u U r V i-nt x. ge li6 t I -I n- .'r -i- ..8 n P nicrsct Herald (rip. T you peri- sight w." ft fell insure a ad-nraer- ! tircb York "a -un-s ! out- '"lilS- ot' Publication. '' r., we;nelay mornln t "i e ' .'i .i. advance ; othcrwUe fi M ' ' ,.B will t diontinue4 until all alj U,, J"(.rtma6erf negleetlntt J'f(, fahT"ri do not take out ' , i i el.1 r . .Tnill'le tor the sut- ir.rlIllI tr-'in one oetofliee to an- i 1 Somerset Herald, Sumerset, l'a. .:.! 1 i ri'l.M V-iT LAW. Soiuetrct, Pa. W. BIESECKKR. TTOKXKY-AT LAW, t. .mT""i'i. l'a. ....... lu rook i IU--ritp' ElwK. u. scfll. ATToKXEY-AT-LAW, S"iuerjet l'a. W. Jii,g the id of tual llOBl : and i -pit. v. in," uvtl- l.d ile nab 'eiut -it, j Jt. uiv for Vew iter iiiid the ? in M. I. the i'ur he ; mvtt. U H iKX EY AT LAW. i. ..nSER. ' ATI'UKXEY AT LAW, Somerset, l'a. , . rMiSl.KY. .Vl'Ti 'liX KV-AT LAW, ' hi.mrrset, P ; ; T. nnKXtV-AT-Utt, Somerset, Pcnn a. : i I I.. A i ToKXEY-AT-LAW, Somerset, Pa. i ER. "' - '. M'KNEY-ATLAW, ' Sunirrfft, Fa., , . .. ,..,ii.Tftri.la1"inlTHf)untlw. ' ,.:,.,!, uitu will t.riuiaiy , an. ii. ki rri:i- . m i ii ,v ritpel. ' r 1'i'KX tvs AI UA". , -i,t-nte,l in their rare will ' m.llv attended 10. t, ' ..u'.ii i'tom f.rt'ei, ifl;e the :!. '- ' ... L.C. O'l.BoKX. ; A" O U.RORS. .iTTuKNEYS AT LAW. . ....-,,.-ted t.. oureare will I lrei"ld" . ', , to '.i!l-''ti"H lmi.tc in "in--,, '.! .lf.l:iti)B '..unii-f. survey. , , iti .'..me -n r-a"ii'l' tcri.. M MM 11. KOONTZ. ATTOKXEY-ATKAW, Sonwwft, l'a., n'trntl-n to bulnJ WWt :,. '- ' .;. r-.'..mTM-i atM D.Uilnir 0"Untlc. :.:.' li'iuie Ki'W. cm.- mi:yfin. MTCKXEY-AT-I.AW SnllKT-ft. 1'onil .tiiru-t to lit!" Willi , ,. , r.,.. Mrcct, ii'-xi '"" " i '!- i.. !T;n. v!i'i;m:v-ati.aw. , -...-h l.k. op talr. Kuir.itff. . . . ',-,- e..:ir. tiwnf ui'!c. i'-it . . v,- '.i-,o ;u..l all 1'K1 I'Kflnf . ,..'!-!. i.r'U:i.v -Ksan.l Mlity. V KIMMKI-. TT( illNtY AT LAV, ' S"tni'rct, Pa. I .' i'i:i rr. ' ATT KXEY AT S-'Uicrrt. Pa. ' O K1MMKL. ATTCKM Y-AT LAW, Sunierfet. Pa. ' m al tm'ine mtrnftnl to bic cr i ' . s. runic mmitn-f with iiin- J - r.-'.-lity." ''' "n Main er.-pf street. "i;y k. ('HKIJ,. ATTCKXEY-AT J.AVT, v a- t Prtil"H Auent, Suinewt, !' - vrfii;i:-.oi u Hla k. i 1 TIK HAY. AtToKXEY-ATLW , rinKolKte,S.'iu(" t. P will ..; u-itw-'eutrui'tedt.. bla care with . .hi I n.lcty . in ii. rni.. ATTOKXEY AT LAW SouierecU ri. - fi.Mvttlt.U lusln entruftf-1 . Ivnnt-a on collrctloM, fce. V, . :i: ,h HuilitiCK. I. Mtil.K. ATTI ii:XEY'-AT LAW, Sllr'f. Pa., - i !'ii-iiici" mtniJ'te'l to mj care at ni l. -n nii'tnt"? ami t:i1'lity. n i .i s. ATT' KX EY-AT-I.AW. S. nuTPt. Pern a. M. i. irTHKK. 1 .run r.y ! S!',vc-t"ii ) ) - I'M t M M i.'-i '. :11H-I)"V III S'-lll'T.-ct l..r Hi'' ,n ' luli -v s.l..r? "t .ii .1 Ituk M r-. iii.i-1. . ... i-.i.itrcii. i ; ); 1 iirii .iv .in m m;t:s . rvi.M-f to tin' !"H.)ile o( S.'ii.e-fi-t i II- li"wn or 'uinrv (ipimi.tly i mi 'l. uinl :it "II. v iy ri.ml!', -ft allv 'iiiinirol. -"ti'-- "ii r:i r . l" Itiilli"l.l. mT knir aj-r-'. i-'.t!. KIMM VAj . I ;, ry i, iT-.n-fsl'Tia' 'o tlio eltl- r l Hint li-iliity. 1 ".! :r..l,-.i..n ' .c .mi I t.'uni! at vit.ci . "U Main ' 1 MutiK'iKl. ii. P.uri'.AKKR t.n.li rs Lis ' - :--i,,r, rrvleii to the clilt.cnJ o! Sum . M-mitv. (irtii e tn re-iik'ii n iWam ' t--. ., il-r lliaUI'tUll. : vm. i:rrn t.n.lirs i.i- - '.'i.irml .eniocf to the ritiycn;1 ot Som : '. K 'in it v - i n f :i't of Wayne fc. HcrkeMlo'f J i r John r.n.i. ' 1'EXTIST. ii' mif i:i"ook a. P.oentu Hlo -k .Somer- ' I'i. . WIT.I.I AM ( OI.L1NS. 1'EXTIST. St OI EKSET, PA. - ir ,i'j i;tr..th Ul-ct. B..y.t a I'niK hiT I o:.n nt nil tm.o l toiin 1 irer : ail hit. i 1 1 work. hi Ii an r.lline. toko . ' Ttr' tf ir hp Ar"lr -lnl torhot all kli lc "ir iff. WBtTlal Inwrte.t. wratlon rj HoWAHDWYNXK, Ml). .' .V 7"' ' n -Y I'EXX'.i. '' oi tt.e F.ve. Ear. Xoe and Thrnnt. L .o t: , K -lil'ive l-rMi'?. Hiturt.f A. M. to 1. "r a Ureon l-.lo k. 6 Main M. j i'. TIKiMlSdN. M I). t St KiEt-'X 1'EXTIST. : J'ilitiM..wn. Pa. 1 1 a t-.teci.i;,1 ejrt'''ro-nte ot more than ' p:t i.i'i Ti:ct Sfw tal.TT. ,; .jj Vnin trH't up :i,ir) over ' - liar.lwaro Stt.re. It will U norea- ; . r. ,T ;t,t wi.rfc iloiif to itmk n i '! ' ' - ! !'.n linn i. -tj yx ' ML- . KlI-HlNAN. M. I. ten- ! ,...i, -..IJai wrrf to tde rltiiprif of ' si ; , i' Hilt v. H.-cun t found at the '" ' : I ! in1 h-r on Main Mrevt or at the I'r "I.i.-t Jtrul ak'-r. 1' I- K. MII.l.KTl lms ixrnia- T.'ir IfK-utt-, nriln ,.r the prartlrw of -B. iff-.i o;,otlte t 'harlea Kriflntr rt air.X-', 'ju-tt t)''';"NI HOTEL, i , MOVSTOWN. I'KNN'A. ; "MM'alar and well known boaee ha lately . '"" ly iit tn wlv rented with all new s-, "' '"t'l'ure. whi. h hat niaile It a very ). ,. "l'l'" r l.lace lor the traurlln fulillo. X ttrrW"' r"m rannc l-e eurj mx1, all I 3 "I'I. a lurife ihllr hall attifhed - nlf' A' Ur" nd roooayatahlinif. cn ' had at the lowl pua .? 1 -J the c-k. day or meal. i SAMt ELei'STEK. Prop. istovaUiW .Pa :,iN.I. NOTICE. V -.- , V"i m "';1! lfKl' llanl. l I. Haer.ol , ut a'tKimieni for "tt an'i ':-'r toamuelM. Savior, u-iul e"1 uo "nderi,cned and SAMt ELM. SAY LOR, "'iroet ul liann-l Jj. Baer. 1 tie I VOL. XXXI L NO 50. YOU Respectfully Invited to Call and Examine, Before Purchas ing Elsewhere the Largest Assortment of Stoves, Tin, Copper, Or Sheet-Iron Wae, Kn iu. Is Plated Ware, . Lamps, Enameled Ware, Clothes Wringers, Etc. To Iw f 1 1 1 1 1 in tj Wti"-:i l'nrt il' (Li !:ati nur . ,.i!-.irp 'Viirranti-il to In- ns ri-p-r'-rtitr.i, uinl jirii'i-s jin- N--;; t'li. within tin- r. :nh ! all jirrxnis tufihiii; tlu'in. TIN HOOFIXJ, SP0UTlX(i AM) .lOIUilXJ at m i. KiM's i.v us. ua i: r n:i- i: form; lrniiptlv Atf (MMit'tl to :ii Ijv'st ISatcs. ISvitsIics (( Specialty, at Wholesale Only. Orlrx Solicit' ! li'i'in ?er Jniitti & Hli ft GhkJh at, My Line. FRANK W. HAY, o. '-NO Va!iin(oii Slrert, Jolmstonii. leima. -tttt JiOD THIS -: o :- It will intrrest Customers (.1 Limited Menus, as well v.-i tliose wlitt du not vili to spend much for SHOES As 13 SLIPPEHS ! -: o: THIS WEEK WE ARE OFFERING 7s" Pairs if Ladies Sli- ers. - s 1(1!) Pairs of Ladies' Kid Croquet Slippers 91 Pairs of Ladies Serjje Slippers, lis Pairs Ladie'Opcra Toe Slippers, 'Jsi) Pairs Ladies" New ports, tie and liutfon. IS Pairs infants' Stra Slippers, 1(1 Pairs Infants" Fine Kid Slippers,- -:S Pairs Children' Op era Toe Slippt rs, -4J11 Pairs lulants Kid Putton Shoes. -0(' Pairs Mens' Cloth-lop Low Lutton Shoes :1s Pairs Men's Low Cut Working Shoes, -Men's 15etter-irrado Low CutPmtton. IS Pairs Youths' IJut kle Shoes, 1 1 Pairs Mise' Coarse Shoes. M'2 P;iirs Luiies Scre Lace Shoes. '2') Pairs Ladies' Grain Per Lace Shoes. - is ")! 41 !)."; 1 00 IS i i s:, 1 t 1 LI V 00 J.J 2't ;s 1 V) HESMiE Til Es E WE OKEEH i tii: this ir; i:k. : ii :- mi THE POPULAR ONE-P1UCE SHOE STORE No. 212 Main St., Johnstown, Pa. N. P. Don't forget our stock of Fine Shoes for Ladhs, Gentlemen. Misses, lJoys, Chil dren, Youths and Infants. FABMBRS, We have marked (Unvn our larc Stock of l'hin hots. Don't luy lefore you fit. our?. ST AUG i. aprt'.lyr. S0MERSE1 COUNTY OAKK ! (r.sTAin.ism:i is77.) t CHAELES.J. HAEEISON. M. J. FRITTS. President. Cashier. Oolleetlona made In all part of the Tolled Sialef. , CHARGES MODERATE. Vartte wtuhlnK to end money Wert ran re a eommlatel ttj draft on New York ID any num. Jollert lone ntiK with proniptneea. I . !. Mowta t-uiilil and eold. Mie and valuable ReeureJ hyimenf Iitehold't eelehrated ate, with bar ic cnt M Yai tMO OU time luck. ACCOUNTS SOLICITED. -All lettal hoUdayi obterved,-fc decT STMRDTEifS ARE f ALIIKI'.T A. Il.-KMI. J. iSii.tt Ward. HQPlIJE & WARD MVi-KSfloUS TO EATON & BROS, NO. 27 FIFTH AVENUE, ! PITTSBURGH, PA. NEW GOODS -?-t -.AT' r-- T , T WTCJ V.. til ii-d ir t-'o1 defies, Lares, MilHrery, White Goods, Hand kuthiefi, D;css Trlr.mings, Hosiery, Gloves, Co-sets, Mu-.iin and Merino Underwear, In farrts' "d Children's Clothing. Fancy Gcc.i;, Yarns, Zephyrs, Kate tia's of Ail Kinds for F ANCY WORK, Gilt's FiiiEiEMEi GcoSs, it, &c I lairuciiiauii i mtBfai.-Trr'ta.T polio'"! ; tro.-r iiy Maii a".oti'io.l to with J'Mtnit l.i a:i.i J i-..m-!i. v i v. A liiyr show than all the , White Elepliants is the Mam ;moth Clothing Stock of . C. ' Yates vS: Co, ! No huiiihuL', no deception. We refund the money on all i "nods not entirely satisfactory. :A. 0. YATES & CO., f 'hrntm pni!.ri)i:i.vm . FASHIONABLE CUTTER & TAILOR, o i- r ' , Ttuvir.n had many - jt ,i years erri-n. e K J?t-'l '' i In all f.ranrhea i.f 'X vii ' Iv'Jt In all hranrhi-i. of ' , -: &'$-IsLt, Ii Tallurlr.K ba- i- iJ C,'t.''-SV'-' ST Inem. 1 ifuarantee i M ;:: rsatisfartion to all um v rail ui me and favor with their pat- A!ir. ours, stc, I Y?l. M. I.OCIISTi ri.KK, i I mnrs OUEMAKONING Ii M. S. M(U:CAX, J'rojiriittn; ' 'I'll E l-M ol :Ik-c vfll-kuonn Mill" are now 1 ..itita tl eireustomert :;h a r ilc n.S nt as- K-.rti.o :it "! WOOLEN GOODS. i ahlr-li tl pv It-h to trade f'.r Wck.I. These Good ! ir. ,., 'in i ,r o n fi.univ. Irom fire Sitork. oti tt-,e E" 't I,ni r vo l Mai'-hlnerv. and tn hrt- . . , I'lL-'fi- 'f'lfjkl A h. Ii (-11,.. KiThtH'-H r Hill r i r m m ,!.--...... fol Ms lit M ((. this rear, and will make It pnv vou ttnieal with o. Um W'earrli pn pure ! to do Custom Spln nim: am' V '--l ' aiuii-i;. Address. WM. S. .VIIKOAN. nj.r-ri -ni. UnetEahoniiifc, Pa. 4 f f n week at home. VL L-v L" l'"v ahudutely am 1 II llinil oot remilred. j oulttt free. ure. ISO risk. L'ap- H J Vwant huelnesa at which pernon f j Keaoer, II you et tier sex. '-urir orlilan uiab-Knst iit the '-inie thev work, with aholii! crtalnty wrl'.i lor por'.iculan to 11. Hu.tTT, Hortland,."e. AGENTSh: wanted for the all the !H LM 1 kJ S Th. lar- t. 1i-iii-ioiih-m. lest fittok evrr wild for lesa iner- I wli-e our price. Ilielaltesi veillliK onoa. aim ca. Iinuiene iimliii to agent. AH inllietul s.i.le want It. Anv one can l-econi a fueee-xirt aitt-nt Ti-rius trae. Haixktt Iiook Co., Fort and, Maii.a. Lime, Lime, Lime ! Erointhe Celebraled Peek Llmestie Lctae. fr.rnlshed als-ard the ear at eur kilna near Pine in,ve eteenta eer hunhel. rnslacked. Onlera proirptlv tille t. For further particular call on "I'Sr'woiJEESnEROF.B RO., Korkwood, Pa., or oiayl 3m. ISAAC O. JON ES, Soinenet, Pa. Somerset TDK CHAIK IV THi: t'HIMXKy COKNKK. V LILI.1F F. 11ARR. On giMod thrones ami on chairs of state. Then- arc kinstliat tromhling it ; Ani to many a lofty seat men clinin Throiif.-li favor snj power ami wit ; l!ut the chair in tae chimney corner Is my scat of power and pride ; Wh.-n I sit there the purple I wear I'm king at my own fireside. The judfie sits high on his lofty bench. And sorrow beside him waits; He solemnly says the words of -death : lie fastens the prifcoii gates. I'.ut I sit in th chimney corner. In my chairso soft and wide, And pass with a kiss the household faults I'm judge :d my own fiieside. In the halls of trade and rommernf, There are seats for the shrewd and hold That can manage a hank or railroad. And turn what they touch to irold. 1 in president in my own affairs, Vice-president is my wife No" board" or "committee" manure me, And I'm chairman, too, tor life. There are seats in the halis of leal nin, And wisdom sits often there, lint even with learned professors Their honor I seem to share ; Tor my boys have many a .iicstion, Thai " father' can best decide. And I feel that I am "principal " To the class at my own fireside. So, my chair in the corner Is better Than the throne of king or lord. Than the seat of judge or profesor. Than the "chair" at any " board ," The hearthstone's its solid foundation, "l is girded all round by love. Its portion is peace and contentment. And the blessings of Heaven above. THK l-IKST r.Ai.u "I'.ut I want to rro.eo much,"' said Zadie. ''Oli, Mrs. MuprR", please, iile.i?e, don't tell grandma.1' The old country houe had lieeti hut and locked up for the. niht. Overhead the stars burned in points of frozen lirht, and the hard enow iileamed faintly underneath, while every breeze that stirred the woods set a, whole chime of tiny icicles to jhmling. Zadie Wilde had had the lenst pos sible cough that afternoon, and old Mrs. Wilde had pent the housekeep er up with a steaming hot potion of vinegar, molasses, lemon-juice and Irish moss, at ten o'clock that nudit. "Girls never take any care ol their health," said Mrs. Wilde. "And Zaidee is in my charge while her parents are in "Havana. Be sure, Mrs. Muggs, that she drinks the whole tumblerful and gets right into bed. And Mugg?,ryou had better take away her candle. There's al wttys danger of eeUinir fire to the bedroom curtains, yot. know." "Bless me, ma'am," said Mnpgs, "Miss Zaidee is seventeen. Vou can't takeaway her bed candle, like if she was a little irl.'" "Well, tell her to be very careful," said Mr. Wilde, laying her head down among the pillows with a sigh. M;igg trudged up stairs, and opened the door very softly. Miss Ziidee might be asleep for anything she knew, and But Zaidee was not asleep. On the contrary, the room was bright with wax candles and there, before the cheval-glass, stoed the little dam sel, dresst'd in white, with a soft Ori ental sash, a cluster of white roses in her belt, and the prettiest little white fatin boots that ever, "like lit tie mice, peeped in and out."' Zaidee Wild was goin?; to the Military Hull. Leave or leave, as she explained to Musrgs, fhe was go ing with Colonel Battersby and his daughters. "But, Miss,'' pleaded Mrs. Muggs, "votir grandma aid you wasn't to ! don't like them Miss Battersbvs, anyhow.'' "Ye?, I know,"' coaxed Zaidee, "but grandma has forgotten how he felt when she wag seventeen. And Col onel Battersby it to be at the Great Gate at half past ten precisely and I never was at n ball in all my life before. Dear Mrs. Muggs, you will keep my secret, won't you?" "Well, I never," said Mr. Muggs. But there was a soft spot down in her heart, after all, and she finally consented, after many tears ami en treaties on the part of Zaidee, to con done her of!enes. "I s'pose it is dull here," she reas oned within herself. "And Miss Zai dee and after ail girls will be girls. Of course my mistress will be very angry if she knew it but we must take care she don't know it." So M uges herself helped to bun dle Zaidee up in the old gray sliwl, which hid all her glories as a brass extinguisher hides the light of a can dle, und escorted her to the Batters by carriage, which waited at a dis creet distance from the house. "You're sure you've got the key to let yourself in, Miss ?" said she, the la -t thing. "Oh, yes, it's all safe in my dress pocket." Muggs trudged back through the snow, thinking of the long gone by days when she was seventeen and Zaidee Wilde went to the ball. Oh, the lights, the roses, the be wildering beauty of the tcene. To accustomed ball-goers, it was the game tedious story, over and over again, the tame "Blue Danube" and "Thousand and One Nights," the same tuneless clarionets and squeak ing violins, the same sickly gas lights, the fame decorative plants from tbe nearest florists, the same artificial entiles and worn faces be decked anew in rouge and veloute and pearl powders. But to Zaidee it was like the "Arabian Knights," suddenly galvanized into life, a uream ef beauty and enchantment. Of course she knew nobody theie but the Battersbvs, her grandmother had kept her shut up a deal too close lor that but partners came eagerly to beg for introductions, and old Col. Battersby found himself a more pop ular character than he had been for years, in virtue of the pretty young debutante, who came in the train of his old maid daughters. "By Jove," said the old coloneL "I didn't know that Zaidee was so pretty, before." Nor had Zaidee known it herself. She could scarcely recognize her own face as they passed in front of a full length mirror, so transformed was it in the light of girlish happiness and KST-xYBLISHJSD, 1827. SOMERSET, PA., WEDNESDAY. MAY 2S, IS84. exultation. She looked like some white robed princess with the fleecy white draperies floating around her like a cloud, the rose.8 in her belt, and the necklace of pearls encircling her white swan-like throat. Grandma Wilde's pearls! Fr, in her infatuation, Zaidee had taken them from their case, and decked her neck and arms with their limpid sparkle and hung their dead white pennants in her ears, after she had reached the crowded dressing room nt the hall. For it wouldn't do to J let even Muggs into this last piece of ' audacity. j "What would grandma say if she ' knew it?" Zaidee asked herself, with ' varying color, and pulses that beat a ' degree faster at the idea. ! It was almost davbreak before they reached home, and Zaidee let herself into the little ivy-drape door in the round tower with her key, and crept shivering up the winding stairs to her own room. "I hope the fire hasn't gone out," she said to herself, "rbr my feet are as cold as stones, and I do believe my bones are frozen stiff." To her infinite delight the room was all resplendent with fire-light when she came into it,-like Cinder ella returning from the Prince's ball and there sat Muggs rocking her self back and forth before the lire. "Oli, Miss Zaidee! oh, Miss Zai dee! "she cried. "I thought you never would come home. You're to go to Mrs. Wilde at once. She's waiting fr you." Zaidee stood still in a sort of a trance of horror. "Muggs, you don't mean that that she knows?'' she faltered. "Oh, bless you, no, my dear!" said Muggs, tugging away at the white gown. "Get those things off as quick as ever you can. Missis has sent for you. Hurry on your pink merino dressing-gown. We've had a terrible trouble since you went away !" Zaidee looked around her with a bewildered air. "The house certainly is not burn ed down," said tdie. "And if grand ma wants me to come to her, she cer tainly can't lie living nor dead." "It ain't that," croaked Muggs. "It's burglars! YVve been rob bed !" "Oh. Muggs," cried Zaidee, conscience-stricken "not through the ivy-door that 1 left unbolted. Be cause it was locked." "No, Miss, no," said Mrs. 'Muggs. "Thank Providence there was no one near that door! It's a ileal tao close to the stables where Thomas sleeps with a revolver. It was the laundry window the' cuiie through, Miss, wfre a pane of glas was cut out, just as neat as it it was a sheet of pa per and scissors, and the bolt araw ed, and every bit of the old crested silver taken, and Missis' diamonds, and I don't know what all ! And we never kuevr nothing till Betsy came down with the toothache to get her peppermint bottle oil' the kitchen dresser, and found things lying around, and the wind blowing through the open window enough to take the house oil of us founda tions : "And the thieves, Muggs?" g;tsp ed the girl. "Oh. they're far enough away, I'll go bail," groaned Muggs. "We've pent oil Thomas to the village con stable's, but it won't do no good, in.:rk my words. Come, dear, ye're r-:n ly now make haste, or Missis will wonder what on earth is keep ing you ail tti! time. And half believing herself to be dreaming, Zaidee was hurried along the softly carpeted corridors, over whic h tiie rosy light of dawn was al ready beginning to beam. Old Mrs. Wilde sat up in bed, lo. iking haggard and hollow-eyed in her black silk hood and gorgeous cashmere shawl. "Oh, Ziidee. Zaidee, how could you ever sleep through all this dread ful contusion," she cried. "Oh, I'm so thankful we weren't all murdered in our beds." "Grandma,"' said Zaidee, gently, "don't be troubled, wt are all alive and well. Let the silver go, and the other things." "Oil. but that is not all." sighed Mrs. Wilde. ' I haven't treated you well. Ziidee. I haven't done as I oiioht. The diamonds were not large, and the silver was old-fashioned I d;n't care so much for those. But tlit! pearls the old fam ily pe iris, Z lidee, that were worth a thousand dollars! By j'our grand father's will they were to have been yours on your 17th birthday, but 1 kept them back, thinking you would want to wear.them every day, and lose them, perhaps, because you were so young. And the' are taken too ! The empty case lay on the bu reau, with the rest of the boxes ! Oh, Zaidee, can you ever, ever forgive me?" Zaidee hesitated a moment, and turned very pink, and then, uncer tain whether to laugh or to cry, she drew the pearls from her bosom, ex claiming: "Oh, grandma, dear grandma, it is for you to forgive me. Hre are the pearls all safe! I borrowed them out of the case to to wear. 1 went to the military ball to-night with Col onel Battersby and Phoebe and Al icia, and I wanted something to Dut around my neck, aud I was very wicked and took the pearls." And here Zaidee stopped short, appalled at the remarkable facial contractions of Muggs. who, in the background, was gesticulating to her not to betray her (Muggs") share in the escapade. But Mrs. Wilde uttered an excla mation of intense relief. "My darling Zaidee," she cried, "I never was so glad in my life ! Of course it was very wrong for yu to do such a thing, but so long as the pearls are safe, I can't be angry at anything else. Kiss me, Zaidee! The dear preciots pearls that I wore on my wedding day ! I never thought to have looked npon thena again. And you must keep them now, sweet and perhaps I've been a little over particular about balls and such things, with you. You are seventeen years old, and it is time that you saw something of the world. You "shall be introduced in ssciety, Zaidee, and by better sponsors than Colonel Battersby and his dowdy daughters! But never steal awayt from me, like a school-girl, again !'' "Dear, dear grandma !" was all that Zaidee could say, for the pearls were safe, and grandma Wilde had forgiven her. "And I'm very glad, Miss Zaidee, that you didn't mention my name." said Muggs, when she wa3 taking Zaidee back to her room, "for after all, you know, it was not my fault." "No, Muggs," said Zaidee, smiling, "it was not your fault." lniereMtini; Trees). The trunk of a sycamore tree, near New Madrid, is 4'J feet in circum ference. An oak in Barnwell county, S. C, measures 'JHfeetin circumference IS inches above the ground. A white oak on the premises of Amos Harvey, of Mansfield, Bur mington county, N. J., measures 21 feet in circumference. An apple tree in Mercer county, Ky., has borne fruit for sixty sea sons without failing. Five feet from the ground, its trunk is ten feet and nine inches in circumfer ence. A lemon tree on the farm of Thom as Kennedy, at Noonan's Lake, Fla., 19 years old, has borne fruit for 11 years, and has earned for its owner 100 in a single season. In the negro cemetery at Auaeri cus, Ga., is a cedar tree that was planted in a pitcher at the head of a grave ten years ago. It burst the bottom of the pitcher and rooted in the earth. The pitcher still encir cles the bottom of the cedar, which is ten feet high. The " Major Oak," near Edwins town, Eng., fell before a recent gale there. Its trunk had a girth of 22 feet, and the circumference of the top was 2t0 feet. The hollow stem was used by picnic parties, and seven persons had atone time partaken of a meal in it. It is known to have stood 700 years. Delos liotchkiss, of Marroo, Conn., has an apple tree in his orchard that is supposed to be 17" years old. Its annual yield is 83 bushels of apples. The circumference of the trunk is 10 feet near the ground. It bears fruit on five limbs one year, and on four dilferent limbs the next year. In lf7( it bore fruit on all of its limbs. The soft maple tree that was cut down on the White House grounds last December had many historical associations. President Lincoln had v habit of stooping at this tree, then thoroughly strolling about the grounds, and pulling a twig frcm it. Then he would take out his pocket knife and slowly whittle the stick as he walked on. The tree wan planted during the administration of Andrew Jackson. Tar Smoke for lliph'hri ia. Ruth Lockweod, th 9-year-old cbild of Thomas Lock wood, a com positor in the Times cilice, became violently ill with diphtheria on Tuesday night. She was so weak that it was deemed dangerous to try tracheotomy, or cutting op the windpipe. On Thursday Dr. Nichols, who was attending her, received a copy of the Itiris Fvjaro, which con tained a report made to the French Academy f Medicine bv Dr. Deltb.il. Dr. Delthil said that the. vapors of liquid tar ann turpentine would dis solve the fibrinous exudations which choke up the throat in croup and diphtheria. Dr. Delthil's process wis describ ed. Me pours equal parts of tur pentine and liquid tar into a tiu pan or cup and sets fir to the mixture. A dense resinous mokt arise, which obscures the air of the room. "The patient," Dr. Delthil says, "immediately seems to experience relief; the choking and rattlo stop; the patient falls into a slum ber, and serais to inhale the smoke with pleasure. The fibrinous mem brane soon becomes detached, pa tient coughs up microbieides, when ( .tight in a glaas, may be men to disoltr in thesuioke. Inthecourse of threw days afterward the patient entirely recovers." Dr. Nichols tried this treatment yesterday with little Ruth Lock wood. She was lying gasping for breath when he visited her. First pouring about two taolespoonfuls of liquefied tar on an iron pan, he poured as much turpentine over it and set it on tire. The rich rssinous smoke which rose to the ceiling was by no means unpleasant. As it fill ed the room the child's breathing be cams natural, and as the smoke grew denso she fell asleep. Philadelphia Time. Allowed Drug Siore lllunders. PiTTsntKii, Pa.. May 13. The small child of F. B. Ward of Alle gheny City, died last night from the effect of morphia given by u drug store clerk named Lewis Seitz in mistake for calomel. When the clerk was informed of the terrible result of his mistake, he dropped to the floor unconscious, and it is feared that the shock may prove fa tal. This is the second death from the blunder of druggists during the past week. On Saturday a clerk in Spohen's drugstore, on the South Side, gave aqua ammonia and sweet oil in mistake for ca3toroil, and tho old lady, Ann Gallagher, who swal lowed the dose, died in a few hours in great agony, Spohen has been held on a charge of asurder. Thousands Say So. Mr. T. V. Atkins, Girard, Kan., writes : "I never hesitate to recom mend your Electric Bitters to my customers, they give entire satisfac tion and are rapid sellers." Electric Bitters are the purest and best med icine known and will positively cure Kidney and Liver complaints. Purify the blood and regulate the bowels. No family can afford to le without them. They will save hun dreds of dollars in doctor's bills every year. Sold at fifty eents a bottle by C. N. Boyd. A girl who elope with a xian named Pickles can hardly expect a sweet honeymoon unless she under stands the much-coveted art of extracting sunbeams from cucumbers. ei Tiie Mexican National Drink. The Aztec9 manufactured pulque, and got drunk on it, just as do the Mexicans of to-day. It is the great: severity, was not illnatured. It if national beverage the lager beer or said that one day, when he was ab hard cider of the land. It is a fer- sent from his study, a boy found mentation of the sat) ef the maguev. some plums in his chair, and at and is drawn by tapping the deep heart of the plant. When a speci men of the maguey feels real good it will yield a gallon of the sweet sap every day for months together. This juice is tnen emptied into an un shorn sheepskin, turned wrong side out and the feet tied up, in which it is transported to the place of fer mentation. Everywhere the travel er meets donkeys laden with these fall skins, or a cargadore will trot along with one on the back of his neck, so smooth, and slippery, and unctious, that it looks like a hog that has perished of dropsy. An enormous quantity of pulque is con sumed every day in Mexico. I don't want any more ot it. I tried it the first dav. as everybody does. It looks like sour milk a week old, tastes like sour milk a year old, sweetened with asafotida and smells like Constantinople. If I couldn't become inebriated on anything but pulque, I would forego that pleasure for life." But the maguey plant is certainly a thing of beauty in the landscape, and when one becomes superannua ted and farrow it ceases to give down and then it shoots upward a great central stock like a glorified tele graph pole, the top of which bursts into gorgeous bloom before it dies for this is the old " century plant " that we have read of. The pulque produced along the national road, but especially in the valW of Tolu ca, is famous for its superiority over all Mexico. It is viciously strong, and the smell of it ascends to heav en. Mesirun fatter. Hula t AVant to I.ie For Her Alone. The other night, when one of our prominent society young men called to see his girl, he found her mother sitting quietly before the fire. After bidding him " good evening '" she looked him full in the face, and said : " Do you really love my daughter Emma?'' " Well ah my dear madam," stammered theyouth, turning red in the face, " I have only been coming to see your daughter two months, and I really think you are a little premature in propounding such a question." "That's where we differ, young man. n tne seeu oi your suwius now will brinjj forth a matrimonial Harvest I'm willing to put up with you awhile longer, but if you are coming here three nights out of a week just to pass away the time, you had better cease coming at once." " Yes. Well, really madam," put in the youth, his voice all in a quiv er," since you press me so closely for an answer I must admit that I am very fond of Emma, and that I live for her alone " "Yes," broke in the anxious mamma; "that's the trouble with you young men ; you waste too much tim'e living for a girl alone, when vou ought to be living with her. I'm a plain, old-fashioned wo man, and always say what I think. Now, I'm willing to give you a month longer a a trial, but if at the enel of that time I don't see a spankin' fine new ring on Emmas finger, your visits to this house will be cut off. And to the great relief of the young man she left the room and sent in her daughter, who, of eouree, was utterly unconscious of the "good licks" her mother had been putting in for her. nright's Disease. Referring to what appeared on this subject in the Scientific America recently, Dr. De Borra, of Crystal Springs, N. , writes that, after years of practical test of the milk diet for Bright's disease, he has a long list of cases in which he has made perfect cures. Great care is taken to get absolutely pure skim med milk, from healthy and well fed cows, and no other food of any kind is given attsr the patient can bear five pints of milk a day. Up to this point, and until the stomach is able to take care of so much, is found to be the most trying period in this treatment, but no other medicine is given, and hand and hair-glove rubbing is daily adminis tered. Another correspondent takes ex ception to the claim made that no drug of any therapeutic value in disease has yet been discovered. In support of his assertion he sends us a receipt which he claims has effect ed a cure in Bright' disease, as well as in drops-, in every case in which it has been- tried during the last fif teen years. He recommends the drinking of an infusion of the dry pods of the common white soup bean or corn bean. When the latter can not be readily obtained the pods of the "snap short bean will answer, and even the Lima bean, though the latter is of inferior strength. The recipe is as follows: 'Take a double handful of tho pods to three quarts of water; boil slowly for three hours until it is reduced to three pints. Use no drink of any kind but this, the patient drinking as much as he conveniently can; it may be taken either hot or cold." Scientific Amer ican. A It'alkinz Skeleton. Mr. E. Springer, of Mechanics burg, Pa., writes: "I was afflicted with lung lever and abscess on lungs, and reduced to a walking Skeleton. Got a free trial bottle of Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption, which did me so much good that I bought a dollar bottle. After using three bottles, found myself once more a man, completely restored to health, with a hearty appetite, and a gain in flesh of 48 lbs." Call at C. N- Boyd's Drug Store and get a free trial bottle of this cer tain cure for all Lung Diseases. Large bottles $1.00. Texas has 4,000,000 sheep. n a WHOLE NO. 1715. Getting in One on the Teacher. Dr. Busby, one the master of the high school, though celebrated for once began to eat them, first wag gishly saying: "I publish the banns of matrimony between my mouth and these plums. If any here pre sent know just cause for impediment why they should not be united, you are now to declare it. or ever after hold your peace." The doctor over heard the proclamation, but said nothing till next morning, when, calling the boy up, he grasped his well known instrument, saying: I publish the banns of matrimony be tween this rod and this boy. If any one knows any just cause or impedi ment why they should not be united let him now declare it, or ever after hold his peace."' The boy himself said : "I forbid the banns." "For what cause?" asked the doctor. Because," said the boy, "the parties are not agreed. I he boy s ready wit pleased the doctor, and the un ion was indefinitely postponed. Montpclicr ( IV.,) Gazette. Anueeiloles About General Scott. An old army friend of mine who remembers General Winfield Scott as' a tall, tine-lookit.g old man, with white hair,, a strict martinet, with a good head and a bi heart, gives nie a story or two about him. Iu his later years General Scott was iras cible. A great many people knew that, but few knew that he was al ways sorry for a hasty word. While he was at the head of the army with his ollice on Seventh street just op posite the War department, he was coming out one day to enter his car riage, cane in hand. A volunteer orderly, who knew nothing of Scott's views of military propriety, ap proached him with u letter from a War Department Bureau, which he had been directed to deliver Gen. Scott at once. The orderly, recking nothing of Adjutants General or Chifs of Staff, interpreted his order iiteally, and nastily giving a care- less salute began : 'OH, General, , his 0feTia.A me the place gave me'a heres a paper 1 want you to look at j n)0ral advantage, and I used it. the before you. For a moment the ! resuit being that j wag allowed ' the proud Commander-in-Chiet seemed i usual princely salary of a repor petrified. Then raising the cans, he, i ter said in a loud voice : "Clear out I f worked along for a while, and sir; clear out ol the way." The ! final,v KOt an interebt in the Huuk startled orderly sprang to one side, j w"hich then increased itscircula and the General got into his carriage j tl0n A curioU!, thing happened af and was driven waay. 1 he soldier ter iiwhile, which caused me to laugh then delivered his letter to some one .y a tiuie Xhere were four of U9 in the othce and walked slowly out. J on the editorial page-Frank Hat- Ueneral ccotts carriage Had not touts thirty rods before it stopped and turned about. The driver, raid ing his voice, summoned the offen ding orderly to the door. Trem bling in every limb, cap in hand, he approached. General Scott asked his name and regiment. He gave them. "Well, sir,'" said the General "report to your colonel that you were guiltv of grcss disres"pect to Gen eral Scott as an officer, and that General Scott was guilty of gross disrespect to you as a man. Gener al Scott begs your varden. Go to your duty, sir." In lStiO a lady passing the season here was very anxious to get General Scott's autograph. He was ytry busy, and she found her task very difficult. One day the happy thought struck her that her pretty little ten-year-old daughter might be able in this case to do what she herself con'-l not. So she sent the charming luile girl to the General's office with the autograph album. The order told her that she could not see the busy General. She would not be denied. She would wait, sho said. At the end of halt an hour the orderly took her humble re quest to the adjutant. The latter admitted her, but told her that sh could not see the General. She said she must. At last the adjutant showed her to the door leading to General Scott's office, and told her she could go in if she dared. Tak iug him at his word, she marched right in. This is her description of the call given at the time: "I was afraid at first when he looked up; but as soon as he saw it was only me he said right pleasantly : Well, little girl, what do you want? and I told him my nia wanted him to write his name in her book ; and he looked shaip at me and then smiled a little bit, and shook hands with me and asked me who my ma was, and I told him my pa was in the army, anil ma was all alone with me and then he just kissed my cheek and wrote in ma's book and said 'good-morning' to me and I came out, and nobody didn't hurt me at all." This is what he wrote : "Treason is the greatest crime. Wintield Scott." Just one more : ternoon in the summer left the army forever, President Lin-jened will find himself, without coin with some friends sat on thetknowing why, an "early riser." balcony at the rear of the White ! J.miret. House, listening to the music of the marine band, wuen lieneral .Tcott: was announced. The Presideut im-i mediately advanced to meet him, j and returned with the Lieutenant General, in full uniform, on his arm. The CrOWd on the lawn Saw the President and the white-haired vet- eran, stopped talking, looked at the ' pair for a moment, and then broke every horse, for all kinds of aches forth into applause. The General at and pains, believe in its sovereignty once stepped to the front and raised a3 a cure."' his hat in acknowledgement. The j band very appropriately played, . , , .. "Hail to the Chief," while the crowd ! . A bo-v wtr'1t7s to a PaPeF th:lt " continued to the clapning of hands. I h.er h.l u-DO?, a" important "You've got a good" many voung , f and h'1 ha!d- roni this it Generals, Mr. President," said thej' 1'ferreJ that the old gentleman old hero, turning to Lincoln, "butj has been resorting to corporal pun- they don't forget the old General yet, ! hment. do thev ! m e could spare a hun dred of them," said the President, helping the General to a seat, "bet ter than him." 4'I thank you," said the General, with tears In his eves. Convincing The proof of the pudding is not in chewing the string, but in having an opportunity of testing the article di rect. C. N. Boyd has a free trial bot tle of Dr. Bosankos Cough and T,nnp Svrun for each and every one j - - r j I who is afflicted with coughs, colds, asthma, consumption, or any lungl acection. Starting a Xewsspaper. Yi.l ...... .In .1 jliiltr nnr.n. j IJIKk TUU CHI Ciaib . WiAiij u-tl i No ? Well ycu ought to try it. i Falling down stairs with a stove on ! top of you is nothing to be compared ! to it in point of excitement. The name of that paper was Th Etviw, land it was started to fill a long felt j want. Jerry Cochrane was my part Iner. There were several very ceni i forting things about that paper, j For instance, Jerry and 1 always j knew on Monday that we wouldn't 1 have enough money to pay the hands oil on Saturday, and we never aid. The hands knew it, too, and so their nerves were never shocked by a disappointment. We ran that way for a while, getting more deeply in debt all the time. At last, one morning, I entered the office and found Jerry looking rather solemn. "Jerry says I, "vou want a part ner." "Yes, we need one, Bob," he re joined. "A business man," said I. "One with executive ability," gaid he. "A financier," I observe". "A man who can take hold of the thing and turn it into money," he concluded. "Then I've got the man you want," I said, and introduced Frank Hitch cock, the sheriff. Jerry said Frank was the very man he had been thinking of, so we installed him at once. r?ir, ne proves to De ail we had anticipated, and he ran the pa per with the greatest success till he had turned it entirely into money. When we wound up the concern there was nothing left but two pas ses one to Cincinnati and one to Burlington. We divided them, and went in different directions. I got to Burlington Iteling pretty bad. I was about two hundred thousand miles in debt, having managed to owe everybody I knew. I would have owed the strangers, too, only I had no way of making their acquaintance. One day I re marked to Mrs. Burdette that I be lieve I'd go over and see if I couldn't get a job on the 1 buckeye. I post poned it for a while, and one day the business manager came over to offer me a place. I could have hug ged the man, but I didn't want to be demonstrative, so I held back rath er coyly. He asked me if I had anything in view, and I told him I had. It was the truth, as I had an idea of going out to the poor house, if 1 could get to ride on the cars ; I was too proud to walk. Well, he urged me, and I finally agreed to take the loatter into con-' sideration. I was to go in at six o'clock the next afternoon, and I bid him a chilly good day. For fear I'd miss the train, I was down there at a quarter to four, but, when I en tered the liurkeye office I walked in like a lord and called the business manager "Charley,'' slapping hico j f;iliniiiarlv on the back. I tell vou ton, John L. Waite and John Bur dette, my brother. Frank was the first one taken from that glorious band, and he became First Assistant Postmaster General. John Waite followed by becoming postmaster of Burlington, and my brother was than appainted collector in the First Internal Revenue District of Ohio, Frank was born -in Cadiz, Wait in Ravenna, and my brother in Cincinnati, all in the same State. I was from Pennsylvania and didn't . . i : t , l. .... t u : . I ei, iin v lumi:. it, liiBvea oinu iuch lor offices. Kuny KiNing. The proper time to arise is when sleep properly so-called, ends. Do zing is not admissible from any reasonable or health point of view. The brain falls into the state we call sleep, and the other organs of the body follow it. True sleep is the aggregate of sleeps. In other words, sleep, which must be a natural func tion i.e., physiological instead of by disease or drugs is a state which consists in the sleeping or rest of all the several parts of the organism. Sometimes one and at other times another part of the body as a whole may be the least fatigued and so the first to awake, or the most exhausted and therefore the most "difficult to arouse. The secret of a good sleep is the physiological conditions of rest being established to so work and weary tin several parts of the organism as to give them a propor tionally equal need of rest at the same moment. The cerebrum or mind organ, the sense organs, the muscular system, and the viscera should be all ready to sleep together, and, so far is may be possible, they should be equally tired. To wake early and feel ready to rise, this fair and equal start of the sleepers should be secured ; and the wise selfman- ager should not allow a drowsy feel ing of the conscious or weary j senses, or an exhausted muscular 1 system, to beguile him into the lolly j ,,f o-oin;' to sleen aain when once his consciousness has been aroued. After a very few days of self-discipline the man who reolves not to "doze." that is. to allow some still One Saturday af-; sleepy part of his body to keep him mer before Scottii,, bell after his brain has once awak- Dlue Grass Breeders. r. pk Withers, of Fairlawn Stock Farm. Lexington, k'v.. writes : j j DaVH PUCj, conridence in St. Ja- , mb Oil th crre.if nain-enro that T use it on everything ; myself, my horses, my negroes. Everybody and A Georgia lady has entered suit against her husband for divorce be cause he would not give her the combination to his safe. The opinion of the general public in regard to Ayer's Cherry Pectoral is confirmed by clergymen, lawyers, public speakers, and actors. All say that it is the best remedy that can be procured for all affections of the vocal organs, throat and lungs. There are 193.000 physicians! in 1 this country. Of)