u u L Somers Herald, terms of Publication- .aBneo m ' Ultebed ary Wednesday morning a ev L.m. paM ta adraoee ; tberwtai s M I inrarlaMy b enanred. j whecrlto8 wtU be dlaoAnnl antil all ( Bn- an pa ap. Portatiar neglecting Ml sabeerers do But taa. eat L p,,,n will be beM reapeortUa fcc tbe ratv Lnen remoelng from one PoetoHSoe to aa- L jBUM yrre the nam ol the Hirmer as The Somerset Herald, Somerset, Pa. ..-n W. BEISECKER, lf' ATTOkNl:Y-T-LAW, L np..uirt la Cook fc Bwnii' Block. AT ruKS tT- AT-LA W, ATTOKNEY-ATLAW, Som.net, Pa. i ucv IL SCULL. fllV ATTORNtY-ATXAW, Bomereet Pa. S KM rv ATTURN EY-AT A w. r TKI-NT. ATTORNEY-AT LAW, Somerset, Pmi 1) li. TH Somerwt, Pa. t" j pi n ll ' ATIOKNEY-ATXAW. lA. Someraet, Pa. L- nilrilaMamgethJeca. Somerset, la. Uce In. he t'-o Ho.ee. " oartoe-entniri- ui care ukiwwi I iFFKOTH A- KVITEJ , ATTtlKX tYS-ATXA W. to,n e.i . d u. tbelr care will be . IK n.l i.un.-tual: tten.le.l U. trni'fc-tw Mn t roei iireet, opponw , l,B.iwi lo;niiied t car ea-e w.U ne pr mpt. '....i, .itcn led to C.lctloa male In S-.m L. He 1'iord. .nd adjo-nii. "n; AOove aucmi """" OHSO.KIMMFX. ATI l'r r i- i , ftumenet. Pa. ViP attend t.. ill rm1nenni4b blf err L ,l o tell y. Mta t'roaa itrewt. ENRY F. srHKI.L ATTtlKNEY-AT K.nty an1 Pennon Agent, Somenet. Pa in naminmn niara AI.KNTINE HAY. ATTcKN EY-AT l. W Und lel rla Ral Eatt. s.imereei. r w. ii.ii.l mall l.otne emrnaieu to on niaef and bdety oiin n.nii,. ATTOK EY-AT LAW Somerset. P- WUI pnaoptly attend to all b"lnee etitrarted v,mn ailranced on ovllecllon. auj Ut ke Id Mmtb Hulldtng. G. OC.T.K. ATTt'RS EY-AT LAW. Soraerau Pa., I Proleerkieal tolne entraeted to nij ear. at Irnded to with prooptne and fidelity. T71LUAM II. KOOXTZ. 11 ATTIIBICEY.AT-LAW, t - - Someraet. Pa., t arill irhre prompt Attention to bnalneai eturaM VI i. hi care In H.-tneraet d adjoining eoanlle fee la Prtatliat Hone. Bow. 'AMES L. ITCH, ATTORN ET-ATi.w. SowMraat. Pa. (mice. Mammotb Block, ap ttaln. Ertrance. la Crne ureeu twrenioiip tilled, tltlee examined, aad all leral bail nee. tt 1 ended to wltk promp'Benasa oocinj. I. BAER. ATTUKWEY AT LAW, Somereet. Pa., Will nraetlee In Someraet and aextnmr.en.niie. II KatincM eotnietetl ta mm wiu veurompvij '.ended M. saac m ors. ATTIRKET-A1-LAW Someraet, Proa a. tprtlMS KXX1S MEYERS. ATTttll 5 ET-A T-LA W, liomeraet. Penn a. n W1 rtirlrear entraned to hirer, will be LtMw nh pr- n pireer and triellty. 'Hire ta IHaaaoin riKa next or dj wait tee. HOWARD WYNNE, M. D. jonxsTo it .v. u tl'imerfetthi V.e. Far Keee and Tnnt. ctl tl icl.w. pr eilc Hmra. A. w Ukia Unea I a ai. ov. iR. WILLIAM (X)LLINS. IHK 1 UST. WJM EKS ET. V A 'flirrhiM.BimMh Hl'-rk. abor rk-yd'a a re abere he can at all timer b h'Cn pretr- o n. ail kli't .4 work, eurb at tnirg rega. I'.i'g.eioaetmg Ac AftMICIal tetnol all I'm : the neat material Inrcneo iuwif krraated. ARVF.M. HICKS. J I'STK'E or TH E PEACE. Someraet, Penn'a. I AMES O. KIHINAS. M. D. ten r dcr fclr a t. m crrrVef to the eltlaena f partt an.1 TidnhT re eaa te tind at tn. hicetce4 I ir itcrti irala htreel or Attn r.eeH lr l'err tral.ker. rejK . im. a. . ? tt. KINMRLL "IR. E. M H. 1. KIXMEU. K I MM ELL A SON I tender their pmleama arrrlcea t. the ettl ii m S-a-"Tei end rhitlt) fine of tbe mem trrol ih. firm can ai all (laiei. anleaniroteaeh I't rutaaetl. he f.a a't their office, on Mala i ml e.r et the Dumoad. ' : I U. J. K. MII.I.ER has erma- I 'wh luied la Kerlhi K tbe pracllee et f.t proiei,i .(fie, ,fiia Chanea Knalng- Apr. a, ima. DR. H. BRL RAKER tenders his ltvlent,al tt1c-. t the eJtlaene of Som Mei.aoiiciniir tt-iice la twideara. oa Mala trret.t ol the ilamoM. J , L DR. W M. RA UCH tt.flr- Lio r. artn. I Icm to th. eltlxeaa of Sl- tr o tlcitst y ' i uau etie.wtaet ot Wavna It BerkeBUe a VU.A.G. MILLER. HlVeK lA AMKOEUN, I H teawwed te Sontk Hand, IndtaBA, vbcra be ; u"ou v wuar or aitnm 1np-J0HX BILIis. r IUKT18T. I tiftee abm Hcry HrBey. atora, ytmlm Cr "aew Keaenn. Pa. fJIAMOXD HOTEL, I. -vir10YST0WN- I'ENN'A. Meu.,ablj aad mi; rrcued with ell an ,7 - 'bit. .tick hat made It a eery 17 I" I'll "'l'l "' l-laee lor the traMllcnr par.lt. . i rw' uarthnr)Ml. all b a Ant eUea. with a larce pa I. IK- altached i?i " - roomy ablla I L7! aWh g eaa he bad at tbe kwM Pue-r.bl.-,,tythek.dajfm 8 AM V EL CVSTER. Pnm. .Car 1mm4 Stoystnai ,Pa 1001 TO YOUR HEALTH ! aad tee t. k tbit yea Co not allow yoar JJ-e aatirely ran aowa aad wen eat I befreye r. rsiitcyVSealtli ScstawV A ar Lmmma otltk alia- Core aona.id-,k ,u,M v -a sattliiir BACK. Vrerarer whleh thu. "-aa.A.rtau, mrbraua the rwr. C0CTS THE XXDJTXYS. iaU 1 tie VOL. XXXI. NO. 33. Frank W. Hay. ETALIHID 34 TEAKS. 3i-"r WHOLESALE Tin, Copper anfl Mlnm Ware Manft No. 2S0 Washington Street, Johnstown, Pa. WE AES PEEPAEED TO CFFE2 :- RANGES, STOVES and H0USE-FURN1SHIKG GOODS IK GENERAL At Prices Less than any ether House in Western Pennsylvania." Special attention paid to Jobbing la Tin. ftaleanlied Imn and Sbeet-Irnn, Suxar Pant, Steam "ipe. Hor-Atr Pipe. Routing, spooling. Slack! of Engines, and all work pertalntug to t'ellar I'ur im. Estimate glrea and wirk done hy brat-ciaM Mechanic only. Sole tcnit for Noble Uook. John townltook Spears A nU-Part Cook. Excelolur Penn. in Houiw-Fornliiliiaa' Omli we oiler I ; 1 Vaec Toilet Neta. Hrea4 tMoaeta, !ke Uozea, ano ia'ei uvmin atiTr fuoonp, tsnannu rjwona, lea irava. iinwa, iru. ami caameiro Ware! Hn aod Doptier Kettloa, Meal Hroiler. Uytter Broilera, tK Betlera, (la different klnila, Bread Toawerm. Pla'eJ Kritatibla and Wire :atora, Iron S Land s. Fire Irocia, and jrrrri bmn of Ware nee Jed In tbe Cooking Kepartment. An experience of tblrttrbree yean In baotnee nereena-bl- at to meet tbe w-nta ol IM eommanllT In oar line, ltb a ad article at a low price. All "l an!d W ihKANri.il AS hKPRl.tl.NTKIl nr I li m.r n-lunded. CM and M the Wr,a : vet l prior Wt. -re rrhr- ; no trooble to allow gooda, ZAiMrreent ny oovii.g tne'roa ni ma at. Merrnantt aeilliiK (jomli ta our una imn li rend lor n niieie rnoa irffti. or can anu aei quotation ot oarwara. Atwenareno apprentices au oar work u Warranted to be ol Ibe 6c j quality at lowest pi ice. To aara money eatl on or fend to HAY BItOSXo.280 WnMhinKfon Ktreet. Jthnntown, Penuta. HERE IS THE PLACE! J. M. HOLDERB AUM I SONS NO. 4 BAER'S BLOCK. A Complete Assortment of GENGRAL MERCHANDISE consisting of STAPL3 and FANCY DRY GOODS! A Lare Aortment of DRESS GOODS AND NOTION! MENS1, BY'S & CHILDREN'S CLOTHING! HATS , BOOTS AND SHOES ! CARPETS & OIL CLOTHS! Queensware, Hardware, Glassware, GROCERIES. All Kinds of Wi' dow Blinds Umbrellas, Satchels and Truns, Churns, Butter Bowls, Tubs. Buckets, Baskets, Toledo Pumps, Farm Bells, Corn Plant ers and Plows, Cultivators, and WAGONS! THE HOLAXD CHILLED PLOW, The CHAMPION MOWER & HEAP EE, Ihc CHAMPION GEAIX SEED DRILL, With Detiiclialile Ft-rtilizer. TIIK II EST OF KYKIIY-IIIXC. AT J.M. HOLDERB AUM & ONS'7 SOMERSET, PENN'A. o nniAX court sale OF Y alna 1b Re al E state . By rlrtne .fan order .1 the Ctrpnana Poor! of Somer-t eoaty to m. directed, 1 will tipota to ale by pablle oatery, eo Thursday, January 18, 1S83, at 1 o'clock a. m , nn tbe premleea. the following deM-rthed real eaute, lata tbe property of John W. Halne, deceafc-d. A certain tract of land, aiiaatein Jenner Twp., Kovrreet ein'y. Pa. 'alning 7) arreraod allow a a. ISO acre thereof cleared a 11 ander an, id Hf el ea tlratl n. ha lance well timbered. aCy-lalng land, of Michael Oorer. m Kaldwln. B. nj K line and others. Daring thereon erected A got IraBM Dwelling House, bank bare auxin, rp ri- g boape and other o. bnl!d iogr: there a large aa thrtrty go.l heartng ore hard of 4g treeeof 44 choice raiktleaonibis farm, two r-loot rein of elpned and ready In work; alfo. a large vein ol lrm ore et g -d aa.lliy. It la well eapplwd with aerer tailing i ream of water, and woneof the a.-at era ral lr located farms In Jennr town.hip el aetro. t a Hedford and Oreen.borg ta nplke two mile fr-w Jrnrertuwa aad baring ark ' boa-eaad ci arck witkia l (of a mile fioai dwelling auaaa. 14 mile to griat aad aaw milL TEBIS : One-third t. remain a I lea oat he premier after the pay mem vfdibiii. the lnierrt te be paid ta the WK1..W annaall' daring her Ilia, and at her de.ih the prli ripal to tbe i elia ! doeeaecd: one third carta, and in. balance In two eqaal anr.aal pat mesta fn meate ol sale with lat-rert; ! er erat to be paid when proterty to knoched d. wn; r and paymeau ta be avrared h tmiameal aMca JHH KELe.M. oecaa Admlrletrator aad IrasttM. JEGAL NOTICE, roatalino Hller.fwMow)Wm K. Miller. Ka' Mlier. John T Miller. tarrle J Miller and M.rlah L. Miller. r-eWiog in Fleher. Cm rxixee -in'r II li(. aixlJ.S Miller, rwtd. ln i. FoeteV. Ueul- eoamy Ill aa n-ln atwl leeal re. r antailrra of Aaron ft til r. lute tf New tvnirerllle bor-agh. r BJn.. oaaiy. , Pa.. le -4. Y . are herehT aotlAed that la poaioe f a writ ot partli Ion I card oat of t be t M-ph a ' 'oart d S .nex o anty. Pa. I IH b.Jd aa h-qoe., I en llie real eetata of ro aiillrr. .teoeaeed al hi la-e real ee, to IS'W IVir-tlll hraKh. a the I ah dy Jaaaery, a4, woer. yoa e a. lead II yoa ibluk pn-r. ' JOhSTJ SPAKGLFR. Paxairr'e t irnn I SberlB. Nor. XX. Isttl. j FASHIONABLE CUTTER & TAILCB, Haring bad a-aay yean eiriea. la all hraaehe. af ' fa. Talk-ring baa. i Inen 1 gaarante. Sattafaethia to All who may eall oa me and fa X ne with tbelr I BP-I taeor Pt- rooage. Yoan, Ac-, WM. H. not nSTFTLFB, Mrrrl, Pat. SOMERSET CtUNIUm! (ESTABLISHED 1S77.) CEilLES. 1 Ei-lSCX. M.I PUTTS. rrefident Cashier. Collaatkma made ta all paru M the TalUd gtaiea. CHABGES KOD-BATE. Part lea wlahiag to fc-wd axmey meet cma be ae. aommedated by draft ea Mew York ta any earn. Uullertlonf mad. (ill promptBeea V. S. Hnaxia howabt aad enM Money .ad ralaable. aarare4 by mo of IfeHtid'r eeletmed taJea, with a 8a r geal A Yale A as Ume lerk. ACCOUNTS SOLICITED. VTAll kt al a-MAysabaarra4. aVaoT CHARLES HOFFMAN, UERCHAHT TAILOR, 4 " Ubov Httr7 Htfflc7.8MMj X ' ? . LATEST 2TTLEX El LC-HT Fliai tTSATISFACJlCM GUARAMTEEDl SOMERSET, r. Joha B. Hay :eos., AND RETAIL Cbambrr-Palli, Knlre im t'orki (C ommon yerami rnimenrfaig Honaa-keeplnitwlll un and Fixtures, Wal Pap rs. i ALBaaT A. Hoikl J. Scott Waad. H 0 R N E & WARD, scccKaaoBA to EATON & BROS. 50. 27 FIFTH AYE5UE. PITTSBURGH, PA. SPRIra, 1882. NEW GOODS E7SS7 IAT SPZCIALTIIS EnkraMttiet, lacat, MiHiaa-, White 6eee, Hiad ktrck'ieft, Bias Triraiiagt, MosiarT, 6loai, Carsets. !! aad Nerlas Uadarwear, la taatt' aad Ckiidna's Chrtkiag. Faac; Goodt, Vara, Zaakyrs, Mibv rials af AU Kiads br FANCY WO.RK, Gatf FmbbMii Gcofs, k k rrtPtrtiti i it aaapatrrrcttT aoLic-- fORDEKSBV MH ATTCSDFO TO , WITH TABIC OtsrtTCH. mart EDWARD ALOOTT, aiaarracTvaKB ad DaaLsm t LUMPER! OAK FLDOBING i SPECIALTY OFFIl'E AXD FACTORY : URSINA, SOMERSET CO., PA. jj-'-y KTBHHtB lAV. 5m. 01 aa SOC Bala Street, JOHNSTOWN, FA. WHOLESALE AKD K ETA II. DRUGGIST, AXD UEAL.LK IS PERFFM ERT, PAI5TS, OILS Olaal and Potty. Bah- aad Teeth Bra he. Fancy Ante Ira. Tulle' and bharing eViapa, . Family Medletae. aad PbyaMOaaa' Preecrtr Uou aeraratolT eenoandad. . aprlt PATENTS obtalaad. aad all taalaaai la the V. ft. Patent t it . or hi the Ooan auaadod ka for KODERATE FEES. . $ , We are wpnnatl. the V. S. Pa tool Ontea, aav giged la PATENT BUSIMESS EXCLUSIVELV.aaa ova obuie X hi laea ueae ihaa Ueaa nmate from WASHINGTON. wrbtaarodelM'dTawtDglseaBtw.adTle. aa U pateatalHlur ire. wl whargwr- aad w. Bank. 1Q cm ARSE tu8$ yfi oiii. nnm ' e refer, here, re the foatagtar. lb. Sapt. af the Money rder Uriah, aad aa a rlaisof tha V. 8. Pataat tMaaa. Par Mrraiar. ad rice, twrata, aad nianan a a etna I auowu la yuar m BtaM ar eoaaMy, addreaa OL A. SNOW t CO.. oilier SOMERSET, YAW, IMIT IS HO. Yaw, tlul is so ! Yaar, d. is at! "Via yorlii VAt all s Dueling ahow." I shnioke mine ple, ' I trinks mine bier. Und efry day tt vork I go; "Dis trnrlt vas all a fleeting show." Yaw, dut is so ! Yaw. dot is ko ! Yaw, dit is an ' I don'd got mNK-li down here berow. I eadt und Irink. I rork mid sleep, Vnd find oudt, as I oldter grow. I haf a lianlerrow to hoe; Yaw, dot is so ! Yaw, dot is so ! Yaw, dot is so ! Dis void don'd gife me half a show; Somedingsto Year, Some food to eadt; Vot else? Slatst vait a niino.de, dough; Kairina und the poy ' Olio! Yaw, dot is so ! Yaw, dot is so ! Yaw, dot is so ! Dis vorldt don'd bven a fleeting a show. 1 haf mine fran, I haf mine poys, To cheer me. daily, as I go; Dot's rst as anydings I knw; Yaw, dot is so ! -ChnrUt Futlen AJanu, in the Detroit Free I'ren. . A XKY YEAR'S CHOICE. One niinht think, who saw tier lifr-, that f-w eitile led a lonelier life than Nina Prentice did. Au tirphiui with iiitrmw nienns, keeping up her dead father's house, there wat little vUiMe excitement in such an t-Aistenee. . Yet hers was a temperament that did not require excitement, aud that found happineest where others would nut dreuui of looking for it. Her fianltii and htr flowers was like a household to her ; the pmir all over the little hill town afforded her oc cupation ; tdie visited somewhat .lining a few wealthy acquaintance!!, .mil for the reft, if she had auch day dreams as other joung ladies are vont to indulge, no tine was any viM-r fr them. Noliodv knew that her friend'a t itlier, the wealthy Mr. Karnes, had nude her a colliding ofl'er of mar riiie any time withm the latt three .tare ; in.hixlv knew fioui her that Kitee lldiiM'Om weiit out to a Mex t'a:i ranch InciiU-e fche had no whiles' tti give him ; nobody knew . lielher llnrold Hartleys lace ever .laittvd ut f the windows of her iMftles in the air; iiolxKiy knew tthether one New Vear day the .oikei f.irwitrd tthe next with any wu'idi r s to whiit it iniht briirg .er tif Mirrow or jy. She was s-o -".eet. to p'.lenl, gentle, that peo pie in general knew no tnore'ot her emotions than of l hope of the statue ut Home oaint in its churchly niche. Yet it was only on the last New YearV evening that, if anv ou had been able to It. ok behind her cur tains, they would have seen her on her knees before the low blaze of her fire, crying as if her heart would break, burying her face in her hands and longing fur the night when'this fever called living" should be over at la.t Terhaps Mrs. Hartley, her moth er's old intimate, had come idea of the fire that burned under this crust of snow. But Mrs. Hartley was not entirely impartial in her judgment of the girl, and it was her morning and evening prayer that Nina should some day stand in a closer relation to her than she did at present. But as that would be impossible with out her sou Harold's intervention, :he left no stone unturned to that end. Mrs. Hartley thought she knew a treat deal better what was good for her son than he did ; ami when she had made up her mind that he had lietter marry Nina Prentice, it was because she consulted his beet wel fare -pobaibly without complete re gard to Nina's. She knew that Har old, although so bffeclionale, was cf high temper ; and that Nina had iuexhaustable stores of still patience, and that that still patience would await the time when he should come back to her. n. longer the knight errant, spumed by a restless nature, hut a quiet and dignified gentleman, ready to take his father's honored place in the community. Her ap proaches in he question were ex ceedingly gentle; yet not so gentle that they did not put Harold on his guard, so that he was like the hunt ed deer, snuffing the gale afar off. "Well, mother, 1 thank good i.ess," he said, with a light laugh, on dttectii-g her meaning. that we do not live in France, and that you can't go and inquire Nina's dot aud settle the " "It's a very good dot, Harold. Just a snug little income to keep the wolf Ironi the door and satisfy reas onable wants ; and it would be vast ly better for any husband than I lunching out n the tremendous foitune of Miss Barnes, with pala tes, so to bay, and yachts and racing horses." "Just 121 ve me the chance to see it if it is. Goto Miss Barnes, mother " cried Harold, gayly. "Ask the amount of her dot, and if your scaegrace of a son is worth it. Yachts and rac.ng horses ! I like the idea." "Oh, Harold P "But Miss Barnes is a beauty, too, mother, and very sweet and gay. The man that marries her needn't marry for her money at all. (she would have lovers if she hadn't a penny in her own right 'Don't ee marry for money, but go wheer money be,' " quoted Harold. "Ex cellent advice, that old northern farmers. And I'll go 'where monev be1 to-night, as he drew on bis gloves. -Don't talk so, Harold. Dont talk so, even in jest Miss Barnes may be well enough, tor all I know, but her money would destroy you, who were net born to money. Yoa would do nothing and come to noth ing. But as for Nina Prentice, as I said, she's a saint" "Wouldn't do at all for a wife then Wive nitisn't be' too good nfor hu man nature's daily food.' Tlnnk of reproving a saTnt because the buck wheats were flt, or tha buttons ufL Adios, you managing mamma," and be was gone. It was a misty summer night, so thick one could hardly see a star. Bat those ringing steps needed no guiding star to direct them, for, to ESTABLISHED, 1827. PA., WEDNESDAY. JANUARY 24. IS3. tell the truth. Haf-old Hartley sus pected himself ot being more than half in love with Miss B rnes. Un doubtedly, there was something in her superb surroundings that added to her own charms: ud she seem ed too, as entirely at horm iu them as the flower that blossoms in the rich, moist air of the hot-houses. That velvet lawn, set with its flam ing exotics and beds of flowers, with the lofty porches and wide halls be hind it, the dimly lit drawing rooms, and the diniag room, with its gen erous side board .all the conscious ness of ease and comfort and delight of the senses about the place made visiting Miss Barnes a very pleasant way of passing time ; and then, more over, as her father was a prominent man of affairs amang the politicians of the couutry, on met there people who enlarged the mental horizon and made a man , think for himself and of himself. To-night, however, as he went along, his mother's words gave him a lit.ie thought, and it did occur to him that it was unwise to let him self btcume so used to all this splen dor and luxury on a venture; for. after all, a girl of such wealth and fascinntion as Miss Birmshxd her chou e from a crowd of lovers, of whom he was but one aud the least conspicuous. Just as these salutary reflections stole through his mind his ear was caught by the crying of a child, and he paused to look, into the window of the cottage that he was passing, and to see a woman hushing a little child, whose face was now hidden in her neck a slejider, datkly-clad woman, who moved here and there, with the baby on ,her arm, and at tended to the wants of a number of other children, waile a man sat at the table, with hia arms thrust out straight before him and his head fallen between thetu, in an attitude of abject despair. The woman's bsck was toward him all the time ; but something about her rem in tied him of Nina Preu tice. 'Pretty much what I might ex pect, 1 supiHjse,'; groaned Harold, "if I o'eed my mother. "By George P as the woman half turned, a sweet, fair, sad face, and delicate profile of figure, "1 believe it is Ni na!' .S - But its absurdity destroyed the fancy, and he Went on his way, whistling a bar ortwo of the "Wan derer," and would have been very shortly with Miss Barnes, had he not beea detained by a discussion with a chance friend at a corner; and bad not then stepped into a pool of water, and beeu obliged to hunt up a boutblack, tbe little scamp atlerward leepiiighitn waiting for the change. T" ' "1 declare," said he to Nina, when at last ne reached Miss Barnes' par lor, "I thought 1 saw you married to a drunken laborer, as 1 came alone to-night with a gang of babies clam bering round " "What made you think him drunken?" asked Nina, with her sweet seriousness. "Oh ! the looks of him the arms on the table, the fallen head, unkept, uushorn, you know, and all the rest" "I suppose," said Nina, "that a poor mau whose wife lay dead in the other room, might look much that way." "I believe it was you P cried Harold. "Do I look like itP she asked, lightly. "And have 1 dual existence, to be here aud there to ?" And then, as Harold glanced her over, in her airy muslins and forget-tue-nots, he smiled at the idea; anu she seemed all at once as differ ent from that woman and from all other women, as if she had stepped out of another star. Yet, for all that, a man does not care to marry a woman who is Uif lerent from all other womeu simply to oblige his mother. "What are you two talking about?" asked Miss barnes, standing be tore them just then, the picture of a Bacchante, with her head bound with currant leaves and ber cluster ing curls like grape bunches about her dark aud laughing late. "Are ou promising Nina that ycu will come to Washington this win ter? Nina is to be with me there for the holidays, jou know, it you should, swell my list ou New Years." And then she went dancing down the rjoui, lor the misty night had driven everybody within doors; aud a waiter was just bringing iu a tray of juleps. "vVhcu 1 was a little confirmed drunkard at the age t ten 1 signed the pledge," said Mi&s Barnes, con veying the waiter to Harold. "But 1 uiviu l know how nice iuleps were. Now 1 am totally depraved. Here, Mr. Hartley. Nina! lis quite as immoral to drink lemonaue with straws as niiut juleps. 1'ue elu lies altogether in the straws P "ll depends ou ine individual whether mere is any sin about it, 1 tnink," said Nina. "But 1 love lem onade. A lemon seems to carry coolness into the tropics." "And you dou'i kuow why you should burn your throat that long, while throat out with the other ? Gel thee ton nunnery!" As the gay girl lifted her glowing glass to the wax lights, iiaroiU whispered to Nina : "I don't believe the -Bacchantes used straws," and was astonished tfcat Nina did not laugh. But that night the faces of the two girls kepi shiniug upon him out of the darkness aa he walked home. Ihttone, the self indulgent, laugh ing beauty ; the other, if not beauti ful, yet ceruiuly a lovely face, in its tairuess aud perfect calm. Aud the girl lifting her glass to the glow of th wax lights did Dot seem so charming to Lira aa before. ' ' "Do you know," said Hart ley' mother, one twilight, some time afterward, "I'm ahid I have been, doing an injustice ta Miss Barnes ? She really has a heart Those iioor McXulty's! When Mrs. McNulty died she used to go down there ev ery evening, and carry a supper, aud hear the children's prayers, and put them to bed, and leave a break fast set out for the father in the morning. Just think of that girl do ing such things !" "Did she tell you that she did. mother?" "Well, no. That is, not exactly. I herd that one of the Hill ladies was down at the McNultv's doing these things, and spoke of it inci dentally to Miss Barnes; and she asked me to say nothing about it and said she only did what she couldn't help doing; and when I said I thought it a great deal for her to leave all her gay life every sun set and go down there, night after night, and wait on that family, and then hurry home to her household of company, she colored up so pret tuy, and said we were all Stewarts, and it was duty and pleasure, too, to do what she could." "Humph !" said Harold Hartley. He knew very well now who it was that he saw through t e window of the McNulty cottage. But alter all, a pretty face covers a multitude of sins. He set about forgetting the deceit ; he reasoned that it was a girlish jest, signifying nothing; and be went to Washing ton all the same, shortly after the holiday season arrived, and present ed himself among the first New Year's Cillers at the great doors of Mr. Baines' residence there. "Ah I have you come?' cried Miss Bariies, hurrying to meet Imn, "We were so afraid you wouldn't Aud now you know so few people in town that you have no calls to make, and I want you to stay the whole day here with us. Iv'e a perfect crowd of pretty girls to help me receive, and a dear deaf and dumb old du enna for a chaperon, and it will be one iong festival ! Will you have some refreshments now? Champagne punch ? There '8 some Maderia, fifty years old. Ah 1 there's the bell. Ev ery man to his post ! There are no privates here; but I'm captain gen eral P and she danced back 'to her place, well content that Mr. Hartley should see the triumphal procession that the day was likely to be. And a triumphal procession it was the jeunmse tLrree. . Loungers, clerks, attaches, members, senators, secretaries, officers, in their spleudid uniforms, all swelled the ranks, swept through the great house, and kept it thronged with groups iu the rose drawing room, groups in tbe gray parlor, in the music ball, the i rawing room and conservatory. As the day wore on Miss Barnes, with a portion of her attendants, was as much in the dining room as the drawing room, sauntering iu A ith one and out with another, or standing under the heavy curtains between the rooms. What a picture she made,.Harold thougLt, iu her scarltt satins, with y elluw puppies in her hair, against the background of the citrine colored curtains. There she was now, taking that Venetian gem of a decanter from a servant, and herself pouring wine for an old senator, who had perhaps already too much. Here came a parcel of gold laced officers, flushed and gay and hand some. What did she mean by urg nig that old port on the half tipsy boy among them, while the rest laughed and jested ? Harold was not ordinarily troub led with scruples ; but this seemed ;o him to pass the limits of a jest and he experienced a sense of reliet as he saw a lady approach in the shadow of the curtain, and placing her hand on bis arm lead one boy away. Gowned in gleaming white satin, her shining shape crossed that scar let blaze like the passing of a moon beam, and knowing who it was and thinking she might have trouble, Harold followed ; but it was only to find Nina alone in the gray parlor. the boy having laughed her cup ol bullion to scorn and left her out ot hand. "Isn't it too bad ?" she said with a laugh that was half a sigh after all "He asked me if I was a temperance lecturer, and called this delicious bullion 'slops.' Will you have it?" "Where have you ben all day ?" he said, setting down the cup. "Oh ! 1 am on duty on ibis side. We are all stationed by plan of bat tle ; but most of my battalion have deserted to the other rooms, Isn't this a lovely one? It almost unfits a person for quiet life at home, these aav nights and days, ll would, at least, if one were quite at rest in it" It was a lovely room. It tempted all Harold's old love of ease and lux ury. The gray velvet on the floor, drap ing on the walls, draping on the fine walls, covering the cushioned divans, wearing a frosty bloom under the silver chandeliers, the delicate carv ed jades and ivories, and spars, the one white winged marble, it seemed somehow as it Nina herself had tak en shap- from all these pure, pearly shadows. He looked through the gleaming arches thai led from room la room and saw the scarlet clad and golden crow nt d beauty standing tnere, with the rubv glass suspended in her hand as she offered it to some new guest and a strange shudder stole over him. Unjust as it might be, for that sin gle moment the one of the two girls was like a picture of the incarnation of sin aud the other of innocence. tie remembered the icy morning, a a few weeks ago, when he had seen Nina in ber swandewn mantle hold ing up a sheaf of wheat against the sky, and a hundred little belated birds hovering around it with whir ring wings and chirruping cries, and he turned and looked at Nina with a piercing gaze again, before which her soft eyes' fell, till the blushes streamed ap b meet the lashes; and, as be gazed, knowledge came slowly swelling up h Harcdll's heart nd jsoul Ihat whatever' attraction dark j and gVwing beauty and luxurious ! surrouadiugs had had for his senses, ' it had been (or his senses alone, and that the lave of his life bad sudden ly sprung, full grown and winged for an eternal flight so eternal that now, in the first moment of its rec ognition, he could no more tell if it had ever had beginning and if it would ever have an end. -T So white, so fair, to sweet, so pure, was it possible he bad been so blind of it all for years ? So white, so fair, eraM so sweet so pure, was it possible that he could win her. Would she take the Door remnant he had to give? ror one brief moment Harold Hartley felt pangs of punishment that seemed to have lasted for years and he felt like a sad old man as he still gazed up. in her. But he was one not to be long daunted, either by his own unworthines-t or by the cruelty of fate. In a heart beat or two he was him self again, and he plunged in, aware that, even if she would have none ot him now, it gave him the vantage ground of her compassion for the future. "I am g!ad," he said, "that you are not at rest in this life. It is a different life that I wish you to share. Nina, is it possible?" Aud then a little hand stole into his, and he led her away into the palm shadows of the conservatory. "Ah ! what a tool 1 have been, he e . . 1 II. was saying, exuitantiv, as ne neni over her. "Why did I never know that I loved you before?" "1 always felt you did, she was . . ... t murmuring to reply, i always knew you would if not here, then hereafter. For I never remember the time when I did not love you !" "And this New lears day, be said, "is the gateway of a new life t jr both of us. Ah ! with God s help, what a life lies before us P The Reason Why. "Where is the old Stewart?" in quired a traveler, as he stepped on boaid an outgoing steamer, lust pre vious to his departure. Oh, he was discharged some time age," said the captain. " hy. he seemed to be a hrst class fellow," rejoined the first speak er. "Why was he kicked out, cap tain?" "Welltto tell you the truth, he got too big for his breeches, and we bounced him." This conversation occurred within hearing of a bright eyed, intelligent little girl, the daughter of one of the tourists on the steamer, subsequent ly another passenger arrived, andr alter Bestowing a cusuai giance around, said : "I don t see the old Stewart ; what ha9 become of him?" "I think he was discharged," vol unteered a bystander. "Do you know what for "No, sir." "I do," piped a small voice from the cabin door. Looking around, the inquirer saw the smiling face of a little girl peep ing out at him. " ell, my dear, said he, why was he discharged ?" "Oh, I don't hire to tell," she re plied. "But I want to know," he persist ed. "Coine, tell me, that's a good girL What did they discharge him for?" " 'Cause" she slowly answered, " 'cause his pants were too short" A Hint to Howela. A few days ago, says the St Louis Globe Democrat, a lady inquired at one of our city book stores for the latest novels, and from a number presented to her selected Howell's "Modern Instance" for purchase. Next day Bhe returned with the vol ume to exchange it for another. She said she had read only the first chap ter, and found it enirely "unfit to have about th house where it could be seen by young people." , The clerk expressed his astonish ment thai such an objection should lie made to a work by Mr. Howells, whereupon the lady opened the book al the followfng passage, to which she invited attention and condemnation. The actors in the scene are a young lady and a young gentleman who have just returned from a sleigh ride : "Good-night," he said, in a low, sad voice. He gave her hand a last pressure, ant) rose to put on his coat Her admiratior of his words, her happiness in his flattery, filled her brain like wine. She moved dizzily as she took up the lamp to light him to the dour. "I have tired you," he said tenderly, and he passed his hand around her to sustain the el how of the arm with which she held the lamp; she wished to resist, but she could not try. "At the door he bent down his head and kissed her Good-night, dear friend." "Good-night," she panted, and af ter the door had closed upon him she stooped and kissed the knob on which his hand had rested. "I could not allow a book with such language as that in itte remain in my house," said the lady. Why She Stopped Her Paper. She came bouncing through the sanctum door like a cannon ball, and without pausing to say, "How d'ye do?" she brought her umbrella down with a crash and shouted : "I want you to stop my paper." "All right, madam." "Stop it right off, too," she persist ed, whacking the table again, "for I've waited long enough for you to do the square thing." She quieted down for a moment as we ran our finger down the list of names and when we reached hers and scratched it out she again shouted : "There! Now maybe youH do as you'd oughter after this, and not slight a woman 'cause she's poor. If some rich folks happened to have a little red headed, bandy legged, quint eyed, wbeezy squallerborn to them, you puit to the skies, yoa make it out an angel ; but when poor people have a baby, you don't say a word about it even if its the, Djm and how cheerless and dusty aquarest toed, blackest hair, biggest , and dreary must his own path ap beaded, noblest litUe kid that ever per. Why, eyen one lone, isolated kept a woman awake at nights act 0f meanness is enough to scatter That's what's the matter." ! cracker crumbs in the bed of the And she dashed out as rapidly as ' average ordinary man, and what she came in. must be tbe feelidgs of a man whose " whole life is given up to mean acts? My son tried Elys' Cream Balm When there is so much suffering and fur cold in the head, after using it heartache and misery in the world, twice he fclt bo more dietres or anyhow, why should yoa add one trouble in breathing I recommend pound of wickedness or sadness to it above all other Catarrh remedies, tbe general burden? Don't be mean, C C Hagexbcoh, Druggist Maha- ' noy City. Pa. WHOLE NO. 1646. A Feminine Trait. A man's foes are those of his own household, aud the keenest enemies of woman are women themselves. No one can inflict such humiliation on a woman as a woman wnen sne chooses ; for if the art of high baud- ed snubbing belong to men, that of subtle wounding is peculiarly femi nine, aud is practiced by tbe best bred of the sex. Women are always more or less antagonistic to each other, They are gregarious in fash ion and emulative iu follies, but they caunot combine; they never support their weak sister; they shrink from those who are stronger than the average, and if they would speak the truth boldly, they would confess to a radical contempt tor each other's intellect, which is per haps the real reason why the sect of the "emancipated" commands so small a following. Half a dozen of men advocating "emancipation" doctrines would do more towards leavening the whole bulk of woman kind than any number of first class women. When they do stand by each other, it is from instinctive or personal affection rather than from class solidarity. And this is one of Hie most striking distinctions of the sex, aud one cause among others why men have the upper hand, and why they are able to keep it A Tramp's Furtnoe. Hereafter the thoughtful minded citizen, in view ot a recent occur rence, will give heed and ear to the merry, merry tramp who accosts him with the old story of "Just a little assistance until 1 hear from home, where I have considerable money due me." Some such yarn as this always accompanied the frequent demands a tramp named John Whalen made upon District Attorney-elect J. D. Sullivan, ot San Francisco. Tramp Whalen generally "stuck" for two bits at at a time and was both con sistent and persistent in his story which was this : lleclaimed.to have a small for tune awaiting him in England, which could be secured by any one knowing how to legally claim it for him. The fellow stuck to it with such earnestness that Mr. Sullivan at last concluded that it was worth the time and postage of one letter to England. This he wrote, and while he waited an answer Tramp Whalen met the fate common to city tramps he was arrested as a vagrant A letter was received by Mr Sullivan containing the surprising informa tion that the described Whalen was entitled to 5,UUU, or, in the denom ination Mr. Sullivan is accustomed to include iu his own accounts, 125, 000. This, of course, placed the Tramp Whalen in the light of a citizen whose whereabouts it was desirable to learn. Tbe letter contained an earnest request that Mr. Sullivan should forward his peculiar client to England at once. Tbe attorney set about hunting up the Tramp Wha len aud was not much surprised to learn that he was in the gloomy shades of the Central Police Station, awaiting sentence as a "vag." Tbe plot worked admirably. Just as the attorney, as he would in a play, was preparing to rush to his distressed client, with the $25,000 information, a messenger entered with a prepaid cablegram transferring I5u0 for Whaleu's expenses to England. Armed with this, Sullivan entered the police court No. 2. Whalen, ragged, dirty, dejected, but calm, sat in the prisoner's dock. Judge Rosenbaum had just fixed his judi cial eye upon the "vag," in mental tlebate whether to give him twenty days in the county . jail, or three mouths in the house of correction, where his abilities could be turned to the making of country roads. The attorney, with proper dramatic ef fects, explained the situation to the court The court reflected, and the poetry or dramatic unities or some thing occurring to him,the court or dered the "vag s" discharge on con dition that be leave the city and county of San Francisco within 24 hours. Agreed. Exit attorney and tramp. Whalen was fitted out with an en tire new suit of clothes, gave him self a surprise with a bath and a shave, and, as Mr. Sullivan express es it "he actually did not know him self." He visited several of his old haunts, restaurants vhere he bad begged meals, etc., and was looked upon as a thief in his new outfit He left for England on the overland train via New York. The Miseries of a Mean Man. Sometimes I wonder what a mean man thinks about when he goes to bed. When he turns out the light and lies down. ben the darkness turns in about him and he is alone and compelled to be-honest with himself. And not a bright thought not a generous impulse, not a manly act, not a word of blessing, not a grateful look, comes to bless him acain. Not a penny dropped into the outstretched palm of poverty, nor the balm of a loving word dropped into an aching heart ; ao sunbeam of encouragement cast upon a strug- cline life; no strong right hand of fellowship reached out to help some fallen man to his feet when none of these things come to him as "God bless you" of the departed day, how he must bate himself. How he must try to roll away from himself and sleep ou the other side of the bed. When the only victory he caw think la a.,m. moan TAri jtWrV Itl taT KaV K Kk fig f0 eu-U C lUCaMI WlVrVI J f auvM has wronged a neighbor. o wonder he always sneers-when he tries to smile. How pure and fair and good j an tn rwt f the world most look to my boy. Suffer injustice a thousand times rather than commit it once. To Foe-toll the- Weather. If the sun sets iu crimson clouds and rises brilliant, or if the stars are numerous and bright, we know that in a general way we may reckon on a duration of fine weather. Dews and white rooming fog?, are . signs of clear days. I A dark and a vapory sun, and a ! sickly looking moon 'with blunt j horns and a circle around her, or ! palid, big non-scintillating tin, are i all signs for rain. If the sun comes up pale and then turns red. if tbe moon is large and ruddy, with sharp, black horns, we may count on wind. The chicken weed is called the "poor man's barometer," because it shuts up its flowers when wet is ap proaching. The aurora-borealis, when very bright, forebodes a spell of htormy, moist, unsettled weather. A halo around the sun indicates rain ; it is caused by fine rain or mists in the vapor region of the at mosphere. A halo around the sun often is followed by heavy rain. A halo around the moon is also an indication of rain. Lack of dew is another sign for rain. Sharp white frosts in autumn and winter precede damp weather, and these successive white frosts are a sure and infallible sign of rain. Previous to rain the nits bite sharper and stick t us closer, and liees retnat i in the hive. But lew of the many sigiiS we have so briefly inst-inced only apply to the immediate future and have nothing to do with the far seeing prophets whose prognostications. also largely based upon natural causes, peer into future months aav, vears in advance. Advice to a Yonaa; Man. I thinV, my boy, that just about your age is the time for you to learn what you are good for. And when you have found what it is, go at it and stick to it I want to see you at work. "I have no secret," said Turner, the great artist "but hard work." "Nothing," said Mirabeau, "is im possible to the man who can will. This is the only law of success." "There is but one method," said Sidney Smith, "and that is hard work." "The difference between one man and another," says Dr. Arnold, "is not so much in talent as in energy." And do you direct your energy in one channel. Don't be diffusive in your work. There is power in con centration. A handful of powder scattered on the ground makes a great smoke when tired, but nothing more. It is the few ounces com pressed in the blast or gun-barrel that counts for something when it goes off. If you are a lawyer, a physician, or a carpenter, and make up your mind that you will know as much about one particular line or branch of yoar profession or trade as any other man, you do welL Because, if yoa know as much oa aay point as any other man, surely as the heavens are above us, you will know more about it than thou sands, and immeasurably more about it than millions of other men, and this makes you an authority. Be ambitious as you will, but be ambitious in one direction. You can make any sphere of labor hon orable. A good, honest man can shovel sand with credit to himself and profit to bis employer, and hon or to his country. Many a good blacksmith and harness-maker has been spoiled by schools of law and medical colleges; and let me tell you, Telemachus, right here, that society, your country, humanity and God need good carehters and shoe makers and stone-cutters, and farm hands, more than poor preachers and poor editors. If you have to choose between a poor lawyer and a good deck-band, be a good deck band every time. A Small Bet-inning-. An Irish washer-woman who was among the earliest settlers in Lead ville, "Colorado, has succeeded in amassing a large fortune by her own industry. Her stock in trade when she came consisted or a pair of tubs and a wash board. She began busi ness under an old pine tree on the hillside, having bo means of hiring a house. She soon, however, got together with her own hands a rude slab cabin, and as business was good at two dollars and a half a dozen for washing, she gradually began to provide for her wants. She pot a camp steve. and after furnishing her cabin comfortably began to accumu late money. The town began to grow in the direction of her cabin, and after awhile she employed la borers to put p a log house. As there was a grat demand for miners boarding houses, the enterprising woman concluded to abandon the washtab and start a boarding bouse in her new edifice. In the idea she received great encouragement and the house was opened with flatter ing prospects. In this venture she proved to be very successful, and made money and saved it By the growth of the city her honse finally got to be in the very centre, and as the streets were laid, it proved to occupy a location on a very desira ble corner. Business was new and she continued to make money, which she invested wisely. She bnilt another log house and rented it Then she put up a frame building, which she rented before it was fin ished. About this time sme of tbe " land grabbers " disputed her title to the land and tried to dispossess her, but the old lady had so many determined friends among the mi ners that the effort was given up. Several months sgo she refused an offer of ten thoasand dollars for her Eroperty, and since that time has uift a two story block fronting on a desirable avenue. She sti'l lives in ber log house, bat intends to tear it down and erect a two story block in its place. When her improve ments are completed she will have an income of more than a thousand dollars per month a pretty good record of business success for an old washerwoman, it must be admitted. Joan BUlta Heard From- Niwpobt, R. I, Aug. 11. 18S0. Dear BtUirtl am here trying to breathe in all the salt air of the ocean, and having bee a sufferer for more than a year with a refract ory liver, I was induced to mix Hop Bitters with the sea gale, and have found tbe tincture a glorious result I have been greatly helped by the Bitters, and am not afraid to say so. Yours without a struggle, Josh Bouses. Are row Kxpome To nialarial influences? then pro tect your system by using Parkers Ginger Tonic. It strengthens the liver and kidneys to throw off mala rial poisons, and is good for general debility and nervous exhaustion.