w u r - Somerset Herald! vrtns of Publication trery Wadnwaday morals t 3 00 , : ' paid to adraDoa ; otfcarwUa 2 M ' ,rtiaoo 1H t lco',nox ntU all 1 rlJ P- rtinMiert Bagleetlna: vn(n ubaoHheri 0 uk w.u t teld reapaoribl for tha ab- witoTla from one ortofllo to an- .repeal - Addrea The Somerset Herald, Somerset, Pa. .TTOi;NEV-ATLAW. tSoioeraet, Fa. rr W. B1ESECKER, r ' ATTORNEYAT-LAW tionierf t la. m .air In Cook a Beerite Block. ,i.i:;e R. scull, f ATTOKNEY-AT-LAW, J S'mrt Pa. h' n. SCOTT, ATTOKNEY-ATLAW. Sudhms "a. KOOSER. ATTOKNEY-ATLAW, Somerset, Pa. ENDS LEY. ATTORN EY-AT LA W, Somerset, P TRENT. ATTUKNEYAT-LAW, Sumeriiet, Penn a. SCULL. attoeney-atlaw, Somerset, Pa. H.' T.AER. ATTOKNEY-ATLAW, Somerset, Pa., . . i c..mi .ml ariudnlnc eountle . 'nt'ru'fted to him will promptly ! "IK TH. W. H. RflTKL. ; , ,FFi;OTII RUPI'EL. I ATTORN EYS-AT-LAW. rill be ' , , !! punctually attended to. "'.t-jin Main Or" ureei opposite tbe ,.B 'th Hi.". KN. L. C. COLWiRK r- , RORN COLBORN. I, ' ATTORN EYS-AT-LAW. . ....iw. Intruded tn ourcare will be prompt. " - r attended tn '..llectl.i m'le In Sum- K.lturd. nl adiolnina t'-oontte. Survey . t yiic-ing done on reasonable terau. ft "I M.I AM TI. KOONTZ. ATTORN ti-Ai - . ., Somerset, Pa., air prompt attention to nuarneaa emtrort ..'V rri in SouwimI and adjolnlnn eountle. - it Print in Houae Row. D KNNIS MEYERS. ATTOKNEY-AT-LAW. Homeraet. Pcr.n a r(il MlnM entrusted to hiaeare will be ,l,, i ltti pmropmri ami uuriiij. ..n Mam I 'row Street, next door to Sny . , . f n. .re. twes l. rrc.ii. ,1 ATTORN EY-AT LAW. S'.morset. Pa. Mammoth Hl-ck. op ftnlr. Entrance, rtrcet. '..l!eetlonii made. eatatc . , title eiamlned. and nil leal buitneM .. v.) to with priniar.ei and Hdeliiy. i'.v K I MM EL. ATT KN EY-AT L A W, ftumeniet, Pa. PIUTTS. ATTORNEY-AT I. AW, S.niitrurt, Fa. t-f. up-rtairf In Mammoth Bloek. O. KIMMEL. ATTOKNEY-ATLAW, Somertet, Pa. attend tn all rslnes" entrusted to his care . iLrrwt and adiotiiln coiinim wuu f.r,- m ! n.lelltj. UfflOf on Vain Crow street. jpr. NRY F. SCH ELL. ATTOKNEY-ATLAW, s cmt and Penrtnm A (tent, it in'Mammutn Hlaek. Somerset, Pa VALENTINE HAY. ATTOKNEY-AT-LAW i-fl ltl-r in Heal Rut. Somw t, P , :,,: ii. all tmidne entrusted to bis car rj tneff and ndety will with tmhn h. thl. i ATTORNEY-AT LAW Somerset. Pa, tr !; i,r.mitlT attend to all l-nslne entmnted r'u: !.nev anr.need on eoileetloni, avc. Ol - ii. Slammotb KolldlnK. J. or.LE. ATTORNEY-AT LAW, Somerset PaM P- fl Til I'nslneM entras'ed to my care - ' to witb pp.miitnew and fidelity. J A AC ATTOKNEY-A1-LAW Somerset, Penn a. rj'l K. W. KLOUGH, ruuir rinsK AS am sikgeo - i.r,h'.ii nerTieesto tb oda of Snmret ri iniir l allf In t,.wn or r.unirr .r.mpt!y "if.! t..' i an found at rthpe dT ..r nlabt, :.r.f..tialy nfad. -"ce on !.i crn.r ol llmnnd. over hnvier M.ire apnaattf. f) : H. S. KIMMEL ti-ndem Kit pri'teaslonal service to the eitl- .. ..,n,rrM inn leluitv. i ntm nri-w . n..tMl t:e run I l-ond at tile ottlrr. on Main v . i-a.t : tbe liiamond. n'l. II. HIU'HAKER te rriers his ,".fiij"til irrlee to the eit liens of Sotn urn, I virlnltv. Ottiee In residence en Main ftw rt ot th IXamood. nn. vM. RAITII tenders his 'it iirf.astona1 aerrlre to the eltlteni of So- .ifr,nedw.raFt of Wayne a Berk.Wle'f j-t.ruir nre. rV-I JOHN P.ILT. i t IENT1ST. "mt n '.atr- InrV'k ai Ilceritf Block Sonier- f, Vi. 1) TI. WILLIAM COLLINS. IiENTlST, SOMERSET. FA. In Mammoth Kl"ck. above Koyda Iru - - itfti bo can at all time be b.on-1 pre par ti ;, all kinds ol work, such as filllrr rea-a ..,r.on fcc Artificial teeth of all kinds. :'!' the l material Inserted. Operation irrmnied. II. HOWARD WYNNE, MD. J'lIfXST" H'.V. i'EXXA . !HwnithiFn. Ear. Ni and Tbrnat. r-.i a .o'.nii uractice. Hoarf. . a. to r.u. liibera Oreen lilock. a Main bU I.1' THOMPSON. M D. SVRGEetN HENT1ST. H. had a pnifeiml experience of mora than jonnstown. - mn iiu.iso Term A sraiin t. . r,." m No MSi Vain street (op stair) over : !.n li.bm Hard war SUire It auiwiFw T t, persona who want work de to ''UjHitrbliireband. etl6'(3. Tames o. ari bit ptofe KIERNAN. M. D. ten ofew'ooal aerTlee to tbe elltien of terwt at,.1 ririn'.tv. fie ran he found at the wi.lri t ot I (Hat be'r on Main Street or at the t-tm Ir lienry hrnlker. liipts lsav. ; TT. J . K. MILLER ha tK-rma- j 1 DLtly located In Berlin for the practice of -' pr,':ewiai. (ffic oj po:;e Cnarlea K nsslns;- kut. ajT. n, Ttut JTAM0XD HOTEL, STOYRTOWN. I'ENN'A. Till pr.pniar and well known koaaa ha lately "iil.uTur, and rely Tefittel with all new tnn tamltar. ank b bat made It a ery -?a l rotiplna place tbe taaneitr : public e" '"t it ana enow eannot be rarpasaed. all oe- c.-M. ltb a lar psblir kail attached lt Htt:. Also lar and roomy atablmc '"' laa btavrdlna ean be bad at tb lowest pu t j the week, day or meal. BAMVELOC8TER. Prop. .E.tXir Iiiamond Smyatow ,Pa CHARLES HOFFMAN. TAILOR. (HryHfllrri,e, ,,, ) UIKT STTLES aUXWELT PRICES. ERCHANT VOL. XXXII. NO 4b YOU Respectfnlly Invited to Call and Examine, Before Purchas ing Elsewhere the Largest Assortment of Stoves, Tin, Copper, Or Sheet-Iron Ware, Knives, Forks, Plated Ware, Lamps, Enameled Ware, Clothes Wringers, Etc. To be found in the Vtf tern 1'art of this State. Our ;oxis ar Warranted to be as rcp-p-entel, and prices are Nett Cash, within the reach of all persons needing them. TIN ROOFING, SPOUTING AND JOBBING OF M.J. KISDS IS TI.V. SHt:ET !KO K COPVF.U Promptly Attended to at lowest Kates. Brushes a Specialty, at Wholesale Only. Onhrs Solicited Jrom Merchants StUiiuj GockIs in jf Line. FRANK W. HAY, o. 2S0 Washington Street. Johnstown, Iena. To'SHOEBIJYEBS' OF SOMERSET TOWN AND COUNTY. We Wish to Call Your Attention to the Large Stock of BOOTS, SHOES AND SLIPPERS, Which have arrived for the Spring Tnulo of 1 SSI. When von visit Johnstown we in our Large Store, and will take pleasure m the fine line of Shoes for ladies Which we cany in Stock, as Medium and Coarse Uoots and Shoes, tanners, when you viit our Store ask us to show you the Hand-made A cjri: kip plow roil jikx and boys. It is the Best Slioe made, at a very Low is conducted on a OISTE PRICE SYSTEM. All our Goods are marked in Plain Figures, at the very Lo,ret Pombk Price, so if vou can't come vourelf send a postal card. iecrihir.ti as near as vou can the Style, Quality and Price you want to pay, and we will send them to you !y return mail. L. STARGABDTEB, OXE-PIUCE OPERA JJOFSE SHOE STORE, 2VJt Slain Ktre't, SOMERSET COUNTY BARK IE (KSTABLISHKD 177.) CH1BLES. J. H1EB1S0H. President. K. I PEITTS. Cashier Olleetlonf male In all parta of tbe Inited Statel. CHARGES MODERATE. Parties .wishlna to s nd money Wert can be ae- j ite.1 l.v dralt on New York in any suta. ..nii,nH tituia with Tirouintnea. 1". S. lknd bouaht and dd. Money and valuables aeenred : byonanf Metxld's celebrated lates, with a s-ar- rent Yale 3 i 00 time lock I ACCOUNTS SOLICITED. -All legal hohdajaobeerred.- deeT FASHIONABLE CUTTER & TAILOR, Havlnz bad many years exerlen, e In all branches of be Tailorina l'U inesa I aruarantee Satirtation to al! who may eali up on me and tavor me with their pat- fmaae. Vuars. SJ--, MM. n. iiofnri-.ri.Fit, Somerxet, P. mart ALBERT A. Hoasa. J. Sott Ward. HORNE & WARD rccaaeoaa to EATON & BROS, SO. 27 FIFTH AVENUE, PITTSBURGH, PA. KPRIG, 1882. NEW GOODS SAY SPEKALTHIS .broid.ri.i, Ucm, Millia. WhH. Goad., Hi kerchiefs, 0r Trimwinr, HoiiafT, ClovM, Cortett, Katlik Herlna Uadarwav, la fiwti' aad Cklidraa' Clothiaf . Fiat j Geeds, Yirat, Zfhyr, Watw ridt f Alt Kid fcr FANCY WORK, Gent's FiiiMliiri Gafi, k, k. vcrarATaoAB ia aasr n ti.lt - fOtVEtSBrmilLATTEStFDTO WITB 4 IE AST) DISfAlCB. t- ARE shall he pleased to see you howing you and Gentlemen well as a very large Stock of Price. Our husiness IoIiiin.owii, Ia. atr.!yr XECUTOliS NOTICE. -tjileof Thomas Oil an. dw'd late Addiaon J township. S.meriet cunty, Ja. Letters testamentary on tb above ertata ' havina leen -ranted to tbe unertianed by tbe ' proper anthorltT. notice la tereby aiven to all pertMinn indebted to an id estate to make immediate i payment, and those havlnif claimsaglnsttbeaauie ! will present I hem duly au'bertii-ated lor aettle ! ment on Saturdav, May ., 14. 1 M. A. l;oss, j KOUEKT E. ROSS, I aprl. Exet-atora. s alesmen Wanted On Salary. KELIAHLE MEN bavj, Ko,l nj and plurk. to aril M 1.kK natnral abilities STOCK. Such men are sure to tucvee-1 ant earn lihkkal sala rii.s truni the start. Write !r tcrm- CLFN BROS. murlit Situations 1'Ermas kt. Nurservmen. KKCHKMhK, N. Y. Head the papers and he post ed as to the hest and cheapest spot in the city to buy your lieady-made clothing. Oui spring stock, now ready, is fine, well assorted and low priced. A. C. YATES & CO., IfJtffMii,tatmt&liilSti PHILI'DF-Ll'IIIA. ) f f a week at borne. 5 outfit frea aN lrvpT atolutely tan. No rik. Cap .Nr II lital not required. Header. If yoo VU J J want barineaa at which uerKin of e.tberaex, "ur.g crold.eaa make areat pay aU , tbe time tbev work, witk abaolut o-nalotT ( wrltefi particvlar to H. Mallctt, PortlanCMe. tSSOLUTIOX NOTICE. Notice la herebr riven that the en-partnership hereiolore trinu n between tieirice H Lire and 1 Adtn J. Loll, umler tbe firm name of tbe Somer j art lUIrr mpany f Sneret. i'a u dla- p.lved by mutual onMnt on the lt ol April. IbM, 1 OEOKUE H IJVE, ; aprl. AUIN'J.LCLU 1. Ja f a. f la avery townihlp. Ttllare VVSniCU land elty In Tet.n'yianta. iiiUillMriii men nod women to aoliclt ordera ft a ' atnlrd quick felling book. Aiblreas lor paxtl.a lan and lorritorr, JOUS 3. fOMTX"K. I apnB.4U Boa lit, Altovna, l a. AGENTS! wanted for the Uvea of all the President of tbe V. S. The lar twice owr price. The faateat aelllna; book. Apcent Immena nruBta to aa-enta. AU Inllu-ral- r bMiMtauiitert. neat took ever aoHl tor tmwm mirr onl wajit it. ABT.ooeean beeotna a aueeeaurt aa-ent T.ra free. Haxxrr Book wod, Malm. Co., Port omer XHK t,lTTI,E WOMAN. Ion't talk to me of Olympus' maids, " Divinely tall and fair," Of Cleopatra's imperial form, Of Juno's stately air. Those mighty dame?, with redoubted names Mayerst have hold theirsway. "Tis the little woman bless her heart Who rules the world to.day. With her wilful, winsome ways, Her artful, artless siui'es Her airy grace and her fairy face Her wisdom, wit ana wiles. She mocks the pride aud sways hcstiengtb, She bends the will of man, As only such a despotic elf A little woman can. Though her pathway may lead thro' darkest ways, She always finds a light ; Though her eyes bcdnzzled by fortune's rays She's sureto see aright ; Though her wisdom be of no special school, Her logic, "just because," The first has settled a kingdom's fate, The liu-t has made its laws. "l is the little woman that goes ahead Whi n men would lag behind ; The little woman who sees her chance, And always knows her mind Who can slyly smile as she takes the oath To honor, love, obey, And mentally add the saving clause In a little woman's way '. Would thedianiond seem such a perfect gem: If it measured one foot round? Would the rose-leaf yield such a sweet perfume If it covered yards of ground ? Would the dew-drops seem so clear and pure If dew like raiu should fall? Or the little woman be half so great If she were six (Vet tall ? 'Tis the hand as soft as the nestling bint That grips the grip of steel ; 'Tis the voice as low as the summer wind That rules without apjK-al : And the warrior, scholar, the saint and sage May tiht, and plan, and pray. The world will wag to the end of time In the little woman's way. X. Y. l'n: IN XHK WINDOW. ''111 keef the light in the window, Saudy, till you come tack." , "Nver mmd, motlier. said the ! hoy, stuhdii.g at the door in an un I certain, slouching kind of way, "I I misrht he late." ! "It's dark tdong the line," eaid the mother, "and a hit of candle light would be illsparc J if you got a tutn : h!e hy it. I'll keep the candle burn ing till ye conn Uack. Slie was a hard-featured Scotch woman, healthy and active, though no longer youug, and as she talked, ehe woiked on, ironing the linen the had washed and starched, and heap ing it, like a snow-drift, in a great basket beside her. Four other chil dren were in the room, girla and "joys, too young to do much for themselves, but .Sandy was eighteen, a tall, handsome fellow, with ripe lips and cheeks, and dancing eyea. "it Sandy only would have been a little steadier." the mother often sishej ; but to he steady" wa not Sandy's forte. Off, ever and always to the river side, where other loung ing boy9 watched the boat come in at the ferry, or plnnged stones into the water tor a village pet, the great Newfoundland, "Whiskers" by name, to "fetch,"' No harm in that, the mother thought, if the boys had all been good ; but, evenings, at the stores, they were worse; and the de cent washer-wovvan shivered as she listened to her hoy's home-coming step at nights, le?t some day lie should cpy Squire Peelor's ways, and lrink too much. Squire Pfel or's btys were her terror, though they were thesons of the richest man in the neighborhood. But now, as Sandy stood in the door, so tall, and faiir, ami bonnv, the mother's heart crew litiht. "He'd be sure to 'settle down' and help her with the bairns j some day, she said. No doubt ol that ; he but a bit boy now ; and she ironed on until her work was done, and then put the candle in the win dow to light the boy along the lonely lane at his home-coming. The can dle burut itself away and sunk into the socket, and the very wick smol dered out, laaving only smell and smiake behind it, ami still lit no Sandy across the threshold of his humble- home, for that night Sandy had ran away. The life at home was to hard for him. The restraints of his mother's watchful eye irke him. To do his own will, to have his wn way, Sandy left his home behind him, but lie had grace enough to re member, with a pang, those words: "I'll keep the light burning till ye come back, Sandy." Some vague 'nope of being rich and doing grfat things for those at huine. was in hi mind, or he believ ed so; hut a selfish desire to escape the drugerv and the le straint, gave the actual impulse to his steps. He ehipped as a sailor the next day, and began in earnest a wild and reckless tailor's life. It suited him. Now and then, when the storm was at its height, and far in tha distance the lamns of some tall lighthouse shone like a great red eye, the tir.y flicker of that window sheltered candle would dawn upon his memory, and he would hear his mother's voice, say ing, "111 keep it burning until ye come tack, Sandy." Now and then, amid the yarns and songs of the fore castle merry-making, he heard the crooning of the tunes she used to sing over her work old Scottish ballads, or perhaps some hymns handed down from the time when old Covenanters worshipped God and defied man ameng th purple heather. Tby never lured him home to help her, thouch. The vears rolled on, and even this sting of conscience loet its paining. In those days there were no such things as sober sailors, nor captains of temperance principles. Hard drinkers were roost old salts, and most young ones. Sandy drank with the rest. He grew broad and stout His cheek was bronzed, his hair changed its tint, his voice grew deep and coarse. He was in no way a cood man, but he was a good eail- . . a, . or. As me years passea ne came 10 be an officer first mate of the ' and the door opened. At it stood an Agamemnon. His pockets were full 1 old, old woman, with white hair enough for all his purposes. Tbebis mother. He knew her stern, sea was better than land to him, and 'strong features, and her blue eyes when on shore be led that kind of still. set EST-AJBLISHED, 1827. SOMERSET, PA., WEDNESDAY. APRIL 50, ISS4. boisterous life that drives the thought of "mother" from men's very souls. He had friends, at least he thought so, men who knew him when his pay "jingled" in nis pock ets. He was not niggardly nay, once he had emptied his remaining dollars into a beggar's hand. Sandy was bravest of tbe brave; but he had never been generous enough nor brave enough to go buck to his east ward seaport, where his mother had left the candle burning for him in the window never, never. Five years were gone aud ten, and fifteen and twenty. A man nearly forty years of age stood in Sandy Cameron's shoes a man who led the wildest life under the moon ahore ; a man to whom fiery bran dy was as v ater to a child ; a man who remembered God only in bis oaths when the Agamemnon came after a long and stormy voyage just within 8ighiaof the coast within sight of its light-house, at least, for in the darkness fa stormy night nothing else was visible. Pattered with storms already, bruised by the waves, wounded by rocks, still the Agamemnon fought her way home ward : by the morrow eve 6ound earth would be beneath the feet of the wave-weary mariners for once, at least, all longed for it, even wild Sand v Cameron. He was glad. He j watched the towering lamps with joy and swore that they were pleas ant sights. Before he slept he stood a long time leaning over the taff rail, smoking, and thinking, if he ever thought. It was an evil linger ing for the Agamemnon. A spark from the cigar held in an unsteady hand, regarded by eyes not brighter from recent draughts of brandy, made its way somenow, wind-borne or demon-borae, into the place where the cargo of the vessel had been stored awaw, and at the dead of nignt they of the mid watch saw stealing through the planks beneath theai red and yellow tongues of tlames. I he vessel was on fire. fire! hre! lire: the word rang its way to heaven, shouted by every tfinrrueon board. The scenes that followed beggars description. None who lived tore member ever could forget it. There Wks no hope from the first ; none save in the boats. They were filled at once. Who could forget it ! Oh, who cotd-1 forget it! The old man pointing to the lights on shore and crying: " 1 wanted to see the children once before I died." The captain, deathly pale, showing that strange bravery which sailors only possess at such a time. Changing from a dictatorial old hard drinker to a very hero; cling ing in romantic fondness to his ship; and while he did his best for every, other soul on board, forgetting him self, and vowing to sink with her. The young passenger and his bride she clung to him ; the poor mother with her babe bound to her breast praying on her knees amid the tumult. The orphan child go ing home to its grandparents, wonder-stricken, and yet scarcely con scious of its danger. The sailors changed like the captain, into heroes. Vho could forget all this? Amid them all, gisantic in his strength, sobered at last by the awful scene around him, toiled Sandy Canif ron. They remembered him well, whose lives he saved. The bronzed man with light hair, and the grip of Her cules. To the boats and rafts some to live, some to die were all afloat. All going into the darkness, and struggling foims had vanished from the wares, and alone together, the flames approaching them like dancing demons, stood old Captain Oaks and his first mate, Sandy Cameron. " Ca ptain," said Sandy, u it's most over." " Aye, aye, lad," said the captain. " Give me your fiet. We've sailed together a good while, now. We eeem bound for the long voyage now. Lord help us, Sandy." "There's a chance yet, maybe," said the first mate "Try for it, captain." " No," said the sailor, " I go down with her." That was the last that Sandy Cameron saw or heard of the cap tain. A ruih and a roar from below, where spirits were stored, ended the words. Then came blinane-s and silence, and time paused for him. At last there was sound again. The 60und of waters. Sifht. the red lamps of the lighthouse. Feel ing, that of the wet sand against his face. Some strange providenc had saved Sandy's life. Bruised and weak, he lay motionless for a long time. Bruised and weak still, he ' i n ,wt. -.., 1 t f l.ta f..t of luff ni.'Xl 1 , Vi v in.- iv. v. n Above him his sailor eye ued to remember such things towered well-known rcks kissed by a strug gling moonlight. The sea had flung him into the arms of his native sea port ; and up above, a man wander ing along the shore, watching the light-house signals, perhaps, was singing a hymn : "There'i a light in tbe window for tbee, brother There' a light In the window for thae And then the tears rolled down the sailor's cheeks, and his softened heart yearned for the mother who had said : u I'll keep a light till ye come back, Sandy." Twenty years ago, and she was nearly fifty then. Probably she was dead ; but some one might be in the old home yet who could tell him of her. And so. in the midnight dark ness, the sailor staggered up the riyer path, through the changed streets, and, led by the compass of his heart, to the lane where his boy hood home had been so long be fore. The lane was no more a street of houses now ; but at its end. or he dreamt, Sandy saw a candle gleam. He drew nearer. No fancy misled him. Yes, between the curtains stood a candle, in very truth and in the window of his own old home. He staggered on, his heart beating wildly. He struck tho door with his hand. He waited, trembling, "What's this?" said she, in her Scottish acccent:. and 'he an swered : " A poor sailor, shipwrecked and needing shelter." " Come in," said she, " come in and warm ye. It's a bitter night The candle led ye Bere.na doot. It's burned these twenty years. Ye wonder at that? I'd a boy once. He left me. The candle burns for him. I've a fancy it will wile him back yet, and keep it burnin'. The others are all dead ; but I'll not be lieve he's gone ; and I said I'll keep a light till vou come btck, Sand; and I will." And then, as he flung himself on hie knees before her, she knew that Sandy had come back, indeed. He never again forsook her. A better son and a better man than Sandy came to be, those of the sea port say they may never see again. And if you go thither, they will point you out the little cottage win dow at which, strong in her faith for his return. Captain Cameron's moth er kept a lighi burning for him for all the nights for twenty years that and the mansion where, with her son, now married and captain of an ocean steamer, she yet lives to bless him. A Hole in the Sky. A tall bronze-faced man, with the easy, off hand manners and the ex- !ectorating ability of a citizen of the ar West, sat in the smoking car of an outgoing train on the Chicago, Bur lington and Quincy railroad as i' whirled throngh tho outskirts of the city. His satchel on the seat beside him bore the legend, " T. Z. Wil liams, Small Hopes, Arizona." He was returning home after a week's investigation of the ways of a big city. While seeing the sights he had met with one adventure which puzzled him exceedingly. He told of it in a free, careless manner. One morning he had started out to do a little prospecting," as he called it. Having served in the war, the pano rama of the battle of Gettysburg nat urally excited his attention. He bought a ticket, then he hired an opera glass, leaving a deposit of $.". While enjoying a prolonged squint through the glasses he was startled by hearing a sweet voice at his eioow. " Isn't it lovely ?" said the fair one. "How I wish I had brought my opera glasses. Mav I use yours a minute?"' With the gallantry of the true son of the boundless West. Mr. Williams offered his glasses. " Oh, thanks ; how kind you are," she said, and a pair of big brown eyes met his ardent glance. ror a moment the lady gazed through the glasses, and Mr. Wil liams stood by in silent rapture. " Great Scot ! look at that," sud denly exclaimed a young man at his elbow. Mr. Williams turned quickly and gazed intently at a spet in the paint ed sky, which the young man was pointing out. After fully satisfying himself that there was nothing re markable about a spot on a piece of canvas, tie turned back iully pre pared to address the fair borrower of his opera glasses. She was gone. This surprised him a little, but he waited tor her return, ihe voung man who had discovered the inter esting spot on the sky qad al9 dis appeared. After waiting half an hour, Mr. Williams decided to go to his hotel. He concluded he would not say anything about the glasses at the box-office. He remained in the city several days,and a!thouh he kept a sharp lookout, he failed to meet his fair acquaintance. rears to me '..hicago wimen is purty nice," he remarked, reflective ly, as he hoisted his feet onto the hack of the seat just in front of him, " but, blast me. if they ain't darn forgetful." ' It has since transpired that the gentleman from small hopes is not the only one who has met the forget ful w oman at the panorama. ITn leavened Bread. In Cincinnati is the only matzes steam bakery in that part of the country, and the latest and most improved machinery is used. The main feature is the rapidity with which the dough is handled and with this improved machinery it is scarcely touched by the hands of the workmen. The process is very simple. Exact proportions of flour and water are weighed out and im mediately put into the kneading ma chine, which consists of a heavy iron trough and a huge, fluted iron cylinder, weighing 700 pounds. The cylinder moves forward and baak ward over the dough, thoroughly kneading it in less than five min- I utes. I he dough is then transferred to the first rolling machine, which rolls it out into a smooth sheet about half an inch thick. It is then passed through a second machine and rolled to a proper thickness for the "cutter." This last machine cuts the dough into uniform sheets CxS inches, and stamps the holes into it. From the cutter it is passed direct ly into the oven, where it is baked and finished in one minute and a quarter. The time required to make the matzos, from the time the flour is taten from the barrel until it is taken from the even is less than fif teen minutes, so that the dough has not time to became sour. The ma chinery and ovens are used for this purpose only, and consequently are idle for nine months in the year. The firm will make 200.0(J0 pounds of matzos this year. They sflip it to Nebraska, Colorado, and all over the South. Cause and Effect. At times symptoms of indigestion are present, uneasiness of the stom ach, Ac, a moisture-like perspira tion, producing itching at night, or when one is warm, cause the Piles. The effect is immediate relief upon the application of Dr. Besanko's Pile Remedy, which costs you but 50 cents, and is sold by C. X. Boyd, tbe Druggist Jefferson Davis will celebrate bis 76th birthday on June 3. efald A GKKAT XOVtXIsT DEAD, Charles Keade, at Hi Death tbe Greatest English Writer of Fic tion, Passes Away, in Hi Seventieth Year. There is no novelist now using the English language the announce ment of whose death would cause such wide felt and honest sorrow as the tidings brought last Saturday that Charles Keade will write no more. Other authors of prose fic tion there may be whose subtile observation and whose dainty work manship are prized more highly by the few, but there is not one of the s irvivors who can lure and fire the sympathies of so large an auHience. His feelings and thoughts and fan cies were evolved within the lines and uttered in the accents of broad human nature, and experience has i .1 . . ..a . Blinurn Tri?it nriftvitnatfiriartirirv tt. unv f' . s ... -7 community in regard to many dis- veerings of conventional Pfedilec-! .ft true, all liable turn, a fame thus bi.Ided is built ; to anJ;Jettth. But if we are Pon a , ' . j sober, cleanly, and brave of heart, we Charles Keade was born m Ispden ntr nave no fear 0f disease of bodv Oxtordnhire, in 1814, and was the ! or mind youngesi sou of John Keade, a sub ' stantial gentleman of that place. In He Took Whisky. ls:j he was graduated frem Magda- len College, Oxford. He afterward ! Doctor have you got the better of studied law, and was called to the ' the ague yet? bar by the Society of Lincoln's Inn. ' Patient No, s.ir. Me and me He never practised law, however, i wife is as bad as iver, stir. but at 2S years of age gave himself Doctor Did yoti get that whisky wholly up to literary work, writing land quinine I prescribed? plays and stenes which were pub-j Patient Vis. sor; but it did no lished anonymously in the maga- j good at all, at all. zines and newspapers of the day. I Doctor That if strange ! You As a novelist, dramatist, and polemic took it according to the directions, I writer his name and his works are suppose? fresh to every reader of current lit-! Patient Yis, sor ; ye know a man erature. Personally Mr. Keade was and his wife are one." a large, broad-shouldered man, of, Doctor What has that to do with robus uhysique, looking much youn-1 it '.' ger than his vears until, within a! few years, several domestic afilic- tionsaged him. He had long been a suuerer trom broncnim and mov - ed some time ago from the malari-1 ous locality in which his house stood to a house next his elder brother's on the Uxbridse road. He called his former house "Naboth's Vine- yard, " because he had defended it;inUie county now. It is scarcely successfully, after a four years' bat- j ry to say they i.e-.l to be tie agaiiist'a corporation that wan-; l0okf 1 aftfcr, Prett-V , carefully 8,w.!i tej jt- i weather as this. Cold, blutry, and Charles Keade's . , , oiograpny nas has . i. ii:. i ?. t j.u .i . i Ivivn nt an fjnpiuritnaliiAmiiit h.va had actual service as a common sea man, or have studied and practised medicine and law. His life has been quiet and uneventful. An Oxferd msn taking his right rank for clas sical attainments, he was trained for the law, but was self-apprenticed as play wright and novelist. His nov els do not contain autobiography in disguise. Yet they reveal unerringly the manliness of his character, the passionate earnestness of his nature. His detestation of hypocrisy and cant, his hatred of injustice ami wrong, his sp'endid courage and tre mendous energy in working out practical reforms, in pleading the cause of the oppressed and in fight ing the battle of the poor prisoner, the plundered author, and the victim of trades union or mad-house, gave him a proud preeminence as a nov elist who was not writing either for money or reputation, but with posi tive ends and distinct moral purpos es always before his eyes, in the literary loom which he so industri ously plied, the strong fibre of his own pure, generous and resolute manhood was never once broken off. Charles Read was a very method ical worker, and neglected no helps. It was his habit to form scrap-beoks containing whatever strange, or star ting events or stories appeared in the daily press, and of these books, which he called his "brains," he had accumulated a formidable number. Believing as he did that an author is entitled to appropriate matterwhere eever he finds it, provided that he adapts it. it is not remarkable that he snould several times have been charged with plagiarism, nor that in some of these instances his defence should have been rather adroit than satisfactory. He posessed a fertility of invention which made him inde pendent of extraneous assistance, however, and his original work will bear comparison with the strongest in English fiction, either past or nresent. He has been charged with inordinate vanity. The truth doubt- eu for p'anting out, remove the tu less is that he w"as aware of his own i bers as carefully as possible, in order ability, and did not hypocritically j not to injure the roots, and plant in depreciate it. That he pose.sed a I well-prepared soil. Remove any ex- depreciate it. inat he po; most sterling character is certain. Ht. was ever ready to defend the op pressed careless of the dtls. and with a fire and energy which nothing could restrain. His hand was id ways open to a pitiful tale, and the many authentic stories of his benev olence show him to have had a knightly and tender heart. Irrita table and fiery he was, and impa tient of bores and fribbles, to whom he could not always behave with conventional courtesy. But he was a faithful friend, a defender of the lowly, a fierce and implacable foe to cruelty, fraud and oppression in all their forms. And when in those books of his which will become classic he is in the full tide of passion ate denunciation of wrongs, he car ries his reader away upon Ki cur- i rent of his enthusiasm, and impres ses the deepest conviction of the truth of his positions. The char ming, sweet and delightful women of his tales are said to have had for their models his own mother and sister, and the man may well be es teemed fortunate whose estimate of womanhood is plaeed so high, throngh the permanent boon of such relationships. Muruerers Lynched. Mocnt Sterling. Ky., April 15. Fifty masked men went to Jackson, T" J ... -. I , JireWUl COUmy,Il ii euuoua; uiii and toek Henry Kilburne, white, and Ben Strong, colored, who were confined ii jail there, and hanged them. Kilbourne was charged with the murder of William Thorp, last January, and Strong was suspected of being concerned in the same mur der. A notice waa pinned on one of the victims stating that all perpetra tors of such crimes would receive like punishment Kilburne had killed eight men. WHOLE NO. 1711, F'ear an an Ally of Disease. While the plaguo was raging in Buenos Ayres the grave dickers bore charmed lives. Of the 300 men f employed not one died of the disease. It ha3 often been noticed that during the prevalence of pestilental diseases, physicians, undertakeis, nurses and grave diggers, whose business com pelled constant liability to infection, have usually escaped in a far greater ratio than their numbers would war rant. Tbe "charm" of this immuni ty from the prevailing scourge is very simple. They are not scared. They are positive as to the dieease, and repel its attacks. Fear is a great ally of death. Whoever is afraid of disease is in a negative po sition, ana really invites its ap proach. And thus it is the world over, l ne brave die but once, wniie i cowards die manv times. Much I UilllCtCrdl V aidiiU OAIOUS ill tlCIT . . i linnaiaaanri n lnrrii a i o f 9 in aiWiiiatr Patient Well, ve see. sor. bein' as j we are one lle.-h, I took tho whisky ;and gave Biddy the quinine. Phil. 1 tail. I Chic: fhic! rhir-r ! , : . ltre a P001' ,nan' y2 chickftw pe ping and ruimina abo;it rainy weather is tne worst kind tor j - ... T, tUritr ! uB be protected against the vicissitt de V of our April climate. The coot.i ! must be :laced in as sheltered places as can be found, on dry, warm ground. The broods, mu-t be fed with care, not too much at once, and as often as four or five times a day. The fir.-t feed in the morning should j be given early, before sum .se, if pes ! siide. The little thmgs are alwavs hungry after the night's fast and start to hunt food as soon as they can see. if they can get out of the coop. If they cannot get out, they scratch and yell and tumble about, to their advantage. Feed early in the morning. The sed may be scalded and slightly warm, but not hat or sleppy, a moderately dry, crumbly consistence is about right ; give no more at once than will be eaten up clean. Have good, roomy coops ; keep them clean and sweet, and confine the hens in them for the first two or three weeks, and don't let the dams eat too much of the feed. The chickens are worth attending to, therefore look after them. How to Get Karly Potatoes. The best plan we have ever tried to get "r.o potatoes" a few days in advance of the main crop, and to be first in the race which is one of the many pleasures in gardening is to select mediuni-sizetl potatoes', and put them in a box of Sphagnum Moss, or, if that cannot be obtained, saw-dust or common garden soil will answer; place the potato seed end up, and fill between them and under them with the moss, leaving only the tip of the potato exposed. This will caure the leading eye to sprout, which takes most of the nourishment from the tuber, and consequently Is ,-,!, .i, etc ,,,.. .r tl.n uiuv.il riityiim i lii.tij it, tun jn it the other eyes produced plants. Iliese should oe started about a month earlier than the usual plant ing time. The boxes of tubers may lie placed in a hot-bed, or in any warm room, giving them all tha light possible. When the time has arriv- cept the main shoot, should any ap pear. By this method potatoes may be had from one to two weeks earlier than by the ordinary method of planting. Look Out for Your Head. No matter what part it may final ly affect, catarrh always starts in the head, and belongs to the head. There is no mystery about the ori gin of this direful disease. It be gins in a neglected cold. One of the kind that is "sure to be better in a lew days." Thousands of victims know how it is by sad experience. Ely's Cream Balm cilres colds in the head, and eatarrh in all its . , . . . - f'j'liv-! Tiiia euv uiivi v nw trils. .1 .- i Tavsi a n n t n n n rrar rr t n o n ria. A grand wedding in India implies more than trousseau for the bride and cards and cake for the dear five hundred. It means unlimited hos pitality to all the country round dur ing the several days of the festivites. At the wedding of the Ras of Cutch 34,000 people were fed on the first day, 37,000 on the second and 30,000 on the trird. That was a wedding as is a wedding. Want af Faith. If C. N. Bovd. the Druggist, does not succceed, it is not for want of faith He has such faith in Dr. Bo sanko's Cough and Lung Syrup as a remedy for coughs, colds, consump tion, and lung affections, that he will give a bottle free to each and every one who is in need of a medi cine of this kind. In the lives of the saddest there are bright days, when we feel as if we could take tbe world in onr arms. A Popular Beret aee As I sat talking with Penman Thompson the other evening, tho gerial impersonator of Uncle Josh remarked tLat he was greatly annoy ed by rheumatism. An acquain tance walked to his room in the ho tel and returned with a bottle of lime water, which he hfnded Mr. Thompson, saying : "There, if you drink that your rlu umatism will disappear." Mr. Thompson held 'the bottle in hi hand a few minutes and looked at it and t?.en, shaking his head he said in a very lunny tone. "I'm sorry, but you're really too late, I can't do it. There are thirty five ahead of you and my mantel looks like a shelf in a drug store." The gentleman took back his lime juice and substituted a more popu lar beverage. Driving Out the Hungarians. Wilkesbarre, Pa., April 16. The anti-Hungarian agitation is re newed. The drivers, runners and mine boys in the vicinity of Kings ton organized this evening for the purpose of driving out the Hunga rians. The miners are in sympathy with the movement. In a tight last night and this morning a Hungari an was stabbed in the head. Fri day night is pay day at the King ston Coal Company's collieries. As much drinking will be done it is thought a riot is inevitable. The coal company propose applying to the sheriff" for a posse. The Hun garians are determined to hold their I ground, and are arming. Hills His Cousin. Ashevii.le, N. C, April 14. Ja. j Green, a white youth, seventeen years old, was arrested to-day in Mitchell county, charged with the murder of his cousin, Joseph Grren a boy of sixteen. Both of these boy were courting Janette I). Birdsall, a pretty and interesting daughter of a well-to-do farmer of that county. The young lady received the atten tions of both of the cousins whth evident marks of favor. James usu ally avoided visiting her when his rival was expected. On Sunday evening James met Janette at church f- the purpose of escorting her home. On the road the couple met Joseph, who stepped up to the girl and without apology or ceremony, put his arm through hers antl walk ed off, raising his hat to the disap pointed and chagrined rival. Atti-r a moment's hesitation James drew a small Colt's revolver and tired. Jo seph fell dead at the feet of his sweet heart. Both young men had here tofore borne excellent characters. I'rom Head to I-'oor. The Postmaster at North Buffalo, Pa.. Mr. M. J. Green, says St. Jacobs Oi1, the great pain-conqueror, cured him of pains in the head, and also of fruited feet. rttirnetl to Death. Dai.las, Texas. April 13. A dis patch from Brenham says a negro named iibh brutally murdered the wife of 1. P. Moore, a Drominent farmer of Buriesson county. Satur day f vening, because she would not allow him to sit at the supper table with the family. Mr. Moore was not at home at the time of the mur der, but returned shortly afterward. The whole community turned out in pursuit and on Sunday afternoon overtook Gibbs,ten mile? away, and captured him, after a fight, in which the negro was wounded. He was taken back to Moore's place, where the exasperated citizens chained him to a post and burned him to death. Gibbs was an escaped convict and was considered a ery bad negro. ISitt Wheat Ylaid Kipectail. San Francisco, April 13. Edwin F. Smith. Secretary of the California State Agricultural Bureau, says re ports from his correspondents show that unless some disaster overtakes the Pacific Coast, it will have an un precedented wheat yield. It will ex cned the crop of 1 vSO if it escapes the hot north winds of May and June, which usually eome about when the grain is in dough The Sacra mento and San Joaquin Valleys will profit greatly by the bountiful rains which ft 11 in March. The yield in these valleys may s ifely be placed at GO per cent, in excess of last year's erop if the hot winds are passed. Aids her Husbands Facape. Wharton, Tex., April h James J. Mattison. a gambler, shot C. D. Bythewood dead here on Sunday in a saloon, having opened a quarrel with him. Mattison ran to the rail road bridge across the Colorado river, about half a mile distant, and escaped while his wife stood on the bridje with a drawn revolver, hold ing the authorities at bay ami shoot ing twice at ti e sheriff". A Mob Hslding a Kentucky Town. Lexington, April 1C. Advices from Jackson says that William Strong, with his "gang," erme seventy-five in nnmber, is in possession of that town, and says ae will hang eventy-fiye of the best citizens in retaliation for the hanging of Ben Strong and Henry Kilburne. one of whom was a member of Strong's band. It h also reported that he refuses to let Judge Kiddle hold Court there. Crops Killed by Kroat. Erie, April 17. Farmers report that the sharp freezing which has ensued since the snow disappeared has ruined about half of the Erie county wheat crop. Wherever the land is loam or damp there the wheat is heaved out and killed. The general report is that the peach crop is killed in Erie county, like wise the ejuinces. Peach growers in Conneauttand Girrard townships say that the buds are not only killed bat that the twigs are also killed and snap like pipe stems. The extreme cold weather and the two or three cats of ice which envelop ed the trees since January played havoc with the fruit trees. Mine Kiplosion. PlTT3ByRO, April 14. An explo sion of fire damp, which instantly killed James Painter and James Ste vens, occurred thi morning at the mine of John A. Wood & Son. at E'izabeth, eight miles from this city. The men, after entering the mine, had just reached the point where they were to work when the explo sion occurted, the fire damp igniting fram their lamps By the use of Buckingham's Dye, the whiskers may be easily made, a permanent, natural brown, or black, as desired. fk