u ti,. 1 'if r it 'tie Hi. Ilk. 'it; 'at II,.. .li 1 Somerset IIcralcLj hvrnas ol rnDiicauuu. i , 12 utll e,ery Wo4nd.y mornto ' ,iion. v J. ... ttp. Po.tma.terf IeeUn7 .r4irt do not take oat ''Lr. Willi b.MWI" t t"1' wn MM PoftOfflOO tO 1 rrtt,ert ro""" .OBtofflco. Addre. The Somerset Herald, Somerset. Fa. ..KD W. liEISECKER, H ' ATTUB.NEY-AT-l.AW, Kuinefet. Pa. kimmel. . Somerset, Pa. a' -, i KOOSER. - ' ATTtiKSEY-ATUAW, Somerset, le. ,ni:t;KR. SCULL. lit ATTORNEY AT-LAW, .V SofBGLrwt I 'a. H KNDSLEY. ATTHKNEY-ATI.AW, 1 Somerset, - THKNT. ATTOKNKY-ATI.AW Somerset, Penn a. H TEL. ATTtlKNEY AT-LAW, Somerjot, fa. i hutts, ! ATTOKNEY-ATLAW I i S.'iuenwt, Fa. M ... iun In Mammoth Hloca. ,,,mv p st'-OTT. w. h. BiTm. '''i i'.,KK!:TlI A- RUPPEL ; r Air.KNtYSATLAW. r ,utrud tn their caro will bo o " vaiu (Mi "t"t. ofl-oelto tie ; , K H. -KS L.C.COLBORK. 'n ORN .vCOT.liORX. ;( ATTlEYS.ATI-AW. l 'r '.T.r,;ttn.r.llert1oBm.lo tn ' I .ModiulTiltut 0.untle. survey. " ' "u"Vu roaa-n-ible term.. ,i A 0. KIMMKL. A1TOKNEY-AT LAW, MKiioeroet, Pa. ' all l UJlnew entrnftofl to ril ere , : .li..lniiiK (intW with l'n n'l'1 ' . ' v ("thee on Malu Cruf itreel. ATTORNEY AT LAW, .. ..t ,r' PetiM-a Anent, S..meret, Pa. ,.:Y"il.-M,u.a,..tnHlaclt. : 1'VTINK HAY. ATTi KN EV AT LAW , , ! w !ti Knl K..to. 8tert.t. P will ir n t.jMneMi euixu.iou u h H. I'HL. ATTuKNET-ATLAW Si'iaerot, Pa, uenl u alt buHnew ertrute.J t ' ;.!,..' ..vn,'et collortluni, -c. Ot- ."y.tu:u''tli HuilJii. T (;. or; I.E. f. ATTdKN EY-AT LAW, Somerwt Pa., K.f'c.inanewertnnte.1 to my faro at- V (-: K- wi'h jipniptnew and tHjeltty. IITILLIAMH.KOOSTZ 5 'KNEAt;pa.. . HlminHinf"";- " - I ,,.. Vnr,lin hiMie ROW. J ATTORNEY AT-L.aw SumerooC Pa. t..X.mti 'rth p Klr. Entrance. V treet. t'ollertion. maJo, otl tfle. eiamlned. aod all lemU l.ieM .tteii.lea to wltt ptvmpuiei and BOellty. II L BAER. ATTiiKNEY-AT LAW, Somerset, Pa., TCi ,,-i-re1r .merrtati! adrihureimmtle. A!! .u.ineeniruMeJto til in wiU liepPuiliUy lUeVrd ta I :aac nr;rs. ATTORNEY-AT -LAW. Somerset. Pena'a. DENNIS MEYEES. ATTORN EY-AT-LAW homenwt. Penn a. ieval !.ulDe en:roted U- In? r.ro will t r,lrj to with limtBltneM and flJeltty. i.f tn M.mnjutb Klixk neit dir to Boya I Crnt Kure. II. 1I0WAKD WYNNE, M. D. j us sT'iivx . ri 'J ;i.,te"ftn Eto. Ear. Ne and Thnat. lain! rvlu-in ).r-tt'. Hcuro. v r. a. La:er a ".re'a lilvek. B Sl- D WILLIAM 0OT,LTNS. 1ENT1ST, SOEKSET, PA. 'r. ltrmoth Kloek. above Boyd'i Iro fe he ran at all time M lounu ireir f il kin.lulwTa, ch tilllr.if reii iSs rrartln(t. ke Arttnetal toetaof all kln.la. ac . it ban material tneened. ojraUun. A RUE M. HICKS. i JV8TICE OF THE rtit-ti SouerMt. Penn a. TAMES 0. KIERNAN. M. D. ten- V hi- i.tvfelonal "rriiw to the rttuen" ot s trrtx and Tirtt.lty. He can bo touad at the w .r.e ot ht rather on Main street or at the .1 v: Ir Henry Krahakrr. U. X. KIxWeUL H.f. alXMtU. DU. E. M. K1MMELL & SON :r, ier their ndal.al aerrloe to tho ettl-i-tii s .irerwt nd Tlemitv. ((iil tho nietn- of tao hrm can at allie. nnlewprorewh- lytiifi. he loond al tnelrlomeio, oo Main t rec' ,4t M tie Uiamoiid. DIl. J. K. MILLER has inua nr.t:T k'ated l Irltn for the practice of I t r- vvc'-, - i,.. oi tflte Cbarle. Kriwln- ' .ur. ILL. Tu-tl. aye. Ki. TO-tl. DR. II. BUVRAKER tonders hi .1..m.l wrviee. to tho eltltont 04 Sun n! vHOaitT. thr In roaldenoo cn Main fireet wt ol tba IHamnnd. 0 K. V M. R A 1" C II tender his ;,Mrcal .ervir totho rtUteoiol Son- -.t H,1 tleinltT 1 dou, ta K ima berkeblle fa-rmore tor. l e'. . '. DU. A.;. MILLER. PH YSKTAN kel BOKOK, Hat renaovva to SutMh Wend. la-'.Waa, whero h faa henutad t) totter wr otlterwuo. DR. JOHN Ull.IiS. bKNTLST. Cfneo obo Peary Hor oyt nof. hl Oo" met, Svwrwt, ra. D IAWOND HOTEL, KTOYSTOWK. PKXN'A. Ti le pojiwlar and well known howM bat lately Uc tkao-aably and newly remted with all new wl KrM ct turtiltore, wht baa naJo M ry ih-i.i. Bt.i.oinv i.Iiuw fur the tntnellna tmbllc Hii !ti4e and rooa rannot l nrpaed, ail l r kntrUu. with a kanre pubUe kail attached t.i the iam. AIk tame and naiT .tablina:. I'm, olaao lnu ( ean I bad at Uhe kwoM !. ll jirtrot, bjtewa.iayorjoai. . AMVlXt'VSTER. rTen. fc.E.(Jur. Dlaat oid Stojaww ,P M Ed W ANTED Tofativaw for tho tale af .'a riuii aiNKiriiaairwi 111 .--., , . iv -eew. ere. Ttn oafgiiw iTiiwre.. . . M( arr aud .11 eipenw. paid. Addreaa, J. M. Bowden A. Co., nrflt Barno owr, N. Y. CHARLES HOFFMAN. v AAovUeixlaatyaSrov UTCT aTTLES ill ICIEST PRICES. tSATlSrmiOk GUARANTEED. SOMERSET, PA. IEBC0MTAILOi ae VOL. XXXII. NO. 5. Frank W . Hay. ESTABLISHED 54TEARS. HA."Z" BROS., WHOLESALE AND RETAIL ' Tin, Copper anil Sheet-Iron Ware Mannf i Xo. 2 SO AVashlngton Street, Johnstown, Pa. "WS ASE TO CFF22 RANGES, STOVES and HOUSE-FURNSHSS G333S l G ERA At Prices Less than any other House in Western Pennsylvania. Stiecial attention Jial.l to Jot.blm In Tin. Qalranliod Iron anil Sheet-Iron, tairar Pan. Steam Ph.e, liot Alr I'il. Kui.nnif, SpuUtlUK, Stfk ol EiiKlnei, and al'. w.-rli jiertalnlnif to t'llar Pur noe. Etim'e irlven and work dotio by tirt-elaf Mecliaaica only. Slo A Kent for Noble Cook. JoluiKtown l'""k Sr" Anti lnH Hook, En-liioe Penn. In HoufO-Parnl.htnK Kodl wo ottur Oxl Vane. Ti.ilct e.. Bread Clonsu. Cke ozea, I li.uilier faiu. Knivet aua xorai tonnimua and iilati'd) ilrm.in hilver Spoons, KritannU S(iona, Tea Travi Lined, Iron and Knameled Warn liraes ad t.r kettle. .Meat Broiler, 0er Broilera. Em JloaKra, alx tlilterent ktads. Bread Toai-rf, PlH'.eJ Britannia and Wire t'aflora. Iron Stands, Ylre Iron, and everytblnit of Vare tire led tn the Oookiuc Ifc-partrornt. An eipertetn-e of thirty-tbree yeart in bortneH beroena blM u to meet the wants ( tM ootimiunltT in our line, with a ijood article at a low price. All moodi old W AbKANTKK A3 KEPK ESENTEU or the m"ney relunded. aall and aee the Ware : ret prloen t,ei.re purotiufinif : no tc.ulile to f bow good a. Pernf couiuiencluj; Houe-Keepln wtll aavo i .iiereem. bv l uvh. ttieiroutnt trom an. MerehanU .elliaic ijomii In our lino ihorid aend lor Wlmleiifcle Price Lift. orrMll and itet qu-itatloni of our W are. Ai we naveno apprenurei an our work is V, arranied to ot the bcxt qaality al lowest pileo. To tave money call on or eeud to HAY IIKOS ,o.2SO Washington Street. Jolmstown. Pciin'n. HERE IS THE PLACE! J. M. HOLDERB AUM I SONS NO. 4 BAER'S BLOCK. A Complete Assortment ofGENGRAL MERCHANDISE contsisting of STAPLE and FANCY DRY GOODS! A Large Assortment of DRESS GOODS AND NOTION! MEXS N0Y?S & CHILDREN'S CLOTHING! HATS , BOOTS AND SHOES ! CARPETS & OIL CLOTHS ! Queensware, Hardware, Glassware, GROCERIES. All Kinds of Window Blinds and Fixtures, Wall Papers, Umbrellas, Satchels and Trunks, Churns, Butter Bowls, Tubs, Buckets, Baskets, Toledo Pumps, Farm Bells, Corn Plant ers and Plows, Cultivators, and WAGONS! THE JtOLASD CHILLED PLOW, Tlic CHAJrPIOX JIOIVEII & REAPER, Ihv CHA MP J OX GRATXSEED DRILL, With Detachable Fertilizer. THE IJKST OF EVERYTHING AT J. M. HOLDERBATJM & SONS', SOMERSET, PENN' A. FASHIONABLE CUTTER & TAILOR, Hariri hid many vear exrieixe ill all brmirbrf of be Tailoring bn inei' 1 icuarantee Satifa'Uon to all a WHO III y i-nii Hp i on me and invor i, me with their pat- ronaire. Yours, he.. w n. n. iitciisTirri.i:ii, Somerwt, Pj- mart SOMERSET COUNTY BANK ! (KSTAW.ISIIF.D 1S77.) CHAELES.1HAES1SEH. il.J FEIT7S. rrw-iiU-nt. Cashier. (lolleetionf made In aU part of too Vnlted Statet. . m-, CHAHGE5 ju.UiJii.ttAi r.. Partle wlfhlnir to MiJ money Wet ran be ae. roWlllKH'.iKeu o; ui.v . , fvHe.1t. of made with pmuiptne. J . h. Bond. tH'UKin anu e"' ; ..... . . iii.,i,raeeleuraiel faioa. with a bar- Kent fc Yale s UP time lock. ACCOUNTS SOLICITED. i-All !o al holldayfobeerreJ.- dod AlsektA. Hoaat. .!. SoiTT WaD. HOME & WARD, EATON & BROS, SO. 27 FIFTH AVENUE, PITTSBURGH, PA. SPIUXG. 1882. NEW GOODS S7IE7 XAT SPICULLTSS C.r4ari, Uctt, -.Hinor,, whitt Got. Hao Vorckicfs. Onttl Trimnaiags, Ciaa, Caruta, WmJia aad MerUo Uaoorwoar, la farts' 1 nthdreaH Ootaf. Faty Geoit, Yif, Zootiyr, Rahf r i of All Ki'dt far FAHCYWOIK. Gents' ftraitt Goofs, k, k. spiral mo ! rt-rrru.T aoLiC- -Dt.r MAlLATTViBFO TO WITH CARS JNf DISPATCH. ar REST! ant. 111 la twaeylsar by. ro and dare hetore ym die. ometBttia mtarny ana pud- Ume Imw iMklad to ooa- ntlreo. Norwa EaecythW w. M'al D re-julrod. Wo wiU tunkUh y" . everythlna:. Mane an naakimt lortauea. Ladlea make al mark an men and bor. and (rtrla ako arreat pay. Hea.er. If yoa want ine at yow I K T. 11 -ii n,. rlie Ut rjarUenlan toH M A Co., Torliaad, Main doely Salesmen "Wanted ! Ikwd reUahlo mea to act U asm I lor onr XEW FRUITS sad Uir XEW SPECIAtTIES. toirethor with a toll lino or nararrr ttoek. peddlliur. rwloa .tparteaoo an oawjaual. Dva. ajUn men oara oud wacaa. Salary and cxpeaaeo paid. or term., addreao. frrrmc ;lwtl name. aao. lrrrVw oaeapaUoa, aad rioc, HtmPES liliO. a THoSlAS.CbojTy Hill Nar erl. Woft Cbeftor. Pa. "'' mm JLli'V'A.Rv: John B. Hay THJTT'S k NOTED DIVINE SAYS: lia. ItTT: Ixar t-rt I or ton reare 1 bao toon martyr to lripaa, ContipatMa aad 1 u.a. Lat .j'ricg ) our l wtrerHvimmendl tome;ledthemtutwithhttlfaith). lam now a well man. hare pood appetite, diewUon eierfort, rcirolar atoola, r! ton, and 1 haro rained forty poan '.. awltd Bb. Tky are muTM tueix wewrht in rr 'Id. Hit. R. L. PTStTriOX, IxMianlle. Ky. SYMPTOMS OF A.TORP1D LIVER. Ixmi of Appetite,Naua,Bowrcle cootrve, l?iin"inthe Head, with a dull anaaton In thoback partPajmder the Shoulder lOade. fuilnoaaftsreo.anaT, with dio inclinationto oxertion of body or jnmd, IrriUbtiity or temperTowr aptrit Loaa if mKmory,w'th a felintofhaving- nr lecteidaomoduty, Weanneaa, Diaxineaa, riatteriEf of theteart, Dota Jjefofo the yeaTYeUow Skin, Headache, Keatleaa- Xkeaa atniorht, hir hlw oolorrd Urine. 1 THESE WATSWISGS ABE tryHEEDED, SERIOUS' DISEASES Will BE DEVELOPED. TOTT'S PILLS aroraprrialir adaptor to nrheoea,oodoeet..aehacbaniio rfeltaaraooartoaihtlaoourer. Trwtltia roanedy fairly, audio, will sain a healthy IMa-eaiJoa. latwrnaa lody. Pure Bl.kuma .".: TUTT'S HAIR DYt. 1 Cray nalr tad W hlakmrhaaef d to a ;lor Blark. bya.larlo applU-atlwa tkla ll. It iaaaparta a jaataral i,"" arta laataataiaeou.Iy. Sol fcy trUta.wracnt oaprooaaia receipt of 1. .Ollirt. 1 "rrar M., w .rk. IR.TrTT-StSrAt..fValafcle I iBfontuUlonanri I aful Rocelpta will I ' jaeaaaJied lKLA.au oinUlcatioia. Al a Blood Purfl tier thl medlrlao if hitcnlr recom mended for all manner of cbronle or o 1 d fiamling eomiilalnts, Ernu tlwril of the akin, urn a Pltni'lee, Mioteno. ami R a l h e 9, Kinn Worms, Totter, Sal Khenm, Scald Head, rtprotula or klnK'l Evtl, K h e a m a t lum. Pain ta tho Bonea, I., . ami Hm.i1 OR and all dlaeawa mrulnat fruaa lm parity of the klood. With thto rare medicine In vour DouM Jon ran do wi .itko.i s.Ita. raitor OIL Cltratoof Maf- nofta. Senna or Maana, and now the wkok of them, and what letter. It may he taken wiU laiety atidei mlort b the awt deltoata woman, at well a. by tb robaat man. It U eery plnt to lh taate. tbrrelore eaitly admlcitered to ehtl dren It H tho oalT eewetablo remedy .lifting wbiea wiil answer ta place ol calomel. re.aUor the ol. ol the llTer without maklna: yoa a life bar Ttctlm to Lb. nee ot men-wry or bloe pill.. It will open the Ooweli In a proper and wholesome "'There' ! othinf Uko Fabmey $ Blood Cleati er lor the euro of all dlaorderi of the Stomach. IJrer. Bowel. Ktdneyi and Bladder lor narrow aiear.. H...l.aa, CuaUveaoia. Indleltioo, Btltoot Eerer, and all deraoajementa ol the tn tetnal rleera. Al a female re?ulator ll kai no oyoallntho wrM. . an vane of pre rent toa It worth more than a pound of ewre." Tb Paaaca w HI at oolr rare old ataadlnc aad aualUtiaai eomplamti. bat If one ol tho beet urerenlatire. of ch dirdera ever tackio aewtediataaea, tb M Cholera, hmall po Trphoid. BilloM, Potted and Intermittent V-ereri by kooplnit rour Wood perilled. The dlflerent deareea of all anch dieeojea depend al uwether apoa the e-ndlthof the btaod. Be ear t. ait lor Fmun i BuaonCLCAsa- a o Pamai ia. a there are eereral other prep arallana In the market, the name, or watea are ooMwhal atnUlar. Dr. Geo. G. Shively & Co., Saereaaort to Fabmey i Broa. A Co, MANfFACTllEKS AMD FBOPEIXTORS Bsrs WT5oo, Pa. PATENTS . .. . . -1, i i a. th. V S r.tMt Office, or ta the Ootuta attended to for MODE SATE HIS. We are oppoette the t. S. Patent thUee, ea rned ta p?T WT BUSIaESS IXClUSIVEl V, and eaa ontata patrote la lea Usee laaa Uvea remote from WASHIH6T0". . , to Whoa model ordrewter k font ww adrtaa ai U pateBtaMtttr tree of chanre: aad we make HQ Fwibrf imirtts wr obtain PATENT. We refer, here, ta the Pootaaater, the Kept, of the Money Order MOtva. aad le emetalaet ta L.o. tateot umeo. f w orraur. wra ww, aad reference to eetnal eUeeM ta yew own a late oceoanty, addreias . C. A, SNOW A CX).. Opptwlt. Patent OfBee. WMalBt-taa, I. C at . B.VH M B o m e ra el - . THE IASS OP BAMvOCHMYLK. ROBERT BCR.NS. 'Twas even tbe dewy fields were green On every blade tbe icarls did bang ; The lepbyr wantoned round tbe bean And bore the fragrant sweets alang; In every glen tbe mavis sang, All nature listening seemed the whil Except where green-wood echoes rang Among the braes o' Hallocbmyle. With careless iup I onward strayed ; My heart rejoiced in nature's joy ; When musing in a lonely glade, A maiden tiiir I chanced to spy. Her lock wu like the morning's eye. Her air like nature's vernal smile; Perfection whisjred, .lasting by, Heboid tbe U5S o' liallocbmyle. Fair is themnni in flowery Hay, And sweet is nilit in autumn mild, Vhen roving thro tbe garden pay, Or wandering in a lonely wild ; But Woman, nature's darling child ! There all her charms she does compile ; Kv'n then? her other works are foiled l(y the bonnie la.o' Uallochtuyle h, lifld she been a country maid, And I the bappv country swain, Tho' sheltered in tbe lowest shed That ever rose in Scotland's plain '. Thro' weary winter's wind and rain With jov, with rapture. I would toil : And nightly to my bosom strain The bonnie lasso' Hallnchmyle Then pride might climb the slipp'ry steep Where fume and honors lofty shine ; And thirst of gold might tempt the deep, (ir downward seek the Indian mine. Give me the c-d below the pine, . To tend the flocks or till the soil, And every day have joys divine With the bonnie lass o' Ballocbiuyle. A KHIVK BTOKY. 'And vou mean tosav you'll swim .In, trTp Tlriine tn the Hcnic?' Yes. Mis Carrie: every inch of the way. I'll start from the bath and BPml tnv clothes on by a cart, and meet 3-ou when you arrive in the car riage. 'Wfll ifvmi do. Mr. Beecher. you shall sit ne'xt ta me at lunch as a reward. What do you think ol that.' Rnt. eareful and don't run any rieks ; the current, you know, is very strong in some places. 'W hat 8 this", Miss uarne; saiu 1, . ii joining in the conversation, is Beecher going to swim oown u-iuvr-row ?" 'Yes. he says so : but I don t think he can manage it.' 'WV11. if he can. I can ; and to prove it I'll swim with him.' The tact was 1 was jeaious 01 T!.,nr- nni! hpinf ft trood gwim- v. v.iv . i C3 mer mvflf, I was determined not to be outdone. But, in order to explain the state of my feelings, I must go back a little. I was staying as a guest with my uncle and aunt at C, on the Bhine. They had come for a month's holi day and, having no children of their own, had asked me to accompany them an invitation which I very readily accepted, more especially as thev had another guest in the person of Miss Carrie Danvers, the daught er of one of their oldest friends. I had before met Miss Dan vers at their made 'her mark on my heart, and HOW. Ill tllC UIOULII . V "l-ll- .v. . I . . . . T I 1 in -aeh other s society. 1 caicuiaieu on being able to return the compli ment, ana 1 hoped, ere i again saw FWl.-ind. ta have obtained her con sent to become, at no distant period, .Mrs. Mcvrath an arrangement which I felt sure would please my relations. For the first fortnight of our stay at 0. everything went happily and smoothly, and I congratulated my self on the progress I was making. Hut, unlortuuaUsiy lor me, wnne we were walking in the Kursaal Gard en one evening after dinner, we came across the Beecher family, neighbors of my uncle in England, and who, tinding him ct u., and twino- charmed with the rjlace. de termined to make a stay there also. I liked all the lamily except the eld est son, Jack in the Guards. Un der other circumstances, I doubtless " ' , . should have liked him, but, just now, he was m the way, very mucn in me i 'You can come out now, ne snoui way. Ud, 'I h9ve explained matters, and He, too. wasan old acquaintance yeut Linden here is kind enough of Carrie's,nnd at times I felt inclin-1 10 P!ly that he will lend you his mil ed to believe something more than J jtary overcoat it is a good long one an acquaintance. As I have stated j go j.ou wjjt - b all right. Out you above, I wa3 jealous of him, and'corne ' that was the long and short of the: Qut I did come most promptly, matter. J w,th profuse thanks to Mr. Linden Since Le had arrived. I had not w,a r.rwt trr-pntable loan. He was " j Carrie to myself as formerly; Jack Beecher shared in our walks and 1 conversations to an extent I did not amirove of. but lam bound to admit j his presence teemed to give the j vountr ladv considerable pleasurr.i and this made my pain ad tne more keen. Some days previous to the even- inn nn which I have introduced mv- self and friends to the reader, a pic- nic had oeen seiuea on at ii., a very charming spot on the Rhine, some four miles helow L. ui uiiirs wiU" j. The Beechers were all coming, and some other .hngLisa loits, whose ac- quaintance we had made during our stay, together with two or three Uer - man Officers stationed at C. The excursion promised to be a j unce, before my misfortune be very pleasant one, fine weather was came known. -11 . 1 . : J a- t. Ul - . an mat a requircu to maae. The party all came down to the trip delightful ,....-' roadtoeeemestart,andnow,Ilook It had been arranged that we bgck accident, I can tor should drive down to M., starting atl . naughter they had indulged 11 o clock, and we were now discus- ;f fof T ceriniy mUst have looked sing the final arrangement, and set-. urioU8no no ot. or thngwhowastobe responsible for 8tokin g9. only a military overcoat, the salt, who fur the spoons, and hUzinir hot dav in J ulv. Just """.'y1 cessiUes and comforts, which are gen- eraliv lound to be missing when me picnic cloth is laid. 'Yes,' continued I, turning to Jack Beecher; 'I'll Ewicu down with you to-morrow.' rr,ii 1 inn.' i :ti inanss. reptieu ne. ina. win be very jolly. It would be rather solitary work by one's self. We ought to start about 10.30, certainly not later, for even with the stream in our favor, we shall not be able to go as fast as the carnages. W ill that suit you?' , 'Oh, yes, that will do very well in- deed A11 right ; then I will make ar rangements to-night for a man to take our clothes on in a cart, and I shall expect to safe you at tbe bath at 10:30 sharp.' ESTABLISHED, 1827. SOMERSET, PA., WEDNESDAY. 'Rifrht you are, Beecher, IH be lucre. iV I v. Tha nnt7Tatinn after this turned upon general topics, and in a short time our party broke np and we re tired for the night to our respective hotels. The next morning after breakfast I found Carrie in the drawing room i -t- .... T at the piano, ana as sue was aione, i seized upon the opportunity of im proving the occasion. I got her to Ring, then I sang, (I rather fancied my own voice in those days,) and finally w tried duets together. She was very nice and kind, and the minutes passed so rapidly that when she at length asked me whether it was not time for her to go and pre pare for the drive, I was astonished to find it was just 10.30. I knew I should be late for my appointment with Beecher, and so ran as hard as I could all the way and arrived at the baths about ten minutes after time and learnt that Le had already started. I thought I could easily catch him before he reached M., so I undressed quickly and plunged in at once. When I had proceeded a few yards I remembered about my clothes and shouted back to the custodian of the baths telling him to let the man have them with those of Mr. Beech er. He made some reply which I did not catch and away I went doing my best to overtake my rival. It was a P-lnrimis swim and I eniovtd it. The current was so strong that but little exertion was required. All you had to do was to keep your bead above water and the river did the rest. u After rrnino- Rome tWO miles 1 turned a corner, and could just make out Beecher a long way aneaa 01 me. I put on a spirt, but I didu't gain on him as I expected. He was a Kiftpr awrimmer than I had given him credit for being, and arrived at the destination a good live minutes before me. When I did arrive I found him on the bank dressing. 'Why, McGrath, is that you?' he shouted. 'I thought you were not coming : I waited a lew minutes lor you and then set off alone.' 'I w rather late.' I replied, 'I didn't quite know how. the time was going.' "Oh. well, it doesn't matter, you have arrived to the minute, for there are the carriages, so get out and dress at once.' I scrambled up the bank and dried mvself. Where has the fellow put my clothes?' 'I'm Fure I can't say he replied, who did you send them by ?' 'Bv vour man."' - ' 'No." I'm sure you didn't He started with mine before I com menced mv swim. I saw him sale on the road, for fear of any mis take.' 'Then mine haven't come. Good gracious, what in the world am I to do?' f Ulnw T am awfullv sorry. but I had no idea you would come vchon von didn't show up at the j riht time, or I should have made dim trnit for votl.' ": 1 . ... T t'onfound it, this is a nuisance, i Mii't nnir s I am. or. at best. clad only in a couple of wet towels, can I? 'No, that you cant said he laugh ing, as I thought, in a very unfeeling 'And what is more, you can't stay where you are, for here aTe some of the ladies coming on the bank ; into the water with you quick !' There was nothing else for it, so in I went up to my neck. 'Now, stay quietly while I go and explain matters, and see what can he done for yon,' he shouted, as he disappeared over the bank. My temper was none of the best, and mr thoughts were none of the most pleasant as I stood soaking in the Bhine. He appeared to have been away v...... n.li. Va at lcnvth returned illl 1UIUI, .lVl. ' V " " " I accompanied jy a German oiheer. ; iv'i urn iiiv.jw a-- f- - j a ,',1 n)an and the garment reached i nMrlv to my heels. j know I cut a sorry figure, and Utmnrrri T received a considerable amunt of sympathy from the party t annml anionir them, still ,t wa9 mixed with smiles ana tui partiallv concealed laughter, which was ,no?t ealling to my feelings. It . AftKannlinn that I should remain longer in this single gar- mpnt than was absolutely necessary. ! n I determined to at once return to tj. and Claim myctowuc. iuhuuo".- v tne man who brought those of Beecher's had not returned, ana i i wa3 thus enabled to obtain a lift 1 back, otherwise I should had to (walk as the carriages had returned .as 1 was sUrticg carne saia t ind you are back in ti time for .1 ,1: ' ntitiArl t the dinner, you are entitled to a seat by roe, remember. 'You mav be sure I "shall not be a moment ionger than I can help,' I replied, and away we drove. .ow my uoubles are over ' I thought, but . . . a w r . njy troubles are over, 1 tnougnt,ouv Jj tad calculated wrongly, for no gooner had I entered the town gates tijan I was arrested by the sentry on , duty fbr appearing upon the public gtreeU without the full complement Gf regimentals. In vain I urged, m the best German I could commund. that I was not a soldier, and endeav- nred to ernlain how I Cime to be in that getup at all, but he would not hear a word, and for two mortal hours I was locked op in' the guard house before taken to the superior officer. JULY 11, 1883. Here I again went through an explanation, and this time with more effect, as I was liberated, after receiving a warning to be more care ful in the future and make better ar rangements about my clothes when next I swam down the Rhine. I didn't waste much time in getting my belongings and dressing, and I was soon driving back to M. When I arrived there I found that dinner had been over some time, and I had to content myself with a solitary meal, as every one had wandered olT in various directions. Just as I had finished and was re gaining my good temper to some extent Carrie ard Beecher returned. They were very anxious to know the cause of my delay, and when I con cluded the account of my sufferings Lurrie said : 'And now we have something to tell you,' and then followed a piece of information which, if I had re ceived it, before my meaL would have effectually driven away my appetite, and as it was it banished at once and forever my idea of mak ing her Mrs. McGrath. From that moment I date my dis like to Germany. To lose mv clothes and be arrested waa bad enough, but to lose my sweetheart was worse. I left for England the next day, and I have never seen the Rhine since, and I don't care if I never see it again. Georgia's Burled Town. On the riaht bank of the Flint river, Georgia, sixteen miles east of Americn. (Isint.. Sriivev has a fertile , j r - - j and valuable plantation of (00 acres. standing on the river oiuii and iooa intr at the level expanse of the farm. o r . ' now in a high state of cultivation, one would not realize that in these fields lay the foundation of one of Georgia's "buried towns." Ae you stroll along the bluff or through the fields, vou see no sign of the town of Danville, that grew and nourish ed there forty or fifty years ago. some time in the twentits a tew hardv pioneers oushed across tiie river and settled, and as immigration came in Danville became the little metropolis of the new settle ment. It had r citv unvernment. a court- ground, a Methodist church, many i... .: l . j: .. l. ,...! uuMiitfs nouses, lilt lulling a ii-jici or "tavern," a few dry goods stores ami several family groceries, with a full complement of dram-shops, and last, but bv no means least, a cock- pit and a race course. Among me many doing business there trom lN Mito 1S40 were Bond and Shef field, Wm. Simms, Martin Miller, I Wm. Uonaldson & Bro., rin hen, Hunt .fe Cowart. William Mann, S, S. Boone, Hubert Bostick. Benton Byrd was the leading luminary ol the legal profession, and Samuel Loudon the principal boniface. Tne resident nonulation at one time numbered over ."0U, and a Masonic j Hall and one or two stores were oi brick. Danville in her palmy days was an immense whig stronghold. It was not safe for a sutl'raffe slinger to attempt to vote the Democratic ticket, and when the denizens of Pondtown invaded the "city in force, with their Democratic doc trinca it was not lont' till the fur he- ean to flv. Dealers proclaimed their liquids as "good wnigwrnssy aim no Democrat dared say it wasn't. But it was on the dav set aside fnr thp snorts of the cock pit and race track that Danville appeared in her glory, and those days were frequent. Enough chickens have been killed in combat with their "heels" in and around Danville to fertalize a considerable portion of Captain Spivey's plantation, and an old resident assured me, in a tone of regret, that the race track was the best that has ever been in the State. Whenever a horse developed "heels" enough to wear the ribbon, the whole population thought it their bounden luty to find a horse uiat coutu ueat him, and sporting men from Colum bus, Macon and Hawkinsville fre quently patronized Danville. Oh, the livelv races they did have and the bloodv mains their pit exmoii .vlt An old friend tells tne that he has seen on an ordinary Saturday evening two hundred saddle horses hitched to the racks of Danville while their riders sipped their tod dies or watched the belligerent roost- ers. A steainoo'u caneu me nolia" was made and launched at Danville in 1S1G by James Butts i Co., but made only one trip, having been sold to parties who plied her lower down. The Southwestern (railroad coming to Oglethorpe in 1S.0 sounded thedeatn Knenio Dan ville. Hr warehouse was shut up. her trade fall off. her people began to leave, store after store was closed and left to rot down, and to-day, with the exception that the spot where once were the streets, her for ums, her churches and her houses, is now a prolific farm, she is only a memory, and. like Babylon and An tioch, thewolf and the owl howl and hoot amid her ruins. A l-ath-Blor. 'I cannot agree with my neighbor,' said a citiztn"as he consulted a law ver the other day. "Build a fence fourteen feet high between you,' promptly returned the lawver. "Ves,Tut it would shut out all my light":' . "Can't you raise your roof so as to, make hi3 chimney smoke?" 'I'm afraid my foundation would n't stand it" "Keep your piano going." "I do, but he has an organ." "Set the police after him for his ash heaps. "I have too many of my own." "Let's see let's see f mused the puzzled lawyer. "Say, suggest to some of his friends to get up a sur prise party on him T "By George! I'll do it! That's just the checker! I'll have the . - f. , . I - , . IT 1 thing nxea tnts very wees: i nere s your $-3, and I'm much obliged be- ! r.A., Pr-tinr.. ; Tiima at loot '" SlUlO. A- bWb AO UllUVi v lo . Mrs. Harriet Beecher Stowe is building a church near Jacksonville, Florida. ' ; 1 One of the doubtful States the state of the weather. eraM THE BAD BOY. "I see your pa wheeling the baby around a good deal lately," said the grocery man to the bad boy, as he came in store the one evening to buy astick of striped pepperment candy for the baby, while bis pa stopped the baby wagon on the sidewalk and waited for the boy, with an expres sion of resignation on his face. "What's got into your pa to be a nurse girl this hot weather." "0, we have had & circus at our house," said the bad boy, as he came in alter putting the candy in the baby's hand. "You see, uncle Ezra came back from Chicago, wheie he had been to sell some cheese, and he stopped oyer a couple of days with us, and he said that we must play one more joke on pa before he went home. We played it, and il is a wonder I am alive, because I never saw pa so mad in allany life. Now this is the last time 1 go into any joke on shares. If I play any more jokes I don't want any old uncle in to give me awav." "What was it?" said the grocery man, as he took a stool and sat out by the front door beside the bov who oy mt iruu uuu o .,.,- was trying to eat a oox oi reu rasp berries on the sly. "Well, uncle Ezra and me bribed the nurse girl to dress the baby up one evening in some old, dirty baby clothes, belonging to our wash wom an's baby, and we put it in a basket and placed the basket on uie ironi door uten. and put a note in thee basket, and addressed it to pa bad the nurse eirl Btav out in iron l.w tb bji -.pment stairs, so the boy couldn't get away, and she rung the bell and got behind something. Ma and pa, and uncle Ezra and me were in the back parlor when the bell rung, ami ma told me to go to the door, and I brought in the basket, and set it down, and told pa there was a note in it for him. Ma, she came up and looKeu at u.e no pa tore it open, and uncle Ezra to0 i l .1 -a tl ed in the basnet anu sigucu. " rpfld nart of the note and Stopped I and turned pale, and sat down, then ma read some oi a, mm feel yery well, and she leaned against the pia'nno and grated her teeth. The note was in a girls hand writing, and was like this: "Old Bald Heaped Pet. You will have to take care of your child, because I cannot. Bring it up ten derly, and don't for heaven's sake, send it to the foundling asylum. I shall go drown myeslf. Your loving, Almira." "What did your ma say ?" said the grocery m;in, becoming interest- "O, ma played her part well. I'nde Ezra had told her the joke, and she said "retch," to pa, just as the actresses do on the stage, and put her handkerchief to her eyes. Pa said it was "false," and uncle Ezra said. "0, brother, that I should live to see this day," and I said, as I looked in the" basket, "pa. it looks just like you, and I'll leave it to ma." That was too much, and pa got mad in a minute. He always gets mad at me. But he went up and looked in the basket, and he said it was some dutch baby, and was evidently from the lower strata of society, and the unnatural mother wanted to get rid of it, and he said he didn't know any "Almira" at all. When he call ed "it a dutch baby, and called at tention to its irregular features, that made ma mad, and she took it up out of the basket and told pa it was a perfect picture of him. and tried to put it in pa'3 arms, but he wouldn't have it, and said he would call the police and have it taken to the poor house. Uncle Ezra took pa in a corner and told him the best thing hecould do would be to see "Almira" and compromise with her, and that made ra mad and he was going to , , , ., ,. , , on uucio " perieuny aim, uu i uc l truess ne wouia nave suoi, mi oi un. Ma took the baby up stairs and Lad j the girl put it to bed. and alter pa o,, onnno-h nnolp Vtt-a told him it. was all a ioke. and it was his own baby, that we had put in the basket, and then he was madder than ever, and be. told uncle Ezra never to dark - en his door azain. I don't know how he made up with ma for calling it a dutch babv from the Polack settle ment, but anyway, he wheels it around every day, and ma and pa have got so they speak again." "That was a mighty mean trick, and you ouaht to be ashamed of yourself. Where do you expect to fetch up when you die?" said the grocery man. "I told Uucle Ezra it was a mean trick," said the boy, "but he said that wasn't a priming to some of the tricks pa had played on him years ago. He says pa used to play tricks on everybody. I may be mean, but I never played wicked jokes on blind people, as pa did when he was a boy. Uncle Ezra says once there was a party ol four blind vocalists, all girls, gave an entertainment at the town where pa lived, and they stayed at the hotel where pa tended bar. Another thing, I never sold rum, either, as pa did. Well, before the blind vocalists went to bed pa caught a lot of frogs and put them in the beds where the girls were to sleep, and when the poor blind girls got into bed the frogs hopped all over them, and the way they got out was a cantion. Itis bad enough to have frogs hop ping all oyer girls that can see, but for girls that are deprived of thir eight, and don't know what anything is, except by the feeling of it, it looks to me like a pretty tough joke. I guess pa is sorry now, for what he did, 'cause wheri Uncle Ezra told the frog story, I brought home a frog and put it in pa's bed. Pa has been afraid of paralysis for years, and when his leg, or anything gets asleep, j Mountains, and even to-day at Wag he thinks that is the end of him. ; on Wheel Gap, in Colorado, or the Before bed time I turned the con- versation onto - paralysis, and told: guest of magniScent hotels that! by his nightgown, which had fortu about a man abont pa's age havine have been erected at these eanita-;na.tely caught in a nail projecting it on tbe West aide, and ta was ner- riums mav see whole families of the j from the window-sill. The mother vou9, and soon alter he retired i irnooa th frrwr wrantpd to oft ac - . . . a 1 quainted with pa, 'cause pa yelled J bath-hon sea patronized by the pale - six kinds of murder, and we went faces. The savages, big and little, into hi9 room. You know how cold appear to get sanitation and satisfac - a frog is? Well, you'd a dide to seeition out of the mud treatment in pa. He laid still, and said bis end quite as great a degree as their civi- had come, and Uncle Ezra asked hirn lized brethren. WHOLE NO. 1670. if it was the end with the head on, or the feet, and pa told him paralys is had marked him for a victim, and he could feel that his left leg wa3 becoming dead. He said he could feel the cold, clammy hand of death walking up, him, and he wanted ma to get a bottle of hot water and put it to pa's feet, and the cork came out and pa said he was dead, sure enough, now, because he was hot in the ex tremities, and that a cold wave was going up his leg. Ma asked him where the cold wave was, ana ne wave was, anil ne told her. and she thought she would rub it, but she began to yell the same manufacturer, kind of murder pa did, and she said j The w,jow 0f jjr Glenn, the a snake had gone up her sleeve. ; great California farmer, will realize Then I thought it was tune to stop this vear ?7(in qoo from the grain the circus, and I reached up mas crop; 0w is the time for the en lace sleeve and caught the frog by terprising young man in search of a the leg and pulled it out, and told pa partner to r0 west. I guessed he had token my frog to- , V bed with him, and I showed it to! Itween the hours of 2 and S him, ami then he said 1 did it, and ? clock last Saturday afternoon he would maul me so I couldn't ! boats, carrying 2o,MK),(i(iO feet ot get up alone, and he said a boy tha. jluufoer, leit Bay City, Mich., tor would do such a thing would go to he a niirn iu rinm h ill' :iml i asked him if he thought a man who put frogs in the beds with blind girls,! ,w"en ne w,a a DOky' " UiU " heaven, and then he told me to lite . . 1. 1 -1 . a . out, and I lit I guess pa will leel better when Uncle Ezra goes away, cause he thinks I'ucle Ezra talks tuo much about old times. Well, here conies our baby wagon, and I guess k.,0 ,:-Urf ic nm,or, and I will go and wheel the kid awhile. Sav, you cail pa in, alter I gjtake the baby wagon, and tell him jciw ont j you don't know how he would get; has l I along without sm-h a nice bov as ' 'ei me, and you can charge it in our next month.-' bill." Kxperience with Potatoes. c I often obtain at the rate of -imttn CJ inbnsbeU of notatoes per acre from selected seed of the best 1 . yielders. Generally four weeks be ' ' J . ; f()re jointing I cut tubers to sinsrlo eyest. dust xvell with plaster and lime, i aprea,i on boards in the cellar and 0, , vlt,fnr T n V J 1 i.v.a . " ........ . , . j remove the seed into a warm upper room, here a strong, heavy bud starts. Having previously ploughed mv land tn inches deep, and sometimes subsoiled the same, I spread ten to twelve loads ol well rotted yard ma- nure to the acre,harrow in thorough - 1.. 1 . . 1. ..... .. , mA-f. V,A v, iy uuui o, mia !': i.u --,. m!.-si0nanes. ihe converts are feet apart (thirty-three inches isifrom Swed-n. Denmark, Wale enough forshortgrowing vines.) then .,,!:in,l ;U:d Norway. The number with a one horse plough open a fur row in each mark, about seven inch es deep, then grade the furrows to nearly one depth, about six inciies. I now take the seed, which is well budded, and drop two pieces of one bud, each one foot apart, in the rows, and cover two and a-half to three inches deep. Furrows are now left oen. In about ten days they will show sprouts all through. I now scatter in the furrows, in and around the potatoes, at the rate of '3 "l to i"iO pounds of commercial manure to the acre, after mixing it with l'a pounds, or more, of plaster. Sooi. a- the sprouts are up thre or four inches I cultivate well, and fill up the furrows in and around the vines with a hoe. Potatoes will now form near the surface soil, and will get the benefit of a warm sun, and showers, if any, while the roots will be below the moist soil. About ten days later, subject to weather, I cultivate again twice beteen the rows, the second time widening out the cultivator so as to cultivate close up to the hills. I now scatter on the same amount of manure as before, this time on each side of the rows. I now boe,"j)r heaven's sake, stand aside! the soil up around the vines, hilling j th;.t picture will kill vou !" It was up three or four inches, then hill up ; afterwards ascertained that his between the rows with a hiller set so ' sweetheart at about the same time that it will not throw the soil over narrowly escaped being killed by a on the vines. j foiling picture under which she was This leaves th notatoes in a ,..i;.. V, V.,.m - - trough to receive oew and rain, aiso it will Keep the vines irom laiiingi. down in the furrows; thev should,111?' V- a;ri,,i,V stand on straight to protect the soil ! m Philadelphia last week, was -ra i ftnj poUtoes under the vines from .u . t ... .-.k t .1.. ... i.,,., ..;,k aA r,i.,i,a ti I . at th4 first timf, boeino-. A fter j .OTe the vines get tto ! t.,. r ,.,,i,u.Qt omi i.;m nr. .,.r.,; Z, , n n,i WBWi, " ' ' Mud Baths in Austria. In Austria they excavate a marsh ; A saucy sparrow took pos?esion where decaying vegetable mold and of a swallow's nest under the eave of water is in abundance, cart it to tbe a house in Louisville and would not bith houses, grind it in a mil!, and vacate on due notice. The pair flew pass it unto a 4arge tank, where it is (otf and presently returned with a drawn oft Into ortable bath-tubs, i score of their kindred, each bearing where it is again mixed, more water! a lump of mud in its bill. Before added, and the temperature brought I the sparrow realized what was going to the desired grade. Then it is on his enemies had shut him up in wheeled into the bath-room, and the i tlie nest, leaving only one small unfortunate bather plunges into a ' opening, out of which, at last ac black, bad-smelling mixture, where j counts his neck was hanzing in a he remains from twenty minutes to I disconsolate manner, while starva half an hour, when he steps into a'tion stared him in the face, second tub, full of pure water, to j . .. , . , 4, . clean himself. The mud is too pre- X1 ridicmous was the death of ciousto be wasted, so after be'ing ! the r rench Marsha De Montrevel, used it is deposited in a great heap, ("whose whole soul, sav- bt feimon, where it is siid to remain ten years i a" but n.toa and lucre with before it will be fit for use a second ou a? .e'fcr fn ale to. Lfn time. These heaps remind one in i?nii,h his right hand from his left, more ways than one of those which j but concealing his universal igno the dairy farmer accumulate behind j w:th n anilacity which favor, his cow-stable. The mud bath fthion and birth protected. He popularly believed to be verv bene- ficial in all cases-, veritable cure - all. The physicians ouestioned on!l,ut'."c a'nner nis lap, ana ,v, .., ;n; 4; j- j themselves as to its indications and I announced that he was a dead man. effects, except in the case of hypo- j He h ( h?' ,and died.m a fet7 choudriacs, with one exception, and I It 10, literally .scared to death he said where a poultice for the, h ab?'jrd casuahty of a salt-cel-whole body was necessary, he knew j Ii,r 3 turning oven of no more easy way to apply it Mrs. Pierce, Wilmington turned Nonetheless, the hygienic advant- : just in time to see her year and a age of the mud-bath are no novelty ! half old child disappearing out of a to the frontiersman. The Indians third-story window. Half wild with always resort to this mode of deriv-j fright, she tore down stairs, expecting ing sanitary benefit from the hot to find the mangled remaing of her j springs that abound in the Rocky i Hot Sprint's at Las Yezas. N. M., the I WW. la .1 1 I - . . .. . i l tes wauowmg mine mire oniyaj lfew Vards below the luXUlionS Minrrllanrou lte-me. The hay and grain crop of Maine promises to be the heaviest in that ;Stai tor years. j W. H. Gangwere, of Cherry villc, ! Northampton county, raised 2o,txX I boxes of strawberries this season. ; An old lady in Georgia, having ;lofct all her patience, has sued a neighbor for $S for coffee borrowed ! a eunttl at n. t:mi During the fiscal year just ended there was a net increase in postorhes established of l.GUt), compared with the previous fiscal year. A pickle factory at Highland, 111., has contracted for over 400 acres of cucumbers with farmers, and expects to ship about 10,000 barrels. The decrease of the public debt for June is estimated at $17,"00,U0. This would make the total reduction for the fiiscal year SVliW. The dairy herd of Jersey cattle belonging to C. I'. Markle .t Sons was sold in West Newton last Thurs day, at prices ranging from 1100 to SCoO apiece. The Mayor of Pittsburgh distribu ted four hundred straw hats to poor iiiuurea on ciiiuruuv oi last wees. i They had been donated by a lanre ymi antl " "'S lIie largest ' uccl rei mil u,ak jujii, m unc :t'uy- The annual report of the chief ...... . - . ..... tmul Uivision ot the Tension uifce nt .Tnnno-1 , fisrvi vw, j 0f .-,;;,-H 1 aplications i'or pensions, an ; jncrease oyer the previous year of j rWo. Seventeen thousand " letters j Were received from Congresrnen. ; . ' m l- Daniel Bunn, a twenty- vear-old youth of Huntingdon, Pa., became violently insane and was chained in a room, from which he as never emerged in all the sixty irs. In all this time his two bachelor brothers have taken care of him. The assevoration that "Governor Blackburn, of, Kentuckey, has not ! touched a single drop of liquor since ! ,c urvtt uic v'.""rj t t..,... !....,.....? : i . . ale.' tlCUb an impression uiai sucn a ; dose would be altogether to small ur him 1 . Miss Carrie Zimmerman, of , llloomington. 111., recently had a verv danirerou-t e.xneriinc in bloiul - i I poisoning occasioned bv handling ; green velvet, the poisonous coloring matter of which entered her system j by ahsorption from the prick of a ; needle. i -rh(l cte-irnshhi ev.ida which jarrivf.fl at New York July 1, brought j,;s0 Mormon converts in char-Vot . . . of int-n and women are about equal". Judge Pitcher, of Mount Vernon, Ind., is the only surviving member of the first Indiana Legislature, which met sixty-seven years ago. He is eighty-nine years old. It has tak-n longer to knock him out of the box than any other Pitcher in the business. Henry Whiting, aged seventy-five years, and Lw wife, aged seventy four year. were found in the ceme tery, in Brooklyn, the man having cut his wife's wrist and then his own, under agreement to die rather than starve. The woman died ; the man will survive. An oiheer of the navy stationed at ! Annapolis has been granted a patent j f,jr "ash holder. At Weet Point, 'so long as the ladies will wear sashes the cadets want no patent contri vance for holding them. They are men of arms and know how to use them to the best advantage. A young man of Macon while camping out with a party of friends was heard to exclaim in his sleep : ; l.l IJUlll (.V , , ' . IIVUJV. The bodv of Archbinhop Wood, -.-.!. t: l i ' interred at the j'' by anew process, c.nmed to ' be eoual and in man repects l.ir superior to that employed by bv the 1 accidenuS and it is thought wnl stand the test of age quite as well. Bv the extraction of the blood and ; the peculiar composition of the ! preservative liquid: preservative liquids, it is churned I that the objectionabl feature of tur ' ning black is entirely obvious. was a, very nP?,UU0U9 anu 1 on?,.aa.v,a -iiar upse. SO ingnieneu was ne mat ne arupe imu r . I t t 1 a I boy on the pavement below, but up- on reaching the grounu sne was at tracted by scream?, and looking up . . . . , , saw her child suspended in the air I..,, , . . , . r ghneteti ana sianea up siair, iear in'T the bov would fall before she ! couly reach him. Ihe cloth was strong, however, and the boy was 1 rescued from his perilous position uninjured. After the excitement wm over Mrs. Pierce fell in a dead faint 1 across the window-sill.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers