The Somerset herald. (Somerset, Pa.) 1870-1936, November 21, 1888, Image 1

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    The Somerset Herald.
ISTHSLIlltD ItiT.
Terms of Publication.
IN.I luJ.ed tvety Wednesday moroUia at fc!
per uBtun. if ri in advance ; ollierwtor -' 3
,;: MnMr be chTjd.
No HibMripuc will to 41 na all
.rrsirtsjwi we pld ap. Iroma nlerttus
to Kt! " 00 " o"" thu
paper will U keld iwspoosiBis fcrtU aotweria-
UuO.
tnincrfbeti remtrrtar ftoa portoSoe to aa
rtr .notild n tt am of 111 ftxiatt as
wi h U prwtit cCa. Addre
The SuauiR Hisalb,
Sohhsst, Pa.
sumerMl, ra.
.. i:h 'orai H. rhL
1-KEi.i. W. WF-t-FCKEh,
. !n Prii-t:o Hou Bow, s,'l-si -"urt
1! .
UIA'U'J'- a.. .
AVlOhNEY-ATLA.
1- J. K'-K iF.5i.
SEVAT-LAW.
US. ENI'ST.EY.
jU-'-M-YATS
A W
s-mi-rx?. 1- I
i
s
C V-TKKNT.
V 1 ' 'TTv
j v.. Hi;.;
... ; k W. U. Km-Ks.
CITUTil A. !;r!';-KI.
, ..r,- t" tV- :r '"
A -1U An..KEAVVw
tt J.W ! .f..ft.. '.!'.!! Mrttw:J
., .;..,..rt a.f) .ti-l.:.-ie
, 1:1 rni't:K ht- K-w. ...;-. ti l-ult
h ,
DKNM- '' !';.-.
lT' K t AT-1 A A .
junNo.K.Mvn-.ATIA
,..-rA -r. .i! ."-!. -ii!nit .1 t bi tirr
lC7.i
JVL1T''H.
A- jiTr..HSVATl.AW.
,v-,, -n Var.'ii -'ti K'..k t:p "'- Kiitrniire
il : uV:m I r..j i'- -
X j" .s. L C. O-UW.
i- v)i.i;' .i;. v (''I.!'.iii:n,
O Arr..i.NLAT
.1 to i :".
,' . ,( f ... ' . v :t.-r.tfi tn. l'ol.wt.on
'". ' C'-i-r-rt . i"". "! wli- -.ini k ii-.m-
II
km:y. r.M-iu:ix. .
ArpB.it-Ai-L.
IWity tu.1 !' Arot OS. in MnnKU
r.I.KNTi N K HAY.
ATioK-SKV-AT LAW.
i n.!.!:V5-
J
uiiN II. vm.
lIi.tMl-l".
-wiTiTeC r.
t- ti r.. i. i.. '.! on o.ltrU.iII. 4M!. Of-
L e m M-i:- ti..Ji i ii- k-
D
U. J. i:. 1IIIX KKI
fit. eK.-rr . r
i .... v t.' rn fi i..r.! rrJ.f U. ttH- 'Stii--rii of
i..i .-.:;llj. Ifi IU lHWUMT
T-i ,Kr bt pr. -! 1 f--rrieeUtbe eiuvn
r ;j.tr1 : t " ti:I i
D
K. II. LUrr.AKl.R,
1 rdi rs hi- jit. ft.tonl nervict to V titiMB
f. MlU'.-vUlu; VMn.U. .'U!!. .v.
:.U Ir.: r j( 1H1U"!1C.
DK. J. M. I.t'l TI'-FU.
l UV-i IAS AM" fVKLK.'N.
H, i- rrr"jn-l.U In N'iiir1 fT tht
m.,,,, .,: I: j ua.it? ou Jiiii rtrret.
Ill rvar ! lirui; u-lr.
ux htiii Bti.--i.iM n ti the pr-r-ai4i f
tut' T'hti.r.a te-'0. An.mV. ki ai-rti. Ail
it': w r".r!.i;-'-1 n-i-mrT in lite
Dtt. JoHS BII.I.
m:nTIt.
lfi:c wp-uir in tk t Beeriu li'-oi k.
I)
,11. WM. COi.UNX
itM.eT.
j . 1 r-. . ... . n'.i, i.wi-'t wh4
esi lr tii!ni i f.irj't- i-rt purct i u all kino
of 'urk h itimirf. r-L'Hialiiu(. eitwiii't.
ac. AM:rn-I th-t ai! kn.." itl ol the t4
a.M'.t'itil lwRrl. AU orfe jlieritlitrtrvl.
I)
:. J. K. Mil.M-R
Somei-.-et County I3:uik.
iE-i.iVLI-iitn 1".)
C. J. HARRISON, Jfi. J. PRITTS,
Pm-wrAT. AH:ta.
tVi.ticiis m-U in all pxrt oi llie I nite-l Mt.
CHARGES MODERATE.
Panic wi.inc to Tn--nT V-rt ran be ae-NTn:n.-:n
-.3 1 jrn! 11 N' rt in any -.11111.
-i.--u.-M ui.:t- :' pr'ti.-pii.- I . i. Bm1
U'-iirh. an'! tt.t M.uty aui tiual.l-" Mur4
M -iiu ,t aurf ith a ear-
g -ui a. in r tirrif k.
rf-A.l Ii Iloiidavt MerTeL
CURTIS K. GROVE.
SOMERSET, PA.
Bl'WIt-. CI.F.I'iHS t'AP.RJAUES,
bPKISU WAMiNS. Bi t K WAGONS.
AND EA?-TEj:N ANPWE.-TEKS WuRC
Furnibd uo Short NiXhv,
rainting Done on Short Time.
ily mn-k :i tr.'t' tm of JV-1!.' shunned WnoL,
.I'll Ui h lrm SUrl. T-.ilitmiHiaiiy
t ol1TTirtni. N'iT Ftl:ih-t. ud
t arm:ilri Uipivt sL.'joUt.'lu
Zrplr Cy First Class Tcrinen.
E-'rm.rrj: of A" Kiinl i Mr l.hif Tir-ne on
etin NtrtK-e, iTiew KLA.tN ABLE, and
All Work Warranted
Call an1 Examine ay ttork. an! Learn Preea
I io Mm-ork. and furnish SeiTt ft Wind
It. lla Rfimn:.ihr tle place, and rail in.
CURTIS K. GROVE,
POMERSET. PA
Qiurxts Huffman,
MERCHANT TAILOR.
(AUx-e Ilefflry'i Ston.)
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED.
Somerset, Pa.
Ine
TOL. XXXVII. XO. 22.
1889.
Harper's Magazine.
IblsUSTFJATED.
UiriitTt f'iozutr is tht ni-"t asefu!. ,UT
tuimn.r. nttti Iw-auiifiit pri 3 h! in the wtwid.
Amnmfr tiie attraction for Ivft mill be a m-v
niv ! Mti AnHntn Morv. entitled Jupiter
Ijk'lit? " by r JiMat. K. Woulfcon ; liJus-lrTn..ii5(fMkl'ar-'
;,im.it v lv E. A.
Ai..wv ; a ern- ot artir!t n Jiuria. ii!u
tr.iii. by T. lt? T!.uiMrup; paperi oa ttie
lmiii)in t.f OmnaiU an-l a i lmrnterist;c sr
nal, ty harle Ihi-JVy Wihht; ihrve N'r
r.ati Muli,:' by I'jonij nte Hjummm.
ill u-i rad-d ; CriittMMlu a hiMoriml ny
y il.f author uf " iit-n-Hur,' lliii-tmu-d by
J. K. Wetfurhn. et;. The I:tinal Iejiart
nirrt 'irr (ii (!iir-tetl by (-i.ree VU!iatn "ur
; Will -atu lia Hi wvlin, and Charles
i!t v WariK-r.
HARPER'S PERIODICALS.
lr Vcur :
nri:i; s .V.i r,7.i x ? 4 oi
UAUVF.Ks 117:7; AY. r - - 4 00
11 1 7.77.7; a' .'.I I.- - - 4 O)
i 77.17.7 A'iVS- ' -.V; rtO I.K - 00
Ti.i' vn';M.' t f the Mt. tziE tv"n wilii
year. YiMl tlt time i af-ili!, mltvriv
li'tn mil Uv'ii vitli ihe XunjhtT turmit
hi t.li.t i.f 'i!(.r.! r.
t.T if.rv . !j( k. in i..iit tloili l:ii'titir.
r vinim.i.. i.. ill (.::-. .r bind.iit.-. ifi
ii lll h t y mjll. .Ma:d.
Iii'Ipi to II vm rt Ia .7jmt. A'vbalx tl--u;,
Ai'u'ytiia . ai. ! !n.;!i..! dr Yolunin. 1
tn if. -iii-ivi-. fnim June Kt, Injure ".
one ml.. m-i, I loth. it.
Ut'initinncf shouM lie imnL' hy Potoltioe
Md'ny rJt-r, or Jinifr, to avuid ci.dncv f
Iinw.
f f XcicriMiiTt nt u4 tn r-fy this A'lfr1'iiieit
n-ti-'u fuit'fS -iT'Ur of llai jttr d' I'r.
.Wren:
n.ivvr.r. nwTiiri:s. x-b-
1889.
HARPER'S WEEKLY.
ILLUSTRATED.
Jf-irefM W'rrkl; ha.a w'l! establishe! plae
a" tl-1 aJin iiJi!?.tra:e, nw-itiHT lit Arner-it-a
The tiinies ot it e4:torial comments
ii currv!.: n. (;.? unit-'i fr it the re
v.i emr'i IfT'.rt t'ii i:iiarTiat readers.
anl lijt- an-ty ami en tih nr of it literary
r(iM-i.tt witK.ii ii'rluiie enl and rhort M -nes
iy the In-t anl iir-v Nptiiar r iten. til
it fT tie niai f (e( 'vf the wid st
r.t e of t;t;- triJ ptiruif. Supplements
are trtjtieitl'y pn v ded. i-.ml noexienfrj is
fpantl to hnrtr tue hiMt order nt ariMic
ainlity to beam;!, the i!ltisrra(ion of the
ehanjrt fnl phu of hne and foreirn h'
iry A itfw work of fiotiun froru ihe jen
f Wi'ihnm 1 i-i Hii'e.lr. ami n bv ;i-v.
Ct arti9 KirLr. vtlt t anmuc the leaiing
ira'ure of the Weekly fr lvi.
HARPER'S PERIODICALS.
lVr Year:
IIAKl'ZirS H'EFKLV H '
ItA&PERHVAliAZlSE. 4 0U
IIAF.PEH S B iZAU 4 "
HARPERS Y'jVSO PEOPLE 2 00
It1no frev t all .' ill the Vnitei
Sttr. Lait-xLa And ilrritu.
j The Vulunica of the W'ekklt bevin with
j tir first uutitU r of Jaiuiiiry of earn year,
j Whtn n tirn- it !i'Mit!(intl sub hpi
i will bvtriii uitii the Nunibt-r turrent at time
of receipt of c rder.
ltvur.d Wain s of Jhirjsr's H'oi'v fir
three ye.tr baric, in t-cat ri.th hit.din. aill
e w lit bv nii.i!. iM-t.tjr'" or by express,
free tt euiT!. 'pnivdul ti.e ftvifht (1'mjs
n-t rirte-i ji jT volume), fr 7 U.jtr
t ' ?i riif.
"o'h i"a---a for ear!) "vo!nn' snital-' for
biii'hi!. ilt te Mitt by mail, iKtwiii, on
retripl of H earh.
Kem:::iMecs hnM be n-a-le by rRtme
!;. ey nkr or Pral, to avtnd chance of
Advlrtss.
7.1 ::; brother, x ivt.
1889.
Harper's Bazar.
ILLUSTRATED.
Jl-jrjy'n t-n-nr wi!T ontiniie b m:tin:in
it repHtati'tn a an iiri-iiaJ-4l family jiur
iiit!. its art ilin-traT.on an- of the tiiiiel
onler. it ii'iraittre i of the b.m-ert kn,
at.'l il 'ahtoti ami iIou!-ehoii Ie-artUiciiis
of the mft pra-'t"-l v.ti'.mu-al r!ia me
ter. Iib jatn-n h l iipplnu'ii anl fah-i.io-plute
a 'Hit- wii! sive it rt-a'ifrs
ti n lim-! thr -t i-f M;rwnpi:t-!i. an-1 it ar
t:.p!'? on chirutive art.' swH-ial eiirj'.h'tte,
h'tir-i k-p;iu. rtkt-ry, elf .. make it iinV-("-nbl-
u x-ery b'iv-h"i.. its bright
h.rt M.r.'.td tim-!y e...y, areamn2
the r-t puii ;iTil : ani 1101 tine i- tinut
t J to its column that couMrffeiid the mt
lt"l .011 t:i!te. Amnjr the ottrariim of
ttw new volume wt;l he en;! orie by !r.
Kntnfe5 I fItti Hnmit. lr. AUxatuJrr,
Wiliian H':n k and Thi;mai Hardy, and a
ri- of pafi on nursery ntnnagen:ttt by
Mrv 1'firiMiiie Terhuue ilernck.
HARPER'S PERIODICALS.
PER YEAR :
HARPKR'S BAZAR i 00
HARI'KR'S MAUAZIXE 4 00
HARPERS WKEKLY- 4 00
HARPER'S YUVNC PEuPl.E 2 00
P-t,vtr free tn nil Snhfnilrt in the I'nited
Sl'ttre. ( Un'of-l, or ifrTtnt.
Tlie Vol;imr of i!ie FJ!Rbejrin with the
fir-t number of January of rath year. When
no lime is. mi ntHtneii, juiiwnpiieti' will be
gin with the number enrrent at the time of
ret-eij of ori'or.
Ik'Uiid Yu'times of Harper' $ 5icir for three
years iiai k. ill m-at cloth binding, will be
tit by until. potare id, or by express,
fn-e of exper.e. provided ttie frei(:bt dow not
exceed l pe' oltime). for $7 per volume.
Ofith t'a;. ftreai"h volnme, miitahle for
bindmi;. will hi sent by niaii, wstpai l, on
receipt of tl each.
Remittances tbmild be made by Postoffice.
Money Order or lraft, to avoid' chance of
be.
y'etrieipert are r Ih rt.py th it n -l'rrti-iirnl
vtfinMitthc e'j.re9 wiler Hirytr 4: iint.
Address
HA1U ER BROTHERS, Sew York.
E
XECTTOR'S NOTICE.
L:nf of Anna yt. Keone. dM.,1ate of Hew
Halumore hoiii. Sumenef Count t. Pa..
l-ttrr aMajoriitry on ihe (mv create
fca'i;j)f be: irrf.H-it tn the nn'1rwtTwd ty ihe
T'"er anthiniy. ail H"ro iDU4x-i mr.ni r-
j tate are i.urMwi u miiKe paytmniL aiKl tie
t,iuc Cimuu i peni u:e wunMii aeicr
W J"h.S ii. IwPPKM- KtroutiM'.
oci2L SH Jbaiiinuire, Pa.
!iT CfiLFj , C OF ART AND
ART, 1USIC, COVItltCIAl. LfTERARY.
Oil
rrd for eataiosne.
bexxpt a r.Ytrrm.
Mvuin. fa.
TRADE VtLt MAKUj
WHAT IT IS. SIS STANDARD VIRTUES,
ITS r.mCACV.-l- Ha ri mrm
pmmpU X. It rrllrf la a r. .
lta rare arc prmnnMit 4. It
ram : irtura of alaw
It rvr 1m all ram
naed tn-fniing t
direrliona.
It Sain nr.a woHiww; !t fs not f!y
I 51. rrlif and in iki -ur a cure-ail; U
U u.e prviuct of fieii; rearriL
)J It Trer:ztheir while tt stmthest an? atiN
ZU. duea, heais and cum ; it hiemlij eoo
i. -r paJn.
f)J lt efTct ane w.Tative and fwrmannt Wi
0u the while croup of muvcuiar aiiKiiO
auo uarvous ajrci.
L It doei eo( raert !t Irritnte the outer sur
rlfl fae. imr d n it :nere:v -iVn r ffiaX
a 0-ttJ.tnru-d mu W T't it kp'i ai-itui a
upen.rf curative virtue i Ut rmiJ-d.
t ft It penetrate dot p!t bnt irertty: ftarrh
3 UK b e v and Piirwtr. ei.-kiu the pais
ai-jt iii a.u A in tti etuq'iier.
G4L Earh ernti:m-Mt of the f 'inula h a
twrTiiw iiitnir;c virtua to aer
uji utrij uie cure of paio.
.?M fry DHVTt' tn4 I men Fvnym Vr.
Ttaa Cbmrlea Voider Co.. 1 la I to., Md
High -Pressure
Living cli.irai-Urizpn lhoi motlrn ilara.
Tli r-ult is a fonrfiil inrivav ot Brain
and Hfmrt lise!e General De
lil!ty. Insomnia, Paralysis, and In
sanity. ( Iilt-rul anil Morphia augmeut
the evil. The inediriDe best ailapteii
to du permanent rixjJ is Ayer's Sar
paparilla. It uritieii, enrii-b.'H, and
vitalizes tbe bimxl. ami thus :reui;;heus
every (tinctiuu anI foi-nltr of the btniy.
" I have liwj Ayer's Sansaparilla, in
my family, for years. I have fuuntl it
iuvaluahie as
A Cure
for Xervons lei!ity raneil ty an in
active liver anil a low state of the bhd."
Henry Haeon. Xenia. Ohii.
"For iH.me tirufl I have been troubled
ith heart lieae. I never foaol any
thing to hvlp ma nntil I l-an using
Ayei's irujarilla. I hav only ueii
tiiis mel:rine six months, but it lias re
lieved me from niy truuitle. autl enaliled
ine to resume wurk."' J. P. Carzanctt,
l'i rry. HI.
M I have been a prartirin - physician
for over half a eentury, anil daring that
time I Lave never found so powerful
aad reliable an alterative and blocd
puriner as Ayer's Sarsapirilia. Dr.
Jf. Maxstart, Ixiuisville, Ky. ,
Ayer's SarsapariHa,
raErAKED T
Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Loweil, Mass.
rriettl ; six Uxik, Qi. Worth fi . bottle.
WAS ROSCOE CONXLINC'S CASE NECES
SARILY FATAL.
Fnim a f-T?rrn!'1 iH., wif of Rov. R. L.
Hi. km;i, -f r-i-t-ri: y4 W artinff?-n efnitry. !a .
a ttnirk" I wih a 'Vf r- &ei lit the er anl
of t; e Ih-'!, f.irrinit her to pek exp.rt trrat
rn n!. The tnu. fcueihtur ar! fflf-t fm the brain
nmir ft pUin tin- ii iiani"i.n a in ihe oftttml
e.L tt;r pniimn-e l--LiI the -ar whwh are
ieirate4 from the braii ly a wali not thtrkrr
than a -h-t of paper. Tbe J-tf i cf Scnatiir Ko.
eot (.'ofikliuc from tM amf fti'icf ittTi alef1 no
lit)1 a'ann t her frttnIy MTirt frf'.'is rndt-rthe
k1Hf.1l tnniWMi of lr?w!r. th Fyiaii'l Far
Sie'iaPt.A P-nM Av-iHi-i-. Pi't-i-:i:h. imrmve-m-tit
a Kajn e-te'.thi-t whu-'i i-MitiiMit to
p-M-: tvrivery of Koiii hntltii an-t hntrtn?.
The HtinUr t'-- of Mr. I I., ilunter of Tih
onte. Pa., in whirl, thee.-'! h.-itl tn lw op-ntt1.
eitiin w iih perltt-t n-tiv-rr, .lenn'tnn.i tbe
WJLA STOCJi
CARPETS,
OF EVERY GRADE
From 25c. to $I.OO.
tapestry Brussels,
From 50c. to SI.OO.
Bodv Brussels,
From $l.O0 to $1.50.
Velvets, MGquetts and Wilton,
From Sl.OO to $2.60.
LACE AND HEAVY CURTAINS.
IS rVEfcV lhlABI.K gt ALITT.
zFLOOli CLOTHSz
I!S ALL WirTH-.
INGRAIN SQUARE CARPETS,
From K..0O to 5s.Xl.00.
Hattiugs, Rugs 5Iaf.
Sliades, and Shade Materials.
o
ISovartl, l?o.se t Co.,
wi.ViOt. 3U Fifth Ave.. Il!tbiirj-h, I's.
It is to Your Interest
TO BCY YOt'R
Drugs and Medicines
or
BlESEGKER 4 SNYDER.
Brcrwioiw to c. s. boyd.
Kone but the purest and Viest kept in stock,
and when Iirutr b-tMnieinen. by stand
ing, a cerTain of them do. we de
stroy them, nitlier than sm-po-ie
oti our cusJoniers.
You can Jeiiend on having your
PRESCRIPTIONS L FAMILY RECEIPTS
filled with cam. Our prices are as low as
any other first-clas house and on
many articles much lower.
The people of this county seem to know
this, and have pwn ui a lare share of their
patronai.'e. and we snail still continue to give
them the very hert frooii f r their money.
J not tiyvt tluit we naWe a seriaity of
FITTIXGr TRUSSES.
We guarantee fatifaiion, and. if you have
bad trouble in this direction,
give U5 a call.
SPECTACLES AND EYE-GLASSES
in great variety ; A full set of Test Lenses.
Come in and have your eyes examined. So
ciiaree Sir examination, and wc siv confident
we can suit yon. Come and see us.
Respectfully,
BI ESEKER & SNYDER.
DROPSY TREATED FREE. I
h.vet.-este4 DROPSY "id ii nifJ'c
ii.Mi w Ih t2w wotuWrfu! Mis-re, t -e
Vereiaiile Cotnpmiaii. t'lMv Smllt:Ut proni.ne
ci h.i9eleia y Uie tw phTi'ian. Cac of km
r.adiiiK. (wf toaC have brei tppeii a Rfimlr
of uaw. anl b irel uo.bie iive we,k. tiv
niii ri-trtrr tti yiHtr eiwe. bow lone alMiied. x.
A-. wto-a yoa order crtai, mitd ill cents ia
ftlamw a pueujr-L
Oeut-lm. 1. K. WEIDSER, West Earl, Pa.
omei
SOMERSET, PA.,
OUR LITTLE MAN.
U!s bead It b bsld.
And hu tact it it red.
An 1 O iw, aad U iuf !
Nat a toota In hfe head I
lie look wonderful wie.
Aad yet ao oue hac heard
Tbts odd little bub
Ever ufter a aord.
Sometime he will frown,
Sometime chuckle with glee ;
Bnt what h" shoot
lie never Hi me.
Hi. rouawii be keeps :
But bin widefwlied eyes
Sy fUiner than words
That be't try ilia la ise
Vp the world. Aad th war
Thai be drawn down hi. face
Sbowt be nire than tuspeets
U f a dangerous place.
Then he make nch a mouth !
Aud O how be doe ery
And kirk, ahi'.e I think
He will eertainly die.
Till Biamma comes is.
With Heaven' owu light
f Uve iu her eyes.
And tla-n ba'.y t all r ght !
.V.
THAT NEW SOFA.
r. .
" George," tutid Mrs. Hall, aatliey were
in their pleasant Kitting room one even
ing, I was never so much a-shaiiied ia
my life as I was to-day."
" IUally," answered her hatband, smil
ing, " it ruast have been a serious matter.
What was it ? "
' Why, I called at Mrs. Savary's venter
day, and she showed me her parlor en
tirely new furnished."
'You were ashamed of that, were
you?"
Come now, yon are laiihiitjr at nie,"
naid his ife, pouting. I won't say an
other word"
"If you don't," said her liu.-hand in a
mockinir, tragic tone, "I shall never re
cover from the blow."
"You are inosrrijrible; but if yon had
only waited a moment I would have told
yon what it tiu th..t I w is asha'iied(oC
Mr. Savary had an eleiftit mfa; you
can't think how it sot off the ronm. She
told me that if she .ily have one
decent article of furniture in the room, it
should be the sofa."
"And you were ashamed of her re
mark?" " Of course not."
" Then I am still in the dark."
" Why, it made me think of our old
fushioned sofa, and what acontruat it was
to the one at Mrn. Savary'a."
"So it might bo, if it wc.. Is ih same
room w ith it ; but you know it is not. I
am w,re it is comfortable enough."
" So would a feather bed be," retorted
his wife ; " but I gnpptwe you would wot
be in favor of putting one in the parlor.
But I wasgiiin to tell you that to-day
Mrs. Savary railed npon nie, and of
course I invited her into the parlor. You
ought to have seen the glance she cast on
our oi 1 sofa."
" But, ae I diiln't gee it, suppose yon
describe it to nie."
" (f course, she cou'J not help regard
ing it as very shabby, though she did not
say so, for fear of hurting my feelings."
" And that made you ashamed ? "
"Of course it did. 1 don't believe there's
a family in town that has got such a
w retched loooking article of furniture."
"I Iwlieve it ia whole, is it not? "
" Yes."
" The only objection you have to urge,
then, is that it is old fashioned."
"lsnt that enongh?"
"You know,"s.iid the young husband,
Cravely, " that I have special reason to
value that sofa. It was my mother's and
some of my happiest recollections are
connected with it."
" Well, there's no objection to keeping
it. We could put it in our chamber, and
buy a new one for the parlor. I saw a
lieatitiful sofa to-day at Whi! marsh's
cost only fifty dollars. I couldn't help
thinking how much it would set off our
parlor. It aoul.l give a certain style to
it that it hasn't now ? "
" Fifty dollars would be a large sum
for me, Mary."
" Why, I am sure you have a salary of
eight hundred dollars."
" Very true ; but it has to be spent in a
great many different ways."
But it only cot us six hundred, last
year."
" that is because we were economical.
You know it was our ambition, or mine,
at least, to save up something against a
rainy day. I may be sick, or a hundred
thing may happen. I shall grow old, at
any rate."
" But you know, George, it only costs
fifty dollars. You cculij still save one
hundred and fifty. It's a good thing to
s.'.e money, I know, and I am is much
in favor of it as you are ; but one likes to
enjoy life as they go along and not de
prive themselves of its necessary comforts
just for the sake of saving."
" So you look on the new sofa in the
light of a necessary comfort do yon?"
asked George, smiling.
" Yes," said his wife, iDgeniuly, be
cause it is necessary to my comfort. Be
sides, wecaneasily save the amount our of
our ordinary expenses, and save np as
much as w e did last year."
(f this George was not fully convinced
but he saw that bis wife laid it very
much to heart, and finally consented to
go over to the furniture warerootus the
next day and took at the coveted article.
Mrs. Hail's eyes sparkled us he made his
conclusion. She knew that, having gone
thus far, he would without much difficul
ty lie prevailed upon to parcha.se the sofa
George had hitherto proved a very in
dulgent husband, but this indulgence,
thus far, had not been severely taxed un
til his wife made the atquai stance of
Mrs. Savary a woman of large preten
sions, whose highest ambition was to
make a show. Her influence was be
gin'ning to be preemptible on her young
friend, who was easily impressed by
others.
To return, to our story. The next day
Mrs. Hall, accompanied by her bnsbmd
visited the furniture warehouse, and de
sired to be shown the sofa. It was really
a handsome article, as George would read
ily have admitted, even if he bad not
been volubly assured of the fact first by
bis wife, and secondly by the clerk, who
expatiate I enthusiastically upon its
merits.
"Ism afraid," said George, wavering,
"it won't correspond with the rest of the
furniture."
"Xo danger of that," said bis wile, " it
will set eff the rest, and make them all
look handsomer."
"It may be so," said George, doubtfully.
ESTABLISHED 1827.
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 21. 1888.
" I suppose yoa know better about such
thing than I do. If yoa are desirous of
having it, I suppose I can bay it."
" Oh, George, if yoa only will, it will
be such comfort ! "
"Then," said her busband, turning to
the clerk. " you may send it to my house.
" It shall be done this forenoon."
The young husband took five ten-dollar
bills from bis pocke ami paid them over
t r the sofa.
" This is the money." said he, as he
was walking home, " thji I was going to
put into the savings-bank. You know
that this is quarter day, and for the last
four I have put in this amount. Now, in
consequence of our sew purchase, I shall
not be able to."
" I is only for once," said his wife,
"and then only consider how mnch let
ter our parlor will look."
Was it only for once? Time would
show.
When that sofa came home, ami was
installed in the place of honor, the old
fashioned sofa was removed to a chain- i
ber. Somehow it did not seem to set off j
the room as much as it was ex-vt-d to.
It looked out of place, as Mrs. Hall could
not help confessing to herself, though she
was not dispoxed to speak of it. The
plain but ueat Kidderminsler carpet look-
ed decidedly cheap in comparison with
; it. However, Mrs. Wall resolutely shut
ber eyes to this unpleasant fact, and con
j tinued enthusiastically to expatiate in
praises of the new sofa. She could not
i be contented until Mrs. Savary had rsll
j ed and expressed her opinion of iL This
happened before long.
" My dear," said that lady, taking a
critical survey of the apartment, " your
sofa is a handsome one, I acknowledge,
but will you pardon my suggesting one
thing?"
"Certainly, Mrs. Savary."
"Then allow me to suggest that a dark
Brussels carpet is necessary to have it
show to good advantage. - w this Kid
derraister, I dare say, is a tolerably gisxl
one, but it couldn't have cost more than
a doliar a yard."
"Only eighty-wven Cents," said Mrs.
Hall, a little confused.
" So I suppose. Well, you see. a carjiet
at eighty-feven cents a yard doesn't cor
respond very well ailhafifty dollar sofa.
To ttl! the plain truth, the old fashioned
sofa looked more appropriate."
Mrs. Hall almost wished that she had
never bought the new sofa; but, having
done so, she was determined, if possible,
to have everything to correspond. She
was to) wise to say auything about it at
present, but wade I until a week before
the next quarter day.
Then she begun to indulge in brief
hints w hich at length became more de
cided. At first, George would not hear of
s new carpet. He was determined not to
omit his usual quarterly deposit this
time; but at length his wife's importun
iti "S succeeded, aided by a lurking con
viction on his o'.vn part that there was a
real incongruity between the sofa and
the plain carpet. The new pun-base cist
fifty dollars aud a trine more, which
made George look a little sober ; but he
could not deny, as bis wife said, that the
room looked a good deal iuipruve-L
And was this all? By no means.
By the time the carpet was put down
it was discovered that the chairs, which
were only cine seated, looked quite in
ferior to the good company which had
recently been introduced. When the
next quarter day arrived, it was found
absolutely essential to purchase some
black stuffed chairs. Afterwards came a
new mirror, and a piano was hired, for
even Mrs. Hall did not venture to sug
gest so large an out lay as the purchase
would require. So the piano whs brought
and some fifty doilais year were paid
for its use, though by the way, it was
never used, since Mrs. Hail had no ear
for intiic; therefore it served only for
ornament.
By the time the year was up, tleore
found thft two hundred and twenty-fir"!
dollars had been spent for furniture, and
not one cent had been deposited ia the
savings bank. More than that, as their
style of living had increased with their
new furniture, which had unconsciously
elevated their ideas, George found him
self some hundred and fifty dollars in
debt. At this time, or just before, the
great cotuinerciid revulsion had swept
over the land, and George's employers I liver will produce serious forms of kid
had not been spared. They had not fail- j ne. Mnd liver disea-es, malarial trouble
ed, but their r.-sources had been gieatly j all(j c,ronic dys-!sia. Pr. Pierre's
crippled. They called him aside on the ! Pleasant Purgative Pellets are a prevent-
last day of the year and told him that,
though they should be glad to retain him
in their employ, they should lie obliged
to cut down his income for the year to
come to six hundred dollars. He went
home much depressed, as well he might I
be. His expenses increased, his income
diminished, and a debt to pay, which
would swallow up nearly all he had laid
...... ., , j
Heat length told his wife the cause of !
bis despondency, on her anxious soiicita
tion. The vanity and love of show she
had exhibited lay on the surface. She
determined to express her sympathy in
an active way. What that was i w ill ex
plain. When George came home the next
evening totea. what was his astonishment
to find a load of furniture liefore his door.
" Can it lie possible," he thought, that
Mary has been purchasing new furni
ture?" Looking more closely he observed that
the new parlor sofa and other articles of
furniture were included in the wagon
load. Full of amazement he entered the
house.
" What's all this, Mary ? Wliat have
yon done with the parlf r furniture?"
" Sold it," said bis wife, composedly.
"Sold it! " exclaimed George, in sur
prise. " Yes ; I knew that your circumstances
were not as good as they have been, and
I thought the money would be worth
more to us than tbe furniture. I had
beard that the W'alkins were about to
furnish their house, and thought they
might be willing to buy our furniture at
a reduced price. Here is what I got for
it,"
She placed in her husband's hands a
purse containing one hundred and fifty
dollars.
"Mary," said he, with emotion, "yoa
don't know how yoa bare relieved my
mind. This will just pay off oar debt,
and I shall not be obliged to take the
money from the bank."
The year passed, again business reriv-
i ed, and with the first of January George
I had bis salary raised to one thousand
v
dollar ; but though his means are in
creased, bis wife has learned a valuable
leeson., and probably wW be content, fir
some years to come, at least, with the
old fashioned sofa. Cowrfm F. Pretton,
Yankee Blaile.
Entirely Reformed.
One of the strangest stories of a drunk
ard's reformation is told in the Philadel
phia TWa. William U , a prvr-
ous tradesman of Eastern Pennsylvania,
lust his property through unforeseen bus
iness troubles, and, leaving his young
fxutily, went West to retrieve bis fortune,
but discouraged by want of success, be
took to drink, and finally became a de
graded loafer. He drifted eastward again,
and was seen in Troy, N. Y, hanging
around liquor saloons. He had lost his
manhood, and even his very name - hav
ing long been ashamed U be called by it1
ami men knew him as "Tbe Worm of
the Still."
Once, soon after the arrival of a circus
and menagerie combination to exhibit in
the citv, the drunkard saw one of the
keejiers purchase a pailful of whisky for
a sick elephant, and snaked after him to
the circus tent, following the impulse of
bis raging thirst.
The keeper put the bucket of whisky
down before " Betsy," the sick elephant,
and she drank about half of it. The in
telligent brute knew it was medicine, and
did not promse to take more of it than
she thought she needeiL The bucket,
still half fuM of liquor, was left standing
near her, ami the keeper's attention wes
called away for a moment.
Hardly was his back turned when a
bloated, red face was poked through tin
der the canvass, and its pair of watery
eves were fastened greedily upon the
bucket. Betsy fixed her keen little eyes
on the intruder, stopped swaying to and
fro, and waited patiently to se what he
would do.
He did not n dice her. The fascination
ol the whisky blinded him to everything
else. The bucket was beyond his reach.
He drew himself nnder the tent until lie
could clutch it. The instant that he did
so, Betsy flung hei powerful trunk about
his waist, aad whirled him high in the
air.
She did not mean him any harm, but
he was taint-erinj with her medicine and
s'.ie would not stand that. So he had of Naples, by a search made for the d:s
barely time to give one wild shriek ot t covtry of Roman antiquities, and rj
terror, when she tossed him thirty feet i mainsd there until it was fonnd bv the
away, w here he struck against one of the
ponderous wheels of a lion eag", and fell
to the earth with one leg broken, and
three fractured ribs. She did not attempt
to follow and hurt him, for she had no
n;aUce. He was carried away on a stretch
er to the hospital.
The rest of the story is a pathetic ro
mance. The wretched man's recovery
was so slow that fifteen weeks passed be
fore be could walk on crutches; but in
that long time the thosnngh hospital
treatment hud cleansed all the liquor out
of him, and he had begun to look some
thing like his former e!f.
One day, when a party of ladies visited
the hospital, distributing flowers and
reading matter to the patients, one of
them, a hindsome but sad faced young
woman, slopped by his chair, and gazed
at him as if strangely startled.
" Father," she said, "you don't remem
ber me. I am your daughter Mary."
It was twelve years since she had seen
him, but she knew him.
She had him conveyed to her home as
soon as possible when1, in time he was
restored to health, f mnd good employ
ment, and began a n?w li:e of sobriety
and industry, which continued to the
last.
His adventure with the elephant, so
nearly fatal to him, proved the means of
his entire reformation.
A Genera! Tie-up
of all the menns of public conveyance in
a large city, even for a few hours, during
a strike of the employes, tneatis a gener
al paralyzing of trade and industry for
the time being, and is attended with an
e nor nous aggregate loss to the communi
ty. How much mire serious to the indi
vidual is the general tie-upof his system,
known as constipation, an-! due to the
strike of the most important organs f ir
more prudent treatment and better care.
If too long neglected, a torpid or sluggish
ive and cure of these disorders. They are
prompt, sure and effective, pleasant to
take, aud positively harmhst
She Knew the Furniture.
There is a good May-moving story
which has just gained publicity regard
ing some nther prominent furniture
dealers in Chicago. The firm alluded to
had a Terr elegant parlor set of solid ma-
. " , ., . . , .
boganv and the finest upholstering. It
also had duplicates ;n veneering woo 1
and cheap plush in tiie store-room. Tiie
costly outfit, which was worth about . )J,
was displayed in the win-low and m irk
ed: "This elegant parlor suit only ?JT."
Oue day a mi! 1, meek-looking woman
came in. examined the furniture and in
vested. She took a receipt for ber m n
ey, left her address and was bowed out
by the smiling salesman, who assured
her that "the things woald lie sent right
over." In due time the wagon arrived at
the young woman's house and backed up
in front of the door.
"Hold on," said the purchaser, "Oon't
unload yet."
Then she climbed on the van and made
a very particulareaminalion of the load.
At last she said to the' driver and his as
sistant: "I'll go back with you to the
store. These are not the goods I purchas
ed. And back she did go, despite en
treaties, protests and assurances
that
"everything was all right." When she j
walked in she was not the mild manner- j
ed creature of two hours before. j
"You've tried to swindle me," she !
cried, "I bought one set of furniture ami
yoa sent me another. Now, I want what
I paid for. How do I know? Because
in every article of that set yon sold me I t
stuck a pin in while yoa were not lojk
ing. Now, I am going to pick out my
property and see that yHi take it over.
If yoa don't there'll be trouble."
There was no trouble, and the little
woman ia again looking for some sharp
merchant with a similar "bargain" on
hand. lltirnyo IleretUL
Mournful numbers a balance on the
wrong tide of the sheet.
T 1
I I: Th i
Ji, JLVyJL
THE SENTENCE OF JESUS.
A Copy of the Original Decree
as Issued by Pontius Pilate.
London TabieL
A correspondent of Site ni Quer
extracts from the K-rinitehr ZIpihJ what
u called "a correct transcript of the sen-
fence of the death pronounced agsinst
Jesus Christ." The following is a copy of !
the most memorable judicial sentent'e '
which has ever been pronounced in the
annals of the world namely, that of
death against the Saviour, with the re
marks that the journal Lt Dr- il has col
lected, the know'rtrdge of which tuut be
interesting in the highest degree to every
Christian. Until now we are uot aware j
that it has ever been made public iu the j
tierman papers. The sentence is wonl for ;
word :c follows
Sentence pro ikhi need I y Pontius Pilate.
Inti ndant of the Pr ivimv of Iiwer ti.il
iiee. that Jesus of Nazareth hail sutft-r
death by the cross. In the seventeenth
year of the reign cf the Kuipemr Tiber
ius, in I on the 21:h of the month of
March, in the most holy city of Jerusa
lem, during the Pontificate of Anna and
Caiaphas. Pontius Pilate, Intendant of
the Province of Lower Galilee, sitting it)
judgment in the presidential seat of the
Pry-tors, sentences Jesus Christ of Naza
reth t "leath on a cross between two rob
ber, as the numerons and nuorion tes
timonials of the people prove: I. Jes'rs
is a misleader. 2. He has excited the
people to sedition. 3. He is an enemy
to the laws. 4. He calls himself the Son
of Go l. . He calls himself falsely the
King of Israel. fi. He went into the
Temple followed by a multitude earn ing
palms in their hands. Orders: The ti-t
centu ion, inintus Cornelius, to bring
bini to the place of execJiioo, forbid ail
persons, r.ch or poor, to prevent the exe
cution of Jesus. The witnesses who have
i signed the execution aginst Jesus are:
! 1. D.iniel Robani, Pharisev: 2. John
Zorol-aliel ; 3. fjiphael Kobani : 4. ( jpet.
j Jesus to b t.ikea out of Jerusalem
; through the gate of Tournes.
The sentence is engraved on a plate of :
; brass in the Hebrew I it-g lage, and on its
i sides are the following words: "A siuii.
! lar plate has been sent to each tribe." It
j was discovered iu the year 12r) in the
I citv of Aiui.l iA-iui!la.i in the kingdom
Commissaries of Art in the French Army
of Italy. l"p to the time of the c m
paign in Southern Italy ii was preserved
in the sae-isty of the Carthusians, near
Naples, wh-re it was kept in a box of
ebony. Since then the relic has ix-en
kept in the chapel o( Caserta. The Car
thusians obtained it by their petitions
that the plate might be kept by lbe:u,
which was an acknowledgement of the
sacrifices which they m-ide for the French
I anny. The French translation was made
j literally bv members of the Commission
of Arts. lJenoli had a fiic-simile of the
plate engraved, which was bought by
Lord Howard on the sale of his cabinet
for 2j:r) francs. There seems to be no
historical doubt as to the authenticity of
this. The reason of the sentence corres
pond exactly with thoe of the f iope!s.
His Words Live.
Nearly two thousand years ago a little
man contempt-ble in appe iranoes, nam
ed raul, was driven by a guard of sol
diers back, to bis ceil in one of the great
prisms of R me. He belonged to a p.sir
and despised sect, and because of his
faith, had been scourged and tortured
that day before Nero. When he hu!d
go out from his ceil again the torture
would end in death. He had f..nght the
fight, he had finished the course, he had
kept the faith. He thought that he had
found a secret for which men of ail na-
! tions had searched since the world l-
gan. It waaa word of life the hope, the
promise, beyond the grave. But if he
had found it, the world about him appa
rently did not care. His li;-sh quivered
as sorely under the thongs of Nero's lic
birs, the stones of his prison were as gray
and hard, the blue gnus fl iirer ia his
path s uiting as brightly in the sun as
tho igli there were no such momentous
unspoken s-creL He wrote a letter in
his cell to a yonng man named Timothy,
whom he love I, and in thes,? dying
words the hois? and meaning of his life
3oke plainly.
A fe -lays later be died of tort 'ire
how, nolo-!v even cared to reme uVr.
! The ir.-ignit":ant little prisoner may have
j been devoured by the .wild beos's or
j burned slowly to death, a living torch to
I light Nero's ga-ilt ns. The saais bine
! grass flower st"l! li'.ed in the path, smil
j ing no to the sun. and the stones of the
j prison frowned gray and unchanged. But
I be was gone. T--day the flower bloom
i no more inside the prison, the prist. a has
i vanished, the grat stones are du-t and
have passed a thousand times into trees
j or living flesh, imperial Rome i:s-if has
I gone, but the words, which the little ris-
oner wrote that day have lived through
i the ages, and have quickened countless;
I souls into hone anil action.
! There are things in the world which
I perish, and there are things which en-
i dure. I j is history may lieip some girt or
boy in the oeginning of life to under
stand what it is that dies and what it is
that shall and mast live. YotUh't Com
panion. The Cat Craze Coming.
Jlecently Queen Victoria has contrac
ted the habit of carrying her household
cats along with her when she moves from
no-; castle to another. The transporta
tion of cats has, therefore, become quite a
fashionable craze in Fngland, no family
of the least pretension considering it in
t s",-1' f"rm to spFfsrsf ruilaay station
without an ample basket containing the
domestic felines. The aping of royalty
even in tbe most absiired. and silly cus
toms is one of those thing that is not
destined to die out soon. tf course the
cat craze is liable at any moment to in
vade the ranks of our American nobil
itv. B-iiti:T)trre Until!.
Mrs. Yerger " Where were you em
ployed last?"
Servant " I was de wash lady for Mr.
Kumel Jones, wat libson Robinson Hill,
but I quit ber." replied Matilda Snowball.
Mrs. Y." I'M you have any words
with her when yoa left T
Servant " We didn't perzactly had co
words. I jess spoke to her as one lady
m out spoke to anadJajc TVau Sjiiitgt.
1
1 J
0l
ri vi fc
a. o
WHOLE XO. 1949.
How a Little Boy Camped Out
One there waaa little boy who all sum
mer long had been very anxious to camp
out over night. Behind his mother's
house was a large garden as large as a
whole city block
and at the far eud of it
j was a liitie kun-li, or hill, with mckscrop-
t y,ia out. It was behind this bill that
li tle Paul w ished to camp, fur from there
ti e hou.se would b- out of sight, and it
wuld le "i list liketrulv camping." So
h.s mother gave htuiA lare old crumb
j cloth for a tent , a pair of blankets and a I
soft cushion for a bed ; a tin pail full of i
b-e.jd.cold meat, aud hard boiled egift, J
j and some ginger bread and apples for his ;
b-eakf tst ; also a bottle of mil k, a tip. cup, :
a wooden plate, ami a small package of ;
pepper and salt. She then gave hiiu some :
cotton to put in his ears to keep out lit-
tie bugs ami things. She bad the hired
' man help hiin drive the stakes and fasten i
I the crumb cloth over them. Tne hired !
! loan, f his own accord, brought from the
born a larg- bundle of hay to spread tin- ;
j tier the blankets, so as to make a comfort- '
I able, bed. By twilight everything was
j ready, and Paul kissed his mother, his ;
i aunt, and his big sister good bye. and,!
SiioiiMering his cross bow, marched away i
; t the "Ricky Mountains" as be called
j t:ie little knoii. '
He pinned back the doors of bis teat.
! with big catch pins, an.l then sat down '
' ou the graund. Everything wa dread-
j f lliy stilt; butt.ie bright tin pail and the ;
I Isittleof milk looked very comfortable in
the soap box cupboard : the brave cross
lo, with its pin pointed arrows promis
ed safetv; w hile the blankets, sofa eush-
i ion, and the soft hay were alt that any
i reasonable camper co.il.l ask for.
But it was so dreadful still! Not even
! the smallest baby breeze was stirring; J
! through a hole in the crumb cloth shone ;
u star, and the stair made outdoors seem
I stiller yet. Paul unlmtu.ned one shoe!
and then the other, and sat for a while I
', listening. Then sud.Unly kicking off his
shoes, he scrambled under tiie blankets
i :inl lay quite sti'l. !! was a tery mull :
! v, and somehow camping out wasn't '
delightful in every way. j
It was nearly half-past eight. M mi ma !
was knitting, the aunt w as sowing, and j
the big sister was .st indingon the diction
nry, rehearsing ber elocution exercise j
Noboly b it mimun hirl the bar hill ;
door softly o;"n, and the tiny feet go !
stealing u;Htair. When the elocution I
exercise was over, m imm i sii 1 she must j
go and find the mate to the stocking she
was knitting.
S she went tin Ujxtairs; hut, before '
I ...king for the sto king, she went into ',
Paul's room. There, in the starl ght, shu !
.v t ie brown curly head c 1 1 lie 1 int 1
its customary pillows- She was a goo 1 i
and faithful mamma, and so she did not
laugh out load. She sbxqied over the
half-hidden head and whispered, "Were
you lonesome, dear?" and Paul answer
ed, "Kind of lonesome and I bean
something j.r't'.'ofirij', very clisie to my
head. And so I cam- in. And ysi
won t tell, w. II you mamma. j
Faithful mauima didn't tell," not until
long afterward when Paul had grown to!
be so old and so big that he went "truly J
camping" far away to the K eky Mun- !
tains. ;
And what was the "swallowing" that ;
Paul heard so close to his head? I think I
it must have Wen an imagfned noise, i
P lll'tVOU? SL Xu'h'ii'l.
Worr.an'3 Work.
There is no end to the tasks which dai
ly confront the good housewife. T be )
successful housekeeper, the rst requisite
isgxKl health. How can a woman con- i
tend against the trials and worries of
housekeeping if she be suffering, from j
those distressing irregnlaritie, ailments :
aud weaknesses peculiar U her sex? I'r. J
Pierce's Favorite Prescription is a specific ;
for these disorders. The only remedy, '
sil l by druggists, under a positive guar- i
untee from the manufacturers. Satisfac- :
tion guaranteed in every case, or money '
refunded. See j rinted guarantee on hot- I
tie wrapier.
Locusts Eaten In Algiers.
It is an ancient and sacred custom of
the natives to cat these in-c-'s. Tradition i
has it that at the firstapisarar.ee of the!
locusts Mohammed instructed his disci- j
pies not to destroy them. I'.ct one day
the great prophet noticed on the wings j
of one of these insets an inscription in j
Hebrew characters saying : "We are .
liers of tiod : ae lay ninety-nine egg-. I
Whenever we shall lay one hundred the ;
universe will have been devoured by ns." i
Ilorritied at this sacrilege the prophet ;
straightway interviewed the Lord and re
ceived the order that as a punishment of
tiie Ucuststhe faithful should kill and eat i
them. That the natives highiy relish
Ihe dish appears from the saving: "Next
to the "late the ks-usts is the sweetest ,
morsel." The Koran prohibits the flesh j
of animals not born, but the Mohamme- j
dan doctor cf law, as becomes wise and ;
dutiful guurlian of their flocks, dented I
that iTist were fish, that as s'lch the
common people might eat them, while '
the men in holr onier should deny ;
tin mselves this sweet niorel in onier to
j avojlJ thv ten,,,t,,in tororge themselre.
Certainly a very wise and liberal interpre
tation to prevent a famine among the ,
poor. I'h.t-nh 'j.iiiu Tiiv. j
Hoods sarsuj-anlla is a purely vegetable '
pn-peration, being free from injurious in
gredienta. It is peculiar in its curative j
power. '
A new submarine torpedo brat has ;
been tried bv Isiih France and P.ussia,
and is said to be sik-i-pshi'uI. It is driven !
i by an Kdison dynamo, provided with i
cotripresx-d oxygen for use under water, (
j ar.d a large pair of scissors projecting
from tbe prow, in order to cut torpedo I
j wires. A'-ir York !mu I
j A tn-nnan statistiian figures up that ;
j England has cau.-ed the death of .',) -
I Ot people and has wrought Jin,'",1!"",
, worth of destruction. ,
Attheciicus "One ticket for me and
two children's tickets for niy two little
90ns." " Excuse me, but your older son
is certainly older than VI." " Oh, ye, but
the little one is much yonnger than 1-' as
the big one is obU-r. So it's ail the
same." Fl'ujnvlr Vlnefter.
It is a noticeable fact that however
cleanly seamen may be on water, they 1
have a decid.-d dislike to being waiesl j
1 aaLure.
Canadian Indians at Home.
! The inntatesol this Indian ho'iie acre
; the strangest part of the scene. Toe ti-;y
wornr-n were squatting on the fl ir. ne
; cr-lerje-i like T'lrks. other .!'.:ng -.ii
oue Pt as a eMiiion, their ..s ?fr:i-l
inward liu-ier tbeii, oroti liie-r km-a i-I
hex-is. Tiiey iter? q lite eieet. yet e.i-y
in their attitude, as comfortable as we
j are upon luxurious furniture.
j One of thetn changed her dress by ue-
i tachments at my elbow. Th men were
waiting for dinner : one slept curled u;
in t heap near the wail : another at f.at
oa the floor by his wifs : ar.d the other
two lay strerched across the opp"i;e en 1
of the lodge. The children ?.oe-l a re
markable capacity for slowing theraseive
away in grotesque shapes ia noon and
corner, wher.ee they tard at ma with
bl. k, bead-like eye as exprewionUiut ts
those of animals. Meanwhile th people
kept up a general conversation in "io-ir
own tongue : their voices were !... ev-n
in laughter, and expressive of a kind aril
considerate nature. You notice a g-sl
deal of abruptness in their t.i! ; but this
is line to their lang'iage. in which y.-o
hear many inarticulate grunts, .!-... r.
brusque inflection v and long, disjointed,
iininelodioiis words. But when they tai
French, which niort of the n nn-ierstan !,
their speech is quite agreeable. I tried
in many Ways to engH;- the opaws ia
conversation in this tongie. but they
turned to me a deaf ear, or e'-e their hus
band's. It seems that the missionaries
advise the tribe to have b it hf.'e inter
course with whites; they will often pr
tend not to nnderstun 1 yon. or will grant
your request without replying to jour
sjieccll.
The dinner, meanwhile h.'-l Is-en pie
pared by one of the squaw . She s t - nt a
nuuilier of plate ou the rl .r, an ! I.-.u s
invited nie to eat of their stewed ti l I.-.
I aiVording'y settle"! from thechet where
I sat to tiie tl-e.r. I 'niy the men cme to
the meal, for it i a custom aiii-uig them
to serve the men first, the women, having
less ep-snre and travel t.n-n l ire 1:1 in
ter, consider their needs as s-s- nd irv.
They w ill atisoluteiy fast when provisions
are scar-e. And yet. rwtw.th-tt'n-b.ig
taeir extra nouri-hmetit. in t.:n- of star
vation the men always sm ca ..b first.
helped ourselves from the k-ttie; and
when we had finished, two of the men
roiled up into hea and went t- sV.-p.
The w....nen, children and -I-.-.-, then with
ered about the d-shes. Kae'ti one had an
attendant dog at her e!iw, ready f .ran'
emergency. The meai w as so-, ia". and
pleasant, with good natured ta k ng. and
manners quite deferential. Hut tn d gs
were an aggressive eleotent. They wer-j
eag-r and unscrupulous. If a hand re
mained too long awa.- from the plate A
-log captured the contents. No aud then
a velji. or a cn-svn lo of iro or the wot I
"ah wis," broke the calmness of tiie c nt
versation. Tne'l-gof th" prettiest ina -1-en
kept advancing his n-se ioaarl io-r
plate, and she kept p-.utiding h.s he ld
with her sjssin till he con. iiido-1 t re
treat. Another rur sat very quietiy f r
some time liesble a child, but at last he
rose in open relielhon. It ru-dicl to the
plate. The child screamed. sf-ons tl ,u;r
ished in ttie air, and scream. resotm-ie-i ;
a:id tinnllv the d"g settled tiw k on his
haunches with a revengeful soar!. When
the women had tinishe-l their n. al tii-y
sat still an I let the dogs str ig.-le over
their lap, and tak'" p-isse--ioii of tiie en
tire cuinarT department. A "er setting
things to rights the women resumed taeir
sewing on the floor, an-1 I h-ft tl.cm chat
ting away the afteruonn, more happily
than o'lr careworn houst1ti:rs) in their
pahu-e fif bvsteand educated discontent.
C. H. Fiasm in Ittrjrt M ij i:hu.
Always Buying.
A la-iy who bos sjH-nt mii.-li of hi-r life
abroad said to me the other day: "Tie
women of Paris p- n ! less up-in their at -tire
than any others in the f.i.-hiopb!e
World. And yet they are always well
dressed, perfect from tip to too, not an
incongruity from the cunning r.bbon loop
upon the jaunty capote to tiie daintily fit
ting shoe. What is the secret of this'"
How do they compass such perfection
with so little expense? Simply they
study themselve and their requirement.
They know ju-t wh it ttiey ru-e-l -just
whnt u.ts them, and thev buy that and
nottung more. No matter how inony
tetnpti.'.g novelties are disphiyisi by the
seductive iiiqkeerT, no matter lie
many "new things" they may n;.n
other women, they cleave to their ran-
buy just w hat you need j ist wiiat suit
you buy g"l material have it made
fashionable, but adopt tiie fashion to
your individual style.
"Two or three Weil-studied, w-'il-made
suits suffice them. Their giove.
shoe and stockings are always thelsst
and their N.nnets are tiie result of a per
fect knowledge of tltetr fa. :i cnt. .i:m
and of just a n.it particular shading and
setting these require.
Pity it istii.it all women did not adopt
tlie rule of the fpig.il y-t elegant Part-o-enne.
It is the mg for someih. tig near,
the craze l.oru -feuvv and van t .'a-i l
res tle"t less to gt everything t:icy s-.-worn
by others, it is t.'iis se;.s-e-w 1:1
puise that furtis etrs-n l.ture ii:.. wj-te
and uiakes inanya h ir i w-rk---i l-.u:.-iin.l
set his tts-ih together in exasperation over
a pocket h -k emlii-1 witiiout ;iir j,r.h
portionate si.ow ing for t'.e in .i..-y ;;,at
hxs g.ine over the dry g ':'.u.;".r.
The passion for biiving "new things,"
gnws into a mania. The w-j:u iu a.lhi t
ed with it SjS-u is iabvrii.th cf iifiirit. rs
and cro-s.c'funiers, iier ee cuight by
everv new ievis? of texture or rol .r, cut
or effect. Yet in the end they i- e l'":s.!y
ratli-r than elegantly dressed. fi I the
little woman who in-v-r g -lo-pp.t.g
Ulll. -S She r.eels s -Let 1 . , ilg a II-1 has . .1. . .
two well-studied so.ts, -t. nr u-e-u t.he
stn-etsan i knows by thea i'iiiriiigglari. e
of every mail and the n.tcr.t or 1.. .k;ng
bac k g'e of every ouiaa tiiat -lie :sll
dressed.
Milliner' apt -enti'-e M-re a nw
style tiflist that Iv'e inTnte.l.
Omaha milliner It will n - . er h- je-p.
uiar.
"Why not!"
" Fveryb-idy "-o-il-l ee over it st ti.e
opera." '.no'i.i M -.-.
An apricot tree at orang". t ah, !:a
yieiiiesl lojtm pi.uu.U of periVs-t fi i.t this
seas-in.
New York's hotel are a s.nall . Ity iu
theu.selvew. There were Mi'y L:t;et.-eri
of them in IsTo, but now there are s,-ty-two.
wi'h six more to follow, and ti.ey
11 a-.,-oniiiio-'ate 'aWO rs-opl,..
A la-Iy in Norwich, Conn., it i sal I,
has constricted a rarerrow " !.dl,i;e
a'l'l thoroughly fetching that ev.-ry n.au
who goes by trie to g'-t up a llirtati--n
with it. It i taken in tbe house rainy
.lay.
There is likely to lf a J..rge migrafioa
of cob-re! .pie fotn FiTiia to Ni'-ura-,
guas"sn. Some who are u-.w there send
iia.'k very encouraging report.
An order of an encarrpuint of Ilritisfi
volunteer is, "all hair to Is- ut .on'e
short, and where po-.L!e the tm.- ai he
only is to be worn."
Time Cies, and stay for an man. Xhe
only icaa whocas teal it, Is th c;v-ciaa.