Somerset Herald. tSTBLisMto tear. 0f jPabHcation. Wednesday morning CM r -u. in advance, otherwise f.1 50 ;3f" . mill be rationed entll All. v . ... naid P. PoMmW-en neglecting stn ulcra do not take oat i li held pwsib" fof tbe ub- a' if-'' Bfi, ;r- from one portofflc to ? . i eve n. tbe lh fonB The - rr T - inv'""- bouT. Pa. .nidtt-o . - aiiu r.A.rA. ,w3fc JohnE.rU. .r S. ENL-? ' -x- t.t W. 1. " omexv. A. atth iinenet. rw. J. G. Ogle. J bustAASXT, Pi aomeraet. Pn. attention tori-ineentniel ' r-fjwr d emug coucuea. ViK--- uuUiw",,'l'iU! TOT. F.-CHFXLj -erPA- pcsoii AgecL OS in MAmmoUi . tt-T IT 1 v: Estt- Will attend to U J Ai. ua.. toen- v .. -.. J . v i . entree to hi iXEiLPTGH. tiw ". .. I .t.rf .; lri btumenA Atr I L. C COLBGA. . "LB' A C0LBOK , I n.miZ4eL J- I - I w .-r-int-d to our car. wi" eua.TAUciu don. en rt" C LEAFR. .e. W.H.BCITK. c 'vFFEOTH A RITPPEL, e,tfaewet, Pm. iT et.trj"'l to their cat. will ..t tad tnDrt.uLiiT Ati':aJM u. y.u ) nriMTISTS. AtTS-Tdsr- Ira &wre, Somerset, r.j i -f: Tr-Ai::ii; to Der.ti.-try ki!lful- 't: "'.JIfeiu lnrted lUn-ul vlu. I ' .i.n!5.'!(l-l. 1 MA I t nni'THny. M. D. j t r:. l -.v ..1-1 a- .... .-, r. yjwt. nrxt door to iTiuliii v v ;i rFTR. 1 1" '. . r. v .vi.irp.r.mv. ... v . ... a1 c u the citiiens t vi.rvs t- .1 V-.ciar.T ctuc next dr to Jjl E s. KIMiiELL, Tti5fta.rf.-ijrl wrliw to thf ritUeni i.-: it :-ae t louao Ai tu on.ee on . FjiJ.iL LOUTKER, FEYsI-.'LLS A"I sURGF-OS, tKfrt'f in Somerset fcr th. hH.J.S.M-MILLEX, T x i::rnt:in to the j.reerTAtion of tl tti. Aru 'Ai in?rtl. All 5''- rx-: -. -; wt:.-c-tory. C'3ic in U. '"n i M Iwif.i at Co. (uve, corner Oils! Oils! l-A-i r'" Orr-i.-?. of P.ttsborrt, Ps, - oj uiAL;uiatauniir lor ba. ait L'Je UK toe briid of -i: a ingi Lubricating Oils fcphtha and Gasoline. 0? TSSSlsun. Eros wh the meet uniformly ; . StlSiaCtOrV OlIS 7 THE I -aerican Market, fjr Buoertet And TidnltJ ifplied by CVMT ft BEmiTI" Airs a - . ICUSA A AOh.H (tuMUAAT. rA. -FINE OLD ' 7 K I S K I E S im .n in bolt and by the , TOX MOCSS 'Bailor, eccrzsBEixzt, gibsoxs xzxx wsisnxs. 'iPTl p:al rBnta. Cornae, wnbor 'korrryfor.iUL" Ab, --c Ma-M t-nrt hye V, hlaki, ?ISHER & CO., . . . .. on jiAin v-iu cui l'ylir ix A g--- LIQUORS I llie VOL. XL. NO. -THE- FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF Somerset, Penn'a. o CAPITAL SURPLUS - S50.000 7,OOC DCPOITW MCCEIVCDIN LAHCC AND SMALL AMOUNTS. PATASLC ON OCMAND. ACCOUNTS OF M ENCHANTS. FARMERS, STOCK DC ALIAS. AND OTHERS SOLICITED DISCOUNTS DAILY. BOARD OF DIRECTORS : L Res M. H ins. "W. H. Millax, t Jakes L. Proa, Char. H. Fiehke, Joha R. Scott, Gxo. R. Sctll, FlU W. BlXBECXAA. 1 Edward Sctll, : : : : Preridkst Valxxtixk Hat. : : Vies Pkssidknt IIabvet M. Berklev, : : : Cashiak. tir of this bank Km KuTvl-r-proof tsife. The only Safe made abeolately iiursiax-prooi. Somerset County National Bank Of Somerset, Pa. ft EstAblUlMt, t877. OrcAit'rfri At t NitiMAl, 189C. -O. CAPITAL $50 000. Chas. J. Harrison, Pres't Wm. H . Koontz, V ice rres t. Milton J. Pritts, Cashier. DlRECTORS: Wm. Fn.!lrr. Jocv X ooA, J. .ha ikuffl. HAmx aoTdjr, w,i-hi libenU traiunt-iii eonusluit wilo a: ouit. .l.kl.. An IMTUT Mid M WOt OS ruuw ' 0 --- .. ..... y be AcooDnnJAted 1J onunor mj iuwi vr 4 Mtn.l.!M mmiI hT OTl. Of T1- bol l Ceiebrwiwi iAfe, wi'.a moi Approved time WCL. r!nTln1nn tn.de In all r-U of the UnlMd Siaml Ch.rpc moderte CURTIS K. GROVE, SOMERSET, PA. BCOGIES, 6LEGH3, CAERIaGEv BPBISG WAGO.N3, BCCK WAGOKa AXI IASTZKS A SD WESTERS WORE rnroixbed on Short Notice. Painting Done on Short Time. ijT wnTk I, mrfront f 7Vrrjc)r SmMrd Wood, Vmi!i P1r.lhrd. And ConstractM. NeAiiy Pr.whcd. And Enplcy C2I7 Fint Class Vorknea. nr of All Klnfl, in If r Line Ione OS Kouoe. Prk-c RAaoJi ABLi, and All Work Warranted -.n .nil TumlH mT Stock. ad Learn Prtee I do Won-work, And famish BeiT. foe Wind KOa Bemember tte piAee. ana cah in. CURTIS K. GROVE, (la of Court Bonw) SOX EE SET. PA B. & B. Fifty Pieces Rne Australian WOOL SUITIHGS, Ane of the most dirable fAbrics for Spring Dresses. InTlsible stnpe. cbeck And P!iasinAlltbeS..ftB.TAnnd Grey t.:., Minchea wide W cents jr yard fcr the elegit wide rtxds. Vigogne and Chevron All- Wool Suitings. inches wide, At 4- s yard, mAke you wonder where the profit in them is-jm p A good .-hAre of it if yon get the RoodA 36 inch All-wool SuitiDgs, INDIA SILKS. 22 1 27 ichf wlif, iOe, 60e, 6ic, fl.00 U f 2,00. Write oor MaU Order Department for full n MUlPKf Ol ow uij Sew CaUlogue And FAshion JooniAl free to any addrtn. NEW! Boggs & Buhl, 115, 117, 110 121 Federal Srtd, .-iLLEGEEXY, FX. 41. It is to Yom Interest TO BCT FR Drugs and Medicines JOHS H. SHYDEB. STCCEt0B TO Biesecker k Snyder. None bet the purett And bst kept in toci. And wbeu Drugs beuome inert ty stand ing, as certain of them do, we de stroy them, rather tLan im pose on oar customers. Too can depend on having your PRESCRIPTIGNS & FAMILY RECEIPTS filled with care. Our prices are aa low i any other first-claaa house and on macy articles much lower. The people of this county seem to kno this, and have given us a Urge shAre of their patronage, and we shall still continue to gi them the very best goods tor their money. Do not JiPFrt that we make a specialty of FITTING TRUSSES. We guarantee satisfaction, and, if you bare had trouble in this direction, gire us a call. SPECTACLES AND EYE-GLASSES in great TarietT : A full act of Test Lenses. Come in and hare your eyes examined. Ko charge for examination. And we Are confidant we can suit you. Come and see us. Respectfully, JOHN N. SNYDER. FANCY WORK. Some Great Bargains In IRISH POINT LUNCH AND TRAY CLOTHS. Bought below cost of transportation we are selling at great bargains white and colored Bedford Cord Table Cov en, tuml ready for working. Sing ed Canton Flannel Table and Cush ion Covers, Ringed llcih Cushion Covers, Bargarran Art Cloth Tabla And Cuhhion Covers, all stamped with Newest Designs ; Hem-stitched Hot Biscuit and Roll Napkin. A new and large line of hem-etiu bed Tray and Carving Clotha from UOcta tip.' Stamped Hem-stitched fcarfe from 3-cts op. Table -Covers from 50 eta. np. A full line of Figured INDIA SILKS, All New Patterns And Colorings. Also, Figured Plush, 21 And .13 inches wide, in beautiful Colors And lesigns. Art Satin Squares for the Ceutral Covers And Cushion Covers. "Waloaii jSTet tiller, 4T,inches wide, M cents per yH. in Pink, Bin-. Olive And Yellow THE XKW TH1NU for Draping Mantles and Doors, and for Draping Over Druerin. A new tine of iieail-reMs !romz-cup. Viit our Table I-inen, Towel, Xapkins, Muslin, Sheeting and Linen Department, by all means. i FIFTH AVENUE. Pittsburgh, Pa. AMERICAN HOTEL. Owned and Operated by S. P. SWEITZER, Cumberland, Md. This hotel Is firtt-cla in all it Aj-poiiiUnenw. rerowieM and refurntae.i. and the l.net lot a Uon in the city, at the head of Baltimore erect, htteet car, las it door every few momenta. First-elaw J.rters Atictid ail trains. Lujrjjajre to the Hotel free of cnarge. directly back of the bold i a Cr-4-clAHi Iiivery Eslablisliment, here rip of aH 5c!criior'n be hal at mod erate rales. The bar of this Hotel i nocked itn the iineet irraJ of Whiie, Wine and Been. Alao on baud a large stock of Imported Cigars. Person, antieipatln matrimony can have their trooWe ar.d care rwJoted to notbing by rur pice at tib Hotei wber. li"en ran be p eured without extra charge. Don't he taien in bv eolored barfcmcn, but come direct to tb Hotel. The undersigned bu on hand a Urge Mock of SOMERSET COUNTY WHISKY, Old Eye, Which he offer, at Wholesale and in small quautitiea, at tbe following prices: Two Year old at S3 25 per fallon. Three " " M - Four " " SJ 00 " - Addren alll order, to S.w. 157, 159. and 161 Bal timore SC. tumberUnd, Hi. 8. P. SWEITZER, Proprietor. Jacob D. Swank, Watchmaker nd Jeweler, Sext door west of Lutheran Church. Somerset, Pa. Uaving opened up a sliop ia tliis place, I am now prepared to sup ply tlie public with clocks, watches and jewelry of all descriptions, us cheap as the cheapest. KEPAmiNO A SPECIALTY. All work guaranteed. Look at my stock before making your pmr- chascs. WantWorkERS Salary or Commission to good men. Fast eclliiig imported Specialties ; also full hoe OUAltANTEED XTRSEEY STOCK. Rr.vi faHine to live replAOsd rut HOME WARD Somerset SOMERSET, PA., WEDNESDAY, Sev. James P. Stone of Lower Cabot. VL. fonuerly of P-AltOD, ST. IL A Faithful Pastor Is held in high esteem by his people, and his opinion upon temporal as well as spiritual matters is valued greatlv. The following is from a clergyman long influential in Neir England, now spending well earned rest in Cabot, Vt. : C I. Hood & Co., LowelL M " We have used Hood s Sarsaparilla In onr family fur many years past, with treat best. .At, We have, with confidence, recom nirDded It to others fr th-ir various ail nieutt almost ail of whom have cerulied to" grel beuelit by its use. We can Honestly and Cheerfully recommend it as the Wrat hlo4 pariSer we have ever tried. We have used others, but none ith the beneficial effects of Hood's. Also, we tln-m flood's 1'ills and Olive IMnl ment iitali. Mrs. fitone sars she canuot do without icem." Kav. J. P. Sjio.nb. Better than Cold Mr. Ceo. T. Clapp, of Eastondale, Mius., says: "I am 82 years of age, and for 30 years have suffered with running sores on one of my lees. A few years aito 1 had two bies amputated, physicians saving I was suffer ing (rum gangrene and bad but A Short Time to Live Eight months ago as a neighbor creed me, I tegan taking Hood's Sarsaparilla. Tbe whole lower part of my kr and foot was a Pill l:i MB sore, but it has a linos I completely healeil and I can truthfully say that I am ia avetwr aralta than I have been fr many years. I have taken no other medicine and consider that I owe ail niy Improvement to Hood's Sarsaparilla It is better than gold." " ekeerf.lly verify the above statement of Mr. Clapp, w hom I have known 30 years." J. M. How ABD, Druggist, Kastondale, Mass. HOOD'S PlLLS aw purely vegvubia, JKOSST CASES CURCO TO 1T tUHtD ir uncos X1CATC0 .V O.SA.IC oi.essi NEW GOODS AT Knepjer & Ferner's. It is oar aim to present at eve ry sea?on a Line of Goods of the Newest Fatterns and Lat est Stylos. We have labored hard in selecting a stock for the coming ca?on, and are glad to say that we have succeeded in buying goods that are su perb in style, and at prices that have the magnetic power to draw and retain trade. CLOTHING I Xever before have we bought such fine styles in Mens' and Youths', Boys' and Childs' Clothing. These Goods are un nnapproachablc iu quality and price. CARPETS. This season we are offering a larger assortment, better styles and lower prices in all grades of Carpeting, Matting, and Oil Cloths and Kug?, than ever be fore. DRESS GOODS. We are daily gaining trade in this department, consequently have bought a large stock, adapted to fill the wants of everyone. Ems1 FURiims, A large and complete stock just received, and are now pre pared to furnish all who want a siecialty in this line. We introduce correct styles as soon as out. We also carry a full stock of Window Shades, Trunks and Sacliels, Rubber Clothing, &c. We takerrenuine pleasure in hav ing our friends inspect the above novelties. KNEPPER & FERNER, hmi,ia.tl i4r A P.HAROLO HAVES M.o7"fc?ssV X illfrt LO. N T ZjrT7"ii"ii i One Door North of PostofUce. ESTABLISHED 18537. A TRUE HEART. Red are the lips of my darling, my dear, Sweet are tbe lips of my own ; Lov. like a bee at herboddlnf month sips. Drunken with panton befor he has flown. But oh, and oh. Bed lips wiU rale some day, WhUt a true heart lists for aye. Gray are the eyes of my darling, my dear. Bright arc the eyes of my queen. Fond at the dreaming of tropical skies. Glad a the rivulet s midsummer sheen. But oh, and on. Bright ey wiU dim some day, -While a true heart la-ts for aja. Brown a thl tress of icy darling my dear, Silken this tress of my fair. Brown with a hint of the sua I tenderness Twined in the strands ofher beautiful hair. But oh, and oh, Kleek kictj wiU thin some day, While a true heart wears !or aye. Praises beloug to my darling, my dear. Love is but due to my sweet ; So here I pluck from the garden of song This tiny bluaum to thjuw at her fevL But oh, and oh. Beauty will fade soma day. While a true heart huu for aye. A HYPOCHONDRIACS TREAT MENT. " nosh, hush, Nellie !" aaid Mrs. Bcl- ton, holding up a warning linger as her daughter sprang up the steps with a gay laugh. " Your father b Buffering very much this Afternoon, and is trying to sleep. lie is in the Hitting room on the lounge, hero I made him go as it is much cooler there." " What's the matter now T said Nel lie, with her pretty face curiously un changed by the news of her father 'a in- disposition. Oh, just one ofh's nervous "pells! and I think he said he had a headache, too. I broiled him a bird, and he seemed to relish it, and drank some buttermilk of the morning's churning." " Well, then, :f he can eat and enjoy buttermilk," remarked the girl, with a a short laugh, " he is not eo very bad off. Be honest, now, mother, do you believe much in father's ailments? No, no ; don't you frown, but tell the truth ! Aren't his appetite and looks too good for there to bs much the matter with Lim ? I declare I have ca git Dr. Easier smiling broad ly several times when he has been here to see father, and it was ail he could do to keep him from laughing in his face." Mrs. Bellon's kindly fare wore a balf- Amnaed, hAtf-fiigbtened expression' as she lititenod to her daughter, but she an swered, demurely: How can you talk so, Nellie? Of course your father is ill, or w hy should he feign to be so V " He likes petting and coddling, just like a baby, and, mother, I really believe yon know it is mainly his imagination that is at work, but yon have got in the habit of waiting on Lim and humoring his fancies until you dit as a matter of course. iNow, own up. uo you oeiieve in his sickness to-day ?' The mother evaded the clear, troth- compelling eyes turned np to her own, but she laughed, and whimpered back to her : " Well, he did eat about sis biscuits with that bird, and drank three glasses of the buttermilk and disposed of near- a third of a lata of my strawberry preserves. Nellie caught her mother in Ler arms with a .hout of delight. Bravo ! bravo ! You Lave owned it, and that is half the at tie. Mother, I know in the bottom cf your heart, kind and gentle as it is, you are tired of father's morbid fancies, and of ministering to his imaginary ailments. And it ia lime something was done to arouse hiui, or be will become a confirm ed hypochondriac, for he is nearly that now. I believe I could break him." "No, yon couldn't, child. I ued to try and get him to shake off his despon dency, and not to think so much of his little aches and pains, but I was only calied nnfeeling fcr my exertions. " Well, I would Approach him differ ently. J.uten, mother, i nave a plan. ' And the two heads, one still brown and handsome, in spite of the fine lines of silver over the temples and the other a bright chestnut, drew close together, and in the golden sunshine of the beauti ful September day a dark plot was form ed, and w hen Rob Harper came strolling in with the most purposeless aix that ever conceived a purpose, the same was im ported to him nhder seal of secrecy. And then, when Xellie chanced to walk asf.r as the turn of the road as Rob took his way home, the doctor, driving past, was halted, and made a partner likewise in the mysterious business. The afternoon slipped Away And the day had given place to the purple twi light when Hiram Beltoa awoke from his pleasant nap and stretched out his hand for the pitcher of ice water usually placed right by his side on such occasions by bis devoted wife, but this time he felt in vain. He pressed his Land on his ferehead and groaned twice, thrice, very heavily, but there was no one who came tip-toeing into the room to bend over him and beg to know what could be done. His groans grew louder and more alarm ing and still they produced no effect, so presently the invalid raised himself slow ly, and advancing to the door, called faintly : " Barbara T He returned to his couch at once, but no Barbara answered, but in a few min utes Nellie came nonchalantly singing into the room. "That yon, father?" she said, care- lesaly. Have yon taken a lazy spell, too?" A groan was the reply, which only brought forth, " Drank too much butter milk, eh ? I did myself, and I tell you it ,ve me a pain." "Where's your mother V put ia the insulted invalid, glaring at his daugh ter. Gone to bed. She had a headache aad I aiade her go, for there really was no reason for her keeping np if she felt indisposed." " So reason.1" snorted Mr. Belton. " And me as ill as I am ! I wonder who sha thinks is goiDg to nurse me ; but itis like a woman to give up to the slightest ache or pain, and justj when they are needed the most." 7 "Oh, you will be all right in an hoar or two ! Father, if yoa don't mind I'll go to prayer-meeting with Hob Harper. By the way, mother said would" yoa please get the churn ready for her, and here's the key to the dairy. fche was gone before her; irate parent could frame the catting speech be bad in APRIL G, 1892. mind, in which he mingled a serpent tooth, an ungrateful child, his wife's un accountable and preposterous failure to perform her wifely duties, and tbe heart- lees madness of expecting hiua to rise from a couch of pain and illness to set a churn. He lay and pondered the thing over. They were evidently growing; in credulous on the subject of bis ailments and needed a lesson, a severe one, to bring them back to their Allegiance. In the meAOwhile Nellie, leaning on ber lover's Arm, confided to him thafFather always fell ill so opportunely, and recov ered with such surprising readiness when be fonnd that illness was inconvenient. They both laughed, but a quick remorse smote the girl when on their return they saw lights glaucing about the house, and heard a man-servant, on a horse, go tear ing after the doctor, and Mrs.. Belton met them with : "Ob, Nellie, your father is dying, dy ing 2 It is a judgment on as for our wick ed doubting of him this afternoon. Oh, I can never, never forgive myself!" But when Nellie, followed by Bob, en tered the darkened room where her fa ther lay, the color came back to her cheeks and ber eyes lost thir look of horror, for w ith singular blundering Bob picked up the shaded lamp, and, turning the wick to its greatest height, let the bright stream of light fall igbt on tbe sufferer's face, so that his daughter saw that the dying man's countenance. was still very healthily tinted. " Oh, oh, oh !" groaned Mr. Belton. Turn that lamp down ! Is that you, Nel lie, daughter ? Well, kiss your poor fath er, and tell him good-bye. Oh; oh !" 'Here, yoa are going to faint, Mlos Neliie. Go oat in tbe fresh air at once," said Rob, and as the door closed on the girl, tamed to Mr. Belton with, ' Toor girl ! And she to be married so goon to Joe Banner ! Your death will put her eddingoff, won't it ?" " What!" yelled Mr. Belton, forgetting to groan and sitting np in bed. " Joe Banner ! Not if I have to kill him !" The Banners and Beltons hated each other as cn!y people in small places and over small. matters have time to. " Has snch a tl ing been going on behind my back? I'll-ril!" "Oh, don't, dear!" icterposed poor Mrs. Belton. Yoa will icjare yourself Lie quiet till the doctor comes. I am sure Rob is mistaken about Joe Banner. Why, Nellie never speaks tohim.aud be sides, she and Rob are " " Here's the doctor !" exclaimed R b, ehicg to open the door And cutting Mrs. Belton short in her explanation Dr. Lester came in looking suspiciously grave, for there w as a very inconsistent winkle in his eyes. He flt Mr. Belton's pul.e And locked graver still, whi'.e the inkle fairly set bis eyes to dancing, and then with a certain reluctance in his voice, said : " I most not conceal from yoa, my dear sir, that yoa are suffering from cere- bro-tpinal menirgitis, combined with tcnemia of themeduiloblongata. How is it you never consulted me about it before. Didn't you suipect it ?" No-o," said the patient, looking sca.'- d and wbite. "Doctor will will it it-rit be fatal ?" Tbe doctor turned first and requested Mis. Belton and Rob to leave the room. which they did, when he Addressed him self to tbe sick man : I feel it my duty to tell yoa the truth. You haven't one hour to live !" "Oh, oh, oh! Save me, doctor! I'll give Jou $50) to do it a thousand dol larsmy wnole place anything any thing only save me !"' Cant do it," said the doctor, shaking bis head. "Face it like a man, Belton. lun't trouble about your wife and fami- y. Mary's married. Nelly could be to morrow, and as for Mrs. Belton, Marks, tho widower, said yesterday she wastha handsomest woman still in the county, and that if she was only rid of you he'd ask ber the day after the funeral. "What! shrieked the dying man, flinging himxelf out cf bed, and dancing over the floor as if it was red hot "To Jericho with my cerebro-spiting whatever you call it, and my oblong medal ! Die '. No, I'll not die not for a hundred years ! Yoa make tracks, Dr. Lester, this minute; I'm tired of your bread pills. Yes, they were bread, and. I knew it all along. The idea of a man's wife and daughter plan ning, aye building on his death, and pro posing before theibreath'a eut of his body to dance over his grave !" Here Mr. Belton grew a little mixed in his language, but he knew what he meant and that was ail that was necessary. It was hours before be could be got to quiet down, and days before he ceased to growl inarticulate and mysterious threats direct ed aginst no one could quite gather horn. But from that time on, Mr. Bel ton has never complained of an ache or pain, and fiercely disclaimed feeling even under the weather whenever informed that be looks eo. Columbus no Saint. Bct who was this, famous navigator and what were his character and aims? The common legend paints him in saint like and superhuman colors. Ne man was so wise, gentle, learned, studious, humane. To several of Lis recent biographers he is without a fault, a Numa, a Washington, with even a higher aim. With more than chivalric austerity he prepares himself for bis rare achievement Heaven guides him on his wy ; he works miracles ; sorrows and a mictions follow him ; majestic and godlike, he passes a way, from among men, without a fault. Such he is to I V Lorgues,Bil!oy,ana the Abbe Cadoret Irving's delightful biography admits his faults, but softens them into venial errors. His hero is clothed in the fairest drapery of Lis matchless style The common legend has filled all modern histories, until the whole story of Colum bus is wrapped in a cloud of falsehood. A nd yet there is some troth in the picture. Columbus pooeesed an unrivalled strength of character and will, a mind of rare power and sagacity. He was strong as Hercules in forcing bis way into dis tant seas, but, unlike Hercules, rather committed than redressed wrongs. Never was there a more striking difference than that between tbe traditional Columbus of the biographers and the Columbus of true history, of his contemporaies. From Tbe Mystery of Columbus," by Eccese Lab AIM z, ia ZTarixr' Jfuoarifie for April. - Political candidates are always prom ising men. era The Columbus of History. Tbe Columbus of Lietory is one of its least pleasing characters. He was evi dently a sea-rover and a buccaneer. He sold his services to Rene of Anjoa or Charles of France indifferently. A rude, uneducated seaman, he joined ia the barbarous sea-fight off St. Vincent, and aided in the massacre of honest traders and useful men. Time somewhat so.ten ed his harsher traits, but Lis early im pulses never left him. ne became famil iar with the slave trade in Portugal, and introduced it to the New World. He treated the natives of the new land with pitiless severity. He threw them into chains, cut off their bands and feet, or sold them as cannibals to misery and death. Ho probably invested tbe fic tion the Caribs only to destroy tbeni. Las Casas thought that the judgments of heaven had fallen upon the merciless discoverer. In almoet every trait of moral excel lence Columbus seems eqnaliy wanting. To the Spanish settlers in HLspaciola be was a bated tyrant, a cruel usurper. He threw Mexico over the walls of his fort with his own hands andspu-ned him as he fell His victims, bung by the neck, shocked the humanity of Boba lilla. It was believed that Columbus anl his brothers planned a new empire in the Indies and hoped to tkrow off the yoke of Spain. In later years Columbus en gaged in a treasonable correspondence with Genoa. His ingratitude to the Pin- rons, his betrayal of Beatrix Fcriiiuei, his falsehoods, his tierce bursts of 'rage, his avarice, his revenge, his will am bi- tion, his pious frauds, his fanatical faith, can never be forgotten, they may l-e lor given. Harsh, fierce, severe, the features of Columbus look down upon us over the flight of four centuries, tho symbol of his cruel age. Columbus found the natives cf Ameri ca fill cf the pab'.on for gold. The glit tering particles Lad for them an irresisti ble attraction, aa to so many aa what are called the educated races. They search ed in tho rivers and sanJj for gold, and when they had found it hung it in their ears and noe9. Sometimes the more highly cultivated beat it into plates, which they fastened around their necks. It was their chief and almost only orna ment, almost their only dress; they used, too, paint, feathers and strings of pearli Toe universality of this strange I-asion for the ductile metal in civilized and savsg man is without an explana tion ; it is natural. We are told that there are ants that Leap together glitter ing particles of precious or colored stones ; it is their instinct. In Columbia the f-'- sion raged with a viulence seldom known. He dreamed of gulden palaces, hea;-3 of treasure and mines teeming with end less wealth. His cry was everywhere for gold. Every moment, ia Lis fler.e avarice, he would fancy himself on the brink of a boundless opulence ; he was alwavs a bo at to seize the Ea.-t painted by Marco Polo and Mandevilie. "Gold," he wrote to the King and Qaeen, "is the most valuable thing in the world ; it res cues souls from purgatory and restores them to the joys of paradize." It was something cf Lis early pirate life that stirred him in Lis plans of dis- sr. sj covery. lie was always ice cuccaneer; he was always a slave-trader. He select ed the port of Navidad becaa-o it seem-e-1 a convenient harbor for t'ave ships. He made slaves wherever he went. In hia fierce avarice, when be found the ca ked Indian bad little gold, he proved to sell them and thus establish a wise source cf profit. Gold he must make by some means. He urged upon the King and Q ieen h:3 infamous project. They seerr.e.l at first to disapprove and after ward countenanced it. They could scarcely fail to see that hunting the help less natives through the islands and the continent to sell them into slavery wjs not a Christlike trade. Tbeyi gently re buked the discoverer, but soon after we find them lending Lim their approval. "Let him be informed," they wrote, "of what has transpired respecting the can nibals that came to Spain. He hss tlor.e well," etc Soon every Spaniard who siilei to America becam" a slave-trader. Ojeda and Americas Yespacius filled their ships with "cannibals," and the brothers of Columbus followed the ex ample of the admiral. A boundless hor ror settled upon tbe new-discovered lands. Las Casas thought the fcicknees and pains that fell noon Columbu the judgment for the woes he had indicted upon the help'.eas Indians. llxr-t Indian Courage. The annals of no country can show any savage foe so formidable for his numbers to trained regular troops of the white race as the American Indian. The tles of the sepoy rebellion, replete as tbey are with heroic achievements cf British sol disrs, rea-i like absurd fairy tales to In dian fighters of our array. The specta cle, repeated again and again of a score or so of these Englishmen riding through as many thousands of opposing sepoys. disciplined and thoroughly supplied w ith the best of firearm, would be a very novel one to those accustomed to the temper of the savage of our own conti nent. Had Captain Jack, or Joseph crGeron imo, with such warriors as they led, been the sort of foes to attack the English power in India, the history of Delhi and Lucknow would have been aritten in far darker characters on tbel psges of Eng lish history. Self reliant, intelligent, fierce in battle, inimitable horsemen, armed .with the modern rifle, our own Indians bare often waged successful bat tle with regular troops unsurpassed in quality and far outnumbering them. It is doubtful if even the Cosback or Arab can be compared with them in partisan warfare. ILirper'$ H7ty. Cold Comfort. Mr. Slimpuree. " To-to tell the truth, I am a-a little afraid to-to atk jour fath er for your band." Miss Char-it. "Ob, yoa needn't wor ry. He says I am ruinously extrava gant" .Yew York Wtfk'ii. A Prophecy. Dasha way. "There is one thing about it. Pit never marry a girl who doesn't dress welL Cleverton. "But suppose yoa cant af ford to keep it np. What tl enT Dashaway. "She won't be so poor as that." WHOLE NO. 2123 The Sunflower. In return for the corn which Uncle Sam propose to teach the Rassians how to eut, it is seriously suggested that we shall adott a few hints from them re specting the usefulness of the sanllower. There are regions in the West which might be meet profitably utilized for the colli vat ion of this plant, which has been f jund so valuable for food purposes in the empire of the Czar thAt S.",000 Acre in that country are annually planted w ith it. Two kinds there Are chiefly one which bears small seeds used in making oil while the other produce big seeds, which are consumed in enormous quantities by the common people in the same way that peanuts are eaten here, except that they are devoured raw. There is hardly another plant in the world which serves so many uses, every part of it being valuable for one purpose or another. The oil is so nutritious and agreeable in flavor that in Russia it has to a certain extent superseded all other vegetable) oils. It is obtained by passing the seeds be neath millstones so aa to crush the shells, fculicgthem tosep&iate the kernels and finally pressing the latter in bags of horse hair cloth. The cakes left after the oil has been expressed are .excellent fodder f jt cattle. The shells are employed for heating, special ovens being ma le to born them in, while the stalks have almost replaced firewood, being gathered and dried in stacks in the fields. A ton of the latter s obtained from each acre cultivated. They make a very hot and quick fire. Tbe seed cups are utilized as food for nheep. A big one when ripe will yield 2,UX seed's. The largest and finest seed cups are selected in the autumn and hung by their ta!ks in a dry place. In the following spring the seeds are shaken out of them and dried in ovens for piantitg. At harvest time the flow ers are gathered as fast as they Are ripe and spread upon the ground to dry. Then the seeds are beaten out of them with a small stick by whipping each cup. Finally the seeds are dried in the sun or in kiins and are sorted by means of screens into different sijes. An acre planted with sunflowers yields 2,0) pounds of seeds, from which ix pounds of oil may be obtained. Ten million quarts of this oil are produced by Itussian mills. Wl'o knows teat the time may not yet come when smail boys ia this country wid gobble sunflower seeds at the circus just as they low consume the festive and odoriferous goober? Specimen Cases. S. II. Clifford, New Cassel, Wis., was troubled with Neuralgia and Rheuma tism, bis Stomach was disordered, his Liver was affected to an alarming degree, appetite fell away, and he was terribly reduced in flesh and strength. Three bottles of Electric Bitters cured Lim. Edward shepherd, Uarris'jurg, Il!n had a running eure on bis leg cf eight years' standing. Used three bottles of Electric Bitters and seven boxes of Back leii'i Arnica Salve, and his leg is sound and well. John Speaker, Catawba, O bad live large Fever Sores on his leg, doctors raid be was incurable. One bot tle Electric Bitters and one box Buck len's Arai.-a Salve cured him entirely. Sold at J. N. Sayder"s Drag store. A Fatal Success. The little woman was blue and looked tired, and of course tbe neighbors drop ped in and trid to sympathize with bsr. The little woman said that she was worn out with sewing and asked the neighbor if she bad ever tried to do any Fewing on her husband's ciothes. " Why, yes, poor dear," replied the neighbor. " It is bard work, and then one but a tailor can ever satisfy a man. I worked two days once trying to fix overa coat for my husband, aad then he only growled and gnrabled and took it to a tailor to Lave it all done ever again." "My experien-'e was worse than that," said the littie oman, sadly. " My bus Land was always growling because he had to go to a tailor fjr everything, and' finally in pure desperation I undertook toput cew 'lining, in the sleeves of his overcoat." " I know, I know," broke in the neigh bor. "Awfully hard to make them fit just right, and to got a color that will suit a oian." " Yes, but I consulted him about tbe color, and then took the oil linings out and studied theaa to see how they were cut I couldn't have them too loose or too tight, yoa know." " Of coarse not. And when it was all done and you felt that yoa had earned bis thanks, yoa waited for Lim to say something that would please yoa, and be didnV "Oh, he didn't." " He j'ist growled out that five-year-old girl could do as well as that, and that it would all Lavo to be torn out Again. ".o, 1 wish he had. He tried it on and said that it was fairly well done and he gueseed he'd never have to go to a tailor again for repairs, and be hasn't. That's what makes me so tired to day. Oh, if I only had it to do Over again, I'd fix it so he couldn't get that coat on." Danger in Reaching Land. A little boat usually brings its occu pants fafely within sight of a ahm or laud. If yoa are ever cast away by shipwreck, choose that yoa may sight a ship rather than land. Only too often tbe fierce storm ia weathered and the hopeful crew sail ever hundreds of miles of sunny seas, almost as if on a pleasure trip, until the g'ad sight of land greets their eyes, and their troubles seem but a a dream of the past, when suddenly they are 'plunging through a mass of white and broken water, and amid the roar of crash icg waves tbe little boat is lifted And twisted and flung about until dashed into fragments upon jagged rocks, while thoee survivors of terriole storm and shipwreck and of unaccounted miles of open ocean, are thrown nton the sonny beach which g'addeoed their hearts, cruelly battered, er perhaps even lifeless. Almost always. too, this is due'to their not knowing how to handle their boat at this crowning. ? critical moment, when but a few hun dred yards remain of a thousand mile jurney from ship to shore. S. icAofc. The Young Parson's Cayenne. That a little fun now and then i relish ed by the bci4 as well as the wist of men. ia not infreqnently illustrated in the social meetirgo of tbe Protestant elergy of the city. They tcjcy a good joke aa heartily as anyone, and set a few of the St. Louis ministf rs are capital story tel lers. As an intance'the following ludi crous anecdote is given as related the other day by an old and prominent min ister: "Many years -since," he said, "when simon-pure universalistn was preached, Lf hanoed to be ia Indianapolis daring the convection of minister of that faith. Stopping at.the hotel where I did was a young parson who had come from the East to Attend the convention. A i afterwards developed be bad taken tbe precaution in viaiticg tkat malarious country to carry a vial of cayenne pep per in his pocket to sprinkle his food with, as a preventive to fever and ague. At d nner one day a tail Hooeier observ ed the parson as he seasoned his meat and addressed Lim : "Stranger, IU thank yoa foraleetle of that 'ere red rait, for I'm kind o' curi ous to try it,' said he. " 'Certainly,' returned the Parson, "but yoa will find it very powerful ; be care ful how yoa use iC "The Hoosier took the proffered vial, and feclicg himself proof against any quantity of raw whiskey thought that he could stand the Ted sail' with impu nity, and accordingly sprinkled a piece of beef rather boantifuily with it, and forthwith introduced it into his capa cious mouth. It soon began to take hold. He shut his eyes and began to writhe. Finally he could stand it no longer. He opened his mouth and screamed 'fire ! "Take a drink of cold water from the ug,' sai l the parson. "Will that put it out V asked the martyr, suiting the Action to the wor!. In a short time tbe unfortunate man be gan to recover, end turning to the parson, his eyes yet swimming in water, exclaim ed: ' 'Stranger, you call yourself a Tarsel- Iist I believe '."' "I do,' mildly answered the parson. "Wal, I want to know if you think it consistent wit'a your belief to go about with hell fire in your breeches pocket?"' Happy Homes. A woman may do her level best to make a happy home for her hosbatd And children, but if she is treated as a slave and onlv given her board and lothicg in payment for ir services as mother, wife, cook, launure;s nur?e girl haiuber-maid and seamfetrese, is it any wonder that little or no happiness exists a that hom? If a mother spoils her son by pampering and waiting on him 11 the years of his childhood and boy hood; and making Lim thTnk that a man should always be waited on by the wo man of the household, is it strange that Le expects a wife to do the same, and at in all likelihood, she either wears out in a few vears from such service, or se becomes bitter and disheartened ? There are very many reasons why a home may not be a happy one and the happi ness found therein depends fully as much on the husband as it does on the wife We are often told that in every true and ideal marriage both husband and wife, must learn to bear aad forbear. In every me where happinea exists, there must L-e perftct trust, confidence and love be tween the hasband and wife. There are two kinds of sunshine in the world, and both quite necessary the one which'is caused by the sun's shining outdoors and the ether by its shiuirg in our hearts. Hippy homes abound in the heart sun shine, and whether it shines without or not, there ia naught but brightness w ith in doors. It is the loving deeds, tbe cheery, helpful words, and the kindly thoughtfulness, that each member of the family shows toward the others that makes an ideal, Lsppy home a perfect heaven on earth. How many of us do our share in making such a Lome that shall be a heaven of rest to ail w ho may eoine within its influence? How Blood was Secured. An anecdote is going the rounds con cerning the manner :a which a well known leading actor supplied the acci dental absence of a necessary iten of "make-up." He was playing Macbeth, end when he came to the murder scene he asked in vaia fcr tbe blood ith which he had intended to i-nbrue hi-s hands. After abusing the property maa rund!y for his neglect, tbe actor, struck with a happy thought, suddenly hit that functionary ca the nose, so that a good supply cf crimson Cuid was obtained, and in this the actor bathed his palms. It is said that after the performance there wa a " realistic " conflict between the" pro," aad the property man, in which oioie claret " was tapped this time net for sa;re purpose?. 77d '. No m Try This. It will cost you nothing and will sure ly do jcu good, if yoa have a Cough, Cold, or any trouble with Threat, Cbett or Lanjs. Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption, Coughs and Colds is guar anteed to give relief, or money will be paid back. Sufferers from La Grippe found it just the thing and au lsr its cs had a speedy and perfect recovery. Try a sample bottie at our expense and learn for yourself just Low good a thing it is. Trial bottles free at J. N. Snyder's Drug store. Lirge bottles, -Wi and f 1.00. The leaves of the banana, often six feet lcrg and two feet wide, are tendr and tbe strcng winds of the tropics Boon tear them in strip, thereby adding to their grace ard beauty. Tbe banana, ia a fruit tl.t beast and bird, as well as man, are fond of, anl the owner, when he lives in a sparsely settled country, mast protect his plantation by a fence cf some thorny plant. 0 il.r an eye more clear to see, A mind to ?-s.-p more earnestly. Tor every good intn That to the sick and J p.nDg 1 bring thee a peerless cur j. Pan-Tina, the gtext reuiedy fcr Coughs, Colds and Cocscmption and 50 cent. Sold at G. W. Booford's Drugfore. A Rich aMru Thousands of men with nothing ia their pockets, and thousands withe a even a pocket, are rich. A man bora with i good, sound constitution, a good stomach, a good heart and good limbs, a pretfy good head piece, is rich. Good bones are better than gold, tocgh mus cles than silver, and nerves that flash fire and carry energy to every function are better than hcces and land. Education may do much to check evil tendencies or to develop good ones, but it is a great thing to icheriCthe right proportion of facuities'.to start with. Tbe a an is rich who has a good disposition, who is natu rally kind, patient, cheerful, hopeful and who Las a flavor of wit And fun in bie composition. Men-kimft flw. If you feel weak, tired, And All rue down. Hood's Sarsapajilla is just whst yoa need to build up stxergth and puri. fy the blood. Ji. D. Luetchford ft Co, Eochwter, if. Y. r,!