I) WHAT OOltra OF SWAPPIXG. An old cloak is warmer than new fashioned clothes ; one feels more comfortable in an honest old blue coat with a long tail than in the silly things worn now-a-days noth ing in front and nothing behind; and one walks easier in old boots than in new ones, especially if one is troubled with corns; and every body has corns in due time ; some hurt here, others there. So I think to-day, now I am old ; but when a boy of twelve I was al ways having something new. If I got a new knife or new bow and arrow I carried them about with me two, three or four days, then left them lying around or lost or swap ied them and had something else new ; and from curiosity I soon ac quired a love of swapping, and from tuis might easily have gone to some thing wurse if our Lord had notcaus td my old uncle to give me two niart slaps at the right time. Every bargain news two people, one clever and one stupid. The business may be bad for both ; the clever fellow gradually becomes a rascal, the stupid one a beggar. Well, I must without knowing it have learned a little toward the latter side, for people have always reckoned me ampng the stupid ones, and when I look at the condition of rny property I cant exactly contra dict them. An my friend Land lord Gollenrieder in" Trepton says, "let it be as they like," I got the plaps, and since in my native city this was thought right I probably deserved them. "But the reason I got them is as ibllows : I had a wonderfully handsome buck rabbit, Maltese with a white face, and my best friend, FriU Kitsch, wanted it Frit Ritsch and I were always swapping and I had received all sorts of fine things from him, only it was a pity I didn't exactly know what to do with them. Well, this time he wanted to give me in exchange for my rabbit eight chessmen, three blown eggs and a half a pair of snuffers. I was also to have one of the pups of his Aunt Kuinpler's terrier when it had pups, which, however, as I afterwards learned by experience, wouldn't have been likely to happen, as it was a male dog. Well, everything was all right except the .half of the pair of snuffers. I couldn't get that through my head and asked, "Fritz, what am 1 to do with this old half thing?" "W hy," said he, "I found it when I went into the wood-yard yester day; you can surely find the other half there and then" ell itfor eight greschen." Yes, that I might easily do but I had often looked and never found anything, so the matter seemed doubtfull Then he said: "Fritz," for my name was Fritz too "just think, my father is only a black smith and your father is Burger meister; why shouldn't you tind something as well as I,?" This was true, so the bargain was concluded and he went away. But as ho walked out of the garden gate with my rabbit and I stood looking at my three blown eggs and half pair of snuffers smack, smack I got the two slaps, and when I looked around saw my mother's brother, Uncle Matthies, who had iK-cn sitting behind the apple tree and heard the whole bargain. My Uncle Matthies was an old soldier and had queer ways ; he al ways struck first and thco told why. lie had been in Hungary and l'oland, seen the world and knew a great many stories ; but the worst of his stories was that they always had a moral which I would gladly have had him omit, for when he came to it he always gave me a box on the car to make me remember it lx'tter. When I had received the slap my Uncle Matthies sat down cn the bench under the apple tree and said : "Boy, do you know why you had that memento?" "No, uncle," said I, "you havent told any story." "That will "come afterwards," he replied. "You got the punishment for your bargaining, for so far as I know j'our father wants to bring up no jockies. Now come here and lit ten to the story. "When I was stationed at Peter wardein with the Hungarian Uh lans we had a captain in the squad ron, a man who had a hump be tween his shoulders and was always wanting something new and as full of whims as a donkey is of gray hairs ; if he fell into a gutter he didn't rest until he tumbled in a ditch too, and if he wore boots to day, he would have shoes to-morrow aud slippers the day after. Yet he had plenty of money and the follies his foolish brain invented his purse made good, at least for a time. "What then was more natural than that our little misshapen cap tain should have a crowd ot hungry comrades about him who stack like burs, drained him like leaches, but laughed at him like rascals behind h is back. Well, one of this brother hood told him that the greatest pleasure in the world was to sit in a glass coach drawn by four horses and ride up and down the high road. Our little captain remember ed that he hadn't done this, so it was something new, and as my friend Cobbler Satnekow in Rostock used to say, consequently' the glass coach and mares were procured and the greatest pleasure in the world began, but also came to a speedy end; for when our little whipper straw of a captain sat in the glass coach and slid from nn rinTni- n 17 1IIIIU T J the other, like a devil in a medicine ootue, tne people stood still and laughed as if they saw an ape. "After three days it was an old story, but luckily the colonel of the rem men t married a vonnr w-;fi had eet her heart on driving up and aown uie nignway m a glass coach drawn by four horses. Th rv-lnr.i had no objection except the expense uiu tur jears naa sung in tne even ing the beautiful song, 'Die Trakte menten, oie Bind zuklein!' but he hadtdwavs considered Hinvtlv af terwards how he could bet-t increase his property, and three days before his weddiiis won from a Hnnmi. rial connt a calash with two horses. one 01 wnicn was a regular screw. "So he went to my little captain ana told him how delightful it would be H turn coachman and as the two thing needed to make a trade, a clever man and a simpleton, met, the bargain struck, the colon el's wife got a glass coach and captain the calash and the screw. "One fine morning when all Pe terwardien expected no harm, my little captain was sitting in hif new calash driving himself, and ran the pole through the window of the colonel' lady's coach. This made agreatetir, and colonel's adjutant came out and asked if the devil was in him. u 'No, said the captain, 'not in me, but the mares.' They talked it over until the talking became bar gaining, and the bargaining became a swap. The adjutant was also one of the people who knew how to manage bo that no harm comes up the rope to them when they lead dogs, and my little captain got in exchange for his calash and pair of mares, a saddle horse, a gray, which, if it had been the same in front as it was behind, would have left noth ing to be desired. "I knew this gray thoroughly; it had been sent to Bukowinathc year before to make up the number of horses wanted for the cavalry ; and the little captain in exchange for his two horsey one good-for-nothing devil, for there were ten furious fiends and fire eaters- in this one gray, which ran with all four legs in the air at once, and was of no use in God's world except to stand in the stable, eat oats and smash the groom's shins. "Well, my little captain got this vrv crav. and the next dav mount ed it and rode through the streets of Peterwardein into the fields, and the ten devils in the gray rode with him, but remained asleep, and the the gray danced along the road like Clerk Blocken's old black mare. My captain was riding on thinking cf nothing in particular, when a hunter came up with n dog, and my j little captain began to wonder where the hunter was going and where the dog was going, and what the dog was doing with the hunter and the hunter with the dog. While he was thinking over these circum stances the ten devils in the gray waked, rubbed their eyes, and whish ! rnv little captain was lying in the ditch. "Here, mv Bon," said my Uncle Matthies, "here." I thought his confounded moral was coming and ducked. "No," said he, "not yet, the story isn't finished; here my son originated the -Baying : 'When do mountain and valW meet?' To which the answer :: 'When a Pucklichter falls into a ditch.' "The confounded gray then ran around the racecourse till it reach ed the spot where the captain lay, when it kicked, plunged, neighed and snorted, while the ten devils in it had its tail straight out in the air. "My little captain gathered his bones together out of the ditch as well as he could, spite fire and flames, snatched the hunter's gun from his Bhoulder and shouted, 'Wait, you scoundrel, we haven't done with each other yet, as the turkey cock said to the earthworm writhing in its bill,' and wanted to shoot the gray. "But the hunter caught his arm and begged hira to spare the horse ; it was senseless animal and meant no harm.. When my little captain swore he couldn't bear the sight of it, the hunter swore he needn't ; he would take the beast himself and give the hunting dog fur it, and at last succeeded in 60othing him. j "So this bargain was struck. But the dog was not the end of the swapping, there was more to come. "My little captain knew as much about hunting as a cow does of Sunday, but for the sake of the brown dog he became a great Nim rod, ran about in a pair of huge top boots, shot himself with both bar rels through the brim of his hat be fore the eyes of the whole sqadron, and then went partridge shooting as if nothing had happened. "Well, I was then quartermaster and acted as mother to the whole squadron, kept the key of the strong box .and could accommodate the officers by making advances, so they often took me with them when they went out hunting, and I was tired enough of running about, for I got nothing but weary legs. "Well my little captain and I went together, and 1 was clever enough to keep three steps behind, for I thought, 'Your calves and whnt is over them are not his hat briui.' My little captain called his dog, whistled, patted, stroked and flogged him, pulled his ears, made him seek and carry, and went through so many ierformance8 with him that even" a dog with an angel's patience would have lost its wits. Ponto at last became so gid dy that he ran when he ought to have pointed, and pointed when he ought to have run, and the captain fired and missed, blamed Ponto and wanted to kill the dog. I pitied the creature and said : "The dog is young, captain, it hasn't been trained enough yet ; let me have it, and 111 give you this pipe bowl. See, there's the famous city of Criwitz, in Mecklenburg, painted on it; this on the left is the church-tower, and these little lumps on the right are the vineyards. "He had a large collection of pipe bowls that I knew and on some were Vienna and Ofen and Trieste, but he hadn't one with Criwitz, so it was something new to him and he made the exchange. "Then he went home, he smoking his new pipe. As he entered the Peterwardein gate, 1 felt bo tickled, tnat I said : 'Captain, do you know what you're really smoking ?" "He looked at me in a puzzled way, and answered : 'A pipe.' ' "No,' said I, "a glass coach with four horses,' and showed him what he had made by swapping. "He took the glass coach and four, the calash with two horses, the gray with the ten devils, the young dog, and the pipe with the city of Criwitz with all her vineyards, and smashed the whole on a stone, sir ing: 'Then I'll get rid of i.ie trumpery.' "So he lived on until he hadn't even a trifle to smash on a stone, and all his troubles came from his love of new things and his swap ping." So saying, my mother's brother. Uncle Matthies rose, and when I ducked again on account of the moral, said : "I'll let you off this time, but look carefully at the trash you've taken for your beautiful rabbit, and as for Aunt Rumpler's terrier's pup py, mark the old proverb: 'What comes after, the wolf bites.' r With these words he went out of the gate. I stood there looking at my treas ures, perceived I had been a great simpleton, and from that hour never swapped anything again ; but the love of "something new" lingered a long time a long, long time. Many follies, many hardships have comV from that egg. Well, I believe l'v done with them ; now new boots pinch me, a new coat squeezes me and new faces annoy me. I wish I was sitting under the old apple tree again hearing the old stones, and my uncle Matthies could again give me a memento. I would heed it more now. From the Gtrmin of intz liciiter, tn Vur Ventxnml Whatever hna excwAeA it ln bounds irf ever in a state of instabil- itv. ArricwDrCaM "Say, mister !" said a tall, sun burned man with a wide brimmed hat, and he edged his way into the editor's room yesterday afternoon. "Say, mister, do you know anything about keards ? ' "Why. res." responded the edi tor. "1 know how to play 'everlast ing' and 'old maid,' and things of that kind: why?" "That's iust what I want to ask vou about Now in playing 'old maid,' suppose the man who holds the ace antes and passes on the draw, whose bet is it ?v' "That isn't the wav I play it," said the editor. "In my game the player who has a queen after all the other cards are played is the 'old maid' " ' "Perhaps it is 'everlasting' that I'm thinking of." mused the stran ger. -'Suppose in 'everlasting' you should catch an old maid on the draw and when the rest of the keards was played you found you had not filled. What then?" "I do not see how that question could arise in that game," said the editor. "Maybe you are talking of the game called poker. "Poker?" what's that?' asked the stranger looking up in innocent surprise, "That's where they have aces and fulls and that sort of a thing." "Do you know how to play it, stranger ?" asked the tall man, draw ing out a pack of cards. "Will you show me how ?" The editor ran over the cards and dealt two hands rapidly. "Now," he explained, "two pairs beat one pair, three of a kind beat two pairs, a flush beats threes, and fours of a kind beat a flush. What have you got ?" The stranger laid down a mixed hand as the editor explained that it was worthless, and his own hand held a pair. "Lemme deal 'em once," said the stranger, running them off clumsily "Five each ?" "Yes,".said the editor, seeing that he had gotten hold of a sharper and making up his mind to teach him a lesson. "Five each." "Now, what do we do?" asked the sharper, "If we are betting I'd ante a dol lar and you'd cover it with two. Then If I wanted to come in I'd plank another dollar, and then " "Hold on ! hold on 1 don't go so fast You put two dollars at differ ent times and I put two all at once, That it ?" ' "Yes and then we draw." "Let's trv it once lor fun, if you don't mind," said the sharper with unnatural eagerness. "All right," smiled the editor, and he threw two dollars on the table, which were promptly covered, "Now you say we draw. How many do I take ?" "You may take what you like, I don't want any," replied the editor. I stand pat !" "Then I'll take- one keard. Do we bet now?" "Yes." The 6tranger bet cautiously, and the editor raised him, and was seen until there was $15 wagered, though there was no money up beyond the ante. "I reckon I won't bet any more," said the stranger timidly "who beats ?" and he laid down four aces. "I beat you," said the managing editor, and he laid down a straight flush. "You owe me $15." The stranger looked at the cards some time, and clashed his fist down on the table. "You played fair did ye ?'' "I did." Slowly the stranger pulled out a greasy wallet and laid down a $20 bill. " The nl itor gave him the change, and the man went out, still running over the cards and wondering how it happened. "I thought he was a sharp and he is only a flat," said the editor, ex plaining the circumstance to the cashier, as he handed in the $20 bill for change. "Like to bo oblige you, old boy," said the cashier, "but that $20 is counterfeit" Parties having business with the managing editor for a week or two will please come armed. Uroolhjn Eanle. .lust Before the llattle. "Maybe so." After looking over the battle field of Chancellorsville I went back to the brick house fordin ner. During my abscence a little red-head. -d man had arriveVl, and he was introduced by the woman as her bruther-in-law. As soon as I came in he began on me : "Vhas you under Sheneral Shach son in dis fight ?" "No" "I tell you dot vhas an awful fiht, my friendt Blood poured out shust like it vhas raining. Maybe you vhas under Sheneral Lee, up der blank road .'" "No I wasn't" "Not under Lee ? But dot Shen eral vhas an awful fighter. Maybe you vhas mit Karlv, up at Freder icksburg ?" " "No." "So ? Yhell, Uat Early he vhas a shplendid Sheneral, una he like to fignt all der time. I feels sure you vhas mit Early. Mavbe you vhas mit Hooker, eh ?" " - "No." "Not mit Hooker down here ! De.n you vhas mit Sedgwick up der road ?" "No." "Vhell, by golly ! Not mit Shack son nor Lee : not mit Hooker nor Sedgwick ! Yhell ! Yhell ! Dot beats me all oafer !" Both of us fell to and began eat ing, and nothing further was said until the meal was finished and we had gone out to look at some old cannon wheels in the yard. Then my friend put his hand on my shoulder, lowered his voice" and said : "My friendt, if you vhas not mit I.ee nor Shackson nor Hooker in dis fight maybe you and me vhas in der same plase ?" . ."Maybe so. Where were you ?" "In Canada !" he whispered. He called "gootby" after me as I rode awav, but I wouldn't have an swered him for a hundred dollars. Detroit Free frets. Proponed New States. Washington, March22. The mi nority report of the House commit tee says the effort to secure the ad mission of Dakota as a State was purely a political movement, agitated exclusively in the interest of certain politicians, whoareseekingto accom plish their ambitious designs, and that of those who appeared in Wash ington in behalf of the admission not one was an agriculturalist The in dications are that the admission of Dakota will become a partjqicrtion, with the Democrats solidly t'tsed. T5ie CesfJtxMciaUoa.; At a recent quarterly meeting of the B. & O. Relief Association, held at Belay Station, the Secretary sub mitted a report which shows its af iaijs to be in a most flourishing con dition. This organization is quietly but effectively performing most valuable service, not only among the employ-m by protecting them from want, but to the company itself and is consti'iily developing new meth ods of usefulness. Although only started in May, 1880, the report re ferred to showed the issue of 22,150 insurance policies, and on December 31. 1881, an actual membership of 13,105 persons ; also the payment of 5,557 claims for sick benefits, aggre gating $74,769.56; of benefits on ac count of disablement from accidents, aggregation $33,047.87, and of 128 death policies aggregation $30,420. 31. These sums, with the payment of 1,168 physicians bills, amounting to $11,278.48, made a total expendi ture of $200,816.22 disbursed lor the relief of members on lines extending from Baltimore to Pittsburg, Ciocin nati, Columbus, Sandusky and Chi cago. I he association, wrougn lis corps of medical inspectors, not only superintends the hygienic and sani tary welfare of its members, but is also charged with a close supervision over the sanitary condition of the company's shops, stations, coaches, grounds, buildings, waters, fcc, to the manifest advantage of its service. The measure adapted bv the associa ted last fall to guard employes of the company from effects ol malarial which was unusual prevailant every where, and said to have been very el- fective in neutralizing its effects. Pursuing the same policy immedi ately upon the discovery that small pox was becoming epidemic in the United btates, the society undertook the gratuitous vaccination of all its members, and m special cases ol their familes. Reports already show that the medical inspectors have vaccinated 5,170 persons ; also that of the total number vaccinated fully 80 per cent of the operations were successful. In other words, out of 5, 170 persons, over 4,000 were found to be exposed to the full effects of small-pox, which had been declared by the National lioard ot Health to be epidemic through the country. The employes referred to are not resident in any circumscribed locali ty, through probably half are resi dents in Maryland. The statistics, therefore, furnished a sad commen tary upon the danger to which our entire population is exposed through lack ol proper precautionary mea sures. If other benevolent societies and corporations would recognize the fact that prevention is of far greater value than the cure of disease, ana would lollow the worthy examp.e of the B. O. Association, they would not only be acting humanely, but would also in many instances save their own funds from heavy de pletion. Jialtimore American. In Memory of Garfield. Long Branch, March, 18. The beautiful Garfield memorial window which was placed in St James Episcopal Church on Wednesday last is in commemoration of the fact that it was in this sanctuary that the late President worshipped on the Sunday previous to his being shot, June 2G. He was the guest of General A. S. Webb, of New York ; and with cx-Postmaster General James, he occupied his pew on that Sabbath, 'i he beautiful tribute is the idea of Mrs. Webb, who thought that a memorial window would be a fitting testimonial to the high place President Garfield held in the es teem and sympathy of the Long Branch people after his long days of sufferinn and fanal death there. Airs. Webb found no difficulty in raising the amount necessary for the win dow from her friends and the mem bers of the St James Church. The window is a Gothic arch in shape, and is the size of the other widows, 0 feet high and 2 feet wide. It is of waved antique Ventian glass, sur rounded by a narrow band of ruby antique glass, and has a medallion portrait of Garfield in the centre. The portrait is enlarged from Saro ny's profile photograph, and is sur sounded by a wreath of laurel and palm, the symbols of victory and peace. The knot by which the wreath is fastened below the medal lion is of opalescent yellow glass, and the entire portrait" and wreath are set in a field of rich, shaded blue, in which the 13 original States are represented by as many opalescent 6tars. On a table representing an tique mural brass, below the me dallion and its field of blue, the in scription is plaead. It reads : "In memory of James A. Garfield, June 26, 1881." The upper and lower de signs of the widow are separated by an arched band of rich rendels ex tending acres j the base of the arch. Within the point of the arch above are across and crown set in a point ed oval field of rich ruby antique glass, which symbolize faith and re ward. The oval is surrounded on either side and below by purple pas sion flowers, whose foliage is taste fully arranged about the design above. The passion flowers are symbols of the martyrdom which faith in the croses sustained and the crown has rewarded, and their pur ple harmonizes with the ruby and gold above them. The whole" effect of the window is strikingly rich and impressive. The entire amount of the money raised by Mrs. Webb not having been used for the window, a silver plate will be purchased to be suitably inscribed and placed upon the pew occupied by the President on the Sunday before he was shot Imitation Flower. A pretty experiment has been re cently described by the well-known Belgian physicist M. Plateau. He bends the iron wire so as to present the contour of a flower of six petals The central ring to which the petals are attached is supported on a forking stem, which is stuck in a piece of wood. Alter oxydizmg the wire slightly with nitric acid, the flower is dipped in glycerine liquid, so as to receive films 'in the petals and the central part It is then turned up, placed on a table near a window, and covered with a bell-iar. . For a little at first it appears colorless, but soon a striking play of colors begins. In the experiment M. Plateau describes, the flower continued showing modifi cation of color for ten hours when dusk stopped observation. Next morning several petals had burst The liquid used was of very mediocre quality. M. Plateau recommends preparation of the liquid thus: Dis-; solve a fresh piece of Marseill soap, cut up into small pieces, in forty parts by weight of hot distilled water. Filter after cooling, and mix luuruujiiujr uiree volumes oi the solution with two of Price's glycerine. The solution should be left at rest till all air-bubbles are gone. It was a soft and bamly night in spring ; the burning sunset was hanging its golden tapestries across the mellow west and the electric light was just beginning to fiz and spit along the main streets when Elder Snoozer was sitting in the elegant boudoir -f Widow S.mith, whose rich brown e ul desirable real estate penetrated the bachelor's inmost thoughts. Can you, barah, he said, throwing his enormous hand upon her Bhoulder, on the further side, "come to. my home in the Sec ond ward, where 1 will be your slave?" "Will that bquint eyed first wife of yours be made to stand around when 1 come ? ' "When your dulcet voice sounds through the ancestral halls Hannah will go to the coal bin. She will have about five hours of sleep a day and work for you the balance of the tune." ' Inside of the week they passed through the Endowment House, when Elder Wells made them one. Okl Snoozer took in a fine piece of real estate with a good looking wo man and was happy. Two years passed, and the once beautiful Sa rah, bending over the washtub and lamming the endowment robe of the third wife viciously against a tree until the suds falling over the tender flowers gave them new life in the hot July sun, is the sort of picture the passing bullwhacker contempla tes. "How do you like the new deal?" ask the first wife, who is chopping wood hard by. And the language of wife No. 2 is not fit to print in a family newspaper. Salt Jxiie Trib une. ' Rural Xotes. Mr. Henrv Quimbv, of the West ern New York Farmers' Club, thinks that a hundred acre farm would produce more with one-fifth of it judiciously planted to timber than it the whole surface were kept under the plough. A New Jersey farmer reports that a dressing of eight bushels per acre of salt to land badly infested with white grubs enabled him to raise good crops of corn for three years past, which was impossible previous to this application. In an Illinois cow that could not be satisfactorily fattened, and was consequently sold at a sacrifice, was found, "at the small entrance of the stomach, a twelve-ounce ball of "wire, naiis and phlegm," the result of hav ing eaten threshed wheat straw, the sheaves of which were bound with wire. At a recent meeting of the War saw. Illinois, Horticultural Society Dr. Rulph referred to the exhaust ive effect of the seed forming pro cess upon plants, and expressed his belief that it is . not yet generally known that roses, verbenas, etc., bloom much longer and more pro fusely if the flowers are plucked as soon as the mature. The Hon. George Geedes men tioned at a recent meeting of the Onondago Farmers Club that one of his fields to which no barnyard manure had been applied for seven ty years and which formerly had a bad reputation is kept' so fertile by clover and plaster that the late John Stanton Gould once spoke of its crop of timothy as the largest he eyer saw. Hope Ahead. A committee of stockholders who waited upon the superintendent of a California mine to ask why in the blazes the said mine hadn't panned out anything but assessments, were graciously received, invited to be seated, and the official explained: "Gentleman, you are all aware of the fact that we had scarcely begun work when the mouth of our mine was blocked by a land slide. That put us back a month." ' They nodded their remembrance. "Then we had iust got in shape to take out 4,000 tons of ore, worth 82, 000 per ton, when the mine caved in. You recall it ?:' They did. "Once more we bent ourselves to the burden of reaping $500 for every $10 invested, when the . mine was flooded by a subterranean river." That was true also. "Then we had just got the water out when we discovered that our mine was located on another man's claim. We had him shot to pre vent trouble, and oi ce more we were about to declare a dividend of 200 per cent when the dead man's heirs put in an appearance. There were three of them. We chased one over the range, had another hung bv the vigilance committee, and I am happy to inform you that I have four men out after the other. and am every he ur expecting to hear that he has tumbled ou aclin. Gen tlemen there is hope ahead golden hope, rleasc come up and drink with me ; after which there will be another assessment of 10 ix.r cent" Tested and found Worthy. In order to bring more fully be fore the notice of the people the value of a true and tried remedy. we hereby give the following relia ble testimonial from one - of the many who have been cured and whose reputation for veracity cannot- be questioned. Woodbury. N. J.. March 20. Swedish Bitters Co.: Gentlemen : I have suffered witli dyspepsia and its horrible ef fects for many years. Have spent hundreds of dollars, with physicians and in patent medicines, with no avail. I have been unable to eat meat of any kind, and could not retain water on mv stomach, and could not sleep at r nights. ' I was induced to procure and try a bottle of your Swedish Bitters, and con scientiously say its use was followed by beneficial results. I can now sit down and enjoy a hearty meal of meats and vegetables of any kind, and have gained sixteen pounds in three weeks, and can cordially rcom mend it to others. Yours respectfully, AuGrsTtrs Pef.hl. Proprietor of Woodbury City Coach Line, Prehl's Livery and Accom odation Stables. Destrnctire Explosion, Leavenworth. Kans.. March 23. The large flouring mills and ele vator of Hanen & Co , were burned this afternoon. Cause, dust explo sion in the dust. room. The whole building was wrapped in flames in an instant A. B. Hanen, of the firm, John O. Day and one or two other employees were serionslv in jured. Twenty thousand bushel of wheat and about $12,000 worth, of flour were stored in the elevator. The loss is estimated at $60,000: with $54, (XX) insurance. j A norriVSe E&ooMaf Affair. EmtrrsBrBG, Ll, Mar h 22. A horrible shooting affray has taken place ten miles north of this town. Charles Cornelian and Frederick Miller, two Highland Scotchmen who came from Scotland last season and bought land of Scottish-American land company on Jack creek, met at the house' of W. R. Howson. Cornelian and Miller soon quareled, the latter calling the former a liar. Cornelian procured a revolver from the next room and shot Miller twice through the head, killing him instantly. ' He then placed the weapon to his own head. Bent two bullets through his brain and fell dead. Merit Moat Reap ita Just Re ard. Of the many Catarrh, and Hay Fever remedies we keep in stock, there is none of which cur custo mers speak more highly than of Elys' Cream Balm. We have never bandied a remedy that has increas ed so rapidly in sales or given such universal satisfaction. C. N. Crittextox, 115 Fulton St, New York. Only lawyer to be Chosen. Washington. Mar. 25. It is un- dereVtod that President Arthur, in selecting five Commissioners for Utah Territory, will nominate only lawyer, believing good lawyers will bereouired to proDerlv reorganize the Territorial government It is stated several leading citizens of Utah haye already been recommended to the President, but it is not likely any one from Utah, Mormon or Gen tile will be appointed. Further, it is reported the President has in timated that he will not appoint any one who applies directly or in directly for the position of Commis sioner. 6S3 Fulton street, ) Chicago, III. j Gentlemen : Your Hop Bitten have been of great value to me. I was laid up with typhoid fever for over two months and could get no relief until I tried your Hop Bitters. To those suffering from debility or one in feeble health, I cordially re commend them. J. C. Stoetzell. An Appeal from Mason's Wife. Washington, March 21. The wife of Sergent Mason, writing to a friend in this city from Locust Grove, Orange county, Va., appeals for aid for herself and her distressed family, and pleads for the interven tion of her friends with President Arthur in her husband's behalf. For eighteen years, she says, her husband has been a brave soldier, never having been in the guard house before, and carries honorable wounds. She thinks he has been punished enough by the six month's imprisonment he has endured, and closes with the hope that he may be restored to his family. , We are strongly disposed to re gard that person as "the best physi cian who does im rt to alleviate hu man suffering. J udging from this standard, Mrs. LyHa E. Pinkham, 233 Western Avenn-, Lynn, Mass., is entitled to the froi i rank, for her Vegetable Compound i daily work ing wonderful cures ia female di seases. Send for circular to the above address. rRailroad Accident. Des Moines, March 21. The first train that attempted to cros? the new bridge over the Middle river on the Des Moines and Osceola nar row gauge railway yesterday at Lanthrop, broke through, precipita ting the engine, two flat cars and a caboose into the river channel be low. No one was killed. The en gineer had his wrist broken and the fireman a leg and an arm broken, and two or three others on the train wero injured. Such Report Do One's Heart Gjod. Mr. Frank Wilke, North and 0th streets, stated, that he was not only highly praised by his customers, but the St Jacobs Oil has not failed to give satisfaction in a single case. La Fayette Journal. Converts to Mormonism. Chattanooga, Tenn March 22. Elder Morgan, Presiding Elder of the Mormon Church for Virginia, North Carolina, Tennessee, Georgia Alabama and Mississippi, left to day for Utah with 100 converts gathered in the above States. At Nashville he will be joined by fifty or seventy-five more. Never before has a remedy of so much merit as Elys' Cream Balm, for the cure of Catarrh, Hay Fever, and Colds in the head, been offered to the public. No dread attending the application. Price 50 cents. Apply into nostrils with little fin ger. Judge Cox Impeached. St. Paul, March 23. The Senate, sittiDp as a court of impeachment, met in open session to day and for mally certified its judgment against Judge Cox, impeached for drunken ness. Tliis sentence is removal from office and disqualification from judicial office for three years. A Fiend's Act. Dpblin, March 21. Last evening a canister of powder was dropped into a house on Kelson street where several detectives are living. Much damage was done to the building by the explosion which followed, but no boay was injured. . A western paper tells how an up country gentleman lighted himself to bed with a Roman candle. He says he'll bet his sweet life he can lick the fellow that loaded it Never go from home or on a jour ney without a bottle of Peruna in your satchel. Great numbers of the trundle-bed brigade Buffer with the measles. Secretary Lincoln reports that 654 Indians are held as prisoners un der the orders of the War Depart ment After a rich girl is made to love a man, she finds indeed that she has been made tool of to open her mon ey chest Spring hanging was inaugurated throughout Pennsylvania on Friday of last wt-ek. The weigh of the transgressor short i - i'Olt Kouralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, Backache, Soreness of tho Chesi, Gout, Quinsy, Soro Throat, Smell wry end Sprains, Burns and Scalds, General Bodily Pains, Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted Feet and Ears, and ail other Pains and Aches. fa PrrpanitloB on rh qul f. J"im Oit u , mmt, snrr, mimpl ixl rkrmp Krmrdr A trial tntmii kot Ui omprtiY-lT trifim oat!Y nt 00 fnt. wJ nrry oo rrir with io can ha obep nd poi pruuf ot M claims. IHrectiou in Elmo Lanes. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS A5ro DEALEEf IV KKDICIHE. A. VOGELEIt & CO., fOB IALB T C. N. BOYD, DRUGGIST ftoaaersef. Pa. )TIIE( CnicAGO & North-Western It At La W Is tiieOLDEST: BESTUONSTRVCTED'BEST EQVIPPED ! and hence the Leading Railway OF THE WEST AND NORTHWEST! It la the shortest and bct route between Chicago ana an points in Northern Illinois. Iuwa. Ihikuta. Wrnmlnar, Nebraska, California. Oregon, Arizona, Utah, Jolorado, Idanu, aluntana, Pieraua and Tor Council Etlufl. Omaha DEXTER, LEiDTILLE. SALT LAZ2, SAN FRANCISCO, DEADW00D, SIOUX CITY, Cedar Rapids. Des Moines, Oohambns, and all Points in the Territories, and the west. Aim, fur Milwaukee, Oreen Bay, Oshkosh, Sheborfao. Marquette, Fond du Lac, Watertown, Honvhum, Neman, Menasba, St. Paul, Minneapolis, Huron, Voljca, Fariro, Hismarek, Winona, LaOrome, Owatonna. and all points in Minnesota, Dakota, Wisconsin and the Northwest. At Council Bluffs the Trains of the fihlcaso k Nortb-Wrstern and the U. P. K'r depart from, arrive at and use the same joint i nlon Ifepot. At Clilrairo. eloe eonnectioM aro made with the Lake chore, Mich i if an Central, Baltimore a Ohio, Ft. Wayne and Pennsylvania, and Chlraico ami uraad Trunk H ys, and in Aankakee and Pan Handle Routes. CImo coaaMCtlona tnasla at JwrtlM falata. IllasbcOXLT USE vaaatiasf PullmanHotel Dining Cars CHICAGO aM COUNCIL BLUFFS. Pallia Slspis oa all Night Traim Insist on Ticket Agents selling you Tickets via this road. Kzamlne rour Tickets, 'and refuse to boy if t hey do not read over the Chicago a North western Railway. If you wish the Best Traveller Accommoda tions you will buy your Tickets by this route, 49-AND WILL TAKE NONE OTHER. All Ticket Agents sell Tickets bv this Line. MABVia Huunrrr,2d V. P. a Uen'l Manag'r, Chieaico. BE NOT DECEIVED Ej Plasters claiming to he an im provement cn ALLCOCZ'S POROUS PLASTERS. ALLCOCZ'S is the original and enly gennino Parsns Plaster; all other so-called Porous Plasters are imitations. Bewart of them. Sea thai jen got an ALLCOCZ'S PLASTZ2, vrhich we guarantee has effected mora and quicker enres than any other external Remedy. FOR SALE BY ktl DRUGGISTS. Jau25,7iuofcoW State Normal School, INDIANA, PA., PuEaiJTs UncKrAMED Facilities roa Paa rAKisa Tkachkbs Ton Ebtbbijo tmkib Field o Labor. There Is no more noble pursuit tl an that of moulding human character, ami no greater bene ntctor than tbe truly successful teacher. If you Intend to teach, prepare yourself thor oughly, and thus make your work pleasant and profitable for vourseirand of real value to others. Every teacher should take a full coarse at a professional school, and Pennsylvania oilers you one superior to that of the Mm Koraial ScM.of Ma. 1. LOCATION, Bcantlfnl, Convenient and Healthful. X BUILDING and APPURTENANCES, unexcelled. . INSTRUCTORS, experienced and success ful. 4. GRADUATES stand high wherever known. . COURSE OF STUDY and plan ot Instruc tion are what you need If you have determined to become an earnest and successful teacher. SPRING TERM WILL OPEH APRIL Id 1832, FALL TERJt WILL OPEN SEPTEMBER 4th, 1882. For further particulars address, L- H. PURLING, Principal. marZi 55 TO per day at home. Samples worth fafrea. AddresaS-riB-Maine. lUar.l-lyr. no a Co., Pi NOTICE Harriet Snyder herel.y gives notice that she has mad applicative) t the Meeratary of Internal A If airs of Pennsylva nia for a warrant nr IS acre of land, la Stony creek township, Somerset eoanty. Pa-, adjoinins; lands of Joseph Snyder on the north, east and south, aod lands of Martin Brant oa the west. marl I llIT'' a meriui, C5-We mkI oae IHownicd Caul HlMtiaCcd CaUk-eae vt KwafC-yilllnsx I I tat (israen, oa apolatwa. .jiff' The Somerset Herald ! (ESTIBUSHED 1827) Caa cf the leading Papers of Western is miMT mill HAS DOUBLE THE CIRCULATION OF AN Y0HER NEWS PAPER IN HE COUNY I It Will Contain the General News of the Day. The EditoriailM Local Speak far Thcmselve. 93.00! t2.se A YEAS! t.0 A TEAR $2.00 A YEAR ! $2.00 A YEAR ! $2.00 A YEAR ! $.00 A YEAR! $2.00 A YEAE! $0 0 A YEAR! $2.00.1 YEAR! $200 A YEAR! $2.00 A YEAR ! nob A TEAR 00 A TEAR $2.00! -IN OUR- JOB DEPARTMENT ! WE HAVE THE BEST FA CILITIES WEST OF THE MOUN TAIN. &S-Ve are prepared to furnish on short notice, and at a great re duction on former prices, all kinds of JOB WORK. such as : - LETTER HEADS. BILLHEADS, ENVELOPES, BUSINESS CARDS, VISITING CARDS. WEDDING CARDS. PROGRAMMES, HORSE BILLS, SLIP BILLS, POSTERS, LABELS, TAGS. RECEIPTS NOTES OF ALL KINDS, DODGERS, CIRCTLARS, AO, 40. Orders from a distance will receive prompt and careful attention. Address, The Somerset Herald, PRINTING HOUSE ROW, Somerae. Pa. MlTMIttm II MMlstUMB nl vhlrli w. .m .. 1...I. XAKttKT UAHUKKKIMAXD H.OKlsT. Bie a each k.wledir aa matk.-ki tojeda-ecot --.y toe li kinds ari'rartt.Flerwerwr TesetaMw eroa(wB' tor lYirate or CoaanierciAliiar'ieiuiis:). bet ..i nmrhiv taat the 4aaiiiv at all Itaaai aae flaala w6iwshwe and Frame in Jerx-y City, are ti- lair' .i sevanac apwarda al lour acres, aufcd ia glass, aia(Muu peter Hsr.-Dsncon & 35 Cortlandt Street, New YorU. RAILROAD SCHEDULE; 1 SOMERSET 4 CAKBRIA Ra:LR0a "CTBWiBtt " ?:uu I - r- aaw IVpait Tk.v.n . a.ul -u. aa. ' 1:41 p. m.. and 11 s "l respectively at Wiwai " -rn,ir, day a SJO moSVa - m.Hvgwni uiruu.h trains i u at a. m.. and p. m.,i wh7 ,b't''a''1 a. ., and r.is p. m.. arH.il"'' ' l Rockwoou at m nTl''' . j PENNSYLVANIA CENTRAL RAILROAD tbaibi eaimt B,T. obasto,. Ex.1.... 'ncEx.j t:37 t m! ! hlcajro Dav kx f. .io-a . ' J St. Louis r;;-7. X r. - z'Tz "op.. MuBLInirfiiw tbaiss aoiaa wmt. ....K v . - 'ava : mil.. i J?.rnr' Cincinnati ttif... 13 a.m. ' a. . Cincinnati I Jubnstvwn ;""."" I:Ma. tn '", ""w" "" I rat tint mau T..4 m ' ". Padflo aM 10:Wt nt..rr5v::; Wa, vZZ-l-iLZ-.-r: stops .. t;tila Fast . I p. liuii. Mai H all si "i i.n.. VK:;,"1U:ip-tops.. etpt JobnTiwnS-"; and Ida Johnwn 1.' if"" TH Fast LIda. a. . ... davs. ana ut at tJul CouTS V eniv. Ti fc. Cincinnati Wlit I dar vy vn JiM stop . ana ust Liberty ' " "T0 J"xl J"nstown Eb .. . rrr.Tn?.t'i acme i mau west la ths svenlmr. BATIM0RE& OHIO RAILROAD. P1TTSBTJROH DlVlSmn sill depart from aiw riv.a,'.nf " ! tnu Water StrtrJfoU,; pu'tt'rn"ui 1 1n anl .fVT . . AST. Lav' WEST, MAIL. Pirutturt; BnbtOcck Mck'eraport WfM wtna Broad Foni Ml. n-aaant CounrlluviH rniontowu Ohio Fyla Kockwiiod Hvodman Cumberland Washin-ion Baiutiiora :M a. m. 9:10 " S-J3 10-UO " " ll:S 10:A4 use - ll: ' lr:w p. m. ::w S:J5 " ; sj " p. SB. Lara ; naitinwrv Washing-ton ('uatbvrlaad Hrndinaa I'bio 1-tI Cinii.llvillt ftrna.1 Vni Ml. ilniiai)? fiiUuurg r. " M M. arriving ltovu ' T M wood 11-M P. M. Ir. :,. "r.v M- .h. TflsflnmMtMf.1. .... . Cumberland at 2 it A M .r.,P '" w.mui it V. :1"A.M- arriving k. b7h 75iA:,w'nMiUVUi -0A- -Wi rives at Washington at V a. m Bam M7, HI r. a.: PhilarlUhi.:io AJ."-"Lt'T"'.1.034 a.: Richmond li;aa. . ' . Throoirb Express, leavlnc 8:08 dallv rives at V aahlnaoon at :3u , a. - " p. a. -; Philadelphia; la ,..7 ir'SV.'X Thronvh Mall trains dally. Kxpsess trains daily exoeut SarHar 1 . mi -Tut mna nond Ptuarf "r? v pot oorner runt and Water its.. Ticket OfllflM. immw KM Oh a , . U M. UOL t. General Ticaet Agent. BEST! biulnoss now be tor the nnb lie. Yon esn make rnmKy faster at work for as thaa at weeded. We will start yon. SM a day and op- anvtnin? elm. I aiti m ,J . mum " j urn iD4jniinB4. JIM ana women, boys ard girls, wanted everywiwre to sort for ns. Now is the time. Yo can rk ia nparo time only, or clv your whole tlmi w the business. You can live at home anil do tae wurk. M o other business will pay pou nearly as well N on can fall to make enormous pay by enpcavfncsl nee. Costly ouiht and terms Ires. Xuoxy aut fast, easily, and honorably. Address. Tars a, Co., Augusta, .Maine. leel J-lj PATENTS obtained, and all business in the V. 51. Patmt tnr, or la the Oonna attended to for MODERATE FEES. We am opposite the V. S. Patent nfflfe, en. aed In PATENT BUSINESS EXCLUSIVELY, and ean obtain patents in less Ume thau louae remote from WASHINGTON. When model or drawing Is sent we mlvtM as to patentability rren of eharve: and we make NO CHARGE UNLESS WE OBTAIN PATENT. We refer, here, tn the Postmaster, the SupL of the Money Jrder Division, and to officials of the U. S. Patent Olflee. For eirrnlar. advice, terms, and reference to actual clients ia your own Stale or county, address C. A. SNOW A CO.. Opposite Patent Offloe. Washington, 1. iX I is nature's greatest remedy. ir. tioruoan prescribed It to 40.000 BaUent. all of whim rorovprod or were morn improved. BeUBl KtBUN ean be taken bv ever uue-; ytraug, the mlddK-asyd, the old, the bal and the motner. sawa. ZZSEES ntntr always agrees wiih Uie p.uliit. ft clsamos the system of all Its Impurities, tones the stomach, rraiuur the heart, an locks tliesecretlonsof the liver, faeosrthei tne ncrvf4ana invigorates tne orain. i j.iil is mo iMwakaujjruKr. imw: blcod, end to the weary and tired from the tolls and cares of the day It gtvx swet and refreshing sleep. " FEiir a ahouiJTo Lkitraby everybudyoe for each meat wbea Wall, to prevent sick ness: when sirk. toeirre. tioon wi!l benald lor sense ltwlll not cure or help. B- -as Perdki laeomncaedof allvecret-itiiti liiirrj- dlcnts: evh one a great remedv In Itnelf. r See pamphlet, a . wj atom vb to dlt any artlclo of fowl. -3X1 )'-r a book which will rnable toq to trutt yourself, adtlrcaa . B. HAKTma.H t ".., ana peiTiconrans wim rom SALE BY ;C. X. BOYD, nruggUU Ttamerael, Ps Mat 4 POTJTZ'S HORSE AND CATTLE POWDERS VO no will die f fif Termor lno r ' a. It frotitr Powdera an ened In lime. viirs Powders wlllcurraix: nre rent Hob Cwt.v" ijutl'i Powiera will prrrpa tiapaa iv - ouix'showlrawill ini-rea. the euantitvoT e . pn! erram twenty per cc,i aod aiak tne tmUc-r tr-i .nd vwert. otitz Powder win rnre or prevent slnvw? it t'-T I'msakk to wliM-n Horwea end fanle nre wil-t. oi,T7." Pownnca willuits Hxri actios. Udd . where. SATIS r. rotJT2. rreprietor. XALTIX32E.1CS. Feb 1. ly. COOLEY CREAMERS. CiREATa.VI.'HPROri'.U. i In dally itio In lA.uui lat-t..T lea and dairies. For curin-e -ctBAMUMKMri. puarrv aud OF CKEAM. BAVr MO EMt'-kU Made in FOUR mLM. TtS RIZEft aecta. Diinlxa anil flmamtmtal. fflrim ailto. GRKATKHT eoeHIULB A.VHOT mafWDy without Bftimr toe cane. Mnet p.11. Un to, the cajutt oatherixo rlao. Foar iiulAt Jfednls anal His II.VF.It .VedaU for HI - FtKIOItlTY. Aleo. Davia (twins' Churn. Bnrter Wrker, Printera. 6c. Hendpwtalfir cirfniar. ttMKMT FASN lACm Ca.,BeUuwFalU, vt. P. H. HAY, Agent. Hkllcla, Prnn'a. lebU-13t E XECUTOITS NOTICE. Estate ol Mary Oandle, deo'd. Letters testamentary 'a the above estate basins; bees granted to the "mderslgned by the proper anthority, notice la hereby aires to all parages Indebted to said estate to ssake lutsaedl ate payment and those having elalms aaalnst the same to present them duly aw hentleated lor set tlement.oa Wednesday. April eta, leg, at the residence of Jacob B. Countryman, ia Somerset township. JACOB B. COCWTRYM AW. Ball Executor. . . . f . ... r . ... v.. t' wlLi iL.i L au avwace i aevrni y men f hmas n-.i. ti- CO. VKSawJ "'iveTl II II i I u