LA lb 3 Somerset Herald. ESTM' ISetD tin. Terms of 1'ublication. j-,V.::i!ba every w.-darauAj ttMrslrif t 12 j, . ;i;ut.. if fii in a-tiai..; olbt'twi U ..". tar. !j !e '..argvd. V, .i;'s'll ;.. -a villi, fll inEm-sl until ail t:-rrF ai tud P- to.tluaWr. u"i!u not-.iy Q whes suhsiTiber. do cm take out tadr pApef will t btid reajoaaible for the rrtaenp- u.r. BuhKrtben remoniif from one poatoffloe lo an c ,-r thoiiM give u the Dame of the former t; u the prwral uSirw. Aiurraa Till SuXUAlT lltiiLD, Sor.nprr, Pi- A. C. liui.Br.KT. ATI JLSEV AT I AW, r:i:i;. w. r::"-; ckki, aitm:-.kva:-it. , siensl. Pa. ! -. -e in tv.ig Ii..le .s..l . y . '. . !.,,K J:. M'l'l.l, I 1 A ; i.K.W".1-AT !.A. J us i:. st'i.iT. at; .i-nky at-Law. i-idx-t, fa r. J. K(.."."l Ai i'liiNKY-AT I v. rsvi. I'. si I'MiSI I V. II. ' An-..KNfcV-AT- W . : r. i i:i:t. 31. !. : i.: i . . i.Nl.V A I i.M, 1'a. II.'' A'iT 'UN) V I AU. !....n..H. xiLJa-rrnu i K -! M .V I.' T! . I , i-t-Vi I" 1'Cf ' .... : , ;., ... ..: ,..'"- TI'M. !!. K'X'T','.. ai.'-.k NKV-Al 5 W. r.NNi- yv Li:--. ti h ' I . ; i t- . ', i !..' '.'V. IllLH : II 'U-. 4 J ,vV,- l.Nt V AT M" '. r"'t. l'a , t I. .1 1-. l. J am;.- i- i . .-.i..!V x: I 1.. f.Lb'.'l'N. C. 'I I',; 'I V ' '! I:' '-V' A., N. v- V. I '-v. 1 .- ! i !.v u: 1k.;i.: m ;.' II i m;y. v. Mnnx. n:nTM t. I a. 1 . " ' V.u:mim: hay. I ' .-"..mcrM'l t- -..iruu-i to -rv im .roiu(KUtr l iv:i . : TuilN 11. T il!.. ,j ATli'liNKV AT I A" i.rs t..fi I ,,..,:'.;,,,. i'. S (.ne.-ue::.--, ... V I. D .:. ,i. i".. r.ii - r. ivi N AS'.' r''i.or."-. s ;:u..-'T. ., r. ic t;.t i .e.' "t i); T ii. .-. klVtiil 1., t ,i . u : ' n u.- . :'... Ma... sl 1),.ii.i.,rii,K.ii.. V M. i.i 'l I'll) 1'. is ! N .,Si' "I v- I) ,! i : . -. ,s- '..'.- ' - -.o r. ' I : I.-... A" : - e-.- ' A '.t t ...I.'.,', : . i -. i a i . . i"' '.ru.-r J);:J" L J'dlN i;i!.l. ! Sil-T. urh. mr:s ir, c. -'l. A l'e. r '. I-'.'k. j yi. M. O 1 fNv ' : V,- f o.-.u ; . !: rpr- j.-. r,i: -! t.i th kit Wu;.i A' .s.) ;-nh . n'.'. ::.-ir tf.'i ! iuc ttit rr.a i!iH',-."i. Aa v "T in: k :;:. tVt. i. j. k. Mil l r.i :. ... . !.:'-' i.- ; ..' ... ' i'.'v , ;-'-.: l ituni - . i - ' Xili.t l si t "Oti!i1 V li.mk. i r.-.; ; . :-r.; c. :..;.:?:?. r.. j. p.itts. !.:-.,lst. i'.'.- : .fc ie ::i !."' ('&:.- .-:'l;n t :j.:t su. CHAe.GLS N'.C DERATE. .. ., v ie ... ; : .- ) . .. v . . i. i ,,-.t . . .. . i::. : ' H..'.:.Un nwrn-L CURTIS K. GROVE. FA. f '."'. !f-. --I ! I -At:!:IAiF., -rr::so v . 'iss. i;w k w accss. ANc l .c- TiiKS asi. k-t.f.s veor.it Fu-.ihot oi) s.':,.r. Suli.-.:. TaiEting Done cn Ehort Time. ai.1 ;l i.'- 's.l V" . v.;.-ui ....'.-e.c'eft Sh'v hiti-l'-i anj W.rijuiUsj xe si:a-lu Irr'.-r CiLt lire: Clsis 'vTcrlsiGS. I: :i:--.:,e Ali K.:i.l" y r l.in Iv,nr tm trntri S. t.i. I re kbA.-S'S HLf, anil All Work Warranted. ' V, .:.il Hxaratne c-.r St" k. ajtd Lert. frVe 1 vio Wiinr.-tk. !;' funrh ?.: v fur Wjad U..ik. ht-aaciUr the p'iace, fctnl a.!- :a. CCRTISK. GROVE. (Esm of Cw.rf H.'Mfi fs'!ERET. TA J:1AKLI HOI FMAN, MERCHANT TAILOR. (Abcte I!.T' 8lor.) I'.rfi fs;yl-., and Uwwt rVio. SATISFACTION GUARANTEED. Somerset, Pa. J 116 VOL. XXXVII. XO. 31. PTJAC03SOIJ I TRADE tCi-f. ,T ""lt Chronic rheumatism. Prompt, Permanent Cures. Oace Cnretl. Atttay (airril. rart Ml ;-S Iv-. T-b lrT f iCJVT-d wtcicIt vr.h 'KfMiuta a ' t.. ltoH fcAr-iir mv Tw ..n.f l J..,';,, o.i usapWUiv coTMi a. rctLr.. in S . I:. IiStTdi. Onr CutfMl, Alva) 1 uirl. CM'in, K Y Feb. 7. 1117 An-trkr with 'a-rtdiiiUfT -aJt Iti -Lou Hit- . iriM T; iddi rinc4u wilt no ;tt Vn; t kjt iS,-i, awl bi t Tb jrvt wu a.-.r l. j ..n crJ. fi-rmJ to or ; i a ctc:k Cera Lj :i4 rwurnL Ti tTT F. COOK. Once ( urcd, AIwavk Cured. lv.il Oct St. iC Hi4 v- rlwairat.jni in kt.tt tnC rrtl'M wuB'-.i r-::tr Ft Ju Oii j I'. tHcpujr cui m! Wo rn utr uf m "r-Tfci i-ro.r. h. tlo-r rinit t It hat V"T Tf.flcd xr a t.sii-, ttt r a cf yrii in I' turn .: ji.i r, Ks md'kuujc ui 2Im:m THH CHAS1.ES . V0CEU3 CO.. Sait.mcrt. Ui. Every Hoiieehold J: i-v-.l i- )"vi;ii t: :y m-t in Ooiip, i"l.tuiriii Conh, uml fc-ore Throat. n.-:):iiil "f u uT::ry. Ait'a ('furry -r:-.i is ijiv rmv lor r' - ;it t !! uiitt 1 ir-ri ihf it. ii'iil tn'tifVrt it ;Vrtil ik ;h -t ' ' Ir. Jwiin C Jut '. ,s. I i i AS'r.-.t Iir;-U- aT, l'a. ' Shtip-y-us a jo Ayfr's i'licrry JYp tor:l ciir- tl niv of a'i.-i'i-i afu-r ti Wt 1 !. A ffw w--k s'lu-f, .Hin araiu a :tl!n Trinililfd VitU tl;o Uc-jlm.', X wui ruUil'tly Relieved By Pimp rrin. I c.-vlV ofTr llsi 1 liiiit'iiv f-T :')'' l.cm ::t . ail miii Liny :iij!;.'i.t." J' II. lla-iv!4-r, lliislor-iryatf, 'i .ihU- j:N-kt rl.r. rvtiTjliH. !ure :hrruf. or rvMip, J lo not kiiiiW if ur.y r ihU vhiih p:vrt ni-.tr ;---:v r- 'ml Tii.Tt) Ay.-rs i';;rty IWTnra!. 1 1 : :i f 'ti'ut if . hImi, invalu jti ;r r;it-s if" t i; h -f ! t-Uil." Ami !,- -. JJ--I Wa.-'i.iijTuu ti(-t, 4Avf-r'f i b'rrr r"- nnl pmvftl dm :i h; 1 nniy titt-tiirine.' 3. M. i'.ryaiL:. Chiix h.-j lils, Alua. Ayer's Cherry Fedora!, FlitrAIXKI EV Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Loweil, Mass. It is to Your Interest TO Itt'Y V,.: k Drugs and Medicines I Biesecker k Snyder. n-ssoiis to c. s. j;-.' n. N-TIC 1- il! 't x k. i e-rt I y M it '. we d' : I .:-n i;n- tJ. . a .11 x . L.C ull 1J t. . i - 'i a i.i ve -! -t:i e ti ti.. the very u '- :'.r ;b-.r :i -l 1 i :...t f.r.-.t ! ,..;.' a -j -. j i-'ittinct tiu;.si: We ;.Taur:i!.tTT s.'fi-'".c 'i...., a" 3. it' y .i. li.ei ;r..ui.:.' : ti dire. ltie i.s a ;.:;. .T :hfir SPECTACLES AND EYE-GLASSES in j.r-.it v-irVy; A f;;i! v t :' T-1 Ia-i w-s. C-:u' in .iit-I V'"ir f y r..';i!!-.l. N t iturp lor cj.'ji'iiu. i.'-i:. a r t . i art-ciili'lfiH t viiti suit y.iu. "iiii- -v BIESECKER &. SNYDER. FALL c-iSSSc WINTER.! I'.ia. k andCo'erc bisl.es. Velvets an i .I'e Kc:' . .lors and I'-i.a k. Brei 1 ("li.t.hs. .vl t J 7" a van!. Wen! i;ei:r...t:;-. i c n; HI per vnr ! i'iaid S:ri;-s. ?Iit:r and farici Wool .'si in. ll Mlo'tig cioti'. iK cel.: cs. all is i r van. C'or.ipit-te ass -rt. iic lit siory, 1'ndcrwe.r, '.;.' broidorit s, M.d.nc'y vis ar.d Yarns, li-tibroldi nrr 11 -es, Ihii rs. 7., j.';i- 'Jib ss fn.-ss Trimmings, Braid" Muslin I'nderw .; r and B -Hons, f. els Ii.-e I'uita'DS, Porli- j ens, Blankets. I'iaMn-' sins tiiis ai.d Muslins. Tal k- Linens. j j ! JOS. H01E 0 PENN ATENUE STORES, ! i 6!3, 615, 617, 619, G2I Per.n Ave., litt-sburgh. Il.iVlT-. s ly OTiKV A1 School f Short-llatid. PtTTSBt-'flH PEN TV. l.a t e.rv -,OV ' in It. ,:r line 'n Thf V . St r jrrsiiuiiir. saiiutud ! twx u. oi fv xi.!-!:.. rt. iz. jitr-ic a-d r-fs-.aiisi. Over lAoo Stuctrnw Lt Ye.r. j feet from tht ihnp earth. As for her, it j something rising in her throat which saf- ' was rfrv--h;ng to evade Bridget's vigilant j fxaited her, her eyes blinded with baby ::': ,irr;ntr "'"'kk'!" I eye.aud to sn-al out of the front do-ar in j ish tears? Thank Cod ! ber brain kej ' . .Ta-. Clrk AVitliart.-.A. t- iPr. i HOW IT HAPPENED. IiE. I hali never limnr how it oouM bare happened, it v: luilc-r she nave nv oaw lok or :xn. Or ti.-th. r i l-ansl mt face toWart livr, Or w tether raited Utr fait; lu a:nc If ufT inr how It J are-1 lo l:if?rJ ; !'.;it ;.- to 1 gtoU ti e m iM Ue v Fr.i'ri r him-y ciiacr, 1 ktit.w 1 fcisN-ti her full an.l ;u.re n l:r lowly shltsrnt-fj i;miin, 0xl ud kwp her ! 1 tt d';r eiio-l.'-ofliy. ail Mi!', I W:i;'o ! ir. mlrt am llirt' tbr uuin'iu? stilen r Ti -'t,ri-j:Kni'w (rupkl-'ij (he p.ir blew chill. J!t'.T Hill Kite meet on-acrtlt ? Hou xnci me with lfHy c:if(ir or k.-oit tK I!v!i( " Uzxt I otHr-nd flu- Kuto of htr lve fort-ver, Or linl inr-eir into rfju ktft iiit SHE. Ht ii'-l'! my han i. th? qui t mjin tA hininff : 1 hf Mrtvi Iny ImJJ in jthado. hrtlf in liftril. A-: rt ;J;.' llllHt'-l f.jnmo m utitv, v -m,.! to re Ij -aiity of tlw nixht. t j:it to a.y btf. ifiyhATiJ had takfn ; 1 o'-.il.i uo: Kj.Att U it ni-'ciy fnra hi- grap ; Aiilt. tu hil c tftlki. lw h. id n geutlf lit Iht Wi nl. fri mil;. .b Iteri.fUtu An ! K.m. h ., ih.nigh e .mil th nigi.t'o stiil 1 ;h:!:i; e lrt.t-tl rnnn at vtch ohir' t-A't'f; liis-, ,;liujr tlail. ttmi warm, tm;l 1I the briiii- A laort t!ii; all, the .ft lit-, nf the ki-. I t tn4 l;yu ii brti.icufl ; 1 sha.Il never Kn-ftt how it p. iiVihfivf happen !. yet ti true Thai, a.- p -aitl ctkmI nihi, we k.rr'l iph oiht-r J s-i a upIetm j.nmixf.l lover s 0'. My li il rc ourohic ami i:iy ln-rt is U':tiiifi ; I oucM to fft'T 1i-('SntJ. of eti.ir-e. fv.r lie It luu-t htive IrtH-n hia fuu.t yet I cud' I blame him 1 only wr;iler uhat he thinks of me : TCM MIDDLETONS WIFE. The Story of a Plucky Califor nia Woman. IiV FLOHl 1IA1NS l.ol I.IU..IO Kate Mitchell was one of those ur.for- tuiuite wouit n wti.ise surplus ; ergies dis'.ingiiisli them fro i.liysic .:! en- i in others i f : ' their sex. As a chil l sh was ku iwn as j a " ton. boy," and rim mot hrrs held her j up as an asfal wariiing t.i their little daughters, while in her imn house the l'ies;ioii of nuw t. subdue her buoyant ! spirits waa rttltnl over with true ma- U-rnal soli. . ini.le. When siie grew up, so-: ciely fr.. lie 1 upon her us a " hoyden," and he way Was continually It-set with Ithoins. At eightivn she could row. and swim, j ar. l rid'-, and play Ian n-tei nis like a I b '.v. s.ie wr.sa g'eat walker, an ! upon one oe;.i'.oii iia i walked to Mt. Diablo and bjcfc in tTo days, with her brother au-1 a c r.;-!e of fiieuds, a fca which alone w ;iiii liae su:'iced to place her under a iian ill San I rancisco's U st society. That she sang like a bird, danced like a sylph, and was, aitop tiier, a very amiable, pure minded girl, tsi small odsct for I he sum of her iniquities, and although she as ext-wdingly popular among a set of 1 young and irresponsible hoys, conserva- i live circles fioned up;n her, anfl it w.is gen( rally understood that she wasayoung vr -n of uufct radical and dougcbus. U-n- !de!lcies. It was, theref -re, a matter of polite re . irret ttl.eti the annoums'iiietit of hercoi.i j it:g ocjtials with oi.s oihi-s:iinec.'iiv.T-; Native clicie was receivcl. Tom M.ddle- tod VC:.S :1 r r"Illi.;ll" !:iwvi-r of evrellel't ! , , , "" j .', i, i j li;ei !ee-i geneiaily iindci-t'sNi that Tom's ; ide d was. .fa d.tl-iei.t type, and more ! hfii r the pattern of the l. puif .viety j women with whom be had been aecus i toi..cd liss.H i.ite. His intimate friend f r.:. I hooii companion. Jaik Spetscer, who hil l a'-ways -ii-approveil of ivute. nnd-.T-1 t k t- p .se ss inc. mouth piece of societv ech -l its-s n'.iin.-iit in Tom's unwil ! iii 'g ear. Tun s!oo.l rtaunchly by bis j !. .rs, bin bis frb 'lids w.-rd wink dtvji ' ir..; I..s S"'o. r.ee(i:eless. lie st-cret'y j re-.i.i-.i ti.at f:r bis sake and her own, I Kate U"i-T by aii ineiii.s le '"tonei jd...v.." ' lie sti ci f-ied even beyond his hopes j nirvf y.-ars afler l.er miirriiiL'P, few woMid ! have r. i...gii!,'e.i i-i the quiet, repressed I woiiiau. the g:iy and spirited g;rl of form ; rr days. K it- was fond of her husband. I and tbvs alchemy of love bad wrought j the ciiui.e ; bi.t it i a dargt-rous thingto j uie.ioie with spiritual chemistry as wcli I :'s the f'tves of the material world, and if Tom hud known what pent-up longings an-', it i.e'.iiotis inclinations raged Is-n-'ath j l.is w ife's quiet t xteri'-r. he migiit have I r.'i'ii ed bis sncces. lint he went on ' ns men will w hen i forvs w iiich thev ) iii-iv and hlind:v, - ii - with delicate cannot nnderstsnd, and Kate kept her grievances to ber-elf. Two children came tiie ei h r a girl, a fiery, untamed little cr":itre. who nia.ie the "i other's heart a. he us she saw a boy, sti'r ly, deiiher ate. l,ke his father. When the children grevc U'ger and ne' deJ room for exercist an ! o i!-d,sir air which their citv home j would not at'ord, they took up their rei- j j deii.'' in a little country home, not so j i far aw .iy but that Tom could travel ba. k i ; ud ' rni dui'y and attend to bis hni- I ' . 1 :. I i ... c .. A . i nt .-s, iiti i i; is i.cre :oai oa. s.oi. unus ! them. i i ir gm-, TV ce i.her tiny, Kate too.l r.t j ii j out upon the land- i icr :i; i ..w", g i. I; iia i l-een a dull tirrime week, i had started off j e'VC on a :a! days lxfore, !.ing-pr.'fiiise.l Tc.i. vacation, which was ! to Iv .Ir. heated to a bunt in the miunt t ains, in company with a party of friends, i She was thinking, with envy, of this j hunting party, and wondering, half-bit- J terlv. whv amusementsthat were conced- tsl to W pro;-r and he.iltbfil for men, shorn 1 net 1-e healthful and proper for women. H 'W she would bave enjoyed the long tramps overthe bills, tbeexcite- I tin-nt of the bunt, the joy of holding a I j too.1 gun on her shoulder and know ing I I that siie could sljiht and sb.sit with the j ; ret of them ! She felt a wicked Solace as j i she thought of the showers that had fal- t!-f 7 clouds thai bad I.nngi igbt before an.l the 1 constantly over the ; ; Mountains. Siie was lonely, dull and i cr.ss, and cliafel sgainst her hedged-in j l-ir., u n-r..ir U.nn.iurrrB un.tRuis I j o.T-. ; j it ss restraints. I There was a rush of feet through the j bouse, the door of her room ojiened, and the chi.dren burst iu. " Mamma, tiie creek is up! Take us down to see it !" The childish longing for novelty and exciu ue r.t found an instant echo in her heart. Tiny liad run in from outdoor p'y, and were bonneted and cloaked. i with rubtier overshoes to protect their! t . 1 4-. 1 I . . 4 .J worsted slij-p-rrt on her feet They Somerset SOMERSET, PA., followed panlen wsth for a little dig. tnce, and then entered a narrow U no lea. ling to a j-laee where they were ac- customed to fonl in the "uintner lime but over which now awent a aeethina' tenifiestDous tiood. As they !.xked and listened, Kate re aliaed that thi.i a no ordinary freshet, hut the prrxlu.t of a heavy rainfall over the whole vast att ihed, which had ac cumulated lis fon-e in tliousands of tiny rivuleta, and joiuinj; issue with the moun tain htrt-aui, plunged down its ncrvw channel a mighty and irrehitftible power. Keen aa thev looketl fhe saw a all of I water suddenly rear up above and come down towanl thera like a miniature tidal wave. The ilaui built by the new water com pany ha.l iven away ! They ran ha k from the shore to high er ground, and Hot a moment tici soon. I The stream rose aeveral feet in a second, j Jt cut into the xolid lunkx on either ide ! and bushes and.youiii; trees, rooted up j and sucked in by the greedy curnnt, went j spinninzby. A jfiant sycamore w jvered, tiunaout its bare skeleton litulrt &H if iu i giiONtly pntet, and fell far o:it into the I stream, interlinking its bninckvs with a sturdy evergreen ok which sto.v) on the opjKisite bank, whilt it.i trunk, loosely an'1 bored by lonp. n.ake like roots, toed helplessly in tuUUtrc urn. " JIuiuuia ! See the biboar.U coming!" cried out her little daughter. Katebsjked fiir up streaiu and saw a timber sailing leisurely along. Now it caUL'bt on a projecting simg and SA im half about, now it struck on a submerged island, and idly disenpMged itself ami sauntere.1 on. livliinJ it was another, and yet another the stream was black with them. " Oh, my (iod .' The railroad bridge :' The railruad bridge, and the afternoon train nearly due, hmxi to rush down a steel) grade to a leiii) into that vawning J thasai. lier first impulse was to start up I the cannon, but she instantly checked j herself. What folly, when miles of over- j flow lay Is-tween her and the doomed train ! onl must le sent down to the station, and from there a telegram to the next stopping place above the bridge. liut bow? The hired ii an ! Jim had gone an hour before to the. village to get the mail ami have his daily gossip with the loungers of the place. Lven ifhewerw here, neither horse nor man was licet enough to cover tiie circuitous road that lay betnecn. Then she looked at the prostrate sycamore. Ikmn the stream, lci-un-iy, but nearer and nearerstill, sail ed the great timbers. "Marian, hike little brother and go straight to the house, and stay there tiil mamma comes hack." he had already pulled herself up by one of the roots and was creeping stealth ily along the snaing trunk. Ib-re her dress raugbt on tx branch ; there she had ! to climb djn and crawl along with her feet under the water t ) avoid s:: upright Hah. Once she slipped and lost her hold, ulsd was nearly Slaked into the ed dying current, bat she caught at a .stout pre jection and swiu.g hcreif up once more. Sue could hear the swash of the heavy timbers np-streain as thev ris ked lazilv I'.isin the water, but she did not ihire to I I'sjU. I 'e fere her the main trunk of the tree was lost-and she saw- two diverging tiioi's, one low in the water, the other '. Isi koil w:th the 'i iu u;i l-air. Which to take? She dared not hniMie, but 1-e-j gall a peiilor.s ci'm.b along tiie upjier : limb, slippery and naked in places, wa j vering so that she grew dizzy and shut i her eyes to keep from failing. And, so, i lying j Toiie iiihin it, hand over hand, st.e , erect the entire !eie;th, and the great ! stick of t:i:i!er struck heavily ag-ainst the i fallen sycamore, and j':s! as Kate swung i her-s l!' into the l;ra:iclies of the nak she feit her s-ipport give way, aud with a groan an 1 cia-ii, mi 1 vvi' I-up tos.-ings of ; itsskel' ton arms, the oid tree tore loose l from its moorings, and was swept down j stl".-!:ii toward the bay. j Her hands torn and bleeding, Kate ; Middlelon readied solid ground at length ! and lirst her maternal instinct asserted 1 itself, ar. l she looked back Hr.d saw her i chiidren s'an ling still and looking after ; l.tr. She pointed home with a gesture . that they dared no! diso'iey, and saw ': them turn and tun up the lane, thenspei ; along br w ay. She w as not light ff :, as in her girl- hoo.l : whereas, she was oni-e fleet as a dee and s ift motion was a very joy t her, she tvr reaiic I that .she was irrow 'rgto le a stout an 1 :ni-bi!e..ig?d woman. sn moved Peaviiy and eiiMisi'iy and la bored for breath, and her feet were liko clods beneath her. There was a mile of rough and rocky ground .to lie covered bef. re she nwebed the station, and the train oh, but to ossess once more the agility of her girlhood ! Which would! first? would thetraio. . . . , . ... ;iy;ng across j:,e nppcr ieveis ot tiie Coast !;a;gt resch the next stc'ion ls-forc the brave ' warnitu iiiii.in bad sent her message of ? How manv times she asked herself ihe question she cuid not have toll. Sue scarcely dared hope that she might be in time. Her. heart seemed ready to burst with grief for the terrible misery threatening so many happy homes. Alas! for the orphaned children who might cry aloud to heaven that night! Aias! for fathers and mothers w hom the morrow might Ixdiold bowed dow n with sorrow! Alas! for the husbands and w ive She w as crossing the bed of one of the many abandoned channels of the impet- ,, mountain stream, a rocky pathway, strv,,, iti tile spoils of bygone freshets here, even then, a shallow stream was rim-ling past, token of the torrent's srnr- ..iu. f,lTce. She faltered, smitten bv a new an,i awfu thought. What if Tom Tom, w ho was not to come for two days n,ore Tom. who bad started oat in .Ho .1. i:.t.-. .1: : i . ..t 1 v.. i geiuer uiuereiiv fiiresiioi, siiouia nave ; cut short bis excursion, or with his par- ( ty. driven home by the continued rains, j somehow wandered to one of the upper j stations, and boarded tiie train for bo me j there ? ! Where was lier vannted physical strength nuw? What was she, after all, bat a weak, wretched woman, with trem bling limbs, every muscle clogged by this great horror that had taken possession of her, a fierce pain gripping at her heart. clear and true to its purpose, and urged on the flagging body. On, on, over little ESTABLISHED 1827. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 23, 1889. hillock. rm lerp! utretcfc. of sanJ, down new rarines gheran. mce she rnt j her foot cruelly nfon a sharji rtone, and reuienibere!, for the first tinie, that e!ie I had on Ihc lik'ht worsted "tilipu-rs fhe had worn in the house, and Jiad careless ly neglected to exchange Jor walking boots when she started dow to the creek with her children. She eveB la'thought herself that her loose house-dress was scarcely the style of apparel in which she should "like to present her 5f at the sta tion, could she have her chtii', and in the same breath sent up prayer of thankfulness for its light weight, which scarcely enctimtiered her moi ements. With all the rest of her sifiscs dulled, her hiiarinj; appeared to hjive Iwome preternatural ly sharp. She seamed to bear the clatter of the approaching train 12. miles away. Tiie throb, thril, throb of the engine kept peix: with her beating heart. She heard the hoi low echoes from the neighhoi inj; hills as the train crept over embankments, its deafening clamor as it rushed across trestle-w'itks, its dull rumble as it ro'led over solid ground. She even seemed to s-e l!ie engineer as he laid bis hand on the escape valve, ready to give the iron monster voice as it near- ed the iiitle mountain towo, then the w ill shriek of the escaping steam, the ciangorofthe bell, the pun'tjjuiT, of the train slackened sin e.!, the clatter of the brakes, the jangle of tiie couplings. Would she nevor reach the little red rtation-hnuse. now i.lainlv in iight at the end of the sMusith-graveled Viad ? Siie was passing tb" po't.ulicc, wliere p -op'.e idiy gazed at her. What matter ? II" only there weie a horse wild buggy in sight, to help her on her way ! If only- one of the loungers would understand a.ud take up tiie mission which her Seiit strength seemed inadequate to fulfill ! But she might not turn aside. On t ie depot platform moro loungers, , ,.. , r , jim among no'in, roiling a quia oi moac- co in his cheek and talking earnestly if the sUte of the weather and the prospect ..r ', Xl,.- oil 1..1... I " 1 " ",. " , v" past mem. Jim uuereu an expletive ; indignation that must always possess a -J o.iM r-iai:, i in iu..-o ' . . mistress ihk-s sometiiir.g der.gatory to ,. . tue dign tv of h3 "l.iimiv. ' The stat iiiii-inaster was l:i his olhce, ,, . . , , , , , laiaitig wi:n a geir.ie na.i w i.o i.mi come down lroui tiie mouiitains, end was in ! waiting to take the train to the citv. He ! was clad iu a hnntirg suit, and was talk ing with some excitement. ; " It has rained uli the week," he was saving; "you think it rains here in the valley, but, great gnns ! you should be up in the mountains in a rain storm. Sheets and siieets uf it blizzards of sleet and bail, and the wind blowing like a hurri cane ; we broke cjmp yesterday ; I hsk a bee-line down here ; the rest crossed tlie hiils to the stat ion above. They'll lie down on the 4 o'clock." 4- Yoke and speaker wen1 faiSihr to the woman who stood in tiie (ioorvv.'.v, loth hands pressed to her panting breast. The woisls came only t.. distinctly to her quickened senses. T'nen Ii"' premoni tions were true, and Tom T mi was on that fa!, d train. Again her body reeled, but her steady brain saved her. "Stop the train ! The bridge is gone '." she cried. lljih iiica bsiked no. startled at the words. With the pro.opt movement of a j man trained to o'oey orders the ajent j !eaie,l t his instrtr.nerit ; the other man, : slower i i ciiiprehen i, came forward, the i ek of amazement on his fo-e, as he viewed the singular apparition in the doorway, giving place to am'..-ed indul-gep.'-e, sis he r-cogni.'.ed the speaker. Wiiat an eccentric, impctiloiis gir! Kate Mitchell al ways was. aud v. bra a life she mu.-t lead Tom .Middiit .n! ' This is quite an unexpected j lcasur", Mrs. Mid lict .ii.," he- said, smiling. She waved him hack with a sinsrte im- erioii g-sMre. There was a brif silence. The ojier.itor listened intently, with bis hea l resting on bis l,.,nd. Kate Mel ile- j C1;c l'ate 1 t strike terror to the bebold toti remaine I stmding in the doorway, j er her hands clasjs'd low, her face blanched i "jTto.,k a little walk to-day," te rn ith dread, nnd nil her son! absorbed in p;;e,i Kate, guiltily, trying to hide the listening, Jat k Siiemvr, slow lv compre hending the meaning of ihe scene, wait- j el, his interest growing with every nio t ment's delay. j At last it came, the monofonnns click, J click, conveying its po'tcntions. message ; in a language unknown to two of the ! 1 three listeners. The operator arose from ! I bis chair. ! Just in time. Tne tram was uiutig out if the : tat ion, but I bey s:op;s-d her." ; esciinale. as she mentally termed it.frdin jn,, ver t!ie ri,lg,, dear and firs mnd Kat'; Middlelon c'.uN-hi-l at the disir- j her husband, siie would gladly have d. Hie ;n , i,'i de note, but a ideas,; nt thou"b way. For the first tiu.e in l.er life her head gave way. Sue was again on the j swaying pyi-amore, going dow n. She felt the water on her face and opened j her eyes to find Jack S;-neer suprs-rting lier tiead, and the station agent pouring t i-e-col 1 wa'er over her. : "Shell be all right in a minute," said j ly gaping cut in one si'.e. Jack, cheerfully. "Now, Mrs. Middieton, j "No wonder you are not yourself to with your permission, I'll see you home." ! night. A little walk ! I shonld say so Siie Ian-rowel a fiat amt a cloak lrom the station agent's wife. Jim n ught up j "I had on my slippers," confessed the j n,,.;ivred to throw false scents, and the the horses. Jack Spencer banded her j culprit, "and there wasn't time to j brook and bramble, the hill and the hol into the wagon, with grave cnurtesv, and change them. Bet it alone, Tom. It ii j (w were all impresse 1 in his service in thev drove off. Some .f the lonrgers i dimly understanding what she had done, I looked on curiously. That was all. No fuss, no formal tributes, ni nieedi mak ing even from the two who understood. I There was no deputation of strong men to tender her public tribute, in voices shaken bv sobs. Contrary to all tradi tion, and unlike any heroine who ever I saved a train from wreck, she was on the j w rong Side of the bridge, and the people most dee y conceined were nine miles j aa-v" j he bad little to say on the ride hone- ' ward, although Jack peneer was alien- j f ive and talkative, and tritsl, as bard as a man could, to show bis appreciation of t i . j . .1 ,, t . uer tiravc oeeo. lerusjis sue was em- barrasst-d in the consciousness of her odd attire, and the curious looks cost upon her as she rode throngh the village, Perhaps she was secretly ashamed of l.er mad race, and of the exertional, nnwom- anly, physical prowess that had made it possible, notwithstanding the fact that she bad saved many lives. She did not even invite Jack to come in when she reached her own door, bnt descended from the wagon with great dignity, and only relaxed a little when Jack said very earnestly : " I shall never underrate the value of the physical tiainir.g fur women again, Mrs. Middieton. Some day I shall beg to pu my little daughter nnder your tutelage." Which was a great concession for Jack, whose little daughter was the apple of his eye, and whom he bad hitherto only looked forward U making an accomplish ed woman, of elegant manners. Neither honor nor praise awaited Kate iu her own home. 15r:d-et scolded her, and put her to he I, and declared that she " wud surely catch her death a-cold, an' she deservwl it well," and tried to save her from the consequences of lier mis deeds at the same time. Of the children Harry stubbornly res"n,ted her base de sertion of them on the bank of the raging stream, and Marian, with her mother's spirit of adventure strong upon her, ter riiied the kotisWjoid by avowing her in tention of going across the water on a tree the first time she could escape paren tal ant lenity. The mother bad her reward, i:everthe less. Jjte that night, when the children were csleep and JSridget had relaxed guard, Kate e aK-! from lied, and don- j ning a rap!er and shawl, laid herself j down ujxmi tiie lounge l)efore the open j fire, to enjoy scanning the daily paper, j The rain fell steadily without, so steadily j that the sound ot'a horse's hoofs comi.ig up the sodden driveway was scarcely d:s- j tinguishable from the patter of the rain j j dros. Kate started up as she heard a I step outside the door ; another moment j a,K' T"" l, f,r looking very ! "A, like a newly watetUlized gh.M. " Tom ?" she cried, sharply, and then she seemed to cower before him ; yet not before him, but tiie horror of the after noon, which again descended upon her nnd took posrssion of her. Tom her, hus band, might have been one of that griz zly throng of mangled, crushed, dead and dying phantoms of the. might-have-been, ever torturing her mental vision. thi lir h. '.1j o'..r I..- tt'uC 1 .... ... ... ' if tnev might bar out the sight. " Oh, you ought not : you neversiio'ild do such a thing." shes'iid. After all, she had nerve's, and they had ! been sorely tried that day " What do vou mean? gravelv de manded T'ith. This was indeed a sorry ' You sho'iln't have come home in this , ,',i. ! ' unexpected war; von shorn d let tieople i , , ' . ! know w hen vo-.i are chiming, ,. '., . Kate, saij To:u, soleinrov, seating . . r . , ' . ! himself on the sofa and drawing her dow:i Inside him, '-you will speak diHer ently when you know how near I came I to not coming home all ; I have traveled twelve miles on horseback over a rough iiioiii)i,iiii rued to get here to-night. We were notified that the bridge three miles below there six miles ahove here, Kate j had been carried a ay." " How did. you iin.I out?" Kate waa herself again. There was a little twinkle in her eyes, but her lip trembled. " As to that," replied T en, " roports are somew hat vague. But all accounts agree it was a woman. And she did wonder ful things. The bridge-tenders wile I ! believe. Floated down stream on a tim ber, ftorii'.bo.ly s.tid. started, all drip ping for the st.Viou, and got tiiere in an unc'inscionahiy snort time. Not a min M to spare. If it iia lo t be. n for her '. oh, it was a wonderful feat, everybody tays." " l!.:t iiow very unladylike ! " said K it.', in a choke ! voice, stooping to pit k up something fr.cn the floor. " ("n'a'iyiik" '. " rr'u- Tom, excitedly. "I toil you, Kate, that was sometime.' worth whiie. Very diifcren! from your lawn t n MS practice. When a woman puts her strep; to s'nh a us and mast have ln-en liv ! such a s'rain us Jove! Why, Kuie, I doubt if you could j I do so mu ll as walk t town and back. ' B it wh'-n & woman ?.iv two or three hundred lives at one s;r,,ki. ; Jy goo l ; ness, Kate! What have you lieen doing ' to your foot ? "' 1 For Mrs. Middieton had nncunscioiis j ly pushed the wounded foot into sight, and its load of ban lag's", piled np bv jjril t !J , jiuB.rs, and finisfwl I with a red flannel swathing, was mdeed foot again beneath the hem of her oress. j " But d m't let us talk about thst, Tom. ; I'm sorry I urine 1 queer and cold when ' you came in. I wasn't feeling weli, and : you you hx-kesi so. it made me siiiv er." Like many eop'e who arj dauntless in the presence of real danger, Kate had ail her life ls-eii hy of praise. If s'rfi , coil 1 bave k-ot tne kaiw.elg of l.er it. But. stupid as he was in some ways, obtuse as he was, be was not lo be put 1 o.T in this way. He was aiready on Ins j knees ln-side her, culling threads, remov- ing pins and undoing cloths, in spite f her protest .until he disclosed a little fart, purple with broises and with an ug ! Jvaie, w uai nave ou ir-u uj. io uo . , be all right to-morrow." "A little walk V persisted Torn. "Gnat j C evar, K ate, you are not to be trusted ! alone any more than a tw o-year-old babe; I'll never dare to go off and leave you i again. "I! I hiden't taken my little walk, yon -you-you mightn't have had thechanwl" cried p sir Kite, cornered at last Mt .,u! C,M To:n- a .. dawn ing noon bim at last. "It was you T .j tl);nk he f..j t;.e lame, braised foot. I am afraid be did a great many fxilisli things and humbled himself most laineuUbly to show his love for his ! brave young w ife, bis pride in her. and his contrition. There was a purse made np by the pas seng. r on the overland train that fate- i fuldav.to reward the plucky womsn j By and by he noticed that on who bad saved them from saeb a fright- I moonlight and starlight nights hi cm fill disaster, but thev were never able ta j eregation was made up of women only, find her out. The station master an 1 ; Finally be a'fc-d the reason of this. A Jack Spencer kept their secret we!!. Tiie ' sister aros anJ 8ai'i : onlv subs.-rinli..n that ever reached its destination was Tom Middieton's. His wife soii.etiras wears a very nglv brace- j let set with a couple of very Urge an.l j pon.jeruus ffwi coins, nen people r - . mu-jj.umi, w, mn-i ttncini" lie Jluilo: there your hr.toerf question ber about it she replies that it the nieeting-hoose joining heartily in the : er of IlaUtead street.-.'.. AV cutter. What's beg. ng lo na i.e w is a medal Tom one awarded ber for a j proceedings. The pastor remonilrat, -! ; She-"WeiI, he thinks of n-.mi? h-r race she won. It is generally understood I with them publicly. I Catarrh orig. nates in scrifi;!ocs taint, after Uie fsik, 1-3i siie ma'aea "Kb that she refers to some rowing match or; "While yon have been idling after j Ibjod's Sarsapariiht puritks the bWJ, I boavy rolla, yon kaow." iTw-i Xj--horseback ride. There are boata on the coons," said he, "there may Lave Uea and thus permanently cures catarrh. yjun. t ,i .! ..! v Tj -.ii. Jj A (Oij pond now, saddle horses in Tom's stable, and a tennis-court on the lawn. But even as she answers Kate sees again the railroad train, with its preciom living freight, thundering on to destruction, an.l a woman bare headed, wild-eyed, with draggled dress and bleelins feet, racing desperately ai ns a rough country, in a mad fctfort to avert the imnemling j danger. The .-I . ;.;, 'Purgatory Bullets.' An excited Irishman lately rushed into a Boston drug store, having a 'broken tip" appearance generally. '-Bo jabbers !" be yelled, "I'm all wroni; e'ltoirvly. I want some shtuft to straighten me out. Some o' thhn 'I'urgat ry Bullets' will 6x me, I'm thinkin'. What d'ye tax for thim"? '"What do you mean'"? asked the I cleik. "l' irg it )ry I'.uliets,' sr-r. or some- thin' loike that, they cad thim, replied! the uian. "Shjre, I'm in purgatory al- ready, with headache, and liver com- ( plaint, and bad stomache, am! tiie divil i knows what all." The clerk passed oiu a vial of Dr. Tierce's Pleasant Purgative Pellets, and Pat went o:f contente I. These little Pellets cure all derangements of liver, stomache and bowels. Sugar-coated, little larger than mustard seeds, an.l pleasant to take. Druggists r.nnn fecr. rr, And Thfiiria,"lh;rl!:1-'i,'',r''',,'rtl'i'''1 easy task vi., i a j . Among the animals w hich may le slid to have become exli ict is thecism dog ot our fathers. He was of no particular strain of bhsxl, but be nr.ite.l the keen H-etit of the ibfrheiin I with the intelli jfence of the shepherd d'-g. and the ten- nrifv of tl.e tin'' doi Willi the st1l!th (if the punllier. vv i-n less m compiisiiments than these he n ht have been good on a fox or deer trail ; the lowing herd would brings forth her litter only once in two have probably Ix-en safe in his keeping : ; years, and from the coming of the litter he might have been a'ole to hold his own j to the arrival of another she and her in a fight, or have stood an excellent j young are never separated. She keeps haiee of suci'eding as a sheep stealer, j her little family together until they are but he couldn't have been a c on dog. j two years "Id, and in protecting them I"or your coon is a tricky customer, and ! w ill light the attacking dog or hunter crammi-I with patience. Moreover, lie j until she dies. Many a good coon dg h aves behind him the coldest, most i has been forced to retreat liel'ore the fury scentless trail of any animal that runs. ! of a -she-coon fighting for l.er young, and lie leads you through taiiglsl swami if she is captured the whole family fall and deep, stony hollows. He crosses and : victims to the hunter, m-rosses swift running streams, lb: j Whi!e the fema'e coon is s-,-ia! and do frisks along the top of rough stone walls . Im,s.; tI)a;e is ti,e ii- : as silent and swift as a shadow. He ..top i w ,tii i ii a dozf-n feet of some convenient wali, clears the intervening stice at a lyiun. I, strikes a tree and glides up the longest limb, runs to its extremity, and leaps a '1uzn feet Iwyond it to the ground again, breaking bis trail abruptly on one side and beginning it as confusedly on the ether. He invents tactics fur emer gencies, and brings to every considera tion of his welfare and that of his family a large and level head. He plays his cards well and the dog that would lieat him must needs hold both bowers and ace, with strong cards to back them. These the coon dogs of our fathers alwavs had. "' " ' "'" There were, twenty-five yearn ago, the j patches and feasts on the fruit, still hunting coon dog and the coon dog j When the milk comes in thecorn is the who let you know at every stp that he j coon's gala time, for he loves the tender was getting there. There was mixed up j s undent grains, as a farmer knows to his with the methods of the still hunter an ! sorrow, and great are the ri-ks he will element of greater i-ertainty that you i take to forage in the fields. It is not nn woiild get yonr coon than there was with j til the berries are gone and thecorn the more melodious system of the dog ' grow n tough in the ear that the coon be- that mouthed his presence in the shadow y chase; but thestyle of the latter rest more tingle into your blood and buo.ed you up w th sweet r exjectancy. There was something weird and uncannv in al! the turnings and windings of the former through the gloomy woods at night. lie crept among tangled woods and deep ra- vines, climbed abrupt knolls and worked his seriier.tine ways down into deep hoi- lows, turning, doubting, shifting, cross- j w ho write b ks, is that he never touch ing and recr.issing his track, like the es foce! until he has quaffed at some iabyrinthe crossing of a ship's capricious spring or brook, even if be is compelled course, silent as the night around him, j to go far to find it. '1.1 cis.n hunters say stealthy as the twilight shadow. His verv j that the coon di; every mouthful of bis silence brought him to the priz. As the food into water before eating it, but, like trail of the unsuspecting coon Iss-irue warmer, the noiseless prtrs.jer became still more cautious until the game was in ' .v.. . .1 1 .. I 1 :. I:.. .. stgiii; vueit lie rusue.i upon ii iiae an j a.alancbe, and the pent up music of his ! soul went forth in one fearful iiowl of tri- uiiii.h. and the surprised and fri-'htened 1 coon knew that bis nights were mini- It was didcrent with the iog tliat gave tongue as he hunted. He made music in tiie night not the silvery treble of the fox hound, foating down from the bills on the frosty air, and drawn out in sweet cadenza by every willing eeiio, nor yet the mellow ba- of the Jeerhoun 1 tj -n-! staccato i ng of bis own .half bark half i t,jV a cheerful mingling of mehsiy with business. The having coon dog always na.j a better me than bis noin less broth- i er Aa, ne needed to have. Tne co-m never knew when tiie silent do was on i bis tra.-k au I c ms.-pieatlv di I n t bring j ito his protection the many wiles and j stratagems that be at once resor'ed to j w hen the crv of the other dog ranir out oa tne trul. It was then that fie m his rac-e for life, and it was then that tine baying coon do of onr fathers cam; out j strong. Step by step ha unravelc 1 the i Ungled and well bidden scent, constant- I )y sounding his wild challenge to the i I coon to do his U-st, until the hunted an- iinal's repertory of wiles was exhausted. ! and, ac-(i.ting the inevitable, heclim'ssl j a tree. When the d'g found he had I i brought the coon to this, bis musical bay i caange i t a Ion 1 quick bark, the signal ! to the hunter following on behin I t.'iat ; the coon was treed. 'nee in tiie rare old days of nsn hunt- ing a new preacher was settled in a hack w.xis uisirici oi i lae coariiy, iiiinoia. He was mA wise in the way of the woods. Kar!v in bis first autumn on bis charge 8"-! ' prr.ie.. u,eing ; 11 " tI,e cx'hin s be.te n tis m ths cJark ,,"J"n' I-"''"'"- ; m'm the men'il j'W j v.g'ii. when tbi "m(n darke-l" j toe nns rrren were a.i in i.ip r mace in cl WHOLE XO. 1058. those in this district who do not hnnt coons, and whom you night bave led here and saved their souls." Ivaeon Brown rxse up in tie nieetinj; and said : "Itominie, if the any one in thisdees tric' ez don't bunt coons bis soul hain't wuth savin'." Coon h'inting as a pastime ent out nf fishion itb tiie wtr, and the old race of trained coon dogs gradual'v became ex tinct. Why the coon has come to lie de spised by the sportsmen in these days is one of those thing about which the re mark has once or twice been made that no fellow can find out. lie is as cunning and as cute as the fox and more dillicult 'o ii. oi. iiu i , luoiro.er, oi'.- eieaiie ui i .. .....i ii..;., ... .i.,. i . animals and ets only the most whole- some food. He should net lie despised surely Ui-ause be ran le banted only at night, for in threiding the woods in the d arkness, following dogs th it you can- I The i'hicairo anart hists can mtet and not see, and whose bavin aione breaks gab. The court have decided tint the the stillness, there is a most singnlar en- I police cannot prevent the Arheiter Bund ehantment. I from assembling, and th" courts are re.-ht. Kven where coons are mist abundant, j This is a free country, eTery!ody can nine out of every ten of the pr.-se.nt gen- nieet, and eery!ly cm talk. But if eration never see one. an 1 few people j talk baa a special and direct relation to know anything alsnit them or their ha!- criminal acts that follow it, that is a dif its. Although the coon ).refere the vi- I erent thing. It becomes apart of the cniity of civilization as ;ts habitat, be penis to keep aloof fr.ni tiieeyt-s of men ' I'J ''a.v l'" n close out-of the-war re- treats, in the deptii of hollow frees or iso- lated crevices and hole in the rocks. He wanders forth only at nighf.and although bis foraging expeditions may bring him to the very doors of t fie farmer, and even within the boundary lines of villag-s, he never betrays his presence. If more than one coon is brought to l av iu a tree thev i will tie inrariatny tenia s or a mother coon with her offspring. The female surly and solitary, ranges entirely alone, and gives no care or attention to family matters. If two males meet in the woods or fields they fight furiously and not in frequently todett'u. The male makes his range for forage much wider than the fe male does, and having no on- to look af ter but himself, more frequently escapes the h'tnter. Ii spring and summer the margin of brooks and pen. la and the soft mod in swamps and bays are thickly in dented with the graceful f l otprints of the coon, for in these months he spends his nights in catching frogs, fish, lizards, gubs and piusstds, which are then his chief subsistence. later on he ranges j among the hn kelberrv and blackberry irius to I.Hik ahsiut for bis w inter stores. These be lays up jdentlfiily from the beaclinut, i hestnuf and acc rn cnips, and on these crrijes depends tl.e bunting of tne csin wiien he is at his best. During the nutting season he is fat, solid and j w ide awake, providing there are plentr of nuts, tine eculiaritv of the coon, which like most of his peculiarities, ha ! tw-aped the attention of the naturalists ali old hunters, old coon hunters say a great many things that would bother them to prove. .' inf.r Inl"trinl J',ir- -w . It Was a Class Eye. J Just as the eclipse begun yesterday f- j tcrnoon a nmals r of peophi on Madison an I t lark streets stoje'l und vainly at- . tempted to I s'k the sun in tl.e face. Sev- eral expressed aland their wish for a smo ted glass through which to observe j the rare event. A little red headed man, j clad in a blanket overcoat and a villain ous expression of cmnteiiaiice, stepped up. "S n ike 1 g'as"s." he sneered. "AH y,,: have to (to is to cover ip one eye wr.h vo-ir hand and Iv.k at tiie sun with . i ... i "-----.'.'. i 'i;e mm u-.t-l it. i-ne .Kk, lasting lo it a s-jnd, w.l en mgh for bim. lie was saiisiied it c "il.ln't be done ; lie turn- v ' l ''lc' 'ti'" r ' '"'adel stranger and j sail 'T il bet y m " y. at the sun whiie I ' I'll go yo'j : 1,1 ik l can't look straight ' .tint tweritv." j it a teno'-r, was the I reply, as he prodiiced a wa 1 of national olu'gati ms. J. lie tuouev was put up in i the hands of a Ly -Under, and the red i lie id'.sl man covered his ieiteve with his , hand and exposed the rigiit to the full Sare of ti,e sun. -one. two, three, four" counted his on- nonent, and the fears began to run down the fan of the gaser. which rendered his ' already viil.iin.eu ficia! ext-si'n viler slili. going B it it was apj.arcnl t lat be was to w in Ins Is-;, and thei.ther feiiow saw it. He st p; to chat w itii alio . si c ,anti:i .111 1 begta her Mrang"r. :;! vour conn'," vciie-i tiie j little man as the !.-i:rsr,:io rel each oth- j er rahi-llv down his cheek. j i -V,. '. r., i ... '..- fi hit ; m no sueaer, and t-re s jjiem. I of time leteen noor and sun-et to count the rest of that twenty. h. vu thought 1 ,r!, wre ,mArt ,1;,'n , y() ?- H-re he rea- he, out br the two lrt j 1 bios while th- I'l-ie run .1 .n,.e,l an.l i 1 swore, still desperately keeping bi eye ' ; on toe sui. "Bat you can take vour blamed old ! 2iaB ,.,-e to another corner. I w aa on to you from the word go." The little mart wa last sten trying to work (hp ,H!11 , (au...t with t t;nie limi, .. i ..i i Webster's Blue Suit. I'aniel Welistrr went to college in a home spun suit, of which probably every thread was carded, spun and woven by his mother's hand from the wool of their own sheep. It was a dyed iu the-ws.1 suit, and tiie color was indigo blue, the old New England color. In the Smith it is butter-nut, but though our Yankee grandmothers and great great grandinotti- I ers knew all about what butter-out bark would do, an 1 the sabt'.a powr for s'.alo ! color that lav In sumach berries and baric of whit, maple, and various dys tbet root and flower, bark and leaf ;-u! 1 b made to yield, through tbs)Sg-nry of vitrol and copperas to-sef theru fist, tbe universal stand-by was the blue pot par excellence th. "dye-pot" that st od in th. chimney corner of every. k!tchn worth namir.a. S- Webster was fitted ou! in indigo blue frvn ciar to an'clo unlei-oroing for bi swart skin and set i oif-handan ! st.pho:n..rit t-j, h inz Hanover thers came one of those drenching rains, which like the S-ot:,s!i mists, wet a man U tbo skin. The suit hel l its own i for has not in l:g- Lino ben "warranteil fast" since first indigo, ! s heard of?i but it had parte.l with enough, so that Daniel, U. was dyed blue from head to foot. Daniel Webster had a liberal stratum of sentiment in bis make up, and for some reason this color of his young man hood became his favorite wear through life. He wore blue cts to his dying dav. If anvone ever saw him in a dif- I ferent one the fact has not been put on I record. He' A'nib. Let Them Cabbie as of Oid. j act, and shann its criminality. U't thu anarchists talk, but watch them, and snatch theiu quicker than lightning if they conspire to break the law. The j chan.va are that they won't. They hav j wen the law hang murderers, ar.d the will likely take it out in talking. Vu- Y;.-k .. Shall Women Be allowed to Vote? The qm-stion of female suffrage has agitated the tongues and pens of r-fonn-ers for many years, and good argumen's have Is-en adduivd for and against it. Many of the softer sex could vote inti Ih gently, and many would ofeas their hus bands did, anil give no thought tithe merits of a (siiitical issue. They wouM all vote for Dr. Pier -e's Favorite Pracrip tion, for they know it is a tV-i n to ' eir sex. It is unequalled for the cur ' of leainrr'nea, abnormal discharges, iii 'rn ing sickness, and the countless ills to which women are subject. It is the only remedy for woman's peculiar weakness, s and ailments, soi l by dr iggists, und r a pitive guarantee frem the maiuHai tur ers, that it will give satisfaction in every case, or money will lie refunded. See guarantee on w rapper around bottle. Looking Ahead. "Yoa must lie very fond of n.e," she murmured as she leaned her golden head against his tricot vest. "What make you think so?" be asked in tones of tenderness. ; "Because you have only known ni a week, and yet my little brother snys that he has seen you hanging around our house every day since we became acquainted. Such ardor, I am afraid, will not tilsT. "Shall I tell you why I bave been hanging an. und yonr bouse during the day ?"he asked.. is be pn-SHed the tiny hand which nestled so lovingly and so confidently in bis own. "Tell me." "I a:n trying to g't acquainted with the dog." B''t n Cirrfr. In the Music Room Sunday. Mani l a at the pianno Now, iieor gie, what shall we sins? .Something f..r Sun l iv, you know? Ge ir.'ie after thought la-' 's, sing, "Shall We io tt Swimming?" I Maunia Why, torg!e, there's n I such hymn as that. fiert.e I guew. mamma. Shall We liather at the Kivt be tii-ans, -.... Smoke a Disinfectant. In.l''iri fiaitr SVv. We relerresl some time since to the re vival of tl.e opinion that tobacco smoke is disinfectant. This was the old im pression, which scientific men, :iftsrs..i. investigation, deei le 1 ti be entirely fa". But this is ai age of revivals, and science is beginitig to find that it has sometimes spiiken in haste. TLisaeeins to Is. t!i cae with th" "super-tition" aVuif the posession by tobacis, m ke of disinfect ing power. There is a basis of scientif ic fact which tends to bwir out that claim. Some scientific and medical journals have lately published an arco'int of soiif ex periments by .llr. V. Tassinari. which were devised in .order to put the 'j'ies tion to a further and decisive 'est. Smoke from a cigar or cigin-'te WHS drawn over a pi-ce of lin-m hi 1 be'n diprtel into a ihi.d contaii numbers of niicnib". v hen the cigar was finish" ! the li:i- i . , . . . n W'AA at finis, njr. I o a In' I'nn i i. en was at on'-e pi :ng a ii q-iid in which some g r in cm,: breed and multiply. Th" : was repeated with a nmn'ier of ent micro-organisun, iii.-hj iing t.ioe if cholera, anthrax, and pneumonia, ari l of course, check experiments were also made in which the s-noking wis omitted. ln everj case llie eil.-t of ti" smoke mi greatly to delay the growth of th orgin is'iis. and in :ne iisftnees it was en- tireiy prevented. It thus ap;ers that tobat smoke is as faUl to th scopic forms of life ai it is to the small inse-t plague which mfet our grH-n- i"lwv l,irlt- .The author pp.ses t. f""ow aI investigat 'alioris :u tie' horf ,ilnt Pt ' to i wnicn us gruiicn:ai trois-rtv m . iu 21..1 so of possitdy a-l ling a new dii!,fe 'aiIt to the long list of ttiose we have. Again the Cigarette. His Satanic majesty nt m'k ing s r"ran;l"' ,Jre""'' """'" hr l b? ,he V 'f the TrwUr. A What's no. your stupendous high- news?" queried the scrib-. " Nothing particular. I a"" rivi bave g-'t a rraze on earth fl.r lb-homing rat'le. 1 Mm f0"1 P "P witM the pfe- !" if I del.rfD every imo i.1 j . so, vour nui'-stv. You're r,o medhrvsl devil ; you're a nin. teen.'it cen tury fiend." " You bet. I'm abreast of the earrwt I cwednesa of the day, Ifc.n"t yon see I'm smoking a cigarette - ...... . .