u u V Somerset Herald 1rm of Publication. M .rj W ..loaaony swa'-oas. - ..... . MM tlM vill be ,4J are mm a. -r-r. U1 ha b.U re-"arbas -if-'- rTr, ewrtn- "-"SB was ' - , . - of ia lorMr aa it .r-aat Azrt The Kmeret Herald, pome-p-, r. ! TI). W. IinsETKER. N-trrr.et. Pa. pt!r-i la ' a.Beerlu' bbwk. P.. KIM MKL. ATn'WtTAT-UW, SintrNt, Pa. r. J. KOOSEU. ATTOKXEY-AT LAW, Somerset, Pa. " ... .t.-i- r L."ir I ( f ATTOKXEY-AT -LAW, " Komeract Pa. 11 ENDS LEY. ATTOKN ET-AT -LAW, Somerset, P I' TRENT, ATTOKNET AT LAW, suiuereet, Peoa a. 15 7i 15 M.VLU AlTOKNEY-AT-LAW, Souersct, Pa. f " ATTOKNEY-AT LAW. ..'A twiaerael, Pa. itr.re. npti ' Man""'' m 01IN k.soott. lSmDTMV aPwU .-...l,ni-i H.KSf.. Alll..Xl! HT1M- !Mfr. attended u wlih pr. .- a t-itli'.J- ... -' - r. . ... w. m irit ( All.-lM l AT LAW; ,. ,,.(!, en' llll f ;-.-!- th. s..a- t-.l i ., -;: a !.!' L t rnin!" At lw rtt J t- aar .t" a -r ! . '4 " . " n; o KIMMKI.. OlMKMVilUW, , ! r. nrw wt ,1 II i:y r. h iiki.t ArTi'tXtV AT LAW, Pa "Al.KVTIN'i: HAY. AlT"Kt At III nfe . ,, i. u !'. wtri4 to ! ear. ii iin li.niL J ATTt KX EY-AT LAW tujmemt. Pa. r '' -vr,irrt:Tt;m1toall nriwm mrnr4 t ,.. .' v. ,i r: i.ivi-.tiixxt on eolloctlo, a, ui T u, i"ii-i KuiktiliiC. fx; I.E. ATTlKXET-AT LAW, Somenet Pa., p.. if..f.: hult;MW mtr. to mj car. at- "H.LIAM II. KOONTZ. ATTUKN EY-AT-LA w , buiu.net, Pa irni r'"1 prnmi't aMmtk to bnrin entrart- vltiv'nn In S.itbi and aUjoininR eountlM. vdi to J''tntinr hw Kow. times l. rrr.Ti. ATTORN EY-AT-CW SumenwC Pa. iw ilsmrooth Plork, op alr. Entrmnre. r:i .!. if.:? xaiu!it. ami all leel buelncM nim.if,! w with imin!wcu anil tulellty. TT I.. RAER. l, ATTOKNEY-ATLAW, Someraet, Pa Will prMi'.M" In Snmsetandatlv'IninKX'aDtl. A ' twn-w ratninteJ to tlm will I omiUy l"fnfd to. iv.c iirnrs. I ATTOKNEY-A1-LAW, Siauerprt, Pf nn a. DKSX1S MEYERS. ATTOKNEY-AT-LAW, Somersrt, Ptn a. AT. i-ka! bn.lnriw mtrnftwl tn fcl rare will b !.,. -i tn r"0'irw P'1 BiScllty. ti!ti In Mauinwitti oxt tl to Boya dpuk '.ure. II. HOWARD WYNNE, M. D. J : i ? : mi .v pw.fnr.rtm Kt. Er K and Tbmat. 'i-l:il ml I xr!oiv pnrt Irr Hnurf. A. X to f. . La kft AUreea l.lock. 6 Main St. D!L WH.l.IAM COEIJNS. MXTWT. SOMERSET. PA. iti 5!inttith Rl.-fk. ahnv Boyd't Irn t hf ran at all tlnrn 1 fun prc)ar ' t.-.iv all kltir'f ilw.Tk. nrb a tillinK reita 'i'1'in-wiini kr Artificial ti?.tbot all klmlf. r, i it tm Dm:rlal lnrtl t iratl)f ai;v EM. HICKS. JVi-'TlCEOFTHE PEACE, Simerl, Penn'a. f AMES o. KIERNAN. M. D. ten- rlrf Llf p'..friiiial frrrlrn to tli. ellltPn ff nww an.! lrir.t!y. Remn he I'tuivl at the fi.'"" ' llf atl.r in Min Mitret or at the t r.oiir I'r-tiry Urnliaker. Sr i . lt. ri; N. KIM.VI.LL U.S. KIMMELL. KIMMELL SON E. M. 1 tfn.l vlr ; heir iT.(if .rtH ; aervlcea to the eltl- i m x.nitTvt ami TiritittT. H)of the ma ! l ii trtn ran at nltln.rf. ui.low ppoleaalon- furaenl. ..r.nr! t their ;fu, on Mala t:r; e.t: U t(.. Inrnhml. nlLJ. K. MILLER has Txrma aillr fcwatrM in licrlln fT tl prartloe ni I f wiuB. .fiice r.jm. Charlrt Kriwin f i'Jf. a it. !, 'Tu-lt D;I. H. RRURAKER venders hi !(ini.il arrrlrrf jo vh. eltlteaa f r?nn tiBuitKu.i.t. .roc in reeU'tic o Main .tt:.att ot the Diutu.tiJ. nn. w 1 ' pr rtrwl. M. RA UC II lenders Inc Mtrw iona! frTTirx to th. cltlxcnf ot Sii- "IMtMti.t. "tr-.Kjrii.trtan of Warn A Herkebile". D1 A.O. MILLER. PHYSICIAN ASVKOEO, Hu Trarww) 10 scorn Bred. Indiana, where he ca'clted tj letter or ataerwiM. DH. JOHN BILIi. DENTIST, far abot lievry HefT.ey -t itore, 7 aln Traw )UM0XD HOTEL, KTOVSTOWN.l'KNN'A. . h.j p.,.iir tMt ,t kin fcuane haa lately turuui;Llj aiiri rie.lv TDtt?d .1th alt new - ! ut mtLltorr. talih b La made it a ery fir.l, t..tni place l tue traailtnu paMle. ' 'tl.'.t tn,'. rot.1. f n.nmt be rarparml. all lie Hf am eUf, witli a lanre pni-ltr hall attaehM ''. fatoe Aim larae al.4 ro,,Biy atabllnc '' i.rdtf.a: emo be hal at the lowen p.K ,'l lnr, t. tor week, rtay or mnL 8 AMVX TTSTER. Proo. S.E. Cor. DiaiDond Sioyatrnt ,Pa II10I TO YOUR HEALTH ! J, t" It that y.-a not allrw yr yteta to -st-urtij run duwn and aimi r.it befureres j( Ftbrcy's EealA Hcstcrer. 7a f. w.e.r ar UanM -ailk lav late, or Hnulatko, Cbt,i arjeoBaBlel wttb riibt W'H.TI-JhTKsoj-tg-r.,,,, PAIW .. CK SMALL OP BACK, LbTTill7 ,bT HU "rer. wbhtb reaaa H "w'- aan aa4 luvturatea tk. Lrir-ar, EECTS THE KIDNEYS. "-JllMlm r 1 tie VOL. XXXI. NO. 37. rrk w. nj. lTABLlrHED 34TEARS. H IT BROS., WHOLESALE AND RETAIL Tin, Coper ani SleeMron Ire Uiufy, Xo. 2 SO Washington Street, Johnstown, Pa. ASS PEEPAEZD TO OFFER RANGESp STOVES and HOUSE-FURHJSHJKG GOODS IK GENERAL At Prices Less than any at her House in Western Pennsylvania. Scial attention paid t. JoMdna; ia Tin. Oalvatuiaed Iron and Sbeet-Imn, Kngar Pana, Steam Plire, Hot. Air Pipe. Kwini, SpoouiiK. Snwkeof Eoiiine, aul all wurk liertainlug to Cellar Eur. ttarr. E-timatef arlven and wurk dua. by tirstclaaa Meebaniea only. Sl AK.nl for Noble C.k J.tn"towalvk Sear' Antl-Doat Cook. ExoelMur Penn. In HoaM-EurnishlDa; tlooda w. otter Ual Vane Toilet toalf. Hread CloKU. Cak. Uuiea, Cbaml-erPaiia, Knivea ao4 Fork! (ommoa and plaierl). Urrinan Silver Stioona, HrilannU ruoona. Tea Trayf. Lined, liw and fcriattieled W.rct Hruat and l.pir Kettlea, Meat Hndlera, Oyaler bn.llrrn. I (fif beaten, tlx dlflerenl kinda, Itreaul Tuaruera, PlattHl Hrliaoiila and Wire (lannra. Iron Standi. Tir. lrona, ittd everrtblncol Ware nee Jed In the ('x.kit.a Departinent. Aa ezperlenee of tblrty-three yean In baaloeaa Here ena-bl- of to meet the wauuol tiiia euuimunit In oar line, with a arood article at a lw prkia. All odt artid WAKKANTED Mi KEl'RESENTEDor the money refuaded. Call and eee Ui. Wans ; get pricea bt.trtre purrba.lnK ; no trouble to show (rooda. Peraona ei,nimenclnc Uouae-Keeplng will aar. 2i ier eent. by buyii.K Uieir out ht Iron aa. Merrbanta felllna; goixla in our tin. ahorld aend fur U hi.leai.le Price. Lift, or call and net quntam-nc of our Wart-a. Aa we hare no apprentice all our anrk la Warranted to ! ot tbe bea. quality at li.wettt pi ice. Ti aar. money call on or aend to II AY imoK..X.2SO Wabintstoai Klret Jhntwn, Penn'a. HERE IS THE PLACE! J. M. HOLDERBAUM 1 SONS NO. 4 BAER'S BLOCK. A C..:. t.- AMoitin. t.t of GENGRAL MERCHANDISE conrbting of STAPL3 and FANCY DRY GOODS! A Iar Aevortnient of ' DRESS GOODS AND NOTION! Mi:X.S;iJOYS & CHILDREN'S CLOTHING! HATS ,BOOTS AND SHOES! CARPETS & OIL CLOTHS I Queensware, Hardware, Glassware, GROCERIES. All Kinds of Window Blinds and Fixtures, Wall Papers, Umbrellas, Satchels and Trunks, Churns, Butter Bowrls, Tubs. Buckets, Baskets, Toledo Pumps, Farm Bells, Corn Plant ers and Plows, Cultivators, and WAGONS! THE nOLAXn CHILLED PLOW, The CJL4JIPIOX MOWER & REAPER, Ihe CHAMPJOX GRAIN SEED DRILL, With Detachable Fertilizer. THE BEST OF EVERYTHING AT J. M. HOLDERBAUM- & ONS', SOMERSET, PENN'A. Vick's Floral Guide For IMS If an elerzant bok of ISO TavML three colored Platea ol Flowers and Vearetatdef and more than l.tt0 illnatrationf oi tbe cbrricea Flow- era. Plantf an.l eu-elalef. and dlrectiona for r.wlnK. It ia hamtaoaie enouarh lur tb. center alle or a h'.Iiday preaent. tend on your name and poatofhee addresa. with 10 eenta. and 1 will tend von a copy. tare p.1.1. Thif If not a quar ter ot Itr et. It lt i.rinte.1 in iH,tu luiK ll.'ti aDd Oerman. If yon afterward order aeads dwiact the lu crnta. - VirL'sSoeds are the Best lathe World! The nor I Guide will tell how to net and arrow thctn irk a Flower and crctal.letfarden. 176 pare. fix eolorol plate". WO enftravioxra. For f eenta man or Entrtifli. pier cover: tl w in eicarant chhu. inuer- Yirk's Illuntr.ited Monthly Maniine 32p.a:ea, a o.li.red plate In every numlier, and many tin. entrravinrf . Price I is a year: five cplef lor no spedmen nuilen aent lor 10 eenta: three trial enpiei air iieenlf. JAAMESVICK, KttCHESTEK, N. T. COOLEY CRF.A1VrF.TlS. rnSSSS Mb in IfiFR 8TYI-FJi. all - -ri h-S fir.". (. Itr r Ftory uae. r'irvjyf Trc-ir faiH rwrity unuiou- H rV1? "lowr r.ccai without a 'I ! arc n.r 9imimo. Five timtd .Mll and rievra Mlvrr .tlrd.l. t.r uut-rvrll5. t'as Ijm, Ick. MKii Bettkb Rurrra. ms sum mm. eureu BUTTFg mm k rUNTEkL and fun In ol lmttcr turt.ir eniilicfl. K'-rifl roatn) tor cirrtilara aud tmtiDuotna VT. final HUCHIKE CB., Hclioaa Fulto, VmumL Planing Mill for Sale. The nndrrslaned desires to sell at private sal. l lute ol irround In Knrkwood, Pa., tb. junctlrni ut ;)ie ft. AO- and B. A O. iUilruadf, n wblcb are a two atory I Plank Dwelling House, table, tbe aanal oa:laiIdtiirf and a PLANING MILL buildtnar. Alao. one-third intereat In tbe machtn- er, contained In the building. For further Jrar- icuiara call onor ailrlrca ANTHOXY O ROW ALL, jan31 hock wood. Pa. FASHIONABLE CUTTER & TAILOR, ft Karlna; had many expenem-e branch, of Tailoring bua- rnarante. A I r. tuiiafx . tMiiisfattion to all i fl ii. who ni7 up on me and faror me with ibelrpat. ft. Vour, ke, ronaire. mart SOMERSET COUNTY BANK ! (ESTABLISHED 1S77.) CB1ELES. I. EiElSCH. . M.I.PEim President Cashier. CollettioM made in all paru of tbo t nlted StCHASGES MODEBAT?. Parties wishing to nn.1 nioner VCeat can I ae contnrtxiated by draft on Kew York la any eom. (ivilectkma made with imauptuefa. V. S. Bond, tamalit and a.UI. Money an.1 valaablea aecsrwl by on. of lleld'toelet.rated tale, with Sar gent av Yale Ot) time lock. ACCOUNTS SOLICITED. r AH le al holiday I ot-acrTed.-fA doeT CHARLES HOFFMAN, (A.bov Hrnry lleffler. Btaarw.) LATEST STYLES 01 LOWEST PRICES. SATISFACTION GUARANTEED. SOMERSET, PA. Book abd Map Hi Ja IIERCHAIIT TAILOR Att y, EaatoB let; John B. Hav ata.hok. J. SoOTT WAB. HOME & WARD, SCCCESIKISS TO EATON & BROS. XO. 27 FIFTII AYEXUE, PITTSBURGH, PA. SPRING, 1882. NEW GOODS EVEEY LAY SPECIALTIES Emtroi.erl, Uc, MiHinery, White 6od,, Hin kerthieft, Oren Ttiirmirgl, Hosiery, Glovts, Cortett, Mutll aad Merlaa I'aderwear, la JiBtt' aad Chiior-M'a Clottiing.Faacy 6codi, Yirat, Zeariyn, Mita rialt of All Kiadt for FANCY WORK, Gents' Miiii Gcofs, k, k rorrTiO is nrwracTrcLLT iouc"'t ! tt-QRDEKSBV MAIL ATTESVFO TO iWlTH CARE ASD DISPATCH. mart EDWARD ALCOTT, aarracTVBBB am buuw lit LUMBER! OAK FLOORING A SPECIALTY OFFICE AVD FACTORY : SOMERSET CO., PA. JyiMT RMTABUHHCat lfVM. Xos. 501 and 203 Mi Street, JOHNSTOWjr,PA. WHOLESALE AKD RETAIL DRUGGIST, ' AND DEALER IN PERFl MEnV, PAINTS, OIL8 OUs aad Patty, Hair and Tooth Brnsbaa, Fancy ArUelea. Toilet aaJ narinw vompa. r.mtlv MadiciiM and Pbyatciaaa Pie ill) tiotu aeeurat.lT c'raled. aprl PATENTS oUalne.l.an.1 all ltm.iiHUth. r. . Patent ( Hhr. or la Lb. Uourtt attaadad m tor ODtRATE ftlS. W. ara mnlM tbe TJ. 8. Patt Ofnea, Bwa.4 ia WTWT BUUNHS CXCLUSIVtlT eaa ornai. p.ir " - -Iroaa WikSUINfiTOM. VImb mod.1 or drawlnf laaeatw. adriaa u to natentabtllte rre. of enarr. : mm w mmmm mj Rli&t UNLESS WE OBTAIN PATENT. ft. refer, ken, to tb. roriUMT. amp. m Hone. der IHfVtoa, sad t. -aflMaatwf taw . v. aa.M . ma!.. Dirnfloa. v. g. patat V.f?!LtS; jjjh. C. A. snow a u-u.. 57a 1 omer SOMEBSET, MY MOTHER. O for the olden days ! Those were the gulden days Days that have fled. O for the mother lore! Earth has no other love Worn its stead. Still, ss it seems to me, Comea she in dreams to me, Ad I her soft bauds Comb my fair hair lor vie, With tender care fur me, Fashion its strands. . Is loves pain to me? Friendship in vain to me? Barren lile's way ? Sorrow she shares with me, hixpers at prayers with me, "God ble. my child !" Sings like birds to me, 8peaks loving words to me. Covers my bed; Oh, I have need for her ! My heart doth plead for her Mother is dead ! What are life's thorns to her ? Life's aunlrfei morns to her? Moons that must wane? Spring has no brenth for her, A ut 11 inn no death for her, I.ihU are in vain. What are my prayers to her? Cumbersome t-arrs to her? Wie is at rt-4. Roees bloom over Ler, Snow blossoms cover her, F-arth on her breaot. Down Ihrouph tlie dreary years. Sorrowful, weary years, rirars a he my cry ? Are her bunds holding me? And ber anus folding me? Is she stiil nigfh? See. rhe my yearninjr tears. Pitiful, burning tears? From Heaven's height Comes she to talk with me, Stealthily walk with me, Morning and niht? Ah ! as it seems to me. These are not draams to me; Still thou art here. Walking beside roe, Whatever betide me. Mother, most dear. When life's "good night" to me lU-ratds new light to me, In the unknown. Unending Mi-s for me Shall be thy kiss for me, Mother, my own. BARBARA ROT'S VALEXTLXK. Allan Norton at five and twenty found bimbtlf a rising physician, with something more than a local reputation. He was decidedly hand- come, and for abilities, they were so far beyond mediocrity as to promiae hira a distinguished future in his chosen profession. Bat for nearly a year the young doctor had been growing more -and more unhappy, until at last, one dull thirteenth of February, he flung himself back in his office easv chair, and clamping his hands over his head, thought, with a dreary yawn, that hie was a very unsatislactory bu&iness, and that his companion on the opposite side of the table was one ot the most insulierable bores in existence, although he chanced to be none other than good natured. ob tuse, gossipping Bob Trelawney. Bob had been describing a society entertainment, and utterly uncon scious of hi victim's invisible writh- ings, had gone on descanting on the churnis of a capricious belle, beauty and heiress known as Miss Barbara Roy. "The Gaunts brought out Lulu Lushington a grand, lymphatic, half caste nabob's daughter you know," Bob continued. "Of course thev meant to set up their great deeping or dozing beauty against Bab " Here Allan interrupted in a savage temper and icy tone : "Do 1 un derstand you to allude te Miss Roy ?" "Certainly," responded Bob, suavely ; "Bab Roy, and a beauty titie is, too. Some of the fellows she has snubbed most unmercifully. Just a few, you know, did go over to Miss Lushington s camp, but thev came back quick enough, I can as sure you. Why, one glance out of Bab Kay s eolt, velvet brown eyes is worth a King's ransom, if she only meant it but that's the worst of it, 6he never does and it just sets us poor fellows wild. Another yawn on the part of the tormented physician, who vouch safed no other reply. Bob was imperturbable, and draw ing a sheet of paper toward him be gan sketching a feminine bead, with great delicacy and skill. "I say, Norton," he remarked, as he elaborated the design, "aren't you becoming something 'of a woman hater ? It really seems so to me, and I've heard more than one or two of Dur fellows say so." "If to discover an absence of real, earnest character, benevolence, good sense, and all else but flattering vm itv and a passion for novelty in the sex, make me a hater, I am one." Allan almost snarled this ill tempered speech at his friend. The facts may excuse him somewhat Barbara Roy was his very distant cousin and his soul's cherished idol. Looking backward he could not re member ever seeing her equal in beauty, grace or intelligence. It was her empty, aimless life that frenzied him her assuming the throne of a reigning society belle, and permit- tine her davs to fly in a ronnd of senseless pleasure every new folly finding in ber its readiest votary, and each sensation flung aside like a child's toy at the appearance of its successor. This was the secret of Allan Nor ton's wretchedness. "Such a grand and noble woman as she might be," he thought, when the beautiful Barbara went whirling br him in the nark, drawn in a phitton as fanciful as Queen Mab's, and by lour pretty, ponies. Behind her, like liveried mutes, with folded arms, hung a pair of flunkies ; and on she sped, reius in hand, a marvel of French millinery and American beauty combined. Coldl-r and -eravelv be raised bis hat and bowed in answer to ber mer- rr laugh, or pouting toss, just as her and then turned away to hide hia altered color or ine lrrepreesiDie pang inai smote nis set ESTABLISHED, 1827. PA., WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 21. 1883. heart and left its reflection on his mobile face. "Dont, pray!" exclaimed Trelawn ey, affecting alarm at Norton's out burst against the sex ; "don't take everything in earnest, there's a good fellow, and don't blame Miss Roy for being a butterfly, for it's rather a charming characteristic to me." "Very probably," obeerved Nor ton, f "On which account I am on the point of asking bet to become Mrs. Trelawney," pursuttl his companion, bending his head skdewise, the better to touch up a pair Of Psyche wing witli which he was ombellishing his subject. ' It was well for Allan Norton's closely guarded secret that he had a patient's call that moment in the front ottice, into which he slipped, leaving the artist still elaborating his work. Boh was a dilettanti trifler with the artist, and finding Norton likely to be detained somf time, be turned his attention to rhy-ming on the fair subject of his pencil, taking her name as a key note. It seemed the easl-sst thing pos sible, and he meant to make it rather a bright one, too ; but things do not always turn-out as expected, and the result was the following doggerel, written beneath a lovely female figure with Psyche wings, surrounded by bubbles, and floating through ether in a -far drawn by but terflies: ' .Sunlit eyes that dance with joy, Melt in languor, then grow coy; Shine like gold without alloy. Such thy orbs, sweet Barbara Roy ! Hair that glitters to decoy With its silken locks to toy. Bright as those of Venus' boy, Such thy tresses, Barbara Roy. Li! what words can I employ To ex press the ravished joy Rapture that can never cloy Dare I express them, Barbara Roy ? "Ah," cried Trelawney, charmed with the picture his fancy evoked, and tired of the effort of thumping his brain for rhyming, "ah, that would indeed le an unutterable bliss; but the deuce of it is, she holds everybody at arm's length, though Iv'e sometimes fancied she thought of some unknown one with a hidden sigh." Here he sighed vacantly himself, and presently discovering a bored sensation, he rose and after lounging about the room for a few moments, called through to the office : "Good night, Norton. I'll drop in again, soon." V Then he took his departure in his usual careless, good humored way, running over in bis mind the most attractive place to which he could turn his attention next. " It was midnight and long after when AllaTeturne3rJ to the rest and quiet of his inner sanctum. His head was weary and his heart ached heavily; the last two hours had been spent beside the bed of a dying girl, a poor ..consumptive wreck of what had once been a society beau ty, and her nervous dread of the in evitable change before her filled his heart with intense pity for her, and her struggle against the Great Van quisher. At 'her request he had, with disguised reluctance, undertak en to convey a message to her form er school lellow and late acquaint ance in short, to none other thaa the beautiful Barbara. "Ask her to come and see me to morrow, sue had Begged most pleadingly. "I have something to say to her; promise me, 0, I im plore you, promise you will !" And so Allan promised, though he thought the morrow's sun would never rise again for her ; and dwell ing on it now, his heart grew still heavier. At last, as he sat musing very, very sadly, he drew the nearest sheet of patter toward him, and, thinking more than looking, began to write : Mixs Barbara Boy : My Dear Coisis I was called this evening in consultation on the case of Miss Clara BelL Sne is dy ing, and desires to see you. She usged me most earnestly to deliver this message that I was unable to refuse. You will please bear in mind that I had no choice. Yours, very truly Allan Norton. No one who did not understand the intensity of Dr. Norton's regard for his distant cousin, could explain the nervous haste with which he threw this formal note into its envel ope. He took it out again to date it, and saw by the mantle clock that it was past one. "February 14," he wrote, and with a queer sensation, remembered that it was St. Valentine's day. "A dismal valentine," he thought, but he never dreamed of the verses and drawing on the under side of the sheet. Penciling a direction on a sheet of paper for his servant to carry the note to its address the first thing in the morning, the tired doctor retired for the night, and, as the gray light of a wintry morn shown through his window ere sleep came to his pillow, it may be supposed that he thought much of the radient and careless creature who was wasting her existence in the worthless search of pleasure, and the shadowy out line of what had once been a votary of fashion, but who now found her self, like one of the foolish Virgins, with no oil in her lamp, while the cry had already gone forth : "The Bridegroom Cometh !" Something strange happened that Valentine's day. Poor Laura Bell died quite peace fully and hopefully the following day ; but it was not that which amazed the fashionable world, who had quite forgotten the. poor thing long ago it was the sudden and complete disappearance of the chos en sovereign, Barbara Roy. Without a sign, an action, s sin gle syllable to mark her flight, the queen of grace and beauty disap peared from her realm, and ber be wildered subjects mourned for her ia vain. Her name was not on an European passenger list, nor wai any one cer tain of her having committed the madness of leaviug town in the very height of the gay season. Dr. Nertoa, her cousin, was con sulted as to her health, and could make no report He heard of her last at poor Laura's bedside, but that did not appear well on dit, so he nev er told it Her elegant up-town mansion was still inhabited, and her plainer equippages were often seen on the drive, but always in use by invalids and old persons never occupied by their charming owner. The po nies and Mab's chariot were dispos ed of at private sale, and the Gaunt family had now the unutterable de light of seeing their East Indian niece, Miss Lushington, now undis puted ruler of the fickle realm, re cline in sleepy splendor where so lately the brilliant Barbara sat en throned. Meantime Dr. Norton gave his disappointed heart all the more ar dently to his profession, and no one Ajoyed a more enviable reputation either for skill or benevolence. Like most of his brethren who love their art, surgery had grown to be a pas sion with him, and his intense sym pathy with sufleridg humanity led him to invent many soothing meth ods of dealing with disease that ren dered hira a favorite and extolled benefactor of his patients. Within a week oi the close of the year since his introduction to the writer he was elected professor to fill a vacant chair in one of the colleges, and consequently transferred his at tention to a hospital in connection with it Attached thereto was a cas ualty ward, and on the lirit day of bid service it was his painful duty to perform an operation on a poor young factory girl by amputating her Jell hand, which a week before had been dreadfully crashed in ma chinery. She was much alarmed at the idea of what she was about to undergo, and according to his custom Allan did his best to assure her of the re lief of anaesthetics, but to all such soothing she was deaf.. "I want the lady to hold the other hand, aud then 1 can bear it," she protested to the persuasive nurse. "O, please let me have the lady. I will do anything for the lady," was her continuous cry. Fearful of the effect of the excite ment, Allan tried to pacify her, and inquired who this favorite lady was. The nurse, conceiving herself best fitted to reply, immediately made answer: "Oh, she's one of our visitors, sir. Mrs. Rore, is her name, I believe. She's a well meanin' lady, but sor ter spiles the patients, you see, sir." Then, turning to the poor, tremb ling girl, she continued, in a Gamp iah tone: . . "Ye can't expect folks to keep up for evet Kitty and Mrs. Rore was here till daylight, a wai tin' on you, ami, now she's home gitlin' her sleep." "She promised she would be back and ah, there she is !" The girl's tone changed to a gush of gladuess. her poor tearful eyes overflowed, her pale lips quivered, and she stretched out the hand that was whole with a gesture of tender ness and greeting to a lady who at that moment appeared in the door way. Allan Norton started as if he bad beheld an apparition. Barbara Roy's disappearance from gay life was now accounted for. She had become a volunteer hospital nurse ! Never before in all the exquisite garniture of a rare taste and costly fashion had she appeared so lovely in bis eyes as now, when he saw her dressed in simple gray and white, as became her chosen vocation. As for her beauty it seemed enhanced by the contrast, and her face had gain ed tbe only charm it had ever lacked before the pure, deep tenderness of a soul awakened to the consciousness of duty and human sympathy. Kit ty's expression of delight at her ap pearance affected her very much. She did not seem to notice Dr. Nor ton, but concentrated ber attention entirely on bis patient. "O, dear, lady," exclaimed the suf ferer, "this good doctor is going to perform the operation. He speaks very good and kind, and says he will give me something to smell that will take away the pain, or make me kind of dead like, bo I won't feel it I know he's kind, and he talks so soothing ; but I jes' only want you near me to hold my hand, and let me feel you'll stay by me when I don't know nothing." With a ready sweetness Barbara assented; her manner had that earnest, cordial kindness in it that went straight to the sufferer's young heart "O, thank you," said Kitty, with a Bigh of relief ; I know'd you was the kindest lady as ever was." A flush of pleasure warmed the oung lady's pale face ; she looked up and for the first time saw who the doctor was. Their eyes met, the flush dyed into deeper red on Bir baras face; then suddenly disap peared and left it very pale. Allan was even more overcome; all he could do was to murmur her name and bow profoundly; and were it not for the poor girl over whom they met after a year's es trangement, their embarrassment would have proved painful. "I fear this will prove too great an ordeal for you," said he in a low tone, referring to the operation, and glancing in the direction of his as sistant physician, now arriving on the scene. "Do not waste a thought on me," she responded quickly, "I am quite accustomed to such things." "What a wonderful change a year must have wrought in the butterfly," was his unspoken comment She seemed to read his thoughts, for she added quietly : "A great deal can be learned in a twelve month where one is an earn est scholar." . She had certainly proven the cor rectness of her words. To Dr. Nor ton's amazement, her skill in prepar ing the sufferer for the operation as far surpassed that of the hired nurse as her native intelligence did. He had often been annoyed by the silly and ineffective interference of those regular society ladies' bountiful help, who Dersist in treating sick people and those in extreme poverty as if they were a species ' of incapable children to he cajoled and smothered era by meaningless words, and not hu man beings like themselves, open to reason and capable of distinguishing real help from affected sTnall talk. How different were Barbara's min istrations ! It was evident she had grown to love the work she had be gun as a mental discipline, and to have forgotten its painful features in the joy of serving and aiding those who suffered. It was well that Dr. Norton's skill in surgery was so great that even his deep emotion could not bailie its success. Tbe operation was completed satisfactorily and when everything that could remind the poor girl of what she had passed through was removed, and she was aroused again to consciousness and saw Barbara's gentle face bending hopefully over her, she exclaimed : "O, dear, lady, I know'd it would be just right if you was by be, and now I feel as if I only need to thank the Lord and get well again." "You are an admirable surgeon's assistant," Dr. Norton said in a low tone. "You insure the success of this work." Again the warm red blush dyed her pale cheeks, she dropped her beautiful eyes, but her voice failed her, she could not answer, or she felt too much. An hour later Dr. Norton, having made the rounds of his new sphere of action in company with his as sistants parted from them to see how Kitty, the factory girl, was progressing. MLss Hoy was still beside her, and retwrted that her patient wa3 doing admirably. "Have you a list ot directions for the night, doctor?" Barbara asked, as they moved a little aside trom the couch. "What has she been taking as an anodyne ?" Norton asked in re turn. Barbara felt in her apron pocket, and, after rummaging a moment, she handed him an envelope. "It is inside that, on a card, I think," she said, "you will find it all explained." lie opened the packet and saw his own photograph, cut from some medical journal. A very handsome one it wasj as one could see at a glance. The instant the picture passed out of her hand into that of the original, Miss Barbara Roy saw her mistake. She saw that the se cret of her life was told, and but for the strongest effort of will she had ever made, she would have sunk powerless at the surgeon's feet As it was she uttered a low, pitiful cry, and clasped her hands hopelessly. "Barbara Miss Roy my dear cousin," cried Allan, quite beside himself at tbe possibility before him, as he drew her iato the nearest al cove and caught her hand in hie, "pray tell me if lam frantic to think to hope that you care for my picture or me ; that my life devoted to you could awaken one thought for me in return. Oh, Barbara, if you could know or 1 could tell how long, how tenderly, hopelessly, I have loved you '' "And yet only one year ago to-day you sent me that picture oi myself, at the same time directing me to go to a dy ing girl and learn what a use less creature I was " "I !" ched Allan, "It must have been a dream," for he had quite for gotten poor Laura Bell and the note of St Valentine's day. "No dream, Allan," said Barbara, and she gave him a look of gratitude through her tears that made her heartthrob with joy. "No, it was for me a most blessed reality, though I shall never forget the shock I felt to see poor Laura, to hear from her faded life how wretchedly wasted my life was, and how Heaven would require an account of my miserable squandered abilities. From that moment I tried to change, and when I faltered in in the way (at first seme of the duties I tried seemed revolt ing) I looked at your bubble valen tine, and thought of the selfish idle picture there " Allan took it from her, and gazed for the first time on Bob Trelawney's handiwork. Then he looked at his own note written by mistake on the other side. The expression of his bewildered face explained the error, and they laughed together. Then Allan glanced at his own picture and laughed again. "IJarbara," said he, "we have ex changed valentines, for to-day is the 14th of February. Shall it be for life?" If ever words were full of pleading love those five overflowed with it Her answer was quite aa tender, though given with her old arch Smile. "You said I would make a good surgeon's assistant, and I am willing to try." It is a mistake to ask a precocious child to show off before company. A gentleman who was dining with his family at a friend's table, where a number of invited guests were pres ent, had a bright little daughter, who as soon as the host had asked grace said : "That's a pretty grace, but that isn't the way my papa says it" "And how does your papa say it?" asked the host, expecting to hear one of the bright replies for which the child was famous, while the rest of the guests echoed, "Y'es, tell us how your papa says grace ?" The unhappy father could not reach her, and Bhe said, sweetly : "Why, when he comes to dinner he looks at mam ma, and then says "Well this is a h 1 of a meal to set before a white man 1" - Mothers Dont Know. How many children are punished for being uncouth, willful and indif ferent to instructions or rewards. simply because they are out of health. An intelligent lady said of a child of this kind: "Mothers should know that if they would give the little ones moderate doses of Hop Bitters for two or three weeks, the children would be all a parent could desire." One of the prettiest girls in Bos ton has discarded an American lover and engaged herself to an English man.' This fact has not been brought to the attention of the tariff com mission, we believe. ? a WHOLE NO. 1650. A Few Hints About Horses. Give horses salt frequently. Road horses should have their front feet stuffed with flaxseed twice a weak. When light shoes are needed par ticularly hind ones, have them made of cast steeL Don't hook your horse to the sleigh the same at to your wagon, but give him mor trace. Keturning from an afternoon drive, let your horses cool off before enter ing the stable. Hones wearing boots should have them loosened while under the shed at the road house. If your horse should pull on one line or throw bis head up and down right and pull on the bit have hi mouth and teeth examined. The hand pieces of driving rein frequently bscome smooth from use, causing the hands to shift In such cases rub the lines with powdered rosin. If you wish to drive your bor-e with an open bridle, have him tied I with one before putting him to ytur top wagon, otherwise he might gt away from you. When horses ov.rreach lengthen the hind shoes ; when they hit the front of the hind ffet have the toe of the front shoes made narrow and concaved on the inside. Some horses in trotting, in put ting their bind feet to the ground strike principally on the toe. Such horses should have their heels low ered, and should wear shoes without heels. Skunk cabbage is said to be good for heaves, given in teaspoonful doses night and morning. Moisten the hay and grain. Be careful with the diet Never work a heavy he-rse on a full stomach. Steel bits should be kept in a warm place until they are placed in the horse's mouth. Any person can realize the sensation of placing a cold bit in a horse's mouth by first touch ing it with his own tongue. An excellent remedy for mange is : Oil of turpentine, one pint ; add cautiously two ounces of vitriol, stir ring the mixture constantly; then, add eight ounces linseed oil, to be rubbed in with a brush twice a day. If your double team did not work to suit you to-day, one crowding to the pole while the other would pull his head to one side, see that the reins are right, and in hooking them to your wagon to-morrow, put the off horse on the near side. Tar is one of the most useful arti cle to be kept about a stable. Inter nally use a teaspoonful night and morning for chronic coughs ; externally- h is particularly- useful in thrush and all diseases or wounds of the foot. Mixed with fish oil it is one of the best remedies for hard or brittle feet. When heels and toes are required on a horse's shoes, instead of having the shoe turned down for heels, have the heels and toes of cast steel and welded on. The heels should ie put on half an inch from end of shoe and placed endwise. For a horse that "pulls" use the over-check, with strap attached over the nose and under the lower jaw. For an extra haid-mouthed horse use a four-ringed bit Have a slide loop on the front of the over-check, so that it can be moved up and down, as may be required. Then have the check-piece and over-check attached to loose rings and the driving lines alone to the large rings. Be ResulT trJarly. A season of activity is near at hand. Spring is coming, with its pressing work. Are farmers ready for sowing and planting? Every im plement should be provided before hand, that no time may be wasted in making purchases or repairs after the work should begin. We have known a half-day of plowing to be lost because the whiffltrees were not at hantl. Some farmers start out with their spring plowing without a single plow point in stock, and when one is needed, the team is taken from the field and driven to the store. Such a loss of time is a serious mat ter, and should be thoughtfully guarded against by ample provision of all such articles of the farm. It is a poor time to mend a harrow when it should be at work in the field. We do not favor that economy if it may be bo called that relies upon the neighbors for manv of the tools of the farm. There are certain farm implements that may be owned in partnership, as a roller or reaper, but the constant borrowing of rakes, forks, etc, is not a wise and economi cal practice. Be provided with all these essential farm tools, and have them in good order, and at hand when the time arrives for using them. Now is the time to look to these matters, and make all needed prepa rations for tbe busy days that will soon be here. In the peace of winter prepare for the war of spring. Amer ican Agriculturist. j An Honesx Boy. In a country school a large class were standing to spell. In the lesson there was a very hard word. I put the word to the "scholar at the head. and he missed it ; I passed it to the next, and the next, and so on thro' the whole class, till it came to the last Bcbolar, the smallest of the class, and he spelled it right, at least I understood him so, and so he went to the head, above seventeen boys and girls, all older than himself. I then turned round and wrote the word on the blackboard, so that they all might see how it was spelled, and learn it better. But no sooner had I written it than the little boy at the head cried out : "O ! I didn't spell it so, Miss Wilson ; I said e, instead of L" And he went back to the foot on his own accord, quicker than he bad gone to the bead. Was not he an honest boy? I Bhould always have thought he spelled it right if he had not told me, but he was too honest to take any credit that did not be long to him. A Muscatine school boy has gone insane from sitting op nights trying to find the streams mentioned in the river and harbor bill How to Swim A writer in Kiioxlftlg? gives these I directions: ! The swimmer is supposed to be simply balancing himepl in the w-a-tr when he jrepar3 to try th ! rirrmeot now to. b? d-ci jbd. riaciDg the hands toscthtr t los-c to the breast, with the wrists touching the collar bones, or nearly so, the palms downward, and in horizontal plane with the closed lingers, the swimmer launches his arms forward to their full reach in front of him, still keeping his hands together. While he is doing this, he kicks his legs out backward to their full ex tent and so as to throw the feet as far apart as possible. Of these movements only the latter is propul sive. The former merely brings the f rms to the right position for their backward propulsive stroke. But though the legs and feet be ing kicked out backward produce a propulsive effect, especially if the feet are well planted, as it were. (against the water during their back ward sweep, yet it is not in this mo tion that the legs do the mot effec tive part of their propelling work. The arms are now to be carried back ward with a powerful sweep, the hand.-. Wing held in a slixhtly cup shaped form, and the stroke being taken with just so much downward movement, and no more, as is nee eaaary to counteract the tendency of the head to sink when the support of the hand U removed. Whil the handi are thus brought toward the lip, the lees are to b brought for cihly togeihrr, like the leg of a pair of shean when we clo it It is in this movement that the lejc prudure their greaU-at propulsive effect an effect which many who think they know how to swim entirely ie. out backward, and Uieii tirawnt them up under them for the next etroke. Tills draw ing up ofjhe lejf. under the abdomen niUMt only be begun when the legs have been for cibly brought together, both perfect ly nzui tut iney are in con-tact. I The closing movement of the ley Li completed while the arms are do ing their backward stroke. The legs are then drawn up under the btoni ach, the feet being bent back as when we stand on tiptoe, while the hands are brought to their tirt po sition by passing from the hips to the chest and palm and fingers as it were gliding over the body. Then the movements descriled are re peated. The arms are thrust for ward as before; the legs are kicked out, then, while the legs are brought forcibly together and afterward car ried forward, the arms take their pro pulsive stroke backward to the hips. Then the movements are repeated, and so on, till the Bwimmer is tired, or thinks well to change his stroke. An Idcsl Girl. In a village "of Oneida county, New York, according to a corre spondent of the Utica Observer, there is a young lady who has merits de serving of public notice. She is a blonde, of medium height, blue eyes, clear cut Grecian features, and is ac knowledged to be pretty, even by en vious females, and has borne away all the best prizes in school for years. Her education is pronounced by our late school commissioner as being as good as that of any teacher in the district She can bake, wash, iron, make garden, sing divinely sew on a button or patch, make and fit all her own clothes, spin the yarn and make her own stockings, mop the floor, entertain a house full of ministers or an assemblage of young people, make tatting, crochet, bevel a lam brequin, knit insertion on a slipper case, or quilt a pumpkin pie. She never was known to call your Atten tion to the door scraper or mat, nev er spoke a cross word or had a cold dinner on washing day; never ate a chocolate caramel or chewed gum. She wears none but her pwn hair anil teeth, and was never nearer a corset than the outside' of a dry goods counter. She never had a beau in her life, yet our best young men would-be at her feet with the least encouragement She can row a boat,' shoot a gun, climb a tree, and throw a fly or land a trout in a manner to win the admiration of any sportsman. She never gossips and never attempts to take a hantl in another woman's knitting work, and is never seen upon the streets in the eveuing unless going to church or to visit the sick. Her father has been a widower for over a dozen years, a pillar in the church, social and sought after by all, yet mani fests no desire to change house keepers. She was never known to torture a piano in her life, manifests no fondness for cats, or poodle or cur dogs, and doesn't know George Elliot's best novel from a hen coop, yet she is thoroughly conversant with the important questions and news of the day, and can quote his tory till you can't wink. We are not related except through our re spected ancestor, Adam, and no young man must consider this thrown out as an inducement, for the lady in question would not look favorably upon his suit a moment unless she was convinced that he was the equal of her father, and it would be strong proof she would re quire. She is a thorough 'going pol itician with Democratic proclivities. Vanderbilt's Gold. William II. Vanderbilt'a wealth, to be measured in solid gold, would it is said, weigh 93 tons. H is income, according to the same estimate. $2 per second, or $rS6,4U0 - pw Mr. Jay Gould's wealth mu as much, and there aid, Mtl. fifty persons in this TOUtTrn ' ' sessions would amount jYFP each. In France there . ' of wealth, but it is beU-plieg, Irvn than in the United State . of the Rothschild family such fortunes in Frano country. Our forefathtj they had provided aga . aot u, m. accumulations when the?1" that landed property sh-Jj83, vided equally between th rnuiaat atvl of the original owners; buty increase of personal property waid. aa the operations of modern ci.lTi has concentrated capital in ver;tk hands. There will be a caul. trouble some time, a our popula J grows larger, and jealousy is crea ' on account of the disprport. between the poverty of the- mat and the vast fortunes of the few The only way to prevent a collisioi is tor the rich to recognize the fac that they must make good useo their wealth, regarding it as a trus for the benefit of their fellow men. For sore lips, take a piece of com mon brown paper, fold three or four doable, and burn on the bottom of a cold flat iron, rising as the steam gathers on the iron. Rub it on the sore lip. Two. applications are enough if Well done. MO,