u u SomcrtftJlerald Menus oj. a. U-fcl . arabcat aM a . . m mmt nta an maoa .ji. I ,1,1 i.M The Somerset ueraia, Somerset, V. j. rriv-- &ED attoet-at. .a. m. P .-! ' Ulk. I o-- K)RGER. SCULL, LAW. SourwtPm. 0HSB.?rrrL.T4AW; ftmrNttfa. -v. - rn . . . : daunt, F-w - tt ENDLEi. -TV teFNT. i E1 DB. LVIVy-at-i-aw. it L BAER, ;OKNEY-AT-fcAW, r - SJsaMrsstr-, W. H. ErPPEL- FnwTHlgSIH..v;o. V . Uurtr oar. Will be 'Wcs-oa . !rMt.d to oar ear. will t prompt- gaga. - , 1 ATToKNET-AT .n ttentloB to tatnal entrant- n'-'l j r.ituo, ATTORSEY-AMjAW Otncw .vrr T PIXH. -P ' rTTOBSEY-AT LAW, Sua .P. Catnsc. " and ill 11 M. TOHN 0. KIMMETj. .1 ATTl'KS EY-AT-LAW, ual OMlitj. m v,r TTrT?Y F srHELL. H attiRKEY-AT-LA'W. tJlis'Sota but- " . V ALENTINE HAY. TOHXH. HIL. J. G. OGLE. - ATTVRS ET-AT-EA W, SoMfMtPat DR. J. M. LOUTH ER, mrHCiiS a-vo t"iCE0.v, I Vl MnfMlifl nni nwri, u w - R. E. BLOUGH, BJMtonTHIC THTS1CAS ASD SUGEO.V ttn!tT. t!lU In town or man iTy prnwptiy id4. evr finvi"r . DR. H. S. KIMMEL tmdert kit prolrtonl cttK to th rtU t.n.orsrtiidVlrtBtty. I BprolewWn- otl htnlbl tOMd t Bll oflw. St cut of tb bimsMOd. DR. H. BRUBAKEB tenders lus rfwf1fel term- to tJt ftrtten SJ n ud Tlrtnltr. 0 ta raMcnea trwt wm ol il DtaBood. DR. VM. RAUCH tenders his SKitffHoaaiMTrlca to U eHlmiBf of Boav tnrtina rkitay. 1 ' . (iaoorait af Wara. k BaTel" DR. S.J. H.MIIXEN. (iradutlt ta Vrnti'try) 4tarKKaT. P-. (px-iil atMBtkw to tb. Htniwlm of tkf Ntri Teta. Artlflrtal mi lnrtJ. All iTt.ic r'iaraa:l mttitcory. tiffic in BTBic:k. ap (talrt. Eatraae. rwe oi i Jeaary 6it0k j octa6m. DPwJOHXBILT. DENTIST. (. ap Rain IsCook A BtmlU.Block.SoaMr an.Pa. DR. WILLIAM OH.f.ns'3. DENTIST. SUMEKSET, PA. "flnlaXamaMiU Block, abnro Boyd a Pra Sura art tiioia'tl Lkoa loan prapar- tcdo all iiin-1, ot rC raalt a SllinaT. at-a-Wuu. .nnninic. k A nltk-tal Ustb or aB kkvta. Mof tha boat Miamal laaTtal.AJanUuai aarraatao. DH J. K. MILLER has penna eatlT MMatart ta Bertta air th. prartk of . maaw am. kavoUCaAriea KrtaMnf a.ia.'T0.i. l.-cau puMaica. and by aull t will jaatrrr aparaaao f awida of larao ,lu.. tnat wuiatart yoa ID wura tH at ra tmtt jot la maoj taer than ay-suc eto ta Amrriav AU abutt ta fM. pnarau wtis eack hoi. Accatt waatod worjr MR.lf Uwrwt.afall aicoa. f.w all th. tlaw. oji tha auW. w amrk . aa)i their own mm. rurtaoM fnr ail mttn aaoulaMlf o HATS AHD CAPS. J StaeklaaUKEV.aadaajDaoa SELECTED WITH 6REAT CARE. - . U vauifu la part of 2it' Cs, Scsrf Kui Slaeta Bat tas, Silk asi Lirm EaaJie Siirts, . Urderwear, k5?V,B,t- .V.artfcarnoBwro HV-r " AT Pf IXK -A$LBlEK S AtLOUK. pat;l u casebeer. CHARLES HOFFMAN. UIET STILES tsi LOWEST P21CES. SATISFACTION GUARANTEED. MERCHANT TAILOR; "7 r T1 r VOL.XXXIV.NO. 11. FRANK no. a. . . : Novelty and Eureka ; CLOTHES WBIXGUBS, :: W. an tailing; at ONLY 53.00. Ranges, Stoves lilDGEWAY REFRIGERATORS. TBIKB 8EASUN..V A I TMFECT HVCC ESS. j ! : j CtirfacfoI Gnariiteed. 1 . i f :T1mm ItMfml'fl an tb. UfepaT ud: : Best In tb Market. : 280 (Washington Street, -THE, OLDEST j ,jt ( ) -VM-U j CTF.T, MITCHELL FA M AND SPRING WAGON. V VfcSTABtlSllED FOR I have now on hand and offer for sale, at greatly reduced prices for the next ninety days, the very best WAGOH i FOR Manufactured in the, United States made by Mitchell, Lewis & Co., Limited, Hacine,' Wisconsin. Any person acquainted with the superior points of the Celebrated MITCHELL Which I am ..now selling, will ther nre th VEUY: BRST Farm Wagon made. They are in general use jiow in nearly every country on the face of the globe, and are adapted to every variety of climate. It is ac knowledged by "all to be the best proportioned, best ironed, best finished, and lightest running wagon made. I present a few facts that should be read by every farmer, about the Mitch ell Wagon? 1st. Great care is taken in that srows. which is cnt at the piled under sheds until thoroughly seasoned. 2. The thimble skeins are much heavier than any other skeins in use and are, therefore, less liable to break. 3. The hubs are dodge-mortis ed, which makes the strongest can be constructed. 4. The patent box-coupling, used only by this Company, prevents the wearing and weakening of the axle. 5. The MITCHELL WAGON stands to-day at the bead and front of all competitors, and is known far and wide as the strongest and most durable, unequaled in quality and finish, and "monarch" of the road whererer known and used. Don't fail to give me a call, and see the wagon for yourself! Remember, for the next NINETY DAYS I am selling these wagons at greatly reduced prices. Land to buy now ! Prices furnished on application. O-IEO. "W- SIN JD-blR XTW BUXLIZtt KO PATRIOT, SHIS EAR C2CCS ST1XST. CURTIS K. GROVE. (Eart from Coart Hobm.) Somerset, L'enn'a. , Nanabctarar of t BIGGIES, SLEIGHS, CAMKHGES, SMSO WAGOHS, i i ' i . i eWE WAGOSS, AND EASTEKN AND WESTERN WORK FaroUhod oe Short Notlea. Painting Done irt ShwIThje Mt work la Bado oai of Tktrnngklf $eti and th. Btiflran4 SlrL sabataa UaUy OuoMrae tod. Neatly Klnlhed, aad H trrmnltd Im Cim Mit'acfiM. I Zsplcy Cnly Rrst-Class Woriaen. t - - - E; atrtnf of All Klndila 5f y Ua IX oa Short Kotiea. riCES BEASOSAtLE, aad All Work Warranted. Call aad Examlao aiT 5t-fc aad Lrara Prlfoa. 1 do Wirwurk. and rarntea Solwa for Wlad MUla. Ecaxhcr th. plaea, aad caU In. CURTIS K. OROVR i ViCaAtfOowtffuaaa,) aprM-lyr. SUXERSET. PA. ium A. Uoaaa. J. 80OTT WUA H0BNEJ2rl7il arccaaaoa. to . EATON & BROS. NO. 27 FIPIH AVESUB, PITTSBURGH, PA. BPRIlSTa. 1885. NEW ' STTST SAT SPECIALTIES iatkraieeri.t, lata, il!!esr,, Wktta Geadt, Haaa karckieft. Dwi Triaahf, HottafT, 61Ta, Otett Ihilatad aUrlat la.areaa, kf ! i lasts' aaa CkMraa't 0(kh(.faat ' 6mi, Yarns, Zaakyra, lato rtala sf H Kiads (ar . rticv wsik. , ncs rsTBoaAss ta aararrrcu.T aourrrcn rT-OrdeTs by Mail attended to with Prompt Bess and Dietieteb i TEE HUMBUGOUT lIGGKfft mriltal GOODS VaadoaitsTCry tara. If fouaoaDiourlHuiuaaiarunr soeaU!BBMaas9iiwfea, aa aa erurkt Ihamaryaua.vuaaaa and fatal aesa and appiari aiaa KTOrylaK'knroraadOTrrborfya4oiii bay U. UpMTaar.aM fa.im tmn4 &m iMMa sactotartiao. W. vaM I 1UI fas sarhoaeKy, auaoarfcaaaJo. MMn thai paseraaal yea aa sat arraiaraaad fnH iatarssaUaa raVUC. haw plain at rsiaeiais. Aedias (jTJ aTlaaSaa? avTl fla. rsataaV tA i V ay. '"W - HAY. ; Water Coolers, ICS CUt AM TMEEEZE1S, : ICC TOMCUES, IOC PICKS. iMEOIf SQUEEZERS. WIRE DISH : cuvEasTKY brushes. cakp.t WHIPS, ETU. Vaa tha Uaprared i SELF-MELTISfl WAI RRQIGS Far Sealing Frmlt Oajii and Jan. and Tinware. I BAKGES, STATES AND TWWAEE. A ad a Uanal AamtoMDl tt j nouse-TnmisMng Goods. j TW-B00115H, SPOITIMJ, j And General Jobbing, AT LOWEST MATES. AU Work Guaranteed. Johnstown, Pa. AND BEST. KHRATED OVER FIFTY YEARS. GENERAL USE, WAGON, . certify to my statement that selecting only the best timber proper season of the year and and most durable wheel that It will pay you to buy of me M w II II ) M Tin CLO RS LIABLE." T O TCI it USE. Bi. Bnaat Baaioai TriajB of &. kg lncToi d .l vntttf World LIVER. Lonof appetita. Kataetv. bowels co HTB- Jtnin tha Head, with a dftll wr Batoon In tha bavcA: part. Pia ander tot anoulder-blade. iolinesa after eat in ;, with a diaincnaation to exertion of body or mind, IrritabiUty of tani w, Low spirt tavLosaof memory ,witS a faaUng of haTtng neglectad soma dntyt wearing aa. X?Hx1pos8. Flqttar- loratnaeyea, eowt;anTlTeadache,RggUesDf sa at n.' umsw oowrea unaa. THESE VASXTSGS ASZ XnrHUDTO, BUSTS SSIASU W1U tCCS U tlTILCPK). - T HITS PILLS are especially adapted to TOch raacs, one dose effort, soro a change of feeling as to wtonisb. the aafTrrer. Tby latmM take Appetite, and caaaa Ua body to Take Fle.lt, thua the sys tem ta axiwrl.hid. aad hr their Tonie aVrtieat oa the WaelT. Ortaaa. Beaiav aar wal. are proiiyed. Pn aa wnta TUTT8 UAItl DYE. Oaar f!Aia otWhiufm chanired to a Giocxt Duck byaawele application of tkis lra. It impacts a uatarat color, aeta Instantaneooaly. toM by Drnfrgiota, or eot by exprea. reeetpt of 1. . OfTiea, 44 Murray St W,w Tsf 3 ash' el ffvn. Joaiaai Wot. snmn lamiiH ram. MASCFACTUEIS OF ; PUDE BOIIE DEAL DISSOLVED boiie. Tkosa Orades of Pkoepaates Maaataetared aad . kevt iasaaealj ea Usatii j txrciilAL. y-' - - tXCElMlOE,'" - acid, - - - - Aamoalatad. - Haw-Biiend. Oe BieUiry la aear ta epeTsttoa. feaasadlater Snath of the ttnra of Soeiarwt. oa th. Uae of th. old Beawraet a Mineral Fotot Kallroad. Wl STANDARD GOODS Oaaraatee alltaatwetwraamt. Oar Fertilisers an the EEST IXTKE EARXET. Ov fensaaa, J. A. Johnson, was with Jotbaa Horner, of BalthSMre. far erar U years. Tb. ea paestr of eat rasaaii si 10 tool per day. W.tak. hones la eaeaasiaa luc Phoaphs Im. Fanaersaod others caa sua asoaoy by rattonnr ap all boeosea tlMirpreaglsaa. acd brlaKlac Umoi to aa. All we ask. Is that ear Oosd. With aay aad alt others o Bared ta the mark a We an here to stay, aad ear Roods aavak for tneataelvaa. w. ha to arst-elaas rautoaa maau tics tor shipping. MS-ALL. QMJlEMS FllEV tRQXTTLT. la saodlac roar order, address ' oisTiuiiinn. aprasia. SOMCKSET. PA. Bead seats lerBoat. ace aad rseorre me a enstlybaxof cunus,ehfab ortU help yoejtoaste asoeay rhtlrt "y taaa aarrthtna; else as tas world. All. of atther tea. sawssil from art aear. The bread read ta ssrtsast is i.a poaee tae wn era, then let air ssra. Aloaoe a Hiss, Tasa k tXAasrasta. Makaa Soiiierset 4 .j . ITUA SAM. - . . .. (JoJ rrov(ht, w Ua miplity purpose grasp' J the heart of ages. The mountains of oppression shook beneath His band, And the book ofhonian life, with all its blood-stained pages. " Was opened to the light of day by His eom- ' mand. ' God pob, and tha pilgrims paved tbeir way across the ocean, , , ,., ThedanRers, all defying, of the storm-syept sea. Planted on the shore and on the land a free devotion. Whilst primeval forests shouted liberty. God , and with tb. rocks of freedom for : a firm foundation, . ' . Deep intrenched by self-denial and the flood of all, He laid tha bast fox a futuio, tinie-emlur- ing Nation, . With " Welcome to the World" eubUuoad ,.. oa its wall. ,. God proem tbia life of promise, aendiiia; souls most daring To defend it from impending dangem of all time, : Heroic warriors, patriot., for tbeir country bearing . Grief and woe and sorrow, joined to sacri fice sublime. - God tallt, one by one, these dauntless hearts to pass the porta!. And our earthly-clounded senses canm cross the line ; ' Cannot see them striving bravely now on heights immortal, ' ' " ' r;i iinrinr for their conntre's rood in I way, divine. '; ' . ftZ God reigm, and by his conrjuenng care pro. tects our Kation ; Christ and faith both teach us that we hare our leadersstill. Their lives and deeds are meeting ours in each pulsation ; We are yet united, working out our "Mas ter's " will. A VERY MCE PAIR. Miss Soneie set one slipper tip up on the fender's tnipe and leaned her bronze curls aeainst the mantel. She had noted the elongation of her a-nests aristocratic visafce, then turn ed to watch the coals Hare tnl pale between the bare of the (irate. "Do vou mean everything? gapp ed Mrs. Deane. "Lost everytning? Oh, mj wardrobe and some jew elry will be ltft, probably. I am sorry to part with the library." Library ! 1 ou eveva not at ail to realize your situation." "Oh, yes, 1 realize overruling. said the girl, careleselv. "After Bell ing the house and all this" indi cating by a nonchalant motion her luxurious snrroBiidings "there will be enough to settle my accounts and rent a country house somewhere." My dear girl, what will you do, with your delicate, fastidious train ing, in a country bouse ?' Bury it and tram myselt better. I cooked breakfast this morning to begin." Mrs. Deane arched her fine brows in patrician protest Bat your sister, Mrs. irenton; surely she might provide for you ?" "Poor Nellie!" eaui Sousie. ""She has lost too. We will creep into ob scurity together." "Oh, don't mention obscurity,'' with a graceful motion that seemed to obliterate the disagreeable word. "You have so many friends they would miss you so much." "True," said Sousie, "but they might find me embarrassing in a cal ico dress and soliciting employment' "Then you ha7e planned" faltered her gnest, "how yon are to to live?" "Minus servants, salmon and silk" with a light laugh. "Fortunately we haxe moderate appetites, and for necessaries I can decorate plaques or something." Mrs. Deane rose. There was a faint jingle'from the jet fringe on her velvet dress. The diamonds in her ears twinkled oppressively. She sent a speculative glance around the room. "If you really contemplate a sale of all your pretty trifles, I willsssist in purchasicg." "How good you are !" said Miss Sousie, with beautiful sarcasm in her eves. "And you paint so sweetly, no doubt you will find an easy career as an artiot I hall be charmed to in troduce my friends when they have orders." "How good jou are!" repeated the girl. ' Good bye. I am so sorry you are going away from us into the country." Then Mrs. Deane withdrew the velvet and jet and diamonds. "Well?" came merrily from an ante-room. "How did she bear it ? Did she weep and say, 'Entreat me not to leave thee?'", Did she beg to he your sister and mother-in-law and ! banker?" "We could go to strawberry .hill to-morrow. Nellie." said Sousie, with her eyes on lire again. - "We could embark for Feejee land to-aioirow, but whether we will ay, there is the rub 1" And Mrs. Nellie came in and knelt to rake the fire. - . "It is untenanted this year, and in tolerable repair," continued Sousie, musingly. i "I remember spending a week in that fair cottage once, two years ago," said Ma Nellie aa she sat do wn on her heels and rattled the poker upon the fender reflectively. Twas in a bleak December ; the walls loomed ont of mist and persimmon trees; within, the doors creaked, the ceilings were stunted, the windows shook as with continual age, the fireplaces yawned for and howled for woodland it was given them in cords of hickory, pine and oak ; but soon it was ail no more, and yet warmth came not except in flashes upon my phiz." "Yes," admitted Sousie, compla cently. ""It is the poorest respecta ble place I can think ot "Why not find cheap boarding?" "But what dreadful people we might meet ' ' ' "Well, we can have curtains and one stove I suppose," said Mrs. Nel lie, with a sigh cf surrender. "In the kitchen, yes : and we will , go to-morrow, please. I do not want to meet everyone. Every one, defined, any one some one him. I always was ESTABLISHED 1827." SOMERSET, PA., WEDNESDAY. i bright at grammar," said the pretty 'little widow, -demurely. i "I eotifesa only this, I am afraid of i betarraingcyaical," said Sousie, with 'afeaddeB gfow on her face. j Mrt. Nellie plunged her poker deep in the coals and looked serious. "Have yoo no faith in every one?' she asked. "To-night will show if it is desert ed.w said Sousie, turning away. "la that quite fair? Mrs. Deane mry not impart her news at once, or be may not be at nome. "He was to call to-night "Oh h hr Mrs. Nellie looked wise. 1 did not want to wait until " - "I quite understand, and I shall dress for dinner instead of packing for a mythical journey," said the fire disturber, filling the pause blandly. Bnt a servant arrived with a mass of violets and a note. Miss Sousie read with h"! very erect, and a proad ciiif ,pened on her lips: MiS9 Dt frr Let these, your ia vorite flowesf,i;remkd yon of one most unwillingly absent I am call ed away on - business, and cannot hope to see you to-night j TToure iannraiiy, u ' Robert Deane." . The paper fell to Mrs. Nellie's knees, and she rested the red hot uoker azainst her drees while she perused it, . "Of course she told him at once, and truly a wise son maketh a glad stepmother," said Sousie. : V ell " said Mrs ellie when tne oker bad created some excitement nd found a safer stand, "the hegira must be, I suppose; but, " and sne looked earnestly into the proud,pale face opposite, but, my Lady Doubt ful, - there is some mistake. Not withstanding Mr. Deane is a true man, true as a sunflower." a . Strawberry Hill was a dreary view for a rainy day. The strawberry tint was minus even in the sunset There were gray clouds, gray walls, gray fields. Miss Sousie watched the dnp, drip down tne windows gloomily. She was close beside the fire and well wrapped in shawls draped cap-a-pie. Mrs. Nellie was beatiDg a tattoo on the small centre table. "Well, do you think this will do ?" she inquired. "Two weeks of this style in tragedy is a fine experience, ot course ; but in time one might have to be buried under the monot ony. We have enjoyed smoke, po tatoes and rain, rain, k potatoes and smoke, and " A rush of smoke poured from the chimney, following a gust of wind that made the windows seem all rattle aad draught "When cot ship comes in, there shall be no smoky chimneys, no enr- uiciess winuowg, - no oeersieasiess' breakfasts, and no false lovers in all the world," said Mrs. Nell. And we will make a little para dise of Strawberry Hill, and find some poor young couple who have ventured on a life of poverty togeth er because they love each other, and we it give them the place and pay their taxes, y said Sousie, enthusias tically. ' "We'll select a girl who rejected a millionaire for a poor man. By the by, would she be hard to find, do you think ? Imagine a girl in a mis erable home, ard no hope of any thing except our wealthy suitor how powerful he would be! Still he would be ratLer an incumbrance af terward," said Nellie. "Not compared with scanty meals and clothes and abundant house work. Love is ranch but money is everything. Not money, itself, you know no woman is a miser but its highest result And such a step need cot be supremely selfish ; there would be his happiness to consider," said Sousie. "He would be very happy when be guessed the situation," said Mrs. Nell, sarcastically. "He need not know." Then the small cook interrupted. "There's a gentleman in the hall." "It's Uncle Jack," asserted Sousie confidently. "Bring him in Nellie. Aud she knelt to stir the log into a brighter blaze. But it was Robert Deane who en tered. "How wet you are," cried Nellie, while her sister rose dumbly. "And Low long you have been remember ing us." "I've not forgotten anything, and only got home this morning," said Robert, with a rare smile. "And you had not beard before !" cried Nel.ie quickly "Not a word." Sousie flushed to tho roots of her hair and then burst into tears. "If you will take offynur overcoat 1 li take it to the kitchen to dry, said Nellie demurely. a a a ' i bough Mrs. Nellie made an oc casional grimance of protest, the sit tere liogered at Strawberry IlilL "One can be not rich without a& tualsufiering," Miss Sousie had de cided ; and some comforts crept into the cottage. . ; Returning from a call on Uncle Jack one day, Miss Sousie's eyes and cheeks were unusually brilliant Mr. Deane looked inquisitive , when he called. "I have htd a fortune given me, was the answer to his glance. "Yes," said Robert . "And I am very proud of it "Proud oi it?" "It was so . generous. 1 be giver could not have done more u be lor ed me with all his heart" "Perhaps he does." "He gives- me twenty thousand dollars, that I may do what do yoo think, Sir Robert" the stood beside mm with one little band on the arm of his chair, and there were tears in her shining eves. ' "How could I guess?" said Robert That I may marry only a man I "And will that seed me away?"' asked Robert huskily, She put her Lands together and lauehed softly. "Will you make confession, Sir Robert? Then you may question." "You know then?" with a quick flush. - "Yon overheard Nell and me that day," in a low tone, and would have AUGUST 26, 1S85. gone home in disgust only I I cried "Wait if you please. I will tell it myself," said , Robert, catching the little hands on their way to hide her face. ."That day I hardly thought of all ot what you said. I was so re joiced at the prospect of seeing you again; and when you cried I think I was the happiest fellow in the world. But afterward that 'money is everything haunted me. At last I sept a lawyer to your guardian. How he came to guess and then be mean enough to betray me " "Of course he never guessed any thing," said Sousie, scornfully. "I guessed." - "Well shall you decline the gift or accept the condition ?" asked Rob ert laughing. Those tears in ber eyes had been wonderfully reassuring. "I would like to know how you came by that twenty thousand ?" Miss Sousie said. Roberts eyes widened. "You did not know that I was rich?" , . "I thought you were your cousin's clerk?" His partner, and first in the firm." Miss Sousie gave a little gasp and looked at the curtains.. . Robert lean ed toward her with attentive eyes. "lou thought me a presumptu oua fortune hunter, then, when I did not come?'' she blushed tunously, then miv chievous dimples came about her lips. ... "We will not say. much about what any one has been thinking," she said, "or Mr. Deane s conscience might be uncomfortable." Mr. Deane looked alert. "Do you know," be said rising with sudden excitement "I believe you have not lost a single cent" "Ob, yes, I threw a dollar from the window expressly," said Sousie, her voice quivering with laughter. "So" from Mrs- Trenton on the threshold "the drama is over. May the next contain less doubt and more comfort Will you walk into sup per, lea miserables ?' Child Teaching. There is possibly no subject of so much iropurUtnce upon which bo little has been written as the educa tion of the c tiili I. We do not mean education derived from books, but tb,t which commences with the first dawning of reason, and continues Uhtil the child goes out lroni under the influence of its mother. Nor is there any subject upon which such erroneous ideas are popularly enter tainedideas fraught with much evil the community. The very first act ib to tench the helpless ibiant to talk in language as foreign to the English tcneue as that in uae among the natives of Kamscbatka. If left to itself the child might have a chance of being able some dy to speak properly, but instead is vigor ously instructed in baby talk, and as a consequence two or three years of its life must be spent ic unlearn ing jargon. Agaf, the ehud is in structed not oooe-in a thousand times how to reason ; the most im portant part remains uncultivated at a time when it is most easily de veloped ; but instead the child is told fairy tales and ghost stories un til it is fearful of its own shadow and lives in a land of dreams. This fear it carries with it throffgh life in many cases, and instead of being an honest fearless, noble man, the child bnt too often grows up in to a shrinking, cringing creature, compelled by his own fears to resort to practices that are first unmanly, then dishonest and criminal. It is not the man's fault that he sinks lower down from day to day ; it is the fault of those who first educated him who, to amuse themselves, first taught him to fear. And then the fairy tale, those unrealities which are the foundation for his chateaux en Eiajne of after life; dreams, destined to bear bitter re sult. Fairly launched upon the world, the ideas conceived at the nurse's knee give him false impres sions of things and cause his fail ure. Perhaps before he reaches middle age he is able to forget ; per haps be carries his fanciful brain creations with him to the grave. But worse than all, these deceptions of the child teach him to underval ue truth. His mother, father, nurse, all have told him stories which he soon discovers to be untrue, and so he comes to believe that eten if his parents tetch truth-telling it is only another sham on their part. Ba ton Bud'jct. Write raw Tsar local Paper There is no more effectual and en joyable means by which young peo ple can store their minds with prac tical knowledge and gain the power of giving expression to what they know than writing for the press. In writing for bis or her local paper the young student cultivates the power of observation. Do not think that your literary career is in writing elaborate articles for the magazines or popular literary journals. Write for your local paper or some other paper in your neighborhood or coun ty that has some literary character, giving the new of your vicinity in the plainest language yon can com mand. Keep on writing lor that paper. As a - regular correspondent you will be furnished with the nec essary stationery, or the postage at least will be paid by the publishers and one or several copies will be furnished -you. Accidents, fires, deaths, marriages, charities, are not the only-nerghborhood -happenings that are worthy of being recorded. The close observer becomes the suc cessful writer. There are many things which when properly record ed, are of deep interest though the careless person scarcely notices them. " He who can write neighbor hood news and hanneninf a in nlam. gtyle, without any nnneces- gary words, has a oeautitnl accom plishment. He has the gift of pleas antly imparting his knowledge to others, and if he is a school teacher be will surely succeed in that pro fession. ' : W a, .ie. General Grant smoked his cigar oa November 20, 1SS4. last erald A Beawttfal Oriental Parable. One of the most beautiful stories in Oriental, or perhaps in any litera ture, whereby we are taught that no human creature is exempt from affliction and sorrow, is told in the life of Gautama, the founder of the Buddhist religion. There was a young woman, the story runs, who had married early, an is the cop torn in the East, and bad a child while she was still a girl. When the beau tiful boy could run alone he died. Her sorrow for a time de- !) rived her of her reason ; and in her ove for the dead child she carried it from house to house of her pity ing friends, asking them to give ber medicine for it Buddhist convert thinking "she does not understand." said to her: "My good girl, I my sell have no medicine sucn as you ask for; but 1 know of one who has "Oh, tell me who that is?" cried thegirL ' "The Buddha can give you medi cine; go to him," was the answer. She went to Gautama; and doing homage to him, said, "Lord and master, do you know ot any medi cine that will be good for my child ?" Yes, I know of some," said the teacher. Now it was the custom for patients of friends to provide the herbs which the doctors required ; so she asked what herbs he would want "I want some mustard seed," he said, and when the poor girl eagerly promised to bring some of so com mon a drug, he added : "You must get it from some house where bo son, or husband, or parent has died." "Very good," she said, and went to aek for it still carrying her dead child with her. The people said : "Here is mustard seed take it:' but when she asked: "In my friend's house ha any son died, or a hus band, or a parent or a slave?" they answered :"Ladv, what is this that you say? The living are few but the dead are many." Then she went to other houses ; but or.e said : "I have lost a son," another, "I have lost a slave. At last not beirs able to find a single house where no one had died, her mind began to cLar, and summoning up her resolution. she left the dead body of her child in the forest, and returning to the Buddha, paid him homage. He said to her : "Have vou the mustard seed??' My Lord," she replied, "I have not. The peoiIe told me that the living are few, but the dead are many. Then he talked to her on the lm- permancy of all things, pointing out to the poor girl how , the affliction from which she was suffering was not peculiar to her, but was com mon to all her fellow creatures, till her doubts were cleared away. She accepted her lot and became a dis ciple. Silent and Superb Contempt. Sooner or later a lie is always exploded. Take the case of Gener al Grant When he began to rise in the array his envious rivals cir culated the report that he was coarse, illiterate, and a drunkard. President Lincoln gave a Quietus to the charge of drunkenness. But the notable part of the business is that Grant without replying to a single slander or invention managed in the course of his career to completely vindicate himself. He never said. I am not a drunkard." but lived so as to show all the world that he was a sober man. He never denied that Lawlins and others wrote all his letters and dispatches, but let the public gradually discover the factt". hen it was said that his silence was dullness and lncapabilitv, he never claimed that he con Id make a ' speech, but when the time came ! spoke often and successfully in pub lic reople woo credited him with no literary ability, found out during the last year of the General's life that he resembled Ctesar in the ability to handle the pen as well as the sword. The wonder is not that these falsehoods were all exposed, but that the silent and superb contempt with which Grant treated them should have trium phantly refuted them all. There is a lesson to be learned from the life of this silent and patient man. No man can be talked or written down except by himself. Atlanta Co. tutiim. Professional Courtesy In driving out -into the country on the Grand River road a few davs ago a Detroit lawyer encountered a horse and buggy driven by a woman. As she was driving on the wrong side of the road he made up his mind not to give his rights. As a consequence the two horses finally came to a stand still, with their noses rubbing each other. The law yer stated at the woman and the woman stared- keek. Then he pul led a newspaper from his pocket and began readme. In a minute she had her kniiting out and was industriously at work. Ten long minutes in a broiling sub passed away, and the lawyer looked up and asked : ' How long are you going to stay here?" ""How long are yooT. "All dy." "And 111 stay here a whole week." He read and she knit for another ten minutes, and then the lawyer called out: "Do you know that I'm a lawyer?" "I don't care for that," she replied: "I'm the wife of a Justice of the Peace." "Oh-ah-excuseme,madame. Really, but if IM known yoa belonged to the purfesh this would not have happened. Take this side, madame, take the whole road J" ' " -a irurer First Western Gthen Thought you were going to move to Boom City. Second Western Citizen "No ; I gave up the notion after seeing it" "What's the matter with it? I bear it was an embryo Chicago." "Pooh ! nothing of the kind. It's a dead-and live sort of place, not worth notice." "You don't say so?" "Yes ; nothing there but factories, stores and churches. WHOLE NO. 17S0. The Xejrro Problem. Gaanting that the South is loyal enough, wishes ner er another rebel lion, andaij satisfied to be rid of slavery, do not the people intend to keep the negroes practically a servile i class, slaves in all but the name. all but the !r,t rlftttf Kii rliimnwr nr he force the legitimate results of the war and of enfranchisement? This is a very large question, and cannot be discussed in my limits. If I were to say what my impression is, it would be about this: The South is about as much per plexed by the negro problem as the North i., and is very much disposea to await developments, and to let time solve it One thing, however, must be admitted in all this discus sion. The Southerners wilLuot per mit such Legislatures as those as sembled once Louisiana and South Carolina to rule them again. "Will you disfranchise the blacks by man agement or by force?" "Well, what would you do in Ohio or in Connec ticut? Would you be ruled by a lot of ignorant field hands allied with a gang of plunderers?" In lookinz at thn question from a Northern point of view we have to keep in mind two things: first the Federal government imposed color ed suffrage without any educational qualification a hazardous experi ment ; in the second place, it has handed oyer the control of the col ored people in each State to the fctate, under the Constitution, as completely in Louisiana as in New York. The responsibility is on Louisiana, ice North can not re lieve her of it, and it cannot inter fere, except by ways provided in the Constitution. In the South, where lear of a legislative domina tion has gone, the feeling between the two races is that of amitr and mutual help. This is, I think, es pecially true in Louisiana. The Southerners never have forgotten the loyalty of the slaves during the war, and the security in which the white families dwelt in the midst of a black population while all the white men were absent in the field ; tl;ey ofien refer to this. It touches with tenderness the new relation of the races. I think there is generally io the South a feeling of good-will to ward the negroes, and an earnest ie.-ire that they should develop into true manhood and womanhood. Undeniably there is indifference and neglect and some remaining suspi cion about the schools '.hat North ern charity has organized for the negroes. As to this neglect of the negro, two things are to be s;tid : the whole subject of education (as) we have understood it in the North is comparative r.ew in the South ; and the necessity of earning a living since the war has distracted atten tion from it But the general devel opment of education is quite as ad vanced as could be expected. The thoughtful and the leaders of opin ion are fully alive to the fact that the mass of the people niut be educat ed, and that the only settlement of the negro problem is in the education of the negro, intellectually and morally. They go further than this. They say that for the South to hold its own since the negro is there and will stay there, and is the majority of the laboring class it is necessary that the great agricultur al mttsti of unsklled labor should be transformed, to a great extent in to a class of skilled labor, skilled on the farm, in shops, in factories, and that the South must have a highly diversified industry. To this end they want industrial as well as or dinary or-hools for the colored peo ple. Harper' Mayazine fur S- jt. Johnny akae a Trout Picnic. The famous fish picnic which John Skae, the former millionaire. gave at the reservoir of the v irginia and Gold Hill Company one day when he was on the crest of the wave of prosperity wa3 a queer frol ic. Every Cornstocker of any im portance at all was invited, and there was champagne for every one that wanted it. The reservoir is a mile or two back of Virginia City, in the hills, and is reached by the old Ophir road, which winds along the mountain sids Washoeward like a red serpewt Every guest did his own fishiiig, and did it without hooks. The reservoir was stocked with eastern trout, the little fellows showing black and red spots ot. their backs and sides. They were, and are to thi3 day, very numerous and surprisingly tame. A handful of crumbs thrown is to the water will bring hundreds of them rushing to the surface toward the food. The poles furnished Skae's guests were laths ; the lines, bits of twine about two feet long. At the end of each line a piece of tough beef, the size of a hickory nut wa3 firmly tied. The instant the beef struck the wa ter scores of trout made for it and the angler would jerk them ashore by their own teeth before they could let go. The privilege of fishing in the reservoir is sparingly granted, for any one armed with this simple tickle can, at any time, land a doz en in three minutes. Hundreds of pounds of trout were caught by Skae's party and cooked on the spot liooaeholtl. Baking beets. One of the most satisfactory ways to cook beets is to bake them. When boiled, even if their jackets are left on, a great deal of the best part of the beet is dissolv ed, and so lost ; it will of course, take a little longer to bake them, but this is bo objection. Allow them fifteen to twenty minutes longer for baking; sliee them and season as you would f-i.., i.7T r 1 . it u.ey were ooueu. una pieasant way to serve them is to chop them fine after tbey are cooked, and sea son with pepper, salt and butter. Turnips are nice also served in this way. Tomato fkittkes. Tomato frit ters are an agreeable entree. Use one quart of stewed tomatoes, one ' small teaepooniul of soda ; stir in flour enough to make a batter, like tbat for griddle cakes. Have some lard, very hot on the stove ; drop the batter in, a spoonful at a time-, and fry. ' CONKLING OS GRAXTr" ' Kits-act. rroaa the tXehriated. Sosai natlna; Speeih Made) at tbKijjo. When a-kr.l ehat Stat, he hails tec Our " tvi-iy wtl he. H h-i! tmn at'-aiatioa An-t its usKnl m4e tree. Never defeated in peace or in war his name is the most illustrious borne by living man. HU services attest hid gfcittd, and the country nay, the work1 know them by heart. His fame was earned not alone by things written and siid, but by the arduous great ness of things done ; and perils and emergencies will search in vain in the future, as they have searched in vain in the past for n7 other on whom the Nation leans with such confidence and trust Never having had a policy to en force against the will of the people, he never betrayed a cause or a friend, and the people will never de sert or betray him. Standing on the highest eminence of human dis tinction, modest, firm, simple and self-poised, having filled ail lands with his renown, be has seen not only the high born and titled, but the poor and the lowly, on the ut termost ends of the earth, rise and uncover before him. He has stud ied the needs and defects of many systems of governments r and he has returned a better American than ever, with a wealth of knowledge and experience added to the hard common sense which shone so con spicuously in all the fierce light that beat upon him during sixteen years, the most trying, the most porten tious, the most perilous in the Na tion's history. Vilified and reviled, ruthlessly as persed by unnumbered presses, not only in other lands, but in his own, assaults on him have seasoned and strengthened his hold on the public heart Laiumnv s ammunition has all been exploded ; the powder has been burned once1 its force is spent and the name ot Grant will glit ter an imperishable star in the dia dem of the republic when those who have tried to tarnish it have mouldered in forgotten graves and when their memories and epitaphs have vanished utterly. Never elated by success, never de pressed by adversity, he has ever, in peace or in war, shown the very genius of common sense. The views he presented for Lee's surrender fore-shadowed the wisest prophecies and principles of true reconstruc tion. Victor in the greatest war of modern times, be quickly signalized his aversion to war and his love of peace by an arbitration of interna tional dispute? which stands the wisest, the most majestic example of its kind in the world's diploma- 7" Altogether Too Mas; Clews. A boy about twelve years old re ported to a policeman the other day that a robbery had occurred at their hou.-w Uinlrr very mysterious cir- cucnstar.ce3. i he sum of Ji). which was in a china case on a brackethad taker, wings. "Were any of the doors or win dows fount! open ?" asked the officer. "No." "Any visitor in the house who miht have taken it?" "No." "And yoa haven't pick! np any clews, eh "That s the trouble, sir there s clews till you can't rest I want to so off and camp out anc dad thinks 1 cribbed the money. Dad wants to go to Chicago, and marm thinks he's got the boodle. Marm wants a new summer wrap, and dad savs she clawed them ducats for sure. The tired girl is going to be married next week and dad and marm and me believe she raked in the stake to go on a bridal tour. Tell you what, mister, when I see how many clews can be picked upen a little case like this it makes me anxious to know which of us will come out on top." Something She Hated. "What is it, sissy ?" said a west side grocery man to a little girl, who was swinging agaiust the side of the counter, lolling out her tongue and looking timidT "Mv ma sent me for surnnin." "Well, what is it?'' "I dunno." "Was it bread?" No, sir; she borrered teat of Mrs. Tiggons." "Was it meat?" "No. sir ; we've got hash enough for ns, and pa he eats fish." "Eutter, may be?" "No, I s'pect it wasn't that, eoz' we're got enough to look at if any body comes in. and that's all we has it for." "It wasn't sugar?" "My, no ! times is to hard for that pa says, and I never couldn't forget sugar no how, coz I like it I gues9 tt was sum pin I dwTt like, or may be I wouldn't forget it" "Then it must have been soap." "Oh, yes, that's it I knowed it was sum pin I hated." at Aaaaaiar tae Part tea. The early settlera of the Plymouth Colony were greatly addicted to smoking, which practice subsequent ly became so common that the weed was smoked in church daring service- This custom, it seems, soon caused considerable annoyance, as he exercises were greatly disturbed by the clicking of flint and steel to light their pipes, and clouds of smoke in the church. Hence, in 176'-), the colony passed this law: "It is enacted that any person or persons tbat shall be found smoking on the Lord's Day, going to or com ing from meetings, within two miles of the meeting house, shall pay twelve pence for every such fault Under this law were fined Richard Berry .Jedediah Lombard, Benjamin Lombard, and James Maker for smoking tobacco at the end of the larrnouth meeting house on the Lord's day. 'Wlae sajinfja. A million dollars won't buy a ray of sunshine. Good clothes are to respectability what the frame is to a picture. You often find a five-cent heart in a million dollar body. The most beautiful woman is she whom the blind can see. A newspaper may be a sewer or a stream of pure water, according to source. An unwashed king is less a gen tleman than a tidy peasant Fashionable women are the mis takes of creation. "Little girl, do jou know whose bouse this is T asked a solemn look ing man of bright child seated on the church step. "Yes, sir; it's God's but He ain't in," she added, as the old gentleman was about to walk up the steps, "and His agent's gone to Europe."