Somerset Hera-d hie Vrriis of Publication. ... aa-aaa t otherwise S3 M) .-eats, f- ' . t- k i. r'n .. . until all ntsrtpu -,ar pat- up- hHpl 1 !tr w .-ubsortheri so ot Uk. act ip-r." mm VnaAffiM t t- s .. M .ha. f.am as frtOMfW""" -.tbSr"-,WUD- The somerset enu, Somerset, Pa. VrFD W. BEISECKER. I1' ATTOKKtT.AT.LaW, A Somerset. Fa. mgt- upstairs la Ooo - Bwrttf Bloc. y. KIM MEL, ATTOKKET-ATJJiW, So-tarsst, Pa. LTj. KOOPER I 1 -4-" Somerset, F, Vt1' attorney-at-law. Somerset Fa. g ESDSLEY. ATTOKNET-AT-IVW, 6aoarMt,F riT TRENT. S ATTORNEY-AT-EAW, Somerset, Fenn'a. Li) u. SCL LI H ATTORNEY-ATLAW. li Some Somerset, Fa. r ATTORN EY-AT LA. W. I JAe Somerset, Fa. Ufee, wrtalrl la Mammoth Block. :.AT-LA.W, ' w Soiueraet, ra. .te.he Court Hua. aimuuihwiiu. mtrntt- iii""" P1 f f ATTORNEY 8-AT-LAW. V v - hs,r:,0iitteiiii to. '1!rm,lalB Ow atre, opportt. 0U ATTORNEYS-ATXAW. '"": Ii ..lirrtninr Oountlea. Survey T-l-cinr duoo on r.aial)le termi. n. TWIN 0. KIMMhL, ATTORN EY.AT-L. AW, Somertet, Pa.' ... .11 iwiinMf MtmatjMl tm hid emre - mjj atiji'iiutiK wu " " " 1 tn " . i Mala Uraai atraet. mi tare. n TVRY F. SCHELU AT luftii c " , . j pirinn A rent. SomerMt. Pa. I c"1""" 'LESTINE HAY, AT I x -a 4 " itJl IHalTI" Krai . ?. .r.iih.lniODt JOedU hit ear with 111 TOHV H. niL. JU ATTOKNEY-ATLA 0 Somcnet. Fa- I ' u ... na Millsetiunt. kA. Ot- to mm. 7,.," G.OGLE. ATTOKNEY-AT IW, SomerMt Pa rVntiwtoeal trannen i en i v teaM u with irruniplneM and nJeUty. at- it TILLIAM H. KOONTZ, ATTUaMi-A',i KomerMt, Pa,, . .HHirin i tknirin.1. ail Irani k III arr m c - J o Ola a raouui a 4ww. ! TAMES L PUOH. J ATTORN EY-ATW, MaBiBoth Kkk. P italra. Ea trance. III i'TWI M ivuv.. 'f ----- mL UUm x-miRd, and U tmslfleai n L BAER. , ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Somerset, Pa Will nrartl In Somenet and ad jnlnlnir oountlea llitailMwentranedUi him 1U beuromptij IDtaMSIU. T;AAC HIT.US, 1 ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, tprilNI DKSXIS MEYEKS. ATTORN EY-AT-VW, K4merpeu reoo a. t!! kl borhm. enframed to hip car. Trill be t ta Haumuth Blork next duor to rioyu fTwiwn. 441 H0WAF4D WYNNE, M. D. j ,v s ro H' A' . If A. InmaMnftlM Fre. Ear. No and Throat. S!ri awl Firluiv itire. Hon ra, 4-l.to t. a. Laiaer A Green Mock, att Main SU D ,R. WILLIAM COLLINS, IiEKTIST, SOMERSI.T, ra. lFrEKinnotl KtKc, .dot '; ' wt itm he ean at .11 time be found prepr- haw ir.!ting. ae. ArtlficUl teeth of ail kinds, "fin ten material Inserted, Operations TAE.EM. HICKS, Ii jrSTICE OF THE PEACE, Somerset, Penn'a. Tames o. kiernan, m. d. in- I m alt pn((mal services U the rttlteni' oi ni rtHnlty. He ran he ionnd at the lf latbernn Haul Mreet or at the slr Hwry Bralisker. ovfi, IBB. B alklJElX. H.8. KIMMELL. Dn. E. M. KIMMELL & SON 'wkr their professional servioes to the eiti ""'SeBiei l and virlnltv. One of the mem-to"-ftb im ran at alrtlniet. antes proiewloo "anci. he fnd at their oH.es, on Main r,. east el the Diamond. DR. J. K. MILLER has perma sntW laeated m Berlin for tbe praetloe of pntetioa.-otnoe otoalte Charles Kriiwlnir riaor. aiir. sti. TO-tt DR. H. BRUBAKER tenders his PMssnooal atrvW i to the eltitens of Sob nan and rirlnltT. Offlee ln restdenos oa Alain ""t sett el the Ulamund. DR. W M. R A U C H tenders his pMlewional servlees to tbe cilisens of Soxn Rasdrmnltjr. u- one duv tsrt of VitmA Berkebile's 'wur more, tat .'(, D R. A. G. MILLER, PHYSICIAN ASUROEON, Em nmani ti Siotb Betvl, lodiaaa, wb S he fefceonsaJMbrhMtet or othonr Urn. DR. JOHN BILLS, DENTIST. ah Boor; Hefflevl store, 'Mala Cn Sonnet, Fa. )UMOXD HOTEL, TOYSTOWN. l'ENN'A. .nkvOM..ni. , k.a lr.f W Uwralyaaa newly rebtted with aU wew iarnu.ro, hich has td. it a -rrj l "Wnf plaee tit the tnnellnK poblic. w ' -anot be sarpMKsd, all bo- k ,I7j' WR !nr. pablws haU attached : au. iw i i . kii rtm A . l.rv. miA Nuitnl M4bll. L- " va h. aaa k 4jm i y in. wees .day r me. hoaMkqr aaa Us had at the km est pos- SAtt.'KL OUSTER. rYoa, .E,Cer . biM-ond , Stoystow ,Fa M1",' WHTtD Tof.nvmssf-th.sleof an Ko lri ee reqalred. Oood sab l"'orni paid. Address, J. H. BowrJen A. Co.. ioc better, N. Y. CARLES HOFFMAN, KRCHA1IT TAILOR, A'bov" Henry lieffley Btor.) ETTLB d tC7ET PRICES. rltTlSFACTIOM eUARAHJED. it r VOL. XXXIV 10. 52. Frank fT. Hay. V . ESTABLISHED 34YEARS. Join B. Hay 7 . t iAl Y! ',B E O S j WHOLESALE fin, Coppetatf SleeMron Ware Uanuf y , No. 2S0 lVasliington Street, Jolinsto ym, Pa. wi as P2SPA2I-0 Worm '.;.';'."';; . RANGES. STOVES and At Prices Le&ihan any ether House in Western Pennsylvania. - t : Snerial.uentloonald ta JSlMnsrln Tm. Oalvaniied Iron and Sheet-Iron, Fnirar Fans. Stek Plie, Hot-Atr Flpa, SOciAiik, SpuUiic, Suu-k of Engine, and all work pertainina; to Cellar Fur aoes. Ertlmatei riven and work dae liy tirst-ciaxs .Viechanics only. Soie Axeni for Nuble Conk. Jubnatown Cos'k. Spears' Aati-Dust Ooek, Exrelrior Oosl Vaset, Toilet Se Brat Clui-aU, Was Boxes, Chamber-Falls, Rnireaand Forks (oommon and plated), (Jertnan Silver Spoons, ' Brllannla Spoons, Tea Trays, Lined, iron .ud Enameled VS axes. Uixm and Conner Keatlcs. MaaL Hrualers. Oyster Broilers, tits He wen. six different kinds. Bread Toaetera, Plated Britannia and Wire Cantors. I run Stands, Fire Irons, and every thing of Ware neeJeU in tbe cooking; department. An experience oi tnirty-tnree year in ounness nere ena bles ut to meet the wants ol thin community lo our line, with a rood article at a low price. Ail roods !d WARRANTED AS REPRESENTED or the money retuoded. 4 Call and see tbe Wares ; ret prion before purchuinr ; no tronble to show roods. Feisons ootumenclnr House-Keeping will save & per ocnt. hr buTiur their outfit from us. Kercbant selUns; roole In our line shor Id send lor Wholesale Price List.ore.il and (cet quotations of work is Warranted to ba oi th best, quality at lowest pi toe. To save money call on or send to HAT BROS, Ao.!SO Warrington Street Johnstown, Penn'a, HERE IS THE PLACE! J. M. HOLDERBAUMI SONS NO. 4 BAER'S BLOCK, A Complete Assortment of GENGRAL MERCHANDISE consisting of STAPLE and FANCY DKY GOODS! A Large Assortment of DRESS GOODS AND NOTION! MENS', BOY'S & CHILDREN'S CLOTHING! HATS .BOOTS tail 7 CARPETS & Queensware, Hardware, Glassware, GEOOEREES. All Kinds of Window Blinds Umbrellas, Satchels and Trunks, Cnurns, Butter Bowls, Tubs, Buckets, Baskets, Toledo Pumps, Farm Bells, Corn Plant ers and Plows, Cultivators, and WAGONS! TUB ROLAND CHILLED PLOW, Tlic CJLUiriOX The CHAMPION GRAIN SEED DRILL, "With Detachable Fertilizer. ' 1IE BEST OF - EVERYTHING AT J. M. HOLDER bAUM &-SOJNS'r SOMERSET, PENN'A. Salesmen "Wanted I Good reliable men to act as agents fur our XEW FRUITS and other NEW SPECIALTIES. tnrether with a full line or nursery stock. No peddllnr. Frevious experience not essential. Live, native men earn rood wares. Salary am! expenses paid. For terms, address, sivinr lull name, are, previous occupation, ami reicrcnoe, uihipvs hn a THOMAS t:nerrv Hill Nur series. West Chester, Fa. nuj. FASHIONABLE !UTTER & TAILOR, Havinr bad many years experience in all branches of he Tailoring bus iness. 1 guarantee Salistaction to .11 who may call np- in mm an.l favor . me with their pat- rooavr. Yours, e WM. Jf . IIOCIISTKTI.EIl, Somerset, Pa. mart SOMERSET COUNTY BiNKI (ESTABLISHED 1877.) IHAELES. I. HARRISON, M.I PRUTS. President. Cjishier. Oollertktns made In all part of tbe United Slate. . CHABQE- BUU-ltAT-, 1 -V. I ,n .J mnM.V V net MLB h. 4A. eommodated by draft on New York In any sum. Collections made with iomptness. I,. t. Bood bought nd sold. Money and valuable secured byooeot iiicwho soeiriwi gent A Yale a 00 Urn lock. ACCOUNTS SOLICITED. 4AU 1 al holidays observed. decj ALSISTA. Uobxk, J. Scott Wabb. HORNE & WARD, rocEseoaa to EATON & BROS. NO. 27 FIFTn AYESUE, PITTSBURGH, PA. SPRING, 1882. NEW GOODS EVES! TAT SPECIivlTlXS EmbroMsri-i, Lacs, -iHiary, Whit. Good., Hano- ksrchft, Draw Trtomltig, Howy, --, CarsrU, Mastia and UtrlM Usdarwear, 1 fasts ana ChlioVas'i Dothisg. Faery Good Yarn, Zephyrs, ata rialt ef Ad Kiadi for FARCV WtfRK, 8tf.'tta'wit,i TiiarATajiA- i aasrat-rrcLXT aouc- tWMBLtStr MAIliTTKXOrOTO WITH ' tC4t t DlSHTrH. mart T T1 " rn - rwecping by. ro D L V I aad aar t-tm yon; die, KP . eometnlaa: kMy aaa sab W J i KJ X Urn. leave behind to ecu qnarUaw. aaweek la year earn twwa, oal- nt fr-. Konsa cvaryuiBg new. -reqetfwd. We will farntah yoa everythwr. Many a aaafctag fntanaa. L-diea aaaka as muck as mow, aaa ooyv a a airw wmv KMdar. U raa waat a-liass at which yea oa Btak. g at pay all U Wme, write for partki irs to M. Raixarr A Oo Fortlaad, Main.. 4ee4r - . i F J I IF44U t AND RETAIL HOUSE-FURNISHING GOODS III GENERAL Fenn. In House-Furnlshlnir ioods we oiler our Wares. . as we have bo apprentices all our AND SHOES ! OIL CLOTHS I and Fixtures, Wall Papers, MOWER & BEjLPER, TUTT'8 POLLS A NOTED DIVINE SiYST IhuTctt: lxar Sirt For ten years I hava been a martyr to 1 ypcnai:4j Coupation and Files. East sTirmff lour pilis wcrerccommended tome; I u 1 thexn(tut wi'.hliule faith). Iam now n well man, have pond appetite,di?etioOi perfect, regular stools P'l'- fone. and I bav. rained forty pounds solid ileah, 'I h1 J are worth their weight in p)U. law. R. L. HnrPPOV. Louisville, Ky. SYMPTOMS OF A TORPID LIVER. 18rfAppeteKaTi!iea,BoUcoati s, Psinthe Head, "wii h a anil sensation Cq theback partPftin unaorthe ShonJder blae,ilness"ter ;Viitinjr, with a dia inclmaUonxertionJt.f body ormind, Irritbilityof tempor, Low apirita, Loaa cf mer norv twith a fwUcgofhavixiK; ne lectedaomeduty, earinews, JDiizirtesa, rinttering of themrtTDotabefora the yesellowfiltin, Headacbo, KfMtieas- i at mget, Bigniy coiorea u raw. , IF THESE WARNINGS AEEHEEDED, SERIOUS DISEASES WILL BE DEVELOPED. TUTT'S PILLS a ep ially aH.nied f rnrhram, snedeK etTeet nc Ijm rh4vnge Try tiiia rrierdy fnirlv. uidtra will mvl. ftaf miiui rVeirrrs. and a a . T4 l'.icc. .AC.Bta, opy-c, rr i WIVS HAIIi dye; Crajr Hair and Whiakersehanure- Gieur Blau-kt bra '- apDisrsvUon of tltl. iyc. It impart utinl color, au-ta lststant-sieonslv sol yU ta. wr ae-t r aas on receipt of at. ,0tce, -X Mu rray Bit.. Mew ork. DR.TTJTT'S afAWrAI. rv.lii.ble I Irrmatlon and refnl K-eelpt. will J ka nuaile- I B oa applicaUam. i PATENTS obtained, and all business in the V. S. Fatent ( imce, or in tbe courts auenuea to lor stuutKA 1 1 FEES. We are opposite tbe V. 8. Fatent Office, en rnced in PATENT BUSINESS EXCLUSIVELY, and can obtain tuttcnts in less time than tboM remoM trom WASHINGTON. When model or drawlnr la sent we advise as to patentability free of charre; ami we make NO CHARGE UNLESS WE OBTAIN PATENT. We refer, here, to the Postmaster, the Snpt of tbe Money Crder IMviHon. and to officials ol the 1J. g. Fatent Office. For circular, advice, terms, ui,i imnn to actual elients In tout owa Stata or county, address C. A. SNOW A CO.. Opposite Parent Offlee, . Wlnateo, D. C a a Ttlnn PlH "A I ner ibla medicine is hlrbly reeom- mmImI flip all I Sir, ' msii'r 01 c manner of chronic standing la Km tv. nf Ilia akin such as Flmplea, D1V4Q.. N K . s a e a. Kins Wnrml T a 1 1 a r Sal Kheam. Scald Head, 9cruinlar K 1 a r ' a Evil, Kh.amatuna, P.ia In the Bonee, Side and Head, ami all dlaaases arising froia im Birllf of the blood. With this rare medicine In year aoase yoa n do wiihoat Salts, C.or WJr nesla. SSenn. .or Msaoa f ' '"rf i.,.; d"m A' by ai'-ost.lt. womja. awel as by th. robust n. nj"";" ?o tl. ttrth.r.for. ewily f" dren. It is the only IZliu& which will answer la Pl'-iaTVlH. the aetlo. of tbe liver bf? lull bmr victim to th. as. of mercury or blaeua. It will open th. boweU In a proper and wbolesoaa Ther.' Is -otblnr Ilk. TJ rse.Hd.ch"JUve tarnal vlcer a. Aaaieiaal. regaiaior naaeao oreventlo. " worth -or. than a pound of cure. i ? ..i.K,ia. hat Ir one - D . arvi Will DWa, ui v i.wa old Taueh--oVdars eror of th. beat preveol.U ' "c"rd offeredto the 'tnmli. tacks of seat, dleeaeea, ne ,,,1,t4t alterant degrees xh, mkL tof'tiwr np Ibecoltl. w -,. aumewhat (UalUr. Df. Gcoi G. Shively & Co., Suc-oaors to Fshmty'a Bros. A Oo KAJn-AOTV-EBS AKD PBOrirrOB Sf aiMP., aa. .if w; '-nil OR . 13k r. j -TV Li4J UNTIL, THE EXD. BT MAa-ABBT t. TtWfTOlt To do QUI vM-Oat's ail , That need concern as ; not to earp or ask . . Themea-racof It ; bat toply ourtaak ' , Whatever may befall ; Accepting rood or 111 as He small send, - - " And wait anUlUiaead. , What IT a spew of (rasa r Stioalddare a4Mni irarainst Uispo r, . And qoea-acv where (or. Ba wlUbeld th shower Or let the tempeet pass ... To shred Its stem and pour Its jaloef oat. Or ahrivel It with drought ' ' . Each atom Oad hath Bad Yields to his primal law obedienoe true, Whether It baa star, a drop of dew, ' Forest or (eray blade. Should on. railat tbe wort, would feel th apell ; . " Behold a miracle V t irNatarsthasoaahow, W 1th acqaioaoeaea absolute, prolound. Be furs the myrtartes that gird her around, , Nor over disallow The pressure of tbe Hand above her, why a Sbeald not this eonacwoa Wherefore la man so loth, ' Without pratnmptioua quest Into th oaoa - Of tnls or tU God's inviolate lawf, ' To trust, as N atars doth. Content, although he nay not comprehend, To wall undl the end Ijost Five JJoIlara. .;. BY ANTHONY E. ANDERSON'. Nan Kendall held .her pretty brown bead on one side, and critic ally examined the picture which he had just nnisned. ". The easel stood by the open win dow, through which the scent of li lacs was borne into the low, old fashioned parlor. Her box otcdlor tubes stood on the floor beside the easel, and the palette and brushes, with the paint still moist and odor ous upon tnem, lay upon a small table near by. - x es, she said, with a self satis fied, dimpling smile, using the mahl stick to aid her as she enumerated the good points of her picture, I think it will pass muster, nwJtber, dear. Confess now that 1 man those bits of sunshine and shade with the skill of an old master. And am I not represented as large as life, only more so ? "And what shall you call it. dear?"a8ked Mrs. Kendall," a fair. brown haired widow, who looked very much like her daughter. "Under the lilacs," 1 think. It doesn't look very modest, I suppose, to paint one's self, but in the dearth of models, I was compelled to do so." . , 'v-"' "As if a prettier model .could be desired," exclaimed Mrs. Kendall, with motherly pride. Yes, it was a pretty model, and a very pretty bit of painted canvas. Overhead hung great bunches of the fragrant lilac blooms, framing an exfuiart smiling, girlish face. Her Land was- elretcBed" pvri and tbe loose eleeve bad slipped carelessly back, disclosing the white, rounded arm. Her apron was almost filled with great, odorous lilac bunches, while she was just in the act of plucking another. Over all the sunlight streamed, warm, bright, golden. "I shall go to Iew York with it myself," said Nan, "and make oh, ever so much money on it, mother, dear. Then we shall have a new carpet, for this one, though almost hidden by rugs innumerable, is un deniable shabby. And I shall get my piano tuned, and buy those new waltzes Hetty spoke of last week, and. I'm sure, 1 don't know what all. I thank the fates that they have decreed old furniture to . be very etyiish and nice, for I'm afraid I won t get enough to buy anything new in that direction." Don't build too many air castles, Nan nette," said her mother, warn- ingly, "for you may be disappointed after all." But brave little Nannette's hope fulness was not dashed in the least She had worked so long on this pict ure, had been so painstaking, burely in the great city, ten miles away, there must be some one who would admire it and buy it. Not quite a week later. Mr. Curtis Van Tassel sauntered listlessly into one of the down town cafes, toward dusk, and settled himself, with a dis satisfied sigh, at one of the numer ous small tables, covered with the whitest, softest damask, and glitter ing with silver. Business had been unutterably dull during the past week, notwith standing the fact that it was early in spring and Mr. Van Tassel's affairs had suilered more tban a little. Hence his unwonted pertuberation of mind. So preoccupied was he that he did not notice be had a vis a vis, till coffee and rolls had been brought him. The cloud lifted suddenly from a 4 . bis Handsome ioreneaa, ana ne glanced with deep interest at the girl opposite him Nannette Kendall herself. - Curtis thought it was one of the most beautiful faces he had ever seen, exquisite in its modeling, per fect in its contour. Her eres looked sad and disap pointed, as if ready to drop tears. Yes, Nan had met' with a great disappointment She had been un able to sell the picture round which her hopes bad centered so long, and she must return hotre poorer than before. She had walked about the city all day, not quite despairing of success; uatil the approach ol evening, l hen, fearful lest her mother might be anxious, she had lett her picture with a kind hearted bookseller's, who bad promised to sell it for her if possible. She had decided to take the five o'clock train, but she had missed it, and now even her brave heart quail ed a little at the thought of nding home alone at night on the cars. Faint for lack of food, she had en tered the cafe, never dreaming she -was guilty of extravagance unparal leled, as it was one of the most fash ionable, expensive restaurants in tlfe city. Poor Nannette! ber head was ach ing, her nerves tingling, bef eyes were hot with unshed tears of mor tification and disappointment ' i What a relief it would have been if she could have indulged in a good, hearty cry. Bat even that little ESTAJBIjISHED, 1827. SOMERSET, PA., WEDNESDAY. JUNE 6, 1883. boon was denied her in this great, bustling, hurrying,, noisy, selfish city. (The adjectives are Nan's own.) ' '" '. ' ' ' ' Her repast finished, Nan put her hand into herpoce$ ior ber shabby little purse. The next moment she uttered an exclamalioa of terror and dismay. ' The purse and mimey were both gone. 'i ' Her waiter stood Mside her with outstretched hands, i faint smile of 1 1 . 1 l2 ll A incruaeiuy on nis mooia counte nance. People who could hot find their purses were by no qieans rare. "But I have lost it!" faltered poor Nan, pale and trembnng with genu ine terror and distreiK "or else some one has stolen it from me my purse with So m it" - . -Curtis Van Tassefe had heard ev ery word. He looked at Nan critic ally, and at the same time sympa thetically. The troubled look in the brown eyes was so painfully apparent that he did not for a moment share the waiter's suspicion. s . A brilliant idea, came to him Stooping down, qutek as thought, he abstracted a' $-5 bill "from his own wallet Nan had not seen'the action, but the quick witted waiter had. - "I beg your parclfl," Curtis said, quickly, and connaously, "but think this must be tiie missing bill. I found it beside lour chair just now. ' Doubtless yolj have taken it out of your own purte, laid it beside your plate, and then forgotten it Very luckily I chanced to look down." "How can I ever (hank you, sir?" IN an exclaimed, wmle the servant gave Curtis a slight' wink, and dis creetly kept all knowledge of the lit tle ruse to himself, f So long as he waspaid, it was no5 business of his from whose pocket fe money came. But a diligent search on Nan's part, aided by both the waiter and Curtis van asses brought no purse to light, and sie was compel! ed to go home withdnt it How the money could be thefe and not the purse was a mystert she was una' bleto soire. :' I 1 . Only a day or ;fo later Curtis was passing HarrisJn's book store when a minting in the window at tracted his attentions -, Its execution way graceful and vigorous, but it was;tbe central fig ure in it that be noticed. It was the very young girl thai he met at tbe cafe. ' ' ,t -: I am a fool I" he, thought as he entered and asked Cie price of tbe picture. . But for all that hi bought it, pay ing $100 for it thotrih Mr. Harrison declared that the artist would con- "Very fine, indeed," Mr. Harrison said volubly, glad of a chance to make a bargain, even it it brought no money into his own pocket, "and a perfect likeness of the artist, Miss Kendall, &ir. II she wasn't as poor as a church mouse the world would have heard of her long ago, I'll be bound." Curtis thought so too, and wanted very much to know Miss, Kendall's address, but he did not sav so. My mother has long wished to have her portrait painted," he said, artfully, "but she wants it to be the work of a a lady's brush. Do you think if I sent Miss Kendall her pho tograph, she would copv an oil por trait from it?" She would be only too glad. I guess, Mr. an lasseis, saia wr. Harrison, effusively, and yon couldn't get a lady better fitted for the work than she. And Nan worked diligently and happily on her first order, never dreaming bv what chain of circum stances the loss of her shabby purse had brought all this good fortune. She knew nothing about Mr. an Tassels, except that he had purchas ed "Under the Lilacs," and was so pleased with it that he wanted his mother's portrait from the same brush. I hope be will like it" she said, on the very afternoon when Curtis an Tassels was coming for the fin ished picture. "I have certainly done my best" Mr. an Tassels did like it, and he liked the little artist, too, so well that he came again and again, on one pretext or another. And before many months he had asked Nan Kendall to marry him, and she had answered : "Yes!" "Nan," said Curtis, quizzically, one day, "did you ever lose $5 ?" Nan 6tared and laughed. "What do you mean, Curtis? No; but I thought I did last spring," she said. "Thought you did!" Curtis ex claimed, "why, didn't you really lose it?" "Curtis, you'r not the gentleman who " NanBtopped. "Yes," nodded Curtis Van Tassels, with smiling lips. "I have sometime wondered where I have seen you before. Oh, it was monstrous of you to deceive me as you did. I don't think I can ever forgive you." A lady visited Utah recently, and while in Salt Lake City saw a little Mormon boy crying in , the street , . " What's the matter, my poor little fellow ?" she said to him ten derly. " Nothin'," sobbed the boy. " Has - any - one - been abusing you?" " Yes'm." "Who?" "Dad." A Have you a mother?" " Yes'm, durn it, that's just what's the matter. I've got sixteen of 'em already, and dad's gone and marriwd another one. That's what hart- me and I don't care who knows it, so I don't, and I'll just ery my head off and die," and be set up another howL Miss - Annie Wallace, a pretty blonde, aged 16 years, who has re cently been an active Worker in the Salvation Army at Easton, was mar ried on Monday to aooal-black negro named Henry Jones, who was a new recruit in the army. The Romance or Mount Tenson. Never is the auaint and beautiful old homestead Mount Vernon love lier than in autumn. It was in 1858 that Col. John Washington saw that Mt Vernon would have to go by the auctioneer's hammer if something did not turn up. And here comes in the romance of Mt Vernon. A woman who had been a confirmed invalid since her nineteenth year, raised a fund of 8200,000, and embodied a plan that gave Mt Vernon to the nation. This was Anne Pamela Cunningham, of South Carolina. She was an only and indulged daughter.' In her childhood she had visited Mt Ver non, and when she had resigned all of life except that which could be enjoyed in a sick room, in her early womanhood, she took hold of a pro ject to buy Mt Vernon, or, rather, the project took hold of her. It is one of the most singular instances of indomitable energy and practical perseverance recorded. This frail woman, from her sick bed, aroused an enthusiasm especially among Southern women, that resulted in a splendid success. She inspired Ed ward Everett with her spirit and his lecture on Washington poured mon ey into tha treasury. She interested Mme. Le Vert and Mrs. Cora Mowatt Ritchie, and in 1850 it was accom plished: the house, the tomb of Washington, and 200 acres of land belonged to a national association. Tbe capital stock was limited to $500,000. It was granted in perpe tuity, and no disposition of the prop erty could be made without the con sent of the Legislature. None of the Washington family thereafter was to be' interred at Mt Vernon, and the key of the vault was thrown in to the Potomac river. Around the marble tombs of George and Martha Washington is a wooden flooring, which, if stepped upon, starts an electric alarm at the house. Through the open iron work one looks into the brick vault, where there are only two tombs. "Hats off" is the strin gent rule at the grave; even the most flippant are awed into some thing like reverence. During some of the bloodiest days of the war, Mt V ernon was treated a neutral ground, and soldiers of both armies were seen fraternizing under the trees that guard the tomb. 1 requent description cannot de stroy the interest of the house. Year by year improvements are made by the regents. As far as practicable every State has a room, ornamented with relics of the Revolutionary times, arranged in the style that firevailed at Mt Vernon during the ifetime ' of General Washington. Hanging in the entranco hall is the key of the Bastile, sent to Washing UAitiLLt&i&telJtejer the Joor of what is called the i stale aTnictT room Washington's field glass, placed on its perch by the hand of Wash ington himself, and never since re moved. The mantle and hearth in the din ing-room are of marble, and extreme ly curious; they were sent to Wash ington from France. On the way the ship was captured by the pirates; when they found that this marble was intended for Washington they took an opportunity of landingit on American shores, and it was forward ed to Mt. Vernon. In the South Carolina room hangs the portrait of Anne Pamela' Cun ningham. She has a refined and thoughtful face, with deep and mean ing eyes. The attic room which Mrs. Wash ington chose after General Washing ton's death, and in which she died, is in almost the indentical condition in which she left it ' In a quaint little drawing-room Nellie Curtis's drawing-room is the grand harpsichord, as large as a modern grand piano, which Wash ington gave to her aB a wedding gift This was tbe grand-niece of Mrs. Washington, not her daughter Nel lie who died unmarried at twenty- two. In the ground stands a rose bush where, tradition relates, Nellie Curtis received her first offer, and walking around this rose bush six times brings every young lady who be lieves in the spell an offer of mar-' riage within that year. The place is managed upon the most practical plan. The greenhous es are made a source of revenue as well as the farm. Only one boat is allowed to land passengers there, the entrance fee of a dollar foots up handsomely at the end of the year. In the old fashioned kitchen a very good lunch may be obtained, served by colored waiters. A superintend ent is employed, who keeps the place in good order, and if General and Mrs. Martha Washington could re turn for an hour no doubt they would smile approvingly. While a great elevator was being built in Kingston, New York, a day or two ago, a remarkable exhibition of coolness and presence of mind was given by one of 'the workmen. He was standing on a scaffolding about sixty feet high, when one of his companions thoughtlessly removed a stone at the foot of the structure. Tbe whole thing gave way, and the workman jwas only saved from being dashed to the ground by seizing a projecting plank. While banging suspended in the air he did not grow frantic and let go, he - simply remarked to a friend below: . : " Jim, youll find a ladder on the end of the wharf." And he waited for the ladder to be brought. Then he said he would take it as a personal favor if his fellow workman and companion would re frain from removing the foundations of the scaffolding again while he was aloft . In San Antonio, Texas, a $60,000 saloon is being fitted op, "of which the mirrors alone will cost $7,000." The glassware on the snowy bosoms of the bar tenders'probably accounts for the balance. . A Pittsburgh man, aged 80, was sent to tbe poorhons the other day by two married daughters who are amply able to support him. . Here I am I've been a begging for twenty years, and aint rich yet !" H OL VLAU JLLr 1 Talking by Telephone Between Chi cago and New York. The triumphs of the speaking tel ephone within the past seven years have been a source of wonder to the world. For communication on snort lines it has come into general use, especially in this country. ' Within the past year some experiments have been made with a view to determine the practicability of the use of the telephone in long circuits, only par tial success being achieved where the lines were more than 150 miles long. Recently a corporation known as the Postal Telegraph Company erected a line between New York and Chicago, using a No. 4 wire which is made of copper, having a steel core to stiffen it. Prof. Elisha Gray, an electrician of New York, was the pro jector of this line, one of the princi pal objects of which was experiment on the possibilities of long-distance telephoning, and to furnish a line for the perfecting of the same. It was apparent that common iron wires would not attain the result aimed at On Monday last the lines were connected between the offices in New York and Chicago and a test made of the new copper wire, which showed a resistence of only 1,522 "ohms" against 6,000 "otyms" on the best iron wire and lo.OtX) "ohms "on the average iron wire. A telephone connection was made and an effort made to communicate, but without success. Sounds could be heard but the inductive troubles from wires hung on the same poles in the city, and in close proximity to the copper line, made it impossi ble to obtain satisfactory results and it -was at once determined to make telephonic connection at this end of the line at the Stock Yards, the New York end being in the company s general office on Broadway. iesterday morning Charles Scribner, electrician for the A'estern Electric Company, William Hoff- master, his assistant, E. T. Warner, an employe, John loung, foreman of the outside department, and a re porter tor the Time took an early train for the Stock Yards, equipped with all necessary appliances for the contemplated talk over a thousand miles of wire between the cities of New York and Chicago. Batteries were arranged, wires strung and connected with induction coils trans mitter, ky and receiver, and at pre cisely eleven o'clock by Chicago time Mr. Scribner sent his " Hello!" through the doubled Edison trans mitter over the thousand miles of wire. He promptly received an an- answer, which came so quickly and so distinctly that he was induced to believe that it could hardly be true that lie was in communication with i New York, but recognized the voice t Mrv John, J&4Ht tt, chemitof the Postal Telegraph Company who, in resDonse to a question as to what time it was, answered: " Five min utes of twelve, which was correct according to the difference in time between the two points. From 11 a. m. until 3:30 o'clock in the after noon conversations, were carried on between the two places, the New York parties being John A. Barrett, Prof. Elisha Gray, George M. Phelps, Jr., C. A. Brown, "W. A. Armstrong, D. Cushing and a number of others. At the Chicago end of the wire Mr. Hoffmaster played on the mouth organ, and E. T. Warner sang, the report coming back that the whole was heard distinctly. During the greater part of the time the conver sation was perfectly distinct, being as plain as through an ordinary telephone in the city. Some diffi culties were encountered several times by some one cutting into the line at different points, and trom the evident crossing of some telephone wires either in New York or Cleve land with the main wire, as other voices could be distinguished at times, and the induction became so great that it was necessary to sus pend for the time. The experiments, however, were declared to be entire ly satisfactory, results being obtain ed which were thought to be scarce ly possible. The volume of voice at times was sufficient to have travers ed fully five hundred miles more of wire, and yet have been heard dis tinctly. The instruments used were the same to both ends of the wire, and were manufactured in Chicago. The transmitting apparatus consist ed of a double Edison transmitter, mounted on a single mouthpiece connected with two induction coils and with the main line, giving double the volume of sound of an ordinary transmitter. Two receiv ers were UBed, the ordinary one and the Scribner head telephone, which is far superior to the other. It has no permanent magnet, but a simple electro-magnet mounted in an iron case, with the ordinary diaphragm. This is placed in the circuit with a primary induction coil and a bat tery, and with the main line. It weighs hut two ounces, while the or dinary receiver weighs about a pound. In addition to them a key was attached, which cut out the re ceivers and cut into the circuit trans mitter at will, and vice versa, thus removing all unnecessary resistence in the line. While talking tbe re ceivers were out' of the line, and while receiving the transmitters were out Tbe experiments will be con tinued. Chicago Times. As when She waa Yonng. . "I have used Parkers' Hair Bal sam and . like it better than any similar preparation I know of," writes Mrs. Ellen Perry, wife of Rev. P. Perry, of Coldbrook Springs, Mass. My hair was almost entirely gray, but a dollar bottle of the Bal sam has restored the softness, and the brown color it had when 1 was young not a single gray hair left Since I began applying the Balsam my hair has stopped falling out, and I find that it is a perfectly harmless and agreeable dressing." A gentleman had his boots black ed by one of two boys, and gave the shiner a wi Bill to get changed. Alter waiting for some time he said to the other boy : "Where is your part ner V :"Ob,"aaid the youth with a grin, "he's busted op, and I his assignee." LL o WHOLE NO. 1665. Job- C. Calhoun. Mr. Calhoun spoke like a college Erofessor demonstrating to his class, is position was stationary, and he used no gesticulation. His pale and livid countenance indicated the cloister. His voice was silvery and attractive, but very earnest His eyes indicated quick perception. Starting with the most plausible premises, he would carry you irre sistibly along with more plausible reasoning until you would be puzzled to know how much back track it was indispensably necessary for you to take to avoid conclusions which would make it difficult to tell the difference between your views and those of a South Carolina secession ist After having heard all the Sen ators speak, if a stranger should se lect the one, irrespective of doctrine, who came nearest a saint, be would select Mr. Calhoun, and such he is held to be throughout most of the South to this day. College professors in the South were his great admirers, and taught his doctrines to their students. Ed ucated clergymen and all fashiona ble society there lost no opportuni ties of manifesting their admiration of him. "Have you seen Mr. Cal houn ?" "Do you think of leaving without seeing Mr. Calhoun?" were questions invariably asked by south ern Congressmen of their constitu ents visiting Washington. And Mr. Calhoun's prestige was so worked up that southern visitors, both gentle men and ladies, were as much ex pec ted to call upon him as upon the fresident At the time ol his death he was gaining a strong foothold among the scholars of the north, who seemed incapable of resisting the seductive reasoning of his perceptive, com Dre- hensive and analytic mind. Senator John P. Hale, of New Hampshire, once came to my seat and said : " 1 am going to astonish you. Mr. Calhoun has just brought to me a letter, which he said he had iust re ceived from President Nathan Lord, of Dartmouth College, and asked me a great many questions about him and the college. He left me, assert ing that President Lord was one of the ablest thinkers and profoundest reasoners in the country." At that time President Lord was not onl v the head of the college, but of the Con gregational denomination in New England. With a bravery worthy of a better cause he followed Mr. Calhoun's doctrines to their natural sequences, and had to give up his position. No mau ever exerted the influence upon this country that Mr. Calhoun did. AH the calamities of the late war were the legitimate outgrowth of doctrines of which he was the father, and to which the sincerity of Kb evotfo vW advocacy of them in his dying hour. How to Keat and Sleep. ut. cargeant discussed the ques tion of the importance of rest and sleep for men in training for stu dents. A distinction should be made, said the lecturer, between rest and what is usually called sleep. Recreation, in the sense of building anew, is rest So often a mere change in local condition is better for a man than complete rest or sleep, a change of activity is rest in itself. The Indians, when tir ed of walking, rest themselves by running, ibis principle is too often disregarded by students and by men wno are training ior any par ticular object lioating men many times-fail to recognize the import ance of general training, but think their whole duty lies in the direct exercise of rowing or in absolute rest The value of indirect training is not to be over estimated. It is no ticed that men who do not devote themselves exclusively to one branch of training, but aim at a general physical developement, often excel in their own specialties men who only train for one branch of athlet ics. The best examples for such facts, said Dr. Sargeant, were to be seen in tbe superior physical condi tion of the men now in training for the general excellence prize. Tbe same rule holds good in matters of the intellect V anety of studies is an excellent thing. The man who devotes himself to only one or two subjects can hardly be said to be Worthy of a college degree. As to the matter of sleeplessness muscu lar exertion, if not excessive, induces sleep. Thus it is often a good plan for men troubled with sleeplessness to exercise in the evening before re tiring. Men should be warned against the use of drugs to cure sleeplessness. The sleep thereby in duced is not a genuine sleep. After any violent or unusual exercise a warm bath is to be highly recom mended before retiring. The prac tice of bathing the feet alone is a doubtful one, however. It is in gen eral, best not to be dependent upon an artificial condition to secure sleep. One should aim at a complete mas tery over himself in such matters, so that he can command sleep at will and thus economize time and force. By such a course the usual average of his sleep can be reduced to seven or six and a half hours with safety. Tbe habit of reading one's self to Bleep id to be deprecated, since it may become a troublesome one and interfere sadly with serious study. It is doubtful whether the sleep gain ed before 12 o'clock is of any more value than that afterward. The con ditions favorable to sleep are then not usually so many. ALMOST AS BAD. Hop Bittern Co Toronto. I have been sick for the past six years, suffering from dyspepsia and general weakness. 1 have used three bottles ot Hop Bitters, and they bave done wonders for me. I am well and able to work, and eat and sleep well I cannot say too much for Hop -Sitters. Simon Koooins. Dydia E. Pinkham began business by manufacturing medicine in a tea kettle. Punch says that tbe English re ward for bravery is a garter and a wooden leg to wear it on. Mtaoellaa-xma Irene. Senator Anthony is improving in health. There are 300 women employed as lournaiisu in tne United States. Thirteen prisoners in th Tjinrxs- ter county jail are down with small pox. There are 85,000 people in West Virginia who do not know how to read or write. General Grant and Hon. William E. Gladstone have been elected hon orary members of the American Peace Society. A demented man, found wander ing about Chicago, proved to be State Senator Thomas Hah, of Marshall county, Iowa. ' The Tabor Mining Company's stamp mill at Denver, Colorado, was burned last Saturday. Loss, sixty thousand dollars. The Society of the Ninth Penn sylvania Veteran Volunteer Cavalry will hold its fourteenth annual re union at Huntingdon, Pa-on June 14. Samuel P. Kersteller, a prominent grocer of Lewisburg, committed sui cide on Sunday by shooting. He had become despondent because of ill ness. Abraham O. Hickman, Postmaster at Pipersviile, Pa., has been sentenc ed to nine months imprisonment and $1U0 fine for using washed stamps. Ira E. Howard, of Franklin, Pa.. was yesterday nominated for State Treasures by the Pittsburg Conven tion of the Prohibation Home Pro tection party. A 1,800,000 acre purchase of land in the panhandle of Texas by an English syndicate is reported, price 3,000,000. The tract borders two hundred miles on the Indian terri tory. William Lanzendorfer, of Indiana county, is said to have absconded after forging several notes and hav ing them discounted at the banks in Indiana. He run a mill near George ville. Gen. Adolph Bushbeck, who com manded the Twenty-seventh Penn sylvania Volunteers, and First Bri gade of the Eleventh Corps in the late war, died last week at Florence, Italy. A forty-dollar Continental bill issued bv authority of Congress" at Philadelphia, September 26, 1778, was found in tearing down the old Marble property in Sunbury a few days agD. A species of green worm is said to be killing all the copperheads in Texas. What a blessing it would have been if these green worms had only scattered all oyer the South be fore the war. A preacher named Byerd was tar red and feathered by a mob at Franklin, Nebraska, for beating his daughter, who had informed her mother of his adulterous relatione with other women. During a fierce wind and rain storm at Beloit Wisconsin, last week, a number of live fish, one of them weighing a pound, dropped in the business streets, and hailstones, the largest four inches in circumfer ence, felL The Wife " of James Herron, of Ohioville, Beaver county, died last bitth to a, ninth rtbitdTMrs. Herron was so convinced she would die, that months ago she began to make preparations for her funeral. Alexander H. Stephens, the late Governor of Georgia, could not walk. Henry D. McDaniel, the present Governor, is a very bad stammerer and cannot talk. But like Stephens, he is a roan of great ability and ex alted character. Garfield's tomb in Lake View Cemetery, Cleveland, was decorated with flowers on Decoration Day by a committee, like other -soldiers graves, and in addition with a beau tiful wreath sett from the Garfield school at Des Moines, Iowa. Sarah Jane Hunt, a very respecta ble and wealthy lady of East Allen township, Northampton county. committed suicide one day last week by hanging, in the cellar of her res idence. She was 51 years of age, and her mind has been unbalanced for several years. Patrick Hoar was arrested last week at Scranton for killing James Norton at a wedding Sunday night Hoar was one of a serenading party who enlivened the occasion by shooting revolvers. He confessed to having shot Norton, but Bays the shooting was accidental. The Cochranville Creamery, Ches ter county. Pa., receives 12,156 pounds of milk daily, from which it manufactures 300 pounds of butter and 1,080 pounds of cheese. It also consumes 1,200 bounds of ice daily and one ton of coal per week. ' Tbe skeleton of a man was dis covered last week in the woods near Tamaqua. Tbe remains are believed to be those of James Campbell, a Brooklyn lawyerwho wandered from home in a state of mental aberration in April, 1882, and was last seen in Tamaqua, where his wife, who had come on in search of her husband, lost all trace of him. Campbell's friends have been notified. This morning was warm, and he imprudently made a change of his underclothing. Our climate is de ceptive. Before evening there came up a ch illy storm. An attack of sick ness followed, of course. But Perry Davis's Pain Killer was used for re lief, with the happiest effect In these Summer months of suddenly varying tempature, everybody ought the keep a bottle of this valuable rem edy within reach. Bill Fox, the dissolute young fel low who deliberately murdered W. L. Howard, near Nevada, Mo., a few days ago for his money, coolly pleaded guilty in court last week, saying bis life had been a miserable failure, and he wanted it ended. Judge Burton refused to accept the plea, ordered one of " not guilty " entered, and appointed two lawyers to defend him. . The action of Fox created a profound sensation. A queer divorce case is reported from Kimbolton, Muskingum coun ty, Ohio. Mrs. Sarah P. Sales asks for divorce from her husband on the ground that he is a very devout Christian, and prays three times each day. She avers that at family wor ship Mr. Sales points eut all the great sins mentioned in the Bible and makes them apply to his wife, denouncing her in bitter terms before all the members of tbe family. This is the reason that she petitions for a divorce regarding her husband's denunciations as cruel in the extreme.