A roKrs MAIL. Four letters and pai' : lhi ono ,ownf A careless hand, i from my cousin Marr; Tc.i jiaes long, and full lo uvcrflowin;; Of beaux, and bell, nd balls, and all things And thii one i well. I cannot quite discorer Just what the indefinite writer doea Intend; He's quite too frankly-cordial for a lover, And much too lover-like for a friend. And here a eister jwet telle her fanciea, Merry readjust as her humor ia; IV earing a web of many-hued roroancea, Oiitof tlieaobenwt realities Ami here is one in marvelous superscription; 1 make it out by guessing at irt . I Ml the truth wiUiout a pioe of fiction I tear it open with a CutUTing heart. Two cabalistic words here greet my vision Two simple wcnls, expressive and defined, And yet tucy crush me with their curt pre cision, Their most polite "Respectfully declined." I take op tenderly roy little vcrsling. That I had written with such loving care; I feel a docs a mother when be nursling Is called by others neither sweet nor fair. 1 rail against the man who thus decree; it. And like the world-renowned worm I turn; "He does not know a poem when he sees it, Elsewise my genius would be quick discern." Or else he wanU to crush out my ambition. To keep from me my due of lame or pelf ; Or flae, C ! moxt judicious, sage decision. It may be he writes poetry himself. If that be true, then may tho muse Cout him, And play npon him an unworthy pranks. May every editor In the country scont him, Andallhis poems be "declined with thanks." And now I read again the little verses I thouhgt so perfect : it must be confessed This line Is bad, and that oncsurely worse is, And this thought certainly fa ill-expressed. It may be that my vanity deceived me; It may be neither jealousy nor spite Inspired the critic who so sorely prived me ; It may be, after all, the man was right. Charlotta ltrry. i i TWO SECRETS. "You don't mean it, Hetty ?" Lloyd Sulton,a good-looking, man Iv young felly, leaning on the half open field gale, looked earnestly in tlie face of the young girl on the op posite Bide of ttie fence. !?he shrank from meeting his eye os ehe answered : 4,I am not accustomed to saying what I don't mean." He made no answer. Hetty scratched industriou-ly with a bit of wild-rose stem upon the trunk of a beech tree which overshadowed them. Suddenly she discovered that she was unconsciously tracing over the initials "L. 8."id"V. H." the latter her own cut in the beech bark. She hastily withdrew her hand and threw away the rose Elem. "Do you remember what you said to me, Hetty, the day I cut those letU-rs ?" asked the young man. 'Something foolish, I dare say," she answered, with affected careless ness, 44 You told me you loved me," he said in a low voice. Hetty stooped and plucked a sprig of clover. "Perhaps I thought so, then," she said, intently examing the bloos souis. "And only discovered your mis take when this rich popenjay from the city made his appearance," said Lloyd, bitterly. She looked up with a flash in her dark eyes. She knew very well that Ehe was doing something unworthy of her, and lowering herself in Lloyd's opinion, as well as causing him pain, and his reproach stung her. "I have a right to like or dislike hom I please," she said, haught ily. "lie seized an unlucky grasshopper, which, at that moment, lighted near his hand, and savagely crushed it to death. Hetty looked at him in sur prise. 1 1 was so unlike Lloyd to de liberately hurt anything. "You are cruel she said indig nantly. "Not half so cruel as you. Hetty, I had no idea you were so heartless and mercenary." The words escaped him unawares. Tletty flushed hotly. "If that is your opinion of me you ought to be glad to have found me out in time." she said. "Perhaps I ought," ho retorted, bitterly. "Ttien I hope you will be satisfi ed as I am 1'' She gathered up the Bkirt of her blue lawn dress and turned away. Lloyd passed through the gate and walked by her 6ide along the grassy meadow-path. "I didn't mean to offend you, Hetty," he said ia a more sulxiued tone. 1 am not offended. I dont in the least care for y our opinion of me," replied Hetty, biting her lip and turning away her face that he intent not pee the tears in her ryes. They had reached a j.oint where the pathway branched right und lelt, and coming along the latter was a portly, fashionably-dressed, mid die-aged man, twirling a cane, with which he was decapitating the tall weeds and field-daisies. On catch ing 6ight of Hetty he quickened his pace. "Mr. Frisbee will see me home. I won't trouble you further, Mr. Sutton," said Hetty, with an air of creat dignity, as she took a step to the left. Now, this leftrh and track was the most direct and freouented wav to Hetty's home : but the rieht-hand pathway, leading along the little stream and .aider hedge, had ever been the favorite with herself and Lloyd. The young man paused now, and standing just where the two diverg ed, Eaid,m a low tone, agitated, yet full of decision : "Hetty, decide now, once for all 1 Will you keep on with roe down this path, or will you go with Mr. Frisbee on the other ? Choose 1" She hesitated, and her color went and came. "You have no right to speak to me so." "I have a right," he replied, firm ly "the right to know whether the girl I love is false or true." Hetty, like Lloyd, was high-spirited, and his look and tone angered her. "G your own way, and I will go mine ! ehe said, proudly. And mithout another word she tamed down the pathway by which Mr. Frisbee tu approaching. Lloyd, as he reached the gate, turned back to look at the two fig- j ures slowly sauntering along the green meadow. ! 1 coula never cave dreamed it oi her," he thought "I believed she loved me. And to cast me off for a fellow like that, whose greatest re commendation is his wealth ! Oh, Hetty, that I should be so mistaken in youl" And Mr.Frbbee, as he walked at Hetty side, admiring her girlish beauty and her pretty, coqnettish ways, and thinking how he would "show off"' his young wifc among his friends did the thought never occur to him, as to Lloyd, that this girl, young enough to be his daugh ter, could not possibly find in him anv attraction save his wealth ? lint poor Hetty, since her father died bankrupt, " had experienced enough of poverty's ills, and heard enough from her mother and Bister to learn to look upon riches as the key that could open to her the gold en stores of life's pleasure. Lloyd could give her comfort and commence, but as Mrs. Frisbee ehe could have an elegant city residence, carriatre and servants, balls in win ter and watering-places in summer, with everything else that she might ! desire. Not that she was light and frivol ous, or longed for mere worldly pleasures ; but, for the time being, the picture had dazzled her, and in her present angry and resentful mood against Loyd, what wonder that she listened to all that Mr. Fris bee had to say, and before she reach ed home had accepted the rich wid ower's proposal ? And yet somehow Hetty felt in lier own heart that this was the most miserable evening she had ever spent. As the davs went by Hetty grew no happier in the contemplation of her brilliant prospects. She turned with a species of loathing from the man she had promised to marry, and her heart went out more and more to the lover whom she had discarded. They sometimes met, but he was distant and proud, and it was not for her to make advances. So she decided to let her engagement be come publicly known, and one day went over to Mrs. Sutton's and ask ed Sue Sutton, Lloyd's cousin, to be her bridesmaid. "You ought hardly to expect it of me, Hetty," Sue said, with some spirit "I think you have treated Llovd badly." "How so V "Because I know he loved you, and I used to think you loved him. You certainly did behave in a man ner to encourage him." "Perhaps we were mistaken in fancying that we loved each other." 'lf you were mistaken, Lloyd wasn't I have never seen a person so changed and unhappy," said Sue, with tears in her eyes. "He didn't appear to be unhappy last evening, flirting with Josephine Willis." 4iOh. that was merely put on ! i She flirted with him and he humor ed her, as a blind. I know Lloyd how proud he is, and that he would never allow anyone to suspect how he suffers. But when we all came home from the party w here he had heard from Mrs. Carter that you were really engaged to that Mr. Frisbee oh, Hetty, he looked so wretchedly, and we heard him walk ing up and down his room for hours, and tossing aoout on his bed ! . I'm certain he couldn't have slept a wink all night" "Where is he now ?"' asked Hetty, a little tremulous. "I don't know. He went out be fore breakfast, and I haven't seen him since. I believe his heart is broken, and that he will pine away and die, or perhaps take his own life," said Sue, with tears in her eyes. "And he had been looking at your portrait, Hetty, for I found it on his table, propped up acainst a look." "My portrait ? Why, he sent it back to me." "Did he ? Then this must be a copy. Wait a moment, and I will get it for you to sec" She was hardly out of the room, when Hetty heard a well known step in the hall, and the next mo ment Lloyd himself entered. In stinctively she had drawn back, and the great book-case screened her from his view. He did not, howev er, look around, but throwing him-s-l." iu a chair, leaned back with clos ed eyes, and seeing him thus she was struck with the change ia his appearance. His face was pale, and bore unmistakable traces of suffer ing, repressed by the strong will which Bhe knew he possessed. But now, alone as he thought himself, the strain seemed relaxed. He bowed his face in his hands and groaned. Hetty's heart beat fast and the tears rushed into her eyes. Oh, if he would bend from that stubborn Cridc, she would eive up Mr. Fris ee, wealth, everything in the world, for his sake ! But for her to make advances never ! Lloyd rose from hiseat and walk ed across the room to the book-case. Hetty shrank more closely into" her corner, and the high-backed arm chair hid her. She heard him rum maging about behind the books on the shelves, and then ehe saw his arm extended to the light, holding up two glass vials. So near was she that she distinctly read the labels. one of which was "Liudanum." This he thrust into his breast-pocket, and seizing his hat turned to leave the room. But at the dor he paus ed, went back to the table, and scratching a few hurried lines on a sheet of paper, left it lying open and went out Hetty, alti)ot as pale as her lover, instantly sprang up, and seizing the Caper glanced oyer it, murmuring rokenly as she read : "Dear Mother : -Can no longer bear agony seek relief home tell Johnny tike good care of you cm lnfnrp von mwt von in" Hetty was trembling all over; but now a great light, as if a sudden re- j sclve, dawned upon her pale face, . and without a pause she rushed from the room, crossed the lawn, and with light, swift steps followed the retreating figure down the road. She overtook him just as he turned the clump of cedars near the stables. Was it there that be designed to commit the terrible deed ? Lloyd turned on hearing her breathlessly call his name. He look ed a good deal surprised at seeing her no longer pale, but flushed and with disordered curls hanging about her forehead. 'Oh, Lloyd, don't do it J For my sake, don't V "Hettv, what ails you ? Dont do ! what?"'" j i ou know ; you didn I see me, but I was in the" room when you took, the the poison the lauda num. Oh, Lloyd, dont kill vour-self-don't!" He looked at her steadily, with a curious working of his countenance. W by ehould I not 7 1 ou would not care, he said, cloom.il v. "Indeed, indeed I should !" she sobbed. 0h, Lloyd, I could not bear it ; it would kill me I" Her pleading, tearful eyes were upturned to his. He looked down into her face for a moment, then took both her hands in his. "Hetty, you arc going to be anoth er mau's wife." "Never, Lloyd never ! I was wrong forgivome!" "You don't mean to say, Hetty" and bis face lighting all over as with a flush of new life "you don't mean to sav that you do really love me?" "Yes, I do! I always did love you. Lloyd., I Wouldn't have told you but "lor this but lor this horri ble poison. Give it to me, Lloyd, that I may feel you arc safe." He answered by taking her into his arms. There was no one near to see them. And then he gave the deadly vial into her hands, and she Hung it us fur as she could into the neighboring pond. "Life is worth living lor now, net ty," he said, as with her arm in his, and her hand clasped m hu own they walked toward her home. "But you will never know what pain I have suffered.'' Most people said Hetty had done right in choosing Lloyd Sutton, af ter all ; and Mr. Frisbee indignant 1 weut bank to the city and consol ed himself by selecting as his wife some other young and pretty wo man. His marriage took place about the same time as Hetty's. Some three years after this, Mr. Lloyd Sutton," a comfortable and happy -looking pater familias,said to his wife : "I believe that any man can keep a secret from his wile ; but no wo man can keep one from her hus band." "Don't you, indeed, dear ? Now, I think just the contrary." He laughed knowingly. "Perhaps I can convince you. I've had a secret from you, Hetty, ever since we were married." "Indeed ! Won't you tell it to me, Lloyd?" "Why, yes, as I don't sec any rea son in keeping it longer to myself. I wouldn't tell you at first, for fear you should feel mortified in know ing it. Do you remember when you pleaded with roc so earnestly not to take roy life ? Well, tho truth is, 1 hadn't the least idea of swallowing the laudanum. I merely intended to use it as a remedy for the pain I was suffering from a terrible tooth ache." "Yes," said Mrs. Lloyd Sutton, demurely, but with an arch glance of her black eyes, "I knew that all the while, dear. You see, I read the note you left on the table, telling your mother that the pain was such that you could not wait till to-morrow to take her to town must go at once, to see a dentist, and that John ny would bring her, and you would meet her there. Then I knew what the laudanum was for." Mr. Lloyd opened his eyes very wide, and gave a low whistle. "You see, love," resumed his wife, stealing her arm around his neck, "I hd no other way of letting you know how I loved you and regretted my folly. It saved us both from be ing very miserable. But" with the same arch look ''don't you think now that a woman can keep a secret from her husband as well as a hus band from his wife?" And Lloyd Sutton, kissing his wife, had the manliness to acknowl edge himself convinced. Uro. Gardner on High Iitving. 'When de ole woman used to tell me dat sartin wo.uen had new silks, new hats, new close, and new shoes once a month the y'ar roun', an' we havin' to lib clus on de same money, it made me mau. Dat is, it nsed to. When I saw men dat owed for deir washin' fitruttin' aroun' like lords, while I had to work seben days in a week an' pay my debt?, I felt like smashin' frew de sidewalk. But got ober all dis. When I met a woman who kin dress like a bank er's wife on de 810 or $12 per week paid their husbands, I doan' 'low myself to even fink about it When I see a man buy in' twenty-cent ci gars, sportin' a cane and takin' champaigne, while his children at home am bar'fut I try to believe dat it am all right When a lady with $300 worf of close on axes me to do a job of whitewashin' in a parlor wher' de best pictures from a tea store an' de best cha'r am un der chattel mortgage, I doan' stop to wonder who she thinks she am foolin'. "Nay burs of mine who owe all de butchers widin a circle of a mile kin pa' fo' dollahs fur a libery rig on Srnday an' I shan't criticize. Wives may go shoppin' ebery day in de week an' my ole woman will keep the cabin jist the same. Since we quit wonderin' nn' speculatin' ober dese fings, we feci much bet ter. Wc know fur a fact jist how fur we kin make money go. If od der folks kin lib like lords on a sal ary ot 4G K) a y'ar, it's a streak of good luck an' none of our buznese. My advice to you is to let such fings pass. Dey are mysteries wid which we have no biznest, an'dc more you ponder ober dem de less you will enjoy what you hab honestly aimed by hard work an' saved by good economy. Detroit 'Free Vr-. Tribute to Mother, . Children, look in those eyes, listen to that dear voice, notice the feeling of even a single touch that is be stowed upon you by her gentle hand! Make much of it while you have that most precious of all gifts, a loving mother. Bead the unfath omable love in those eyes, the kind anxiety of that tone and look, how ever slight your pain. In after years you may -have friend fond, dear friends hut never will you jnd irentleness lavished unAnvmi novo fio"in Tho initmrMGihin which none but a mother bestows, often do I sigh in my struggles with the dark, uncaring world, for the swett, deep security I felt, when of an evening, nestling in her bosom, I listened to some quiet talc, suitable to my age, read in her tender and untiring voice. Never can I forget her sweet glance cast npon me when I appeared asleep ; never her kiss of peace at night Years hare pass ed away since wc laid her beside my father in the old church-yard ; and still luer voice whispers from the grare, ami her eves watch over me, as I visit spots long since hal lowed to the memory of my mother. Lord Macaulay. Indian Fight, 8as FhaScisco, November 7- A Tucson dispatch of yesterday says : "Information is just received of a fight between the hostile Apaches under chiefs Tar and Dravo and United States cavalry in Apache county, in which four Indians were killed and three women and child ren captured. The Apaches were scattered by the engagement, and are making towards San Carlos agency." "The doctor said my wife had con sumption. Tried 'Lindsey's Blood Searcher,' and she has better health than ever." G. II. Hubbard, Hamp den, Ohio. In For Life? f This cell," said the warden, as we reached 212, "belongs to ono of the oldest lifers in this prison. I believe he has been here nigh on to thirty years, and he bids fair to last for full twenty more. Hjj is a very singular man." "His crime then was murder, of course?" . "Yes, Ji-id a strange murder. He was then young man of thirty-two, morose, i: not quiet, and no one had ever heard him use an oath or seen him display even the smallest vice. Had he stolen an axe his friends would haye been amazed; what could their feelings have been, then, when he was charged with murder? One night, with no earthly excuse for offense, he got out of bed, Talk ed three miles to the house f a friend, and called him out and stab bed him to the heart. He then re traced his steps to his home, and returned to bed and slept soundly until morning, the bloody knife laying on a chair by his bedside. He made no effort to conceal his crime, and when arrested had no excuse. From the day the constable put hands on him up to this hour he has not spoken except when forced to. I have several times had to threaten him with the strap to make him answer ny questions.". "Does he mate with any one ?" "No, he comes and goes as if alone in this great prison. 1 cannot im agine w hat inducement .fcould be held out to make him address a question to a prisoner. He shuns all of us as if wc were poison. During all the years he has been here he has not asked a favor of any sort." "Is he ever sick?" "Once in a while, but he never complains. He would rather die in his tracks than ask to see a doctor. He has fainted away at his work lench and cried out in the delirium of fever, but ho has never complain ed." "What do the prisoners say about him ?" "They fear him. I have ' been told twenty different times that he would some day rebel, and that he would have to be shot before he could be disarmed. I can't say that he, is plotting, but we keep a sharp eye on him. He has the eye of a perfect devil, and he will look at you in a way that will make your flesh crawl." "Can he be insane ?" j "No; a dozen different doctors have agreed that he is as sound as any man. lie is simply a uorn devil. He was never known lo laugh or cry. His old mother used to come here in years gone by be fore she died and she said she nev er saw a smile on his lips, or a tear on his ciieeks, not even in his boy hood. He is a hater. He hates himself. He hates everything living or dead. There is a cauldron of ugliness boiling within him and some day it will bubble over. When that event occurs we will be most likely forced to kill him in self-defence." "Has he any relatives?" "Not that we know of. His lather was dead before the murder. He had a mother and a brother, but when he had been here about five years the poor old woman went to her grave. If a man has any heart in him a mother's heart and tears can touch it She used to come here and wring her hands and weep and sob rnd pray, and this fiend sat as unmoved us a rock, even refusing to answer one of her questions. She was old and wrinkled and heartbroken the last time she came. She told him that it was her last visit, and that she had only two weeks to live, and the murderer turned his back on her. The broth er came here three or four times, re ceiving the same treatment,' and the last visit he made came very near being his last day on earth. Taking advantage of the momentary ab sence of the doorman this fiend grasped his brother's throat, and was fast choking him to death when help arrived, fhe brother died several years ago in Illiiois, and now the man is alone on earth. No one asks after him nobody thinks of him. He is buried alive." "He never writes to any one ?" "Never. He has not had a pen in his hand since entering the prison. Most of the prisoners manage to keep posted on outside affairs, but this man neither knows or cares to know. I don't believe he knew of the war long as it lasted. He won't talk,; he can't or won't read; be won't permit a prisoner to talk to him, and as a consequence he hears no more of the world's doings than if he vras in a grave. It must be a horrible feeling for a man to live this way, and yet he seems to enjoy it One day is the same as another. One night is not blacker than an other. Weeks pass and bring.no change. Years come and go and his rouiine is the same. The past is full of blood the future is a long unbroken midnight I have won dered that he did not commit sui cide." "Has he never tried to escape?" "Never, and that is why we fear him. Three different times since he came here he has had good opportu nities to take French leave, but he has refused to go. It wasn't because he feared recapture and punishment, for any one will take the one chance in a hundred on that It was be cause he hated the world worse than his prison. Give him another chance to-day, and he will refuse it As I told you, he is a Btrange case. He is half man. hall devil. Kach year he is growing more like a fiend, and every time 1 look into his eye I think it has a more Satanic gleam. I don't know what the end will be. but I half expect it will be full of rebellion, desperation, and blood. Some d.'y his hate will overpower all other feelings, and he will pick up a bar of iron, an axe, or a sledge, and he will fight us to the death." Detroit Free Press. A Uanrnock' Wild Way. An Illinois exchange feels called to deliver itself: "His hammock swung loose at the sport of the wind," and turn Died tne iion. J. a. Irwin on bis head, and but for the appli cation of St Jacobs Oil, he might have gone "where the woodbine twineth." F,veo so dear Beacon as many others have gone, who failing to use the Great German Remedy in time, for their rheumatism and other dancerous diseases, "have naid the debt of Nature." Sub is oqr motto. Clcvetittd, Ohio) Herald. Whipped Hi v Stepaaugbutr to Death. AsiEEicus.Ga,, Nov. 10. Ed. Par tridge, colored, yesterday whipped his stepdaughter, Belle Holmes, to death. The flesh was beaten from the body. The citizens threaten to lynch him. New Jersey tries to claim Noah because he was a New-ark man. Prof. King at Hnirie. Prof. Samuel A.King the balloon ist: whoso air-shin was wrecked in the Great forest of Wisconsin on I October 14, and who tramped about for five days in the wild roes?, .rc" turncd to his homo a few days ago, "Well" said he to the Prens reporter afterword, "I suppo-e -on want to know something u.i t!i wreck. Wc had a very plnwti.t night of it after asce adine from Chicago The wind was blowing hard . from, the lake, and when we got into the air the cooled atmosphere acted eo sud denly on the baloon that I thought she would fall again- Wo went Up about a mile and drifted southwest erly across the IUit.ois prairie, and when nijiht fell we saw lights dim- merintr from small villages without knowing where we were. The wind died avvav and the balloon remained almost stationary in the clouds all through the night." Signal-service Officer Hashagan, my only companion in the balloon, went to sleep. The car was about tight fi-ti long by seven feet wide, and we had very comfortable quar ters. At the earliest dawn ol the day I saw that wc were moving again. Wc descended impercepti bly until the rope trailed over the roof of a house, and perhaps demor alized the chimney. Then be ask ed where we were, and a farmer who responded said that we were near Spring Valley, Wisconsin. We went up again and passed a valley which looked like a hole in the ground. Presently came upon the most beautful sight I ever saw a vast field of little hills, rising sud denly from the green prairie and crowded at their summits with a heavy growth of timber. We yelled down to ask where wc were of a passing pedestrian, and ho "guess ed" wc were about 200 miles from St Paul Minn. The drag rope was still trailing, and it must have hit somebody's house. Wc heard a gunshot, and then the hum of a bul let close to the balloon. About noon that day we again asked where we we were and a man said not more than eighty miles from St Paul, but that our course would take us a little to the South of the city. I threw out ballast in the hope of striking a higher current, and as the earth fell away and be came a vast plain. I caught my last glimpse of civilization for five davs. After two hours in the clouds ataheightofS.OOOor 10,000 feetjl descended again, and as the clouds broke away under us I believe I said : "Great God, we're in the wood. Hasahagan, do you see any house ?" -As far as the eye could reach it encountered the rolliuir ocern of trees. A river twisted! through the forest, and believing we had traveled northward through Minnesota, I said "We are on the Mississippi anyhow." The balloon descended in the tree-tops, after climbing a steep hill with an ease which we appreciated when we car ried the balloon down afterward. Finding an opening in the forest, we split up the balloon and soon after, began our long tramp to civil ization. Wc followed the Flambeau River, eating berries and part of a hedgehog on the way, and finally reached Chippewa Falls, seventy five miles from the balloon's resting place. You know the rest" PhUti. Pres.. Xotefl on Farm Stock . It is nearly time to consider the winter feeding of farm stock, at least this ia the month to make all the plans and get everything in order lor the cold seiison that will soon be at hand. The question of winter feeding in all its bearings is an im portant one. There is a constant outgo of fodder, and the problem is to so govern the expenditure that the best returns mnv be obtained. Not only must the animals be4kept, but they must be kept vctU, that the opening of the new vear of pastur age may not find them run down, or as it is termed "spring poor" Aside from bringing the stock through in a healthy and vigorous, condition, there is the manure to be consider ed. This should be a good dividend upon the winter's outlay, and there fore it should have a place in the plans for the winter feeding. It cannot be too strongly 'urged, that the best manure is made under cov er. The same system w hich gives the best protection , and care to the animals will insure the most satis factory returns in the manure from them. Feeding for manure is more and more to be a leading factor in the winter keeping of farm animals. A plenty of the best feed, a free sup ply of pure water, ' and warm quar ters, arc three essentials in profitable' winter farming. This does not mean that the animals shall be in the Ktalls and stables all the time, but it does preclude that out-of-door, straw-etack feeding when 'the ani mals must stand in unprotected, shiverine croups the whole nijzht ' ! through. Sheds and good ones Will DIIV iUr Ult:iJA!:iVC."V U LLAV UCbfcCl ; . . ii- f minnra f hat. Will lw m ifiP in IllCin I in . ... av- u t.., , "? I". r, :: -not .to mention th ecou y , , . j 7...-.-. 1 , Tobmyo Smoking Iiailies. "Asiatic nations" the. London World, writes, "consider the use of tobacco as a substitute for intoxi canrs. It fills the hours of idleness, when people have nothing better to do would drink if they could ; not smoke. It ia a quiet und pleasant mode of soothing the brain. Wom en who have traveled in Egypt gen erally come home confirmed smok ers and find to their discomfort that they must keep their new taste very dark indeed or e)se be looked at askance by the virtuous of their sex. IT they dare to smote friend y. ciga rettes with their male, friends they will find themselves ranked among the rapid women who are dangerous. Now the rjnestion is, by what process do English women ar rive at a ' conclusion so strange ? The Chinese lady smokes from childhood, and one of the elegances of her attire id a silken tobacco Euch. Yet tlie English lady who arns to smoke when away ' from her prejudiced little island would be daring indeed if ehe had a tobacco pouch slung around her waist with her fan in Iondon." - - . - , Yi??tq.v, Forsyth, Cq:. (l Gents: -. I desire, to express to you my thanks for your wonderful' Hop Ihtters. . 1 . was troubled-with dys pepsja for five years prcyiops to commencingthe use of your Hop Bitters some six . months ago. : 'My cure has been wonderful. J anj j .it tor of the First Methodist Chqroh. of this placf; an4 - my whole: cqn gregatioo can testify lo the grea$ virtues of your Bitters. Very respectful! v, : . .." IIev. ll. Feiikbek. . Before the.war--Conrtin. !feaby Enlightened. D. R. Locke' (Kasby) tells, in the Toledo Blade, how he was converted by Bed path on tho Irish question. Ktdpath only said, Come with me. He declined to argue; he merely showed Mr. Locke a Beries- of pic tures", of raps and starvation, of des titution indescribable, of misery Je yOnd the power of tongue or jkm' Jo depict' lie counted, in a flvemiles! drive, five hundred women without shoes or stocking, walking in the cold mud. . In Fvrmuy, 'a. tolerably prosperous village' for Ireland, the women not only had neither shoes nor stockings, but they had scarcely anything to wear. Locke saw evict ed tenants hungry, barefootcd.bare legged, and bare beaded women, and pretty womenat that trudging along the cold wet road in a drench ing rain-storm. And next he saw a flying squadron of loOsoldiers fine looking fellows, well fed, well moun ted and well armed with loaded car bines riding away from the scene of an eviction. lied path invited "Nasby into a typical cabin, where in its single room, 10 feet by ll,with a hole in the wall for a window, the wtt earth for a floor, a smoky fire place in one corner, he introduced him to its seven occupants. About the fire three or four children, dress ed in scanty cotton slips, were hud dled.. In another corner there was a brood of chickens, and a pig re peatedly poked his snout in at a loose-hanging door. The little hold ing attached to the cabin had been improved by three generation of lamily tenants Irom three shillings to forty shillings per acre a year. In America Mr Locke thought the land for which the tenant pays S10 per acre rent might sell for 31 per acre! In another cabin Mr. Locke saw a led consisting of four pobts driven into the ground, some stringers cov ered with rough boards, and on the boards dry leaves and heather cov ered by some old potato sacks. This is the manner of living of the Irish people, against whom Mr. Gladstone is employing the "resources of civili zation.' When Mr. Locke entered the Emerald Isle he was prejudiced against the Irish. He says he tried to convince Mr. Parnell that he was a demagogue; that the Irish had no reason for agitation; that Ireland could only be properly ruled by the English; and that they ought to be thankful to the kind Providence that had given them a superior race to protect and care for them. After a few days with Redpath, Locke was wet, weary and mad. The day's sights, he says, 4were too hor rible for talk.' Mr. Locke will not dispute any more with Parnell. The Reynolds Monument. Hon. A. G. Curtain, president of the Reynolds Monument Association at the instance of the executive com mittee has issued the following to all soldiers who served with General Reynolds: At a meeting held at the Union League in Philadelphia, on the 1st of Ju'y, 1SS1, the eighteenth anni versary of the death of General John Fulton Reynolds at Gettysburg, it was resolved to form an association to erect an equestrian statue of that heroic soldier, ilr J. E. Temple subscribed twentv-hve thousand dol lars. 'The Grand Army of the Re public, the society of the Array of the Potomac, the Pent - vlvania Re serves, the Third Uniteu States Ar tillery, the J"ifih and Fourteenth United States Infantry, the Associa tion of Graduates of West Point, the First, Third and Eleventh Corps and Bufbrd's Cavalry Division and other military and civil organiza tions heartily endorse the proposed monumert a fitting recognition of Reynolds' services. : All soldiers who served with Reynolds are invi ted to contrihutc.according to their means. A dollar from every man who was with Reynolds in his suc cessive commands, from .the time he left West Point uutil he fell at Get tysburg, will abundantly- provide the sum rexumd. 8end whatever you can give, be it much or littIe;do what you crn to secure additional subscriptions, and forward them to J. G. Rosengarten, treasurer, No. 532 Walnut-st., Philadelphia, 'who will promptly acknowledge the receipt. . nBaaVkWBBBaaWavaBBBBBBpnBB How She Helped Her Mother. . "I don't see how I'd t elong without Mary, nohow,'' Mrs.Blucli er observed, pausing to wipe the perspiration from her aped- features and put another ladle of soft: soap into her eteaming : gudtt, while her daughter' voice at the piano could be distinctly recofrm'zed", floating oat from the adjoining parlor. "I don't see how 1 would get along without that gal, nohow. Always on these days when I have the tiringest work, she just picks out her nicest pieces', like "Sweet rest, by-and-by," "Moth er's growing old" and sings 'em ' for me afore she goes out on the lawn wjth the other voun? folks. Taint cvt ry uai uu 't; pu UCl tC SO UlOUghUUI, 1 ' XT a C J km tell you.. Now. most of cm ud . . . .. just bane awav .with "Jordon is a . Wh ,em np hliza bane, or something ot that kind, but she ain't none of that sort. he is a pile ol comfort to me a pile of conkfort' And Mrs. Blucher funned herself, vigorously with a soiled apron, preparatory to running the clothes throngh the second water. , , Atiootl Word for Colored Men. We have heard it said, by , not a few proprietors, that their negro tenants arc habitually honest and prompt in payment ol ; their dues, while the reverse was true of white renters of the land. This is greatly to the discredit of white tenants. We" are told that much progress has been made in some of the neighbor ing counties by colored farmers es tablished upon large plantations, owned by white men of humane dispositions, who assist the tenants with advipe, and, when needed, mon ey. These colored people form a colony, work hard, improve their dwellings, plant fruit tries, aid! make comfortable sums of cash an-! nually., Merchants here praise their honesty, and do not fear to trust them. Agitata Chronicle. . . . . Desperate Hetertfr. ' JuesJuv evening Capt. Win. S. M'Cuskcy' Jjfft I'lnlatklphia ou Cin cinnati express, having; in charge a lot of ubout Sl'ty recruitu for the regular army, whom ho was taken to San Antonio, Texas. The crowd was prettyr rough, and while the train was running at a full speed at point between Egle and Paoli one of the men jumped from the win dow of Jh'e tpter 'closet Ife was fount Litter iu the night by Con tjuctor RiiVej of ftn acp oruinpdation. train whifh followed, antl wpcin ex amination it was . ascertained that his arm was sprained and head bad ly bruised. , OTA '"feihv hi . .. . I avawHn, r--. ... HEM i Ky Baku LUI. i ... .r ---. - - r Hauralgia, Cciaiica, Lumoaga, Backache, Soreness of tho Chest, Gout, Quinrj, Sore Throat, Swell ings er.J Sprains, Burns end Icatds, General Bodily ; ' Pains, Tooth, Ear end Headccho, Frosted .... Foot and Ears, end all other Pains and Aches. N Prartim,0.r.rth Sr. 0J . t.. .imitlr Hi d rhrmp kxf! l trim miii "r I with puin cut haw ebn nU Vmw pr-f f u EOLD BT DEUG013T3 AHD J3EAIX3T A. VOGELER & .CO., j fOR S.LK T . . . C. N. BOYD, ' DBUOCIST Kwiarmet. Pm. I urn Ttrs r"rrrr?e VHY APE SfCK?iV J'err.utf vt rror thttf Cf'l urrruKj io WcmM e&jwl or itrpi-l. unit ;.. I wmonar huV'ore wi tnio ... If.'iaf thuuldU expalt'i nmurM.K. j WILL SURELY CUfiE iKiDMEY DISEASES, I LIVER COMPLAINTS, 4l.IT.rn. COSSTirATlOX. miSABT M nr.iFV.rS. FEU ALE WEK.NI. jj A.N scayoca IKDF.B, tjiy ewuiiijfru adieu of Ultse vry.nt ami fi ratveii: J Ihtir poicir lo ,'jwic tff aiua. l it-u. .nr,. p.ilinas la and ar!i? (I Whrlormtattd tilth Pil. Conttlpatien: Y fftj rriplittaed r disordered KiilBT! j Ifl Y.hJ dar bmtbm f rdari $ Vu KlDXF.Y-WOUTtmirfjxtrlr..'tiulA Af 'ltl j)Utln fry YrrtM" Vara. Intlr iJnaowiaHupo' jtlu.li iibimbi".-tKii: llnwIk-iiM. Aiu In UiitfriT.wj--L3 (ntti, t Uw tmalun naU; j j,rejMrU u ryll . t with dI in :tl-.er trcrra. H J.t rr or Tot'R Mtt-GGisr. riucz, 41.00 WEILS, ItlCUlBDSOS A Co.,rrop's, roi mi th ry s r vrnirctwi. TTTF ran rai.k t . C N. BOYD, - ' MmriMl, Pa. Hop K yam ro juonr wl rlt or nl U ' ponrAmttA or fauuruln tioa : if T-rtt af 4kr- tM . . i 3B mm. nil u Hop Bfttofft W-rer yoan vtMnrrrr y " tool yoar ostnn Utst or t&ioauUUiuir, f.Tw u Kidney dtstr that murL t av Imm'ii pnr-utf taU Hop Bittara. mpvixxr ... . AT J- nxwwjnanifmw D. U C wU AaMQlnt of lha ttmacHw, rtroiikemiesii. Ih n r tor Tm w1 to nnd itmm Hop Stttor f;j wf if a a au mriritLtiTr' Ut It may! invopur life It has! evc h un ci roCs . C. N. BOYD, : : Somerset, Va. . . THE CREAT . IWRLrXGTON -liOUrJZ ' tV"Kr oHirr Hnr rutin Thrvf TTirruita Pa "enircr Traina Irnlly Uitweu Chko, . Muinn, Council lth:fts (linalil, Un olu. St. Joseph, Atchimn, Twka ti1 Kansas Oty. Direct ronoectioiia for oil point in Kan:u, Nebraska, Colorado. Wyomini. Mi i.tan-i, X. vada. Sow Mexico, Aitona, li!abo,Ore?un ami California. The Shortest, STieeIict nr.d Men Con-.f.Trta. bio ttoute riaHuinUxil lo r'urt Sroti. l)enion, IMilas, Hounton, Austi:i. Kun Antocio, Ualt ton and all point in Texa. TbC iroequaled indiKmr nt f.ffere.1 tr thi Line to Travelers nrnl Tons-M. nre ns fcilow: Tao relebratel Pullman (Iti-wheeK l'uUi bieoping Car, run only on thin l.iiw. (.'.. ti. & , y. Palace Drawing-Koom Cais, with Horii.n'a Ueclinlnir Ilia Irs. No extra rharOT for Scats In Uoctininv Oiairs. Tlie fanioiw C- ft. A V Palace DlniiieCar. Honrenu Pm- kinn frm Otto with Elffmnt HlKh-ltickod Km tun Ke. volvinir Chair fur the c3Hu.ivo ii' u or flrsi cl.t9s pansennera. Steel Track and Pupprii.r Cguipment. Mtn blned wtth their Great Throuub t n - Arnuit'e mcnt, makes this. abo-e nil mhi-rs. the forrte Konte to the South. Soutli-t i tho Va t Vest. - Try It, and you wilt tlrvi traveUc? a luxure inrtcod of iilscomforu Through Ticket vin XhH CelohmfiHl Line for aale at alt office In the I'liiicd Suicos mil Canada. I All Information nlrnut Itat'- of Fan., t-Iei n feta' Car AoC"tnmoitlim. 'linm 'Jables, 4o will bo cbuerfulJ.v ici iv, una n'lt nl t rcr to any address an ulesrant t'-(. ;rf i f l iiit,l States. In color, l.y applmnjr t i s J.O. A. BKA.V.Uiti' ts.-ti in Ai-rn!. Kerer falla to ears aar kldser dlvain K-1-1 I aotmert eJso. aumm of tbe btodcler. - Til loenou rmnii locnoUaeuea of arliHt, (wetitnotTob aTl I rxatmalj ia poxtttw care. f. r t-J lacTTarsoi yawn, rLw n a ismmurc. TTXA. . f a Pr.rjr.tA. 1 Fnrnorro i.y mil faotirf. Are n mi m w . a mwitpeiTmnkviu ot vnhth I. Iw ImmeauM ,tdf. i w nrrwafl unNnuuk. ttnipta i, i Puma A ''.mi curat I T tnelwHCTifiT, at WO', toaiw r. null Itjy-tlM.WctUy on P&scra. 1 I or nniiinf timtrj of both t. . i, iuf to-1 1 not nature or tU kasi gi-Uiy Uenctt, Ll LJ RE.HArrMA54CO5boro,OWo. fcjfT-wueaeaiwaataririta- , . 4 4 i rOVSAtE BY ' 7 3Tf XOXD, Brveght, zi F43 14 i j I y If Txvriwat Jil joauva '3 I S of(jiff.a 1 a vt tot- II twloItumuauf V lr.tcij;ocrfci. H I loot 4rXie mrauX -1 ! i. fc t.-- a II illmtlukolll If Hi'tamiKiitti a Sonera. nwwHop". gl mm M IKMi BMISA 3-E mw .... . -ii: I NEVER a-5ir-- ir-i it OFinrms' Vj 1 11 tToita.nak in I i in i Tho Somerset Herald ! Railroad sched (ESTABLISHED 1827.) Oaa of tba leading Papon cf Wattara . PcnnsylTanix ; IS STMilllT MEM. HAS DOUBLE THE CIRCULATION OF ANY OHER NEWS PAPER IN HE COUNY ! It Will Contain the General Hews of the Day. h: Elitjrhi :nii Local DEVRTMEISTTS Spak for ThemBelTes. 93.00! &H1TEAR! A2.00 A TEAK ' ' 2.!0 A YEAR! iOQ A YEAR! - $2.00.4 YEAR! $2.00 A YEAR! 2.00 A YEAR! 2.00 A YEAR! $2.00.1 YEAR! ?2.00 A YEAR! . , $2.00 A YEAR ! SCO A TEAR! A S3 OO! in our: JOB DEPARTMENT! WE HAVE THE BEST FA CILITIES WEST OF THE MOUN TAIN. ftaT-WK are prepartnl to furnieh on short notice, and at a great re duction on former prices, all kinda of . job yy on k, uuch af : LETTUt HEADS, PILL HEAP, - ' EXYELtilES, BrflXESSCARPrt, YJi-ITlXO fAUDi"-. .! WEPDIXtJ UARIV. PKWRAMMKS, HORSE RN.LS. SUP BILLS, irOfiTERS ;t ABELS, TA'IS. . RECEIPTS NOTES OK ALL KIXD, DODGE1LS, (1RCTLARM, AC, I OrJer rtv,4 A disianre will revfive jiiumpt And careftil ottentUin. j Ad.lfesv i The Somerset HeraM, . PRINTING HOUSE ROW, Romerae.Pa)- j SOMERSET 4 ! iUll.. n.!i ... . ", iti.. j W.I Tri. dw t. vsjutt - tin. at : . m., ad I d ! mi i " W. pennsylvanuce7tralra. Lcart, fmcitus Ll. ' i i . n u-mis 1 1 . k .. .. . lU. Coo.il t.x... ... , 5 1 ""-. i-iun.,.....!..;!;-'...:- Plt:b.,.h I,. JuhoMuwa Aee.4., f . .. . w V ra , Motif. r pT. uutv. ........ ft m, r. ... JubtwU-WD Anr.,m. ... 77' H,ti, i . , . ......a 4rv i , . iraina wrvc. ralr 1 hm 'i Line, mn , aaau.ctUv 1 J Clnelnnatl txprn, t list BUlr.vlll. l.7.- "1" L, . . .MWIIU.Ito f . ' J u rciOe mmt J.njt, . . A1M AMBK.Ifc? .P"- eoooei-t UD I ft. ttwn.ij'; U tli munitaK. nl l in, i i" l' and mU m imVZ K BATi.MORE i okio Rail;,; PITTSBCKOH UITis oj 111 .l,jrt from .mM" Dd 1WSUKJ,MMkt,. IAJT. . MAIL. no -ro.m - ll'l - ll: 11: H tM -: -7 .W " 6 K m. Rr.l.io.k hnmU Ford VI. Plnmuit AnniMriu Cnlonfowa Ohm Y Tl Rx.kwovl ..IlUAI. '.!l -V: - V.i Urudiu&a glunura K. m.iuir c mi;ii. ' fu ii-tu r. Jl. la niani tk Kr. Jajxirjrb&iul ,t iu i w i . ... v. r A. JL. " I Tb matt dlrert sn4 pieu,,. a.l S.,th Tl WmawnittwintT Tbruairh Mll IchtIuc t t rlvo t MbiDirtoa .t r. L a ., r. M.: PMlpelphi.:lO..: jUv' . : KlchauDii ll: A a. m TLrvuvB ExpnM. leTinjlP , . on at Mbinxtoa mt s m. m. A. M. ; FMiAutliibla; i.u r.m 's i ThroMh Mill tr!im )l-t. Vxyrm trail dailTexoe S4r. AecummoilAtioB Iruu aqJ Fffa dAiijr except SobiIaj. Ticket office, mrtwr flfU Athi treeta, and depot otb Oraat ui rutsbnrtrh, l'x. C. K. URn, Ota. Piwuf, ' I. Al. COLCOeiKriiTcMi ' ..TIIE; Chicago & it.vr lwa. It the OLD ES T! B EST UPSSTunTl EqriPPEI! udanei : Leading Raiiw -OFTH&- WEST AND NORTHWEST It li the rhorteK anil beet rot tTr and ill pouit" in Xnrthera lUinuta. k.n. butf. '' Sebrafk. ('.liforaie. Im Atw Cutarado. Idaho. Mod tic. 5eria Council Bluff, Orf DEXYEIJ, LEiDTlUT- ISALT LA22, ZXS Hi! DEADWOOD, SIOUX crn Ceder RapW. Dm He! wo. t Pmnl, In Ik. T.mtj.FlML AJMf 'b.e!C Milw.aAee. trreen H;. tM Marquette. Ftvd da lAt. Keensh. Mub. St P.L Ala"" OwstuBM. and pJI pMete ia Hubm" Wtpenusta end tneNjrtheX Al Ovaoell BluS. the TnUM"f North-W,Meni and tbe V. V. B n arriTe al ud om toe mtat Jliit la" . . : . Ut - the Lake .-bore. Mttbiiru lotr0. 0-1 iiki.. v. r- . i L....... - and Orand Tranh H rs and t i ran Handle Kuatee. 1 riM e.ia)eetla '1 redate. ltlabU.LY tl.1"" IPiillnanHctdKi ! aaTu ! CHICAGO and t Ioiirt oo Ticket Aea Z1'"7! thU roa.1. Examine roar TW aojr If thee de not read orer ft deaot Ballwar. Winn thi wenera tfauwar. .... J If Tua wi.h the Bt TtiTellM i 1 uooe Too win ooy y-' -ANi WILJ.TAKE ?0f Maatria HraiTT,l V. r. a j Chleavo. FEMALE COlU PITTSBUKGH. PJ .v-.:.l..t-llv t-ll Will 1 lTI i 111 ... . , ty ; weu rann -i ...ertits ! Ircthia ef nnoeral' and ,11 , Inic fta-ly uf natural Kht 1 tmr nk . . . i aoirie f:"-:' y ,( . 52 (fa. 13 ft .i .