TttJS BUKAA'TON U'KIJflJJS- WJCliJVJiSDAY MORNING,: JAXlJAUr 18t, Tie Mistlf Mates titmm '..af iDit: .1)1 LSI $L By ELISABETH PULLEW, Author of "The Man from Aldone." Copyright. 1806, by Bacneller, Johnon and Bacnellro. PART I. When, looking out into the darknesa before the winter dawn, the woman who lived nearest neighbor to Miss Drusilla Brockway could see no light lii the window of the house on the hill, she thought that Bomethlng must have happened. She told her hunbuml so. "Jotham, I wish you'd step over an' nee that she ain't dead or anything," the added. So Mr. Jotham Dunn clothed himself, lighted a lantern, and went out of the front door, which opened on the road. VI t don't seem nateral, not to go out to the barn, fust thing, to Teed the crit ters," he observed, pulling on his tlue Kittens. "I don't see vhut you're so "How Can I ? Ain't the House All l.oekcd Ip?" turrible worried about, Maria." But lie went, with the protesting tongue and the prompt legs of a inun who has a many-eareful wife. At Miss lmisllla's everything was dark anil quiet. He wulted a moment; then he knocked. "I expect Drusllly'll call me a fool for my pains," lie mut tered. The answer came In n groaning voice: "Oh, fi that you, Mr. Ininn?" It Is." "I'm dretful glad you've come. But you'll hev to let yourself in. I can't stir Without its klllln' of me." "Why, Miss Drusslly, how you talk. What's the mutter with ye?" "Oh, dear me, I've fell an' I expect I han't never get up again. ' You must come right in." "How can I? Ain't the house all locked up'.'" "No, It ain't, and that's how Well, never mind. You go round to the shed door, Mr. Dunn." Having entered by that way, he soon heard about the misfortune. Miss Jlrusllla's cat had not come back in due season the evening before. "Tommy, he knows when It rings nine o'clock, an" he generally puts foi home. But lust night he staid ouC, an' then come to the shed door a-cryln', an' I got up to let him In. I was kind o' dazed, wakin' up so sudden, nn' for got to bolt the door again. I'd just got back Into bed when I thought nf it, an' started right out to fasten up the door. I expect I ketched my foot on that braided rug. for I fell all In a heap. An' here 1 be. An' I guess my hin's broke," the finished dolefully. The neighbor looked about him for an Idea of comfort. '"Twas a mercy you was caryyln' a taller candle tnstid o' one o' them kerrysene lamps." "Yes. I s'pose I might have been burnt up an' the house, too an' I do' know but 'twould have been just as well," rejoined Miss Oruslalla, who did not care to have the silver lining of such a new and dismal cloud turned forcibly out for her Inspection. So It was that Miss Drusilla Brock way, who had always been the most active and Independent woman in the township, became bedridden and help less. . For a time, the neighbors took turns In caring for her; for though she was little loved, she was respected on account of her virtues, which were genuine If crabbed. By and by charity cooled with custom; people began to tnlnk that they had none too much time for their own affairs; and Anally It was suggested to her that she ought to have a housemate. "Because there can't nobody, however glad an' wlllln', tend out all the time, an' you ought to hev a woman right where you can call on her, night or day," Mrs. Dunn told her. Miss Drusilla took kindly enough from this good friend what she would have scorned and resented from an other. "I guess you're right. Mis' Dunn. I'm a turrible trouble to folks, nn' I can't expect but what they will gredge what they do for me. Blood's thicker than water; an' I'm goin' to write to some relations of mine to come. I don't expect they will, but I can't do no inor'n ask 'em to." So, with unused and stiff penmanship, Miss Drusilla wrote a letter to her nephew, llolman Urockway, In Massa chusetts, asking him to come with his family to live in her house, which would ' be bis after death. She possessed a farm, mostly run out. A man could Improve the land. She thought it ould pay him to come. This letter was a total surprise to the FOR THE A wlrm sliamroo with Cuticura Soao. and a single application of Cuticura (ointment), the treat Skin Cure, cicar the scalp and hair of crusts, scales, and dand- - raff, allay Hchlnff, soothe irritation, stim ulate the hair follicles, and nourish the roots, thus producing Luxuriant Hair, , with a clean, wholesome scalp. Benl ttimitrae tte M. hmi Dam a Can. ft-, ante Wwrnfttnut, Banna, t. a. A. r nephew; his aunt had quarreled with his father when Holman was a boy; each had gone his own way, with dumb and grim lllwlll on the sister's part, with Indifference on that of the brother. Holman Brock way cared nothing for his father's old feud; he was willing to accommodate his aunt and to tuke hold of the farm run to wuste. There was another reuson which weighed with him; his daughter, Corlnna, during a recent visit to the city near which was the village where Miss Drusilla lived, hud become engaged to a young man there. The lovers wrote to each other dully. "I guess, Corlnny, we shal have to move down to Maine, to save postage stamps," the father said good-hu-inoredly. With that Jest the matter was settled. They, gave up the rented house, and went to live with Aunt Druslllu. The farm showed promise; the lund had long lain idle; but Holman Brockway found It to have a soil mixed with sand and decomposed peut, which would grow big vegetbles. Miss Drusilla had cultivated u Bmall patch, enough for her own use, which she reluctantly praised as having "done as well as other folks' gardens, fur's I know." Holman's wife thought the house rather Inconvenient, but It was sunny und hud a pleasant outlook. Corlnna was huppy because It was nut & long walk to the ferry which connected the village with the city; and It Is certain that Herbert Jennison spent , his sub stance on lioutous commutation tickets. At the landing he sometimes found I'orlnnu waiting for him, und they en Joyed the stroll up the hill to the house, which stood on the crest, bristling with rocks and bushes, forlnna's parents liked the young man; he was clean und honest, eager to learn and to make his way In the world. It was all smooth sailing until Aunt Drusilla blew up a gule. She was a formidable power as she lay in her bed In the grnund-llour room which she re served to herself. This was intended by the builder of the house for an office; Miss Diusilla's father had been a law yer. It was a one-story room, project ing from the southern side of the house. Nothing nourished there but a few stalks of gaunt and huary mul lein; even In June the herbage yel lowedsomebody had said that Squire Broikway's law was so dry that It made hay of the grass. Near the side window stood a birch tree; It had grown ut impeded by a sharp splinter of granite so that its roots were quite out of the ground, clusnlng the rock like skeleton arms. This tree. In Its tat tered shroud of white bark leaned toward the window as If to peer In. Krom the other, the front window, Miss Drusilla peered out; nothing that passed along the roud could escape her notice. Neither did anything that took place in the house. "Your aunt has got an extra sense, more than the rest of the people," Surah Brockway told her husband. She heard every step, every fall of crockery; she sniffed every overbaked loaf, every scorched kettle holder. 'She would have all things go on in her own way, which was that of her parents before hercurious sparlngs and parings; unwelldly stores of vege tables kept In the cellar to be constant ly culled over, or else breed diseases. A certain yellow and white striped pitch er was devoted to yeast, which she called "emptlns" and would have homemade, with much pains and with "Itring Him in Hers; I Want to See Him." potatoes; a blue platter dedicated to none else than a "foiled dish" would to her mind have been desecrated by a burden of doughnuts or of cookies. "Seems as , though Aunt Drusilla thought all the things in the house were foreordulned and predestinated to just so and no other way," Sarah mildly la mented. "I can't get the hang of her notions nor remember half of 'em; I'd be clad to suit aunt, for It's real hurd to be bed-ridden, she that's been so ac tive all her life. And I expect that I have some set ways myself; we all have." From morning to night Aunt Drusilla issued her orders through the hair-open door of her chamber; Sarah found it no sinecure to be the lieutenant of an old-fashioned housekeeper. The longer that Aunt Drusilla was confined from contact with actual work, the harder she was to please; she expected the Im possible and criticized with lavish vigor and homely sarcasm. But as yet she had not spoken of Herbert Jennison, because his visits were always made In the evening, and she had taken the habit of eating her supper early and be ginning her night's sleep at twilight. To balunce accounts, she awoke before the cocks had begun to halloo from barn to barn and when Aunt Drusilla wus once awake, there was no more sleep in the house. When the neighbors praised Sarah Brockway for being ready to sit down In a white apron, to sew at ten o'clock In the morning, she modestly replied: "You know I have to get up an hour and more before day light and I get ahead more than I care to, sometimes." But she said It with a patient smile; on her kind face. She admitted, however, that "now 'an then I get all nerved up, an' then Aunt Dru sllla's voice goes right through my head. After a time, Corlnna, having come to understand the tremendous will and the active veto power of Aunt Drusilla, began to dread lest the old woman should wish to Interfere with her In tended marriage. If the aunt called her. Corlnna started and turned pale. The dreadful old creature, from her bed, ruled the household. She became always crosser, more dismal, more ex acting; one could but pity her, yet she was not good to live with. It chanced one afternoon that Co rlnna, preparing her aunt's tea, was absent-minded by cause of her fears for her love and put In a double dose of the herb. Therefore, Aunt Drusilla's eyes, at eight o'clock in the evening, were set wide astare with asshftd sleeplessness and her ears were sharp ened by the stimulus of the tea green, green; she would drink no other. So, although Sarah, after making her com fortable for the night, had gone out, closing the outer door of the chamber, the entrance of a person at the front door was heard by Aunt Drusilla. It was the step of a man; then the tones of Corlnna's voice blended with deeper notes; some sibilant little explosions Interrupted for an instant their talk; soon after, Holman and Sarah greeted the new-comer cordially. What did all this Wan? ' Because Aunt Drusilla, could not imagine she rapped on the floor with the pearwood stick which waamer summons. Sarah ran; and the aunt was soon informed that the visitor was Mr. fbert Jennison, from the city, engaged to Corlnna, "a very ex cellent young man, and her father and I are much pleased with htm," added the mother, mildly ruffling up her feathers, ready to defend the choice of her one chicken. "Bring him In here: I want to see him," said Aunt Drusilla, grimly. For In her unhappy old soul a har bor of ull sorts of cranky and piratical prejudices, with a roving commission to board other peoples business she remembered that in remote years her father had hnd a quarrel with a certain Jennison, who might be a grandfather of this young man. "And I'll let him know that 1 ain't forgot about that mat ter," she decided. (To be continued.) INDUSTRIAL. In a recent article In the Denver Re publican President J. C Osgood, of the Colorado Fuel and Iron company, a cor poration In which a number of Scran toniuns are interested, after calling at tention to the vast wealth of Colorado's newly found gold deposits, adds: "While its wealth of precious metals gives Colo rado so greut an advantage and stimu lates all the industries of the state. Its inexhaustible dsposits of lead, copper. Iron, coal and other metals and miner als are of the greatest consequence to Its future prosperity. The coal fields of the state are greater In extent than even those in Pennsylvania, and con tain anthracite equal to the best Penn sylvania can produce, coking coals su perior to any in the world, coals suit able for steam, gas-making, smithing, and every other purpose to which coal can be applied; with such supplies of cheap fuel and raw material, manufac turing will eventually be the chief In dustry of the state. Iron and steel are probably the most Important elements, and these the works now owned and operated by the Colorado Fuel and Iron company at Pueblo can suply. While these works have been In operation since 1K82, It has only been during the past three years that they have been operated with any considerable degree of success; during that period the works have been gVeatly Improved, the capacity Increased, and costs reduced so that the products could be marketed on equal terms In competition with the Iron and steel works east of the Mis souri river. The company only manu factures the primary products of Iron, such as pig iron, steel billets, steel rails, merchant bar iron, cast iron pipe, spikes, bolts, angle bars, etc., for which it lln.ds a market In all the states and territories west of the Missouri river except California, from which they have been shut out by the prohibitive freight rates of the Southern Pacific railway, but whose markets will now be opened by the recent decision of the Interstate commerce commission with regard to rates to the Pacific coast. But it is In the secondary, or auxiliary, manufactures of iron, and the rework ing of iron and steel products into im plements, general hardware, and con struction material, that the growth of the company's plant and production must depend and which will constitute Colorado's principal manufacturing In dustries. The attention of manufac turers has been attracted to the ad vantages of establishing plants in Colo rado to supply trans-Missouri markets, and the Griffin Wheel company has In operation at Denver the most complete car wheel plant In the country. Other industries which will be established in the near future are plants for the manu facture of sheet Iron, steel wire and wire nails, barbed fence wire, wrought steel pipe, tin plate, corrugated Iron roofing, car axles, etc., one or more of which will undoubtedly be In operation the coming year. The Increased popu lation resulting from the development of precious metal mining and the es tablishment of large manufacturing plants will create a home market for agricultural products. Storage reser voirs will be built, and the area of land tinder Irrigation largely extended. The success which has attended fruit grow ing In various parts of the state will result in the establishment of canning and drying factories. The world's sup ply of corundum is very limited, not nearly equal to the demand. A deposit of corundum has recently been located In Colorado and Is now being developed. The preparation of corundum and the manufacture of corundum wheels will add another to Colorado's list of indus tries for 1886. The great variety of avenues for the profitable employment of capital In Colorado, and the compari son of the state's prosperity with the depression existing elsewhere, will at tract men with capital and enterprise, and result In the more rapid develop ment of all our great resources." Philadelphia Press: The report cur rent in New York that the Beading company will recede from the position it has taken on the coal trade confer ences for a year, that is, that the com pany is entitled to 21 per cent, of the total tonnage, apparently has no foun dation. The policy of the present man agement has been to Insist on that claim, and to show that It was a just one by the figures of the actual produc tion. As far os can be learned there Is no thought of receding, and It Is not improbable that this fact came out at the meeting on last Thursday. There is a general feeling of hopefulness In the trade In this vicinity that some agreement will be reached as to ton nage In the near future. The compan ies are not very far apart, but there is an Indisposition on the part of the New York lines to concede the claims of the Reading company. While this was just the position all last year it Is be lieved that other influences which were not then felt will be potent at the next meeting of the coal presidents.. ::- - Wllkes-Barre Record: Messrs Lam oreaux and Smith, enterprising con- fractors of Forty Fort, have taken the contract for erecting a breaker of Im mense proportions for the Summit Branch Railroad company at Williams town. Dauphin county. Its dimensions are 320 feet by ISO feet and It will con tain one and one-half million feet of lumber, thirty-eight screens, forty Jigs, twenty-two set of rolls and all the latest Improvements in breaker bulld Ing.and will be one of the best equipped In the state. Work will commence Feb. 1 and It in to be completed In eight months. Mr. Lamoreoux was foreman for a number of years tor the late A. B. Tyrrell or Kingston and Is famous for building some of the largest break ers In Wyoming Valley. The report of the operations of the Cambria Iron company for 189S, at Johnstown, shows that six per cent, was earned on the old capital of 15,000. 000. When It is considered that during most of the year the company carried a floating debt equal to the Increased capital issued in the fall, the net re sult is equal to six per cent, earned on all the capital, old and new. The com pany has no floating debt, pays its bills every thirty days and has put a large amount of cash Into Improve ments that was put into operating ex penses Instead of the construction ac count. The company has paid divi dends regularly every year since the war. The electric motor has Invaded the rolling mills, and in one a 30 k. w. motor Is connected directly to the rolls. This machine has been built to reverse every 10 seconds. At the Carnegie Steel works, at Homestead, Pa., motors oper ate small buggies, which carry the hot billets from the heating furnace to the rolls. The motors are placed on each buggy, one operating the buggy itself, the other driving rolls on the buggy, to place the billets on the transfer table carrying them to the large shaping rolls. This buggy Is operated entirely from a distance, current being led to the mo tors by means of swinging cables. A curious form of life Insurance Is springing up in French manufacturing towns under the name of I.a Fourml (the ant). The peculiarity Is that the longer a man lives the less he becomes entitled to. The payment of $1 a month assures the, payment of $1,000 to the heirs of a man dying before the age of 2S, the payment diminishing propor tionately to $510 at fi!. The Idea seems to be thut If a man dies young his chil dren are likely to be In want, but thut when he Is 60 they will he able to eurn their own living. Huntingdon and Broad Top reports coal tonnage for the past week amount ing to 35.7:19 tons, compared with 3fi,7ti8 tons for the corresponding week of 185. The total tonnage for year to date amounts to 137.884 tons, compared with 121,565 tons for the corresponding period of 185, an Increase of 16,318 tons. -:l:- The United State furnished In 1890 28 per cent., or nearly one-third, of the total amount of gold produced by the world. Its leading competitors are Aus tralia and Russia, the former in the same year producing about $30,000,000 and the latter producing about JIM, 000, 000. St. Louis Q lobe-Democrat. Among projected conveniences at Primrose colliery, near Hhamokln, Is a telephone Hue within the mines. It will connect the first slope and the of fices and perhaps a line to town, so that the foreman in the bowels of the earth may phone the executive offices in Wllkes-Barre or Hazleton. -:ll:- The attorney general of Ohio has de cided that electric cars in that state, carrying passengers, express and mails, "are under the Jurisdiction of the rail road comlsstoner and subject to the same regulations that govern steam railroads." The Reading railroad reports that Its coal shipment (estimated) for last week, ending January 1!&, was 300,000 tons, of which 80,000 tons were sent to Port Richmond and 30,0000 tons were sent to New York waters. After an Idleness of two months, the Reynolds and Moyer waahejy. In Plym outh, hao resumed operations. RAIL ROAD NOTES. The Ontario and Western company has Just about succeeded in vanquish ing an underground Are which has been threatening the Scranton yard and lojADVJAY'S M PILLS, Always Reliable, Purely Vegetable, MILD BUT EFFECTIVE. Purely Teretable, set witaont pain, elegant ly coated, taateleee, aiaall and ay to take. Midway's t ills anitt nature, t'n.ulatina' to healthful activity tat livar, bewele and other d goitre orgeat, leering the bowels in a nat ural condition without nay bad after affeata. Cure Sick Headache, Biliousness, Constipation, Piles AND All Liver Disorders. RADWarS PILLS an partly vegrtabl , mild and reliable. Cauee perfect Dig. at ion. con plate abeorptioa and healthful regularity. ota. a box. At Drug lata, or by null "Book of Adrian" free by mall. RADWAY CO.. . O. Box W, Now York. DUPONTS 1886, BUSTKS M0 SttXTIIS POWDER Maaafaecsrsd at Ike Waawalknwe Mills. La aarwa ouoaty. Pa., ami aiWO nlaeton, Dataware. HENRY BELIN, Jr. General Afeat tar the Wyaaaiag District. tM WYOMING AVL. SersHHoA, Pa Third Vaeeaaal Baal causing the company much alarm. The yard , was made by filling and much of the filling used was cAiim. This culm took fire some time ago and has been exhuming gas and smoke of such quan tities that it gave rise to the belief that a fierce tire was raging under ground. To extinguish the fire an exca vation was made about fifty feet long, twenty feet wide at the top and having a depth ranging from fifteen to utty feet. The burning culm, It was found, had Ignited an old breast of the aban doned "Cork and Bottle working." but this was extinguished without much difficulty. The location of the fire is almost directly beneath the westerly span of the Linden street bridge. The Delaware and Hudson passenger shop in Carbondale Is building a hand some new iay car. It will be complete In its appointments and a masterpiece of the car builder's craft. It will be one of the finest ray cars In the coun try, and another sample of what can be done In the Carbondale shop. In the near future there will be a change made In the method of conducting the pays on the Delaware and Hudson In this vicinity. Instead of havins the car at a central point and conveying the pay master to collieries and shops by car riage the car will he run to as many ot these places as possible. :o: The newly elected board of directors of the Iehigh Valley Railroad company held Its first meet Monday and elected the following officers: Charles Harts horns, vice-president; Robert H. Sayre, second vice-president; J. H. tiarrett. third vice-president; W. C. Alderson, treasurer; John H. Fanshaw. secretary, and David tl. Balrd, assistant secre tary. :o: About 13,129 miles of railroad, be longing to fifty-three companies, and representing a capital and bonded in vestment of J775.776.O0rt, were sold by foreclosure In the I'nlted States lust year. Just I.Ike o Woman. "Oluta," Baltimore TeleRrum. As long ss the world lusts women will Insist upon distorting a necessary conve nience to some other purpose. A young woman, the other day, when a decade of miles uway from home, hud the accident of an ugly puncture to hap pen to the tire of her bicycle. "Oh, thut run be euslly remedied," said the man who uccompunled her, "where Is your tool puckel; we'll soon have it fixed." lint, lo, not nn Instrument Old he dis cover, instead the bug contained a oomu and brush, a small box of face .uwil-r, a ehumoto powder cloth, a mirror, some hair-pins, a bit of scented soap, a needlti, thimble, spools of black and white cot ton, a paper of pins, a pair of scissors, some pink cord, and a clean handkerchief. WELSBACH LIGKT Ipeeiillj Adapted or Reading ud Sewing; Consumes three (8) feot of gas pet hoar and gives an efficiency of sixty (60) candles. Baring at least 33 per cent orar the ordinary Tip Burner. Call nd See It. i 434 LACKAW1NM IVEMIL fUnufacturers' Agent. Maaafactvers of Um Oalsbrateo PILSENER LAGER BEER CAPACITY oo,ooo Barrels per Annum THE FINEST HALF-TONE CUTS That you can oet any whera. At one-half the old price. J. I. PH0T0-E1GR1VER. 3ULACIAWA1-U AVE. DR. LOBB'S BOOK FREE To all nuffcrera ef IRRORSOF YOU 111, LOST VIGOR and DISEASES OF MEN AND WOMEN, 208 Tiagm: cloth bound: arcurelr tea led and ma lad frao. Treatment bvtuiii trkt'.y confldentinl, mai a i ultir qnlck cur fua antetd. No matter how tang atanding, I will poUlrelr onra you. Writ or call. DD I ftDR 1 5,h s Pnllada.. Pa UlU LvDD 3J year' coatmncaa practice. Jfl iMiie toil III -sr-1 dsn Ten CONNELL in n LAG BR BEER BREWERY- IS w Km J Battle Ax Plug ihas jumped into public favor on account of its size andquauty.it5 a Great Big Piece OF HIGH GRADE (Action to our Washburn-Crosby Co. wish to assure their many pal rons that they will this year hold to their usual custoaa of milling STRICTLY OLD WHEAT until the new crop la fully eured. New wheat is now upon the market, and owing to the excessively dry weather many millers aro of the opinion that f is already cured, and in proper condition for milling. Washburn-Crosby Co. will tako no risks, and will allow the new wheat fully threo months to mature before grinding. This careful attention to every detail of, milling ha placed WashbtirnCi'osby Co.'a flour far above othaf brands. m QEGARGEL Wholesale Agents. IRON AND STEEL Bolts, Nuts, Bolt Ends, Turnbuckles, Washers, Riv ets, Horse Nails, Files, Taps, Dies, Tools and Sup plies. Sail Duck for mine use in stock. SOFT STEEL HORSE SHOES and a full stock of Wagon Makers' Supplies, Wheels, t. Hubs, Rims, Spokes, Shafts, Poles, Bows, etc. TTEBEBB SCRAN a EVERY WOMAN 1 St BsmaKaag neeila a reliable, monthly, rafnUUnt nadialna. Only bualaai Um pore! oiugi iuvuiu d iuvu. Dr. LPeal's Pennyroyal Pillo Thar an arompt, aafa mi cartaia In rtaalt Tha aeniiua (Dr. Fal'a) Dtr Haifa BJinL. 8at aarwhers, li.M. 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II Sot ealy enne by atartmit at tee Mat ot dleeaee. aul la a neat sens tonic and blood ballder, br)Bt Im baoa tha ptak alow to pal etaeaka and ra ywrias the Are of youth. 1 ward off Inanity nd Ceoaomptton. Inalnt oa serlat RKVITO, aa etlier. It can be carried la tart ocktt. By MIL 1.00 ptr package, or all tot M.OO, with poet Ut written guarantee to awe aw taioad the money, areolar tree, addreaf 0YAI MEDICINE CO.. 13 Rim St. CHICIQ0. ILL, ate y ttfaevf Bffgaiat CONNELL r w aw aT m m ar Day. .In