliirilnrK Jlloetl lltttrrj rer protracted case 01 lumliAge and general eletitllly. nnd new am pleased le state have rrcevi'resl my nipntlln mid wenti-d strength ! eel better nlleKeilher " Kersnlehy II. II Cerlinui, druggist, 137 and I.W.eilh Uueen strisit, ljuirvster Net a Case,. Net a esse of rheumatism, net a case of 1111 .mtglit, uotiicAnef Ismeness, nedafaseed pain or sprain 1101 one reus niiieci 10 an wneti ni lack est by 'Jtiemtit' l.'elrrtrle Oil. rer le hy II Ik Cochran, dnigutst, 1J7 and I3J North Ihiceu street, Ijineaster, What Can't lis Curcsl Must ll laiiliit-fsl." This old ndnge does net signify that we must suuorthe miseries of dvsiepsltt, when n me-dl cine with the curative preertle of Hunlock llloeil Jtltlm Is nvuthdile. It Is ene of tlie most Mibtantlsl and rellatilu remedies sold te dnv rer sale by II II. Cochran, diugglct, 137 and U North lnten atieet, lanca-tcr. Dvsrirric, nervous people, "out of setts," Cohlen's I.liiuld Its el 'lonle will euro, tit Jar CVieffn'j. or druggists. In.'MwileiKlAw MKD1VAI.- TJVUUr.K'S TONIC. Attend te it New. MinysulTerlng people drag thcinelve tbent with fallluK ntiength, feeling that they lire steadllv sinking Inte the gnive, v, hen hy using Parkers Tonic they would niidnrurnreininenr Ing with thn Hrst dose, unit v Itallty unci stiength surely coming tmrk lelhctn ' I nm G! yours old have been sick nearly nil ley lire, and ought te knew eemethlng nbeut :nedlclne liy this time. 1 have tisesl Parker's Tonic fiesly for 11101-0 than nyiiir, nnd runslder It Hie best remedy I have ev er knew n. In met, 1 new llnd no ether uie-dlclnu necessary, ler weakness, dcldlllv, rheuiii'itlsm, nnd that ills tresslng all gencne uud pain from which I surfend pe long, It has noeeiml. 1 de net see hew anyone can ntTerel te de w I thou I se v tin thin n mcdtrlnn," Mrs. IIattiN. OKAVKS.csir Fast nnd Frent streets, 1'ioildcuie, It. 1. PARKER'S TONIO. IPrepared hy lllsrex ,t CeM N V Sold by nil Druggists In lnrghnttlrntnne Dellar. mnrl DnM.tlh IDAUKHll'S HAIR BALSAM the popular I iverlte for dn-sslng the hilr, lie. sterfng color when gray and preventing lisud nitr. It cleanses the scalp, steps the hair filling, nnd Is sure le please, roc. and I sizes ut Druggist. iiMiuM.Th.tw DIL KKNMUIY'H rAVOUlTH HUM KDV. beg SulTcriD freni Stene ia the KiJnejs. Ills hy no means stmnj'e tint llr Divld hen nedy, of itondeut, N. ., should have re ceived the fellow lug letter Hy rending It jeu will sen In ene minute why James Andrew was thanklul Dr P. Kenntily, llomleut. A". 1'. DriRSm Until within a recent dtte, 1 had f.ir several jear sntrered greatly lrem gravel, called by the doctor ihe llrlck Dust Sesllment. or utient. u jiur past this sediment has net passed err In the usuid quantity, but hasneru uiulatesl, rauslng inn untetct ptln lltvlncr hennl el I If. DAV UlhKSNhDV.sj KAVOIIITK ItKVI KDV.ltrleel It, mid nfter using nbeut ene nml one-hnlf bottles 1 veidest a slenee frem the bind der, of an oval shape, of 7 IS or an Inch long, aud rough en Its surface. I send you thu lurKcsi Jileie, that you may nroefwhit It Is cemxid, Unco then I have telt no pain. I new consider 111) self cured, and cannot express my thankful ness and gratitude for se signal n dellveruucu from a terrible dlse-asee. v(,u have my consent te use this letter, should you w Ish te de se, for IbobeneUtef etherwiiUerer. V ours truly. .Iamcm Amkkicws, Ne. 10 Slarshal St., Ida 1)111. Trey, N. V Dr. Kennedy's " Favorlte Itemedy " Is esisc ctally eirered as a trustworthy spec Hie for the rurnef llldnnyand I.lvcr Complaints, Centtlpn tlen.undnll disorders uilslng from an Impure statu of the bless, 'lewcmen who suffer from any of the Ills pe. cellar te their se 't-nverltet Iteincdy " Is con Btanlly prev lugltself an uutalllng frlend-u leal hlesesliig. 'Jhere Is no mere ngnnlrlng class of disease, nnd none mere certain "net le get well el Itself" thin the disorders of the, Kidneys und bladder 'I he only inedlclneth it does nirerd speedy relict nnd permanent cure of surh alTettlens Is Dr David Kennedy's' rnverllu lnmcdv."nf Itnn. deut,N. lieill ced.tw c UKHUUAHAXTUKD. RUPTURE. Cure guarnnti-ed by Dlt. .1, II. MAVKll. Kasesleiice: no operation or delay from liusl ness ; tcsted by hundreds of cures. Mnlu eltlre. Ml AltLII ST., I'llll.A, bend for Circular. fJUvehtw rvitsiTi'iir. TTOrKMr.l KR'S, BEDS ! ' BEDS! AT- HOFFMEIER'S Furniture Warerooms, -U HAST KINO STiiKKT. S-lMcture Krunics te Order. COAL. -T H. MARTIN, WHOLKSALK AMD KKTAIT, DIALVB IN All Kinds of Lumber and Geal. -VAitn: Ne. 4M North Wnter and l'rlnce Btrc uts, ubeve Lemen, lointaster. n Hi d JAUM(lAHDNi:US A JKl-'FIMtlKS. COAL DEALERS. Orrics: Ne. 159 North (Jueeii street, and Ne. Wl North I'rtnca street. v Alius t Nnrlh l'rlnce etreet, near Iteadlug Denet. I.ANUASTKIM'A. auglS-tm c OAU M. V. B. COHO, MOUTH VVATKIt HT , Ijincasl WholesKle and Uetall Dealer in I'a, LUMBER AND COAL. Connection with tbe Telephone Kxchange. nrd and Olllce: NO, Me NUItTIl VVAl'KK BTKKET febMlvd TAHT KND YAHH. 0.J.SWARR&00. COAL. - KINDLINQ WOOD. Uffice : Ne, 3) CKNTKK SOUAHK. Ileth yard nil ofrlce connected with Tulephone Kichunge. aprlJ-lyaMr,K Je $ jj&
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