,f PnWinf ion . L Somerset Herald, : lit -j every WediiesJ-iy luoniln. at (c!u " n In aUvauce ; otherwise 2 W , .r,iiiB' " 1 , .tTijl'" win '' i n P.tmjlfr neirleAttnir ... . . 11 i... i ti ii u. paiu -j- , ttlica suhicrlbers do not take out ':' ...... v.i.i Minnnflble fur the anb. ' rft B,OTlng from t" Postoffioe 10 M' ' , vr n tie n,ul0 of t,le tnrmKr j'j.c S.niii ri t Herald, S'lnn-ryt', 'a. 1 ,n'i:Nrv atlaw, (Dionwi. re j; -Ci'Ll.. ' ' ;. , fOKXEY-ATLiU, jom rtt, l'a. f r"iSU . j '" All'1 'KNtV-AT LAW, tS'.imrrset, Pa. ' ' ATi'uiiXtV.4'l'-LAV, I I S .niffrcL Pa. .- ., .1' 1 Souw-rsct, P. L r-.'pvTTKRSOX, l' Ali.,.;;,!.Y-AT-I.AW, S.iuiersst, I'a. n 'sl t M cire will In at- ;;, j'... i;.;uo-s an I ttlch:;-. V-'l-' . w. is. ui WCU .rj'-oTil - nriTEL. Al lOilNEYS-AT L 1W. -n ried t- their care be i.u:i -lu.:' a Handed Ui. . '2.H. .-: .u oras street, opposite the. i :;v v. scuell. "i !''n-i 'n Asti'Ut, fcoiocrfci, i-sw i-'WiNK 31 AY. AlT.iRNKY-AT LAW I " ,! 'lu'inef en'.rusiod l bis r Willi . r.il t'jt a ft.imt.rs;.- IA . will :a,.,,ii.M-'-J- V ). KIM MEL. A r TuiiN LY-AT-LA W, Somerset, Pa. I .. k -ta-.i: I" all 5iiacs rntrasted tt li'.s care . ...( r I A.I-MHin. cuunuic ...... jl' 1 1. !? :."". iiSo: ou M .in Otvtt s'.rwA. VS. L.C. CM-BdliN. ,.;.;;ii::lt('OLr.MlX. i-ir,,.-.- (utru?t4 to their care wtM 1 " : 1.11, aftjnfl(4! In. b.ier's Block, t'p uiiri. u. niL. ill UJ.NKY-AT LAW. fcuujfr&ot. Pa., .r..xi.-'-i.:ca1toi5 la?lm-?g cntraft! ,i ii oil-'.. lv.it on cullectloas, &c i- ;,.iy.;!.i:. . , A1T -KXEY'-AT LAV,', SoaK;r3ei Pa., i!lwiT!Ttrtl t jr care t- ht ATT.KNKY AT LAW, n-.'"t::it !. ami nil olhr leiral a-.; t with iirvmjUic unil hltlity. ' iV I, i i-i W sif:. a.:rij":Hi lo them iti U:irvri:iiiiy r; I.I.I AM II. KOONTZ. I ATYoHXEY-AT-LAW, tMjmcretfi, P.i, v ii V-..I.M,; altcntl"n to lnim? ertrow- . ! Ti-r in S' mernet ami atljoluluff ct'Untitfi. .'iti'Miuuir H-use li'tw. II. SCOTT. ATTjUXEY-AT LAW. SuiucrKirt, Pu. '. i'. tic ('..in Houm. U liuslu-w vntrut i' art aticiiileil lo wltli jiruu.itiief ao 1 l it;h. ATTDKNKY-AT L.CW. Somerset. Pa. t . v.;'n.T. :)i-k. op lr. Entrance, s nrwt. c-'illwtiouK mude, mnates u.r -xain1rid, and nil ieiral bu&incp with jrouii.ncw and cMelity. :.;;!'!: m. hicks. J JI M' ICE OF THE PEACE Rnmcrct, Pcfia'a. U.S. a'.-VIKLL. '.. K. M. KIMMMLL & SON ")?r:hrlr t 'imriianalrvkvsta the clil- S-.nwrxri and vi' tnily. One of ti e nwin '' '. uroi win at sViioca. unlip prototitn-.'t.-ni i .4u:4 w tlieir bilkts Slain J. K. MH.I.Ell Jia.s i.i nna- 1 s )uit '..I in Iirlin f r the ra !l) ol I'li. ):a.-e ojiuiujic Charged K.-i.tiiL'- '' II. Mini KKll tcivlt'rs his 1 u?!(,iry. n'.Ure in jrf&itlcuce oa Main iwt.voi lite lUiuiMti'.L. i". A.c. miijj:?u. fa.TH ;., s-mtli Krad, Inilinti,wlicre he !;e; l y letieror otborwis'!. DKXT1ST. irt Henry HciHcy't tirc, ;MiU (Ml 1 .Vi'JI.LIAM COLLINS. M-VnST, SO.VEbtr, PA, "'c Mammoth Rlcck. al-ore B"Td' Krun ' ' mrf h pan tit alltuvi be found pri'iwr t.irlft vora. im:-h as rjliinir. reun - rerv,cz ac Artltirlal teeth ol ailktmla. J : uea eri;J la.-ortcit. eraliuc( i:i-.SIi X AGENCY. 1 Stim:,,.-.,! c..n.t Pm1.-H Cm.ruJim.iitr i ol !!, Peace, furvivor a ad cIkub -a:j,ri, :! t-.llist. all H. uatraDd PB jit n,uu't-d to liiiu. P.rwfi9 iliiiir 1 ntk. will .'.'rem Lim at the itiv a' rUl ',''n l'.re and puMaw AUCTIONEER. I'-K.JSMMiac mvvrTl?e rn Itril or f-r. ' . ."""'" "ta'.yiliiiiK to hedifMWedoiat :m tt'hl i win rjy, er.tireatliilartlon. ' mn j.roaij .ly attended to. W A VIU1WT7 .E '-S BROTHERS Siq;, fp.ESCO PAINTERS, N'MEUMT, IV.XX'A. tRMENTED WINE, FOR SALE or alias j mm ftl-'4 Son"'"t- the pi K.y 11'""'l.l(;U a list if - u a i. li u rj r f n. ivi dace ff mann- the klmU in CHEMv ELACKBEKny, rirrl CURRANT, ELtEREERRY WILD-CHEKRY kKT tf r-r . t i i Vi'iNt, r1nr.,'rt .lca4 and urn- VOL. XXX. NO. 4. JOS. HOME & CO., j lai, 1SJ, 201 aud 203 Tcun ATt nnc, I'lTTSnTJItail, X'A- ANNOUNCES That tlii-y liave rweivitl tiic lurpwt as xnniiK'iit of NEW SPRING AND SUMMER GOODS Th.-.t tlicv hnvo yet haii the jJeuxure of f I'lTillg t (In-jmlilic. Very ::t Takes, In every lino of ii y.m in mt, cn:r,c to ii:r iv i n yuur sliMjij.ins; you pan have ymir vraiily y:ui.sl:uv. Iirily sii)iilifil hy scmlii lis yinirnritcrs hy ' mail. Wf iiavi- this lvraiiili of our Imsincs ! Ilmr.inlily irj.'u:iitl, and all onlerx f.ir (itluT SAMPLES or (J00DS, ! i mul liny i:if.irii)atin:i that may he il.-iml, iLat it is -.-ilU fur us to rivc, ill have ' "i;r must run-lu I and tiromjn ntN-tilion the aim; tlay liiry are ri-cpivivl. In sending ( your oriicrs Mnu- as fxiilicilly as ymi tan ; what vim waul. t .V--Jlo iii. f.il in a-j.l mr regular htru-.i izi-d uilvcrtiscini tits, as 1 1 j y ain';tr term ' time to thin' in a' I of the I'iuMmrh daily i and ri'lifriitus ook!y imjieiv. ' ! RETAIL STORES, 127, 199, 201 and 203 Penn Ave., ; r iTTSBURCH. PA. Iii tlie Hiiidu.j known as the. aST-A.-CTGHOE HOUSE, ! ALBERT RECKE, VmlaALl k. KETA1L MA3t rA(Tl'UEn OF I KIXt and COMMON C AXDIES, CK ACKEKS, CAKES AM) BKEA1), HEA1.EB I OKOCEBIES, FIXE t IOAKS, SMOKIXO AXHCHEW1XO TOBACCO, FOKEIGX AXI) DOMESTIC FRV1TS, t.c. Pnrtie and Picrili-i mpjilicil with Candle. Cakes. Nu.b ami Orapoa un short notice. Al Goule Freli, and aold al A LOW FIGURE, ;all and sec fur yourselves. I wi:i(!- n out with a mil liae or the above K jo.lf, Slav luifa. Has constantly on hand nt his distillery PURE RYE WHISKY For s:ilo 1-y the barrel or gallon, euited for MEDICAL Al MECHANICAL PURPOSES. Orders .'iddroscd to Berlin. I'a., will re-piv romjt attentin. Marek2, LSSO. J AS. A. M'MlLLA. 3 so. II. WATrns IVI'IYIILLAN & CO., rUAC'TICJ L PLUMBERS, STEAM AND GAS FITTERS, No 112 Franklin Strec I, Johnstown, Pa. Snrfwl attention glrra. to House Drainage and Sewer VeolLitkn-. ESTIuIiTESXAEE AND WOBI DONE lathe Eost IV-mijcb xr anncrand guaranteed. NEW BANK Somerset (bounty Bank, CHARLES J. HARRISON, Cashier and Maliagcr. Cr ilectlons made hi a,tl pa.ru of tlie Cnlted KUtea. Charyes moderate. Uatter and other check col lected and eash'id. E igtern and Western crckann always on band. Remittance, made with paotnpt- neal. Accoanta sot id ted. Panic deflrlnic to inrchate V. 8. 4 PER CEKT. FUNDED LOAN, can be aoeommo dated at this Hank. The coo pons are prepi Jd In denomlnatl' Ol of 60, 1"0, 600 and 1.00D. . JHO.HICT . la ua K. BtlVKI. Agents for Firs ani Lift Insurance, JOHN KICKS & SON, SOMI 2R SET. I'A.. And Real Estate Brokers. Perwnswhodefire to fell, hnjr or earnnnce j nwrtv, or rent will rind It to their adrantaav hi mxl'ier the (terrription thereof, aa no chanre ia ux'a unlf nld or rental. Kcal eauiie bnsiueH trenvnili will I jmnnjAlj attended to. - IS S. T. LU TLB & S OXS, lOH HALTIMOHK BTXIKKT. WATCHES, CMISX, SOLID SILVERWARE, D1AMOXD, AMERICAS' CLOCKS, WENCH CI OCXS. Si'MH FLA TED H'ifif, JEWELUY.tc HOLIDAY FEESEHTS I Watches and Jewelry Keikred by Skilled Workmen and: rer.arned by Ezprea Free of Oharfre. Xfo extra charge fur Engraving. Goods war ranted as reiirescnted. octla e KAUHIT. AVRICJIIT AM) THK MIIj L.K1VS 1MYS. Says Will ti j.jlin, "Conic j-'t-t your gun, "We'll to the woixla liiul hevo bhiip fun." W'iat' the rush? I see m ni-cd; Wait till 1 grind this loud of feed." "No, leave the grist till o pet back. And then I'll help grind every favk." "If I should leave it for a stroll, I'm afraid I uiiht forget the toll." "If that's the only excuse, you know. We'll take the toll before we i-u." "With dojrs and ruiis, ciuiiii-ed colllIleU, They urtisl ii the village street, When in the valley, out of fright. Who should drive up hut Farmer Wright. "My grist, I think, mast sure he done, 'Twas promised ere the cloek struek one." 1'p strolls the fanner, in the mill. It was diverted, all was still. Hunting his grist, from sack to saek, lie brought his cane down with a whiu-k, l'or there his grist as stvn before I'liround : and then he raved and tore. . The boys were ttirnlling ocr the hill. And saw the farmer at the mill. Jsays John to Will, "I'm in a plight, I'or tliat's the team of Fanner Wright. Co hark we must, sure as you"re born, And grind that Farmer's outs and corn. For he's a tiger when he's mad ; I'm :i"iaid he might report to dad. We'n hide our puns up at the bam, Then we will spin old Wright a yarn, ilow the olts and cows got in the wheat, I think the old man we tan beat." "Well, well, my boys, I've found you out, Yon leave my grist, and pad about, fo this is the way to run a mill, I seen you climbing yonder hiil." "You see the stock got out the yard, To drive them back "tia very hard. When once they get into the whea', 'Tis hard to get them to retreat." "Oh, oil, my boys, 'tis very queer, io you harvest in the winter here ? You must not think an old man to b at: "Why, Mr. Wright, it's winter wheat ; The town bell now is striking one, In just two hours your prist is done. Pray, do you think I use you ill ; One-seventh we take to pay the mill." "Oh, no, young man, I think it's right, : To toll my grist while I'm iu sight." When Fanner Wright was gone away, Will laughed and roared, and then did say : "John, don't you think it's awful nice. For old Wright's grist; he tolled it twiea." THi: MIMSTEK'S CHOICE. The new minister was spending the afternoon at Deacon Osgood's, lie came to Lynton, a small town in Pennsylvania, in February, and now it was June, and tins was the first afternoon he had, spent with the Deacon and his family. Delia Osgood looked very pretty in a drab mohair, with a tiny bou quet .it her throat, and Mrs. Oe'good looked very motherly and pleasant in her Llack alpaca and milled white apron, and Johnnie Oood (aged live) tried to look as a deacon's son should. The minister ought to have had a very pleasant afternoon f 1iatv hut hi dil not. The first Sunday lie preached in Lynton, and every Suncly since, he had Keen some one in the dea con's pew whom he did not see in the ileacons parlor, cue was a young woman with sad eyes and a lace w hereupon lie nau never seen a smile. He had tried all the after noon t lind out who she was. with out seei ning curious (he was young and un married, you see), and had failed. This is whv he did not en joy his Tisit as much as he ought. At h'c oclocic .Mrs. tisgooa ieit the parh r to get tea, and the minis ter was a Jone witn jonnnie. "So vo u are Johnnie Osgood, are von?" siiid the minister. "Won't you come here and see me?" I canseii vou lrom here, answer ed Johnni c "I hope you are a good little boy ?" stud the minister, smiling. lou ought to be, for you have a good father and mother. Don't, vou think so?" "Oh, I don't know. I want to run awav hut they won t let me. Mv pap t aJks as if he never was a little bov. What do vou think? This afternoon, 'fore you came, he told me if 1 said buJJy' while you was here I le would lloz me. Was you ever a little boy ?" On, yes, answered the minis ter. "Ain't yxiy sister Delia pretty though?" was his next question. "Very," said (he minister. "But s'ne's tlie dumbest thing! The other night I wanted her to do my sums in division for me, and she couldn't do on of 'em. do you believe. I made Melissa do 'em." ."Who is Melissa?" "Why, she's our help. You've seen her. She sits in our seat in church, next to pap. There's tlie bell, I'm going to get." And Johnnie disappeared through the open door, and was not seen again until after the blessing was asked at the well-filled table. After tea the deacon turned to the minister and said: "Mr. llidgely, it is our custom to have family worship immediately after tea.- I shall be" glad to have you conduct it to-night." The minister assented and the deacon raised his voice and called : "Melissa?" Just then Johnny was seen going slvly to the window. ""Johnnie !" said his mother re provingly. . "John !" said his father sternly, "where are you going, sir?' "I'm a-going to get," answered Johnnie, as he slid quietly out of the window, and rolled over on the green grass. Then Melissa entered, andthedca- con introduced her to the minister. "'Mr. liidgelv ," he said, "this is our ahem ! this is Miffs Melissa Perry, Melissa this is Mr. ludgeiy. The minister held the little, hard hmwn hnnd in his a moment, and looked at the sweet, pale face, meek, like the Master's and as clearly pale aa a white morning-glory, ami into die ead blue eyes. Then he mo tioned her to a chair next to him, and opened the Bible. He read a few verses of one of the "ewect, old chapters," and then they sang a hymn. Melissa did not sing. She sat very still and listened, but she only heard two lines : "Itreathe, oh, breathe t'..y iving spirit, Into every troubled brat'." Then the minister prayed, and when they arose from their knees the room was dusky with shadows, Somerset but he was certain there was tears ! on Melissa's cheeks, and somehow I his heart ached for her. i "Surely they treat her kindly," he thought as tlicy left the dining room to the parlor, "they arc a chris tian family. lie was puzzled, and when a few minutes later he heard the rattling of china and glass in the next room he involitarily glanc ed at Delia's hands ; they were too white, too soft, to bo pretty he thought. Melissa cleared the table in tlie dark, and wept quietly all the time. l oor child, she was so disappointed, She had been in a little tremor of happiness all the mornins. for she thought Mrs. Osgood would certain lv invite her into the parlor a few moments to get acquainted with the minister, and after dinner she went to her room and put on a delicate . lilac muslin dress with a tiny lace : i rill in the neck and sleeves. lut i at 3 o'clock 51 rs. Osgood came into ! the kitchen and told her to go and j put on a dark calico, for she must mix biscuits lor sunoer, aud sue would spoil the muslin. Of course thore was no parlor for her after that, and she was rather surprised when they called her to prayers. While she was washing the dishes Johnnie came stealing into the kitchen on tip toe. "Are they through praying Melis sa? What are vou cry injr 'bout? Did vou break a dish ?" - V ..... Johnny sympathized with any one who was so unfortunate as to break a dish, lie had broken one or two himself. "No Johnnie," she said. "Did you burn your finger, then?" he asked, anxiously, with his little iat face upturned to hers. It you did, I'll wash the dishes, every one of em. and vou can wipe em, Mel- iasa." She declined his offer of heln. but he stayed with her until the minis ter went away, and by steady coax , . ing found out the reason why she wept. Mr. Iiidgely walked slowly home from the deacons. He boarded with an aged widow, and he knew by the dim light burning in the par lor when he reached there that she had retired. He was too restless to study or to sleep, so he walked up and down the little garden in the star light, with his hands clasp ed behind him in the style peculiar to ministers in deep thought. There were a great many roses bloming in the widow's garden. Tlie soft nidit air was laden wi'.ii their perfume, and made him think of Melissa. Of course there was no resemblance between the fliwers and Deacon Os good's ''help,-' for ' she was white and droopiug like a lily, and they were in full rich bloom; but she was pure like them, and sweet, like their breath, and thev made him think of her. With the thought of her came a memory of what his old aunt had said to him the night be fore he came to Lynton. Jud.-on," she said in her broad nglish, "you are going awav with the Grace of God in your heart; you've got the old Iiidgely muscle and the marrow of the spirit in your bones, and your feet are well shod, but you lack one thing, you need a helpmate. And, my boy, you're not complete. You'll find it out some day, and when you do, follow the leadings ot your heart. 1 ou ve got an honest liidgelv heart, mv bov and it'll not lead you amiss." Whv did the roses make him think of Melissa? Why did the thought of her bring his aunt's words to his mind? He certainly could not have loved her when he had only spoken to her once, did you say? No, I suppose not. I believe it isn't called love in the be ginning. Johnnie and the minister became very intimate after that night. Johnnie liked him because he had once been a little boy, and he often went to the widows to visit him. He told him about Melissa's crying the night he was at their house to tea, and he told him that she had a lot of books in her bed room that used to belong to her father he guessed there was a3 many as five hundred altogether. One day the minister plucked two or three posies, a rose and a few geranium leaves from the widow's flower bed, and sent the new boquet to Melissa, by Johnnie. Johnnie told him the neit day that she had kissed it after she thought he was out of the room, but he peeped through a crack in the door, and saw her do it. He went to the, dea con's often after that, but he never could get a chance to talk to her alone. One night, when none of the fam ily was to prayer meeting but the deacon and her, he undertook to go home with her alone, but before they had gone two squares the dea con came pulling up to them, and talked "new pulpit" until they reached home. By the last of September the min ister like everything else, had ceas ed to be new. Martha Simpson had tried to get him, and failed ; Fannie Goss had tried, and failed, and he was looked upon as belong ing to "the church." But he was not the church's. He was not his own. : Next to the Mas ter he loved and served, he belong ed to Melissa Perry, but he did not know it then. , . One bright October day the knowledge came to him, with its burden of sweet hopes and trembling fears. Would Melissa take what belonged to her, he wondered. Ilow could he ever find out? The Lord, through the mouth of Johnnie Os good told him how. One morning Johnnie went to the widow's and stayed v '.th the minis ter untill the clock struck twelve, then he caught up his cap and start ed for home. "Stav and eat dinner with me, Johnnie," said the minister. "I can't," said Johnnie, "I have to get. I have to wipe the dinner dislies for Melissa ; she's going to the butter woman's ihis afternoon. Why didn't you go to see her ?" ' "I will," said the minister. Johnnie meant the butter woman, but the minister meant Melissa. He went to the butter woman's (she was a member of the curch), ESTA.BLISHJD, 1827. SOMERSET, PA., WEDNESDAY, and had been there an hour when Melissa came. She ' wore a dark calico dress, and carried a bright tin pale in her hand. On the way out to the house (it was more than a mile from the town) she saw a little bunch of scarlet berries lying near the road. There wag no bush near them ; they were alone with their warm, bright beauty, and she picked them up and fastened them in her dress at the neoavwondering where they came from just as the minister had often wondered where she come from. The minister saw the berries, and he forgot whether her dress was colico or noi After she purchased fiie butter she took the tin pail otti her arm again and went out at tlri kitchen door. The minister Paw her go, and went out at the fron door and overtook, her, and insisted ou carry ing the pail. They talked in a gen eral way until they reacted a bit of woods through which thy had to p;iss, und then he persuailed her to sit down by him on an oJd log and rest. Something perhaps it was the bright day or the independent Autumn air made her forget that she was Deacon Osgood's "help," I and she talked unrestrainingly, with an intelligence that surprised him. At last with delicate tact he led her to talk about himself, and she told him how her parents were both buried on one day, leaving her penniless end friendless, and how she had been bound to Deacon Os good until she was eighteen years old. "They are kind' to you, ar,e they not ?" he asked. "Yes they are kind, but " she stopped abruptly. "But what? Tell me all about it," he said encouragingly. -. "They do not care for me," she answered with great tears in her vio let eyes. They do not love me and nothing can live without care and love," she added. The minister's heart was swelling under his coat, but he kept very calm. "How riuietly. old are you ?" he asked "I am nineteen." " "Why not leave them ? You are not obliged to stav." "I have no home, no place to go to," she answered sadly. Come to me, said the minis ter. She looked at him wondcringly for a moment, then she understood and went to him. When she lifted her head from its nest in his grey coat her eyes were glowing, and the sweet, pale face was beautiful, transfigured. v here did vou get that bunch of berries ?" he asked touching it ca ressingly, as a little gleam of sun light looked through an opening in the trees and feasted a moment on its warmth and brightness. I found it lying along the road and took it up as you have taken me, sac said. The bright tiuts that were gath ering in the west warned her that supper time was approaching, and the minister took the pail ot butter from its resting place at the end of the log, and they were soon at the deacon's gate. Ihe deacon was in the barn leed- ing the fowl, and the minister went out there. Melissa went to the itchen. Johnnie sat on the steps with a piece of apple pie in his hand, and she bent down and softly kiss ed his brown cheeks. "Have you been courtin', Melissa?" ie asked, looking at her wondering y. "I bet you have ; 'cause your eyes look lite iJcuas when iom Iiggs comes to sec her. Melissa laughed, and went into the house. Ilow are you, Mr. liidgelv?" said the deacon as the minister en tered the ham-yard. "It ha3 been a fine day, a yery fine day. How is the new pulpit getting on ?" "I have not been in the church to-day," answered the minister al most impatiently. "I came to ask you, deacon that is, to speak to you about Miss Perry.' "About Melissa?" asked the dea con with surprise. "About Melissa," answered the minister. "Mr. Iiidgely," said the deacon with a lengthening face, "I have tried to do my duty by that girl. I pray for her morning and night at family worship, and I have several times prayed with her alone for more than "three quarters of an hour, never let a Sund ay p iss without speaking to her about the concerns of her soul, and yet she remains in different. She is growing indifferent, and lately I have noticed "You have noticed nothing ot the kind," interrupted the minister. Then he said abruptty, "Deacon I have asked Miss Perry to be my wife, and as she has been a member of your family f-r several years I feel it my duty to acquaint you "Your wife!" exclaimed the as tonished deacon. "Why, Mr. Iiidge ly, she is my help, my bound girl!'' "She is the daughter of the late Maxwell Perry," said the minister quietly. "But, sir, what will the church say! "I really do not know," answered the minister, in a tone that meant, "I really do not care." "She is from a good family," con tinued the deacon, "but she is not a church member, and I fear the con gregation " "I have thought of accepting a call to the Bloomington church," said the minister slyly. 'Oh, no, n !" cried the alarmed deacon ; "you must not think of leaving us, Mr. Iiidgely. Tlie church has never been in so prosperous a condition, spiritually and tempora rily. Don't speak "of leaving Mr. Iiidgely. As to your marrying Melissa, I am perfectly willing. I only thought but there is the eup per bell. Come up to the house." Words fail to describe tlie amaze ment of the Lyntonian9 when they knew for a surety that their minis ter intended to "marry Deacon Os good's help. A few among whom were Martha Simpson andArama tha Peabody hinted that he had better resign, but they were ordered JUNE 29, 1S81. to keep their hints to themselves by the more sensible ones, who, when they recovered from the shock, went to find a house suitable for a par sonage. They decided on a cottage opposite the church for which they paid tho sum of two thousand dol lars. The wedding took place Christ mas morning in thej church. The minister took his bride to his aunt's for a weeks' visit, and when they re turned to Lynton the congregation had forgotten that Mrs. Judson Iiidgely was once a bound girl, n:ul received her with open arms. They have never regretted their minister's choice. A FicndiHh Joke. From the San Francisisco Chron icle : "I think," said a well-known orchestral leader, "the best joke ever played in this town was on an amateur pianist when Gottscholk wa3 here, the amateurs father was the owner of a large hall, and he offered the use of it to Gottscholk for his benefit. There was to be a piece for eight pianos, and the ama teur had to play one of the instru ments. I was leader. 1 thought Gottscholk would have a fit when I told him that the amateur couldn't play three straight notes of the piece. "He is sure to throw us all out," said I, "and ruin the performance!" "Gottscholk swore like a major, but it was no good. The bills were out, and he couldn't go back on his programme, even if the gift of the hall for tho night was no idea that fixed the whole business. The am ateur came down to rehearsal, and we praised him up until he thought ho was to bo tho star ot tlie night. As soon as he left we took the ham mers out of his piano, and made it dumb as an oyster. I guessed he would never know the difference, with seven pianoes going at once. The tuneful convention laughed. "And just as I thought," said the leader, hammering on the table with his glass, "that amateur or his friends never discovered the trick." "No?" "No, sir; he just sailed in and pounded on that piano as if it was the worst enemy he ever had. He was bound to show off among so many good pianists and hammered on his key loard until the perspira tion nearly blinded him. Now and then I looked at him approvingly to give him fresh courage, and every time that I did he gave the piano a lick that nearly made matchwood of it. His friends nil around threw bouquets at him till he looked like a wedding arch, and when it was all over his fond parents fell on his neck in the green room and slipped a check for into his hand. The old man didn't know whether he was standing on his head or his heels, ho was so tickled, and the way he set up the wine for the crowd was a caution. "Didn't he do fine," said he to me, "among so many first class per formers, too ?" I never heard an amateur do so well before the public," said I, "and what's more I meant it, eh. Don't you think I was right?" The niadennburs Train. Several davs ago a stranger made his appearance at Ihe Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Depot and asked Brother Koontz how long before the Bladensburg train would go out. In about twenty minutes, was the reply. then 111 have time to get a drink, won't I ?" "You will." "That's good. I always prefer to travel on a stiff horn of whisky." He returned in five minutes, wip ing his mouth on the back of his hand," and asked: "Has my tram gone yet? "No, 6ir; you still have fourteen minutes to spare. "That s good : I guess 1 II go back for a little brandy.'" YY hen he again returned he lelt in good spirits, ascertaining that he still had six minutes to spare, he said : "Now that's what I call liberal, and IU lay in one more drink." The last one proved more than he could bear up under, and he was not seen again for three hours. Then he came around with a wabble in his gait and an uncertain look in his eyes, and asked : Shay, what time does that bla densburg train go out ?" "In about four hours." "IV hours? Why that'll give me time to get drunk again ; mos' 'com- modatin railroad 1 ever saw, eli .' "Yes." "Shay. I don't want to be mean. You needn't wait for me any longer, 'cause tmay delay others, lies a zhentleman, he is, and I'm a zhen tleman. I am, but when a zhentle man holds a train for me mos' half a day I can't impose on him any longer. Shay, do you ever cry, when you get zhrunk? I do, and if you've no jeckshuns 1 11 cry now. No objections beuig made, he cried. Train "Wrecked. Hartford, Coxx., June 1C A freight train on the New York and New England Ilailroad was wrecked this evening at Willimantic. The accident was caused by some mis chievous boys, who loosed the brakes of a car which was on a siding, and let it run on to the main track, where it was struck by the approach ing freight train. The engine and several cars were derailed and dam aged. The fireman, named Polk, had one leg injured. Not A Beverage. "Thev are not a beverage, but a medicine, with curative properties of the highest degree, containing no poor whiskey or poisonous drugs. Thv do not tear down an already debilitated system, but build it up. One bottle contains more hops, mat is, more real hop strength, than a barrel of ordinary beer. Every druggist in Rochester sells them, and the physicians prescribe them. Evening Telegraph on Hop Bitters. TEXAS IN SUMMER. We continue our notes of a recent tour in Texas. Perhaps they will prove as interesting to tho reader as was the trip itself to our party of strangers in a strange land. Cool and pleasant as wo found the climate on the shores of Aransas Bav, where we revelled in the trade winds, a ndo of 2S miles on the prairie, beyond the reach of these refreshing breezes, gave U3 a taste of summer weather that was almost tropical. Fleas are among the lux uries of Texas in early summer, but it is said that on the 2.5th of June the sand gets so hot that it. either cooks them or compels them to seek some retreat out of the wav of man and beast. They troubled some of our party, but most of us escaped their rapacity : and . as we drove through the brush or rhapperel on our way to the Big Pasture, although the period for their departure had not arrived, the sand seemed hot enough to roast any living thing that came in contact with it. OUT OX THE PRAIRIE. We left Fulton after an early breakfast, on the morning of the 31st of May, and were soon out on the open prairie, approaching the lands of the Peninsula Pasture Com pany, which are but a short dis tance from liockport. There were six in our party, four of whom were ladies, with Col. George W. Fulton as our pilot. Eight miles from liockport we passed through the gates of the Big Pasture of the Coleman-Fulton Pasture Company, aud entered-on its broad domain of 1G8,(XX) acres, or 20G square miles, of what is regarded as the very best pasture land in Texas. We were to stop at the ranch, the herds men's headquarters, ten mile from the gate, for dinner, and to rest our horses, and afterwards continue our journey to Mr. Coleman's mansion, eleven miles further on making twenty-one miles from the gate to the house. When fairly on our journey in side of the Big Pasture, on casting the eye around, the horizon was seen to be as sparply defined in every direction as it is at sea. There were a few small motts of live-oak trees, and some scattered cattle browsing on the plain, but nothing else, not even fences, obstructed the view. By the unpractical eye there was really no road to be seen, but during this and subsequent drives both Colonel Fulton and Mr. Cole man seemed to know every cowpath. These cowpaths were made by the cattle going to the lakes for water, as on suc h occasions they always walk in single file, and pursue the same course day after day. This was the case before the new pasture system was adopted, when an in stinct seemed to guide the cattle in pursuit of water. Then there were no artificial lakes, with the winter raius stored in them for the use of the cattle, as is now the case, and it often happened that the distance between water and the grazing grounds was twenty miles or more. In the dry season thousands of them would die from burniag thirst, and leave theirj bones 'along thej cow tracks, or, on reaching the water, drink to such excess that death was sure to follow. Now there are five or six of these lakes on this great pasture, one of them three miles in length and from fifty to five hundred yards in width, while the Chiltopin river forms its northern boundary. FENCES AND WATER LINES. The reader will naturally feel curious to know how it was possible to enclose tins immense tract of land, but it is all done by about (V miles of substantial fencing, which includes 25 miles of interior or divi- sion lences, between the several grading pastures. The water bound ary of the pasture, of course, needs no fencing, and this is estimated to exceed fill' miles. It is bounded on the east and south by the Bays of Aransas, Copano, Corpus Christi and Neuces, and on the north by the Chiltopin river, leaving only the western boundary to be protected by a substantial fence, which is forty miles long. IUNCOX KANClT. Our first stopping place was at Iiincon Ranch, ten meles from the gate, and here Mr. Whitney, the gentelmanlv superintendent, gave us a cordial wcllcome, and had a sub stantial dinner in readiness for us, after our long drive of eighteen miles from Fulton. Here are locat ed the cabins of the cattle herders, mostly Mexicans, und here are a portion of the immense stock of horses, 1,500 in number, kept for the special use of herders. Consider able farming is done here, the fields of corn showing the richness of the soil, and foreshadowing the future agricultural importance of this vast territory when the railroads that are threatening to invado in, shall open it for settlement. Whenever we passed a deep wash in the land, the rich black loam was visioie to tne depth of from two to three feet from the surlace, and the heavy coating oi grasses, a large portion ot which is themesquite, indicates its present value as grazing land. The mes quitc grass is almost as valuable for fattening cattle a3 oats ana corn, being as nutritious when dried in winter as it is in midsummer. Thus it is that 15,000 head of cattle now on the pasture are enabled to take care of themselves and provide their own provender in winter and summer, and receive little or no caro from the herdsmen. There are a great many varieties of grasses, the instinct of the cattle enabling them to seek out and graze on that which is most nutritious during the vari ous seasons. MR. COLEMAN'S MANSION. We stopped two hours at Rincon Ranch, and at 3 o'clock resumed our journey; a unve oyer tne prai rie of two hours and s-half bringing us two the splendid mansion of Mr. Coleman, which could be dimly seen in the distance at the com mencement of our journey. We had heard that his establishment, way out in the wilderness, twenty miles from his next neighbor, was a grand affair, but when we reached the gate and drove around hi3 beauti- 0 ii AVIIOLE NO. 15G4. ful grounds to the main entrance of wte mansion, we were usioxus.ieu its magnificence and its architectu ral elegance. It is a building about 75 feet square, with three fronts, with a lofty basement, two stories and a mansard, surrounded by a tower, from which the vast plair.s for many miles, with their teeming cattle, are visible. It was finished only a year ago, having been five years in building, and is in many respects an enlarged improvement on the mansion of his partner Col. Fulton. Here we were welcomed by Col. Coleman and his lady, son and daughter, and a more generous and elegant hospitality could not have been extended to guests in any private residence in the land. During our five days' sojourn at this delightful oasie in the wilderness, everything that'could contribute to our enjoyment was lavishl' provid ed, and Mrs. Coleman and her ac complished daughter provided them selves unsurpassed as entertainers, having at tlie time, besides our party of six, four other guests. Miss Coleman and two of her ladies fur nished delightful music in the parlor, both vocal and instrumental, and one of the ladies, a daughter of a "cattle king," displayed such vocal powers and such extensive repet:re as must have commanded favorable attention in the most highly culti vated circles ia the land. I-fXriiY IN THE WILDERNESS. 1 laving given a brief description of the exterior of this "mansion in the wilderness," it is but proper that some allusion should be made to 13 interior attractions. The house, as we have said, lias three fronts ; tue halls passing through its entire length, are about twelve feet in width, the floors being beautiful ly tiled. The cornices, pillars and ceiling decorations are in the high est style of art, both in the parlors and halls, and the mantel in the parlor is oi Italian marble, elabor ately carved with artistic represen tations of night and morning. On the first floor is a large parlor, ele gantly furni.-hed, with a grand piano; a uinmng-room, horary and billiard-saloon, with mi expensive conservatory opening iroia Iheiiura- rv, hlled with rich auf rr.r" plants. The two stories above arc of corres ponding elegance, both iu finish and furniture, and its capa-.-Uy can be judged from the fact th ' all of the ten guests then m the .. juse were provided with tlegantlv furnished sleeping-apartments, without any evidence of crowding. V ;ti:-i oms, with hot and eold w. 'er, re in abundance on every tk..r, aini all the gas fixtures and chandeliers in readiness for the gas-work3 about to be constructed. The surroundings of the mansion are very pleasing to the eye now, but when the improve ments now in progress are complet ed all of which indicate the gor .l taste of the proprietor it will have lew superiors anywhere. Mr. Cole man is a practical farmer, and he has here twelve hundred acres for his home-place, part of which is under cultivation the field of corn then in tassel showing the richness of the soil. A VISIT TO CORPUS CHRISTI. Accompanied by Messrs. Cole man and Fulton, the male portion of our i rriy took a trip over to j Corpus thnsti. Ihe distance Ironit Mr. Coleman's house to Corpus Christi Bay is about sixteen miles, i that bay forming a portion of the southers boundary of the pasture. Our drive, therefore, carried us through vast herds" of cattle, and sometimes we encountered one thous and cows, with calves by their sides. The herdsmen were busily at work, separating the different kinds of stock, and driving them off to the different pastures decignated for them. Mr. Coleman as we passed gave orders, mostly in Spanish, to the Mexican herders, and we moved on over what seemed to be a track less prairie, but our companions seem to know every foot of the ground and the direction of every cowpath. On reaching the bay our companions inspected the work progressing on a dam which is under repair, having been washed out during a storm last August, and then proceeded across the reef to Corpus Christi. This reef is three miles long, across an arm o! the bay, and being carefully staked off, we passed safelv over, with the water nearly up to tne carriage i:eu. -iier crossing, a short drive brought U: ,'.' t ii t!ie moment he te; rougui us i , , . ' e ' would require toe on one of: ., , . i three of these Iynx ,er known , . ,, -i ; .. ; his elbow, ail anxio lent eitv. . . into the streets of Corpus the hottest alternoons ev in the history of this anc We could not discover that it had improved to any extent since our visit seven j-ears ago. Indeed, in many respect there seemed to be less bur-iness activity, although the railroad fever is at its height, and the building of depots and work shops, and the landing and forward ing of the material to the City f Mexico, which is now nearly com pleted to Laredo, is the subject of bright anticipation for the future. If Corpus Christi had n good outlet to the sea, it would undoubtedly be thb terminus of the road for all shipping purposes, but liockport and Fulton claim that with deep water at Aransas Pass, which is confidently looked for in a few months, the road will be compelled to seek a more northern place for debarkation, where it will not be necessary, as now, to lighter ev rery- tV.incr over the bar. We spent a day with some kind j and hospitable friends at Corpus j Christi, who dragged us off from thej hotel, declaring that they could not J consent to our being roasted there, j and seated us in a gallery, where j the full breeze from the bay had free access, we passed a cool and pleasant evening, and were very hospitably entertained until noon the next day. when we again cross ed the reef and took our way back oorsa tholiifr nnst.nre. to Mr. Cole-! x I tiuuiaii .' - w i . . man's which we reached after a five prevails on account of tmsnecessi hours' drive in the cool of the even-! for botfly and mental mvigora ing. ition. Parker's Ginger Tonic fairly . THE CATTLE ON THE PASTURE. The Coleman-Fulton Pasture Com pany's lands are by careful estimate capablo of sustaining ot all seasons of the year about - 35,000 head of cattle and horses, though at the present time there is not more than ' half that number there. During ; tin) pa.- t year the stock of rattle wan ; reduced to aljoiit one half the full 'complement, and the gras. allowed to renew itself by seeding. The pastures arc consequently now cover ed with a heavy coat of mesquite grass, and the company are tilling up their pastures .with cattle pur Q j chased from Texas and largely from Mexico. During our siijotini a lot of 2.' " head arrived iVoin Mexico, and a despatch announced that ,-l,iXl head more, purchased by their j agents at $f', i'J and $12 per head, ammmmmt were on their way, this price includ i ing their delivery in good order in tho pasture. When they arrive the beeves will be ftt-acd, and shipped to New Orkans as soon as ia condi- i tion for market, tho cow3 will be driven to the Barada pasture of S'-V ai:ij(j( acres, used for breeding graded stock, and tho male yearlings driven to the Big Pastures of 10o,UJO acres, whic h is devoted to beeves and stock for the market. The sorting and separating of tlie cattle require ex perience and good judgment, and a vast force of men and horses. The prospects of the company were nev er so good as at present, they having just declared a cash dividend of 4 per cent, for the post six months, while they are very ouiident ot in creasing it to 12 per cent, per annum. Four-filth? of the stock is held by Messrs. Coleman and Fulton and their children, thev having sold onlv 3100,000 of stock to enable them to take advantage of the present price of cattle in Mexico to restock their pastures up to their full capacity, whilst at the same time furnishing two cargoes per week for shipment to New Orleans. IMPROVING STOCK. They have now in their breeding pastures several hundred head of ull and half-blood Durham bulls, and will soon dispose of ail the na tive bulls. They believe strongly in the value of the native stock as a foundation for improving upon, giv ing hardihood to the improved breeds, which is required for breed ing in largo pastures, where the in dividual attention cannot be given that the full-bloods require. The few additional notes that we have of this visit to Texas, including a visit to tlie government jetty at Aransas Pass, must be reserved for another article. C. C. F. IlaUimore American. The Oldest City In the World. Damascus is the oldest city in the world. Tvre and Sidon have crum bled on the shore ; Baalbec is a ruin; Palmyra is buried in the desert; Nineveh and Babylon have disap peared from the Tigris and the Eu phrates. Damascus remains what it was brfore the days of Abraham a centre of trade and travel an isle of verdure in the desert ; "a presi dential capital'' with martial and sacred associations extending through thirty centuries. It was near Damascus that Saul of Tarsus saw light above the brightness of the sun ; the street which is called Strait, in which it said "he prayed," still runs through the city. The caravan comes and goes as it did a thousand years ago; there i3 still the sheik, the ass and the water wheel ; the merchants of the Eu phrates and the Mediterranean still occupy the streets "with the multi tudes of their wares." The city which Mahomet surveyed from the neighboring height, and was afraid to enter, "because it was given to man to have but one paradise, and for his part he was resolved not to have it in this world," is to-day what Julian called the "Eye of the East," as it was, in the tiane of Isaiah, "the head of Syria." From Damascus came the dam son, or blue plums, and the deli cious apricot of Portugal, called fda- masco; damask, our beautiful fab ric of cotton and silk, with vines and flowers rising upon a smooth bright ground ; the damask rose in troduced into Eugland in the time of Henry VIII; the Damascus 1(J d sommU3 t'he worid ovcr for - . , ' , , ,ic.,i its keen edge and wonderful elastici ty, the secret ot whose manufacture was lost when Tamerlane carried the artist into Persia ; and that beautiful art of inlaying wood and steel with gold and silver, a kind of mosaic engraving and sculpture united, called damaskeening, with which boxes, bureaus, ami swords are ornamented. It still is a city of flowers and bright water; the streams of Lebanon and the "silk of gold" still murmur and sparkle in the wilderness of the Syrian gardens. Conkling Socially. To get a thorough understanding of the machine politician he must be judged entirely by his acts, as a personal acauaintancc warps the judgment and destroys what might be a first-class opinion, because the feelings are called into play. Begin ning with the pages, w ho skip and fiit like butterflies on the Senate floor, all unite in the worship of Senator Conkljng. He never has to clap his hands to bring a page, for the moment he begins work t.iat service two or eved dots are at anxious for the honor to serve him. Ihe writer asked a bright little page whv the bovs were so vi in? to no nis omuiiig. iii- replied: "He never sjke a cross word to a page m says : 'My little man, this kindness for me?' his life. Ite will you do Then we ail run. The wayof the transgressor is Eu ropean. A brass band that is all one A dogs collar. piece The material for good soldiers must be planted in drills. . Convict Commits Suicide. j Baltimore. June 10. John iflimiK n colored prisoner in E. the j c;ty jaiit sentenced to three months' ! confinement for assault on a woman jiurig himself to his cell door eanv this morning, and when found was tjea(j. He was thirty-four years of agC a sailor by occupation, and Ci"m0 from New York, A IMfllcoU Problem SoWel. Ambition, competition and over exertion use up the vital powers of men and women, so that a desire for stimulants seems to be a natural 1 c;on. and drunkenness solves the aimcuit piwivu., -- brought health and napmnesa many desolate homes It docs not tear down an already debilitated system, but builds it up without ip toxicating. Enquirer, bee other column. T7