The Bat tle orArdmur, The sunshine never kissed a lov lier day nor blessed a fairer eeene. All the land, and the sky and the clouda were clad in the beauty of June. The lanes were fringed with , rouud e-ed daisies CUiVlWVi ii t i : the woods nestled like gems m the velvet moss, i'Own in me meaaowo of buttercups gleamed like buttons of gold. Over the low hills the soft winds whispered to the leaves about other summers, and down through the shadow woods the little brook laughed and babbled like a child playing by itself. Here and there a cottage nestled among the trees. The distant calls of children came rippling across the fields. The long road wound away, yellow and quiet, until it turned out of sight beyond the little church with its snowy walls and splender spire. How quit and peaceful all the world lay before the window of my prison that day in June 1 Far away the note of a meadow-lark came, and was heard no more. Now and then the whistle of a robin ; at times the twitter of a blue-bird. It was nuch an afternoon as you would wish to endure forever. White-winged peace smiled it the sunshine, and banc with the rephrye and the brook, and the far-awav calls and acarcely heard laughter of the children play ing somewhere unseen. Its- music is the crown of the law'6 beauty and tranquility. Clear mellow, tnstant four of five notes of a bugle ring out over the low hills, and come echoing down the forest aisles. How my heart leaped at the sound of the bugle call ! How my blood went surging through nay veins like a tide of lava! Out of mv prison window I look with straining eves. In the flutter ring leaves I can see r.o glitter of bayonets. I listen, but down the road or across the meadow I can hear not the rumble of a battery hurrying into position. How silent it all this! And yet not silent enough. I want the wind to hush, and the leaves to kwp till, and the brook to stifle its babble and laughter. I am listening for a foot-fall, the crackling of a twig, the mufil-d tramp ol a column of n.en stealing through t-Uvf-T. I am listening for the neigh of a horse, a clatter of rythmic hoof beats, a ringing carbine snou i eer inr out of the window of my lonely cell, I am listening ever since that first bugle-call came winding over the hill I have lwn listening for stompr music than the robin s note and the wood brook's murmur. March !' There it is at last ? I can see noth inir from this window. The voice comes like a far-away echo of the bugle a boyish voice, softened into music by the day and the distance. I picture to my sell the fair haired lieutenant who cammands the skir mishers. All those days made men of boys ; the school-buy fonght be side the veteran, and the adjutant of twentv messed with the colonel of forty. Will the line never come in my sight. "Halt!" Silence again, and once more the bugle calls down the unseen line. Now I can hear the tramp of feet amid all the terrible hush of prepa ration. All about me the tide of batUe will sweep, save only where I can see it : and I iwnned in this prison like a caged rat, with ringing' bugle and clanking saber calling me out, shouting my name in words that burn and ring and ring and ring again and I am here. "March!" Away off the tap cf a drum, the flam, flam, flam, cadencing the step of the marching column. Xeares it comes, and further away it sweeps, faint into quiet at last Tramp, tramp, tramp. Muffled, yet distinct, and stepping nearer with every foot fall. "There they come ?" shouted some one. I hold my breath ; I press my hand to my heart and wait for the 'firet 6hot from the skirmishers. "Ready!" The click of a musket, so close it seems in the room where I am. Gods! I listen lor the sound of the boyish voice again. It seems to me, in my excited condition, there is a childish trebble to it- I wonder if "Fire!" How the cheers, peiling up in waves of sound, drowned the crash I was listening for! Again the boy ish voice calls, "Tire !" and again the shrill cheers follow. They hush as the bugle-notes come pealing down the line again. I bear the wheels as a battery is hurrying for ward. I hear a drum beat I hear the tramp of hurrying feet. Some one is calling for "the flag." Once I hear so close the tide of battle swept in my prison a saber swrig from its scabbard with an angry sweep. And all this time I could only fee the golden sunshine only the fluttering leaves and the playing shadows lengthening into the waning day ; and floating in at my window came the mellow whist ling of the robin. The cheers are fainter now, as the shadows grow longer. The robin's note has ceased. Mellow, clear, and beautifully imperious as ever, the bugle calls again. A pall of silence falls upon the clamor and din of the battle. I try the door of my prison. It yields to my touch. Down a stairway, with a noiseless tread, I hasten. I step through a curtained door. I stand on the field where the waves of contention have thundered and dashed. The level rays of the setting sun drift over the helpless figures stretched about me like a blessing upon the dead. At my feet the overturned cannon lies. There are shattered wheels. Lying across the brazen muzzle, "his back to the field and his feet to the foe," is stretched an artillery ser geant, still grasping the broken saber in his nerveless hand. Here is a eroup of infantry soldiers : thev will never stand upon their feet again.1 XI ere is a trooper ; ueaaiess he lies under the horse that, with two legs torn away, has fallen upon him. A littla drummer-boy how came such a child here where ih fierce maelstrom of war circled and eddied in fire and carnage and fury? lies by his drum. I bend above him, and in face and form there is noth ing human left lied are the stains about it, and the broken little hand hangs stiff and rigid on the edge of the snatterea drum. It is terrible. Here, ghastly and horrible, lies a head, the blue cap with its scarlet and white pompon still resting jaun tily over the brow ; but nowhere can I see the soldier's body. Here is a saber bent and twisted in the fury of nand-to-nand combat 1 walk among the headless trunks, arms and legs without bodies, crippled horses lie prone on their side or 6tand wearily, and with dumb patience, upon three legs. I tread carefully over and around the broken shatter- ed bodies of the fallen men. Here is the flag, tattered and unfurled, just as it dropped from the hands of a sergeant; here an epaulet, glit tering in crimson and gold : here is the gilded belt of a general ; here, marred, bent and dented, lies the bugle whose silver voice called into ri i v i niH vv rt-i . av nuu vai a . - iir xcTPr ana carnage, auu J . field, awav where just the spray ox this angry sea of strife could have reached mv foot almost falls on a child lying'prostrate, half turned on her face. The dainty feet peep out of a cloud of silk and lace ; the tan gled hairofgold,a6kein of sunshine, half hides the brow and cheek. There is no sign of life in the beautiful face. Killed bv the terror and fear born of the battle? I bend to lift the little form, and the arm upon which I thought the child was lying is gone; a horrible gash reached from the temple to the base of the brain, and the lett eye is cru&nca in its sucKeu The child the dear, 6weet little girl ; somebody's darling, fair sacri fice to the hideous juoiocn oi war how cold "Robbie !" I hear the voice of her little serene highness. "Robbie! come, now, and pick up your toys. dear, lou'ye lett your dolly ana all your soldiers scattered about over the floor, so that papa can scarcely walk across the room. And some body has stepped on poor little Bes sie's head. I'm afraid she'll have to go to the surgical institute. A patter of flying feet, and the blue-eyed commander of the troop3, aged six, comes charging into the room, and, resolving himself into an ambulance corps, collects the dead and wounded with both hands, scoops them into a big box, exam ines the fracture in dolly's head filled with saw-dust, and ap pears surprised to find the skull lin ed with a hole. "Papa!" he cries 'did you hear'e battle zis appernoon ?" "Yes. Major, I heard it" "We lighted awful," the Major says, "an l leu down on my arum and broken my cannon, butgrampa will get me anuzzer one." Hay far Hogs. . . . , , A Nebraska man says hay is good for hogs. Cut the hay short and mix with bran shorts or middlings, and feed as other fted. Hogs soon learn to like it, and if soaked in swill, or slop food, it is highly relish ed by them. In winter, use for hogs the same hay that you feed to your horses, and you will find that it will save bran shorts orothcr food; it puts on flesh as rapidly as any thing that can be given them. Every farmer knows that hogs are fond of grass in the summer season and that they always do more or less grazing in as regular a way as do cattle or sheep, but it is not so com monly known that hogs are just about as fond of good hay in the winter season as they are of grass in the summer. We have known in stance here at the Union Stock Yards where large pens filled with hogs had a liberal amount of good prairie hay . furnished them for bedding in severely cold weather, where such hay would be nearly all eaten up by the hogs in the course of a single nicht. There can be no doubt but what bay of the right kind can be fed to hogs to really good advantage during any winter season. This is especially the case with young grow ing hog3 ; but even hogs that are being fattened will eat a very consid erable amount of hay and be bene fited by it, especially in cold weath er. It has been sufficiently demon strated that hogs will eat hay in its dry state, just as otht.-r kinds of stock eat it ; at the same time, with a ccr tain kind of preneration the hay can be put in a condition in which hogs will cat it with a good deal more relish and get a eood deal more 1)enefit from it than when it is fed dry. Good clover hay is no doubt the best kind that can be fed to hogs, and this should be cut fine, the finer the better, after which it should be either soaked or steamed, and have a moderate amount of rye or corn meal mixed with it If prepared in this way it will be found that this kind of feed will count handsomely in carrying any kind of hogs through the winter season. We now discuss this matter here, for the reason that we are disposed to point the way for the production of hogs to the best possible advant age iu every part of the country, and to do this there is no doubt what a good deal more mixed feeding is necessary than has been usually common in the country. Vital Questions ! ! Ask the most eminent physioion, of any school, what is the best thing in the world for quieting and allaying all irrita tion of the nerves and curing all forms of nervous complaints, giving natural, childlike relreshing sleep always? And they will tell you un hesitatingly, "Some form of Hops !" CHAPTER I. Ask any or nil of the most emi nent physicians : What is the best and only reme dy that can be relied on to cure all diseases of the kidneys and urinary organs ; such as Rrignt's disease, di abetes, retention or inability to retain urine and all the diseases aud ail ments peculiar to Women" "And they will toll you explicit ly and emphatically "JBuchu." Ask the same physicians " What is the most reliable and surest cure for all liver diseases or dyspepsia, constipation, indigestion, biliousness, malarial fever, ague, tc. and thep will tell you : Mandrake! or Dandeliou !" Hence, when these remedies are combined with -others equally val uable And compounded into Hop Bit ters, sucn a auS:lm. Concluded next week Bar-nam on Clowns. Barn urn is a good temperance re former, but one of his greatest re forms he has said very little about Perhaps it speaks, or rather keeps silent for itself. He 6aid to a Phil adelphia reporter: "People go to the circus to see, not to near : none of our clowns attemnt to talk. We allowed them to talk for a day or two, but the tent is so krge that not one half of those present heard what they said, and I guess they didn't lose much. I haven't a great opinion of talking clowns, and to prove that their acts are not so effective as pantomines we dress ed up a man as a dude in New York the other night and sent him in to idle about the ring. He did not have a word to say, but his appear ance and pantomine took the audi ence by storm, and he made the hit of the week." " I'm going to draw this beau into a knot," as the lady said when standing before the hymeneal alter. LONDON LETTER. From Oar Regular Correspondent, London, Jun 20. 1SS3. You will har with iikerest that there is some probability of once more beholding the famous levia than steamship, the Great Eastern, making regular passages to and from the river Thames. Years have elapsed since the huge fabric was nearer to the City of London than the Medway. Her bulk is not like ly to allow her to come very high, for there are bends in the river this side of Gravesend which would prove rather dangerous navigation to a vessel that is more than an eighth of a mile long. It is stated that a company ha3 been formed to purchase the vessel, and that she will be employed in the coal trade between the the Firth of Forth and the Thames. As much as twenty thousand tons of coal, it is calcula ted, can be stowed away in her vast interior in sacks. No one need doubt the Great Eastern's carrying capacity, though the use to which she is to be put at last seems strange, and not without tathos to those who can recall the dreams of her de signers and builders, and the enthu siasm and etcitement which her collossal form awakened as she lay broadside to the river at the ship yard 'M years ago. It would be stranpe if she would prove a success in this, her latest undertaking. So hopeles3 did she seem as a commercial venture, even before she was launched, that Mr. Lindsay, the shipowner, relates that when Mr. Brunei asked him, How will she pay ?" he answered that she would never pay as a ship, and that the best thine to do would be to send her to Brighton, dig out a hole in the beach and bed her there, and make a promenade of her, with a grand hotel in her 'tween decks, where room could be fouDd for salt water baths and dancing saloons. If she would "pay" now, the triumph will come late, but it will be a tri umph for the great old ship, for all that It is thirty years ago since she was built, and during that time "hip building has made gigantic strides as respects dimensions of craft; therefore, if we in this age cannotre flect without wonder upon the mass of material which entered into the Great Eastern's competition, what must have been the amazement and the enthusiasm excited by her in the public of the age to which she fairly belonged ! She was furnished with engines for her paddles and screws whose combined power was equal to eleven thousand horses. Her interior was designed to afford accomodations for four thousand passengers. As even with a speak ing trumpet at his mouth her cap tain was unable to make his orders heard she was fitted with semaphores for day use and colored lamps at night, and also an electric telegraph, by which the commander made his orders known. Htr saloons in their original form were truly niaguificent, furnished with massive-looking glasses, ornamented panels, nobly decorated columns, sofas covered with Utrecht velvet, portiers of rich crimson silk to all the doorways, and so forth. She carried twenty large boat", and two small steamers, each one hundred feet long. Under full sail she spread six thousand five hundred yards of canvass. Tlrere were ten anchors and eight hundred fathoms of chain cable, whilst her five funnels were each one hundred feet high, with ten furnaces to every paddle boiler, ot which there were ten. On the seventeenth of June 1SG0, she started on her first voyage across the Atlantic, with only thirty-six passengers aboard. Her second pas sage to America was made in the May of the following year, the dis tance being made in ten days, her greatest speed never exceeding fourteen-and-a-half knots. She was next employed in transporting about two thousand troops to Quebec, and then followed another Trans-atlantic voy age with four hundred passengers on board. On this occasion a most mel ancholy account of her behavior in a storm was given by the passengers who stated that, tall as Bhe was, she rolled her quarter boats under water, and that the angle her decks pre sented was upwards of forty-five de grees. She is mainly memorable as a triumph of engineering and con structive skill. At this moment she is reported to be in as good condition as she was at the time of her launch, and in her iron finds one of the most signally successful illustrations of its serviceableness in shipbuilding, when of good quality and put to gether by the hands of a master. He'll Get Adopted. "Why don't you get somebody to adopt you ?" asked one elegantly attired young man of another, as the two lolled in graceful attiudes on a sofa at the Grand Pacific. "Several of the nicest boys in town who are in hard luck have told me they were going to try it." "Good idea.by George," exclaimed the other young man, brightening up as the thought hit him. "It's much more genteel, you know," the first young man said, "then to make your own living, as you just now said you were afraid you would have to do. A young fellow of good form ought to have little trouble in becoming a rich man's son by adoption, if nature hasn't done the proper thing and supplied him with a real father who has plenty of money." "Very "true," murmured the other young man. "Think of the rich merchants," resumed the first young man, who have Heaven knows how manv , thousands to spend and who haven't ! any gentlemanly sons to spend them, i Think of them, dear boy. There's a promising field for you. Why shouldn't every one of them have a handsome fellow like you in the family to give it social standing ?" " ery true," said the other young man, hesitatingly. " But aren't those dreadfully rich people inclined to be vulgar ?" " Well, slowly answered the first young man, "there's no denying that one must run across vulgar peo- Ele everywhere. Old folks never ave elegant manners. If you don't associate too much with the ones that you allow to adopt you, a little vulgarity on their part may be over looked. Vulgarity, my dear boy, can be more easily endured than hard work." " Work P gasped the other young man. "Yes, to be sure, I'll get adopted right away. Work is dis gusting." Chicago Xewt. A Voice from the Northwest The Milwaukee, Wisconsin, Daily ixnlincl, which is the leading mora ine paper of that State, write ; u fit Jacobs Oil, the wonderful remedy j ior rneumausm, nas Deen used by a larce numoftr oi nmn a in thia ittr with effect truly marvelous. J The AMMBlnatiM of Liocola. While in Maine recently I fell in with Gov. Hamlin, as the ex-Vice President and Senator is generally called there. One of his Bons is in partnership with Eugene Hale, the youngest Senator from Maine, at the town of Ellsworth, about nlty miles south of Bangor. From what I could understand the Governor's sons are much respected, though they.take but little part in manag ing politics. The elder son entered the war and, after serving awhile in the field, became assistant to the Chief of Artillery of the Army of the Potomac, and he gave me an inter esting description of being present in Ford's Theatre the night Mr. Lin coln was murdered. " I had never been able to 6ee the play called 'The American Cousin,' said General Hamlin, M though I had several times made engagements to go and see it, and I had never seen it fully performed, so that I have a sort of superstition about the piece. The night Mr. Lincoln was murder ed I observed that , " The American Cousin " waa to be played, and I took my sister ard another lady to the theatre. We had seats far down to the front, only a few steps from the stage. Mr. Lincoln came in and proceeded to his box, which was the upper one on the right, but he was not visible to the audience where he sat, having a back place in the box, from which he could the better Eee the stage. Indeed, from where I sat below, I could eee no person in the boxes. Not lone before Mr. Lincoln was shot there was a change of scenes during an act, and it seemed to me that it was the longest time required to change scenes that l nau ever observed in a theatre. It was so no ticeably long that I afterwards won dered in connection with the mur der if there might net have been some irresolution or perplexity on that stage. Not long afterward there was a sound somewhat like the slappine of your hands together sharp, yet not very loud, but loud enough to make me turn my head and wonder what could have made it, and whether it could have been a pistol. " The next thing I saw was Booth getting out of the box. 1 had seen Booth play on two occasions, and knew his face perfectly well. There never was a more deliberate thing than his stepping out on the sill of that box, and leaping rrom it lie made as pretty a jump as I ever saw. If he had practiced that leap, it could hardly have been more ele gant He alighted in a crouching position, like one who has brought his body down to break the shock of the fall. While it was a good one in height, it was not a dangerous one at all ; perhaps from where ho leaned to the stage, was nine to twelve feet. His spur tore a flag, and that seemed to bring him around somehow, so that he alicrhted with his face turned more to the audi ence than would have been the case had he merely hopped directly downward. His face was marble pale. In his rkht hand he held knife, and in a theatrical way he stretched it upward and distinctly said the words : " Sic semper tyran nis." Then in a very stagey stride, still pale, serious and intense, he went right across the stage and out Many people at this stood up, and near me was a naval officer whose name I don't remember who, hearing some one exclaim, 'The President has been shot!' lifted himself, sailor fashion, up to the wood-work and decorations of the private box below and climbed into the box above, and he came down the same way in the audience. " Of course the audience was dis missed, and as I was going up the street a few minutes afterward I met a friend in the Service, who said to me: This is terrible news. Mr. Stanton and ( here I forget the officer mentioned, by Gen. Hamlin) Mr. Seward, we fear, have been mortally wounded. At this I went to my of fice and took the responsibility as Chief-of-Staff of the Artillery of or dering out the field batteries we had in the forts around Washington. I feared the next thing would be some kind of rebel rising in Washington, and summoned the artillery to come down at once, and had them put in positions to fire upon the town and clear the main avenues if there was to be any more violence." A Horse Choked by a Snake. Superintendent Lyon, of the Ear- clay Coal Mines, was in the city on Wednesday, and told an Advertiser reporter the following snake story, the authenticity of which, he said, could be vouched for by several re liable citizens : "On Tuesday last a boy was engaged in plowing on the farm of a man named W llkison, be tween Greenwood and Monroeton in Bradford county, when he saw an enormous black snake lying stretch ed along on the ground near the fence. Frightened by the reptile the boy dropped tne line and started on a run lor the house. Reinforced here by several members of the fam ily he went back, when one of the horses was found lying on the ground with the python tightly coiled about his neck. 1 he snake was dispatched when it was found that, the horse was dead, his life having been chok ed out ov the snake. No Urease Tor H!ni. "When Greece her knees Greece her knees Greece her knees," stam mered an embarrassed schoolbov. I forgetting the next line of his recita I tion. ' There is no occasin to grease anybody s knees, shouted his teach er. "Go and study your piece. oeuner is there occasion to grease your hair. Parker s Hair Balsam is all the dressing you want. Restores the original gloss and color to crav or faded hair. Does not soil the linnen ; ' not a dye ; good for the scalp ; prevents falling out lm. No man can read about all these burglaries without a determination to have his wife sleep on the front side of the bed. THE GREAT GERMAN REMEDY FOR PAIN. Bcllevo ant am RHEUMATISM, Sciatica, Lumbago, BACKACHE. HUCACH8,T00TH1CIB, SORE THFOIT. QCINST. SWELXIJTOa, MPBAIBS, Sartnttt. Cuts. Brnltct. FBOKTBITEa, rMsrs, tCALM, And all otto Wodlly actus and p 1 r, nrn corrs mttll BoM by alt DracirMa and Deafen. IMnctiuasIa It Tat CtiartM A. Vaaatar Ca. mmut. canaa a ooi MaM,c,l. Br, r Z 1 ( Yi Indian r Bowels, Kidneys, Skin and Blood. Millions trurHtv tn itn fffinAv in healing the above named diseases,and pronounce it to be the BEST tLtiLaMLfX Jmuvvn iu xuivi. Guaranteed to Cure Dyspepsia. nrAGENTS Laboratory, 77 West 3d street, ' For iv row. Pa., Aagait rt, WW. Dr. Clark Johnn. I troahlodwtth PalpltVM ol On Hrt, bat tke aslng your ! Blo ftyrap I hiTtrecrlTMl much relief. , JACOB IOLB. GO w o o PCS w 1 tn w -3 O O U 6 a H w SO a & o CO H trj oi holer a CHOLERA MORQU8 CHOLERA INFANTUM ASIATIC CHOLERA ALL CHOI.-RA D16EASE8 YiCLD TO THE INFLUENCE OF The Great IIkmepy for eyery kind of EOWEI. DISORDER. Captain Ira I!. Foij, of Go!bborough,l Maine, lays : " Ouc of my sailor was attack ed severely. wi:h cholera morbus. We ad ministered Piin Killer, and tared him." j ' J. W.FimoriJs, rrnttleboro, Vt.,say: "In case tk cholera r.iorUis end sudden attacks of summer compUinli, 1 have never found it 13 f.U." ALL THE DRUGGISTS SELL IT.' $72: A week made at home by tba In- dojtriotii. Meet hootnewi bow be fore thepuhlie. Oatillalnot need ed. We will a tart yon. Men, wo rn in, bov md cirlf wanted everywhere to work for na. Now U tbe time. Yon can work In spare time, or Kive your whole time to tbe business. No other business will pay you nearly as welL Na one can tail to make enormoas pay by etsyravlna: at once. Coatly omnt and terms Irea. Money made last, easily ana Honorably. Address I aca it uo , AUKtuta. Maine. dee-ly BONE AT PURE SLAUGHTER HOUSE BONE DUST. It is Not Boiled, Not Steamed, Not Bleached. We will sell our Done Dnrt by analysis at sumo price as any oilier Kone in the Market aim will return $3.00 per ton to the bu ver. It is higher in Bono Phosphate aud Anuixmia th.iu any other lij-e iu Anierioa. It is richer iu Ammonia thii Peruvian tiuauo. Pure Chemica t ,Ft jljstd Super Phospkattj 07B RAV B02TS FTOTPTTATS 13 QTZCS, A2TS 13 FC3 SPSSDT AITS LAEGS TSTLP. JOSHUA HORNER, Jr. & CO., 3ow!y's Wharf and Wood St., BALTiiWCRT. Happy Homes ! ' Tin: inXJ fly ;: Day's SsaRpgftFS SQfiP"Da?sl5ap lfst Ottr tr 12T) f lleaara. Dat & I used for smoclhina Otnilmr: the surface cf vcr hand-irons, clvintj ieclioK- L brxpiUil abould them a relish and siROSthness. that Mcsor.. Day & Ufill m.-o(I ee: 'ft I Jnr Sin.- it' ua"f "" somannerienfe for thiny-tlve years asa h'isekeeer. .she pntuouucea it the fl" ' , giving yoi , awui auvicru'vniiHiHiriiiiiuT. i ours resijertiuilT, Itir ClOhlrS t W L.OKY.U. D.. I"astor Central M.K.t'buruh. a finished (salt. f llcssn. Day Jb J Itear Sirs: Remember tliis, i mucn luperior Soap ii? chpsncr MiT.DAY&FRirK. ' than - i a,.-, .-.a -i .i r. i niu the does an wa vswj tor it. . - I J II I nu rTftOI lt . miy amount vi iiitiiet. i dliT UtilC J i ber of Tears, and eould rue iu I . . , tt ln a!e l my hands, and now lilrtitLi.!. jii.'A I 'I Bos not nul cured me. but 1 i - r Wash-day has no terrors for t'ae hr x:il wh?ro DATS SOP 13 used, no unpleasant and sickening odors to fill y 0 jr 1 rum. n i CjiSu xj rabb a j oa the wash-board, while the washing- can be done in 'v.lf v.r n.-t:.-- iry y lo iovr ..i I worn-out method. MADA1VI for it is to t'10 I-tuT -s tv'c J -sire io -j k njore j c a ly yn are the interested per son in this matter; you it is tint suffrr' lh -p- ? fr n !ic w i-h tub and it ne.tvy cares; you it is to whom the perplexities and r s'reb;W; is of tit..- )..: 1 M nylifuliy bt ;tnir, and you . is that should interest yourself in a trial of th-: ju .t!!t"-s f l!;:s ojp, tif bi .i!vva s tT.ven :t-e!t t be a boon of salvation We do not come to you with a p'ausible htory caiciditH to hive y-u try it, .simply for the amount of money-such a sale would brin u -; wc do rot c .i!.- t yon a irrv-p nsibic parti. , who hav no reputa tion to suffer calumny, but we do pre.?nf to you tiii; Ir i"i J f o p up -n an absolute guarantee and recommendation of a well-known industrial cstihnhu nt in Pii'laddphia, of sixteen years' existence. ,Do you suppose for a moment it woi'ld coinpejsats u to rr:a'e filso .statements to you and ruin our veil-earned reputation ? No, dear reader, what we siy .bout BAY'S SOAP is the truth, and it is sus .tained by the evidences of thousand of lvu w ves f.oni dl over tb.e country; besides which we stand 'ready to endorse it all with ready TJTt ak VVK 'lii lv JlftV. It, """" ' "" """ lawaal aaaaasir- . mmmmmtmmmmmKBaxcmsier: ..sgTv.jLaa-wt--a-i.tav t"r-BmitBnmmmmamamumm I IatbenaaaHaaanaaaajr I at the an mf nr. lailaM' . r.v tl-.W.v ! a a '.! c!oWt t tu Pay's Sop irUJ aaaralr I . ata. tawtU taa aaa wav ir!r i. t latxtr. sr the ! i-lratr cna;.r Tloiu. , o soda, no washing crystal.", n- tyo rj? to no nca, hit mp!v supply yourself for the next wash-day with a bar of DAY'S CC'.iT. ti.- e c;;rf hV.-? read the clrcctions uui follow them to the exact letter, and if you don't s .; ;i ? i . tht Old wa3 ''.-h "filer, for I am a wiser woman, you will be the first person we h.we yet hc tt i h'.t is b en disappo.n: -d , tSTTZcrw remember f y.-u cr.'t -.u d to .;' the dircc: in do ntt try the soap at all, for Jinless you do this you will be d.siop '.. : 1 I t;i n wit w.!! -cold us and yourself as well. The cost of one cake w.ll conviii. c y r t'r t it is the be t a:-.d cheapest soip ever offered you, 'while the smiles that will encircle ymf b ov ' J.:stifc t .1 golden unstt Have yon confidence in thi3 nwapsr? I2 0, to ' suppise the owner would allow us to swindle his readers by offerin,; thent t vv.u inJuc 'tneirs? lie 11-ics it in his own home, and can certify to its merits. Now you get a ;iK.e fiom yuur grocer i:i time fr the n xt wa-.h-day, and become acquainted with its intrinsic worth. Ask your grocer for it, and do not all w him to put you off wiih anytltinj cl-e fctr a substitute for every dealer can obtain it and should he tefusc you.' sond d.rcct to . DAY & FRSCCI, Prep's o! th Pbihcdelp&la Sieaia Soap norks, 17av4-568-C02 Howard Street, Philadelphia. CLARK JOHNSON'S Blood Syrup oil Hieootxva of tJir KtorrmrVh Liver. WANTED. Mew York City. Druggi its nil THE WHIT IS KIlSTGr IT IS HIE being almost noUclen. It bai a Sslf-Threading Shuttle, which tentlon can bo regulated without removing root tbe race; an Automatic Bobbin Winder by whlcb a bobble ean be wound as even aaa spool of silk without tbe aid of the baud to guide tie thread, thru assuring an even tentiun; A SELF-SETT1HG KEEBLE! A DOUBLE-STEEL FEED! a lancer space un.ler the arm than any other fam lly machine made, i"lnif a lancer variety KDd greater ranfre of work tban any iamlly machine. Simplest construe e l, easiest manatced, most thorough build and best machine in the world'. Sold on tbe MOST REASONABLE r3U! BY JOS23PII CRIST. Jenner X Koads, Pa. angle tr SfrSl Lightest Runnin gShuftle Machine LESS THAN CAN BE PURCHASED ELSEWHERE-W-AR.-A.3TTTIT3 &,ppy i-:tx ujf t'.. C.!:.rAitd Laimr r-nrt Ivaitfattiii '.a- : 1 V READ THE EVIQENCE BELOW. Frick. i-hiiu,elfhta, fa. r. yoor celebrated lav'a Soar wcuujpowU.aua hairiug iiiliy tried the top, I tke i j3V2 031161105. pleasure in givin this a m tntiuuniy : ist. 1 he -oU in tt.-ily haimUm J r an i may bi used wiili Impunity wen in aaxhinir the moat dtlieate lulai t. cij ,, ,:. Pn.n lh moet fcistl'llons It'HUtv. 2t. It i.-tiuillvilie reli.IaliL-. itimnt aim iit-iii-1 wi lim MiS CUUJ. Ilavm born martoarr)namU'a -with the inCTerlipnti of blcb 8 No lady, no centlemHii. no hou-x-kivper. no h"iil, be without it. The abf.ve irm stem tmn; have only embodied urconvirtioiia after iht.roujli experience Very tiuly yuur-. B. rKICE, ir. D.,307 KortU Fatrtc. rHll.ADEm;iA,May5th.lSl. Your Dat' PoaP Imis U'en used in rriT famflr. Mv FateK. Having ns your &ap. we fun say it (rives satisfaction, beta to otuera niuieno useu ior laundry liuriMws. iours, A. J. MARTIN. C..h1 Vllmlwkllan 1 1 . . . , ic-iiik imt s rHAr, una coaia nrn oe inaarpu to nave been sulTertiis; with salt rheum foranum-J . .:'(C Soap until I met yours, and to my gTeat surprise lean doa day swash without any aavea mo manv bnura if hard nrl- inniiriy ivronimeiiii il loeverv woinati na rr. rwsr Niun mm, in U....tr.1lv UUJ U1TTDD nntI, j . ""'wiiZZT.sYo '- 'i Wi IT. ; cash. 55 " SOAP is th t Oi Ifiaii. rl iJ? ..!' Ulachamtil. Mklai a v. H -' ' A f' i W1" ' aM-W la al sMaaav at -i m r, w Mmboky'a aU aatat CI T THE PUBLIC. I am again in tha fiald, Dd am .offering " among the best Lightning Conductors In the market at the present time JIIE FAMOUS Star Copper Rod, Three inches Burface. Satisfaction guaranteed. fS-REPAIMSa A SPECIALTY- Address O.F.EHOAD9, mAv30 SOMERSET. PA MARTIN SCHiEPER, Book Binder, Locust Street. Oipitt St- ftbfl's Sclool. Johnstown.' - iPa. ALL KINDS OF Books Neatly Bound AT LOWEST BATES. Old Books Re-Bound. UUS1C BOOKS A SPECIALTY. Parties desiring books bound can obtain prices by dropping me a card. Arrangements hare been made whereby express one way will be paid on all large order. All needed Information can be obtained at Somerset Hjckaxd cttice. Dovla. Omtmuednm laei lerei.) How Watch Cases are Made. In baying a silver watch case great car should be taken to secure one that is solid silver throughout The cap of most ciieap silver cases is made of a composition known as albata, which is a very poor substitute for silver, as it turns black in a short time. The backs of such cases are made much thinner than those of an all silver case, being robbed in order to make the cap thicker and get in as much as pcsbible of the cheap metaL Another important point in a silver case is the joints cr hinges, hkh should be made of gold. Those of most cheap cases are made of silver, which is not a suitable metal for that purpose. In a brief period it warps, bends and spreads apart, allowing the backs to become loose upon the case and admitting the dust and dirt that aecummulate in the pocket. The Keystone SilvcrWatch ( 'uses are only made with silver csps and gold joints. ' Kt. In, Mr)., TVb. 17, WS. In ourlnng and varied x;MXtence in bAoniing watcnM. wecannot hot acknowlMrsrd ree.ar:.-tirarrtytha the Kxfrtooe hood Mr Vli Ca. are tne best aoade to not knovieiijrn. Harm; no tvi,.-f ng they re. main nunvereneiMi, Aorder and cir than the would be were they hatd for Hliniig, nwi hav more mafting power agnifiHt preMura titan any "Ur c r in the alautuu a Jaxahi Jiwitiat to. temd 9 m ttaaia U K.y.U.. Wtlra Cm. rarUrUs, rati. Mptta, ra few ffltatat4 raw kUt tawalae kwe JaawaW an Watte tan. an auaM. TOW Happy Homes ! ! ! I'sTrXlZ HAPPY SiwraaBtrjra j Save yo-jr Kealth.- H laf. ve your time, no liim. no I lai eune. but It V-i yr:" j,:'JSlf nrfOP and triul. iu iruu. n r 1 Xinlh Street "3 sickness as wife has hnd j? ,J52 rsscit cf a hard l; ri 5 Vfscn Frankford. riilfllL Elizabeth, S. J. StCI hCt V vater, !a wash boiler. , Tr t ... . 1 $ ctgiss nice and use any other sr-J si Ira-1 sufteriiiir. It : T"T PPVl mr.TS t ti., t.. i . f 1 - igh.aJ ,.t -r.a rlramba ntu.rV kln ! Clathea. rlotavaa. Claatitaa. ryrboUy'a stlatai siaial Ciaxlaca. GET THE BEST! More Somerset Coun ty people have read the HERALD (limner the past year than ever bc-Ure most! fore, fore, since it was first Srutttif printed. ; :;ive no trouble, i;,.,.- ' I wile, r.c.v. she". s'..",,,5 ideal with ,b"per?i r'rV ltr:Ltion and other a:h, j the bloom otf her ci ' TWniwo its: nmvs col-Mng.ou; hy ? -iV , - an i lit;;,. r.- - umris present all thcti inrpsr. t mws 111 nil in- i stm uve mut tractive style. Because it always dves all the local news fter' wifliniif ltfPnno rendered , ... inposevi upon th columns with unmean-; unprincipled ing and uninteresting correspondence. Because it is always reliable politically, and says what it means andjfUc means what it says. Because its Court -tCW: ports are always full, i l oJy :nvc: ' I i i 7 ;ter sometiiir.g a.-ai..,,.,- fair and trustworthy, such casc3 as iv... ;,v;; " j will sometime, wiu .; is : , I When Benson's i Plaster was placed f about ten years r . . j hope became a f ;et. BeCaUSO it IS tlie Ilie- rare medicinal vir.;; . i l ii I its rapid action . ir.;-!;r. -, dium used by the peo-leucine is fa t di p:, : !r: pie of the county whenj-f-S they wish to let their Nf.tl:: neighbors know when j word CAraxE. e ,;:r . vVJ . xl 1 C acim, -H",v ler,. uiuy iiuve it laim ui anything else for sale. Because all legal ad vertising appears in iU columns, anu people arc !vc?.no" l. ue tM t: ;it thus kept posted as to what transpires in the management of the af fairs of the Courts and County. Because it has the best Washnirton and V I Harrisburgicorrespon- clents attainable. Because it is active, aggressive, and always for the cause of its constituents. If you have friends who live outside the 1 j1 comuy, mere is no more acceptable pres ent you can send the in than a copy of their county paper. If you have a neigh bor who needs a paper recommend the iiek ald. It your childrenwant a paper, subscribe for the herald. Subscription $2.00 per year. Address HERALD, Somerset, Penn'a. Int a Kran.J on H Women arp r,, sai-1, bringing down nit in nriiir..- hpartie.s remark Parties remark. It J'' rc store ut We: M '- ounty, and ral figure of a Vi CO tral philosopher:). '.un ... . tfil y, and sixty "there 8 where I i r . altost ther." said M- r " Luuj, of the san,e i,; i " . lucn hoimj hot f-jr the n,,. ' ! unnatural in either e!.' . -jtheiu, and ievi.. ! thcru when they're t took it. 1 sent ;i- ih aftnj several times. you could see how iilU nad done her, .; u, women are the ;ri blessings, and l';.r;;: r T i.cxL;' ' This preparation known tu l au r- e 1 1 tti a a ui neee-.-Mr, ' of Ginger : and as :'lT'. unimportant v-r:: we drop the mislead!;: There is no char v toe pituiauuu u a;.a . ties remaing in the i.v;, wrapped under the ii:init -f-(Jiager Tonic cent: it. i. medicine if tlio la.-.;ri.-;e of iiiscox & Co., is a: ' the outside wrapptr. The most bashful !rle, -of was a young hi.lv w;i0 ' when ehe waa a-ked 1 een courting sleep. Here at Last. v; said an Orange cou;,'v ;,L a complaining Iris!." j.il-r years ago, "lor that pait, ; chest you had better ;o h-i yul on a mustard p!.. ic thiiik this minute r: - 'I '.i.!1 ' !:.e i ':.:; ? ii.!i rt No one hayit bu .. :i;.v to prove wbt-u fans weriiriti; ed. There can be r.. d.vul-tL er, of their tx istrnce ',: " t' for representations of t: articles liave been di-cuvtrcii; tombs at lhebe. Far, nre the oldest articles ii; : except their tongue. i Messrs. Iliscox vV Co. t-ali : i '. . i- . 1 11), INbd, the nanie a;..! ttvk , preparation wi'i heitaitHr be JWker't Tonic. Tiie v.. rd is uroppeel, ior tti- na-Mi tr rrincirded dealers ar-. ci.l i ceiving their patrons bv ?u interior preparations uua-rtr.c: of Ginger; and as giajtri; important fiavnrii.g iir our Tonic, we are -wrv : friends will agree with u- -i ropriety of th:) c:.;. n: I ne no changf, however, ui t..r aration itself ; and a;i L maining in thf ha: '.- . wrajiped under th er's CIixcjf.r Toxii nine medieiiif if' Ilisoox 'c Co. is at outMde wrauiar. " c i.'.iin ' 11 At LROAt) C'iiDUL SOMERSET & CAMiWU n"i T,an!a.arr,My H, tril:.- sioitTnwAnD. 3S 1 . ' 5 3 r. . 1:45 I: .S S:-l io: l:t 246 l A IT S -ft :.'A H -U 4 . 1.1 4 r. u r. m. .-) 3:- 4 I'j 4:14 A f.j 4 4t 4:6T I :ua 5:W 5 8 St : B. U l-t 6: u .Ct'n:KLAV :T M'a...iu:; '.. KLI.K-SI.IC I.CtMIK'S MILLS . ..1IVMM A ...WILLIAMS... ...rAIUIIO-K. .. RurTIIAMPTt'V i OLKIruK ..A! r.T :l. . KHYSTO.NK .. MKVKKSUALi: 8AL!i:I KY ! ...iAai:ErT. .. . . R m xaiHin .. ....niLror.if . . ...IMtMKKM'.r .. A. 1A 3X1 ....okihk:; ... 7 4i 8:i VI7, tr:0; V. V. ..ruiKitLs . .8TV!TftW . HlMlVltlu.VII.Lt HKTHKL.... ....B.lttll!t ... ..JOUtToM X.. A. ' Trsiris markJ dal'y. (rhcr nh' : ectt tinnrtav. Special Suu.I-it trains Icav. .m-r l'wn at TMi fc ra.. arrivii-ar tt J .ii "tl ilis tritnA s.op at all stall ,n thamrock. K'lru. ':':' 1 1 JTuW.ilIar, K..wiA. Hull s frr..i i. f KAUff.nan trim k'tn.. k... I.i.. ,n.I '.' re rl.ig iuiiMsa br all regular tru:- BATIMORE JL OHIO RAILCS pittsbi-koh ii!v:s:t" On and after May II, trAlns w.il nu ' KAJTWAB3. arsP- - - - Z STATIONS r. at. I A. M. A 1100 s;w ...piTrsrt! k;h.. . 11.' l.ruo Ct)Nr l.r.- II.I.E. '" VIM; l-'TOJ ..lUN'i'M t.Mt... litjB, li:U7 LKS1.NV I liiii... piyK;:l;Tiv ... VJV l'ASt:i.MAN'.... 12:43, tt KiuJaWW"1 .... OAKKFTT I Yl'tllK 10 .SAMSlit KV ji 1.13 IW ..JltYf.KSPALb... ! 1 11 ,...KLVSTi'f UK1 11 . ,SAMFAlCii.. I It)' OLKNf'E. , ISi A1KHIPK t' :S. ... HYM'MAN :4") Jfol'..! T.MHKhl.ANI'.. 413 loo ..MAUI l.NSHI K' an ii.-ii1 . AhHKi:- 73'. ' ,.W.4SHlMlir 4i. ... l!ALTl-U"UL.... Trilns wt not stop arliors Mull Tni w.r win s:oi icrs tiiii. i "..Vr ,:,, at f'',.jt- t.'oniiTlisvtle V LauJ pifeonT4 LxpreM trains .tally u"-'1;1, Bf lM.lnimj.lurina Inunjl anu r 1 dalljr cicopt Sunilay . I Ticket ma, eornw nnh A""? . - , .i . . iiMitt aipi r-lltsunj h. Va.. A? L. M. CHILE. Oeneral rif'" THLW.M.KLNli.t" "V 1
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers