The Somerset herald. (Somerset, Pa.) 1870-1936, July 05, 1882, Image 1

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    5
3,
4.
,- nf jPublication. I
jc Somerset Herald,
isbed et7 Wedne-laj ruing at f I
nnom if ua.id In artrsoee : otr-orw'-"- fP '
tnrarlably b charirad.
y subscription wlU be Uwonthw' """ u
rasar. paid mp. port'elertta
t-fy us wb mt-rr"" sot Uk. oat
pars-lllbabaMreP"'1 M rob-
Jun.
VP,
t
ha preseat e Aares.
The Somerset Herald,
Somerset, Pa.
V KIM MEL.
c.
Somerset, r .
FkOO:
KOOSER.
ATTOE S E Y -A I Ul v ,
Somerset, Pa.
Jorge r. scull.
I ATTOKNEY-AT-LAW,
3 Somerset, Pa.
1 S. ENDS LEY.
J,' 4 ATIOKNl
KY-AT LAW,
SnmrrMt, Pi.
I.TRENT.
i . attiiRVEY-AT-LAW,
tril
;(TLL.
ATT tKNEY-ATLAW,
Somerset, Pa.
II NomcrF'-'t, Pa.
4 up-fUkln- In Maniinoth Blm-a.
Li
j R. SCOTT.
ATTOKNKV
-ATI.AW.
Sooierket. fx.
f V In lh Court House. All business cntrust
d r Is r. attended 10 with imimj .: "1
.
.H-CtPFIloTH.
W. 1!. uri-ri.u
CCFFROTII & HOTEL-,
I ATTOKXEYSATLAW.
f Aiinea entrust! to tlielr care
will le
-nrt nunctualir a..""c -
Owrf)K n Main o'
str.et, opj-jsiw the
h BlJCk.
AJ.OOLBORS.
..! M. 11: V
COUiORN A f -OT.RORX
T ATTtlKNEYS AT LAW.
I AU' iiae lntnirte.1 to ourcare will be prolog
f 1 r.i..,..n.iio:olle'ti"ma.Ie ia Si.m
dlurd. and a J.iouuni; . '-
Suney-
Ki avODveyancinu
done on reaK-uable terms.
( K I MM EL.
ATTOP.NEY-AT LAW,
Somerset, Pa.
t
Itten.ltonllbuoinessentrnMed U lit"
fcrset anJ adJotninK counties wilh pn.nip.
M nlcllty. Oitiw on Main Cr.' s'r-t.
(AS '
war, . Id
I'ATTEION,
ATTOUXEY-AT
LAW,
Somerset, Pa.
i,Jn.anlnlril to IliS rre
ill le st-
I to with promptness snd tl'1el!ty.
y a,t-l,lWJ.
IV F. SCH ELL.
ATTOKX El -AT-LA w ,
and I'en-lon Aitent, Suui'-rs.-:
nViln"Mammoin Hisck.
1 a.
LENTIXE II AY.
ATTOKNEV-AT LA
: Art Deal.Tin Keal Est ,te
iXtm I to ail 1.uiim- entrust'" -
dcs and u:ety .
JOHN II. I'HL.
A1T(KXEY AT LAW
j S' Uifrsel, Pa.
WTB prompt tv attend to ail Iwir.eM entmte.1
etna. Money" aiWanced on colltti.Jis, k". t-
I fe Mammoth Itulldtnc.
Li
Fj. OGLE.
ATTOK N EY-AT L A W,
S..oierset Pa.,
Prols?iiial business entrusted to ir.J care
to wiin proujjfiiies. auo nfji. ......
ITILLIAM II. KOOXTZ.
ATTCKX EY-AT LAW,
'7 J Somerset, I t.,
rtl irlve prompt attention to business entrast-
It His care in r"'ni: - JJ
B m Printing House Kow.
IMESL-Prcil.
ATTUKX Ei - A I -la v. .
Somerset, ra.
Vm u.nnik Hl.iek. un stairs. Entrance,
.inuL tViileoUo'is Dl, estates
atvfe-.l. titles examined, and all leiral business
abided to wttn promptness auo
U BAER.
ATTOKX EY-AT LAW,
Somerset, P.,
wu uracllre In Somerset an.l aH "tnlnir count i-s.
U bualness entrasteo to liiui will Iwpromptly
IU
led to.
aAC m ors.
I ATTXIKXEI-Al-L," .
f Somerset, Penn .
lVci
I:XX1S MEYERS,
ATTUEX EY-AT-LA W ,
Somer"t, Penn a.
jT3cM-al Imsiness entroae-l to tisoare wm or
fttf H'd to with promptness ami miriuy.
. te in Mammoth Ulwk next door to Inyd t
Ir re.
m HOWARD WYNNE, M
I).
rf jonxsro iv x, i-exx-j .
r insesof the Ere. Ear. Ne and Throat.
It. ai and Exclusive nra.tie. Hours. . . to
1 r. . a Lutaer A Oreen P lork. V Main St.
:1.
13
I.
i
WILLIAM COLLI XS,
UET1ST, SOMERSET, PA.
4 In Mammoth Block, abor. Boyd's Ini(r
V. where he can at all times De i.mnt prepar
tt UJt all kinds ol work, such as tlllinit reau.
' atle--,eitrcuns;. eui. Artincil teeth ol ill kinds,
isdotti. Imsi material Inserted. twiatins
asrraatwl.
A IU
E M. HICKS.
.H'STICE CP THE PEACE,
pHimerset, Penn'a.
alVMKlX. H.S. KIMMKI.L.
iTWL E. M. KIMMELL & SOX
I jXtender their protesrlonal acrt loes to the ep.l
a it-t Somerset and vicinity, Hie of the mem
i ! the arm can at alplmea. unless prolessli.
i itFaired. he ! at (lielr oltioe, . n Mam
. east ot lb. Kntmonu.
rj' i K. MILLER h:w inna-
Jlientlv htel is Berlin tor the practice of
iai.iMfsiiiu. otBee oiposite Clmrles Kntr
i ajw.SATO-lt
rl. II. P.RUBAKER tenders
his
serrt-es to the citizens
w4sad vicinltv. Ottloe in residence
a Main
ll.vwt ol toe inamono.
DR. A. G. MILLER.
PHYSICIAN .SVROEVN.
is rem.ired to Sowth Bend, Indtam, where he
cou-wited by totter or otherwise.
j l. JOHN BILT-S,
aber. Henry Hrey ( iUr,:!ln Crs
iWueraet, Pa.
IAMOXD HOTEL
F TOVKTOWK. l'ENN'A.
r spopularsBj mr known house bat lately
I itboroi'! and oo lv rtmet with all new
a ketot lori"tre. lii.'h h.t made it a very
i a Me stopI'lL, Uie traue!lcc j aMIc
I Ule and r'-, cmntx i surpassd, all tie
Ik., tt cUsw. wltk pnMIc hall attached
f sam.. Al bince snd rweay stsWinc
twsaiasstwardlDa'eM,ulul1(ltwk,vr4t
slWss nre. the OT et
S AMI U.rrsTER. Prou.
.E.Cor. IHatautMl
Stoysuiw ,Pa
laitted and Dcctfcd!
PEOPLE THE IKES !
THAT
I DR. FAHRNEY'S
iealth Eestorer!!
. wa.aA
1 Vat Vegetable Kemedv. cures more ease.
VesoiiiieLIVt K, EIUXEYandBUMjU
y other knowa reuaedv. It contains no
5r h poison: Is mad. of the most ba rmleas
7- aMdloal Hoots, Barks aod herbs
I settne. ba, disccvered for
C: EA5S1NG THE BLOOD
1, ,U tt Stornaeh ank Liver. Ca
tZ ',!!'r, '"!' by eld and younr. It
ltd up th. TM and wrerworked Wlv.
II wu,. aad Titror to those who fel
iSibjnVm' AU Jmiicla' "1r kU IU
j IB. D. FAHkJtEY ft SOX.
W II.rtt.Mi Ml
rn:M
Bom
i
j y
1
VOL. XXXT. NO 4.
rraiik YV. Kay.
ESTABLISHED 34TE1RS.
.A. "Z" B O
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL
ft Copper anil Sheet-Iron Ware Mil
o. 2 SO Washington Street, Johnstown, Pa.
RANGES, STOKES and
At Prices Less than any other
i
Special attention naM to Jobblnc In Tin. Galvsnlied Iron and Sbeat-Iroa. Sugar Pans, feteam
PI;. Ht-Air Pi. Euutinic. SpnoUnt;, Stark of Eofrinet, and all work pertaining to tllar Fnr
Bam. K-iimaief1 Kivn auU work dutie by nrnt-claM Mechanloa oalj. Sale A prni for Jiobla Oook.
Jr-ntDwaOk Sirare' Anti-IiaM Cook. Exril Pran. In Hunne-Furnirlilnj O00.U we offer
O il Ybm-k. Toilot eset'. Bread CluKia. Cake Btixea, Cbamlier-Palla, Kniveao4 Forka (eomBon
art llatm!) Herman Silvw Spmmd, Britannia 8Mona, Tea Traja, Lined, Iron and Enameled
W .rc ltrM end Copper Kettles, Heat Hroilers, Uytter BroHers, Egtt tieatera, six different kinda.
itrrad ioaierR. Fliited Brlunnla and Wire Caautra, 1 roa Standi, Kire lrona. and ewythlna-of
V re nee !e,i in t lie t!.k:nir l)irtment. An exiierience of thirty-thre. yeara la baaineaa Her. ena-
Wi u to meet the wante of thin romtnaalty la our line. withaood article at a low pnoa. All good!
!.:d WAKKANTEL) A.i KEPRESE.NTEDorlhe money relunded. Call and aee tlie Wares ; et
v.r'r i..i..r.. nnrr-hn.lns : no tnnme to soow riioas.
i.riwnt i.v liuvii.K tlieir.ut nt from na. Merrlianta aelllnc iniods in oor Una ahorld aend iur
V holcjile Price Lift, orcall and net quotations of
Tk is WarnintKl to be of the ben quality at lowest
JTAY HROSo.2SO YTaMhinKlon Street Jhnt4own, Penn'a.
HERE IS THE PLACE!
J. M. HOLDERBAUM I SONS
NO. 4 BAER'S BLOCK.
A CVul't Aortmentof GENGRAL MERCHANDISE consisting of
STAPLE and FANCY DRY GOODS!
A Iirge Assortment of
DRESS GOODS AND NOTIONS!
MEN'S, BOY'S k CHILDREN'S CLOTHING!
HATS ,BOOTS AND SHOES !
CARPET & OIL CLOTHS I
Queensware, Hardware, Glassware,
GROCERIES.
; All Kinds of Window Blinds
uEaDreiias, oaiciiets tuu jl iuuas, vuiuus, uunci
Bowls, Tubs. Buckets, Baskets, Toledo
Pumps, Farm Bells, Corn Plant
ers and Plows, Cultivators,
and WAGONS!
THE JtOLAXIJ CHILLED PLOW,
The CJfAJIPIOX JIOIVER & REAPER,
Ihv CJLUIPIOX GRATX SEED DRILL,
With Detachable Fertilizer.
THE ISKMT OF E VlSIt YTIIIA'G AT
J. M. HOLDERBAUM & SONS',
SOMERSET, PENN'A.
aJIIII WORLDrAHi:i
is rn sai.k
5. .1. SIKFFf.KY,
MUSIC DEALER. SOMERSEh PEHN'A.
Aiiovs IlkSKV 11 trr. ivV Stock.
tlnsiln TTTTTVfl
3 TRY THE BDECETT !
IT IS TUT: LJTST!"
11 De53 Mitioa is Variety, Baatj 4 Price.
Tlie supcrloritv ! the Bimlntt f iriraM Is reeo
nlo.i and ackii"la!gcd by the hithest musical
authorities, and tlie umiand I T them l steadily
Increasing ss their merits are lieootninn more ex
teaMvalr known. What everybody wants to tlie
BES r KAN f'r the least amoont of monry :
Therefore everyUkly wants the Ht'KDETT.
Evkuv Okoas Gt AOATEtn Fiva Years.
Soldo Easy Monthly Payments and tow fr CASH.
VIOI.1VS, GVITAllS. ACX)i:i)KOS,
ItAXJOS. CliAUIOXl-nTS. IMC-
COIiOS. 1XVTF1S, riKK4.
And In fact everythitiir In the masical line. The
latest and moat dcpiraHe Instruction Books for all
instruuients ou shIc, Blank Music Bsks and Pa
lter cl all sixes and kinds.
SHEET EJSIC k VIOLIN STSIN3S i S?2iallT.
CnrAos Tuned and Repaired. Mnstcal Instruc
tion ih per quarter. Send for catalogue.
Sollciiinir your orders for "Ererythina; in the
Mnlcal L'tie." I aiu. Yours Respectfully,
i. j.
HEFFLEY,
8'tmereet, Pcan'a
I.tr-tr.
FASHIONABLE
CUTTER & TAILOR !
Having had many
years experleme
In all branches of
the Tailoring Ihis
ioeas. 1 guarantee
kiatistartKm to all
who may call
MCS
V Jij n. ith their pat-
i
sours, x ,
H'M. 31. noCnNTETLKR,
mart
SOMERSET COUSTY BANK !
(ESTABLISHED 1ST7.)
CHARLES J. HARRISON,
CASHIER AND MANAGER. , ;
Collections made in all parts of the
t'nlted
Sialea.
CHARGES MODERATE.
Parties wi.-Mnx to Scad money West can be ao-
e-jciuudatrd by draft oa New ork in any sum.
Col l-ci Ions Bia.)e wilh rimpitesa. I . S. iionos
b.:ht and sold. Woner anl ralualdes secured
byuoeof ilelrseeleltfted safes, with a Sar-a-ent
k Yaie f.iM M Ume lock.
ACCOUNTS SOLICITED.
w-AIl lcl hoUdays observed. "W dT
CHARLES HOFFMAN,
(Alxivs 1 icnr.v 1 L-Jlley'. Srot.)
1
LATEST STILES Cl LOWEST PRICES.
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED.
SOMERSET, :PA..
Tourowa town, u outfit
No risk. Everythlntr wew.
not required. W. will tur-
m mmm. ithliig 9S.nv am
m skitiir fortune. Ladlea make as muck as aaeu
and bors aod arirts ar nakinr crest Pay. Kwadar
if you want a business at whieh yoa eaa auks,
rreat par all tb. lint, yoa work, writ tor partic
ulars to H. Haiabtt A Co Portiand, Main.
lMClt-lj.
inn
u 1 ft v r'
11 Un"" sJSk 1
MERCHANT TAILOR
Jons B. Hay.
HOUSE-MING GOODS III GENERAL
House in Western Pennsylvania.
reraonfi eonimenciDK nuuw-n-ceuiciK win w.
onr Warm. Aswe hare no apprentice all our
price. To sar money call 00 or Mnd to
and Fixtures, Wall Papers,
LYDIA E. PINKHAWO
TEGETAELE COMPOUND.
fi PrwtiT dire
Fr
A j -d iriae far W.maa. InreaUd ky a Wmam.
Prcaared ky a Wautaa.
Via CMfll cd MMnry Stat. Us Bam af Biatarr.
MIt r.Ttrcs th. oraowina' srwrita, uiroratn and
harm .-3Lg J the onraida fnnc-fams, airas elasticity and
firmer, te the s-cp. rtstorss t! natural rostra to the
era. awl pi mt oa the pal. check of womau th. (nwh
rvm f Ufa's wriBr and aarly msir Has,
I i."ny sic ians lis H aai Pr.scrib K Freeiy it
It msiw falnusw. nacdn-y. desovys all ornlas
foe stiaal-.Tt, aud relsaa wjaiuanw of (b. stoma-A.
T'.Rt t.i-Uns o: suariuf doua, fsawSa rata, w.ht
and 1m k-j'n. Is alwan pmsuieaCy cured by a u.
Feelkc ear of Kldaer Caalafets.r either aes
111 la twsMsl la niisarawsssd
I.TI F. PIKRHKM- VlJOT PrKIFIEK
will rrnH-.. ercry Tt:TC ,.r Humors lnm tb.
Blooj. ana ut tend and rtn'RirH to the syaveia, i
woioaa wr 1 Inst uli Uavla It.
Ant b ' is Cunjmmd aod Hi A PiriSrr ar. nrrpared
atSSsj..: WcAjra Aecaaa, Lyaa. X.iss. Pries of
ettrx-r Hit hottlrs for $1. Scot by nail in th. foswi
o! U-'. of I ja an ou r-jc ipt of price. $: per boa
f.miarr. MrPuikhamf party aiswersa:ilraaraa(
luroiiy. Eaaluae let. stanp. gjudforpanipf 1. k
Wcf-mny JimM r wt!ijti.TrlA K. PIKimATfS
UVfa I'l'.'j. Ik" e-r cuatiMa:iua. bumisars
aadftorpidit.vuftheU4!r. Si cenu per bur.
-sld by adl Drufc-ista.-. (
7
FOR SALE BY
C. N. BOYD,
imroGisT.
fMsmeraet, P-
Ai Rear A. Hukkc.
J. Srorr Was
horne & mi
atKmaoaa to
EATON & BROS,
27 FIFTH AVENUE,
xo.
PITTSBURGH, PA.
SPRING, 1882.
NEW GOODS
S7Z37 DAT SPSCIALTHS
EmkraMarWa, Laces, UIary, Wait GaWt, fisaf.
ktrckiars, Drttt Ttianfiafa, HwsiarFs !,
Corsets, fstlis awl Maria. UaVwr, la-
fanti' aaa taltdr.' Cictftiaf. Flat
Caodt, Yam. Zajrrt, Mata
riali tf All Klais fcr
'"' FANCY WO IK,
GmtiVMiia IteJs, to, fce.
rcra rATBouaea a ntrrrrcuf souona
tg-ORDKBSar MAIL A TTEXDED TO.WtTU
CJJtr AW BlStATcn. marl.
OXI.Y BY V AST
I
m
M mmr knt feia.li tort.
omei
SOMEKSET,
IS HARBOR.
I think it is over, over
s' think it is over at last;
Voices of foeruan and lover.
The sweet and the bitter, have pasweU;
Life, like a teniiiest of ocean.
Hath outblown lta ultimate blait.
There's but a taint sobbing seaward.
While the calm of the tide deepens leeward,
And lielmld ! like the welcoming nuiver
nf birt.niil throbbed thronuh the river,
Those lights in the Harbor at last
The heavenly Harbor at last !
I feel it is over, over
The winds and the waters surcease;
How few were the days of the Rover
That smiled in the beauty of ia-e:
And distant and dint was the omen
That hirted redrews or release.
From the ravage of Life, and its riot,
What marvel I yoara for the quiet
Which bides in this Harbor at last?
For the lights, with their welcoming quiver.
That throb through the sanctified river
Which girdU the Harbor at last
The heavenly Harlior at last?
I know it is over, over
I know it is over at last;
For the -tress of the voya has iswt;
Life, like a tempest of ocean,
Hutu outblown its ultimate blast.
There's but a faint sobbing seaward.
While the calm ot the tide deeens leeward,
And behold! like the welcoming quiver
Of heart jmlses throbbed through the river,
Those light in the Harbor at last
The heavenly Harbor at last !
I'AL t H. II.tvSK, in Harjrr'i ifn-jnz'mt fur
Jul.
KAIR SCHEMERS.
'Mistletoe!" cried Alma Field.
"Real, dark green, glossy mistletoe !
Oh, Frances, where did -ou lind
it?'
The snow-niDtled fields were all
crimsoned with the flush of sunset
Far in the distance old Mount
Washington lifted 'his white peak
against the steel-gray sky; in the
valley the frozen river seemed turn
ed to a sheet of crystal, while the
woods were full of that cracklin?,
magnetic sound which often thrills
a leaflless copse at nightfall.
And the three girls standing at
the stile had cheeks like roses in the
keen winter air.
"I found it just here on the old
broken branch which hd fallen
witii the weight of the snow," said
Frances Purple, a tail, slight, sol
emn-eyed girl in a dress of shabby
brown merino with dyed ribbons at
her throat.
"Give me some !" exclaimed Mary
Wallace, "to hang over my pillow
to-night. Mistletoe means good
luck, you know, and to-night is St.
aler.tine s eve.
"Nonsense !" said Frances, a little
curtly.
Mary Wallace shook back her
yellow curls she was one of those
graceful, elf-like creatures to whom
such capricious motions are infinite
ly Iiecoming and laughed.
Alma Field shrugged her shoal
ders.
"France? will never marrv," said
she.
"No," said
nosedlv, "I
Frances Purple,
don't think I
com
ever
shall."
All this time Mr. Murray, stand-
a . 1 .11
ing leaning ngainsi me sine, naa
watched the three bright faces with
a certain grave interest.
"Why not" he asked, abruptly.
"One" reason is because I don't
want to, Frances answered, with
equal bruskeness.
..Au . a .i-VT
Uta, prances! cried Alma, -now
can you tell sucn snocmng stories
right here under the mistletoe ?"
, , w w . aT 1 t 1
"Uitn aiary ana Airaa n is an
ferent," said Frances, speaking more
gently, as if she half repented her
former sharpness of tone. "The
world is softer to them. I am a
working bee. I have my own living
to earn, and I have no time to spend
in romance."
She took up the dark green clus-'
ter of mistletoe as 6he spoke, and
walked quickly on.
"Poor Frances ! ' said Wary, apol
ogetically. "She is really gettins to
be quite a crabbed old maid."
" hat does she mean by being a
working bee?" said Mr. Murray, as
he helped pretty Alma over tlie un
even stones of the stile.
"Didn't von know?" said Alma.
"She has taken Miss Tint's position
in the telegraph office. Eight hour
daily and two on Sundays and holi
days. Isn't it dreadful !"
f'But why did she do that?" per
sisted Murray, gathering up the
scattered sprigs of mistletoe for his
companions.
"Poor, dear Frances always was
peculiar," said Mary.
"And, of course, I wouldn't say a
word against her for the world,"
added Alma, artlessly ; "but I think
she's a little inclined to lie avari
cious.
Rudolph Murray walked with
Alma and Mary a far as the old
red-brick house and there left them,
with some merry allusion to t. Yal
entine's morn.
While the two-girls, running into
the house, flung their mistletoe on
the hall table, and came into the
great, low-ceiled sitting-room, where
a fire of pine logs blazed upon the
stone hearth.
Frances Purple was there quietly
moving around intent on some
household duty 5 for tjie three con
sins lived with an old aunt whose
means were limited, and there was
no servant kept in the establish
ment "Oh, Fram es," cried Alma, angri
ly, "why did you tell Mr. Murray
that you were a working girl ?"
"Because it was the truth," said
Frances. '
"But truth isn't to be spoken on
all occasions," flashed out Marv.
"What will he think I"
Frances bit her lip.
"Why should I care what he
thinks !" said she.
"Isn't it enough to do as you have
done without publishing it to the
whole world?" complained Mary. '
"Frances is such a strange, odd
girl," said Alma. "I believe she
wants yes, actually wanu to die
f an old maid P
"I should rather do that," said
Frances, "than to win a husband
under false pretenses."
"It's no such thing, if you mean
me," retorted Mary, stung into sud
den animation. "Papa was a naval
officer and how is any one to know
sot
. i -f J: '-." . :A
ESTABLISHED, 1827.
PA., WEDNESDAY. JULY 5. 1882.
1 that he was cxbiered before he died ?
! and I should be a great heiress if
only niT CTeat uncle had succeeded
.0 . .... .
in establishing his claim on the Hat-
I lands of Boston !"
! While Alma surveyed her dimpled
i face in the quaint oval mirror above
the wooden mantel.
"Now, girls, don't go to getting
cited," said she. "or you'll Le as
! exCl
wrinkled
and old-lookin? as the
wiches in 'Macbeth.' If I win a
husband it shall be through my own
' personal attractions. I'm not a gen
J ius like Frances there, nor a schemer
j like Polly, but I'll waeer my inoss
j agate bret-stpin against ; anything
I you please to mention that I'm mar
i ried the first of the three."
j And she complacently: fnstended
'a spray of the glossy black-green
leaves into her bright brown hair.
'"Now," she said, wilh a smile
which revealed teeth like seed-pearls,
"I wonder I do wonder wto is
j going to be our Valentine?" I You will love me a little in return?
; "Is that the reason," said Mary, ! You will be my wife?"
j suddenly, "that you hive changed j "Why did you not say this be
i vour room to the front of the house? j fore?" she hesitated.
i A ln... I ilmn V Ar.,1 ttii tnlb nf r.ri '-U'hn .K.J ...... .!,..
Alma! Alma! And you talk of my
Aiuia . .iiiuu. . . 1 j .. v. ...j
being a schemer !" f
'All is fair in love and w ar," said
Alma, with a merry nod of the head :
"and I like a prospect of the road as
well as any one." -
Mary Wallace bit Ler lip, inward
ly resolving not to be circumvented.
" Ten minutes afterward, she went
out into the kitchen where Aunt
Pha-be was rtirring up waffles for
tea. ;
"Is your cold bet ter, auntie dear?"
she asked.
"Well, it's only so-so," groaned
the old lady, who was one of the
ptsfciinists of the world. "And
there's a dreadful stitch in my side
whenever I go to bend over."
"Poor aunty !'? cooed Mary. "Ill
tell you what" you must do lie in
bed comfortably to-morrow morn
ing, and let me get up and see to
things."
Aunt Plnt'be viewed ,her niece
through her spectacle glasses with
unfeigned surprise. What had come
to Mary all of a sudden to make her
so affectionate and self-sacrificing?
"Well," said she, "I don't know but
it would le a sort of rfst for me, just
for once in a way."
And Marv went back to tlie sit
ting-room, quietly determining to be
the very first one up in the house
the next morning.
"And if I should be opening the
window-shutters of the kitchen just
at sunrise, she thought, "and Mr.
Murray should come down the road
on that superb white horse of his to
get the early train, it would be so
delightful to be his Valentine, and
Alma would be so furious !"
"Girls,": croaked Aunt . Phu-be,
putting her gray-pufi'ed head into
the room, "I forgot to tell you old
Miss Peppercorn's folks have lieen
here for watchers, and I promised
'em that one of you should go there
pnd set up to-night,"
"Good gracious me! 1 hope its
nothing catching!" said Alm.i, with
a shiver.
"I shan't go !" said Mary, petu
lantly. "People have 110 business
to be sick if they can't afford to hire
proier attendance !"
"And it's St. Valentine's eve, too."
said Alma. "Resides, I never could
sit up with sick people it makes
such dreadful blister-colored circles
around one's eyes !"
"But I promised," said Aunt
Pheo-be, looking helplew-ly from one
to the other. "And Frances can't
go because of the telegraph office,
and "
IU go. Aunt Phi'le," said Fran-
.1 .,.M 1 If
ces, quietly, uia .ms9 reppercom
has no friends, and I may as well
try to be of some use in the world."
"trances thinks that she may he
a desolate old maid nersen some
day," said Alma, maliciously. i
"I think it extremely probable,"
admitted Frances, good-humortdly ; j
"and then, perhaps, I may need j
some one to care for me."
"Well, it won't le me," said Mary.
"I do hate sickness and sick people,
especially if they are old and ugly
like Miss Peppercorn."
And she gave her golden tresses a
backward toss, as if she Mieved
herself to le gifted with eternal
youth.
Just when Mary and Alma were
nettling down among their pillow
with the sprigs of mistletoe hanging
over their heads, to dream of love
and lovers in the frozen starlight of
the winter night, Frances Purple,
wrapped in one of Aunt Phrbe's
gray linsey cloaks, was clitiing across
the snowy knes to the little one
storied farmhouse where jioor old
Hepsebah Peppercorn Jay breathing
her life away.
All night long she kept her sad
vigil ; and when the poor old woman
died it was Frances Purple's gentle
arm that supported her head
Frances Purple' sweet voice that
whispered words of hope and 6acred
cheer into her benumbed ear.
And then she closed the glazing
eyes with all a sister of mercy's ten
derness, and stood looking down
upon the small, withered form an
instant ere she called tlie attend
ants. "She is gone home!" she said to
herself. "All her weary pilgrimage
is ended !"
And, for a moment only, Frances
almost envied the dead woman.
Going back across the fields, with
the red streak of sunshine beginning;
!:v .1 1 til. I
iu i.it tne gwty uaiuieis 01 iiic ru.-1.c111 i
sky, there wsi a strange, sweet peace
in her face
.-MJrS.!.,
sarilv he a nselesa one."
wiu uciDui , tsuii ib ,n. . . nv.w 1
Just where thev had gathered the
. . . . t
mistletoe the night before she paus
ed n moment to say a long farewell
to ali that life of hope and fear,
scarcely acknowledged love and
steadily repressed aspiration; and
as she" stood there with drooping
head and veiled figure a shadow fell
across the dazzling surface of the
stiow--the shadow, darkly outlined
in the rosy sunrise, of Rudolph Mur
ray. '
Miss Purple!"
ni, Mr Vrnrrnwtr,Mrlaimpd!ifvonJreadv haveanvofthesedis-;On
Vr ' . w wssv - -
Willi a CUil t j 1AVJ IT VttM'C JUU
1 I thoagnt I would cross the
meadows to my train this morning
on foot, instead of taking the usual
route by the high road, he said.
u "ksNW AIIMA etl1 tiArA?1
rr j-t rr ' r f! T .
Uii. IK-
"But I never expected to see you
here!" . , .
"I have
. been
watching with a
'sick woman," explained Frances,
feeling herself blush a vivid scarlet.
"I am going home. Good-moraine,
; Mr. Murray !"
Rut he stood directly across the
narrow foot-path,
'-Frances," he i
said, "have you for
gotten what good saint smiles
through this red sunrise? Don't
you know that you are my Valen
tine?" "I am not golden-haired Mary,
nor yet beautiful Alma," said Fran
ces, a little nervously.
"No," said Mr. Murray, taking
her hands ; i-but you are Frances
the sweetest of all created women in
my eyes, lou are the girl 1 love
the precious treasure that St Valen
tine has given into my keeping.
Nay, dearest, do not avert your eyes
! so resolutely look straight at me!
j t it j uiu j ' xA arum lilt ru ucici
minedly? Why did you declare
j over and over again that
you never
jungly re-
me.int to ruary ?"'
he lau
torteiJ.
''Because because I fancied
that
no one cared for me," said Frances,
with downcast eyelids.
"And what is your opinion upon
the subject now?"
She hid her face upon his shoul-
j der, as he tenderly drew her close to
him.
"Oh," she whispered, "what have
I done to deserve a happiness so
great as tins ?"
Long, long before the pink glow
brightened the snowy crests of the
hills Alma Field was peeping
through the blinds, in her prettiest
dress, with the mistletoe braided
into her wonderfully-tinted bronze
hair. Earlier still the thrifty Mary
had opened the lower part of the
house and was sweeping off the
stoop, with a pink silk handkerchief
twisted jauntilv around her golden
curb. And, a-lack-day ! the only
masculine creatures whose appear
ance rewarded their vigils were
Squire Ilotchkiss' donkey straying
in an objectless manner down the
hi"h road, and old Deacon Penfold
driving to market with a load of
russet apples,
But when Frances Purple came in
to tlie very indifferent breakfast
which Mary Wallace had grudging
ly prepared, her face was brighter
than the sunrise itself.
"Well," said Aunt Piiti be, lugu
briously, "so old Miss Peppercorn's
deadl It does appear to me that
there is nothing but trouble in this
world I"
"Oh, yes, Aunt Phtebe, there's
something else !" pleaded Frances,
brightly. "Because I met mv al-
entine this morning as I was coming
home through Poinsett woods.
"What !" cried Alma and Mary in
chorus.
"It was Mr. Murray," confessed
Frances, "and lie aske( nie to marry
him, and he said he had loved me
for a long, long while ; and so we
are engaged."
Alma and Mary looked at each
other with the blank faces of young
women who see that they have been
outgeneraled.
"Oh !" said Mary.
"I thought you wer-j going to be
an old maid!" acidly remarked
Alma.
"I did think so," said Frances, in
alow voice; "but I have changed
my mind."
A Southern Type-
In the South one soon meets the
young man, a lawyer, or editor, or
physican, who will talK lor hours,
to any one who will listen, of the
suieriority of the South; its people
and its civilization, over the North
and everything Northern. He al
ways talk well, and is usually a very
good fellow, but he proceeds entirely
upon the o jriwrt method, and his
conclusions have little relation to
the facts of life. He knows little of
his own region of the country, and
nothing whatever of any other.
Young men of this t'pe always
dwell with nroud and endless itera-
tion on "thesunerior purity of South-
em women." heirVr&tence ;
i.heir pereis
ways brings the mere fact of chas-'
ift. nmrfl TViW-flK- rt(l ilpfinitplv llf- !
tity more nakedly and definitely be-1
' J . , .1 ft 1
fore the mind than seems whole-!
1 11, i u '
some or desirable to persons who ,
have seen more of life and of the
world. Theseyouthful eulogists ap-1
pear w u rn, " ,nu ;
is almost
unknown except in tne
Southern States,
cognize the.fuct, which is ot great
importance m any real discussion of
this feature of oi : civilization, that
the women of another race formerly
helpless and now degraded, have al-
ways formed a projecting harrier be-!1
w-j..n inn itiiiiniiiiiiu ii'iwtifiiiu sti i
"P? men aTn(lWt0men '
. 1 .
01 tneir on race, a uu uomuu-,
pose the
1,1 Mfimiin nf 1K0 (Jmth
best women 01 tne soutn
have any superiors on earth, but
their immunity from temptation
and wrong has cost other women
dear.
What young men of this class
most need is a wider observation
and larger knowledge of the world,
or, especially, of their own country.
Thcv would thus, in time, under
stand how much better it is for our
young men to be penetrated and in-
spired by the idea of being Ameri
t 1 .1 it: !
cans man iw ue always uweiiuig!
upon the fact that they are j
ot Virginia, or Massachusetts, or ,
JIriey" .Til"6'9
IfCiUiV UU 1IUMII 111 U1C15G VUUUK KCll" i
ixaiij uu imiiu 111 bum; JVUUg gtll'l
tle.nen ultbnnah their vehement ut-
1 o" . :
terances regarding subject
. . , , 1 . , . - !
which they have but slight acquain -
tances, mce sometimes .iuniut
convenient material for the use
iortiiem pomiUBiis uu were 1100-..
iM.i.n.b....!. t.i--.- ir.,i..
. ., . ... t i
llie UJ lue tTOlUU. lUftmrc mimui'j.
Can't Get It.
Diabetes, Bright's Disease, Kid
ney, Urinary or Liver Complaints
cannot be contracted by ycu or your
family if Hop Bitters are used, ana
-
Rifforu is th nnlv mpdi-:
cinethatwill positively cure yortj
Don't forget this, and don't get some :
puffed up Etuff that will only harm
you. i
era
methods ok ixstrcctiox.
j
BY A. C. 1TOT.BF.RT.
CHAPTER XII.
Hints for Home Study is the sub
ject to which I propose devoting this
cnapter.
Education is only valuable in so
tar as it has taught us how to live,
how to act, how to think, how to
study, and, I will add, how to work,
All this knowledge is the result of
drill, of practice. ere a person to
appear in the world who could at
once perform any required opera
tion, of any branch of science, who
could perform any of the delicate
manipulations of the arts at once
and without the necessity of learn
ing how to perform them, such i
man could not be called an educat
ed man; he would not be educated
in anv proper sense of the term
Education implies two things: "r
drawing out" and "a pouring in pro
cess." Many teachers confine them
selves entirely to the latter; a much
less number confine themselves en
tirely to the latter. Such teaching
always make me think of a ju
when it is full you may pour out, but
the rluid will run away and be lost
hen it is empty you may turn it
upside down, but you get nothing
more out of it
The proper mode is a combina
tion of the two. He who has been
educated, in the true sense of the
term, will know how to issist him
self in the various exigencies which
will and must arise during the jour
ney of lite. I have elsewhere re
marked that no arithmetic can con
tain all the various questions that
may arise. hue this is truu, any
one who has thoroughly studied this
branch will know how to attack anv
possible question.
Just so it is all through life; the
educated person knows how to help
himself.
Of what practical benefit is it if a
bov can solve all the problems in
his arithmetic and cannot tell his
father the interest on a promissory
note? Of what practical benefit is
it for a young lady to be able to jab
ber rrench, and howl Italian songs.
if she cannot write a common note
without misspelling? Instances
might be enumerated; they are as
plenty as blackberries, but it is un
necessary.
Education, when properly con
ducted, will modify our desires, and
enable us to control our passions,
Education, says Novalis. "is a
completely fashioned will" The
definition Is a good one to my mind
A child will cry to have the reflec
tion of the moon in the water in its
hands: it is no use to tell it that it
cannot get it; it will scream all the
louder. Iet it find by experiment
that it actually cannot obtain it, ed
ucate it that far, fashion its will to
that degree, it will cease screaming
and will never again cry for the
same object You have given it just
that amount of education.
I presume, however, tl at the
teacher has tieen so far educated that
he knows how to help himself. How
shall we manage our private read
ing our "home study?" Many
young men honestly think they have
no time to devote to home study.
They would very willingly, they
say, study .if they could just see
how to put in the time, or, rather,
how to get the time. It ia for the
benefit of this class of young men
that I am writing this chapter. You
cannot expect to do anything, I
mean anything that will be specially
profitable to you in the way of home
study, unless you make a systematic
division of your time, so that you
may know how much time you have
to devote to study. Having discov
ered when you can study and how
long, the next thing is for you to de
cide what you shall study. Do not
aim to study too much, especially if
your time is limited. I can only il
lustrate my meaning, and my illus
trations are presented as such,and not
, ,
ias you wouia, pernaps, tune up
works to study. In axyanging your
time you find" that you Lave an hour
at your disposal, and you find that
you also have an hour in the early
m0'f ' : J"
twelto of your time
mis given you one-
and is perhaps
! "
'
more than some young men reauy
. Is
vi 3 l"
Shakespeare, study algebra and
. i ' . ,t . ttn
physiology. If you cut the hour up
P , m Jve h
. , d
- f y j.
L.'ii.nnrin Slrtll TSSilTtt tV Vflflll
. , . minutes will pass
r,
ere you ate it ware, uuii ) u umj
1 . I . , . V in .!i,uK,1 i'.ll(IV tin
; gd omorWand
; " . . , ,
wS'Ss be in the
j f s
j h d one
d fa to each, which
amounts to ten days of ten hours
each solid work, and this w as much !
. . - of.i.,..l,i
" Fuh " " ;
, ,
SLUuy Ut iuijr uutj uioni-u in s
months' school term Many a young 1
man cannot find
study because he
time tor home 1
does'nt want to ;
find it Many a young man wm-,
plains that nis tamer keeps niru at 1
work early and late, and that he has j
not a minute for himself, when his :
father will give you another side to j
the story, something like this:
"My boy cares nothing tor books. 1
Nothing would please me better than
to see
to see mm mamiesi a utsposuiun ia
1., li, wif if Kaa
5" Ud'L'lh
PI extended to me when I was
aboyof his age, but he manifests
-i-
no aiPuu"
take hold and do
n
iUW, It 1AJU iliCVUIIW.ICUUVua til
the9e 9erti ons,th ereisan unhappy
.. . . t-. father
Oil". t-..s :- -: r
., uij
ten the old
aiiu soil, um ill 11 1 lie mnrs uub ui
man" is right, and the
son is too lazy to deserve any sym-;
pathy. ;
Two boys were talking 01 some
excursion, and it was necessary ior
one of them to obtain the permis
sion of his father, who, unknown
w I
to them, was working in the garden
other side 01 a nign ooara
. . f 111 .i
fence.
"Jim, you must go and ask father
in regard to me; tell him your father
permits you to go, and I think hell
let me go."
d
WHOLE NO. 1617.
"WelL John, of course I can do it,
but it really seems to me that you
are the more proper one to go and
ask vour own father's permission."
"Yes. I know Jim, it would seem
so, but then, you see, I'm not very
well acquainted with him.
Here we have the cause of many
misunderstandings, and I doubt not
of many a wasted life. Parents are
not very well acquainted with their
children, and children are not very
well acquainted with their parents.
Why are they not very well acquaint
ed with each other? Who has a bet
ter right to be very well acquainted?
Many a boy thinks he is perfectly
lucky if he can keep his fattier from
knowing anything about him, and
many a father never makes any at
tempt to know anything concerning
his son, hence they are never very
well acquainted with each other.
In the case of misunderstanding
I have referred to above, if the fath
er and son were very well acquaint
ed with each other would it be pos
sible for such a misunderstanding to
exist? Could the son wish to pur
sue a certain course, and the father
desire him to pursue the very same
course, and yet the son pursue a
course directly opposite? Never.
Verily they are not acquainted with
each other. Sons, you want to get
acquainted with your fathers, and
fathers you want to get very well ac
quainted with your sons, and in the
future years there will be fewer sto
ries of "wasted lives" to write.
Some young man may say: "But
I have not got an hour that I can
call my own. My time is all taken
up. I bis may be true; it so, I
pity your case; but if all your time
is occupied vou may console your
self with the reflection that iTror-
ance is not your fault but your mis
fortune.
But do vou not mistake the mat
ter? Is all your time employed?
What would you think of studying
a Latin grammar while blowing the
bellows in a smith's shop? Elihu
Burritt did that, and "the learned
blacksmith" is a household word in
more countries than ours. How
many languages did he understand?
You mav look the matter up for
yourself, "and when found make a
note of it, as our old friend Captain
Cuttle would sav. But vou must
not suppose that Burritt was under
the necessity of studying ail the lan
guages he understood in ttie manner
1 have indicated. No; his very zeal,
his indomitable will made him
friends, and the same means will
make you friends. I might men
tion many more instances to show
what can be done by the undaunt
ed courage which will attempt to
overleap any obstacle, which will
find a way or make one.
An Lnglishman, who was in the
British House of Commons, was
taunted by an opponent with the
fact that he had formerly been a cob
bler. Mark his reply. "Had vou.
Sir. been a cobbler, you would be a
cobbler still." This is one of the
most caustic things that I remember
to have met with anywhere.
Never allow such a retort to be
possible to vou. Improve whatever
time you have; if much, so much
the better for you; if little, so much
the more need to improve it.
Manyayaung man too may say:
I have not the money to invest in
the books you have mentioned.
Many of them are costly, ard I can
never obtain them." Pcrsevereance
and economy will do great thing?.
Remember I told you not to think of
buying all these books at once. I
will add here do not buy any large
part of them at once. I have seen
a man unaccustomed to that mode
of dining sat himself at the table
with a long "bill of fare" lefore
him, and in the plentitude of dishes
not know what to order. Just so
would it be with you should you or
der many books at a time. Order
them as you can. I have not given
publishers, lest it might be supposed
that I am interested in someof these
works, or, rather, in the sale of them.
I am not, but I am very greatly in
terested in seeing the young men of
our county pushing ahead. I am
interested in seeing our county the
"banner county" of the State in the
character of her teachers and in the
exi-ellenre of her schools. There is
nothing Utopian in the idea; noth- j harbor for Hampton Roads, the
ing impracticable. I know that there ' schooner having a capacity of from
are many young men of ability of j iVJ to l'AH) bushels each, the aver
marked" ability in our county. , age being 800 bushels. The beds of
Why should any one deem it a sur-j plant", which ore known in the
prise or a thing to excite wonder if trade as "cullintines," are rich in
Somerset county should be the ban- j the natural growth, in the roads,
ner countv of" the State. Young and a hand ran with tongs take up
men of ability, of marked ability, 'one hundred a day of the young
all working for the accomplishment i oysters. They are about the size of
of a given end are what make ban- j half an English walnut, and he gets
ner counties. uork then; work
earnestly. Keep the great end in
view. Let nothing come between
ycu and the attainment of your de-'
sires, and after you have fought the
fight tou cannot fail, having well
nml faithfully Tierfornid all thu cln-!
ties anDertainintr to this life, to hear
. , , ' ,
m nie next uie grateiui approval.
iA,1, ,, , v . ,
UOne, gOOU alia iauniUI ser-
vant: thou hast been faithful in a
few
r i T-i rra T will tnrtalra 4
over inanv things."
My next chapter wiil be on Insti
tutes.
A Self-Rwording Barometer.
A new self-recording barometer
by a Belgian inventor is thus de
scribed : The barometric tube, hav
ing a capacious reservoir at the top,
is fixedly suspended. The cistern
is a tube slightly wider and nearly
a3 long; it bears on one side an in- his plate, and then said:
dex, and on the other a pencil-work- "Is there a reliable physican slop
ing on a moving cylindrical surface, ping at this house?"
and it forms the upper part of a "Yes, Bir," said the waiter,
kind of aerometer, having a down- "Good surgeon, too, eh?"
ward extension in the form of a; "Believe so, sir."
flowed tube floating in mercury in a ! "Then just see if he is in his room
i.;.!,, tnh wbirhrommiinicateslie-
jow through a TJ tube, with a wide
and ghadow-covered cistern, the
erel in which is approximately con-1
r
stant tne variation 01 pressure u(
marked by the variation of height of;
,J .. 1 if .
mercury in the reservoir, anu tnia
l.ittfr ia to that of the total height in
barometer cistern (or to the path or
float of the pencil) in the ratio of
the section of the cistern to that of
the retervoir (a sixth in the instru
ment the author represents). Thus
an amplification is realized. j
, Tho While How a Mail
Sever;il hiuidrt u leth r- arr niiiv
ed every day nt the White House.
I They are delivered by a sjiecial mes
senger. The correspondence ad-
dressed t' the Preiii!nt is nt om.
j ed by him, and it is very rare "that
J he read one of the thousands of
i letters addressed U him. All of his
I letters are first opened by his private
j secretary. The majority of them
are simply referred elsewhere, an.l
; never in any form come to the atten
; ticn of the President. It makes no
UinVrcnee how "jwrsonal, private or
confidential" an envelope may be
marked, it does not go by the desk
of the private secretary unopened.
Letters from relatives or intimate
friends are sent to the President just
as they are received, but all other
lttters of a character worthy of be
ing called to his attention are sim
ply "briefed," so that the President
can see at a glance what is wanted.
Applicants for office who write to
the White House are alwavs refer
red to departments. It has been the
custom of late years to send out to
every such applicant a polite form
ula, saying that the application has
been referred to such and such a de
partment Some of the simple
minded correspondents of the Ex
ecutive construe the receipt of this
formula as one of the most import
ant steps in the war of securing the
desired office. One happy man who
recently received one of these form
ulas wrote in reply that his gratitude
over the receipt of the same was "as
big as a Elefent" He then added
then when he should get his dace
his gratitude would be "as big as 2
Elefents." This fermula of answer
is really as full of encouragement as
the editor's polit? "rejected with
thanks," sent under seal with a pile
of returned manuscript But no
amount of ill success has any dis
couraging effect upon the people
who write to the President for infor
mation, advice, money or office. Out
of the ),tKM,l.0OO of" people in this
country there is always a daily num
ber who flatter themselves that they
are not wasting gxd paper, pens,
and ink by writing to the trriieiit
lhat Awful Liittle Ky.
It was in the cars. The ladies
were sitting together, busily engaged
in conversation. On the seat lacing
them sat a five-year old boy. He
had been looking out of the window,
apparently absorbed in the moving
panorama of the outside world.
Suddenly he turned from the win
dow; he began searching about the
car, exclaiming in a high, piping
voice:
"Mamma, which man is ittliat
looks so funny?"
"Sh !" cautioned his mother. But
the loy was not to be hushed.
"I don't see the man with the bald
head and the funny red nose."
The "sh" was repeated. By this
time the car was in a titter, save and
excepting one elderly gentleman
with a very bald head and the funny
red nose. JIis eyes were nvited
upon his paper with a fixedness that
was quite frightful. Again the boy:
"Oh ! now I see him ! what a
bright none ! What makes it so red,
mamma?"
"Georgie !" shouted his mother, in
a stage whisper. But George was
not to be stopped.
"Mamma," he continued, "what
made you say he had a lighthouse
on his face? I dont spp any light
house." Again "Georgie!" and this time
with a slight shake.
Once more the piping voice, the
bald-headed passenger gazing at his
paper more fiercely than ever, and
grower redder every moment
"Mamma, I don't think his head
looks like the State House dome.
Its shiny like it. but it isn't so val
ler." While the titter went round again
George's mother whispered rapidly
to the loy and gave her hopeful a
box on each ear, which seemed to
partially divert his attention from
the bald-headed passenger, but not
entirely. Hecried once more through
his tears:
"You said his nose was red as a
beet, mamma; I didn't say nothing."
Strange to say, the bald-headed
passenger didn't take any part in the
suppressed laughter that followed,
but he put on his hat and hid his
nose in his paper, over which he
glared at the boy as though he want
ed to eat him.
Plaining Oyster.
The oyster business in these wa
ters is now very active and has
reiiched an interesting stage "the
planting." There are at least thirty
vessels engaged in the business.
The oyster "plants' grow in the
mouth of James river, some eighty
miles from this place, and it takes a
trip of about five days for a good
schooner, with fnvorable winds, to
make the trip, get a load and return.
I Every morning a fleet leaves this
six cents per ousnei, making ironi
$2 to per day. A favorable trip
of from twelve to fifteen hours puts
the vessel in Chincoteague bay,
j when they are mostly planted in the
' Maryland waters from fifteen to
twenty miles above this point lbe
planting consists in scattering them
; t, e.. u, 1;.
i id , 'J " "
1 .t.:i.i .. v. v...,. r tu. ..t
iUJtu.Jjf m. mc uvuwiu vi uic nan..,
ard more than touching each other.
The whole cost of planting to the
owner who hires the vessel and the
work will reach 20 cents per bushel.
He has his ground, or his water
1 rather, staked off, and in two year
j his oysters are large enough to be
taken up and sent to market They
command 50 cents a bushel here, or
$1.10 in Baltimore, Philadelphia,
and New York, and the finest $ a
barrel of three bushels. lltirtcntrayne
loiter in Baltiuwre Sun.
A new boarder gazed fixedly at
before I start on this breakfast. I
i had a brother choked to death on a
steak like mat once, anu a ui uvu....
to take ail necessary precaution:-.
BUUauuuula.BWBwmwmwjaBmeBBuwawaws -
....
A miserly farmer of Litchfield,
If I 1 l.H:nl.,..li.n linen
1 .naia aaa oeeu uutuj
! horses every spring, working
them
Fianl all anmmer. and killing them
in the falL As he paid hardly any
thing for them, and avoided the
cost of wintering, the plan proved
profitable, until a Bergh society bad
him heavily fined.