the Somerset Herald r; WTWum"' " irerms of i'tibliQation. Published every Wednesday morning t v " jrr annum, II paid 1 advance i uLhrTwfcs M HIM Invariably be cnor.cd. t No tnbscripUon srfU be ilwoaUnuod ontil all prcaragesarepabl cp. Ptatmuiem neglecting notify w when ot-r.en d not Uke out Ve'.r paper will be hU responsible for the tab- s uLscrihert removing from one ostoffioe to - j hershoold given! tbe "an 'ormr " sella the preoeat ofTcs. Address The Somerset Herald, f J ATTOll-ATLAW. sepj. I71tEI). W. KI CHECKER, i .JTUKNEY-AT-LAW A- r Souier-eL Pa. I OlfiT, op-su!rf in Coo - Beenti' Hiock. t- - rr::r. p EOKG ;K K- ' AT TOitN Tt V - A 1 -I.a w , So merfrt Pa. 01 IX i:. '0TT. ATTOKNEY-AT-LAW, . Somerset, Pa, 1 J- KOOSKU. ATTOKNEY-AT LAV, Somerset, I. . KNDSLEY. ATT KN EY-AT-LAW, XL R U. TRENT. ATT'iKNEY.AT I.A1 Somerset, Penn a. 71) 13. scull. ATTOEN EY-AT LAW, Somerset, Pa. I. BAER, ATTUENEYAT LAW, Somerset, Pa, . l- l...l.lnAnnnHM will i.ract cc n somerset m a-ij-imo. ' V;.r;, ;,!, him will be promptly All bo attended to. t n.orn;orii. w. u. r.riTEL, I j ATTORN EYS AT LAW. t All business entrusted to their care - . , 1 1 .. ft til. will i iMammoth Klock. 'iT'rv L C. COI.BUKX. tiv t. cat nnnv. i All business lntrnte.l to our rare Jvfc. tulthlv attcu.led to.Colle-tl Vrset. He.ruri. and si!i..ininK will lieprompt uiale in s.m- unties. Survey- cwevailcing done on reasonable terms. rilJJAMir.KOONlZ. Somerset, Pa., 1 WP1 L-'ve i.r. n.M nttertlon to bflneM entrnn ?e.lTo hiicsr in and ad.wlninR counties. i ( -Mice in Printing liuuso Row. D EN MS ME YE US. A TTOR N E i - A X Somerset . Penn a All letal business entrus'ed to biscare wm ne ftende-l t" wuh promptness and ble'Ly. tjce on Main rof8 Street, nest .lour to Sny cr n Co.'r store. -ir5 JAMK, I, TTC.H. ATTORN EY-AT LAW Somerset, l a. (irtice. Vammoth Rlock, op stairs. n'nc; I Vain Cr-s rt. CoHectmr.s made.. e ntcs I m.V.m1 titles examine,!, and all k,ral bustnees attended to with promptness and ndellty. Y. KIMMEL. ATTORN EYAT-LAW, Somerset. A mat3 Pa. MJ PRITTS, . ATTORN EY-AT-LAW Somerset, Pa. OfSoe. nivsttlrs In Mammoth Block. TOHS 0. KIMMEL. J ATTORN EY-AT-LAW, Somerset, Pa. Will attend to all business entrust a bis care InS omersct and advlnlng conniies with J""'!" ne and uaouiy. oiuw - II EXRY F. SCIIELL. ATTtiRN L A 1 , Bounty and Pcnion Agent, Somerset, ra. Otttce in'Mammotn Ulark. :r T r-TTE HAY. ATTORN EY-AT LAW And Dealer in Real Estate. Snmer t. P attend to all lu?ines entrusted to his care will tith promptness and hdety. toiin riiT,. f) ATTORN EY-AT-LAW ' Somerset, l a, Wiirpromptlv attend to all bnslnete n'msted to him. .Moncv advaneed on eoliectiona. tx. ui hre lu Mammoth Bsiiding. T ; 00 I.E. ATTOKNEY-AT LAW, Somerset Pa., Protesalonal business entrusted to my care at tended to with promptness and f. delity. M. I)ITHEU. ( Formerly of Stoyettown.) FUYSICIAS AD SIRGKOS, Has pK-aled tet manentty In Sdmcrset T-r the .mriccct his iindcsslon. Otfice Sdw.rs n est ol I entrul Hotel, In re:ir ol Drug Store. may.il. D R. E. W. MjOUGII, IIQMIOPATUIC rHV.K'iV ASP SVKGCOS Tenders his seixleos to the people of Someraet ai.d vicinity. Calls in town or country pp.mptly ationdedto". Can Iw Ixnnd at ofhen day or night, unless proleshinally eniraired. -Oihce on Sontli:it corn.r ol I'iauioud, over Knefter'f Shoe Store. apra'.tf. TR. II. S. KIMMEL I f tMi.iers his profe sal oral service to the cltl yi tis of Some wt and Vicinity. Cnles protcsin- 1 .nirairel he inn be tound at his etlicc. Main St., east of the Diamond. DR. II. KRUKAKER tenders hit? nmfesslonal services to the clt liens of Snm ernet and vicinity. Office In residence on Main street west ot the Diamond. "TR. WM. RAUCII tenders his I professional services to the eltijensof Som eret and Ticinltv. ( tftirs- One dilor fast of Wayne k Herkeblle's tnrnitnre store. 1 cc. 6. 'Ki. DR. JOHN DN.T.. DENTIST. omce p stair' InCc- k tx Kcerits lilock, Somer set, Pa. DR. AVII.T.T AM COT.I.IXS. DENTIST. SOMERSET, PA. omce In Mammoth Plock. above H-iyd Iirng Store, where l. can at all times le found prepar ed todo all kinds oi work, such as rilling. Tvun latlnir, extracting. c. Arttricial toethot all kinds, and of the beat material inserted. Ojrathnj arrantei. H. HOWARD WYNNE, MD. Diseases t f the Eye. Ir. Nose and TtroaU Siecial and Kv-iBiv. p-sctice. Hnttrs. C A. to f r. h. Lutker k lirccu Hl.n k. Swi Main SL T r THOMPSON, M. P. SVRtiEeX DENTIST. Johnstown, Pa. Hss had a i-r fepsi'mnl eTteHcncedraore than dirty years En l ino Teicth a SratTaiw. ittn-e tCnis N't. Main street tup stairs) over John IMrt's Hapiwarc Store. It will be neces sary lor rsocs wto wunt worg done to make ea gairemcijts beloretanv2. tctl6's3. DR. J. K. MILLER nently located in Berlin foi lias it-rrua- for the prartioe of his prolession. Omce oiiposlte Charles krisstiur- er l store. aj. XJ, ,0-u. D TAMOND HOTEL, STOYSTOWX. l'MXN'A This popular ant wedi known bouse bna lately been th.Touahly and newly retltted with all new tdJ t-st ot lumllure. t:i. h hat made it a very detn.lde stopping place tor the traueling public. U if tatde and rfits cannot le snrAiwed, all be ne tint class, with a larire palUe hail attached to the same. Also larue and roomy tabling. Kim class lumrtiioa can lie had at the lowest pos sible prices, by the week, day or meal. SAM V IX CT'STER. Pp. S. E. Cor. DlatEond Stoystow ,P SDMINISTKATOR'S NOTICE. Estate of ut Sarah llater. lata or Somerset Twp Somerset IVwity, Pa., de eased. letters Of aitmtn!trarlim n. t mi.r-m havirg heea granted te tbe un.ersii.-ned bv the l-r-1r autnorlty notice is hereby Kir en to ail -toos indebted to said estate to mae immedi ate payment, and tlxr having claims against the same to prcs-m tbcm dniy authenticated tor set tlement Saturdav. t ne :oUi day of Auc, at the oBice ol J. H.'t'bL Eeo,., in Someiset Dor ongu. DAVID CASEBtEK, J"155 Administrator. ADD 17 IT Send 6 cents lorpost- a s.-e and receive free a eoeilj boa ot Kifc .iu.n win he)p xm to ,,-., monev ru-ht away tbaa anything else in this tk v . ol .itkn Kx- eceed lnn erst hour. ne bread road to fortsne opens the work- CuAEuita,'Matne. . - mi, at once addreaa. Ttt i k lan'j. K 1 L VOL. XXXIII. NO. II. Riflgeway Patent Refrigerator The Best. It solves the diiBfuli problem of Perfect Refrigeration. It dries and nurlfies Itself while in nse by an Astomaile Cireslation of Air. It dispenses necessary to soep It ciean.ann perrnnsoi a wooo. lining re,ulring really noeicaningat an as long a ice supply It maintained, iM ilk. butler. Meat. Fish, Kruit, etc., can be kept in this Refrigerator at Miiict line without Imparling the savor of either to the other, li I much more eeunoui leal in consumption of ice than any other Kefritterator. insulated with dead airspaces made In best manner, with api walls. "i'o rifk in purrha-luf:. batisiactlon gnarantod. or money refunded. -Send lor Illustrated Catalogue. Fndt Jars, Jelly Glasses, Fnat Cazs, Csseiit Ladles, Jar Tillers, Cherry Seeders, . Grazi:e Ware, Lasps, Clothes Wrirsers, Fly Traps, Znives and Forks, F. W. HAY, Manufacturer and Denier in i PLAIN, STAMPED k. JAPAN"EU I RANGES, STOVES, AND ! House Furnishing Goods,; ClIor i Sheet Iron Ware, j HmslicsK:c. i AT WHOLESALE and KKTAIL. : N"S. 278, 'JM) an12S-i WaPhington SL, ! JOHNSTOWN, PA. i Wholesale Agent for Self Melting and Self-Sealing "Wax Strings For scaling Froit Cans and .lars. The Simplest, Cheapest, and most r. liable method lor Mating Kroit .lara ever utd. From .'k) to tHt cts, per th7cn saved hv Usilng them. leal rrf supplied at mrnulaetnrer's jTicis. eud for circulars. -:o: Our Entire Stock Must be Reduced This Month, To Make lloom for Our IJVTOMIEJNXSE STOCK OF FAIL BOOTS AHfl SHOES, If You Want Some of the BIGGEST BARGAINS That was Ever Offered in the Boot, Shoe and Slipper line, ('owe to ,Vy Uh thi 3;k. L. ONIS-iPRICE SHOE STORE No. 212 Main St., Johnstown, Pa. SOMERSET (KSTAliLlSHF-D 1ST7.) CHiELES. I EAEEiN. President. K.J.FK1T71 C:ishier Collections made in all parts ot the I'nlted States. jroj ' CILAIIGES MOUiUi"- ParUes wishing to send Bene? West ran be se eommodated by draft on Kew'Terk in any sum. ddlections made with promptnera. V. S. Hoods bought and s44. Money and valuables secured by one of 1 Heboid's eelebrated sales, with a Sar gent k Yale 3v 00 time luca. ACCOUNTS SOLICITED. f Allien bolidayi otjerrel.- BARGAINS BARliAIIS STARlrABBTEB s with meul linlng.so objectionable because ol labor S2.00 Will purchase a Kitchen Outfit, Consisting ol the fol lowing 38 pteees: 1 Dish Pan, 1 Colfea Pot, 1 Water Ducket, 1 Covered Kucket, 1 Large (irater, 1 Tin Cups, 4 Pin Plates, 1 Cake Cutter, 1 S:iuco Pan. I Wash ltnin, 6 Taldekniv.a, STahie porks, Table Spoons, 6 Tea Sjoons. Enamelei an3 Galvanize! Iroa ffater Coolers, LEMON SHI EEZEKS. ICEPICKS, ICE Tt N IS. W IK ECOOLKKS. TI ' M KEEK DRAINERS. ICECREAM MOLDS L1ULOR MIXERS, ETC. ALntsx A. HoEKB. J. Soott Wabd. HOBIE & WARD SroCKSBoBS TO EATON & BROS, AO. 27 FIFTH AVEXUE, PITTSBURGH, PA. NEW GOODS EVZSY DAY SPECIALTIES i.m broideries, laces, Millinery, White Goods, Hani kerchiefs, Drest Triramltigt, Hosiery, Gloves, Corse's, Kuslla and Merlae Underwear, In fants' and Children's Clothing.Fanty Goods, Yarns, Zephyrs, Mate rials of AH Kind for FANCY WORK, Gent's MMi Mi, k, k ror rxTKoiiAGg is ESrcrrrLi.T soLiciTin. jZfit Onlt P! by Mail attended to with Ironipt netss and Hbpatcli. , . , A NEW ENTERPRISE. E. M. Lambert &Bro., Manufacturers of and Dealers in White Pine ani HeM Sftfe We have secured a I And manutaeture Shingles on the Michigan I Principle. We cut, and constantly keep on hand I two gradesof the various kinds of Shinnrlea. We ' guarantee cur Sblnifles to be superior to any j in the County. Shall 1 pleased to have parties I come and inspect our shingles before Laying elsewhere. Address E. M. LAMBERT & BRO., LAM BF.RTSV1LLE, SOMERS ET CO., Pa. unell-eui. FASHIONABLE CUTTER & TAILOR, bad many experience branches of Tailoring bus- iruarantee Satisfaction to all may call p- and favor 4, me with their pat ronage. Yours, kc, ivn. m. iiocnsTK m:K, Somerset, la. mart QUEMAHONING WOOLEN MILLS. WM. S. MOJIGAX, Troprietor, rl'HE Aucnts of these well-known Mills nrenow visiting their customers with a splendid as sortment of WOOLEN GOODS, which thev wish to trade for Wool These Goods are made In our own County, from fure Stock, on the Latest Improved lachiery. and by first ciasa workmen. We want FIfTi' THWSASD Pt Mis Of ir OOL this year, and will make it pav you to deal with ns. ai-v are also prepared to do Custom Spin- i' ning and Wool carding. Address. WM. 8. MORGAN. apr-3ni. Unemihjcing, Pa, $66s weeg at home. S outfit tree, pay absolutely sure. No risk. Cap ital not required. Reader, if you ant business at which ierson of e, iher er, lonng or old. can make great pay ad tin time tuev work, wttn at.soiute crtainty writt for parUcolars te IL Ualuctt, PortIani,Me. AGENTS; wanted for the lives ol aU the Presidents of the U. S. The lar- ifest. handsouHtst. best book ever sold for less ner twice our price. The fastest selling book. Agent ca. immense pronts 10 agents, ail inillsiul- eople wint It. Any one can beeome a sooeesort agettt Terms free. H si.i.ktt lioox Co., Port and, Maine, Li e, Lime, Lime ! Frnta the Celebrated Perk Limestone Le'lge famished aboard the ears at ear kilns near Pins Or-ve at 8 rents rr bnsheL mslacked. lnlers promitly tailed. For further particulars call on tue un'tersigneu. J. I. WOLFESS BKRQEB A ERO Jtockwood, Vx. or ra-ajlt ISAAC O. JONES, Somerset, Pa CHARLES HOFFMAN. erorei.l LATEST STILES ill LOWEST PRICES. SATISFACTION GUARANTEED. b&"VfiS Having L ."J-W-CA. years .nKT I ' . 1 in all ',i.:"jr 1 J.yJ r mess WLXkM IJEBCHAllT TAILOR. (Atxv Heaary Heffl'i SOMERSET, YJl. Somerset TOGKTHEli. A fairy skill in a stream was lying ,, ? : AskiiT with a sliken sail; . . In a forest of fire the day was dying, .. . And daintily slimjd t lie gale; ... . AVhen a maiden fair and ajrallaut gay i , Sjirang into it lyitly and sailed away Away through the purple gloaming. ' . - No moon loolied down from tho vaulted. heavan ; ; They tailed by the Iifilit of elart. ' 15y the smile serene of the raters seven And the ruddier glow of Mars. Hut the storm ting rose in liia grandeur grim ' ' And the stars swam into the distance dim, As they tossed uu the troubled water. The tempest reased, and the broad, deep river . Flowed on with annulled lireaft ; : -. Again in high heaven tho sisters quiver. And the wild winds sink to rest. . , There is caliu he Low, therein peace alxve, And the eyes of the maiden am full of love As she clings to her happy lover. They hear the boom of the mighty ocean; Their blithe bttrk breasts its swell And westward jjiilc ,witli a gentle iiw , ; tion ... i ' I : : , i . But whither, I cannot tell.' We know love's stream, ia not smooth for aye ; . Hut the sweet stars shine as they sail away . ; .... O'er the ocean of life together. ... . ' A WIFKM CHAIOI. A pout upon the red lips of Ger ald Sinclair's youns wife unmis takably a pout for though a wife al most two years, hfr fond, indulgent husband had for the first time said nay to an openly expressed wish. - The fancy ball of the season, a grand and fashionable assemblage, was to take place during his ab sence and he said that he should prefer she would not attend. fche was onlv twenty. Jjet this much be said in extenuation of the two great tears that rose to the brown eyes and slowly tricl'led down the pretty face, splashing on the dainty " morning "dress, which clinging to the dainty form, revealed so perfectly its graceful outlines. Certainly Niobe had no reason to feel ashamed of this one of her chil dren. Rut Gerald Sinclair had only stooped and kissed away the glisten ing drops in a half-hurried manner, perhaps to hide his awakening re morse. "Never mind, little wife. IH make it up to you another time." Then he was gone; but she sat still, turning and returning her wed ding ring, with eyes bent upon it. It was a curious ring a solid band, set with five large diamonds.' It had been her charm, her talis man, not to be taken from her fin ger until soul and body had parted ; but this morning it had Jost its charm: If it failed ' to' scatter the clouds, it. failed to bring "back the sunshine. Even when the hour came round for Gerald's home-coming, he miss ed his usual warm welcome ; but he thought that he might trust his wife's heart and said nothing. The next day he started on his journey. "You 'r not going, mv dear?" ex claimed Mrs. Martin, bursting in up on her friend on the morning of the ball. "And why not?" "Gerald is away," replied Mrs. Sinclair, with some little show of wifolv dignity, as thouga the fact were in itself sufficient explanation. "And why need that make any difference?" pursued Mrs. Martin, a bewitching Jittle widow some Jew years her mends senior. "I will share mv escort with you Count Belzoni!" Sophie Sinclair looked up amazed. She knew that the man mentioned had but lately gained entree into so ciety, and knew also that her hus band disliked and distrusted him. Once or twice she had seen his eye fixed admiringly upon herself, and had felt somewhat as the bird might feel beneath tbe basilisk glare of the serpent "Well, why don't you answer?" continued Mrs. Martin. "Will you go." "No, no," she replied, trying to ppeak with firm decision. "Besides, I do not think that Gerald admires the count." "Prejudice, my dear, all prejudice. The count is one of the most charm ing and agreeable men I know. In deed I think I should he canonized for my willingness to share his at tentions, especially as I have heard him say all manner of pretty things about you." "Nonsense. Ellen," retorted Mrs. Sinclair. But she felt tbe ground slipping beneath her feet as she spoke. After all, Gerald had not said pos itively no. Had he thought it nec essary after he hadotrenly expressed his disapprobation of her going? He had not known that she would be so sorely tempted. Besides, she would wear a mask. No one would know her ; and when she told Ger ald he would forgive her. A sudden thought came to her. "" "' I will go," she said at last, after continued urging, and looking at the picture in all its brightest lights, "on one condition, and that is that no one is to know me not even the count Say that you have persuaded a friend to accompany vou who wishes to remain unknown. I will come to your house, where he will find me, and thus gain no clue." So it was decided ; but, in spite of her exquisite costume of a fairy as she concealed it and herself beneath a large domino, as the clock on her, mantel chimed ten, it seemed to So-i phie that every stroke said, 4Etav ! Slav!" " : ' , ; ' ' . " i She was almost tempted to obey it, but she had promised Ellen ; and after all, she had heard that it was well for young wives to assert them- j selves. An hour later and, on Count Bel zoni's arm, she ' entered upon the brilliant scene. So far hj had not even seemed curious to ascertain her j identity. She experienced at this a singular sense of relief. The ball was at its height as the clock rang out the hour of midnight but for the first time in her life ligh ' and gayety were distastefuL A hun dred times she wished herself at home. . . "I will tell Gerald. I have al- ESTABLISHED 1827. SOMERSET, PA., WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 27, 1884. ready been punished," she whispered to herself, as she stood for a moment alone in a quiet corner. - ; "You look more like a nun than a fairy rather like one who had fore sworn the vanitietof the world, than a siren to tempt men to their de struction," sliid a voice close to her, "though to" the latter I know no one more fitted." .... . . "Sir!"she exclaimed indignantly, recognizing as she. spoke, the count standing at her elbow. "Ah ! you thought I did not know you. I should penetrate any dis guise you wore. Besides you have forgotten to remove a badge of recog nition," She followed with her eyes his downward glance, and saw that it rested ou her baud, ungloved, as in better accord with the exigencies of her costume. Involuntarily she drew it away, with the, ring which bad betrayed her. Denial was useless. "Since you know me, then," she said, "we will not further play a part. To the others we are masks ; to ourselvss we are ourselves." "Ah,., ruadame," he whispered, "let us rather say to the world we are ourselves, to each other we are a mask. , Can men, think you, look coldly on such beauty as you pos- sees? Cau- , Indignant'and alarmed, she check ed his i'urtherjspeech by starting for ward to escape him. His hand closed on hen? as in a vice. She wrenched it 'from him, sprang among a crowd of maskers, and 60 made .her way to the door. "Call a carriage for me," she di rected. Ten minutes later she was within her own home. Her first impulse was to tear off the hated costume which had caused her such trouble ; her next to throw herself on the bed and sob out her excitement and con trition. The morning sun streaming into her room, awoke her. With a shudder, she remembered the events of the past night She looked down at her hand the hand which had been polluted by anoth er's touch as though in some way she expected to find the contamina tion branded on its soft, white sur face. It was all unrnarred, but she looked again she rubbed her eyes and looked the color meanwhile fluttering out of her cheeks and her pale lips quivering, as if her heart seemed to stand still in a sudden ag ony of fear, for from the third finger was missing the talismanic ring. When and where she had lost it, and how could she now find the couraze to confess all to Gerald r She rose and dressed, revolving the problem in her mind. At any hour tier nusoana mignt return. J?or the nrst time she dread ed to meet him dreaded to look in to his kindly, handsome eye3, and read there all his incredulous re proach, mingled, perhaps, with scorn and anger. The day wore on. lier menu Mrs. Martin ran in to scold her for her desertion, but her pale face and trembling tones made good her plea of sudden illness. At nightfall G.erald arrived. She threw herself into his arms in a burst of nervous weeping, but when he wonderingly asked the cause her courage failed her. Why was it she never imagined that he might look stern until to day ? A week past, when one evening, sitting in the twilight, a step sound- ed close beside her. She looked up to discover the count "Pardon!" he began, in answer to her indignant questioning look. "Why must you be so cruel ? May I not now see you ?" "Sir. I command you to leave me. I am now under the protection of my own roof." He was about to answer, when a latch key was heard inserted in the outside door. In an instant he had sprang into some place of concealment but the fact that he was near lent the young wife a sudden courage, born of the moment's desperation. Her husband entering, approached her, but she motioned him back. "Gerald," 6he said, "I have a bitter confession to make. It is fitting that you should hear it now." He listened, with arms folded across hia breast, while she told him all the story of the fated night "And is this all ?" he questioned bitterly, when she had paused. "No, not all,,' she continued, rais ing her voice. "My confession has another witness, who has forced his hated presence again upon me. The Count Belzoni is here again, Ger ald." . , As she spoke she drew aside the curtain, but the. form she expected to disclose was gone, the open win dow attesting to its flight. Silently the husband drew a pi per from his pocket, and showed her a paragraph offering a reward for the arrest of a thief and swindler known as Count Belzoni. "My darling," he said, "my little wife has learned a lesson she will never forget I have known this story all the while, but I have wait ed until you came to tell it to me. I returned the night of the ball to take you with me, when I found you had gone. Imagine what I suffered and my added suffering when, arriving at the scene of enjoyment, where I had followed you, I discovered who was your companion. I stood near you and heard the words he ad-1 dressed to you heard with joyful heart your answer, saw you wrench your hand from his hold, and also saw what you did not, the sparkle of the ring he drew from your finger. Poor little girL I watched you hast en through the crowd, and knew that you had already met your bit terest punishment It has been through my efforts that the count has been traced and exposed. Only this morning I recovered your ring from the man with whom he had fledged it as security. Once more place it on your finger. But, re member, darling, it is only the out ward charm. A wife's true talisman is her husband's honor." There are 112,412 miles of raiiroad track in this country, of which 107, 158 are in operation. , , Tbe Last Leather Breeches. Old Harmanus Schooenhover was, some fitly and odd years ago, the 'oldest inhabitant' of the village for it was a village then of Brook lyn, a genuine old Knickerbocker, faithful to the traditions of the times, and looking down with sovereign contempt on all modern innoyations and improvements. He lived in an old wooden house, the gable end of which profected far into Fulton street, and the door yard of which was always ornamented in the sum mer time with those choicest of ac climated exotics, parti-colored tulips from Harlem, and sunflowers from heaven knows where. Harmanus was generailv known as the Last of the Leather Breeches, from the style of garment that incased his nether limbs. He also wore a broad-skirt ed, cinnamon-colored coat of homes pun manufacture and make, decorat eu wiin nuzn oiue Duttons. a very long waistcoat of black cloth, a white nect cloth, and a hugh three-corner ed hat trimmed with tarnish gold lace, in me loop of which, when abroad, he invariably wore a little clay pipe, with the stem tipped with red sealing wax. We must not for get his square-toed shoes, large enough tor the wear ot a gouty alder man, with their huge plated buck les. The rising generation did not regard his attire with that, venera tion which it inspired in a few relics. of the old school, who had not, how ever, courage enough to imitate his example and resist the modern abominations of dress. They would often laugh in the very face of the studv old Knickerbocker . His old three-cornered hat, And his breeches and all that Were so queer. But the old gentleman was queer in other ways than matters of dress. His notions on banks or in Wall street speculations. He would some times shave paper with undoubted indcrsers, and he owned some real estate : but the bulk of his property consisted in sundry fat little kess solidly filled with gold and silver, which he kept in his sitting-room up-3tairs, fronting the street Then he was queer in other things he had queer ways of helping poor people anonymously, and absurd notions that charity should begin at home, and only expand outwardly in pro portion as every necessity within its immediate sphere had been relieved. ho that, putting all these things to gether, the good man passed for being a little cracked, and heads with nothing at all in them were gravely shaken, like empty poor- boxes, when his name was men tioned. The old lellow viewed with an noyauce and. disgust the changes that took place in his native "village He only smiled when the stages from Patchogue and Babylon and Islip disgorged at Carmanh their loads of antiquated figures that look ed as if they might have stepped down from the canvasses, of a rlem ish gallery of the seventh century. He didn t recognize as fellow-creat ure3 any man or woman in the modern Parisian mode. At length the wise men of Brook lyn pronounced Schooenhover's house a nuisance. It was shabby, it was tumble-down, it destroyed the alignment of the street. It must come down. The corporation offered him a handsome price for it He rejected it with disdain. He was told that he must abandon his man sion the homestead of his father i will ye nill ye. He dared them to violate the sanctity ot nis castle. He was notified to vacate he scorned the summons. The whole town became interested. Tbe old man was a non resistant, like old Father Lem3on. He shut himself up with his money-bags and doggedly awaited the result Workmen were sent to pull down the house. The whole vicinity was thronged with curious spetiators as at a ship-launch, Merrily rang the axes and the hammers and saw, and the 'yo heave-ho ! of sturdy fellows pulling and hauling at cables. At last the end of the house was torn away shaming the legal fiction that a man's house in his castle and there sat old Hermanus in hi3 elbow ehair, with his cocked hat on hi9 head and his immortal breeches on his sturdy legs, sublime in his mar tyrdom, and smoking tranquilly his old clay pipe. His family had been removed to another of his houses. He was invited to join them. But he declined, wich a majestic wave of the band and a graceful emission of tobacco smoke. Then he was lifted carefully, arm-chair and all, carried down the staircase, and de posited on the opposite sidewalk. His goods and chattels were sent to his wife ; but even when hia money kegs departed he refused to accom pany them, but sat all through that day a silent spectator of the utter demolition of his venerable house. At night he rejoined hU family. The removal of this old landmark marked the merging of one era into another, and had the significance of an historical event The corpora tion paid tbe old man a large sum, but he did not long survive the de-1 struction of his house. His son lives in a palace and drives blooded horses, but few beyond the family remember, in the heady current of life, the, 'Last of the Leather Breech- es' of New York. A "Walking Skeleton. Mr E. Springer of Mechanicsburg Pa., writes "I was afflicted with lung fever 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 43 lbs." Call at C. N. Boyd's Drua Store and get a free trial bottle of this certain cure for au Lung Diseases. Large bottles $1,00. The first society for the executive purpose of circulating the Bible was organized in 180-3, under the name of the British and Foreign Bible Society. . eraM J Jl. Social Character of Athletic Sports. Bodily exercises imply society and a social disposition ; for if a sol itary person, like Robinson Crusoe or Enoch Arden, were to be found daily practicing with the bars and rings, we should suspect him, not of social, but of ominously selfish and morbid tendencies. Tho pleas ure of being strong lies in iht fact that others are strong around us thereby furnishes us with compan ionship and competition which are the fuel of life. Health is. or should be, incidental to this pleasure : that is to say, I question the propriety ot making health the deliberate ob- ject ot exercise, Let it come if it will: but it will come none the slower if you forbear to be on the watch for it. To make yourself strong for the sake of your private health ia the analogue of obeying the decalogue for the sake of your pri vate crown ; there is something un pleasantly unsympathetic about it But be strong simply because man kind at large will be better if all men become physically more eflicient and the other blessings shall be ad ded to you. Moreover, apart from the stimulus of example and fellow ship, it is doubtful whether one man in twenty will take the trouble reg ularly to exert hersell. Lnlessthere be some motive' outside himself, he will soon cease to think it worth while. Dr. Winship used to say that he never would have made him self the man he was but for the purpose he had formed to thrash certain offensive upper-class man in college; and Mr. William Blaikie began his athletic career an appar ently hopeless consumptive. Dr. Winship lifted three thousand pounds, and Mr. Blaikie pulled stroke of the Harvard crew in their great race with Yale ; but it would be useless to tejl me that the desire to turasn a mv or to heal a disead lung had more than the minutest share in bringing these results about. If it had" not been for the gymnasi um, with its jolly society of zealous and emulous young gymnasts, Win ship would never have lifted his own weight, and Blaikie would have been, at best, a valetudinarian. The fame of the Olympic and Isth mian games still echoes in our ears but it was not the games that made Greece go to see them ; it was Greece going to see them that made the games. In the same way I have noticed that the university crews of Oxford and Cambridge, for example profess to be superbly indifferent as to whether the British public on the day of the race lines the river bank from Putney to Mortlake; indeed, they have lately undertaken to intimate that they would prefer to have the public keep away. But no one know3 better than they themselves that, were the public some day to take them at their word not only would the crews nev er find the energy to get themselves into condition, but were that difficul ty overcome, tbey would never find it in their hearts to pull further that Hammersmith Bridge, near which there is a very good ale-house. I do not wish, however, to run this theory into the ground ; I only wish to indicate that athletics are essential ly a popular pursuit, conducive to good citizenship, and the cultivation of which, therefore, good citizenship should imply. Julian Hawthorne, in Harper MagAzine for August. How to l'low Orchard. Whether to plow the orchard to the trees each year or to turn the sod in opposite directions in alter nate years must depend on the sou and location. It is only in excep tional cases that the former course should be pursued. In poorly drained orchhards, on low, black land, this practice of heaping the 3od about the tree has the advantage even in this particular, however, it is doubtful if the benefits will over balance the inconvenience resulting from such a practice. Belter tile the orchard and keep the surface even. Drainage is not always se cured by the deep dead furrows. The ground must have a good nat ural slope or deep pools will be formed in the dead furrow just where the young roots demand warmth and drainage. The cons tant lowering of the dead furrows cut3 off tbe smaller roots and drives them deep into the subsil where there is little nutriment The val uable surfacesoil is piled up around about the trees, where it does no good. Roots feed largely upon the valuable elements which reach down from the surface soil. The most active roots of large trees are far from the trunk. An uneven surface in an orchard is a constant source of aggravation, especially in picking time, when, one must en ter it with a wagon. Windfalls roll into the dead farrows, and become bruised, wet and decayed. The sod does not usually strike close against the body of the" tree. As a conse quence, a little depression ia formed there, into which drifts litter, form ing an attractive home to insects and mice. There i3 no danger of injuring trees by plowing away from them and close to them if one has trained his trees properly, and if he exercises care. If the practice of close plowing be inaugurated in young orchards the roots will start deep enough to avoid the plow. It is not necessary to plow deep. Trees should be trimmed high. Low headed trees are au abomination, and they present hardly an advan tage over high tops. Even the oft repeated assertion that they are eas ier to pick from I have usually found very wide of the mark. To hae comfortable picking one mu9t have room under the tree in preferrence to a top so low tha't he can step in to it With' moderately high top ed trees, short whiffle-trees, low hames, a gentle team and a careful man one need not fear about injur ing trees. Plow one yev east and west the next north and south; one year to the trees, one year away from them. The English railroads have more substantial roadbeds than those in America, but the rolling stock is very inferior. WHOLE NO. 1728. The Hot-Feoted Centipede. Centipedes are composed of a body of from twenty to fifty segments each provided with two feet of claws. The front pair are more largely de veloped than the others. They form a sort of "foot-jaw," and are provi ded with poison glands. These are the apparatus by which the insect seizes its prey, and when these "jaws' are brought together the pressure forces the venom along the sharp points of the claws into the wound. The insect lives under damp stones and in old walls. If a centipede i f crawls over a sleeping person (for it is a night traveler) there is sai to be enough poison exuded from its claws to desjroy the scarf skin, but not enough to do any serious dam age. If, howeves the sleeper should make some sudden movement that alarin3 or hurts the centipede, it prepares for war by extending its claws into the skin of his involun tary entertainer. Of course, the poi son from the "foot-jaw" follows their insertion, and pain, followed by ef forts to remove the insect, so thrust after thrust of the poison-bearing claws is made, and hence the idea that each of its feet is provided with the same kind of weapons arises. Itching, followed by intense pain, is experienced : red spots appear at each puncture, which are red and become perfectly black at the cen tre. The inflamation travels alon the lymphatic vessels of the part .to the nearest glands, which enlarge and sometimes occasion abscesses. There is great mental anxiety pains in the head, back and limbs weakness, fever and vomiting. In very rare instances convulsions, unconsciousness and death follow. sometimes within tiro or six hours, In those who recover troublesome sloughing of the skin and underlv ing tissues occasionally occurs. In some persons it is said that eruptions appear every year over the parts of the skin affected by this kind of injury. 1 he treatment of casea ot poisoning by the centipede is the same as for spider bites. It has also been advised to give chloral and car bolic acid internally, and to apply astringent washes externally in cen tipede bites, Looking Into Empry Muzzle. On the way down from Natchez to New Orleans the boat rounded to at a landing on the Louisiana shere to take on a lot of cotton seed. She had just made fast, and the mate had stepped ashore "hustle them niggers," when a middle-aged man closely resembling the typical South erner, suddenly stepped out from be hind the sacks, presented a revolver within a foot of the mate s lace, and cried out: "Throw up your hands or you are a dead man !" There were faity of U3 with our eve3 on the two men, and we held our breath as tne mate siowiy raised his arms above his head. He didn't change color in the slightest, and those who took in the details noticed that he chewed away at his plug tobacco with the same regular motion nei ther faster nor slower. "Now, then, down on your knees and beg my pardon, or 1 11 send a bullet into your eve !" The mate's legs wab bled, bent and down he sank and iemarked that he was sorry if he had offended the other. "All right growled the man with a pistol as ho shoved it into his hip pocket "after this you will be a little more careful whom you fling your impudence at" As he turned away the mate made a dive with his right hand, and up came a Derringer, out shot the arm, and in a voice of thun der the mate crii-d : "Halt I Throw up your arms ! Down on your knees or I'll blow your brains all over the plantation I 1 he tables were turn ed. Up went the arms, and, after a few seconds, the man went down on his knees, and said he had the high est respect for the mate's moral worth. Whe he rose up the Captain and there had reached the pair, and in ten seconds more they were dis armed. "Close call that," said one of the passengers as the Captain han ded the weapons to the clerk to keep until the boar, was ready to leave. "Humph ! neither one of 'em loaded !" replied the old man. Such was the actual fact Two emty and harmless weapons had humbled two men who meant shoot. A Woman's Curious) Reqnest. Tn the will of Racbael T. Stevens, of Souierville, -recently filed in the Probate Court of East Cambridge, appeani the following bequest: "I give and devise all my estate, both real and personal, to the city of Bos ton, in tru.-it, nevertheless, tut the following use and purposes, viz.: To pay the net income thereof in rsemi annul payment to Hannah J. Adams, of Somerville ; upon the death of said Hannah tr pay the net income of said trust estate for the support and maintenance of poor, worthy Protestant single women of Bwston who have arrived at tbe age of o9 years (not including widows,) pay ing each the sum ol $100 annually in semi-annual payments ; upan the marriage of any beneficiary under this will no future payment is to be made to her, nor is any further pay ment to be made to any beneficiary who becomes unworthy of help un der this trust The foregoing is a perpetual trust" Her Somerville property is directed to be held in trust until it can be sold at SI per sqtfare foot, at which time the city is authorized to sell without apply ing to any Court for leave, the pro ceeds of the sale to be held upon the terms of the previous trust Some Foolish People Allow a cough to run until it get3 beyond the reach of medicine. They often say. Oh it will wear away, but in most cases it wears them away. Cou'd they be induced to try the successful medicine called Kemp's Balsam, which we sell on a positive guarantee to cure, theywoold imme diately see the excellent effect after taking tbe first dose. Price oOcts. and $1.00. Trial size free at C. N. Boyd's Drug Store. England has an men in Ireland. army of 45,(300 Small Farm Profitable. The owner of fifty acres of good ground who thoroughly understands his business is better situated than his neighbor who owns 200 acres and farms according to the old theories. The small farmer has less invest ment, pay less taxes, and cultivates more carefully than the large farmer. In t rance and Germany the farms are generally very small, often not a fourth of the size of average Ameri can farms, but they are worked bo carefully that, while steadily increas ing in fertility, they still produce a great deal more per acre than our own. The owner of many acres is apt to neglect the poorer portions of his ground, and thus manuring, rotating and cultivating are reduced to a system that produces the best possible results. An example of German gardening will illustrate the point Within three miles of Tort Jeryis lives a German family consisting of six or seven persons. For years they have liyed on a strip of sandy land lees than two acres in size, a part of which is covered by the dwelling, a barn and outhouses. The woman of the family, an able-bodied and in telligent person, who had learned her work in Baden, cultivated this piece of ground, and for a series of years supplied her table with vege tables and sold from $300 to $4U0 worth of vegetables annually. Every inch of room was occupied. From early spring, to late autumn crop after crop of lettuce, beet, spinach, cabbage, potatoes, corn, beans, mangold, wurzels, asparagus, onions, endive, eg plants, peppers, salsify, cauli-flowers and other plants appeared. Every bit of waste mate rial fit for the purpose was thrown on the compost heap or turned into liquid mancur and the naturally sterile piece of ground was made to pay for itself over and over again. The fences were built in trellis form to support grapevines, and not a square inch of ground escaped the payment of tribute exacted by the indefatigable woman who tilled it Her methods are those in steady use in Germany, where overcrowded population has rendered necessary the thoroughest working of the soil. Her plants for setting are the first in the market, and sho is the last in the autumn to offer fresh vegetables for the table. To such a farmer fifty acres of good land would be a fortune. It is such tillage as this which makes it possible for French, German, English and Italian holders of twenty-acre or thirty-acre or lourty acre farms to earn a living, while American holders of farms, of equal ly good land, ranging from 100 to jt acres, work about a hard and are forever under mortgage and on the very verge of bankruptcy. The future will certainly witness a great revolution in American farming. and one of the features calculate! I to bring about a better state of affairs will be the division of land into smaller farms and the consequent improvement in agricultural meth ods. Story Discredited. Washi.(jto5, August 12. The ac count published in New York this morning stating that the records of the Navy Department showed that the rescued members of Lieutenant Greely's party had partially sustain ed life upon the fleah of their dead comrades is wholly discredited at the department to-day. Canute and Effect . t times symptoms of indigestion are present, uneasiness of the stom ach, Sec, 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. Bosanko's Pile Remedy, which costs you but oO cents, and is sold by C. N. Boyd, the Druggist There are 20,000 producing oil wells in Pennsylvania, yielding, at present, W.QOO barrels of oil per day t takes o,0U0 miles of pipe line and ,C00 barrels each to transport and store the oil and surplus stock. Thousands Say So. Mr. T. W. Atkins, Girard, Kan., writes : I never hesitate to recom mend your Electric Bitters to my customers, they give entire satislae- tion and are rapid sellers. Elec tric Bitters are the purest, best medi cine known and will positively cure Kidnev and Liver com plaints. Pu rify the blood and regulate the bow els. No family can afford to e without them. -They will save hun dreds of dollars in doctor's bills every year. bold at hltv cents a bottle by U . Bovd. Malarial poison can be entirely removed from the system by the use of Ayer's Ague Cure, which con tains a sure specific, in the form of a vegetable product, used in no oth er remedy. Warranted. Maud S. has beat Jay-Eye-See's record by one-fourth of a second. It v anderbilt s turn to be elated, and J. I. Case will doubtless feel the loss of his short-livid position s owner of the "fastest horse in the world." A Dreadful Dlsieaae. Read, pondei and profit thereby. Kemp's Balsam for the Threat and Lungs is conceded by all who have used it to excel any preparation in the market as a complete Throat and Lung Healer. All persons af flicted with that dreadful disease Consumption will find speedy re lief and in a ma jority of cases a per manent cure. The proprietor has authorized C. N. Boyd, to refund the money to any party who has taken three-fourths of a bottle with out relief. Price 50 cents and $1.00. Trial size free. An exchange says that a Chicago girl sleeps with her feet out ot the window because she has read that "cold contracts." The first temperance society in this county was organized in Sara gota County, New York in March 1S08. Texas comprises 288 organized counties, and territory enough to form 100 more. There are now 19 producing gas wells in Allegheny, W ashington and Westmoreland counties. More than one-half, and probably two-thirds, of the lawyers of Berlin are Hebrews. The Delaware peach crop is said to be very large.