Herald. Somerset t sTBU$HtD im Terms of Publication. , --rf evT WrdtwwUy nx-mm at t r " if Mid in advance ; tbcrwiat 12 SO .variably berbareel V op. Pomnaxtera ncgtertinc ""Ti wbea .ubwrlben. do ant takeout their .HI neld Wb abxcrlp- ,,; 1 MtHe l-e u oreseotcii Address Th SoaaJtMsr Hebald, SoMaJXKT, Pa. hY.lk.kkt, . ,., ' aTTokneY-aT la, A1 sememe, Pa. V. c. .. i n w bieseckel, i:ti- w;;"k vtv -at-law. xotnenet. Pa. . J, i H-rite' Blx k. up " I IS - . . - ii ij - ru. r. ""1i,,uv.iT, A i avt. Pa. 'Tttohnevatlaw. II lI" ATT..KSF.Y-AT-LAW. jmersrt. Fa. TBVT. K ATT (RNEY- T-LA . 31 J ATT-KNEY-A ; LAW. i Somrrwt, Pa. f,Trt OHioty Ba k. II i mm ' AlTOK.NtYArLAW. Sam'rsrt, ra.. alTfiiilou. W . H. RlTTEL. . i-..trriuTH. , yv. -II A RITIH ATK'KSEYs-AT LAW icTt. Pa. v mini'trd to Ihflr rare will h . .tt. rulni Ui. Jfli IO k", wwuv AY M H K' x NTZ. ATT..RNEY-AT-LAW SinnrrMt, ra,. II rirf pr.ropi atl.-nti. tolwne-i eotnid .a" m 'n.rr-l ami ad...iic H'"i' . " I)!NNI MFYFKS, ATT..KNEY -AI-LAW. Pa. i:- bBin. " ' will he J ,Iit). KIMMFU ATTUKNEY-ATLAW. wmfKt. ra... a 1 i.t4 u hiwnn ftitr-.ixtKt t hi rare lr ,il ..lj.nmn"Hi. ailh pr-U.t- SJTTm "" 00 M,"D "tr,:,rt- r'lJier. 'k Swre J MrL PI '!!. . ATTORNEY-ATI.AW. Simernrt. Pa. fi,mM.mm..th Bl-k. up i-.r. Enlranre J ' v. ' n NMi l..liH"i..u- mad'. -t "!'' tiilf sanimrd. iud all Inral (.unites, at rial ui ailh iiDiftiiwaadtidylity. rrrriT l. c. cl..-. Cv a ISUKS A '( "l.IK RN. ATT.'KNEYS-AT law. tNWM-rwt. P- i;; tacnw mtn!td to fir rare will be STj.i, :V .rjr--t. Bli.d and adaiiiic roau iiw Mirtt ii aud iimvryaiii-iiiK done on rt- II km:y. f. s hfll. attok.ney at-law. Swnerfat. Pa. B.raty and rvnsion Aeent. Office in Mamnxitb VALENTINE HAY. ATToKtY-AT-LAW. ' Simerset, Pa. A Dirr In K.-aI E.tate. Will atu-nd to all l;.n rutrurtrti u hi care with protnpluew uj tfJelJ ty . J nIIN 1L niu ATToRNEY-AT-LAW. Swment. ra. trn mrmtlT aitrnd to all buine entrniaed , tub.m M iry'.ivaniloneoliecuon, c. of- 1 brr in aamiuoih HUM-k. Dl F. a. p.iioads. PHYMCIAS AND WRt.EOV. . N.tu.rM't. Pa. oftre in Ok Brer.W Block. Siid FUa. D R. J. E. BIESECKEK, rUYSIiTAN AND Sl'Kl.E.'N. SaF.KET. Pa., T--:v'ts btf j.mf-itml iwn'irvft t.) the citiietii' of sm.-ret and vi. muy. I ittiee in l'usl st,i HuiciiUtt. hart l:anioad. S. K1MMEIX, 1, irtr. hi pn.f.i.-nal a,-rvi.sss Xu the rltlient nf siPTsrt an.i Tu inity. I'tiNw pniteiimnlly rikl ti an t touuu at hi otti.-e on Main M-, ol I'tamotid. I) R.H.BUUBAKER T -iilrrp hit t.rc.f!'r.al errir. to the ritizens o-s-iarnet and Tii-inily. ottlee in rnodt'Weon la:aanet tt c lnamobd. 1. M. Lid'TKER. tt-irrmrrty .straf'rtra.) PHYSU1AS AND SI ROEOS, H' lo-ai.-t permanently In Simeiset for the p.uT b prulUrti. ttiieun Main street. !! Tvar ii Vrutt suit. I) R. J. MMILI.EN, '.;ve- wpt-jal attention t tht- prwn'atim f ; t':1 n:i.-kl tnii. AmtUl "'if inTiL All : r-i-mtitwii -w.uMftftrr. oftc in Ber S i. ui-jur. LKSTIHT. DR. WM. i'uLMNS. I'fcNTlST. "ffiT inKnpper BUw k up-wtMiw. whr- h et V foun-1 t all Um iTpn to rti all kitwi of work nu-u a r!ll:nit. niniUtlnp. xtnu'iiiiff. Atiftrtal H-lh of all k:n ai.i f thf best amm. miw-nril. aU work ji.-avuiwJ. J. K. MILLER Ht ta-nnarmily U atrd in Berlin fr the prar t lii pn.l.sir.n. (Wire opUiMIe Charle li-':iif,.r , ( Somerset County liank. Er.i jt HKD 1ST7 ) C.J HARRISON. M.J. PRITTS, PtEMIT. CA'Hiea. C'lUromo, ma.!, in ail part of the I nited Siaiea. CHARGLS MODERATE. Pn hina u. end nxmey est ran be ae- f"cim,rtaie.i t,y ,irH 0 Ne York m anv un. """Um.nia.le uh pnanltmeM. I'. S. 'HolKln n:and .ul )J..aey alei taiuahlra -sninsj m Lnet. .;) . erlehrautl nal-n, with a ear rw iawaiitime U k. i-:cr::Ts sciiktee. 'Ail Lntai lloliuav Clbaerved. CURTIS K. GROVE. SOMERSET, PA. K'WiHX SI.Ell.HS, CARKIAIiES, fPKlNl, WAirflN'jS. BI CK WAWNS. eastern asd western work Furnished on Short Notice. Paintmg Done on Short Time. rlJ '"'" of n.irw.flWv nmM Wmd, M the kth i Sul-iantially t-JismH-,. yuiy Finished, aud sn;,te.l Uirive SatistartHm. S7 Ciy Hrrt Class arhnen. I' A" Kio'i' r Line Hone oa '. pra-a, kLAai-V AKi.E, and AH Work Warranted. i Eiauiine my Stork, and I-earn . Ve. a'-"". l(1 niniHlh seivea lor Wind "rotirr the plat, and .-all in. CTJETISK. GROVE, ' Eat of Court H.me) .VFH"VT H-U;lk HUFFMAN, MERCHAN TAILOR. Uiawe Hrmer'a sx.rrv.) Lt" 'ylB. And Lown.1 Pricma. STlSFACTlON GUARANTEED. Somerset, Pa. 20 i i- ; - ' - ! -" : - - - ! i VOL. XXXVI . NO. 23. ! CONSTIPATION j J- called trie ilsr of I , bwuf there ! iUlrkH -y4i-m fw tii ii.Mrrfton ol p.- ,: mkwwj iii thr rirmm of Offnywt ario vf- i feft mit-r tj th stiHoh and howel. It t (Mil-! T'-rr H Liver, uM witiovh Uiie br-iutr J fitftiifi fnun tlif tftri.1iKT N&tur1 Ma farhftrtt. in y-nt-ni.iy ftrxnpuitp with . vfc r-mU a Diss OF APPETITE, HCK HEADACHE, BAD BREATH, ETB. Th tvar?nnt of OmMii.t;itn de tvil rtmi ror-lr it; nnMuUn the bo.flA. The nMHln-ine muia iKitHilrM-t a it ftuivftm't, Imt a tonic w-M,ani1 at !t1ii .iWr it u mattTf-tivrm-o.. T. rnfim- a nifiilnr hlil f N1y w ithout rhaiifruitf tl did ur dtMncanizuiie the " Er attention, aftt- tH:lfritttf with itipa tuii lor iwutff ll:n jr.Ttn., uiu. .aitl to Sitn ! ni l.in-r Knfiilat.. and, harlnc triwl xIukm ! ev.-rrthiiiif fm.-imir.l to try it. I Hini uk a winrei"f.ii. and altruanlH f1tM'vd the tl'ine j to a taNKn!!):. alter ilinkliott. Mtlrrfafh Bal. j 1 f.Hiud lhi it tad dou tiir s. mnfh vood tliat I l miutttin-d It Hntil t fi tuo NHtlr Sin. tb-rfl ! I Iihvv not rxi-n,.nT.i any diftVisltT. 1 ktl. it lu niy hour and would ti.it b wit'hout k. but ! ua tio torn- fl.r it. it having e;:rvd inv " 4.K..R..K ! H . 'ii'.f.. A-t t 'lTk uH-ri.- ..'.rtirt. Bioh i. ta. j . U. Zriim Co. It is to Your Interest i TO Bt'Y Yol'R ! Drugs and Medicines1 BfESECKER 4 SNYDER. : srcTOM irs To r. s. boyd. I Xone but the pureM and best kept ill Mock, and when Inip la-romc inert by Mand in. a .ertain .d them do, we .ie stn.r them, ratlier than im mim' on our cu.-"t.im-p. You can dcpeii.i .in having your DnrPBlDTinMQ f null V DrrnDTC rRLOlirllr ilU.W i rAIlLI nLLLiriO i tilled with cure. Uur ori.-e are as low as ! any other fimt-cia house and on j many articles much lower. j The iieoplc of this county nwm to know i this, and have iriven a larye share of their ! (Mttronase. and we ha!l still continue togive ; them tiie very hi-d gianls for their money. IHi not forget that we make a sjieciuity of FITTIXC1 TRUSSES, j We jruamntv witNftuiif n, ami, if you have ha. intuhU in thin (lirei-titia, pvc nj a call. SPECTACLES AND EYE-GLASSES in grat variety; A full set of Test Lenses. I ome in and have your ej'es examined. No charge f r examination, and we arecontidtnt w e can stiit voti. t 'ome and sec me. iesi1 fully. JIESECKER & SNYDER. EHELSIOR COOK STOVE Uim SATISFACTCBY. EIGHTEEN SIZES AND KINDS. UI Pnrcliasers cai MAS' fA'Tt RED Br L i flOIM k II. Mil I, .V FR SALE JSP la. 15. ort-S-'ST lyr. Schell fc Co., WtMKRSET. FA. AlbkhtA. HoRXK. J. wtWa. Visitors to . j i lllSDUrijn j ARE INVITED TO CALL AT OUR New kd Elaeged Store NO. 41 FIFTH AVENUE, Iittslmrfj:li, Penn'a, (JuM 6 Al Imr (d ftand.) We have aV"it four limes the nsira tre had at our Ibnoer pia.-e t Imsiiiesa, better liaht. the hesl ventilation, and a niiKh more comfortable place In every way to transact .sir lanre and growinc tiusinen.. spe-ialtitw in tne following Linea of i.Hslk : . GENTLEMEN AND LADIES' FURNISHING GOODS, LACES. WHITE COODS, EMBROIDERIES. DRESS & CLOAK TRIMMiCS, YARNS. ZEPHYRS. ART EMBROIDDRY MATERIALS or all xixtw. rtc. etc. m-t Orders tijr Hall Promptly All ended ta.' HORNE fc AVVRD, FIFTH AVE.. PITTs Bl'R.iH. fk- PITTSBTJEGH Female College .AND PITTSBURGH CONSERVATORY OF RUSIC IOO Full Music Lesaona S20. tMstinet Srhwdasif Lilierai Art. M ima. FJoro Oon. Fine Arts. o. feturai. Healiomi. Twen ty teacher. M.witfale rharrea, W inter term be liw November 1.41. heture makiaa encacv. aaents ebvw here, .end fr new raiaJoaue to REV. A. H. K HtfSS.. I). Pirrsat iu.H, Pa. Washington and Jcferscn COLELGE, WASHINGTON PA. The 7th eear tx-aina September 14lh. Clasalfal, firieutili.' and PeeparauiTT beuartmenla. . For information mnrrraina; freparatnrr T part merit af.pl y t Prof. J. A.tolps Schauta. Prui rtbai. for Catawweor other int.rfriiaiH.a tn PKfrillifcMT MOFFAT. j WHEN THE FROST IS ON THE ! PUMPKIN. Whra the ftiiat ( on the pumpkin and the foddefa to the nhork. And jm utar th kyuuck and gotble uf the luut- tin' turkey ca t And the ravklin' of the guineya and the rlwkln' of the bras, j And UieroaMvr'i hallj looler aa he tiptoe on the i O. ba tfaeathe tine a feUerto afeeUn'at his ; beat, ! With the rinin aun to greet him from a night of peaceful re. An be leaven the houae bareheaded and goe out to feed the stork. When the front to oa the pumpkin and the fod- der'a In tbe hock. They'll aometbing kiudo' bearty-like about the ataMiapbere W'bea tbe beat of aummer'i orer and the eoolin' (aU f ber Ofrmine, ae bum the flower aud tbe blmaiimi on tbe treea, Aud the mumhle of the hummin'-birda and bua zin' uf the beea ; B.it the alr'i bo appetixin', and tbe Undarape throuah the hale Of a i rixp and atiauy morninir of tbe early ao tuinn days In a pk-tur' that no painter haa tbe rolurin' to tuufk When the fnt in on the pumpkin and tbe (od der ilo the nhock. The hiwky. ruMle of the tataeL" of the corn, and the rat-pin' of Ihe'tanKled teavea. aa artlden an the morn ? The MuM.Ie in tbe ftirriec kind o kmeiAme like but still A-pnwhin' aermoiu. to UK of the barus they anm'd to till ; The straw-stark in tbe meddez and the reaper In the abed : The hoton in tbe atall below the elover over bea.1 . it set my heart a-tlirkin' like tbe tirkln of a riork, H heu tbe frm4 la on th pumpkin and tbe (ud der in the aburk. Jamf Whiityrmb Kilty. THE FORTUNES OF WAR. OR T11K EEl'D or THE CALLAHAJi-O OK.0Y. Bridget Callahan and Norah )'irady met at a fish-stall in the Sixteenth Street Market and, as luck would have it, each fixed her fancy upon a particularly large and handsome flounder w hich lay upon the slimy marble slab. The two women had come up to the stall at about the same moment. It was not Bndget lalia- niin fault that the dealer, adrkskiiine.l Italian with sleepy black eyes, happened to see her first, but the O'Grady chose to think so and abused her roandly, while i. f..i:.. .... t. ; ..iu. .xr wwtrse brown paper, counted out his cus- liie AUlllrtU 1.11.11 il lj hit: o.-ti 1U .onvr VI j tomer's change, and bowed his thanks. The tide of ineffectual w rath w hich is- sued from Mrs. O'Grady 's lips surprised j no one accustomed to the place. It seem- j ed rather to delight iU object. Xoruh j O'Grady was a small woman, stout and 1 firm set as an ale bottle, with a rather long neck and a small bead, whieh was on this occasion crowned with a sailor hat belonging to her little daughter, pre sumably snatched up by mistake in her haste to get out for her daily marketing. Mrs. Callahan, on the other hand, was of generous proportions, with a large, fat face, and serene blue eyes that could be savage enough upon occasion. Aud she w as gorgeously arrayed, wearing a bril liant Paisley shawl with a fiery red cen tre, a vauut of social superiority which she had waved before Mrs. O'Grady for years. They met again at the door of he mar ket, and assailed each other w ith a mutu-4 al storm of invective, for which the fish acted as an excuse. Both knew that there would be no "making up" or ''taking back." The day for reconciliation was long gone by. Just when this crisis had passed it would lie difiicult to say. Whether it occurred on the day, some ten years gone by, that the two families first took up their abode in cottages side by side, and Mrs. Calla han's Tim threw a dead cat at Mrs. O'tirady.and Mrs. O'Grady retaliated by cms! ling a pane of glass in the Callahan domicile in her efforts to tmnish the cul prit, and Mrs. Callahan appeared Uxm ! the scene hot and red, and covered w ith i .lust from beating caroets, and essayed to ! take the carpet stick to Mrs. O'Grady, to ; her own discomfiture; whether these j small beginnings, which were liable to ! occur in any families of the Callahan and ' O'Grady circle, formed the animus and j incentive to after h.xrtilities, who can say? 1 Certain it is that the war ha.! been kept i up with unabated vigoreversince. There ( . : ..... 1: : is H .eriaill convenient? 10 .jirarrcini ; over a back fence, which people who i i have had to nurse their wrath at a dis- 1 j tance w ill readily appreciate. Anger has i no chance to oxl, as w hen time and dis I tan.-e intervene. Over the coot stove, ' at tbe wash tub, inning, sweeping.scrub- j ! bing, rocking their babies, the voices of j j each could penetrate the other's domi- j ! eile. It is needless to sav that thev made 1 free use of their opportunities. If there ; i was an opprobrious epithet in the vocab- j ulary of billingsgate practiced in tioats' j Hollow that choice quarter of San Fran cisco where both had the honor to claim a resilience which they had not at some time flung at each other during their in tercourse together, both would have thanked you to make it known that they might at on. atone for the deficiency. They bad resorted to every expedient to prove their genuine neighborly feeling. When Mrs. Callalutn hung her washing over the back fence, Mrs. O'Grady sprin- ! kled it liberally with dish water. The soil in both back van Is was generally mulched with broken crockery, old bot tles, bustles, corset steels, battered tin cans, and other neighborly courtesies which had been exchanged over this convenient back fence. In some ways this feud had been of great benefit to both families. It had served as a sort of a safety valve for the conflicting emotions which often disturb the .eaee of a household. How ranch bodily fatigue and parental irritation the two mother had worked offonach other will prolwbly never be known. With youngsters a proximate estimate of the exact amount of vicionsness spared their own flesh and bhxxi might easily be made. When Tim Callalutn was spank ed by his mother, he immediately cuffed a yoangO'Grady. When Annie O'Grady was denied a new frock, she made faces at Tim Callahan. The little Callahans and OTiradvs sparred and scratched and bit and stoned each other with promiscu ous zeal. For a tim . the heads of the two fami lies abstained front any active participa tion in the general scrimmage, looking with dignified indulgence npon the clashing of the two weaker vessels. Lit tle by little they were drawn into the conflict. Some depredation of more Somerset SOMERSET, PA., than uxtuti atnR-ity had fireI O'Gra.ly'u V.I.wkI ; Callahan hal lien wrought to a frenzy by the combined effecta of an in Halting taunt and an nnu-soally iffnerutM evening dram, and ttitt two men bad forthwith indulred in a knwkdown fight and having once aired their grievance. within the arena of the police court, reg ularly contributed to the swelling of its anna In. At the time which I write an intern- rng bit of litigation u pending between the two familyg. The CGradya kept poultry, and a sorry lot of fowls they were, maimed and crippled by the perse cution of the Callahan. Nevertheless a feeble tribe of ducks and geese and hens wandered about the back yard or scoured the odorous precincts of -UottU' Hollow, contriving to pick lip a precarious living. Situetiuies tiiey ventured on the premi--xes of neighbors, and were driven away with uiany a loud "shoo," shower of dirt or waving of dish towela Now, the Cal lahans had a flower gunlen which was at once -their glory and their pride, being gorgeous with showy geraniums, prickly cactus and redolent with herbs. The O'iiruily fowls, sharing the family ani mosity, spied out this humble paradise, and besieged it with a persistence that was positively ghoulish. By d ty and by j night, through chink and crevice, and gates left carelessly ajar, they invaded the Callahan garden and uprooted the choicest plants. When the Callahans walled them out they burrowed under ; when they laid a coping of rocks around the entire lot, they still contrived to make periodical marauds. It was privately whisiered that the O'Gradys used to set i up a step-ladder in their yard to assist ; the fowls in their depredations. Be this i as it may, the Callahans at length got a do, a fierce, yellow, whiskered canine, with a stub tail and an evil eye, war ranted to be death on fowls. Thereafter, when a chicken, or duck or goose stole into the Callahan grounds, its mangled I bixly was promptly Hung- back over the fence. The O'Gradys could not stand this long. One day Mr. O'Grady paid a visit to a neighboring druggist, and the next morning the Callahan dog was stiff and stark. That day at noon Mr. Calla han swore out a warrant for the arrest of Mr. ( I'Grady, and the trial of the latter w as set for a w eek from the day on which our story begins. Both families were to be out in force, and the suit promised to the occasion for airing a long list of grievances on both sides. As the feminine heads of these two warring factions continued their home ward walk, it must not lie imagine.! that they took opposite sides of the street. Had they belonged to a different grade of society they would doubtless have con tented themselves with icy stares when they met, and gone their way swelling with horrible things they would have liked to say. Being the women they w ere, they had the comfort of giving full vent to their feelinus, and walked along side by side, in a neighborly fashion, punctuating each step with angry words, tart ejaculations and venomous sneers. When they had progressed a block or so a slight distraction, of a not entirely agreeable nature, occurred. A youthful Callahan w.s discovered in the act of be Ulsiring a young O'Grady with a five gallon oil can, while a bio sly nose anda scratch on the assailant's face attested the ability of the O'Grady to give as good as the Callahan sent. The two mothers watched the battle with pri.lein the prowess of her offspring. Neither attempted to interfere. This was a consistent result of years of industrious training, a valiant rally to the support of the family traditions. It was more than that ; it was salve for a secret grievance that each nourished in her heart. For upward of a year their two eldest had sus pended hostilities. Nay, more, Tim and Annie exchanged shy glances of sympa thy and affection whenever thev met. They had been seen walking together across the Hollow at night. Annie, a pretty, blue-eyed little creature, w ho was really modest and ladylike, and alto- gcther a very exceptional product of a public school education working upon raw Ililwrnian material, had lifted up her vo'n-e in defence of the Callahans, in her mother's house. Tim, a sturdy young fellow, w ho bad s(x'nt the best days of his youth d.xlging the police authorities 1 ti.. .. :.i ij .1 t u... 1 1 . 1 auu limustriai ii.xii, um. nai lurnr.i out a very decent machinest after all, had left the paternal mansion the night be fore, slamming the door behind him, in resentment of some slighting allusion to the O'Grady's. The neighbors were be ginning to say that it was a pity such a likely young conple should be kept apart by family differences ; but the parents preserved an uncompromising front. Sabsorlxd were Ix.th women in wa ch- ing the outcome of the combat that they did not at first oliserve a crowd that had gathered further down the street, nor the people running thither from all quar ters. Evidently something of interest was transpiring ; possibly a fire. The Callahan's and O'Gradys, young and old never missed a fire if they could help it. With one accord the two women started for the scene of excitement, and as Mrs. O'Grady's short limbs were somewhat more agile than Mrs. Callahan's longer ones they kept well abreast, and never paused until they had reached the out skirts of the ever increasing crowd. Then Mrs. Callahan stopped with prophetic instinct, one hand pressed closely to her panting breast. " It's tbe sewer. Something's happen ed in the sewer ; an' my Bill a-goin' to work here the mornin'." North O'Grady gave an exclamation of disgust. The idea of one of the Calla han crowd being singled out fiw any spe cial disaster was so absurd on the face of it that the very suggestion awoke in her a sense of impatience. " An' w hat's happened 7" she aaid, in a debative tone, accenting the second word, addressing a man w ho stood at her el bow. . m Bank caved in. Men under it," " No, some men fell into an old cesspool that they uncovered. Bridget Callahan did not wait to hear more, but pushed her way through the crowd. Xorah O'Grady, without waiting to think, or reason that it was none of ber concern, followed in her enemy' wake. In spite of oaths, and resistance, and angry words, they threaded their way to the margin of a narrow circle, where banks of loosely heaped earth sur rounded a yawning black bole. There they Warned the details of what had hap pened. In extending the ay stem of sew- ESTABLISHED 1827. WEDNESDAY, XOYEMBER 16, 1887. erage along the' street, an old twpoo! ha! been nncivered, and three men had been rent down to examine it ; two of them hail .ieaten quick retr.at, bnt the third had aucctirabed to the foal gaes g'nerate! there. Two aotresBive, at tempts had been mad by other work , men to rewuehitn,bat neither of the men j who went down after him returned. Three j men lay dead or dying at the foot of the ( ladder, and no workman could be found foolhardy enough to venture down. "An' who were tbe men that wint down V asked Bridget Callahan. "Walsh and William was the men that went last. Bill Callahan was the firxt." Me huslmnd and the father of seven children. A man th it is honest as the dny is long ; that niver lost a day's work in nis lite. .May tne Lr.i ana all the holy saints have pity on me r cried Bridget Callahan. Even in her first wild cry of grief she managed to sting the woman who stood silently by her side, and N'orah O'Grady felt the thrust and winced under it. No one had ever accused Patrick O'Gra ly of being honest, and as for doing a tlay's work since the day some eight or ten years ago, when O'Grady had abandon- ed the calling of hostler and taken op ' the profession of a ward politician, he j had never condescemled to soil his hands S with a day's manual labor. Yet, strange- : ly enough, Xorah O'Grady felt no incli- n dion to triumph over her enemy, but i new and tender feeling crept into her heart. Meantime Bridget Callahan filled the air with the sound of her lamentations. now subbing, now pleading, now railing at those about her. "An' are ye men, an' stand there idle with three poor fellows perishin' so near an' not a band that lifts to save thim ? Shame on ye for weak-hearted cowards ! ! For the love of heaven, bovs ! Oh, ye lazv vagabonds . Let a woman show ye your dutv P And quick as a flash, before any one amid anticipate her movement, in spite 1 of her corpulent and clumsy figure, she! had swung herself over upon the ladder t ami was preparing to go down. In the first excitement of their appear ance on the scene neither of the women had noticed a big, muscular fellow, wear ing a flashy checked suit with an air of awkwatd rakish ness, who stood on the bank of fresh earth but a few paces away, smoking a short pipe and gazing j stieculativelv into the black pit below, j As the woman's shrill cry of denuncia- j tion reached his ears he might have been seen to remove the pipe from his lips for ; :i moment and smile grimly to himself ! like one who hears a compliment intend- ' ed for himjin'l hastened to acknowledge it. ! But Mrs. Callahan bad no sooner set foot ! on the ladder than a heavy hand fell on , her shoulder, and a grutf voice sounded j in her ears. I " Back !" She looked up and recognized him, and her face grew red as a lobster with con tending emotions. "Oh, it's you, Patrick O'Grady, is it?" she cried out in a shrill voice. "Let go of me. Oh, you worthless loafer! You good-for-nothing, do-nothing, dog-poisoning r-rascai ; Let me go to save my man ! My man, whose little finger is worth more than your whole lazy body. Oh, Bill, Bill!" And she broke out into a fresh storm of sobs ; but she suffered herseli to be lei! back without further protest. Manwhile, the man whom she bad so bitterly denounced, but to whom she had nevertheless yielded an unwilling obedi ence, felt a light touch upon his shoulder and turned to lace bis wife. His eyes asked a question, and her eyes answer ed it. " All right, if you say so, my girl." In an instant his attitude had chang ed. New life seemed infused into him. His huge, brawny frame, but the moment lxfore a torpid, inert mass, became the emtxxliment of activity and force. The sluggish blood bounded through his veins. Kecol lections of old times, w hen he had been a miner on the Comstock, and had fought the miner's battle with j e(fe(.t o'Gradv stormed and s tore, and foul air and fire-damp, came buck to j wpnt anKri,v off wi,hout breakfast, put lum. He flung offhis coat and unbutton- tin in hi appearance at the police court ed his collar, bareing his huge, muscular j a ful, minuta, U fore his antagon throat. j jst Jsome rope ! he shouted. j A coil of rope fell at bis feet. He i caught up a hose, hanging over a led of ' mortar close by, and turneda spray of water into the tlark pit, at the same time saturating his handkerchief with the wa ter and bin ling it tightly about bis mouth and nostrils. Then, with the rope knot ted around him, a word to the men w ho were to pay it out, and a parting kiss to his w ife, he stepped upon the ladder and commenced the descent. Xorah O'Grady, her heart wrung with terror, stood on the brink and saw him go. To his death, she thought, and tried to frame some prayer for him, but her white lips refused to move. Standing there, on the threshold of what she felt must be the tragedy of her life, she be came suddenly aware of the curious eyea bent wpon her, and of the absurd specta cle she presented in her calico wrapper and with the child's hat on her head. She kiew that she had gent her husband to his doom, and she must not leave the place where she could seee hisdead body w hen the men pulled it up ; but she tried to settle the jaunty hat into' some ex pression of propriety, and fumbling with her belt, strove to arrange the folds of her wrapper. In the midst of ber awkward struggle a mantle seemed to descend upon her from the heavens. Gazing in astonish ment over one shoulder, she found her self arrayed in all the glory of the Pais ley shawl. Looking up, she saw her ene my awed into silence by the strange turn events had taken. Looking down upon ber with quite a new expression, and she realized that it was no chance impulse that had prompted her to divest herself of the garment, bnt tender womanly con sideration. "I don't need it," whispered Mrs. Cal lahan.. Then she broke quite down. " Oh, Norah Ct irady ! Catching the Ut ters little nervous hand between her large, strong ones, she sobbed over her in penitence and compassion. There was a err from those who stood about tbe ladder. Here he comes !" . An instant later OGrady's herculean figure appeared, bearing in his arms a lender yoamj fellow who tried o stand, and would have fallen had not strong anus come to his aid. A shout went np. "It's Williams r A gray-haired woman came forward, an.l half-led, half-supported her son away. The next time O'Grady appeared he stumbled and fell, as he was relieved of his inanimate burden. A whisper ran around. " It s Walsh r They laid him on the ground. A girl stole timidly oot from the crowd and wept over her dead lover. AU eyes turned ouestioningiy upon O'Grady, who was leaning np against a box, pale and t ry m , con(.nient method of getting riil shaky, making a weak grestnre of pro- j f troublesome doubts and wearisome in test as the swaying of the curious crowd j quiry into hidden causes. A p.or solu- tnreateneU tc shut off the air trom uim. j inen He arose, and raltere.1 WfwaM the mortar dox wnere me nose was playing. He had loosed the handkerchief from nis month and nose, ami now untied it with trembling hands. " He's going to give it np," someone said. O'Grady heard the words, and was re minded that he had already done all that culd be expected of any man; that if he stopped now, he would still be i a hero in the eyes of those who were j looking on ; th:it neither duty nor reason j demanded his return to the poisonous j den from which he had escaped, but he looked toward the quarter from which , wie worus nau come, and replied witn the words had come, and replied with a savage sneer : " Not much." He stopped long enough to take a cool. invigorating draught from the noizel of j tbe hose and to saturate the handker- cnier again, neiore oinomg re across nts face. He called for another length of rope and, as he instructed the men to haul up at a given signal, they knew that his strength was giving out. Then he leaped upon the ladder and descended, hand over hand, with the swiftness of one who is almt to take a desperate ! "sk. No one in the pure, wholesome air I ahove could guess what it was to plunge ' into this noisome hole, the reeking re- pository of filth and corruption, from w hich poisonous gases exhaled, blotting j out the light of day that essayed to creep 1 through the narrow opening above, mak- j ing it impossible for so much as the j tiame of a candle to survive. Xor did O'Grady find any comfort in the reflec tion that be was doing a magnanimous and gallant deed, risking his life to save his enemy. To him, Callahan had from the first lost peisouality and identity. He was simply a fellow-being, suffering, j failing, dying. As O'Grady reached the lower rung of the ladder and stoopped to the foul ooxe lelow. the horrible vapors seemed to rise like spectral forms, clutching at him, (tripping his throat, crushing his chest in j a vice like embrace. His eyes were j blinded, something roared inhisearslike j the thunder of incoming breakers. ' Sightless deafened, choking, he groped about him and found what be sought. The men above felt a faint pull on the rope O't ira.lv had carried in his hands, and hauled it in with a wi!L A moment later Callahan, unconscious, but with his chest heaving in slow, convulsive move ments, lay stretched upon the ground beside them. Everybody looked to see O'Grady's resolute face and broad shoul ders appear at the opening. Cheers were on their lips, praise in their hearts. Somebody pulled gently upon the rope he had tied about his waist hen he first went down. Heavy, inanimate weight was the only response. Two of the workmen swung themselves down the ladder until their beads and shoul ders were visible, and gripping the rope brought the heavy burden into position to lie rasied. "Now, boys!" Slowly and more carefully than before they palled upon the rope. When Xorah I'l irady saw the lifeless form she sprang fir ward with a little cry. A week later two convalescents sat up in bed. and demanded to fie dressed. Bridget Callahan hastened to obey her husband's behest with a willine heart ! I and trembling hands. Nonth O'Grady ) scolded unci exnodnhited. but to n,i He had actually got in a savage plea of " Guilty, an' it plaxe ..ur iionor!" when the plaintiff ap x-ared on the scent. The two men met for the first time since The world knows little of the inner the day Callahan had been drawn back iives of even the m.iet conspicuous men. from the jaws of a frightful death by his j The late Francis Palm was generally re enemy O'Grady would not hx.k towarl j sari,.,i a supereiitively close. Many him now, bnt repeated his plea, rather J thought him hard, miserly, pitiless his more loudly and decidedly than be- ,e object in life aecmnlation of money ,ore; ! " Guilty, your honor." Callahan held a hasty consolation with an official of the court. "Nolle prosequi," announced the latter in 9 careless tone. "Case dismissed. Call the next," said the Judge. )'( irady had to beta ice informed before he comprehended the turn affairs had taken. Then he left reluctantly, unhap py and dissatisfied. The fact that he j had laid his enemy nnder the heaviest j obligations to himself had only served J to whet his zest in the role of injured in- ! nocence, which he had been ready to enact. He had been making ready his po vers of oratory all the way down tow n rehearsing the pedigree of the game cocks Callahan's dog had slain, counting j his decimated flock of ducks, ntking up a score of old injuries which he meant to rehearse if an opportunity was presented. He went out of court crestfallen. Some body awaited him outside the door. "O'Grady!' said Callahan, in a voice at once conciliatory, pleading, argument ative, holding out his band at the same time. If O'Grady bad been the man who had lain at the bottom of the cesspool and Callahan the man who had saved him, he would have struck aside tbe proffered band. But all at once it came to him that one who confers a favor has obligations far more binding than those of the recipient. The man who has once done a noble and unselfish act has a character to maintain. It is the princi ple of nobless oblige, among high and low, rich and poor the world over. They w ilked down the stairs together and out into the street. For a long time they did not speak. Then Callahan, timdily ; " They do say as oar Tim be eoortia i av your Annw." i era O'frrady smoked his pipe for some woods without replying. Then he took it deliberately from his mouth. " Tim's a loikly lad," he mid. That evening Tim Callahan walked up to the front door of the O'Grady cottage. Annie O'tSrady, her face a genuine April of smiles and tears, was there to receive j him. Flora Hmiut 1vtjh?nl i th Aryo- . juntt. Pleasures of Superstition. There is, after all, a good deal of satis faction in being super-stitious. To be able to charge all puzziing or inexplicable oc currences to invisible, sutieraatiira! ag'n- ti.m ., .titfi..n!tv i..v n. t,. a i.n.fun.l i j thinker, be better than none, but it is ; infinit,.T lre comforting to ordinarr j haman beings. Men feel, moreover, that in acknowledging that there may be truth in astrology, charlatanism and all the rest, they have been in a manner brought into a mystic brother iood ; and most people have a certain secret notion that the very confession of faith is in some way a sort of propitiatory oifering to unseen powers. Mystery has always a fascination (or man, and almo-n anv of dettfction can succeed if it can v,j jtseif j a perni-obscuriTr and ;,,, the awestruck curiositv of the is?no- j rant A verr small btisis of truth serves anmcient basis uim which to erect a very substantial structure of delusion, as the histurv of innumerable uuacks j an,j iillr,.toi has testified thr nigh all j tlle centuries since civilization began. j It not mucn that mva ,ike to deceived as that they enjoy deceiving themselves under the pretence that they rt ind in the presence of some inscrutable mystery, before which, since human rea son is sure to prove unavailing.it is f.xd ish to attempt to be reasonable or logical at all. To be freed from thinking is, after all, the delight which ensnares more of mankind than any other temp tation. Buxton i'miritr. WaSps in the Ministers Pocket. Everybody has hear! Thmie! Webster's story ofaN'ew Hampshire parson who put on a pair of trousers in which the wasps had built a nest, and did not make the discovery until he was in the pulpit. He had just announced the beginning of the text. "The spirit of the Lord is in my mouth " when the pesky little fellows got in their work, and the senten.-e van concluded with the exclamation, "and the devil in my breeches," t .j. t 1 t. 1 - : ir: .1 1 aui iiriaiuMii umiii'i uiiiitii iu -'. r..r.i,n 00s, " New Hamshire parson when last Similar he appeared in the pulpit, wearing a pair of fall trousers w hich had been banging in the wardrobe during the long summer vacation. The wasps had not found him out, but a motherly old mouse had." She had spread a ni.v, warm coiii'h .of seal skin plucking, in the right hand pocket of the tro sers, into which an even half dozen of one-day-.ld micvlets had been tucked away. It is a favorite gesture of the clergyman in question, when about to approach a climax in the sermon, to thrust his right hand in his trouxer pock et and elevate the left with the forefinger extended. It so happened on this part icul.tr day that Elijah's translation was the theme. The good profit hail wen followed by the eloquent preacher until the climax of the ascension in a chariot of fire had been reached, when the clergyman thrust his fight hand int.) his trouxer pocket. The audience, who had been hanging on the burning words of the orator, were no little startled by the sudden collapse of the tinlifted left hand, the index finger of which was in the act of pointing to the gates that were being lifted up to let the prophet in. The ex prexsion of a momentary pang sli4 across tiie jireach er's tt.re as with a convulsive jerit the other hand was brought up frjui the rsx'ket. A glance at its contentes, a quick squeezing together f the hand, the light thud of something dripping be hind the pulpit, an amused smile on the lace for a second and then the glowing theme was resumed. Only taose who sat on the front row in the amen corner hear! what the preacher said when he discovered the mice in his hand. u Well, I'll be doggoned ! " was sufficient. Francis Palms's Gratitude. and bis recreation the inventing of meth ods whereby to lesson the cost of living. Unquestionably he was anything but a riotous liver, and there is n..ne to dispute his willingness to see his millions multi ply; bx9 that he was heartless, cruel, grasping and relentlesx is not true. The relation of one inei.lent in his money getting life will show that beneath his glittering and cold exterior beat a re sponsive and greatful heart. When he rami to Ih'trnif, a young man in quest of employement, he found a friend in one of Iefroit's m.wt promi- nent inhabitants. Mr. Palms became a bookkeeper. On quitting that employ ment he drifted into a pine land deal. Without large capital he xn found him self between the upper and nether mill- stones, where he was like to he gronnd fine. Then his friend caught him, so to say, by the hair of his head and snatched him from financial destruction cheated the millstones of their grist and sent the young speculator spinning tip the hill of fortune. Years afterward, when Francis Palms had become known far and wide as tbe richest man in Michigan and his friemp- had drifted from his anchorage into the whirlpool of commercial danger the former found his opportunity and his heart and " went on" the old merchant's paper for $200,000. An acquaintance of Palms's met him one day, warned him that tbe maker of that paper was in a shaky condition and ctsanselled hint to get from nnder with all possible baste. As near as I ran figure it," said the acquaintance, " yon are in for about ?!00, 000." . " Well, said Palms, calmly disdaining j to corret the misapprehension as to tiie I sum of his indorsemenls, " my name is i good, I suppose ? ' " Why oh, certainly, Mr. Palms, by c O- o 1HIOLE NO. 1800. all means. I merely wanted to give yoo a friendly hint," Palms made no reply, but the deep down kindly heart of the man to say nothing of his commercial sagacity and his practictl seu.se in dealing with money problems was shown by developments. The friend died with Francis Palms still htseii 1 .rr for j-3. ,!. Theesute of the once apparently invincible old merchant tottered on the brink of rain. The executors held a serious consultation with the creditor whom they, in common with the general community, looked tin as a Shylork whom nothing could move from his firm purpose to have his pound of fl.'sh. They said to him in sulwtunce. " Mr. Pa'ms, you practically own his estate. On what terms shall we tarn it over to yon ? " " Hold on. gent'emen," n the response t io slow and let us see what i the best thins ti le done. Ah. to be sure. Go back, gentlemen ; go back to the widow of my old friend and asuure her that I shall not pren my claim. You are sensible men. business men, honest men, I'm sure, anil want tdo everything for the -Jood of your trust. Dispose of I y.mr assets on the most advantageous i tenns von can. That done and vou ' must take plenty time, mind, gentlemen, plenty time yon can not only pay me, but leave the widow very comfortable indeed. Thus encouraged, the"c faithful execn tors sat to work with new zeal. In time they steered the hark into a harbor, paid off everv dollar that st'xwl against the estate and left tin? w idow, as Palms de- ) clared thev could. " verv comfortable ' indeed." Elephants in the Lumber Bus iness. Lt.yand i!uiu.y-lixking as the ele phant appears in our menageries, where it is merely an obj.s-t of curiosity, in Asia it is as useful an animal asthe horse, and is, indeed, employed in a greater variety .if ways. There are few tasks, which a horse c-.in be trusted to perform without care - fill and constant guidance : whereas the elephant is frpvntly given as much in dependeme of action as a man would have for the same work. Tiiis is notably tbe case in the lumber yanis of Rangoon and Malmein, where the entire operation of moving and piling the heavy timber is perform.! by nut'e elephants without any special sut-rvi 'ion by the keepers. The Legs to lie moved are teakw.xx!, which is very heavy. They are cut into lengths of twentv feet, with a diameter or perhaps a square of about a f.sit. An .ii,.,n( 1, l r thrust his tusk under the middle of it. ciirl his trunk over it, test it to see that it is evenly balanced, and then rise with and easily carry it to the pile w hich is being made. Placing the log carefully on tiie pile in its proper place, the saga cious animal w ill stop back a few paces andm-jsure w ith his eye tod'termine whether or not the log needs pushing one w:iy or another. It will then make any necessary alteration of position. In this way, without a word of command from its mahout, or driver, it will go on with its work. To do any special task, it must, of oonrse, be directed by a mahout; but it is marvelous to see how readily this great creature comprehends its instrjctions, and how ingeniously it makes use of its strength. If a lxg t.w heavy to carry is to be move. I a short distance, the ele phant w ill bend low, place his great head against the end of the log and then with a sudden exertion of strength and weight thrw his fxxly forward and fairly push tiie log along; or. to move the log any great distance, he will encircle it with a chain and drag his load behind him. As a rule, however, the work of drag ging is done by the female elephants, siii.-e having no tusk, they cannot carry logs as tiie male elephants do. A man could hardly display more judgment in the adjustment of the rop or chain around a log. nor could a man with his two hands tie and untie knots more skill fully than do they with their trunks. From " EUjJi'inti nt (Fort," tnj John thr tW, i;t .V. .Vcei.M. Courtship In Greenland. The preacher is invariably resorted to by both y.Ming men and maidens, as the matrimonial ;igent. A young man comes to the tuissi .nary house and says to him ; " I what to marry." " Whom ?" asks the missionary. "Have you any one in mini T' " Yes," answered the I ver, " but she will not have me. I want yoj to speak to her." " Have you not ro.,ken fur yourself?" " Many times but she always answer ed ' No.' " "T.iat is nothing," says the pastor, "you know the way of maidens. Does she like you T' ill " it Is ditiicult to find out. She tell vou." ine pastor accordingly sends tor the ; tate is a sort of unwritten law, so bind girl, who comes willing enough, knowing j in thai they are seldom sent awav ,x. what the message means. j rept f()r ery ou cause. Thev regard "Well, my .iauL-hter, it is time yon ! mu!e, and imnlimenta of th- ,.!.'..., ,. should think of marriage." I never mean to marry.' ! is the inva- , riable and conventional answer. "That is a pity." says the nifkister. hecaiL-e I have a goal husband for thee." " Who is hcT she ask. The missionarv loan tells her his name although he km wsit as wen as tie ami tauncnex out 11110 tne lovers ian,i experts in cane Culture; knows praise. He is strong, good looking, kind- j the strong and the weak pointa in the ly; heran.'httwo fine whales when his I character of every man in his emplor eom pan ions t.x.k none, or whatever else j U)eaL Indeed his rule so mild that" can fx? said to Ins repute. After the cat- alogueof bis merits has been recited, the j girl replit- : "But I think hi m .1 gxid.f r-n.thing fellow." ; "Ah well," ssy.x t he missionary, " thou , art not wise. There is no lad who can ! fling a harp-n as he can. I shall soon j find him a wife." j He then wishes the girl a good day, af- i fecting l believe that the interview is j over. But she is xtire to linger, and alter ; a blush and sigh, she whispers : "It is j particularly your w h. Herr Pastor? I j do not quite like him," with a deep sigh, 14 but if yon " At this point she vir- tually hands over the business to the minister, w bo has to tell her tbatiht knows she loves the lad ; that she would j not have co;.ie if she had not thought of ' a. - cepting him, an i that nothing is wan- 1 I ting but to aak the blessing uf God upon ! ; their anion. j The nmrrimfe, uriot;sTi ettoneh. ttsrj alh take place njon the rrrj d:iy on which th rilt .iithattc:!9T pr'..-'d thai she wiil never have th "i i;in . The Public School in England. It was turf until Is7 that any jibl.e provision for education was made in Eng land, and then the aid ol the State was extended to elementary education only. This ai.i. too in only partial, for the pub lic schools are not wholly maintained, as. in the United Htotew, by general taxation of commnitie. bnt oot nf asrhonl fund obtained from frew paid by th puptla. taxation or Parliamentary grantsv In t!i:a sen of the Education act of l!7l more over, every elementarv sch.xj is a public school, provided that it is conducted ac cording to .he condition of the act. which especially require that there shall be no aiisolute exactions in the matter of the religittu observance and instruction. The fee of the pup.il varies between 2 and 1 cents a week, and if he is in ac tual destitution the sura must be paid by the I iuardian of the Poor of the district ; but the principal support of the Bari sch.xl. as distinguished from the volun tary schools entitled to the benefits of the school fund, comes froru taxation, at whose increase last year there was mu. h growling among the rate payers. Finally the education of the children between the agew of 5 and 14, in reading, writing and arithmetic, is made compulsory, though, because of the fee exerted and the desire to use the wages of children, the requirement is very extensively eva ded. The number of pupils enrolled Iat year was about 4,."s),()i)i) and the average attendance about 3,.Vl,iH The average salary of a master in a school is fTOO. and of a school mistresn $;75, with a higher stipend for London. Corporal punish ment can be administered, but only by the bead teacher, and aa with us, the girls are quicker than the boys in learn ing. In the matter of penmanship both the English and the Irish are very much be something wrong tn tne instruction in the art provide.! in our sch!s, for the j chirography of the average American, ' whatever his age or oerupstion be, is I bad. So far as the method of supporting the I schools is concerned, we have nothing to 1 learo from England ; but its theory that the State should give support to elemen tary ed'ication only is un.pjestionai.lv sound. It is for the intrm-tion alone that the taxation for schmls can be justi fied. In England, where tbe suffrage is now greatly extended, and in this coun I try, where it is universal, the well being I of the State demanos that children shall ' he taught to read, write and cipher but it lis not justifiable to tax the people for any education beyond that. .Vr York S'in. ! The Late Henry Ward Beecher j as a Humorist. " Rejoice in the Lord always." I will defy anylxxly to do it, if he were such (rod as was taught tue when I was a small boy. The man that has live.! for himself has the privilege of being his own mour ner. Whether Ireland ever will be quiet de pends on how many Irishmen emigrate. They are like whiskey not to be taken straight, bnt in mixture. The opinion of Solomon is not shared by men very generally. Conceit in very much in repute. People who are con ceited by no means think that they are f.xils thev think that Solomon was a fool. There are those that are instructed in the necessity of cross bearing who, that they would not be without a cross, make up little crosw-s, and are careful that they are made not only small, but of light tim ber. Their crosses are the hermit's shell, like the old pilgrim's scallop which was ! worn out on theNhouIder. The Bible is like a telescope. If a man I looks through his telescope, then he sees I worlds beyond: bnt if he looks at his j telescope, then he does not see anything but that. The old Greeks said that a man had two ears and one mouth, that he might hear twice and speak once, and there is a great deal of gxxl sense in it. Yon will find that, if you will simply hold your peace, you will pass over nine out of ten of the provocations of life. It hits been supposed that we sprang from monkeys, and there has been an inqu.sition to see if there has not been a caudal appendage rubbed off. Nations have been explored to find a man who had a tail as a monkey has, or some tra ces of one. You are looking in the wrong :ilace. Look inside and you will find some resemhiani-e of the monkey, the lion, the bear and the hog al! of them. Some justify the obscurity of their style, saying that it is a gixxi practice for men to be obliged to dig for the ideas) which they get. But I submit to you that working on Sunday is not proper for or dinary people in church, and obliging your parishoners to dig and delve for ideas in your aermon in making them do the very work vou are paid a salarv i to do fr them. On a Sugar Plantation. From a profusely illustrated article in the November Onhiry, by E. V. Sinalley on " Sugar-Making in Loiisiana," we quote the following a illustrating the re lations between employer an I employed: "The relations between the employer and the employees on.tsujrar estate are unique. They are the nearest approach : in America to the feudal system. Xot a fix of Ltnd do the laborers own. Yet t.ieir right to homes and labor on the to some extent their own, using th.-m to cultivate their gardens and to haul their fieL In directing the plantation work be seldom uses any harsh words of com- man.! ; talks rather in kindly tones, scoels a little if needs be, but in a rather parental fashion ; uses opinions at times. irom swartnv oiu uncles wno nae a standing on the place as faithful men i stranger to plantation life wonders ho the uncouth mass of black laborers i held t.igether and disciplined so as ! produce favorable industrial results. That Hacking Cough can be s oaiclrt cured by Shiloh's Cure. We guarantee it. Sold by G. W. Benford A Son. It is worth mentioning that all good siiotx believe in the center-bore, too. Shiloh's Cough and Consumption Cure is sold by ns ot a guarantee. IteuresCon atimtition. Sold by Geo. W. Ben ford 4 Son It th W2 o twin, w kim in D,;... -rv; ,, for the squalls on Lake Michigan, 0 If the moon is made of greet cheese then the man in th mooa skipper. moat be TT
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers