fte Somerset Herald. ISTMUSHIB Ml. Terms of Publication. . . ,,tt e;w.T manOnf UBOO if said .!Ta ; cMHr 12 M , . wia b JL-wmti-ued ant ail , on. Pmtmmxxn ngcB t whea Ktrl? Oo w takeout then " . 1 held -! fcr -it-crip- -r Sxxkset ILu.ld, Sor, Pa. tir, "rTTv BIF.SF.CKEK. .jIN-V-al-LA C LAW. irafMt Fa. . k Been- B-a. P JT Ai tomeraet, f T.UN '-'.-.at law. J Ai swuicnet. Fa. 1 Somerset, F Vf S.'V.m'-M-KY. TT''i.NEY-AT-LAW ij. A s. Fa. 31 r,-M-, (E'T .E - .-. II stmitrct. Pa ,rr-; :.;'; cu- u wui . :. - ' ' "' Mi. a. rrra , - . ,.na --th. . w. rt":-1--l I" thf " lU ' Tt7?V;..W-' y--.a BI.-L-.fTU ii K " NTZ. oilier -ct. I1., .... . R--:t.ti.m ttw'iitr"f ' -.u-rx-i at- a-i;-.lMJ rvu-.ilie. '4. - ' f T;1 MFYKKS. :- '.'.'!,: ..u.Vtm-M. r.l I' !-tr- -'-e V'-I. u: " ,lrr 7nxV.K':vMn.., j s.ui. r t. r.., .:,s.'l,T!' ivm -u! -it pf""H'- , : ,.' .. . JUia " rnw. rwvl, t.-u.-r- ilt w. Viv! h. rt"".ri. ,j 4VT'.KSEY-AT-LAW. ,r v,r -..! Bl.k. or rT.trai-.e MJ' 1 .'- t V. ;nt Nt - . n 'i.r. ii:n. " AlTor.:. t:j-AT-I.AW. , (. .., pt-n-'.M w" ,ri:1 ,.,. mimr ;r- :it mul -iut-yi"'eiii ". r- nri:Y. f. s nri.L. An. iwNLY Al-LAW. WUK'TVl, Pa. r- r..rr ana r'.-!.-i A.vit MamaK-tli -I'M.KNTINK IMV. Ar-.of..M.Y-AT-i. ' i'D-rt. Pa. u . n.n'. Eriate. ' c.enrt ! all ..,;;-u.-'.oi u. b .are w.U pnwipuws .: J 1!S ii. I'iiL. ATTOK.SEY-ATLA-. s.:irTHt. Pa. ,., y..,,, v wiwivl ou cuwvUoca, e. " , v.t''.:.--- " ; I) ? F. A. RH'.'AI. i-HY-lt-LL-N A:m si i.or.i.s. iiiw?el. r C.t ia '";- i Becrtt' Elk. 1 '""- I) !L J. F- bIKIX KFIi, mvi'inv AND slKoEuX. S'tr.K.-FT. Pi.. - ..V k r-W.-: rri to th eitiavcw f ,.r.-t . .. -.I.- y. .. tIM. Vttte ku.:..-.h. tc Ina.id. ! 11. S. Ki Mil ELL, T,ili.tnifM. KTTK1 of U til rilijMM . T fs' mt.'l VHIMtV. l uie- porfw-lia-iy .r .-ai. . H tiiui at ii- ua Vain sc. ut L'.aU"LI. i D 3. II- EUCBAKES l. rr--f.-'r.i serriif-to the ritiarn , Dr.. J. M. I.i ilTKFR. j PHYSICIAN' AND St Koti-S. U '.. r.--! (. rr.a.-r.tlv In SVcMint tr the jt ;i-T k s.;pr:.i.-!U 0w JIaia trei. rvmr -.t l r.t -t--re. D!.. J.S. M'MILLFJS . ' k,:- ,! itcn.'fi tHi pT-rv:on , ?:-r.'" u .-ia. A-irV-wi in-.T.l Ail t .M-nUA.,. -;ra;.twru -toiuciwry- .rd.f-m EUu-r , i) s. j 'UN r-n.i. Tf.-t -ztf m Cn.k r-eent). RI.K-lr. D V. JI. (. ut-LINS. l'LNTI-T. ' :n Kr.i-T.r1. Tll-wk uptair.. wl.ti- he -.:-s r-;..-!ir. r--rut!:(i:. elr-t:ii .. --.-a ot .1 fel.l-i" aii .rf' line be a::r. .i-.l. a.i ainu- J. K. MILLER l v.9r.; in Berlin f. the prae. : - -I .1 -rw-'w-: c.- ej-t-j.u; 1 h le. iiat i s-t t Cot in tv IJauk. L.-TJiiZ!hi:D 1-T ) C.J.Ka?,R:SCN. M.J. PRITTS, ! ' t e: I t NT. C AH . IJL -"i."r;,tn nua.i 4, part of the Tnited Suae. CHARGE MODERATE. Txr "- v, rs t.-i rI CMer.oT tl'o'T ran be v : -nci.-ii.-i ta .ira't on N-w Vwk in any :it, ' J ".;;. R:.;t n'tliL-C'-rw. r. !. Biihi i k i t,. 5c,,.,. v r, vniuaJ.k- : ,A',r I'!- t.-t.rJ tic, alk SWT- itt j.-x- :u uwk. I A a-wp V lcW--WlMP' CURTIS K. GROVE. ! SOMERSET, PA. rtKli.UA. CAP. EI ACE?. ' fi'tiN-, Wa-V.N's. rr.WA.ioN. I AM' F-i-TFJiX ANEW E-TIaiX W- ! F-iTTzh?.: on Shcn Notir. Ta.g E0e on short Time. ! u '., . r-v. ,uw aw, j "1 " ' I'" '- t-t .v-w. mr.:r -::nrt.i. v;ijr Fmi4H. as4 I -.teu-f .ve ?. - j - r7 7 CS li. 1 'fc,iT r ' Alt K-hs Vt tSrw IVme a j '3-"N-t:. Htv.K-.Nhan4 j All Work Warranicti. '2 -i Ex-tin my stnrk and tears . .mrt aiM fiini-i Ww W iiKl '"wVr tl,t ?u-. ai rl ia. CURTIS K. GSOVE, iuk of toon Ewisti homers et. r iULS HOFFM.V, MERCHANT TAILOR. U Bvffiej'i ston.) tWt St, Anfwet Irioe. ATISFACT IOK -GUARANTEED Somerset, Pa. r lie VOL. XV1. XO. 34. Is Life rortli Living? That dt'ju'Dila npon the Liver, fir if the liver is iiu:tive the whcU? syste-jj out of tW the breath is UJ, Jiestkni l.ior, the m xni'A or ai hi: energy and liopefiiliK-es pHiB, Uiii piiit ure liep'-t-sted. a. heavy wi-i'il sxit tr eating, with iitncrji! tUapon !etiry ari l th him1?. The Liv er ia the hoiisokeex.-r of the ln.iilh; ami a hariuUfwi, bimle ivnWy thut acta like Naiure, l'r rht towti Kite aflerwanijt or njaire constant takujg, les not intrfiire with business or p";ias nre during its use, Sim mons Liver I-i!iitor a uioliiul Irfot-t:on. t hve t -t 1 l: vrm-fx jvr rTr. nt kiv j that 1"T i'V-pji. liilu.i:!. nrl'l Tanr. j hiMch'. t; tri-b-M in-1 !.::!; l 'jrir:a rvr w : liJtv- tr-i f ny 4ftii'T r."o vlit-: NeirStui- liMre t!;. tt-tarniry n'li-'f, i'.ut t :e kruiUJC ! ttt oliiy rt:Luv"t (Mil H. H.JO.NES. Macon. Ca. HOLIDAY SUSPENDERS. Pt:t n; on iair in a Hot. Plain S:ttin and Moire, also Lu hly Kaibroidereti. Holiday Fancy Nightshirts. The i'-et Line of TatlLTiis we have ever had. HOLIDAY NEC WEAR. New trade-up !uipes. Four-in-HandTies, I'-jws, vf, lor all occasions. HOLIDAY GLOVES:. F.t laiies and Gentlemen, all tlw latest colors aa.l 1 n-zth. 6 is every occasion. 110 LI DA V SIL K nosiEn r. I n'uLrr.d pera Lengths, Ei;:ck and j Plain Color and Fancy Patterns.en t:n'y new designs. HOLIDAY APRONS, A very hands-me line of I!ain T'k.k; Embroidered and Iiaiu ril patterns. Holiday Handkerchiefs, Every kin-i, quality au-1 in lar,e (jiu&ti ties, ami, f-f tiMst importance to buy ers. EXTRA AND REST VA L- UESevcrotrvreii inlian lker chiefs. Ik and Linen, for Cnt!emen. Hndkerchiee. Ptain ur.d Embroidered for La-li-s, and Handkerchiefs for Chil dren. Come in every day and look ar on ml. HORXE & WARD, U FIFTH AVE.. PITTsBt E';n. PX. It is to Your Int rest TO Kt"T Y-.-t 'R Drugs and Medicines BlESECKER 4 SNYDER. mirtysc - to c. x. BoYP. None I Kit the j-r.rest an.l best kept hi stock, and when Prugs. become inert by amandin-, as eeiunn f them i-. we ie atmy ttiem. mtlier tl.au im-po.- on our ct. imers. Y oa can J.-pend on having your PRESCPJFT1CNS FAMILY RECEIPTS tilled with care. Our jirin are as low as aiiy o!ier tirt-!a Ihiu.- and on many articles m h lower. Tiie people "f this county arem to kn-w this, and have trlrm ns a lare share of their IitrHje. an.l we sla! will continue to give tliem the very best o.is 6-r tlieir money. Po f.-rr-t that we nia.e a jj-reialry of FITTIXGr TI?US.SES. We giarantie sati'lion. ami, if you have had Ttj-ubie in this direction, ive us a call. SPECTACLES AND EYE-GLASSES in prt variety; A ftii! set i-f Test Lenses. Cmc in and have vour eves eiannmil. o rlw fi.r examination, and we areconli.lent ! wc can suit v.m Tome and me. Resj:ul!y, BlESECKER & SNYDER. Something New and Cheap I 0.J.)0.l0)0.).)O.I.)0.)S)OOrW10000000000 - A J.vr sj PEXSr EAZSED. I a ousts too rat nrrif by calling at the oc w Boot and Shoe Store JOHN G. SANNER, feO. 9 aHHQTH block. I hT ia a rU JI C.r.irtc Iuo. 3e BOOTS, SHOES, GAITERS, LEATHER, FINDINGS, dC, dC. I have the CeVbrated WArr.NPHA5T SHOE the Bet and Cheapi-a: U.-n' Shoe mat Ia Ladies' Shoes i I have the Thv- Tine rrbtwrt to Siitnorw at A-tontMinr'T Prices. A p.-rlal lut- l.-i.-n t- cxu-si-l--d tnall an.l tne .--... My t-'k of anil th pnrvr at hl-a lory are -.1.1. eatim-i be irvwd. "ni.a-ie . an nrainn? a -eilty. Call and mta-rk. ar.d jnn will mtainlT tlad Jnu yi waut Ewpecifully, jobs g. ixyrszvu X , Haaumcii Block. Hent SEA WONDERS x- u jjjjr jv wf uientia. TlMe a -i .T BM.ie .urk thmt earn ! l.pae whf.tr Iivina n ui4 - 1 Xtwir a4ra to Ualleu ', - VI '. ai neeiv. free, liiil tnl-a aew either l ot all sav. can ran Cr ta- - ar 4mj as:d upwant, viiervver they 11 c. m. an wrv ed ff-e. i apUai required. se aa.e fata mr Mil anr Cay at l work. All ia a-iy THE DECTIVETS PRISONER. Two men sat ti)gether in the rear seat of a smoking car on one of our railromls and cbatte'l familiarly of the ops ami downs of a miner's life, the topic being snir.'ted by a landscape dotted with coal breakers and furrowed with cool roads. The freedom and interest of their con versation di J not seem ta be damped by the &et that the younger of the two carried a revolver, while hw corapanivn ; wore a pair of those nucoveted articles of i jewelry which are known iu criminal cir ! cles as " brai-eleta.' j The few passvnjKrs who hal observed i thu U'ameil ftxim the connMential ! brakeman that they were a noted detec- tive aud his prisoner on the way to trial. : As far as aes went, the pair mlht have j been taken for father and son, th' fine tray head of the one cvotra&ting strong ly with the crisp brown curls of La j What crime had been comomted the brakeman did not know, but hazarded j conjecture that it " must have been a S pretty hid one, or John Munsen wouldn't nave lae troauie 10 pu lueiu loicgs ; on his wrists.' ' Presently the brakeman and the con- djetor satisned the joint demand of cti ; tjuette and curhisity by stopping to ex ; choose tew words with the deWtive ; j the former then perchel himself upon i the coal-box directly behind the prisoner j and the latter dropped magnificently into j j the seat in frout. The train was sweep j in? around a curve and past a mined tresstle ou the hillside at which bcth of the passengers looke.1 with some inter- j ! " I remember that place " said the old- j er man. -So do I," responde.1 the yonnr; "I was born there. Came near being bur- t led there, too," he resumed, after a mo- j ment's pause. j " How was that r j "If a pretty long story,- said the de- : teetive, " but I guess we'll have time for . it between here and the nest station. : Way up there on the slope is the little i ttletnent where I made my dJ,ui. so to j speak ; from it to the bottum of the hill ; i..ere usen 10 oe a gravity roao; a n,r, winding track reaching from the settle ment down to the top of a black wall of ! earth where a slide occurred the year I was born. On both sides of the track ' rew saplings that had sprung up since J the disaster (what I am telling you hap- pened five years later!, and they crowded the road and hung over tiie old rusty ( rails on which the coal cars u--l to ! run. Yon must remember that the hoas- es were buiit near the mouth of the pit. That was one of the arst mines workeil in this country, and one of the first to lie abau lone.1. At the time I am telling about, some men. were walking up the track, and a lot of children playing near the top, climbing in ami out f an old car which had lain there since it made its last trip, with lh broken spraggs still in its wheels. " The men were miners, all but one of them,' who questioned his companions alHit their work and the oun ry they were living in. He was eviaently a i stranger. Presently, as they talkef, a shout from the top of the slope attracted their atten tion, and they looked up just in time b ;ia t-i move siowlv down as an impatient exclamati-m from the oldest man ia the party. 'Theru brats is always up to some mischief.' be said. They have started that old thing off at last ; I've been expeciin' to see it go any time this five year. They'll be breaking tlieir necks yet with their tom fooling.' And another of the group added : ' We must du-t out of this lively, unless we want to get our ow n necks broke ; shell . ilher jump the rail, or go to pieces at the bottom , lucky there ain't no one aboard of her.' " The stranger was looking anxiously np at the approaching runaway. His quick eye ha 1 caught sight of something r-vund an.l golden above the blackened nm. "' There is a child in that car,' he said "It was a second or two beS-re his 1 , ,:... tt. .-fal mnm-r i tjwt statement A child ! That was, as i if he lud sail that in a few moments some one perhaps one of tbeinselv would be childless. With one impulse they tamed to Ix.k at the broke, rails by thee leof ; the fault Shuddering, they fixed their j eyes again on the approaching mass, an.l then hopelessly on each other. Thry could not dream of stopping the pmgrem of the ear. Rut as quick as thought, ai- '. ! ranger to. .It hoU of a sapling and bent it down till it neurlv tou. he-1 i the track. Hold it,' he said, to one of the men ; 'it will help to check iier." A rod fnrther down another, and then a third and f wrth were held down in the same way. So four of the party waited for a fe w breathless seconds, while the two remaining ones hurried further down ; bat one more effort, ami the car was upon them. The first obstacle was whipped out of the bands of the strong nian who held it, and the car rushed on to the sec ond ith scarcely lessened force. Again tiie barrier was brushed aside, but this ; time the speed of the old wreck was per-! ceptibly less. By the time the fifth ob- j struction was reached the new-corner was 1 -1.1. . . 1 t .. . . 1 1 ,e !. I . . - child into the arms of htscomp inion.but t 1, , , , , . ' ! - w line IlC U. VU.ITT I' t III. I J -. 1 1 llIC I old track had regained something of ha j momentum and waspluniringon towards the precipice. i Wi!, the man jumped just as they I reai-bed the edge, just before his vehicle j '- . ... ..... ; so.4 over into Urn air. but be bail verr i 1 t ;,tt.. ;., ... .k l. .... 1 1 . ! ; umc time ui rnooi uvt grona-i. ana so i landed, aslnck would have it,onthe only ' j .n.n., ' - , . - -vuil j heap of stones in sight The others pick ed him np dead, and carried him Bp to the settleiuent, where the miners held wake over hint. But he came to life ia the middle of the festiv the obsequies. I j mean and found that be was only crip tonfy crip- ! pled for life, Tbe miners, folks not easily moved, i were enthusiastic about the affair, and i save snch testimonials as theT could, to i show their gratitude and appreciation. One of these expre-m- took the form ol a aoavenir, signed by every man in the j place, and stating in very grandiloquent j language what the poor fellow bad done. Hia qskk vi, seemed to them more won. Some SOMERSET, PA., derful than hia eoarage anJ devotion, in a community where neither quality U un tLSil at aiL ' The man who takn hia own life in hig hand every day, and has frequently to fight f ir the life of ame companion, values a ' brainy ' action. In the box with the testimonial was piirtie of fifty dollars and a enriooa old gold cruse, that had been treasured by the mother of the lad w ho was saved, aa hr one piece of j g nery. On it waa rudeiy engraved these words : "'Given by the miners at the Xotoh to the man who risked hia life &r a child. 'Titat waaalL The poor fellow went away and woald have been foiyotten, only that the fid miners told the story dontethnets to their children. The primmer was lookinjr out of the wiudow. The contlur-tor rurtled around us though ashamed of the interest he had shown in the story u story which i he did not doubt was pare fiction. Oclv j be bn.koQ1;in gave wavtohissvmpathv, ani wblH;ler yj, .a.1 ever f f0un,i j u x 1 1, j j. M lhe Je. ; tcct:Te " And was you the boy which he saved r -I was the kid." "And you never heer'J tell what be came of the man what would you do if yon she'd come acrost him sometime I" Evidently the hrakeuian had an imag ination which was trying hard to assert itself. " h '. I'd try to even the thing np soiiu-how. I suppose common decencv woa,,j Jemanil tIlat Vd trKlt him as! well as I knew how." jt i,ere the primer, turning fnai te window with an apparent eifort tl) clwniW a conversation which, f. some rea1)nj ha1 n,lt to inWrest him - ,,)k here oU n!3Qi rve . Htte keejisake that vmr story just retnindeil mtf o- ajl)1 j ;,)aI , a it Vi jjj. von to uie c.h.lw f it fr mc till till this :3 .., lf vonn Dt hani tkere , n 0'ut that bit oTihbon. M) j xj!e mTl&t almost jampeJ out of I nij.;, ! - ''jmefl if it ain't the cross you've just been telling alout P he shoated. A month later the detective was un dergoing a cross-examination by the con ductor ami braketuan. "Yes, he wa. a lad lot ; oh, yes, he didn't have a W to stand upon ; the facts are as dear as day. AH true about the cr-js-4 andthe rest of it ? Just as true as gospel.. What ha-1 he been doing? Throwing loml) the last thing. Punish e-lT Weil, to tell you the truth, they won't lie apt to pnnish hiui till they j catch hiio again, I gtjes. Fact is, be j got away frou me somehow that same night. Who, me? the force anv more. Oh, no. I'm not on I got the bounce." A Talk With Bill Nye. Bill Nye's real name, strange to relate, is William Nye. Ta it may not seem sur- i prising, an t yet it is, lor tne a.1 option ol i a false n-ime is a trait that Iiterarr men ! an-1 burglars bear in common. The man j who is resp-msihle for this discovery is ( Edward D. Cowan, who is now sha.low ; ing James G. Riain in Europe in the in- tera.-'t of the Chieaso .V. -m. Cowan was connected with th. Dmver T. i'ioiat the saaie time that the crimson.-n.ted poet of the Wild West, Eugene Field, was also illuminating its pages. In looking over the exchanges Cowan's attention was frequently attracted by side-splitting paragraphs which appeared in a distress el 1-ioking sheet called the Laramie B nafT tr.y. Investigation resulted in the discovery that they were the free contri bution of a B-ttmsrimg compositor named Bill Nye. O. IL Rotha-ker, the editor of the Denver Tnhnm; so dazed the newly discovered humorist with a magnificent , . .- 1 t i- t I maddening whirl of literature. Now the H'f.rfcf is his ovster, and he only a iittie more than thirty years of! age and b.ildheaded at that. j When I tol l him that I would hold fonvers? with him, he !.ke.l ,at me with a Pityirgsort 01 smne.an isai.i: wonu Tou fr-lin men to be Le me , Not no ticing my shudder he continued: "Would you have Americans become a race of humorists? How sad. then this world would be! H-w dr. Iful to contem- T'- niP ff them in the j bad and lessen the number. Ah ! sir, ) you do not know the dreadful responsi- biiity which weighs me down and which i hxi tuade tue bal-lere my time. Let me j coafei to you, sir, that I would n .Lire ! to t fnnav a : I esn. The rHsil! tt n of tiie result are too fearful to consider, even for a moment No, sir, leave me to car ry my bnrden alone." "Why, my d. r sir," I exclaimed, "this sort of thing will never do. It is your duty as a literary man, to tell the public at wliat hoar yoa go to bed, what yoa dream of, at what hour you ri?e, what! you eat, when and how yoa work and how much yoa pay the butcher weekly. Let the secrtt of your humor, if yoa will, remain a secret still." . "WelL" he said wearily, "that which yoa ask is easily answerl. I purine a calm, peaceful, uneventful, in fact, model life. I g" to bed with the lark and rise with the evening enc-btrd. If my j dreams would assume visible fona Finn- I , T t-.. ... ... ...T I ..f V..r. ! . , , . , . , , fireed to send to the wil.lsof oadan for ! , , T . . U.-. lit" un. ." .urn a ; gt a chance, and as for the batcher, I have not the honor of his acquaintance, I am aware that this plain, unvarnished u!e not agree with those told , by mT feHo Sanitises in the onfenced field .ft; . 1 . - . 1 . w 1 -toc, " .. ri u 1 Bill Nve have never been jlnnwri As I Srwb -it yon flatteringly ternimy humor.I I will wily say that ,t not carve, 1 out r Uh a hatchet nor uplifted with a crow- bar. It ,np!y bnbbL-not a s-japsod, aHa.imi.l.knM.l. W k v,i I , , lite, gurgling bubble that wells np from overflowing with Innocence and i guileleoesw. That is the sort of a ha- morist I am. Bat as I intimated before. neither the bore.! nor the world can af- I ford to have my tribe increased." Let me add to this what Mr. Nye's modesty would not perit him to say that be is a g-xxl fellow, a jolly fellow. and one who will never "lose a friend j for a jest," and thus " deserve to die a , beggar by tbe bargain." .V. Y. Graphic ESTABLISHED 1827. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1888. A Joust on London Bridge. Richard grew op to be a tyrant over both nobles and people ; a king of pa geants, banquets and tournaments only, with no thought but for his own' pleasure and glory. I should be glad to dismiss him now, if it were not for two strange spectacles which, during hia reia, took place on London bridge. One of tem will prove of especial interest to boys, the other will be belter liked by girls. It was Saint George's day, 13!X), that King Richard appointed for the first of these spectacles. A Scottish knight, nam ed the Earl of Craufort, had a ijuarrel, or some dispute, with an English knight, who had been ambassador to Scotland, named Lord de Wells. After the custom of those days a challenge passed between them, and they were to settle their dif ference by a paseae at arms. Such tilings were of considerable mo- ment to the parties concerned, ever, if no more than a friendly strnagle to see which was the better man. Tournaments were the great amusement of the day, ami they were often held at Westmin ster. Whether it w is because one of the present combatants was from another country ami the nearest to neutral ground was reonired : or whether it was a whim of the kiru to give the greatest possible number of people a chance of witnessing the fray, no less dangerous a piace was chosen for the rotuhut than London uridge. Here, accordingly, the lists were prepared. Tournaments on the water with boats were frequent, as well as tournaments on land with horses, but this was to be on neither on land nor water. Of course they ha-1 no doubt that the English knight would knock over the Scotchman, for the knights ot that coun try were not believed tj tie very formid able. . There was a great array on the bridge, the king and most of his nobles being present there ; and the populace covered the shores. Lord Craufort rode into the lists with twelve knights, who hail been j given a afe-cnduet to attend upon him. ' When everything was ready the sinal I was given, they put spurs to their horses ! and, with their lances in re-t. met in a ' fearf i! collision midway upon the bridge, j The lances wrre splintered, neither man ' dismounted, but the Scotchman sat as im- movable as a pillar of iron. The Eag- ' lishman, though he sto.xI it well, looked ) lor a moment a littie awry, like a till stove that had Let oue of its feet After they had recovered their breath. and the Englishman had been si t np- ; right again, the two wumlrew f--r anoth er charge. Azuin came the dash, and the clash, and thesplintersand the dust, and the horses on their haunches, but there sat the two knights, ths Scotchman as firm as the parapet, but the Englishman somewhat arched over the bow of his I saddle. f Tlien they drew off asain. It was sure- I Iy the best joust of th year. For the tbinl titue, they met But Hits' tfrrw Lord i de West was hoisted out of his saddle, and landed on the hard pavement, like a mass of old iron. He cijul l not even hear the cruel clang he made. His breath an-1 bis senses ha-1 been nocked I out of him. He did not move a iim'u. j Neither fir a time did the Scotchman, ! who, having reined in bis horse, looked ; grimly down upoa tiie ruin he had j ma-le. ' Such defeat wouM never do. The cn- ; rage-I an.l ang"aerons spectators rals-d i the shout, " He's tied tohis horse ! "He's tied to his horse 1" Whereupon the j knight lightly vaulted from his steetLand j discotiifirteii his accusers at once, an-l j What di-l he theu? Vault back again, 1 amid the loud plaudits they could not ! forbear to give? On the contrary, he ; ; turnol his back upon his horse, and g-- j j ing quickly to the fallen knight, lifted i him tenderly, and took off his helmet to . give him air, while the king and all the ' ..... .u, l . t . 1 ; ! . v - 1 uigger. as was now d ji pnvilcge chivalry m his brave heart prove.! to be j as trne as was the stroke of his iron arm. j His heart had warniod b his gtillant a I- versary, and to the ama-ement of every one, he watched by the sick-bed of his f for three months tiiereafter, until Lrd de Wells was mended of all his ills. v11. yfh'iii for Fcbruury. Uncle Esek's Wisdom. Genius invent, talent applies. Faith won't enable a man to lift a ton all at once, but it will, ten pounds at a time. i ;tPP-tur- U tfu .Ju t of the mn,mn f ma t j on the unwritten t thir."s. j ..... "L" u " "en- T j -O' -"J i-Jiwcbbvi a , Motion. j I never have seen an Ulea too big f ra I sentence, but I have read thon.l ( sentences too big for an Ilea, Vanity and jealoasy are the two weak- j est passions in the human heart, and, j strange to say, they are the most com- ! mon. t You may travel a g.vxi ways on whis- ky, and travel fast while y are going, j but von can't alwavs get back when vou 1 want to. A thoroughly neat woman is a joy un speakable, bat doesn't she make it busy for the dust, and for the people in her neighborhood ? I have heard of men who knew more than thev could tell, but I never have . .. v - -t -met one. If a man has a genuine idea, he can make himself on-lerst.xd. My young disciple, don't bant r new things, but study to improve upon the old ones ; every fiat stoce, and roost of j Hie bowk!?w have been turn?.! over al- i ready by the novelty -yunicrs. fin.l -W- f At i .ven, - . well ; thev know too wh for - - r S j-.v. - one MB( -j qnite eDOu H for two. t, aMnr4 ,-JUrr I . nve oiiiar pace note usueu uy trie i ! T . . . I T 1 i ! ? I p4rmr.' Bank of Wilmin-ton. ltel in 1313, Just seventr-foor years ago, has just I iiiii i.w. aeT.ntv.Mu- vear. has lust ICIUI lX4 V. - M.JH ..M-IVIItlj, hi-..- ing been sent on for redemptian by A. G. Douglass, of St Louis. A Wilmington paper says that tbe note is well preserved ' and there is no doubt of its genuineness, j J Darwin said : " Every species of fruit '. contains a living principle." A man is very apt to discover it when he bites into aa apple ia the dark. B-Mm Pewxm. TT The Nose. " The nose," says the Jnotst GoxdU, " is, if we are to believe II. le Bee, French savant, gradually losing its power to discharge its traditional function in the case of the civilized peoples; and when the sense of smell vanishes alto gether, as will infallibly be the cae one day, he tells as the organ itself is bound to follow its example sooner or later. It is no doubt the fact, as he points out, that the olGictoiy sense is ever so much keener in the savage than in thecivilized man, and it is reasonable toconclude that the more we progress in civilization the 1 duller the sense will grow. Its complete ! extinction, M. le B.-e assures i, is a mere question of time, and it is certain that nature never conserves useless organs. When the nose loses its power of smell ins, the nose ' must go.' Civilization is gradually making tu bald (about that there can be no doubt whatever,) re can be no doubt whatever,) and it will be a heavy price to pay for it il we are to lse oar noses as we!! as our hair. If this ever happens, the civilized worl.l will for one thing have to rcvUe its stan dard of comeliness. It may be that the civilized uum of the ftitnre will see no beauty in a Greek statue unless it has lost its nose, which, it is true, is the case I with most of them, Points on the Mercury. It is said to be nearlv as cold in New York as out west, where blizzards are blowing the mortgages off the farm To investigate this assertion a reporter took a trip around town in search of cor roborative Cuts. At the Hoffman bouse the reporter met a Montana man from Helena. He said that he should not return to the ances tral hails of hia "dugout" until whisky thaws in the spring. It was so cold when he left Boeian,in September, that $8 w6cn " T ontat n;g!it ; at th rest in one :irection it isa-Ieci-k-l bran.ly had feen sawci into paper ! r'"'re Jf'an on sawyer has been waked j victory fir the Hotstein as a beef pnxluc welghts, to remain in Uuit shape until r"m steep, iipposirg that the mill ing animal, Imt as there were two H-1- the spriiiji elections. At the Fifth Aventy hotil a promineut , citizen from St. Paul was found in his -room, ith tiie steam turned off and the ; ice croler in his bed. II-; said that Min- f ncssota wis cool, but beautifuf. People t never die there with consumption, be- i cr-.use their lungs freeze stiff on their ar-1 rival ami only thawed out w hen they ! went back east to die. All the ceiueterv ; companies in St. Paul were banknirt, ' an,i the un-iertakers were building skat- 1 i ing rinks, and would ma them as perma- i ; nent in'-c?tments. A I iiluth man at the St J.im-s was , explaining to Capt. Connor that the , J country afing the Northern PHciric rail- , ; road 'annex was tempore-! by ;breeze I j from the Pacific ocean. He said that in i j Prjctor Knotf 3 countv the canned fruit . ! crop l.a.1 increased everv vear. The blia- j zurd from Dakota had no effect on fruit, i It was customary for skaters to fill their noi-krts with stewed r.nsnes r-li-kcs! from u trees. Canned peaeh-s were as pten- tiful in January as are cocoanots in South America. The Lake Superior country had all the advantages of a tropical country with none of its annovances. When a child went for a bucket of water there was no 1 fear of being gobbled by ap alog-ator. ; Scorpions, centipedes, tarantulas, Renal f tigers, rhir.ocerr-ses an-l spotte.1 Ic-parls , were unknown, ami when a family sat; down to a dinner of potted meat and canned elephant there was no vacant chair nor newly made grave as Is often j the case w here the mercury stands at 10 j I degrees in mid-winter. A Risiruirk man at the Brunswick said the Missouri river was solid ice from Fort Reiiton to St. Perrie, a distance of miles. Freezing precipitates the mud, leaving the ice so clear that one can walk on the ice and see all tiie people who have 1-een drowned lying at rest in the bottom of the river as they w.'re in a museum. lUinctly as if " Tiie numerous : steamln-ts, moles, wood yards, happy homes and occasional towns and cities great rivers are also visible. It is pre dicted that next summer will be onusu- allv wet owing to the large amount of ice and snow on the western landscape.- Fnm d AV 1VI Wirw. A Drink That Lincoln Took. Colonel John R. Haskin was a member j of the Thirty-sixth Congress that expir i ed on March 4, !oI,the dav Abraham I Lincoln was inaugurated President of i ' the Unite.! States. Short! v after the t er- I . I pn.ot.ii24 were overtne new rf-i.!ent t:ii - I a stroll in the corridor cf the Capitol, and recrnizinz throush the open doors ch nWn .!, I ofa comiuittee room two of his acquaint- ances stamiing in-ide, he entered and ex- changed salutations with iukme! Haskin ao,i ( v-l-rcl John F.-mcy. He then went lii -in i.lti-i-rl smili-v l-i iea t ra n : u ,h(te .nJ bkckj jn froft of the Capitol building, " While looking from the window," ! said Colonel Haskin to the reporter, "I opened the door of a waa.stand, where, . for sanitary purposes, Colonel Forney j an-l myself each kept a bottle of good old brandy an.! some excellent B hanan i whiskey. Mr. Lincoln, who had been 1 I.xiking oat of the window, turned at the t moment, and I remarked to him : " After going through the Senate and i fe , 1 House vou must be tired. It is about our time to take a drink. Will you join us? . . . w l .-.l;.I " " . "":'"M "r:' x , i I told him we had ome fine bramly , and some good Buchanan whLskey.and, asking him which he would have, hand- ; m,.h n!rre tha he WO!Ilea t J the prti,-e-l eye- of Uie nur instantly i 'I noi.-e-I that he was very eD-n-e.1 him one of those talr tra:ght-np-aml- ; thnk th;. L;fe u rec.ni-e-I iu the point the puncturing ! strative," returoe.1 he, as he moved un- down tumblers, which were charad. r- . ' , ... , njclU.' of ahvL-nnlc vrinu..TUi k-l ! easilv ia hU .-h;.ir tie of that period, and admitted of no d ception. "Buchanan whiskey?" bewiid. in.piir- ingly. I think out of respect to the "I think out of respect to the present Administration, I ought to take ' the whiskey." i ' The glass was bamled to him, and he ro"1 wrt l fowrfinser-deep. I .I.- ntT,.ma karw- 4 . mOKm wT r-r.s """. t .IJl, -,r : ,ul 7 .! Mr ! P ' t ' , ' , U wt Ute ourwli - kcy stt!ght. Aod be did tac , , , s : t II WtlUOU. IKTOTr.CU WIUvtUT. ' The Handsomest Lady In Somerset remarked to a friend the other day that she knew Kemp's Balsam lor the Throat ami Langs was a superior remedy, as it stopped hercoagh instantly when others had no effect wbatcrver. So to prove this and convince yoa of its ! merit, any druggist will give yoa a sam ' pie Bottle Fete. Large size 50 cents and 1 (Hlrft (T J JL H VUUiL V Voices of the Birds. The Toice of birds correspond in their registers to those of human .beings, al though this has never before been stilted. For instance, the nightingale is a rich contralto, the mocking bird is a soprano soprscnto, the wood thrush a fine so prano, the skylark a curious combination rif the mezzo and the soprano, with the odds in favor of the niezzo. The state driver is a basso profunda. His notes are deep and sonorous, ami bis song is " Punk-a-gonk '. A-gonk-a-wunk !" The cwlar bird or watwing Iipg. He tries to sing in all parts and caamiC siug in any. The bobolink is a musical bvbrid of me tres. Hia is a jingling song. He Is the I only bird whom the mocking bird can't imitate. If a bobolink be shut np in the ' same cage with a mockingbird the mork- i ing binl will not infrequently- die within f three months of a broken heart, because of his failurs to imitate the bobolink, Tile winter wren is a crystaline contralt) tenor. The rapidifv of its sonz defies lightning ami consequently analysis. The blue bird, as Mr. Eeecher mid, always 9eems to be atul to sing something, but never quite gets there. The vulture is the musical discord of the binl family. Its vaii. which is even more hoarse than that of the blue jay, is perceptibly vitia ted by its' intemperate habits. The vul ture is the drunkard of birds. The bell biri of Fl.iri.f has a voice whose gamut j of sounds represents the higher ami low- er tones of a peal of bells. The voice of this bird can be hear! distinctly Cr i three-fourths of a mile. The voice of the j oriole soumls as though the bird were 1 singing Tuscan Latin. The voice of the i wood dove is like a flute. The red bird's voice resembles a ptco-ln. The scraping j voice ef the whefsaw resembles so exactly j the sound of a saw at a log-mill that ; : was in rr.ot:-;n. The canary b3s a zi'hcr voice. The catoirl imi'ate a violin. Toe monotonous voiceof the blue jay is like a Scotch Icgpi.. One Way to Cet Ice. Many farmers wfv would be glad to have ice for summer nse are dcterre.l fmm putting it ur because it can only be obtained at a long ilistance from home and tiie hauling would make it expen sive. They perhaps have a gl well with windmill ar.d eievateI tank, from which water could be carried ia pipe to any desired locality. Persons so situated ca make their ice-house in ordinary winters and at but slight expense. A Ca- na-lian farmer a. iopted this plan more than twenty year ago. ami has b-en able each w inter to make his bouse full of ice. j Uls ter supply - brought in pipes from . a Vria 00 higher ground than the build- 1 - e1- if The ice-honse was bnilt on lower f ground than the tanks info which the water disrharcM t the house and barn. It was made with double walls, the space being packed with dry sawdust and a ii.iit nnor ami tight inst-ie boar-ling. On the advent of severe freezing weather aaier was lei into trie House in a small piantitv at a time, and when frozen solid another supply was let in, the doorway being built up on the insi.ie as the hou- tilled. Ail the labor involved was the letting on an-1 shutting off of the water. It took but a fear .lays tf hard freezing weather to fill the house with one solid- : originated, I tit it is probable that it was ly frozen cake of ice. If mild weather j originally intea-ie.1 as a saeriSce to Nep intervened befi-re this was accomplLsh.e.1 j tune, the ?.l cthe sea; as on laml the the d.ior was .hut till it turned cold 1 jyl, were pr .pilite.l by offt-rinyiof the a'-'a;a- j .k-voot, so 1j k sought to cilia the sea The l e kept better than ice put np in , vu ire by offering him a eat. The old rakes with air spaces between, but was , u, even ia this advanrr.1 sg., regar-ls not a convenient to get out, as the whole 1 the rat as a veritable w.-ither-gige. mass was solid. In buildiugsuch a house, I TheM l.m l-man is often pe.!to ;as ,here ,5,a no P,k'0 a the bottom '.,,.: 2 I a : 1 I ..II I' . : "r " o-inoinz, u would be well to ose niatche-1 fltjorina-. put together with lead, for the flHran-i t age would not wet the pack.ngnn-ler the j f floor mr in the walK The water should - 1 t - f s . - - , in open trougns, as iea.i or iron oo!'1 ifler ,ittV fi!l ni with ,w from thv V'ent i"tfrg off of the water. What am I to Do? The symptoms of Biliousness: are on- happily but too well known. They dif- ; tVr ta differer.t in-'ivi-!na!s to some ex- i "l it eater 4 ' tent A Bilious man is seldom a break- T frequently, alas, he has an appetite for liui-U but none , f,,r of morning. II tnge will , hardly hear intion at any time; if it is cot white and furred, it is rongh. at all events. The digestive rytem is wkcafy cot " : or-Jer aa-l larrnr .cnstipation nut be a symptom or the two may alternate. There are often Hemorrhoids or even loss of blood. There may be giddiness : ae.? frf-n lieMil-i. K ,n-l .!.l-'ti r.r flit- ; .. ' l-'tw and ten,lemes in the pit of the niach. To correct all this J not effect dire try Jt-jtA i7vr, it costs . "al nu mouaanua a;ie lis e:u- , cacy- ' f Men Judged by their Dress. , . .- , Men mav also fir. nn motives of pr.ucv . " , , - . " ( I- BUjIVlH'l . .jtr- B. .lie. i judge one another very much by attire. That most amte observer. esterfiVld, , ... . , c i,:,w.i j.jw ;-,,.. C UMKC . . v lJTOt-. IUU 1 ' ! as in old times ther made war for the i man in armor. . It ia by a man s personal j ' appearance that the world, to a consoler- r k; tv,--. i perharai. no coontrv in which men are ! ' . - ,. ' . t this. No one has a title or a Satuily to ( till bark noon and there are few ber - min u 11' 1 1 -. 1 i-'-r .1:1 .1 1 .1 1: , i- .1 a . things by which to S-mi a j-Klginent ! r! laur-' inta il'Uflliu. I have had catarrh, for twenty years, and used ail kiadw of Teavli itaout rellet . Mr. Smith, drflgji'wt,4 of Little Falls. K-eommoodexl' Ely's Cream Baliu. The effect of tbe first application was magical, it allayed the in il animation an-! tite next morning my head was as clear aav a beil. ( ttw bottta- baa doite me so much good that I am convinced its use will effect a permanent cure. It sooth- r ing pleasant and easy to apply, and I strongly nrge its iw by all saerers. Jeo. Terry, Little Falls, X. Y. WHOLE NO. 1907. Feeding1 Steers of Breeds. Different The Agricultural College of Michigan has been experimenting with the feediDg of steers of different breeds; representa tives having been taken from th Short horn, Galloways, Hereforis, Holsteins, Jerjeys and Pevons. They were brouit together at weaning time, cared for un der the same conditions, and a careful record of the food consumed, its amount and qiiility, was mad.;, as well as of the mode of management. The animals were not selected on account of phenomenal deve?opement, ami it is not out of place to state that a single test will not pom trvely deuiocstrate the value of any par ticular breed. The ratio of gain is not in l strkt accordance with the amount of j fi wd consumed, and it ia noticeable that ! the gain for each month and the propor- tion foci consumed rarv rrvat'y. so j much so as to render it almost imp-jwible ; to estimate the exa. t gain an animal should make on a g: ven quantity of food. but the charges in the pruportionsof hay and grain as ailVcting the ratio of gain are very marked. The greatest gain from day ef birth was made by a IIoIste;n, andthe lowest by a Jersey, the gain of the former having been i.Ctt pounds, dai ly, with the Galloway following, with a daily gain of pounds; next time a Shorthorn, with a tla:!y gain of pound., the other having but UttSe less. Rut the grtic in weight, tf.ouU stmewhat ! regitate-l by the f- -l consumed, showe-1 an a-lvantag in Javer of some brteJsas being capable of producing a larje am-junt of lcf at the lowest possible cost, for w ith the exception of the Jerw-j-s j and Devon, the IluL-tciiis consumed less food than the others while the Jerseys and Devocs did not aain in weight even in proportion to the f-jol eaten. Looking 1 seins reirwnfet the secor.-I animal did ! not show as z'-'l a recon! as the first, yet ! its gain in jr . j.-rti. .n to Cl consume.! was greater, while its daily gain was fully equal t-. the steers of other breeds. It is not to lie supposed that this test is dis paraging to the .-horthoms. Galloways j and Herefor-!, for in a second test they may stjrj-ass the H-Ostein; but it deui-ontrat-i titat, thoi:h the Hoisteins are pro.lia-erot nii'k and barter rather than of beef, the steers f that breed can suc cessfully compete with tiie best beef-producing breeds .f the CJMintry. We mav not have reckcd that stage in breeding ; which permits us to J breed of animaht denominate any an "all-purpose" I one, but in the various tests that have j been made to determine the best beef, ! butter and milk producers the Ib-lsteins have come Bearer earnini the distim-tion of " all-purpose" aniuials than any other. FftM tfit r'iifnltlpkiti Rrrtir'L The Cat For A Breeze. " Y"e, sir. that is a Terr pretty eat." sai l a Hfy t- an reporter yestenlay, rpfcrr'ngtoa fine Persian cat eoilo.1 up on a ng. "Bit I oftt'n w-nder ho I man.id to get Itr home afe. ua f t b.ug!.t it ia Calcutta and came hon, in A .y shi ariUn.i the ew. YVeil, sir, every time we were becalmed the sailora would try and get my cat to 1 throw it overb.rd, for they think that uo so win onng wtmi. This U an .4.1 superstition of the mar iner. It would he had t sav how it ; nrlnt for wn)e of the strjISiK. terms, t ' - ln.i tioas ere often asked as to the meaning of the simply a q-iaint rorl "catspaw" It is lea of a mariner, who sees in 1 : I ! .-nan I peculiar zephyr that t rufH.-s the water a resemblance of the fr.il-.' Cif fl r if. nM hhaiv 11 1 n 1 . r. 1 11 .v. 1 ; g-Kl huuiorelly there wilt b a ysxl ; bteeze and fur. Bat when she arches j her back and swells he tail, then look out, for her scowling look will be as a i calm to the st-jrtn it fureMhaiws. and the t dashes front her eyes hot as sparks to tiie n, tr ks "f lg-a? lightning which certriniy illuminate the sky. A Pitiful Case. The in.-er.aity of morphine victims to vi h:is never been better i"u trafed than in the case of a t. .una ' airf at a Jiab'e young ladies' boorl I ing-s.h.J war Pt.Ua-felphia, who has J just K-en takn away by her parent. he sai l slie 1 mel to usj morphine w-jtuaa, wei! from a young marritd known in society in New York, wh-im :-;ie met at a water.ng place last sum- ... ..... liieULK-tosurecamearjontacci-lentaily. When tbe yoong stu-lect rr turned to the I tha .f? ha1 pi. of deep 1 .i.n.lency, and often asked the priv- I ,4,, iiy t P10-i j- the eminary ...V t , apital. There she woa!-l 1 time, only wusing her-j j set apart as a hospit ue -.r a-.a .1 . i,:::-, uuij roii-in ner- 1 1 self when any oue approached the table ; on which st 1 an ink bottU; and a t styl-igrapl-rie pen. The nurse having oe- j j casion to semi a mesae to the .loctor attempud to write with this pen. the , ; young trirl at that time beimr asieep. The pen mn only refused t write, htt - " , to B tUB'1,t;i"n 01 "k f-arunce bottKbat there was no Jnk ln u waft oa the outsi.le an I coaUiued Ma remits sula- tiL,n '"?"' enoo-gh for one ban-ire-I ! ami twentv-eiht one-half train dose. ! - Tb principal of the school w sno.- ' "W"11"' imnreItatly, an. I h sleeping ! -irrs arrn ba""L 11 a P- fn n'u'','f ikiriiot to the hand, ami tSys live. I brie marks o-nrirmcl the sus picion, which was ehane-l to absolute certainty by the ual! abevs which had begun to f.in in tbe torcn just almve the wri The habit hl been forme. ! aUj.it two wooth only, ami ther ia a ! tu-ibilitT that a cure can be a-orted. A coHossal stick of Into her from Paget Swnd has lieea contributed to the me- ' chanicV exhib-ti.m at San Franc L. Its ler-trtb is 151 feet, and it is 3 by 20 nt-hes through. It is believed to be the longest piece cf imber ever turned but Didnt Dictate A touriit stopped at a log-cabin to Jet drink of water. Sotieing s very leas eer Bear the dser chaw iug s ri, the tooriM. ad lresKicg the " lamilorl," sai l : " That's a very lean animal." " Yes sorter." "Why doalyoo jrlTa hiar sonethin; to eat?" "Ain't he eatia'?" " Yes, eating a rag." Wall, ef rag nita him, all right, I ain't no man to dictate." " Hell not nuke very good beet" "Reckon not; don't want him fur beef. I ride iw" -. "Ride him'" " That's what I aaid. Sum faiks moot perfcr er hosa, but I want er suvr. You oughter see him trot. Don't low nothin' to pass him on the road. W j, he's so math peartcr than any of the hosses abaMU bet that when any body is in a harry to go after the doctor they gener ally come here and get hiro." " I never heard of anything like that before. " I reckon not ; an' ef too stay round here very longyoall fcwar o'er I manr things yon never hear I o" beto'. Never heard 'ole MatTuompson swulWrln" a snake, did yoa? " No." " Wall, he done it." What for?" "Snake hungry, I reckon. I seed httu at the time an' I thought that the pr-x-ed-in was sorter Strang, but as I ain't n man to dictate I let him tr !ea 1. Yan der cornea my soti-ia-Iaw, an' I d- know that hf' !es account tfu any feller that ever lived. Look at him sloaiiin aUi.ng like a fjol." " Why did y-w permit your -la-JjShter to marry him?" "1'i-la t I tell you that I wa'mt a man to dictate? I reck n y "i' 1 b-tt-r be gvae. A teller that' bari o' un-lers-amiln' as you air mout r" a man inter tru'!e. A Bit of Manners. It was not be. -anse he was han.Isom that I fell in love with him. For the little fellow was not camlsouie as fi! phrase g;es. But he had clear, honest eyes that locked friendly into yours and a mouth that smiled cordially if shyly, as my friend t-viched his plump httie hand which rested on the back of tl-ur car seat. He was with his mother. She was plainly clad as was Le. She had a tht.tight'td Cice, perhjj 9 a titt'e sa.L I fan -ied she was alone in the world ; that her husband miht be dead an-1 this little boy her sole treasure. He had a pritecting air as if h. ,vere In r only cham pion an-l defen-ler. Rut he could not have been more than five year M. We arrived at o.-.r station and left the car. We waited f.r tl.e long tnjia t- pass. As tiie car in. which ...i;r little frien-1 was seated i-ame up he wis at the window. He caught slA.t of as, an-l with the instinct of e,Mished cotirte.Hjs habit Lis ham! went up to his cap, ar.-l th cap was lifle-L A brght smile on the bonny Cwv and he was g--n-. It is not a comment on the manners of ninety-nine beys that this little five-year-old fellow is the 'one in a f Mildred " that we renieniler? Poor Man. A buntlar g--t into the in use of a frail looking, sad-eyed UlUa widow in Tj-..b the other niht Noi fin-lmg rty valua bles down stairs he stealthily ascendd to the second fLmr and entered tte pui where the sleeping am! unsuspecting -w man lay with a smile that told of pleas ant dreams on her lips. R-ughly shaking her, the dastardly in tnnler said grutffy ; " Here, wake np ; bow jtist yoa ket-p. cool ; no use yelling ; I know as well a yoa do that you're al.-ne ia the house ; just ham I over the keys t. here, stop th.it T let go : help : murder 1 help 1 help ! 0-o-o-h! h-h-hr Y'hen the police finally got them they found the tnrglar d-.ne np wth a cl ?! - f line as neatly as a gs er does trp ten I pi-an-is of sugar. He was jtvt opening? his eyes in the "ctmin to" prtn ; when they rested on th littTe wi.l-w they took on a beseeching t k as lie shivered aa-l sipped out : " Don't leave me al--ne with her aiin. gentlemen; please don't. I've k;!!.-l Rixky Mmntaia lions snd she bear with yoangcobn. ami tn-kle-! to hye nas at a time, but this is my fir-t experi ence with a lone Ari.r.y wid-ler. t an"! yoa l-xjsen these ro:-s a little an-l e I how manv of niv runt is broke, an-l r.ll me over so" I raa ke.n fmu Txu',ii in- - 1 . t. . . t. .. 1 1 . 5ne ' aocc. i ont ; ami t -t use t nn m "R P -"ole. ! an-i 1 oevu w:nj on in a -lzen piaces. I ra ler l III never pull through i.k.s gentlemen." - frZ Fsrr Be Civil. Nothing can be m.-re v.truab'e f- a young man or Woman tn civility, and it is the duty of every parent toincjicate it b..-th by prw-ept and exaajple. N- parent can a.T-rl, under any cirr mo-in-ea. to y an timrivi! won! &achil !. Tie rwpei-t which perict e-Mirtjey in spires U the on'y bn.swo4t.it !.ve which . alone hoe I a i-b,itd to obedience- an-! t.JrT oVti-ed riht d-.inr dorin. th- , crllic-jl ti'i- t,f e.wifK - hn tf... .t,--.-. 1 power of fear, which in rhiluhnnd iu:l.t j be p..t-nt, is no long- effected. ; 1 shop or cotintin -rmt, olfirtr, or home, it Is not only an invalnaWf p. sew.-vn. wnicn an may have an-l B-.f can aJ-1 to be wit'i-mt, but it also brings ttuit e-iuipoise of personali'y which enables one to be always at ti:e best. .Inbre-1, spriugir. frn the hart' t : . 1. c.nfim.ed hilet !- i. ,. tr rrM , and chaa k, h'er but civility rises wperi-to both " "1 An Affectionate Dog. nave yoa -en papa j new "fc-g, 1 ar- Io she asked, as they lea ther in the parlor. Yes," he repli. -nie-f.at ar.easily. I have had te- Heasnre of ms :ng th- dx" " Isat be splendid ? Ife'a T-i;..n- 'ate" "He is a very pyful animal, b. I never saw cm saore plavful in all my life." " I ai gla.1 to hear y -a sue that." "Wby?" " Because I was a little bit afraid Uiat when he bit the piece out of my pants to-night he was in earnest. Rut if ho was only in play of c.nrse it's ail right. I can take fan as well as anybody." A party of pienieers from OrfamJo-. Ky. who explored the'btgeave in iSa-k.-astie coanty reeent'y, fmd nine-Jinm-r pHtv mbvn app-rra V oC "rmU Th? hj,J " "r, rie.l b-T th ' ' tie7 oaw. vt pterwi . e n-v,ri. Th ue great lesaoa of C7i IS) taiaght in the profesm. that ia trade. taoght One man is over-nice ami benvnes fi-ay ; Qlr at ami ioaet hi-tn