1 ttT r. , ' 4 V. ; I, 1 Somerset Herald IfilC rr&s of Publication. ' 1 . rr Wednesday "omlng DUN r"S oald in advance : stW."J'-"-- . . ,.!, will oe ' " iTt paid P- Postmasters neglecUn- .-ry ' . hhM da not take vat iy ss ne" . . xunilhli for the sub- jm1 I mm mm oftofflfle to an- .,TfWr rem- h11 fir te " o farmOT " (tjlbPlefflc- A,,ll8, The Somerset Herald, gomer, Tn. J Ka-UARTKNn.AT-LAW. txnuerset, Fa. L nTV. BI FLECKER, II' 7 1 .. . - riomereet fa. k op.rtlr to Co. A Heerits dur.. ,roKiE K- SCULL, LAW, Somerset Pa. . tTJN II. SCOTT, I ATTUKNtV-AT LAW, I Somerset, Pa. V ATTOKNEY-ATX.AW, 1 Somerset, Pa. i " kndsley. ATTORN EY-AT-LA W, Somerset, P ; r TKEN'T. . ATTORNEY-ATLAW, ? Somerset, Penn'a. ,v, u. (TLL. m H attj:net-at law. Somerset, Pa. i: L BAKU, attorney -at law, Somerset, Pa., . ii .rtiin Somerset and ad mining eoontle ...ifJ t(1,Fn:oIH. W.H.K11TF.L. nKFKOTII IUTITEL. I, ATWKNEYS-AT-LAW. uine entrusted to their care will be i iv ati l i.uni-tualiy attended to. 7,oi. Main Cross street, opposite the lSBith Block AiUiORN A 0OLB0RN 0 1- .n1nw IntniMed tn nortw will be prompt. V VnurJ. adtoinina tommies, survey faCovryauelns done on reasonable terms. "ILLIAM H. KOONTZ. ATTt'KM-1-Al-L.Jl", Somerset, Pa., i-iii rlre t.r..rnpt attention to business entrust- "t" r,rr (n S..merwt nd adjoining eountlea. ,(B Prtr.tiDK H"Ue Kow. D KNNIS MEYERS. ATTOHStl- i-iv. Iftil boHnew entmMod to hiere will he to iih urmiti)eff and b.lelliy. t in Mammoth JlUxk next tloor to Boyd i "re. times l. rrr.ii, . ATTORNEY -AT-LAW Somerset Pa. Mammoth Hlock, on eta Irs. Entrance. f ... , r'ii street, tvlleetlotii made, estates tl'les examined, and all lefral business ,::.ieJ t "It" liromptneas and Odelity. P. Y. KIMMEL. ATTORN EY-AT-LAW, , Somerset, Pa. f J .PRITTS. l. ATTORNEY-ATLAW. S.meraet, Pa. v't. up ftalra In Mammoth Blora. iIIN 0. KIMMEL. ATTORN EY-AT-LA W, Somerset, Pa. it tttend to all hoslneas entmiite1 u his eare . B,T.t ami adiolnlr.a; counties with rt.mpt--u ant D.ielity. ome- on Main Cross street. II ENRY F. SCHELL. ATTORNEY-ATLAW. F tti'T and Pension Agent, Somerset, ft it Mammotn black Pa. V "A I. EN TINE HAY. ATTORNEY-ATLAW A',-t Teal-r In Real Estate. Somer t. P will i -r,i all l.nslnens entrusted to his eare with v '.Dess and hdety fnllN n.niL. I ATTORNEY-ATLAW Somerset, Pa, "'l!'prfmpt1 attend to all rmslnes entrusted ' in. Ynney ad ranged on collections, ate. Oi- :t Mammoth HntUlinc. T G.OGLE. I, ATTORNET-ATLAW, Somerset Fa., rVtestmsl business entmste.1 to mj care at JT ied to with promptness and fidelity. Paac Hrc;rs. 1 ATTtlRNEY-A1-I.AW. Somerset, Penn'a. Hi: IT. S. KIMMEL I I tenders h'S rr"esslona! service to the cltl--. r, s..,m,Tr a no Vlctnitv. Inless pnifcl.m. Tir'irl h on he "Uud at his oftee. on Main . cum ol the Diamond. n . U. P.RURAKER his . . -i. a . Ar Cash -! n1 TicintiT. im In rwWcnoe on mm r.rx vrstol the IHamond. R. WM. RAl'CH ten1rs hi pn.lesslonal services to the eltliens of Som- tad vicinity . . . . iw one door east of Wayne fc Berkeblle s :-ritor store. Lt f, 'U. DR. JOHN BILLS. KENTIST. tit ap stain In Cook fc B-erits Block. Somer .Pa. L) ,R. W1LLTAM COLLINS. I)ENTIST. SOMERSET. PA. i1- In Mammoth Flock, ahwe Boyd s Pro it whera he can at all times be foun-t prepar- M. no all kinds ol work, snch as filtlnar reaTi- i-li.r extractlnsx itc Artificial teeth o( all ktnda. Mn! the lesi material Inserted. Operations 'Arranted. JJ HOWARD WYNNE, M. D. Msessesof the . Kar No'e and Throat. !cts! and xciote practice Honrs, r . . to t at. Lmher fc Oreen I hfk, fc Main rt. I. P. THOMPSON. M n. SVHUEcjS 1IEMIT. H-,f had a prut' ssiooal ext-erieoce ot more than '- vcr Kmio Trr.Tn a Swuitt. 1 r i.irs No KT: Vain street (up stairs) over i n II her "a llanlware Store It will Iw rece. .lohnstown. ra. urv ir neraor.s wl.o want aura oc" w in, I Dfiinr luv. . . a IB R.I I AM ES O. KIERNAN, M. D. ten- ''rs his p.ntesslor.al service to the eltliens of itt-spi .no wiT-iiiii,. ' -" - - - . t 'ct.cc o1 rls at.'er on main cut-ti. i enf Iir ltenry Urubaker. SfJ't IsaB. n T! J K. MILLER Las iverma- rm.teasloB. Othce opposite Charles Knssinar- centlv lecai'eo in tiernn iot int ir -r IAM0ND HOTEL, STOYSTOWN. 1'liNN'A. Tfcttpopolar and well known honae has lately n tkoruok-hl; and newly refitted with all new w l oi turriltBre. which has made It a very "Kltalil. tot.r,lr. itlace lor the tranelina- pwblle. -t'le and ro-s cannot be aurpasseo. all be- ' tm class, with a larr pot-iic nan aiiacrwo tte same A I so larre and roomy atahltnat '! claa. boardlna: can 1 had at the lowest os- : prices, by the week, cay or meat. SAMVfcLOrSTKR. Prop, si. E. Cor- Irtasaoad Stoystow 4a THARLES HOFFMAN, (A oove Ifeary HrBe jr Btor.) UTEST STYLES Ufi LOWEST PE1CES. "SATISFACTION GUARANTEED. iniK'RSET. "PA. KERGHANT TAILOR ftULlN 1 O'Vhe . .-t. hex I- ever sld lor st-as tbuD Ka i"' 'kr' 1 br n"' aellina hoA In Aa.er- "W IffifBta III I. All n.lllMM)ff I he VOL. XXXII. NO. 33. BARGAINS ! In House-Furnishing Goods We Offer: Coal Yapee, Bread Boxes, Cash Boxen, Toilet Sets, E;rg Beaters, Slaw Cutters, Puddinn Molds, Lemon Squeezers, Can 0X'ners, Apple Parers, Mrs. Potts' Irons, Bread Toasters, Towel Rollers, Steak Pounders, Pocket Stoves, Farina Boiler3. Cake Boxes. Tea Travs, Chanib r Pails, Copper Wre, Mincing Kmvw, Revelvinc Grater?, Cofiee Mills, Nut Crnt kers, Wtiflle Iron?, Lau:uB. (All Kinds,) Clothe? Wrincer?, Enanielen Ware, Queen Oil Cans, Knife Trays, AND HUNDREDS OF OTHER ARTICLES. In connection w ith the above we offer llie Ijtreet-t and FineM Assfirlniint of RANGE3, COOKING and HF.ATIMJ STOVKS everaliown in Johnstown. Pltccinl attention paid lo JoMiinp in Tin, Galvanized Iron and Plieet Iron. Supr Tans, Steam Hot-air I'ie. KoofiiiK. Soutiii(; Stacks lor leucines, and all work pertaining to (Vliar Fnntaccs. Kslinis'te ptven t'd work done bv lirt-cln nieolianicsonlv. II A V liltOV, o. 2M asibiiiRton Mrret, JohHMoiin. Penn'a FASHIONABLE CUTTER & TA1LCE ronaae. Yours, axe., WM. M. HOCUS TT. rijKR, Somerset. Pa. mart Albkbt A. Hokke. J. Scott Wabd. HORNE & WARH auccBAsnRS to EATON & BROS, X0. 27 FIFTH AVENUE, PITTSBURGH, PA. SPRING, 1882. NEW GOODS EYES7 2AY SPECIALTIES .mbroi(feris,Uces,lilllnery, Whits Goods, Hand kerchief!. Dtet Trlntinlngi, Hotlsry, 6loves, Corsets, Wuslla sttd atertns Underwear, la fants' and Chitdron's Clothing. Fsacy fisods, Yarns, Zestiyrs, Wata riali of All Kinds tor FANCY WORK, Gents' FurBiiMsii GooSs, It, k T( t'RFATKOKaOl IB BBSrBCTf CLLY UUC,I tM-ORDERSBV MJILATTESDFD TO WITH t ARE a.vP PISPJTCH. art SOMBtSEI COUSTTf Mil (ESTABLISHED 18T7.) CBAKLES. I. BAEE1SCN. M. I PRITTS. President. Cashier. Collections made tn all parts of the t'nlteu States. CHARGES MODERATE. Parties wishing to St-ml money West can be ac eom.no.late.1 t.y Jralt ..n New York In ".njj-llle.-ti..ns ma.it atlth trompneFS I . a. Konos boucltt ami sot.l. Money nJ valuables securetl liyoneol Utet-.IJ s eeleltrate-i tales, wuu a o.r gent A Yale J 0 OU time luck ACCOUNTS SOLICITED. M-All lepil holidays obserTKl.-M lecT NEW GOOD ! For the Fall ani Winter Me 3NTOW IIS STOKK ! Cashmerrs. Slk Flnlsh.l tnitina-s. Velvets. ratter I'rss viwi, , i n. . . . . ... . i,:,. cotton. Plaliis, Klnnrls Liinseys. Canton flannels. .Irana. Sattlnets, Ca:iimervs. orduroys. Hosiery, ilovrs, t'n'HTwear. Vams, Notions, r'aoey iKtoila, Npa-Wear. A Full Line of Choice Crocerles, Tobacco and Cigar, HARDWARE, QUEENSWAKE, BOOTS S. SHOES IX GP.EA T YAP2ETY HATS and CAiPS. A lar and TarltJ assortment, CLOTHING, Nails, UUas, Stor Pipe, Tinware, Oils, Paints, UruifS, Oyes, Salt, Flour. Meal and Chop. 3 o : It will he or aim to keep In stock ererythlns; asaal'v kept In a well r- ajulate'l -eneral store, all ,.l whlt'h willneaol.1 at rock hnunsa prices All kla 'eol ir.lnce taken lne-hane lor"o.la,at the bla;n-H market prlpee. We le ont-asioa to thank a (nrntai pi.hllr fur the liheral patrooaare we hae reeelrert ainoe we hare e mmenred ho-l- i.ll. .11-1. m Miiin.fH (it f ht aieaa. anu wvyr on. - .. - same 'Otliose who bare not aa yet dealt with as. we kloll ask to give as a trial and be con Tlneed. hort DroOti ann qolrk retnras. Is oar motto. r U W.C. Ol MBAl'LU JO TimriLULa, Pa,. Oet.W.l-W JEGAL NOTICE. To Rachel Helnbauah. (w.tow) Jaanes Heln haukh. t Ijinark. Carroll Cnty. Illlnoia. Sa- . . i.k l.ml.h Polk. if r.i K - gs, IfSe '- HaviriR had many Kl -tSv ''im-S. years experlen-e flfk T in all branches of fli J W- he Tailortna bus- A JiVW '"ess la-uariintee ? J'1.;AV I atlslatiun to all . -.a . i jTS I ITff K me w Ith their pau ran. miCTmimr-i " " " " ' lick lownship. Somerset !unty. Pa.. Nancy. In-ermarrte4 with Stephen McNalr. of Caasel nan. Simersct ewinty. Pa.. Matthias Heln. baua-h ol Lanark, Illinois. Jona leiubaiivh, deceased, leaving a widow, Wary Ann Heln lUKh resMina In Iowa, Hannah, Intermarrt.d with Hiram Krejer, reatdlt k In Iora, Sarah. Intermarried with Iavld May. realdlna; at H hre. this county. Kieis Helnlaoa;h. Resullnr at Fllne P . JaHrbard. rdlao of Jonaa and Uavid Meii.bau. all of Sxaaeraet county. Pa rm are herehv notlnM t" appear at aa Or phans' Cuart to be' held at Soaoeraei on Monday, the 2:t fa da of r. bmarv neat, to awa. or retune ,tae i Ivrel estate ufMaana-l Helot.fli. 1 ecact at tbeK ra. sen valuation, or show eaaae wbT the SaDie sl.ould n- be sold 8BkatrrarFira. t bberlfl. January 7, IsM. i Fine Carving Sets, Knives and F'rks, Fine Plated Ware, Cake Beaters, EtrR Pake Molds, Spice Boxes, Lanterns, Oil Stoves, Tea Canisters, Granite Ware, Wire Broilers, Cupsidores, I)u?t Brushes, Rolling Pins, OLD HELIAHLE ISADBLERY & HARNESS SHOP (orrosiTi: Tin: glade house,) IvT-A-UST CBOSS ST. SOMERSET, TA. I keep constantly on hand a large assortment ol HAKXESS, SADDLES, BRIDLES, BRUSHES, COLLARS, WHIPS, DUSTERS, ROBES, BLANKETS, And everything usually found In a First-class , HASXESS SHOP. Harness from S1O.O0 a Set Upward. nEPAiniXG A SPECIALTY Saliiactien guarmntrtd in rrrry intlancr. Jeremiah Woy, novTJn.. PROPRIETOR. ruft's PELLS TORPID BOWELS, DISORDERED LIVER, and MALARIA. From tin-no aourcia arise tljii e fourths ot tho ilmra-i'-j if him i.uman ttttte. 'lln-e symptoms milii'iit.' tbeirrxutc-nc-e: Ioaa ot AicClie, itoMela coatlec, eicac Head awlar, lialliaesa wller aatlati;, atvrraloaa lo cxerltaiM oa body or auitu. letaliuu of food, InitaMlil' ( aeaairt IjWW aplrits, A IVelana; r having aaeajlrclrd au dtit-, INuliwaa, Imtlc i-tng at tha llt-art, uta tseletre the rye, htajklir col ored I i-lur, Vi l IPATIOV, and tie m in i tlic utto of a remeily ibnt actalirrctlv on th- Liver. AiaUvcr roeiliciuc Tl'TT'al 11 iiav no v.jutU. Tut-ir action on tho hi lut-yaiintlSk'n iaaUt prompt; reniovlua; ull iiuputities through llit-ae turea aeav eaicrra of the ayatean, prcluclnaT app tiK .Miunil liip-aiinn, n-Kultir stools, a clear akiiiaiiilaTiK.irouslKxIv. TCTT's PILI.M chu-m no naum-a or wiping nor iutcrlera witli rVoiT work anil ata p-rfect ANTIDOTE TO MALARIA. nr. rrri s like a m iv iwaji. ' 1 hum hail Iiysm psia, with Constipa tion, two yearn, anil liav,- trl'-tl ten dlfTi-rent kimls of pills, and TI'TT'S ar the llrrt that have done mo any good. They have co-wii-d me out ni--fy. My appctho la -likniltil. fofl diffests VeadilV, anil I now lime naluml pat-'iii.''-. I ft I lik a near m:in." W. 1. fcUWAIUJS, Palmyra, O. ..l.'fmtlw .-JTe. OfS-.l MnrrvS-..X.T. TUTT'S HAIR DYE. t.ttiT II iir R Witiasi Ra clmntreil In. o.ttntiy t i u .I.osr )Lai I If a Kingle np. iMli tillO'l of i Ins Hi t Mild Dy Iit uygisU, . '! -itt ly airt-H o;i ri-r.ipt of s I. otlii-i-, 44 Murmv Str--t, New York. UTT'S MAhUAl OF USEFUL RECEIPTS FREF PATENTS oMained. and all business In the t S Patent I iffl.-e, or In the Courts attended to for MODERATE FEES. We are opposite the V S. Patent OtTlce, en aed In PATENT BUSINESS EXCLUSIVELY, and esti ohtntn fiHt-nts iu less lime tliau Iboae remote Irom WASHINGTON. W beu ai.Hiel or orawlna; Is sent we advise as to patentahilltv tree ot charae; and we make NO CHARGE UNLESS WE OBTAIN ?ATENT. w e reler, bere, to the Postmaster, the Snpt. of the Money .rnler Division, and to officials of the V. S. Patent tiffica. For circular, advice, terms, and reference to actual clients In your own Stat or county, address C. A. SNOW & CO.. Opposite Pteater.torT.ee, Washing-tea, 11 C. JOTICK OF APPEALS. Notice Is hcrcbv ariven that appeals will be held from the assessmtVs of at the tjummlsslon era' othce. In Soin rset, lor the several dislrlcts of the coontv, aa follows : For Jeuner, JcnncrUiwa rkiniorh. Coneinauiih. Paint, Shade, hinyestowo Hornunh. Quetnalion. InaT. Slonyciek, few Baltimore Horoua;h Alle lilieny, jeOerson, Somerset Somerset l oruith, i-rhn Rormrh and Brotherva!ley, on Moday, the tttb day of January. For Addison, Lowrr Turkcyfont. 'rsica and Confluence Hrua:ha. Cper Tdrkevfoot. Middle, creek. New Cntrevlile Hon-Ukh. .MlUord, South, ampton. Northanip on. Wellcrniiura: and Meyers dale Hor uiths. Summit. Orenville, lrim-ri l-.lklii w. and S.ilusbury II mikIi on Tl.urnlay, the 'J b day ot January, 1H14 when and where .11 persona ami corporations leeltna themselves aa atrlevet at theeuomerati.in and valuation of b-ir taiatile property and enVcr. made pursuant to the seversl MCtsol Aaseulily in aoeb cases made and provided, are requested "to atund and stale their KTievaneea for re-irea aecorlina to law. Tiie appeals will he bel.l on the almve mentioned da) a, between tne hours ot Bam. ani 6 r. u. A 1 1 A M .ho fi:r, JOStPH HttKN KR, HtK.dA.NHhl KAKER, Attast : Commissioners. 1 J HoEsaa, Clerk. CALVIN HAY, BERLIN, JS.., (MILLER'S MILL.) MANUFACTURER OF FLOUR & FEED! I alwavs keep on hand a large stork of FL.OCE, KKN-.vlE4l.. IH.'cKVVHEiT FLOCK, and all kinds of CHOP. Also, all kinds of OK A1N, whlcn I sell at Ji OTTO 31 PRICES! Wholesale and Retail. You will save money by buying irum me. My stork it always Freeh. ORDERS FILLED PROMPTLY. jXECuroirs notice. Latata of Josiah Oivelv, laU of Salisbury Bor. ougb Somerset Co., Pa-, dea d. taers tastaaienury on above estate having beea granted te the anderslenad by the proper aa tbority. notice is hereby given to ail persuas la deted to said estate to make Immediate pay ment, and those bavin elmlms against It to pre sent them duly aetbntlca-d lor settlement oa Satanlav. Jar, h 1 l-4. at the late residence ol said deceased. In Saltsoary Borouith ML. U1VELY. jan.a. Eaecator. DM INISTRATORS NOTICE. Lsiateor Michael Lohr, late of Omemaugk Twp Somerset Co , Pa., dee d. Letters of administration on the above estate having hen granted lo the undersigned by the iir-per authority, notice is hereby given lo all LerlTws ladeoted to said estate to make Immedl iTe navment, and thiee Laving elalms against the same "III present them duly authenticated f. tenement on Saturday, the th day l Fehrasry, U- atiheolnoeof J. U. Swaak, Esq , la Da- omef A CXEAU CASE. Auburn hair inclined to curl. Honest eyes and winning sniilr; Form to set the brain awbirl. Lips that ininlit asaint beguile; That's tb girl. Taller than the maiden cor. Truthful fearless, handsome, strong ; Heart of gold without allov, Halting ne'er 'twixt right and wrong; That's the boy. Window panes festooned with rime. Leafless trees and hillsides bare; Town clock, sounding midnight chime, Street lamps glimmering here and the.re; That's the time. Kestling at the mountain's base. With it's one long, quiet street Clasped iu winter's white embrace ; Quaint old village, trim and ueat; That's the place. Truant arm and br embrace, Tendar vows in willing ear, Kisses on an upturned face, Whispered: "'yes, I lore you, dear;" That's the case. ALICE'S SURPRISED It was asunshiny May dat. iTcTa'ndS den,and intense glow of cold- light oo the gr,, and a drea.oy languor in the air that made Alice Hopkins slet-p in spile of heielf as she sat with the liule children a copy-booKs in a pile before her, incrUing the month's marks upon the cavers, ac cording to their respective merits. Alice was scarcely more than a child herself. Barely nineteen, with a alight, yung figure, a eoibr that catue ana went t the slightest vari ation of her pube, and pleading ha 7x1 eyes, it was the hardest work in the world to assume the diguiiy that was neccseiiry for her position as as sistant teacher. "1 never saw such babyishness in my life." said Mis Negley, the prin cipal, "and I shall nejt put up with it, Miss .Hopkins don't you think it? Dignity, in the educational line, is every tlnng. And 1 do not call it lining to the position of the a?sist tiiit principal to be racing round with the children in their nooa day game!?, and dressing a corn cob doll on the sly for little Priscilla Jones, to say nothirg about bursting out crying, like a great baby, when Billy Smith killed the robin red breast with a stone. Dignity, Miss Hop kins dienitv should ever be the watchword of our profession. Miss Negley was tall and grim, with heavy black hair, a sallow com plexion, several miasinn front teeth, and something very much like a mustache. Alice Hopkins cowed before her savage glance. '"I'm very sorry," faltered she. "I'll try t be good." More like a child than ever," said Miss Negley, despairingly. "I 1 mean," Alien hastened to corrtrcl herself "1 will endeavor to et a guard upon my rash impulse." "That sounds more like it," said Miss Negley. "And now, Alice, see here. I expect some of my school trustees here to-mrrow." "Oh, dear," said Alice, remember ing the signal failure of her class upon a similar occasion nt so very long ago. "It isn't another exami nation, I hope?" "Worse than that," said Miss Neg ly "far worse." Alice lifted her hazel eyes in amazement. What could possibly be worse than Fanny Dow spelling cat with a "k," and Lucy Maiiey as serting that Baltimore was situated on the left bank of the river Nile. "There is a proposition on foot to reduce our salaries,' said Miss Neg lev. "Actual! v to reduce our sala rits." "Oh," said Alice. "But mine is v-ry small already. Only twenty pounds a year. I don't think they can poesibly reduce it much," "They can reduce it to ten, can't they ?" said Miss Nejjley verv shortly- "In that case," ventured Alice, "I could go and be a shop girl in my uncle's shop in the city. One must live." ' "You've no proper pride," said Miss Negley. "A shop girl, indeed. But 1 don't intend that they shall carrv out their nefarious plans. If ii " "My good gracious me! there comes Mr. Barlhorne now. jogging along on his old gray hrse just as composed as if he wasn't bent on an errand of evil. They do say that old Barthorne is the head and foot of the whwle business. I'll show him! A reduction of salaries, in deed." "I dare say he means to wheedle a conser.t out of us before hand, so that everything shall seem smooth to-morrow when the committee meets. But he'll find that he has mistaken his customer this time." Little Alice bwgan to tremble all over, and to grow pink and white by turns, after her usual fashion when she was disturbed. "I I am s frightened," hesitated she. "Please may I go home?" "Yes, you little coward," impa tiently responded Miss Neglev,"that is if you haven't the courage ta stand up fo'r yourself and your rights." "But Mr. Barthorne has always been so kind to me," faltered Alice Hopkins, and if he should tell me it was best, I almost know that I would consent to having my salary reduc ed. You know, my dear Miss Neg Uy, that if it had not been for bim I never should have received the ap pointment at all." "I don't winder," said Miss Neg ley, apostrophizing the ceiling, "that they aren't willing to allow women the privilege of suffrage in thia be nighted country. And you, Alice Hopkins, you may go home. You certainly will be of no use to me at all in fighting this battle." And Alice, heartily thankful for this grudgir.gly-accorded privilege, . .v ' i" - :.. jl S8 SI .1 definer! caught ber little pink lawn sun-bonnet from ita nail, and van ished like a flying shadow into the nearest patch of green woods. tlla. Marriott ml vprs linriurit with i.iino ""-.J r 'J -r------' j t.AA.A urnii onil t.rnminpnt elbows. i,,.- ...i.. ,i,t. tincinul ith the rosy hue of coming battle, her lips ,. EST A BTaTSELED. 1827. SOMERSET, PA., WEDNESDAY. JANUARY 30, 1884. pleasant faced gentleman of five and forty or thereabouts, trotted up to the school house door, leisurely dia mounted, tied his horse to the hitch ing post, and, totally unconscious that he was observed alike by Miss Negley from her post of authority on the school rooo dais, and little Alif Hopkins by tha spring iu th woods, paused to dust his boots with his yellow silk pocket handkerchief, and to adjust his thick dark locks before he rapped on the door. "I'm glad I'm not there." eaid Alice Hopkins, with a long sigh of relief. And then, having cooled her face and hands in tht transparent spring she sat down to think. . To her, a reduction of her scanty salary meant nothing less than star vation. As things were, she could scarcely pay her board and other expenses. And sitting there in the shifting shadows of the wind-blown branch- ij es, she cried a little, to think how n solitary and friendless she was in the j world. ii Miss Nesrley, however was in a had an wered IT dr' mer sea?.8 J entred , IV l,rjM' V4 aii DibMiij utU DiatiU iauu straight. "Good afternoon, Miss Negley," said the trustee depositing his hat on the nearest shelf, and venturing on an apologetic bow. "Good afternoon, Mr. Barthorne," Miss Negley answered, with just about as much warmth as an icicle in her address. 'I hope I de not intrude," said he ciily. - - Oh, no, not at all, said Miss Ne aley. A hem," eaid the trusb-e, evi dently ill at ease. "It ain't easy to broach the business I've come on. Miss Negley." "I should think not," replied the l.dy. "But I called just at this hour, when I expected to find vou all alone." "Oh, yes, I haven't any doubt that you did, Miss Negley interrupted him in accents of fine sarcasm. "Even you, 'Squire Barthorne, would be ashamed to hint at such a thing liefore the dear poor school chil dren "Eh?" said Mr. Barthorne, in stinctively retreating a pace or two, fir there was something pythoness like in Miss Negley's attitude, as she rose and darted her read for ward at him, to emphasize her words. "I know what you are going to say," said Miss Nej-Iey, and I won't listen to a word of it not one word! No one but a set of narrow-minded misers would have thought of it I'll leave Wyndale school first!' "Well, Well, no harm done," eaid Mr. Barthorne, clutching at his hat, "if I d have known that you d taken things as hard as this "How did you suppose I was go ing to take 'em?" said Miss Negley with a scornful laugh : "did you mistake me far the dust under vour feet?' "I assure you, ma'am, that noth ingot" the sort was in my mind," humbly uttered Mr. Barthorne, "I wish you good afternoon." he hurried out, remounted his gray steed, which, poor beast, was just composing itself for a comfort able doze in the sunshine, and rode off, making, to Alice Hopkins' in tense dismay, straight for the shady woods, where she still sat arranging ferns around the ribbon of her sum mer hat. "There is no use trying to run away," thought she, "I may as well stay where I am. And after all why should I be afraid of Mr. Bar thorne?" Mr. Barthorne checked his rein as he saw the beautiful young school teacher there under the trees. He nodded pleasantly. "Fine day, Miss Alice," said he, wiping his brow with the identical yellow silt handkerchief which had just now served as a duster to his boots. "Yes," eaid Alice, standing like some lairy wood-nymph beside the spring ; "please Mr. Barthorne, what did she say?" "What did who pay?" said the middle aged gentleman, turning scarlet. ' Miss Negley. Don't think me intrusive," she added ; but I know all about it." "The deuce you do!" said Mr. Barthorne. "Why, she wouldn't let rne get in a word edgewise that's what she said. Perhaps, however, I haila lucky escape." "But you must own that it is hard." said Alice, earnestly. "Hard?" echoed Mr. Barthorne. "I should have supposed it would hsve suited hr exactly. But," a new idea burst athwart his brain; "there's as good fish in the sea as ever were caught out of it. Miss Alice, what would you say if I were to ask you to be ray wife?" Alice Hopkins looked at him in amazement. "I, Mr. Barthorne," she exclaim ed "You are young enough to be my daughter, sure enough," said the worthy man, not without some bit terness, "but I'm not so very old, either, and I've a good home to of fer any woman who will take pity on my loneliness." "Loneliness?" Alice looked at Mr. Barthorne in amazement. It had never occurred to herlittlt innocent heart that Mr. Barthorne, in the big white house with the pair of horses and the close carriage, could ever be lonely. And perhaps there was something in the dewv brightness of her eyes, i as she ran as she raised thera to Mr. Barthorne' ikMbt emboldened him to plead his cause with more energy. "I should love you very dearly, Alice," he said with a trembl. in his voice. "I would bo very good to vou. Won't veu answer me, Al- ' Her head droDDed : there was an instant of silence, nd then she said, "Yet, Mr Barthorne, I will marry you. He bent over and kissed her fore head. "You'll not regret it, my lass," said he. "And you're the very girl I would have picked out of a thou sand. I'm glad now that Miss Neg ley wouldn't listen to me." Alice started. "Oh, Mr. Barthorne," she said, was that your errand ?" Some Burled Cities. Mr. James Stevenson, of the geo logical Burvey, reports the discovery of several more ruined cave and cliS cities, differing from any before examined. The most remarkable was a village of sixty-five under ground dwellings, situated near the summit ot one of the volcanic foot hills of the San Franciseo Mount ains, in the San Juan region of Ari zona. The surface stratum ol the hi'l had, by exposure, become har dened, and formed the common roof for tho entire community, ihe dwellings were excavated after a common pattern. They had no in- ter-communication oeneath the sur face, and were onlv accessible bv square holes leading from the sur face by a vertical shalt to the Moor of the main room of the dwelling. Foot rests holes at convenient dis tances along the sides of the shaft served the purpose of a stairway. At its base was an oval shaped, arch roofed room, about twenty feet in its smallest diameter. At the ends and in in the side opposite the entrance, lew doorways connected the main room with smaller rooms, the whole suite or dwelling consisting of four apartments. A groove, eighteen inches deep by fifteen in width, extending irom the floor of the main room up one side of the shaft to the surface of the hill its bottom filled with ashes and its sides blackened by smoke formed the fire place and chimney of the establishment. Many curiosities illustrating the social and domestic customs of the extinct race were found, such as stone mauls and axes, the imple ments used in excavating the dwell ings, pottery bearing a great variety of ornamentation, bones, nails and needles of delicate workmanship, the metate or family grinding stone for grain, shell and obsidian orna ments, and implements of wood. There were 6igns of inter-commu mcation between this village and a cliff city, some fifteen miles distant, also indications of ihe contempora neous inhabitancy of the two. This city or rather cluster of villages, oc cupied the sides of a cativon, which has recently been christened Walnut Canyon, an immense fissure in the earth, with nothing above the gen eral level of the country to indicate its existence to the traveler until he steps upon the edge of its precipi tous brink. The sides have been gullied by storms and torrents, leav ing shallow, cave-like places of great length at different heights, along the bottom of which, wherever the ledge furnishes a sufficient area, dwellings, in groupes or singly, were built. Other villages, like the one exam ined, could be seen along the can yon for a distance of five miles. Among the rlics found was a wood en spindle wheel, similar to those in URe by the Pueblos of the present time. Nothing indicating the use of me tallic tools of any description was discovered. The surface of the wood of which the whirl was formed, had apparently been charred and then ground down to the required size and shape by rubbing it upon sand stone. A shaft of reed similar to bamboo, a spscies entirely unknown in that region at this time, it'll re mained in the whirl. It had been broken by the ancient werkman, and neatly mended by winding about it a piece of fine twine. The , . i - i end ol this twine oeing examinea under ihe microscope disclosed the fact that its fibre was of very fine human hair. Article0 of wood, corn cobs and even the perfect grains of corn, wal nuts, bones of elk, antelope and wolf, portions of wearing apparel of a fab ric resembling the mummy cloth of Egypt, but made from material un familiar to the explorers, and other perishable articles were found in abundance. The preservative qual ities of theatmosphere of this region are remarkable, and it seems that centuries have elapsed since the last of the race or races occupied these cities and villages. 1 he absence of weapons of war, ot works of defense either than such as are constituted by the selection of almost inaccessible localities, of tem ples, of idols, of hieroglyphics or nictures, together with the durabili ty and solidity of the dwellings, 60 different from anything to be found of the handiwork of existing unciv ilized races of that region, and the wide extent of these ruins indicate the existence of allied races covering iare portions of the present territo ries of Aiizona, New Mexico and Utah-as well as Northern Mexico. In a bicramv case tried at the Oar . Liverpool Assizes recently, the pris oner, a young woman named Bersr Wardle, pleaded that her husband sold her to one George Chrisnall with whom the bigamous marriage was contracted for the orice of a quart of beer; and having been so sold, she thought sne was iree to marry again. The man who had both hands caught in a hay cutter knows what it is to meet disaster on every hand. Help others and you relieve your self. Go out and drive away the cloud from a distressed friend's brow, and you will return with a lighter heart. 4,Yeur father is entirely bald now isn't he?" said an Austin man to the eon of a millionaire. "Yes," replied the youth sadly, I'm the only heir he has left." f "freeie- out" between riA r..c on1 iho Vnrtb TN.le there . vsiu A iwia aim -v. - : is a prospect of an over production oi ice. eraiu What Oar Young Daagbtera Read. It is very unusual to find a moth er who is indifferent to her daugh ter's clothes. Even when that daughter is but a wee toot the petty details ef costume are scrupulously looked after, and the maternal mind allows itself to be plainly disturbed overincongruousness oftint between the ribbons serving as fillet and necktie, and by meagtmess f gar niture on (rock and apron. Practical-minded women will even, in spite of girlish remonstrance insist on low heels, loose clathes, and warm wraps, and with wise laws and hy gienic maxims crush the fashiona ble yearnings of budding woman hood far French heels, a genteel waist and ekeveless jackets. Careful, intelligent housewives are scrupu lously exacting in regard to the amount of cracked wheat and oatmeal, beefsteak and potatoes, milk and brown-bread which the growing maidens must consume; and if the fitful appetite so often Been iu school girls tails to respond to the mother's cooking, the family doctor is promptly applied to for tonics and iron. A9 a matter of fact, the average affectionate Ameri can mother looks after the physical neds and social duties of her daughter.- with more or less of conscience, common sense, and rightful mater nal pride. She feeds and clothes them with considerable expenditure of time and thought, sends them to the best school she can find, has them taught to play on the piano, to dance, and perchance to dabble in decorative art, and when they have attained the age at which they are expcted to leave school and " go out," she exerts all her energies to provide far them a good time, and to help them to settle in life." In a word, the mother's utmost care is concentrated on supplying physical fowl and clo.hing, and what has been called " ornamental gingerbread." But what can be said about the endeaver to provide for our daughters mental nourishment and intellectual adorn meuts(?) to develop in them a taste for great and noble thoughts, and the ca pacity to enjoy coiiipiniunship with pure and elevating writers, and as sociation in ideal worlds filled with honest men and pure women ? to arouse that instinct for true knowl edge which is, indeed, the main pur pose of education, certainly of that kind of education which is "the leading of human souls to what i9 best, and making what is best out of them ?" There is no more amazing phase of nineteenth-century feminine de velopatent than its passionate and enervating indulgence in nauseous mental pabulum, and the appalling extent to which an unlimited supply of such stuff is furnished to the young. The same woman who is conscientiously careful of the school companionship of her daughter twelve or fourteen years, is appar ently criminally indifferent to the character of her associates in the world of book. She will watch what boy carries her girl's books home from school, but forgets to look below the cover of the new nov el that same daughter haa brought back from the circulating library, stopping there for it on the way home. Now this apathy or ignorance in regard to what young girls read is responsible for the destruction of the finer tone of character of many of our children developing into wo manhood, and explains a good deal of the frivolity, demoralizing coquet ry, and unfortunate "affairs" which from time to time startle a commu nity and bring sorrow and disgrace on highly respectable fam ilies. During the formative period of life, when both mind and body are changing from the chrysalis state of the child into the completeness ot the woman, the future stamina moral powers of resistance and phys ical capacity for endurance, the pur er mentil tone and healthy bodily muscles ure dependent upon the manner in which both body and mind are exercised, fed and trained, and to the quality and quantity of the nutritious particles of matter,' material and intellectual, which go to make the substance ot the one and spirit of the other. Feed vour child on pickles and I sweetmeats, allow her to wear paper soled shovs and an insufficiency ot flannel, and we all know what the consequences will be dyspepsia and hectic cough. JJoes unevtr occur to you that the analogy applies to her m.ntal sustenance and tquipment? that if we fted her unformed and emotional nature with high-spiced, morbid, unreal fiction she will be come incapable ot digesting better literature, and that by the time she is a woman anything else will be re jected by the pampered appetite 7 Have you never een this, you motn- era ? Harper s Bazar. Dying of Tbirat. Did you ever suffer extreme hun ger or thirst?" was asked of a Ken tucky Colonel who had been relating some solid stories about himself. "Well," he replied, "I never suf fered what might be called extreme hunger, but na man knows how to endure the agonies of thirst better than I do." "I remember the time well," he continued retrospectively. "I wan on a fishing excursion and became lost in tbe woods. For three days not a drop passed my lips. My lengthened absence finally caused alarm and a party was sent in search of me. They found ne lying in an unconscious condition an the bank af a little trout stream, and it was hours before any hope of saving me was entertained." "Was tbe trout stream dry ?" ask ed one of tha interested listen ers. "Dry? Certainly not How could I catch fish if the stream was drr?" Wp11 T don't m how you conld'ciailT when they have contained suffer from thint with a stream af sour milk. The acid must ba corn water close at hand ?" pletely removed, or it will sour the "Water close at hand !" repeated : next milk that is put in tha cans, the Kentucky Colonel. "And what ; Want of care in this respect has has water got te do with a man's much to da with making poor being thirsty ?" Philadelphia CalL , butter. WHOLE NO. 1(598. Credit Not Good. "I suppose," remarked the tramp as ho helped himself to a pickle at the lunch table, "I suppose if Presi dent Arthur came in here and said : Johnny, let's have a glass of beer and harg it on the slate til pay day, like a good fellow you'd let him have the stuff, wouldn't you ?" "Of course I would," replied the barkeeper, with a wide smile. "Why sheuldn't I ?" "And yet President Arthur is near ly 2.000 million dollars in debt," continued the tramp. "At least the government is, and you have to wait until that was paid before you could get your nickle." "Is that so ?''isked the barkeeper, rather staggered by the figures. "You bet! And I suppose if Queen Victoria walked in and said : 'Ho, Johnnv, let's have a glas o' 'arf an"arf, hand Hi'll tell me Lud o' tne buttonbag to settle when 'e gets me spuas. you a spun tne wine up wnh your awn fair hand, wouldn t tylj yQ , , t ,, ... I surely would,' return the bar keeper. And yet Queen ictona 1 is in debt nearly three thousand millions ; or her government is. and you would .A a L. A v A. 1 ..A iL . M I - get inai ten cents aooui tne uiuute of the next century." "As much as that?" demanded the barkeeper, in astonishment, "Then there's the Emperor of Germany, if he should alight from hia special horse car in front of your door, and say, 'Mien Gott, Chonny, give me a scnoppe, und I vill bay for dot yen I soltmein dog,' you wouldn't hesitate a minute, would you ?" "I suppose not,' said the barkeeper rather startled by the information concerning the other potentates. "And yet that same Emperor is in debt over one hundred and ten mil lions, continued the tramp, solemn- "I don't believe it,' exclaimed the barkeeper. "It's a fact," persisted the tramp. "Ami the Czar of Russia, suppose he piiuuii.1 vuuic jiiiji:ii 111 11 tin pome , , t 1 ... I friends, and say, 111, Johnovitcn, 1 . ., ' 1 . ' , , . ' puttnemounk on ice ar.d let th! r.,, , , J - . -. u ' b.ll stand over till Chriatovitchmas.j , , ., ... 1 vuu wuuiuu k wail iu cviiiraiuuiiii from behind, nut you'd waltz right 1' over the bar, wouldn't you; "I don't know." replied the bar keeper, cautiously. "How is h fixed?" "He owes 2,000 millions," answer ed the tramp, "Do them people all owe it for bar bills?" inquired the barkeeper with a shudder. "Most of it," responded the tram p. "But I don't owe any man on earth a cent ; and yt I don't sup pose you would trust me for a glass of beer to save my life, would you ?'' "No, sir!" sheuted tbe bar keeper. "I wouldn't trust you for another free pickle. We liquor dealers are already out nearly S.OOO millions on the crowned heads, and I aint going five cents more en a man that hasn't got even a brim to his hat. Put that pickle back in the bowl or I'll stop up the rat hales with you!" And the tramp went off to work the racket somewhere else, while the barkeeper figured up his share of the losses on the crowned heads and tueked something on to the bills of his known to be pajing debtors. Brooklyn Eagle. Never o More. He had just got his oyster-shop opened to the public the other day when in came a man who asked: "Got anv raws?" "Yes. sir." "Serve 'em on the half-shell?" "We do." "Extra large ?" "We have some of the largest oys ters I ever saw." The price was asked and given, and as it seemed to be perfectly sat isfactory the man ordered a dozen and added : "I've got a slight contraction of the muscles of the throat, and some times I choke. If any thing happens to me run me to the door where I can get the air and then rush for a drink of water." The caterer promised to observe the caution, but it was onlv when the twelfth and last oyster was taken 1 in between two rows 01 teetn wnicn stood out like ten-ienny nails that anything happened. Then the eater suddenly raised one leg. his eyes blt"d out, and he began to skip around like a goal dodging a club. The choke had come. The caterer seized bim by the arm and rushed I him to the door, and then nurnea to the rear end of the restaurant for j a glass of water. When he returned with it. half expecting to see thet customer lying on the floor in the agonies of suffocation, no one was in siiiht. The n an was not in the door, nor at the deor, nor around the j ing, "there m Toupet scratching up door. He was two blocks away, show with his hands. Earnest Jol and tha twelfth oyster had gone ba fallen, the awkward one!" down to keep the company of the other eleven. Just exact' another such thing won't happen in that place again. Some other man with a contracted throat may start in to play the game, but before he has eaten his second oyster he will be dispatched with a hickory club, and his body sent ta'some medical college to find where the loose spoke was. Detroit Free Prtt. "What time will you come home to-night, my dear?" asked Mrs. Col onel Percy Yerger of her husband when he was going down town ta attend the meeting of vestry. "Whenever I get ready," answered the husband, crossly. "Oh ! well, don't come any later, please." The Austin ladies are proverbial for their accommodating disposi tion. Washing cans and pails is a very important work in the dairy, espe- j The Spiritual Effect of DrankennesM. An editorial in "Topics of the Time," of the December Century says : "This loss of self-respect, the lowering of ambition, and the fading out of hope are sigus of the progress of this disease iu the character. It i is a mournful spectacle that of the ! brave, ingenious, high-spirited man sinking steadily down into the de i gradation of inebriety ; but how j many such spectacles are visible all j oyer the land ! And it is not in the cuaracier 01 mose alone who are notorious drunkards that such ten dencies appear. They are often dis tinctly seen in the lives of men who are never drunk. Sir Henry Thom son's testimony is emphatic to the effect that "tne habitual use of fer mented liquors, to an extent far short of what is ncesary to produce intoxication, injures the body and diminishes the meutal power." If, as he testifies, a large proportion of the most painful and dangerous maladies of the body are due to the use of fermented liquors, taken in the quantity which is conventional ly deemed moderate, then it is cer tain that such use of them must re sult alio in serious injuries to the mental and moral nature. Who does not kuow reputable gentlemen, physicians, artists, clergymen even, who were never drunk iu tneir lives, and never will be, but wha reveal, in conversation and in conduct, cer tain melancholy effects of the drink ing habit? The brain is so often in flamed with alcohol that its func tions are imperfectly performed ; and there is a perceptible loss of mental power aud of moral tone. The drinker is not conscious of this loss : but these who know him best )are paiufuliy aware that hii p,tctfV. ; ,;..,, Mr hia ;.tmant ia j aww av abuser savvuj aa iu juuiMVUI lt,Od jsouad, hia temper less serene, his spinlUltl vi8ioiI les3 clear because he Urries every day a little too long at j tbe wine Eym lhoge wbo refuge tQ j elltertaln at.celic theories respecting I U)fcsel(ev . mav b b . ! er that there are uses of them that stop short of drunkenness, and that are still extremely hurtful to the mind aad heart as well as the body. That conventional idea of moderation, to which Sir Henry Thompson refers, is quite elastic ; the term is stretch ed to cover habits that are steadily despoiling the life of its rarest fruits. The drinking habit is often defended by reputable gentlemen to whom the very thought of a debauch would be shocking, but to whom, if it were only lawful, in the tender and just solicitude f friendship, such words as these might be spoken : It is true that you are not drunkards, and may never be ; but if you could know. what. i too evident to those who love vou best, how your charac ter is slowly losing the firmness of it-texture ami the finest of its out 1 texture and the fineness of its out- f i line; how vour art deteriorates in ,, . u . the delieacv of its touch ; how the , , - , ... ' . Htmospi. ere ol vour hi seems to grow , , ,,- , , 0 murky and thu sky lowers gloennlv 1 ....J i;l. .iiwtj j uu, juu nuum uoi unua your daily indulgence harmless in I its measure. It is in just such lives iasvours that drink txhibits some i of its most mournfull tragedies." A Little Close. In one of our hotels recently, says the Portland, (Me.) correspondence of the Boston Globe, a resident of one of the country towns in this State told several stories in regard to his townmen. and of one lamily in particular, all the members of which have the reputation of being "a little close." One of the sons at last made up his mind to be married, and concluded, after long thinking that he ought in some way to make a change in his usual apparel, but could not decide exactly what the change should consist in, and at last concluded to consult with his father, and the old man, after hear ing him through, thought the matter over, and at last said : "Joe, what have you been paying for your hats ?" "A dollar," replied the son. "Then," said the old man, giving Joe a slap on the shoulder, "1 11 tell you what to do. Liz is a goood girl and you'd better do the thing in style. Get a dollar and a half hat, Joe." The members of the family were not too close to invest in fancy stock and the father and eons owned a very valuable Jersey cow in com mon, and "the Jersey" seemed to be always present in the thoughts of each one of them. One morning, after Joe had settled down on a farm of his own, a younger brother made his appearance at his house and said half crying : "Joe we're in trouble at home." "The Jersey isn't dead, is she," shrieked the ahrmed Joe. "Not quite as bad as that." replied the brother, wiping his eyes; "grand mother's dead." Kdouard Frrre a Village Criti-. When Eilouard Frere first came to hewueu the world did not call him a great painter. But all tha Iittie children learned earned to love rum and kept on with their games when he was near, lor they knew that Monsieur Frere was interested in their play. As the villagers gather ed around his easel when he painted jn the ope air. or now and then paid a reverent visit to his studio and scanned the sketches on tbe wall, they would pick out their friends and acquaintances from tha pictured greups with many an ex clamation of delight. "See!" they would exclaim, before a painting representing boys coast- And there are the three Arnoux, hugging each other tight, and slid ing down hill upon one small sled. Ah! it is so in life: if brother are rich and live in a wide house, then they can quarrel politely, and stand aloof from ane another like gentle men ; but when quarters are narrow, then there is the more need for affec tionate embracing." "Hold Sainte Beuve and Y'von have tumbled together! That is good. If one must be down in tbe world, it is more endurable if yon have good company." "Look, there is Donat,the dandy ; how proud he is of his new hat ! He must needs be painted in it be fore the boys had spoiled the shape for him, and now all tha world will imagine that he wears a hat like that everv dav of his life tha pretend er!"' And so the villagers would rattle on, almost without cessation. St. Nicholas- Cynical Spanish proverb, that, after all may not ba without soma justice: "A woman's tears cost little, but bring her much !" "Eeonomy is the road to wealth," and the way can ba easily told by the Ull grass which streaks its centra. videville, KOLiOWt."HR. j1Bli Administrator. lerais fra. Uaum iMwK Co.. Pert 1Ul" jana. compressed ; when Mr. Bartnorne, a in a low wine
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