S ' ' r ation. -.4 LI rr p., 'art. " K .to a, i I t Kaflro '"I lea! rrin, a laor ( 1Ul,u) l4 iiy J i i rriv,i .. 'p.uw p. tnj " . J '. Ja. nP '. Bl IB. 'A. 10. p. f- ID and eet, Ac local Sun. 'tiny. Mob. wiu BS- anj li IB . Ml it. f i 11 inicrsct i ' art. crald, ,-lay . .tharwlsa SI so : iw .gsrs- a,!"00 " " 001 0 hla for the nlk wrwv . fts on rotofBM to aa- ..- former m 1 Somerset era! a ESTABLISH. 1837. ' Somerset, I v tV-AT-LAW, Somerset, Fa. iSsEV-AT-LAW, Somerset, Pa. lKXEY-AT-UAW, iTI Somerset, Pa. VOL. XXX. NO 42. SOMERSET, PA., WEDNESDAY. MARCH 29. 1882. WHOLE NO. 1603. Al.UUT A. Hoknc HOME J. Scott Wttn. & WARD, SUCCESSORS TO so. EATON & BROS., 27 FIFTH AYEXUE, PITTSBURGH, PA. "TT?. '.TTokxET-AT-LAW Somere. Somerset, Pa. to Mammoth Bioc. ;S& to'iUi pr.m.ptnoM and AU'bueine entrust-- W.H.ItrWEL. TH & HOTEL, to their ear tST'ijwt .met, c;po-it U ill be uc.coi.noLX. & COLBORN. iTTOKN EYS-AT-LAW. ..teJtoonre-m..rVt- X 5ST" readable terms. ) KIMMEL. iTTt'KKtV-ATXAW, Somerset. Pa. . ,11 business entrusted U Ml ears ai .mlnic counties with pronipt M Main Crvw street. ! vTTKKSON, r iKXEY-AT-LAW, i Somerset, Pa. r-.tro.t. to hi. ear. will be at- t ,,rompineM and fidelity. VF. SCHELL ATTORN EY-AT-L.AW, Pmikm A root, Somerset, isota blatk. Pa. ;T1SE HAY. ATroKNEY-AT-LAW i -a KfJ EUta, Somerset. P i ,.ii.ew euirosid to his can ..will wtia in.niL, mc.KNEYATXA .t:i- i stit Bttlldtns- ' ATTORKEY-AT 1-A', Somerset Pa-, -. .ine-entnute to.mj eara at iiii .ues. and fidelity. SPRIISTG, 1882. NEW GOODS E7SSY DAY SPSCIAITIES la Embroideriet, Lacei, Millinery, White Goods, Hand kerchiefs, Dress Trimmings, Hosiery, Glovas, Co-sets, Muslia tad Merino Underwear, In fants' and Children's Clothing. Fancy Goods, Yarns, Zephyrs, Mate rials of All Kinds for FANCY WORK, Gaits' Finiifti GcoSs, k, k vera raraovoa is KEUFBrrrrLLv bolitited. MTOkDKUS BY MAIL ATTESDED TO WITH CAKE ASD DISPATCH. mart m. LTDIi L PIKIRia, L? ITO, till, 1 l o V i s. A SOMERSET COUNTY BANK ! (ESTABLISHED lvSTT.) CHARLES J. HARRISON, CASHIER ASD MANAGER. rolled 7oUectlocs made In all jrti of the suiiea. CHAHGES MODERATE. Parties wisMna; to apod money 'West ean be av eommodated by draft od New York In any sum. Collection made wis h promptness. V. S. Bonds hoaicht and kM. Money and valuables aeenred ttyoneof IHehold's celebrated fatea, with a Sar reni k Y ale as.iO 00 time lock. ACCOUNTS SOLICITED. -All learal holidays obscrvad.1 det-T 07 O WEKK. 12 a day at bora sally & I V mart. kstly ontutrree. Address Taca C', Anirasta, Mane. Mar.la-lyr LYDIA E. PINKHAr.VS 7ZG3TASL5 COlIPOTnTP. Is n rrv't'tve Cnre tS Pnl.rnl .aaplalaM aa4 Wnlnaal nM.au l.amr aM fcatal. BaalatiM. ; ; .. . . r" r:.!ln 'j V.e worat form of Faaal.Con fMiax a.'l vT.iriau troubles, Inflamanatieei an4 nrera t oil. Falling and IHxplacrnwcU, and ta. eonagqwant rplnal Wcakana; and is partlcalarly adapM to the l l.a; of life. It r'l! !!xm.1t. nn J erjil tamors frcm th. b-ras la .a ii - ftcre of AvreinpmmL. Tbs trDdMcytoeaa. rrra-Lt l i.: u tn titer. la c Wetted wij speedily by its aas. IS tvwoT . fatatneaa, natnleney, destrnysall eraTina for rtiniuIe-L--. and relleTea wakness of the stosaaek 21 cures !!:: ?. Ccadacbea, Kervons rrostration, euerai I't" , , KleejiamaBeas, IprMaton and lndl aoCt a. IhAt ff-e:::ff of twrtna down, eaasiea; pala, we!c!:S aiwl bacVacite, Is always prraianeBtly cured ty Hm toaa. It will at all tiroes and BBdwaUdii iilaatanrnaetta hanaony with the laws that covera th. fenaht system. For th. rwraof Kidney Complaints of either ssz this ComTMmad ts ansurpaaied. l.VDIA F. ntn- TEGETABLE COM POl'XDis prepared at S3 and S3S tfcatera Atsobs, t.rna,Xaa. Price fx Six bottles for fx ScnttymaJ In tie form of pilli, ali i n the form of laarn.-res, on receipt of price, 53 per hoi for either. Krs. rinkhan lr. 'ranswrn ail letters of Inquiry. Sewl tor pua3.l1 Address aj a'jovc. .r;.a ia rujier. SCPERSTTTIOX. Like the Uack ahadaw of some ancient power Some vast and formless horror, given to he A tyrant to oar weak credibility, Spawned on the sad world an eril honr : That demon, Superstition, with its dower Of suffering, death aad ghastly prophecy. Haunts ns who hate and curse it and are free, ' Who lore the truth as sunlight lores a flow. r. It broods above the strong and starry mind. And seeks with weird devices to affright The spirit which moves ns with a noble hope. It rouses all the dtad pant, aud we find It's spectral memories in the lunar night, Like dreams of witches, dangling by a rope. A YOUXG liAWTEIVB HIT itt"t -Vrc: ; tv- ir::hoot i.rrr. r. 1 , P. .T. T '. r cup? rohfet-'-utJort, S..I -.-ac r. " ' ' ' - icer:t ' 'r be-. .' j- !-oi u.l U:a. i tor sal bt G. X. BOYD, ' DRUGGIST, Somerset, Paw $66s week In roar own town, fh oatet free. No risk. Evervininc new. Ital not requli-d. We will (nr 1 to ererrtbtna-. Many are m sainsr fortunes, toadies make as mora as men and boys and cliis are making; great pay. Header tl yon want a nusinesa at wnicn yon can mate, vtmI TUT all tha limn eon arnrk wrlra tnr nartlc. uiars to k. Uaiutt A Co.. Portland, Maine. Dee 18-ly. 1SS2. 1882. UMH. KOONTZ. " 'attoksev-at-i.aw. Somerset, Pa., iiromot attention to bnslnesa ntTiit rJaTrSiSaaaswa adjoining .nUea. mUiiC Uuass Mow. i l rroii, ATTIIKNEY-AT-I.AW, Somerset. Pa. Entrance, estates 1 examined, and all leaal bu lineal silt promptness and noern j. ....ik Riftr an stairs. I siraet. Colleetioos ma-le, I EAEH, ArrOKNEY ATXAW, I Somerset, Fa, n adiotninreonntics miru'siedto him wUl be promptly ILTJAM COIXINS. fctX riST, SOMEKSET, PA Cimmotti Itlock. abora BoTd'i Pn r he can at all times be found prepar tmdsolwork. such as P1""" teeth of all kinds, lwt material inserted. trperaUcos n ar w WTWn -i M. II 1L ir. 1 JVSTICE OF THE PEACE, Somerset, Pcna'a. ; m. U.S. KIMMELL & SON . . . 1 . 1 i 'beirprofessiopalaerTicCTio im viMr.it. tine of the mem' r ;ns can at alOimes. unless prorcsi i uhe tind at their office, on Main i 4 the Itiamonc. K. MILLER has irma- ;mtrA la Rcrlln for tiie practice ol a.-Uttioe opposite Charles Krisjinjr- :. KRUDAKER tonders his eal srrrtces to tha cltjseos of Kom r.l:y. omoe In reskteoe on Main y. the Diamond. . MILLER. FHYr-lClAN kSL'KtlbU, ? t tc S.oth Bend. Indiana, where te il ty letter or otlierwow. 1 1IX BILT.S I DEXTtST. J ( Henry HeBey" store. ;Maln Ctwaa Suet, Pa. 0XD HOTEL, ! IYSTOWN. l'KXN'A. i tar and well known house has lately -(tilt and pcwIt re tit ted with all new I tsnilture. which has made It a tctt 5 iitns: place tor the tra.eltns; pohllc. J w roo- s cannot be surpssaed, all ba- J. with a larre pet.llo hall attached i . Also larare and roomy stahlinc J "MMr can be had at the lowest po- - , . Hi aw mal AMV IX CVSTER. Prop, hi. E, Cor. ltiamond Stoystow ,Pa OOO C.alIon iE FERMENTED WINE, DR SALE SPRING and SUMMER A-jSnNTOTINCE MENT To the People of Somerset and Vicinity: L M. W0"0LF, The loyiular On'o Price Clothier and Glen's Furnisher of JOHNSTOWN, PENNjL Would respectfully announce to the People of Somerset and vicinity, that through the convenience afforded them by the S. & C. 11. It, to visit Johnstown, they can now avail themselres of the opportunity to purchase their CLOTHING of the finest MATERIAL, BEST MAKE, LATEST STYLES, and NEATEST FIT, at the same or even lower prices than they have been paying for or dinary shop-made goods. la. M. WOOLFS style of doing business has gained for him THE LARGEST TRADE IN JOHNSTOWN. Discounting his bills before maturity, and buying all goods . . 11 y . iinT t inn i firn a1 in large quantities enaoics mm to a3sxx ur.Ai'in man anv other Clothing House in Johnstown. OXK miCE TO ML. XO DEVI?1T10X. XO GOODS 3IISREPRESEXTED. Vl.L GOODS MARKED IN PLAIN FIGURES STIiTCTL Y OXE Pit ICE TO ML. Money Refunded When Goods Do Not Prove Satisfactory. L. M. WOO LF, The Popular One nice Clothier and Gents Furnisher. XAIX STREET, .fOIIXSTOTVX, PA. .MarSt LOOK HERE! VTbeu you come to JOll SSTejwj H. do not fail to call at the PEOPLES STORE 11 NO. 3 MORRIS ST. i"ietoerat A. i. Cawttrcr i-rart. Pa or at bis A o.'s & GROVE FAR1I t'rrh of S4ccrsei. the place of msna 4Mlci)ii is a list of the kinds ia X1 Berberry, BLACKBERRY, CURRANT, WILD-CHERRY AKD CIDER WINE, ' euid la quantitv to' suit perchsser. 'acs aied tur medlraJ and sarra- : also aa a bevwraaw by 'w wma. "2R SALE I. TO MAKE YOURP URCHASES ! We keep constantly on band a full Una of foods usually kept In a First -class GENERAL STORE!! which me will sell at a VEBV LOW mars; in for profit. GIVi: US A CslLL! TIIE WOBL.D-FAMED BDRDETT ORGAN IS FOR SALiK ONXY BY I. aJ. IIEFFLEY, UUSIC DEALER. SOMERSET. PEHN'A. BEFOBE BUTDT3 TET THE BUEBETT 1 "IT IS THE BEST !" It Ms Coiptitioi U YariJlr. Baitj k Rla. It was the gloomiest of gloomy days. There was not one rcdeem- lnz feature about t 11 it nau only rained, iiere might have been music in the droLS : if it had snowed, we micht have "lived over'' the beauti ful poem ; but it did neither, and now. late in the afternoon, the air was a thick, damp vapor, and the street ankle deep with slusn and mud that an unpaved western town supplies so beautifully and readily, Then asrain. the life of the voudr attorney is not always one of whirl and excitement and pleasurable re sults. Not a living soul except a bootblack iust as if he would ever need bootblacks again had entered the door that day. In vain had I tried to rive mv mind over to the arbitrary statutes, and then in de spair sought the more inviting stim ulent of Recina vs. Reynolds : even the gossip of a great leading case failed to inspire me, and wearily I turned from my books to my thoughts, and from my thoughts to my gloom. It was just then, beiore 1 naa as cended to the realms of suicidal pur pose for I walk that way slowly that the door knob hesitatingly, cau tiously turned, and I was hard at work again, pen in hand, with one eye on the paper and the other on the door. I won't make a diagnosis of just how fast my heart was beating, if peradventure the door would open, and somebody that was somebody should come in. I could endure the suspense no longer, I looked i squarely up. Ihe door had opened, and, though the evening shadows j were gathering thick and fast, I could see that my visitor was in dress and mannc r a lady the most significant word in the greatest of j languages. Her veil conct aled herj face, but, old or young, ugly or pret ty, her thoughts probably were : Here's a vouns man very young, he hasn't .much experience don't think he ever did much work before. I would help him, but it don't help me. I had better look But I interrupted my own fore bodings by springing to my feet with a "Good evening, madam Step in ; I'm through with the matter in hand a little pressed now, with term time upon us, but have an hour to spare such a dull day ! Sit down !" and my first triumph was won, for she was seated. Then I swept my books from me with an air of relief, as if any prob lem she might agitate would be child's play compared to what I had just passed through. 1 bad not yet so mucn as caught the color of her eyes, and couldn't but wonder why she kept her veil down so closely unless she was meditating a sudden flight to the office of the bald-headed wretch across the way, who had a few gray hairs and more experience, you know but a bad attack of rheuma tism, too, thank heaven ! which I devoutly trusted was keeping him home on such a day as this. I want vou to write a will, she suddenly began, in a half halting voice. "Certainly, madam, I answered, nobly resolving to strengthen the faith within ber, and I pulled a half quire of legal cap toward me, ana : thought of the solemn opening and ; the weighty formalities of its publi cation. "It's to be my husband's will," she added. "lie dare not come out on such a day as this," and she shiv ered so prettily that I was reconciled with the weather for the first time that day. "Hadn't I better come to your house ?" I ventured to suggest "Oh, no ! not now," she answered, with a little sigh. "It might excite him too much. But he may be bet ter to-night, and I will send the car riage for you then. It will not make any difference will it, about the will being binding?" and something told me she was peering anxiously at me. "Of course, madam, if he then ful- The superiority of the Banlctt Onrani Is reeoi nlsed and aeknowleds-ed by tha blithest musical authorities, and th demand f"T them ia steadily iBcreaaina- aa thair merits are becoming: mora ex tensireW known. What everybody wants la the HtsroKUAN for tha least amount f money ' Therefore .Terr body wants th BUKDETT. Evkxt Oboax Or aKaxtzxb Five t aaaa. Said Easy iosthly hyswiU ass Law for CASH. jan'-'i-Sa ALBERT TRENT, Manager. WALTER ANDERSON, ttrut somatome: about Oa Humirtm ' faeces ()) orty to BltT-ar (sa-M) t teen (it k and Poplar timber la Lta I 'ewmy-BTaaereseseellcwlBveadow. l' eaM train aad pastor, land, be T Jaitwr land, all well watered, llme '"cu. rood frame house, sitos shed, i a bar. Ritnatod from Lor., aula. IacoII. P. R. B- mile. . aad eo4ialf mile, wbwr may Maeh rraia and nay market. t TERXS EASY. Jw 171 Woodland Ave.. Philadelphia, Pa. a. " " VUMTBl, fj I MBSU WW U7UUJ, P" BVV DEBCHMT TAILOR ecu WCaiET.AKIimiTEmt NO. 226 LIBERTY STREET PITTSBTJBOH, iab.i fl??a week hi your own Wt( outBt owe. r-oruwed. Mala. Address H. JUtxarr a Cex Mwr.l-lrr llOIJXS. GUITARS. ACOOIIDKONS KAN JOS. CtiARIOXETTS. PIC COLOS. STATES, FIFES. And ia met ererrthiot: la the musical Una. The latest aud most desirable Inst met too Books far all Instrument on sale. Blank Masse Book aad Pa per at ail sizes aad kinds. SHEET MUSIC k WW STK 1 SlllJ. Orran Tuned and Repaired. Musical Iastrae Uoa tin per quarter. Send lot ratalo-. SolkHtins your order tor " Every m Ins; la th XBsieal Lane,n I am. Yours Bespeettully, I. !. HEFFLEY, fU3-tt Somerset, Pcaa'a CHARLES HOFFMAN, nERCHAITT TAILOU IrVbovw Henry JlIBrjrlB 9trv.) LATEST STYLES Cl PaIOS. arSATlSFACWM GUARAHTEEDEX SOXERSET J?JL. AKTLAk rABMnX Book aad Map fnt. By C. E. 1 fat All A HAN, Atfy. tae toa,M4 h Let. ly and voluntarily adopts it as his, it is iust the same as if I took all down from his own lips." "Well, we want he wants to leave all his property to me, with full powers as executrix and I am to take charge of his only child and make for her such allowance a I shall think wise." "What is your daughters name ?n "She is not my daughter," she an swered with the slightest token of gathering animation in ber voice. MAh, yes ; just bo," said I nervous ly fumbling with the paper. "She's your step-daughter ?" "Yes sir." "What's her name ?" "Mabel Cecil," she haltingly spoke. 'A deuced pretty name," I re marked to myself. "I wonder what she wants to stumble so over pro nouncing it ?" And then I tried to forget all about it, as I took up my pen and began: "I 1 Ah 1 pardon me, madam, but what's your husband's name?" What fools men are when a little excited, especially young lawyers, sitting np with an early case. "Robert E. CeciL" "I, Robert E. Cecil, of the county of Herkimer, and State of.. I , do make and publish this my lost will and testament : "I give, bequeath and devise to my dearly beloved wife" 0h ! pardon, madam, but what's yoor name?" - "Lucy L. Cecil," ; "To my dearly beloved'wife, Lu cv L. Cecil, all my real and ' person al property of whatsoever Jcmd and nature, alter the payment ot all my just debts : and! hereby com mit to her guardianship my only child, Mabel Cecil, for whom there shall be made such allowance and maintenance as to mv beloved wife may seem fit. . "And I hereby appoint Lucy C. Cecil my sole executrix of I'jhis my last will and testament, hejpeby re voking all former wills by me made. In witness whereof 1 have here unto set mv h?nd. this third day of November, A. D. 187 ." "I suppose you will understand," I undertook to explain, "that this will vests all of your husbakds prop erty in you, and to leave his daugh ters allowances at your discretion is to leave her at law nothing in her own right The provision if in short meaningless, except that it shows that the testator had her in his mind when he made his will, and so far makes it all the more binding." "Exactly," she spoke with anima tion. "It's his wish and I shall see that you are well paid for your trouble and counsel the carriage will be here very soon." And sho had gone as qnickly as she had come. That remark about payment had entered a threadbare coat and struck right home. .' "But it's too mean all the same, pay or no pay," I growled, to cut that girl off that way without a cent But it's the old story, and I can't help it," and I sank back with a philosophical smile on my face. I .Then just in eport in a fit of ma lignant satisfaction I took up a second sheet of legal cap, and scrib bled thereupon, with a formal open ing and close that this said Robert E. Cecil gave all his property to his dearly beloved daughter, Mitbel Ce cil, and left the lady of ' the veil where the law found her. r? "But such is the history of the world." I concluded solemnly, "ever such ; and what a gulf, deep, impass able, between what ought to be and what is. How I should like to bridge it over." And I buttoned up my coat and walked to the window imacrinine: that I could see through the darkness the coming of the car nage of Madam Cecil. The time dragged slowly, very slowly, and I never felt more genu ine relief than in hearing heavy wheels grinding through the mud and slush, and a knocking' at the door to notify me the carriage was ready. I sprang into the carriage and away we dashed through such dark ness that I could not for the life of me diacovrr to what portion of town 1 w being dnyen very v: dr-Q IiaV hands !" I cried as I heard a strange j The Washington Monument, sound behind me, and I would have turned if all the pistols in the uni-! Nearly a half century ago anas verse had been pointed at me. ' sociation was formed fortheerec The old man's arms had been lift-! tion of a lofty monument at the GlaVM IIotMCa. ed as in prayer, but now sank with ered upon the pulow, whilst his eyes stared at ns in tho rigidity of death. He had died. Instinctively Madam Cecil seem ed to realize that it was all over, and lowering her weapon, hissed at me between her pearly little teeth : "You've played me false go ! go! or i n snoot you 1 capital to the memory of George Washington. Funds were collected, the site was chosen and the pre liminary work so far completed as to allow of the laying of the corner stone July 4, 184S ; on which occa sion an address was delivered by Hon. Robert C. Winthrop, then Speaker of the House of Represen tatives. Tho work progressed satis- And I went eladlv moncr. from factorily till the column reached a the stone front .with its treachery, height of 15G feet, when the funds its wicKeaness ana its avarice, into the dark night and muddy streets. But I had carried out the wishes of the poor dragooned husband, and Mabel received her own. As soon as her share of the estate could be obtained the wretched woman dis appeared from the neighborhood. and it-was understood had sailed for Australia. Although a vounz and almost briefless lawyer, I was appointed Mabel's guardian, and 60 faithfully fulfilled my trust, that after six vears. when she was little more than eighteen, she gave her estate as well ' strengthen the bane, as herself into mv kpprn'rw :m fl na i iudned inadequate to 1 write this, after my tea, and as Ma bel leans on the back of my chair, watching the rapid strokes of my pen, she declares that I did not praise myself at all in the grand act of justice I did, and the courage I showed at the revolver's mouth to sustain her rights. A Woman's Ingenuity ki Tk I nn tho 1 I open d V ii. i sum iri I ed hal! V As JI 1 and ni l Cecil. V with I me tl : instrl It hap I oeei 1 hi -f fc ,i i '"' t frSg o suc- Elizabeth Lloyd King, alias Kate Stondard, who is well known as the murderess of Charles Goodrich, brother of the Hon. W. W. Good rich, and is now confined in the Auburn State convict asylum, be ing denied the use of writing mate rial, recently invented a new way of composing a letter. She was allow ed books and magazines, a Bible and a Test-iment, although not per mitted to have scissors, had a needle and some thread. Taking the fly leaf ot a book she stiched upon it single letters, and bits of words that would compose sentences, and very neatly made out of fragments of print the following letter : Mr. Pavey, Counselor at Law : Sin: Please excuse this print and paper, for I have not been al lowed to use any writing material since last July." I' would like to consult you as soon as I can. Will you please call here? Respectfully, Llizahetji Lloyd King. Auburn State Convict Asylum. rk. the Syractse Standard ; ill you please oblige me to Mr. Counselor Pavey note? I do not know ress it Please excuse d paper, for I have not to use any writing ?e last July. illy, abeth Lloyd Kix. Convict Asvlum. jicssly she elided over the h aw carpets, and as silently I fol io Ned her. She passed into'the li brary, and from thence, as 1 instinct iveiy felt, into the chamber of death; even elegant furniture and costly paintings and embroidered coverlets are not to overawe our destiny. "Mr. Cecil, the lawyer has come," she softly said, as she stooped over the face of the silver-haired man. "What? Who?" said he starting irom a seeming stupor, and looked wonderingly at me from his sunken eyes. uHe will read it to you now, Mr. Cecil," she added in a low tone, "he is sinking rapidly ; I fear you must hasten." I felt that I must I seated my self at his bedside, and as I did so I saw his lipstremble.and I beeved they were breathing a name. I im agined it was "Mabel." Our boldest moves are born upon the spur of the moment "Mrs. Cecil may I trouble you for a glass of water ?" I asked, as I took out the will she had drawn. "Quick, sir, quick !" said I, as I noticed his sunken eyes v watching her hastening footsteps. "Do you want your daughter to have allyour property save what the law gives your wife?" He started from me as if he could not trust his own senses, or was doubting whether to put confidence in me ; but he seemed to feel the necessity of doing so, and suddenly the dull eyes brightened with a mo mentary gleam of relief and joy as he clearly answered : "Yes, yes ! And God bless you." And I, too, was thanking heaven for the whim that had led me to write two wills so very like in strength and appearance, and it was only the work of a moment to make; the exchange and just in time. With Mrs. Cecil came the house-1 keeper and a man servant, and in their presence the dying man trem blingly wrote his name to the second will and they witnessed it They had gone and I started to go, when the old man pressed my hand and I saw the tears gathering in his eyes. As I turned to go I in voluntarily felt that the black eyes of Madam Cecil had witnessed all and suspected everjthine. "I should like to see that will!" she said firmly, in a low voice. "Some other time. He's dvjng, Mrs. CeciL" "So much the greater reason, sir I Show it to me." I looked at her one instant calm ly and suggestively in the face and then started for the door. "Stop !" she cried, and a tiny mounted revolver gleamed inker hand. "My God! Mrs. Cecil, yon have killed him ! He has died at yoor address was atich bit of paper, which sewed on the re- card: ey, Editor of the i, Standard office. ork. have required many weeks to have pieced out the letter. The capitals where used only in proper places, and great care was taken as to punctuation. The whole of the first letter was in bre vier type, and the most of the sec ond, and the words were nearly all made up of single letters pricked out of a printed page, evidently with a needle, and then sewed on with white thread. The word King seems to have been cut out of a Bible printed in agate. The stitches were taken with such care as not to tear the paper or to leave upturned edges that would be apt to cause any part to be torn off in handling. The edges of the paper were neatly hemmed. The letter was delivered to a visitor to mail, but it was taken up by an asylum physician, who has preserved it as a curiosity. A Claimant After the Estate) orThad tlena Steven. Lancaster, March 1G. Most peo ple familiar with the life of Thad deus Stevens are also familiar with fact that he left a peculiar will, lu the event of his favorite nephew Thad. Stevens, Jr.,keepiDg sober for five year3 he was to receive a cer tain amount of the estate ; keeping: sober for five vears longer, he was to receive a certain other amount. and, keeping sober for fifteen years, I mien comp eiea me ascent win he was to receive all of the estate 1)6 mad elevator, or the stair became exhausted and further pro gress was indefinitely suspended. The civil war which ensued was, of course, latal to any scheme lor ob taining further aid, and it was not till after its close that various meth ods were organized for procuring the necessary means for the prose cution of the work, all of which had no practical result, and it was left for congress finally to make an appropriation which secured the completion of the enterprise at no distant day. The first labor to le done was to which was sustain the enormous weight oi uie column to rest upon it, and a large sum and much time were expened thereupon. This accomplished, the laying of the course was resumed in August of last vear. A few of the surlace marble blocks, found injured from many years' exposure, were remov ed, reducing the height from 156 to 150 feet Since then, to the middle of August of the present year, thirty-five courses, or seventy-five feet, have been added, making the eleva tion reach that of Bunker Hill Monument. It is estimated that by the close of the year a height of 250 feet will be attained, not includ ing the granite base, which extends eighteen feet below the surface. One hundred men are employed in cutting and preparing the blocks in the sheds around, and twelve in setting them. The marble blocks have a uniform thickness of two feet, but are irregular in length, and each is accompanied by a granite or inner block- The blocks are hoisted bv ao elevator worked bv an engine intfiftv rinrse-nower. The elevator will endure a strain far beyond any possible demand that can be made on it, the two cables which support its weight having been subjected, as stated, to a test of 170 tons each, and not being at present taxed be yond eleven tons. When completed, this monument will be the loftiest structure reared by man, towering seventy feet above the Great Pyramid of Cheops, ninety three fe t above St. Peter's at Rome, and tw t and half times higher than Bunker Hill Monument. The measurment at the base is fifty-five feet square, losing one-quarter ot an inch to thejfoot as the column as cends. A small portion of the me morial stones contributed by states, cities, towns, associations and for eign governments hive already been placed in the niches assigned them, the remainder beinj; housed near by. It is estimated that the monu ment may be completed in the course of 1SS5. Were it not for in terruptions, two courses or four feet per week could be added ; but. changes in the gearing, inclement weather, delay in th arrival of ma terial, and various causes frequent ly retard progress. Already, how ever, the monument begins to peep up to view, in quarters of the city, where, hitherto, it has not been visi ble, and its gradual rise is watched with great interest. At its present height it attracts the attention of visitors, and as it progresses and nears completion it will become an object of increasing interest, till, at length finished, it must"prove a chief attraction to Americans and stran gers. The highest columns that man has ever reared, apart from its object, must bring to Washington a tide of visitors, pilgrims to the new Mecca from all parts of the Union, and fctr.inger3 from abroad all anx-1 ious to view the shaft towering! above all existing structures. We may add that at present on entering the shaft and looking up ward the sky seems visible through j a very small aperture, and a very j sensible change of temperature is noticeable. As we ascend by the elevator it becomes more chilly, and the light diminishes, till on arriving midway to the summit, it is so dark that objects become scarcely dis cernible ; then, as the ascent con tinues, a sort of twilight succeeds, which brightens reaching the upper platform. hen completed the ascent will Perhaps not one builder or con tractor in ten, if told that the com mon grades of glass made at glass factories in this city have a crushing strength nearly four times as great as that credited by experienced en gineers to the strongest quality oi . wuere cer husband granite, would accept the statement as true. Yet it is a fact, and being so, the query is as to why glass has not received more attention from architects as a structural material. A reporter had a talk with several prominent glass manufacturers on the 8ubiect. and in answer to an in terrogator v as to whether blocks of glass could be made in suitable lengths and sizes and so annealed as to be utilized in t!ie construction of a building in place of stone, they said it could be done. Said one of these gentlemen : "This question has been consider ed by myself a number of times, and ; although 1 do not want to advocate the absolute abolition of brick and stone, yet in the erection of art gal leries, memorial buildings, etc., a structure composed of blocks of glass in prismatic colors would be a unique, beautiful and lasting struct ure. It" "le uumerous inveiuious which have come into use of late vears in connection with the pro duction of glass, the cost has been gradually going down, while the quality of the fabric is steadily be coming better. "One objection which would be raised to the durability of a glass house, in the literal sense of the words, might be that the blocks would not take a bind, or adhere to gether with common mortar. The objection can be readily set aside by the use of a good cement, and when completed the structure will stand for ages, barring extraordinary acci dents. As to the cost of a glass house, it can be kept down to a small percentage above the price of our cut granite. In building with stone you have to pay the stone masons, and when it comes to elab orate examples of carving in Co rinthian pillars, collars, capitals, etc., why the work is rather cotl v as compared with glass, when ihe lat ter can be moulded into any snape or form, and the work accomplished in much less time. I am convinced that the time will com when we shall see such a building erected. Scarcely a day passes but, what the sphere of glass as an article of use becomes widened, in parts or oer many and on one line in England glass ties are being usedo.. railroads, and thus far have given Msf.n lion, combining all the requisites ot wood' - V w-ur- jr S B 1 all the, V' j . v-i ' ana , thev all thrx joyed V ! that therex tional Capiv dition fairly barbarious ph. the sex have gnu. present independe. At the Chinese Ia the handsomest resio city, lives a lady of rv country, tbe wife of the pa. ister Cheng Tsao Ja. She. as strict seclusion here in the al Capital of our free couDtry still in the capital of her native la Even here she must obey the natics. al law which compels women oV rank to keep within tneir nomes.- She has never been out since si e re moved from the Arlington Hotel, and his suite were until the Legation ready for occupancy, which en tie3 with the virtue of being sus ceptible to usage at least twenty-five per cent, longer than wood. Then by the Bastra process glas3 articles are now being made for common use which can be thrown on tr; floor and will rebound like a ru'ubt r ball. Progress is also being made toward rendering glass, which has ever been characterized as the brit tle fabric, ductile, and to-day threads of glass can be made that can be tied in knots and woven into cloth. Were one disposed to give play to fancy and fuse it into fact, a house entirely composed of glass could be built with walls and roof and floors fashioned from melted sand. Car pets of gl.tss could cover the floors. The most ultra asthete, sitting on glass chairs or reclining on glass couches arrayed in glass garments, eating and drinking from glass dish es, such a one could realize that the age of glass had come. Yet nearly all of this fifty years ago would have been classea with the then impossi ble telephone and eletric light, and this statement would have likeiy found its way into the 'Catalogue Expnrgatoros.' " PitUburgh Dot patch. Why a Woman Wanted a Warrant. was before the middle of January. While the names of the wifes of the other gentlemen of vne Diplo matic Corps who are married and the names of the wife and daughter of Mr. Bartlat, the American Secretary of the Chinese Legation, appear al ways on tbe official diplomatic list published by the State Department the name of the Chinese minister ' wife is not thereon. She receives no company at all, and must not be al lowed to see a man except her hus band. Consequently, she being alone with her Chinese women at tendants, has no opportunity to learn English. She is the fourth wife the other three, I hear, am living in China, and she, it is said. was ermitted to accompany her m husband on his travels because she was the youngest and comliest of the number. Ihearthev have not been married long. She is under 25 years of age. The Chinese minister visits and attends parties daily, and although as yet he knows no English, no one seems to enjoy society more than he. Through his interpreter, who al ways accompanies him; he talks merily with ladies. He thinks Miss West the British minister's young est daughter, very bright, Itr-cause she has memorized some Chinese phrases taught her by the interpre ter, and repeated them to him, Two Philadelphia ladies at a recent re ception kept up an intimate conver sation with him through the inter preter, and he laughed heartily over 6ome of their sallies. As no one below the grade of Minister or Charge d' Affaires is ever invited to dine with one of their Presidents, the Chinese inter preter could not accompany th Minister to dinner at the White House, and thus, where all the lan euases of the civilized world were spoken, he was the only one present who did not understand any of them. The Japanese Charge d' Af faires who attended, there being no minister here to represent that na tion communicated with the Chi nese gentleman in writing on thia occasion, though he cauld net sneak his language. The Chinese Minis ter did not appear to feel lonely at the dinner, but ate and drank hear tily, and as he closely watched the others about him committed no faux Tpn$. He afterwards told the President that he thought the wine very good and enjoyed it TIWi. Cur.Phila. Times. Episode or Love-Making. "Say, mister, I want a warrant, right quick!7' exclaimed the irate woman as she dashed info police headquarters. "What do you want with a war rant?' asked the sergeant .When the French sought to es tablish a monarchy in Mexico a Mazatlan youth raised a regiment of boys and waged, -against such in vaders as appeared in Sinaloa, a warfare that told. The young man V father was of Castilian blood and his mother was a Mexican. His name, Corona, soon became famous and at the age of 2-5 he was regard ed as the Moseby of Mexico. At the end of the war he was a major gen eral, the hero of the soldiers and tbj idol of Mazatlan society. He was six feet tall, broad shouldered, handsome and daring. While at tending a ball at the American Ho tel, in Mazatlan, he stumbled over a domestic, knocking a tray from her hand. Stooping to pick up the crockery, General Corona noticed that the girl wa3 very pretty and saucy. She told him that her name was Betty Bowman, that her mother was a San Francisco washer woman and that he ought to know better than to rush so headlong down a dark stairway. Corona made love to the American mis and before leaving for the Capital he had learned of her irreproachable I .. a a us . . j though humble Jile. Unce away, For mv servant sdrl. Has hhe " Iace ana Terl ways hauntetl got any right to chase me around i llim 80 mncb that he wrote to hf r the house with a clothes-pole?-' j arranging for marriage by proxy. "Certainly not." ' He remained in Mazatlan ; the bride That's what I thought Which to a convent school. They of us has the right to eat at the first were a thousand mi es trait and table she or me?" wrote to each other daily, the hus- "YVbv you, of course." band instructing the wi.e in polite "So 1 supposed. 1 want to know ways- President Jaurez, fearing if I've got to sleep on the back fence ! that Corona s popularity would lead with the cats four nights in the h PePle S,ve their vote to the week, while she gives partie in the young soldier at an election then kitchen ?' i opproaching, conciuaea to send mm "Assuredly not. inf r nrain rlnir - i A irK 1 Ttvt laar'' ill IV VraVl V i Ul ; MlCVIIttlgV (Itl Whv don't vou i a? few small bequests. Not ii n to these terms, vountr save livin Thad was to receive SsUU per an num during his life, and this he ac cepted, burying his talent and his life in an insatiable indulgence in strong drink. In the event of young Thad. receiving only $S00 per an num, tbe residue of the estate pro vided it amounted to $50,000 was to go to the founding of an or phan assylum where children who had lost either parent (and regard less of color, creed or nationality) were to be admitted. Hon. James P. McPherson, Hon. A. E. Roberts and Hon. O. J. Dickey were named as the executors. Mr. Dickey is dead, but the other two executors were about arranging for the trans fer of the estate to the Children's Home of this city, when Mr. Thad deus N. Stevens," of Indiana, step ped in and filed a bill in equity which sets forth that he is entitled to the residue of the "Old Common er's" estate because it does not reach 150,000. He claimit that he and his Bister are heirs-at-law, and that his sister has transferred her claim to him. Able counsel has been retained by the claimant, and the case promises to be more than ordinarily interesting. Mr Clarence B. Stoddard, the druggist, informed us that Mr. Louis Hope, a sufferer with rheu matism for a number of years, ob tained the greatest relief by the ; use of St Jacobs Oil. Monroe (Mid) OtmmerciaL 1 cant get near does the law justify i eyes of all Mexicans. General Co- case which hugs the wall and is to be so constructed as to relieve the toil of ascending 550 feet At short dis tances will be resting balconies for pilgrims wending their weary way to the summit The interior will be lighted as a matter of course, and an electric light will flash from the summit The further statement may be of some interest, that up to the suspension of work upon the monument $2-10,000 had been ex pended, and that the appropriation for it-t completion will swell the cost to some f 000,000. The marble i : . l t T 1 I r Iliovan ale iiuiii j tuiiu. uiiu ui very fine material. 1 he monument grounds contain about thirty acres. There were recently forty memorial stones built in Ihe structure, and eighty-five are still uninserted. Jioiton Tranmript. $4000 to Pay. Scraxtox, Pa., March 15. The Court today awarded to Professor J. E Hawker, Superintendent of Schools of this city, $4000 damages brought by him apainst Morris Goldsmith," a prominent merchant of this city for signing a libelous pe- tion the "State Superintendent of Schools. Mrs. Lydia E. Finkhain, 2oJ Western Ave Lynn, Mass., is ra pidly acquiring an enviable reputa tion for the surprising cures which daily result from the use of her Vegetable Compound in all female diseases. Send to ber for pamphlet". M inister to Madrid, the most en viable diplomatic position in the enough. Sav, her using my L false teeth tr rim or rarnet rjiolta and t t T 1 . , ortjl aha rirtar ta vat, er?ttl aa trtA mrtat Oil. ..v. 3 .-H mo ... "l v brilliant and accomplished lady at wears mv clothes roria took aughter to the washerwoman's his palace in Madrid making me shin around with noth ing on but a hair-pin and a sore throat, while she to a wake? "I don't believe it does." "So I concluded. Gi'me rant" the Court of Spain. Tbe Fanamal Canal. a war- j From Germany it is learned that a icurious historical document con- "Can't get any warrrnt here. You will have to eo lefore the judge in the morning." "Will, eh ! Well, I won't! If you think I am going to waste any cerning a Panama canal exists in the archives of Venezuela, (which, by the way, is not a city, as some of the Continental papers say it is), bearing the date of 17.S0. A canal more time lawing with that girl, project, this document records, whs you're left. In the morning the broached in the reign of Philip 11, oil can will be left alongside ot the i but Flemish engineers surveyed the kitchen stove, and if you find a job j territory and declared that the ob lot of legs and backbone around ; stacles to the undertaking were in your precinct you can make up j surmountable. "Native Governors." your ideas that that girl is out of a: .--mtinnes this record, "thereupon job, and I am busy collecting the : pointed out to the King the enor insurance. You hear this twitter-: mous commercial disadvantage like ing?' I ly to arise to Spain from such an And she left, the sergeant wonder- undertaking," in consequence where mg if even dynamite would have ; of Phillip II issued a rescript which any effect on a girl who could get ! threatened with death any person the best of that woman. ; alluding by word or writing to the . ' project A Pnkrd B.med to Iiea.lu Monroe, Mich . Sept 25, 157-5. Bi'ffalo, Mar. lfi.-The house '; -T1 ve taking Hop and saloon of Patrick O'Harra was i K,tKr? f?, mflTU.0DJ0f.k!?! i ana uiauuer. lb uas uuuo tur uin what four doctors failed to do. The effect of Hop Bitters seemed like burned this morning and he perish led in the flames.- OTIarra was. rlmnV trie -nrerinnu rno-rit ami ban turned his wife out of the house in ! mai,c to roe her night clothes. ' W. L. Caster. ----- If one dog can be placed on a The greatest cleanser and purifier j scent, how many can be placed on of the blood, Peruna, should be tak-1 a trade dollar ? en ever few months to prevent roa-! larious diseases, and to cure them Peruna is in itself when prevention was neglected. ' cian. great physi- ' Kv v ' v i V. V. ' s was made i t I i j! ' i t