i 1 The Somerset Herald. ESTASLISrittO irST Terms of Publication. - ;od every WriacfW morning it CH A MO , HCR'S TALK TO MOTH. ERS. Some tlt.te ago, says A .V. Y. H,ntr,l,r writer. I read an article ia a household pnj-r on the cruelty ef pu'tlnj children 11 i CI era i -n j to b I alone ia the daj. Ti a;y izi.aA , '..: . . ..-. CCj's'j it c ." i'.Mr.g A i M - t-.'K-a if !-'-3 ,n advam. Hberwt U M v, - .-r .:- i'-l be di-coritlaued oatll A-l , ,;d up. 1'i.tmaMc-i neg'-ocUng i t.ra .::rr:'ri do WW take out o t r cs 1 .T will be ktH jvpooaibi loUub. 1 '..t- .i-T. i L' ,t B"oe oi'. Addrcssi -... a. ' ' SEAT, Ti Vi i. i"sV. '"" .i.lviMV-iTlAJT, - TAKY ! bL!.. frjiscnat pa. ' .,.'. ....-i r-- -.nrwi.-a. fa. .1 , i. KY AT LA. wn r. A A. SAIllll, fa. i y J. At. .' ;. I r i , Ai .1. A a. i . - SOCietM. 1" ( A! .tl-Al-U V ' ' ooraersrt, Pa. J. G. Oil-. J i. s-.on. Li'u'TT & OvH-i ,. n on tobu.-4ae entrusted V A' jvKil-AT LAW. .. i cal Esuue. iU uend to U AXiAl-LA , . : u Ii bv-icwe eatrasted J' r -.; e iib iU.C Iwyii-n-iTU'1- . v,., ,.. Hi. a..-i up-...-. t::r..n-e '- V';'!". ...... !. : h.. -i' i-":.cs.t- 1 c li.-l.-i-' " 1CLI-. II. UVkwEV-All-AW t- la SooerKtAud dJoitJKI ; A ...- Vf.aiiCJr v.'ti i.Uiii & RUFl'EL, Aiiuli.Ni.Vs-Ai-l.AV., & rcup e- n' d to taelr Kit wOX be T W. CAlVLTIiEr-S. M. I i 'J -- cm I'ion street, next do.-: to i-nnuii DR. P. F. SilAFlHR, i-HVsiClAii ASjilP.'.B)X, b..!'.iuitr. Pa., t - lc n ti rrofeM'i.aal h f i .v lo Hie ciuzvu :"i-u:r.-ri and viowiq J Ootjr 10 D Ll 1L S. KlililELL, : s.lin :r irof: ional nerricet tke ein i 1 ia be ijiiUi ai Uai oiiic oa Maui d. D K. J. L0UTI1ER, PHYriC'IAM AXD fl'EoEOS Haf ;xs-.cd in nr.ar.ecl!r in Somrrret for tbt DS. J. M'MILLEX, xduU ta AJnHri,) j'Tf . - sitr-UiTi to toe j'rtwerrmti.'ffl cf ie l-fic A.-t.i"al t--U U!"-ntd. Ail .,ici;.i'ia Mu-iai'hiry. vtbee a ttj r .. , T ;;. 1 & Co. Hon:, wib .'...v : U kl.i". .teta. Oils! Oils! . ' .. : o . r.tl-l '-11 It arl , r c vr i;tr i'n -iic U-iC , .,0! t.rla'ia Ua i 'i-';r.ar.g& Lubricating Oils Naphtha and Gasoline, PRODUCT Cr PETROLEUM- If 10a tie mo naiforcily Satisfactory Oils - IS THE American Market, au k,j out. Trade tot Sooiriset and Ticinlcy rapj.liea by FaiAS KiH li. - Ktt 6uuur. Pa. ARTISTIC JOB PRUNING A SPECIALTY. HARRY M. BENSHOFF, MAKUFACTURIKG STATIONER AI) BLAXfi BOOK 3IAKEK. HANNAH BLOCK. JOHNSTOWN. PA. IHPOKTAXT TO T:,e cn-irn of the country tnpers ia ltand la ln;;au,n' County fit Lists. Shrewd --vetisex8 avail themselves of those lista, a T7 of ?.idi can be had f Pxainutoa of Sew Tork 4 RtwUirj. )'.0U CAN FIND THIS PAPER 1 k. 'U i'rx-r.r u ft Kumu ori VOL. XLII. NO. -THE- riTPT T A TTY A V W A - sr irini hai uriAL hank Somerset, Penu'a. CAPITAL ... t50.000. 8URPLUS C12.000. 0 DEPOSITS MECCIVCD IN LAttGE AND SMALL AUOUNTS. PAYABLE ON DEMAND. ACCOUNTS OF MERCHANTS FARMERS, STOCK DEALERS. AND OTHERS SOLICITED -DISCOUNTS DAILY. BOARD OF DIEECT0IS : LaHii M. Hriil W. H. Millkb, Jakes I Ft&h, Char. H. F:tHia, Joer E. St-crr, Gso. E. Socix, FaiD VT. Biceckks. Edwabo Sctll, : : Valentine Hay. : : Hakvev SI. Bekeley, : : : President Vice Pbesidest : : : Caseiies. The funds And pocuritiee of tbia bank Are fwurely protected in soelebrated Cor liss Eurplar-proof Safe, The only Safe niade Absolutely Burglar-proof. Somarsgt Ccuntj National Bank Of Somerset, Pa. h EiUillthei, 13T7. 0rxni:l a t Kat!ari!,1890. CAPITAL, $50,000. Chas. J. Harrison, Pres't. Wm. 1 1. Koontz, Vice Pres't. Milton J. Pritis, Cashier. y. Directors: Wi F.s-.lflcy. .Ii.;.a y.. jolt. ua& S. Hiiicr, HATT'X.n. ,k wi'.I riive the tnofl I -lil w bi'.lr illfl- ,.1 i U. V c't T -- CAD J :h bl. J.rt.u li. r-: rder J..-( li K. I't.TB. JoTXiu;e audi, fAm. B. !'..-. tit-mr.i-iit it.i.M J-emt:. .in. lo - :!t :..r y an.o -t- r-r..r l -ile of r'io- b..d ft vji.-lir.U i SAftS 1. oilee.'..-!!!. tr.ide !ti $UH.. fHanrw mod : Accui uI LwiMi: yi ; i, ;trovc uaie :i jcrt of the Catted raam title hi ihst h. 121 A 123 Fourth Ave PITTSBURGH, PA. I 4TM 1 .f. Undivided Profits $250,000. Acts as Extvutor, Guardian, Aijrn and Reciivt-r. '.Vil'iS riKuiptel f r and Lo! 1 froe of Business of residents and non-rcsidetts carefully Attended to. JOHN B. JACKSON, - President JAMES J. POXSELL, Vice President. FRAXKUX BROWN, Sex-rt-Ury. JAS. C. CHAPLIN, Tr.av.irer. Dress Woolens, FuR AUTUMN ANDYINTER. Y."ere fhowin;: i:ur;if r;!-e lines an I clioioe, dtiraUe tuii:, eil lon?ht and weli-Relei ted fr-vu tte I et of the pea . n.s I'm.) actions, ol l"-b fortign i.rij doniestic lixjius. -,- Prices to suit you all, from to ji. .0 a yard. A very desirable and extensive rarge of new Fall Dress Woolens. Cheviot?, "Jop,!at'K8' Illuminated rTro-toned Fabries, Mixtures, Plaids, Checkc, etc., in all the new cr'lor combinations and 2S inch .) cent stutls, At 45 Cents a yard. 5 cents a yard i9 not a big savin?, but 5 cents on every yard all the year is qute an item, and worth l.xkicg after tiiese times. W V ii n mn Vm( ti) the Western Penn's ExpositioD, the rapid transit facilities cable and electric cars, will bring you to the Allegheny side in 3 minutes, and its worth your while to come to this side if voo have any trading to do. If yon 're not coming to the Exposition write us for SAMPLES, PRICES. and a copy of our illustrated catalogue AND fASION JOURNAL, or write usany way, whether you'll be in the city or not. Pest yourself upon the styles And p ; -t -ff Boggi oi bulil, 115, 117, 119 and 121 Ftderal Street, ALLEGE E. T, PX. 10 HootfsiCarcs ifra. C. n. Titum "Every Dose Kelps Lis VThen I take Hood's Sursarnrllla. and I ttilnk it t!-c l--t miiic.re ior t'..e iild. Xy six-yar-fM tvir V-.i! err.- on lit fenf. rau--! ! v POL N)" IVV. '1 !:-y t.Ta'i:e .so I ;r-d aiid pr.in I'il fcet, :.i mt we-ir .;s:.... A n.-rx af.-r 1 1 ..-: p.v.ut biw l!u.ii' hnrifnir!.a tlio .; Kgia tobcxl u;an'! (uJ:tear. and v lien f, i i.r:i tv. :..Mr:--i Ii.- v..;- f;it:r.-iy cured." Ml:s. -'. II. Tu 1 Soiitli ii!i-:i, l a. H.OOt'3 PiLLS r-' fv.e'j -?t;:l.:e. aid d. ao: purge, nil r jfrt-:po. frj.d jy ail arai.;. Jc Tbe Kumaji Electrical Forces! How They Control the Organs cf the Body. Tfc cVctrlrnl fnn-c ef Uio hur .n hCy. :.s t'.it ii-rve UuiJ may be U-r3h.il, I i r. t ;--c:a Uy Attractive departntert ! s i ic', : it r-tTt.. narkel an lnfi'i'!v?e on iho 1 1 Ii tX fit .ir:uis of ItKlv. lv:,. ir-- i -V l-i. -"l t.y tins tra:n a i-i i-o ivi yi tl 1 y r!it':i!i-f llto ti'-rves ari.-us t-,- -.rr i t tiic laxjy. iliu-supplyin the latter w i ii'.tli-v n.s-i-:iryioiii- t- '". Th IH-U!a.uaTic uerre. a ArfTKi Mil .u ii in-r liny iw s j.u -.. "'7 " if tue cm ir nerve fv- tern, as it numtiie- tlio IHIVU'li, fl ... W It 11 1IIU r J-'- n'-rve f r o ueesury to C? --; . kw liu-in a. -tive and '"," I t-alii.y. niil Im hhh K""s,'-' 1 -si-em-iii.' fr-.tn the ?Zf ' tX li:: of lite Lriia end 'Y. i"a ti:.i;;Ti;.t'n-i in tiio lkw- iVC.'Jt. .... i-n ...... . fll' . 4 t-.-.-art. tuti nad finii- i i.u. . ii.-ii -.ii'j nr.iiii v -- - .. , . i- .mm In any uht & :--. ' ' A o:-dr-J by irrilahiiiiy 5".. . VVU:,5,'1 iiri-iaiis',un, tue iwrve , f.r -ewn.i-b it Mippii V.-S i." ''J U J . J 1- -etit d. and i'io or- fVvV.J'v' t'-c i prin-i r.'...ivimr tiie di- i.,--'-j'iNV'-"-.- l'hv-9M.iniis soiirr-iUr fail r?itrt-An" T ri.-w f i- f. ! :t n1;:. ir.e i-1- r ir. n -4-!f iii:ea-i tf -1 an -c (,f - re rrt-oiic j i. . Ti-.tV-J '-iuii-.t. 1 r ti l.iiii i -.v.. -i. 1 1 L. L., 1; ci.t'ri Hit ffn-ai r :irr f i.i . ! t -r (..iy (f iliis m!-.f. u:nt i '- - r.a i '1 ti:-. JV "T:!'-. C HKfrtHtt J it T' (iUv tUlit- ; . Tl Jr. Mi!1-.' Kk-;tr.iTivn ,i ri :.-. ihf m-.i - V'.i ( I.: Jill AliiX tUT e f'XMl, 1- . P U OTl lit-1 j r.- ilijr till ncrvwi, .n.i in . uy (.,;;, r iii It iii ts Uai'-iiia'- fiit'ii vr, ot '. i .?rv.-i-:iu lis 't indt-rf .il kij. tv--1 .c ; I i-r . r y i' .r -f t ;v l;nL r.'-r.o.j- pjp.tr:i! :.n. n tiiii ..: r.a. f ? I y, tt. Van- .;.n v. i : ! -. to. If fiw frtm tiinti -s tr i ;!i;-r.;i- U. It t- -oid n ii p,iiive ca:triu! o -v iir i.- L tn rfy-i'K'iri'Ct ly t;t- Ir. Mi i ,:l ;, i iiai. :tvt. Ir.il.. on rr,'; of r-i i .-. rl j-or FANCY WORK. Sonic li t eat Bargains in IRISHPOINT LUNCH AND TFAY CLOTHS Bought below coet of transportation we are 6;iin at great barains white and colored Kedie-ld Cord Table Cov er", stamped ready fur working, "ing eti Canton Flannel Table an-l Cush ion Covers, r-int:ed Plnfh Cu.--hioa Covers, Bararran Art Cloth Table and Cu.Hii.-n Covers, ad siaiaped ith Newest IVsius ; lkni-s'.itctiei Hot Eiixuit and lioll N-kins. A new rnd larre line of Lem-Flitrhed Tray and Carving Cl-jths fram O-Xta up.' Slai-tped Ilem-siitched Scarfs from 35cs r?p. Table Covers from 60 t-tc. up. A fail tne of Figured INDIA SILKS, All tw Patterns and Colorings. Also, Figured Plush, il and inches wide, in beautiful Colors at.il l)trrs. Art Satin Squares for tbe Ccutra! lovers and Cushion Covers. Waban Net-ting, f.incLts wide, .V cens Tr yard, in P.nk, B'.-je, t;:ire and Veliow, T'l'iJ NKW TK1N" for Drajiti? Mantles and DiK.rs, and far l.'rapiup Over lrapories. A new line of HeaJ-re!i. fr.tn 1"- uj. Vi-it onr Tatile Linen. X jwe!, Npk:ns, Ma-dm, Slieeiing and Linen Utj-artoiect, by all means. 0 iff il FIFTH A VENT, rittibureh, Pa. FAT PEOPLE. To reduce yoar weisht suntLV WUIrd"i Otit-fi-.y Ptii aud ltre 10 poami a raoiith. Nu in jury to ilie beMltla. So lnu-rferenrc v. ilh but uw c pleafare. HO STARWINO. Tney build up and improve the Kcaeil li'-aiiii. bear.ufy tbe eiiiilexion and leave no WRINKLES. An -Tf'it. M .1i..'.ni cu.t..'.. :t. .tf-', ftrrt.--V,rtt Mi 'ut V- M' IVlTnSarnt K.1 wcitV fftm tSi l'miuUUi Ii.tn-i vrtr J-U N-.r i -S kv Ii'- Jm di f&a'T'l tciiU V molt, and .io iU J ivoi i i.i, wtK. Our patron inrlude Fby-Mi-ians, Hantirs, iiryermnd Irmlrnot sorietr. ur el! are not ml J In dm mores ; all iirdm re i;H''-t d:ityt frem onr Price per )ac ke si.tn.or three irkaces f-w $5 t by mail preiL pniettir iKiaied,. 4 eu. Ail cuci potidei.ee cotdideaiiaL WILLARD REMEDY CO., BOSTON, MASS A Scientific America! Agency for CAVEATS. TRADE MARKS OESICN PATENTS, COPVAKSHTS, etc. For tnf rtnatlnB an4 fr HBdhor wrtta u Ml NN A Co- a Hk.i;iiit, New Your. Otueai buna ',w acnruv patents In Ancnm. i Ktmit plent takra out ly ! tironitDl wroca s-fienmit ajBrnwa KTrr rlenl Ultra o!l lr a. l urouitni iieirvw Vti pca-M; toy a imcioe (ivcm tree cti.aii m Lua lartat etrecteHna of anr KMnalSe paper tn tba wurid. ht.leoaidiy liliuuaua. No lntMiireu lama eboo.d ba wtthotn, tu Wee(y 4.4U a au.atz oootba Artdrm Mf S s.A CU. Pi niiiti;1"! S-AikgaCaw.&'ew IotACUj. "T ... iA I HOBNE mm r-5 fTfXX SOIMERSET, PA., AN UND1SCOURACED FARMER. 1 met a Jt.'iy faraier ia a lovely We:em vale. A man of ferule iatx-y that n never kaoan to fall, Wbo, when I tilt ot hiiStjncs ereo oance fall in weight. Said he had ntn twetve-ounee one bats la e:j!iteco-sity tiLt. And when I poke ef fiih I'd caagbt, in certAln foreign rilL-, IliAt measured tweu'.y even feet fro-w narratiTe tosiil, lie f!d, a lth brow unraffied aud a niAsaer frank aud free, Tital he had caaght them twice as Ions 'n eigh teen ;xty Utree. And then I spote of having met a feltow in Ber lin hofe Lioulh wai laie enough to get three large poUtoo In ! Where. .n he uthtj Jiu Hankinwa his couiin waf ative ; He'd seea hi in hold six apples in hU mouth in tixiy-iive. It seemed to mike no odd, to Liin how I'd exag gerate . He'd always go oue betler ; to I thuu.ht tLat I'd ntrrate Haw with an as' janboue did the mighty Sim Hia iday Ten thousand of bat fojiaon last to see what he would ftar. He lUiencd most intently, ith an ever broaden ing smUe, As thor.gU be u as a person that bad never heard cf guile ; Atid wheu I'd done, he told me that he knew my tale was tn;t. For .mx. n't self had told it him In eighseen sixty two. JIarpr'i Bazar. A HOMELY HERO. "Poor Abe Dodge That's what they called him, though he wasn't any poorer than other folks not so poor as some. How could he be poor, work as he did And steady as he was? Worth a whole grist of such bait as his brother, Ephe Dodge, and yet they never called Ephe poor whatever worse name they might call him. When Ephe w aa oil at a .-how in the village, Abe was following the plow, driving a straigbtfur row, though you wouldn't have thought it to Eee the way his noe pointed. In wiiiter, when Ephe was taking the girls to i-inging school or spelling bee or some other fooiisLness out till after 9 o'clock at night, like as not Abe was hanging over the tire holding a book so the light would shine first on one page and then the other, and he turning his head as he turned the book and reading first with one eye and then the other. There the mu-der's ouL Abe couldn't read w ith both eyes at once. If Abe looked Kraight ahead, he couldn't see the furrow nor anything else' for that matter. H-.s befit friend couldn't say but w hat Abe Dodge was the crosseyedt st that ever was. Why, if you wanted to see Abe you'd ttanJ right in froat of him, but if he w Anted to sa you you'd got to stand behind him or pretty near iu Homely! Well, if you meant downright "humbly," that's what he was. When one eye was in une the other was oat out of sight, all except the white of it. Hambly ain't no name for iL The girls used to eay he had to wake np in the night to rest his fate, it was so humbly. In tchool you'd ought to have seen him look down at his copybook. He bad to cati't his head clear over and cock np his chin till it ptinttd out of the winder and down the road. You'd really ought to have seen Lim; you'd have died. Head of tbe class, too, right along; just as near to the Lead as Ephe was to the foot, and that's sayings good deal. But to see him At his deck ' He .looked for al! the world like a wei-k old chicken pet-pin' at a tum ble bug! And him a grown man too, for Le6tayed to sdiool a inters so long cs thtre was Anything mors the teacher could teach him. You soe there wasn't anything to draw him away ; no girl wouldn't look at him. Lucky, too, sec in' the way he looked. Well, one term there was a new teach er come regular high upgirhdown from Chicago. As Dad luck would have it Abe wasn't at school the first week hadn't got through his fall work. So she got to know all the scholars, and they was aw ful tickled with her everybody always was that knowed her. The first day she come in and saw Abe at his desk she thought he was squintin' for fun, and she upped and laughed right ouL Some of the scholars laughed , too, but most of 'ein, to do 'em justice, was a lettle took back, young as they was, and cruel by nature. (Young folks is most usually always cruel don't seem to know no belter.) Well, right in the middle of the hush Ahegtthercd np his books and upped and walked out doors, lookia' right ahead of him and consequently seeing the handsome young teacher unbeknown to her. She was the worst cut np you ever did see, but what could she do or say ? Go and tell him she thought he was niakin tip a face for fun? The girls do say that come noon spell, when she found out about it, she cried just fairly cried. Then she tried to be awful nice to Abe's ornery brother Ephe, And Ephe he was tickled most to death, but that didn't do Abe any good Ephe was jest ornery enough to take care that Abe shouldn't get any comfort out of it, They do siy she sent messages to Abe, And Ephe never deliv ered them or else twisted 'em so as to make things worse And wore. Mebbe so, mebbe not Ephe was onery enough for it. 'Coarse the school inarm she was board ing round, and pretty soon it come time for ole man Dodge's, And she went ; but no Abe could she ever see. He kept Away, And as to meals he never set by, but took a bite otfby himself when he could get a chance. ('Course his mother favored him, being he was so cussed un lucky.) Then when the folks was All to bed he'd come in And poke np the fire And peek into his book, but first one side And then the other, same as ever. ' Now, what does schoolma'am do bat come down one night when she thought ba was abed and Asleep And catch him unawares. Abe knowed it was her quick as be heard the rustle of her dress, bat there wasn't no help for it, so he just covered his crosseyes with his hands And she pitched in. What she eaid I don't know, but Abe ho never said a word, only told her he didn't blame her, not a mite; he knew she couldn't help it no more than he could. Then she Asked him to come back to school, And be An swered to please excuse him. After a bit she asked him if be wouldn't come to ob lige her, And he said be calculated he was obligin' her mors by stay In' Away. EST A BLTSEEED 1827. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1. 181K,. Well, come to that she didn't know what to say or do ; womanlike she upped and cried, And then she said he hurt her feelings. And the nphot of it washe said he'd come, And they shook hands on it Abegivin' bis other hand ofourse. Well, Abe kept bis word and took np schoolia' as if nothing had haptned, And school in' as there was that winter! I don't believe any regular academy had more learnin' and teaching that winter than waat that district school had. Seem ed as if all the scholars had turned over a new Iwif. Even wild, ornery, no ac count Ephe Dodge, couldn't help but get ahead some but then be was crazy to get the schoolma'atn, and she never paid no attention to him, just wcat with Abe. Abe was teaching her mathematics, see ing that was the one thing where he knawed more than she did outside of fariniu'. Folks used to say that if Ephe had Abe's bead or Aba had Ephe's face, the schoolma'am would hare half of the Dodge farm whenever old man Dodge got through with it, but neither of them did have what the other had, and so there it was you see. Well, you've heard of Squire Catou of course. Judge Caton they call him since he got to be judge of the supreme court and chief justice at that. Well, he had a farm down there uot far from Fox river, And when he was there he was just a plain farmer li ka the rest of cs though up in Chicaga he w- a high up lawyer, leader of the bar. No ir it so happened that a young doctor named Braiuard, Daniel Braiuard, had just come to Chica go and startin' in, And Squire Caton was helpin' him ; gave him desk room in his otlice and made him known to folks Kenzies aud Bulteriields And Ogdecs and Hamiltons And Arnolds aud all those folks about all there was in Chicago in those days. Brainard had een to Paris Paris, France, not Paris, El., you un derstand aud knew all the doctorin' there was to know then. Well, come spring, Squire Caton had I'o: Brainard down to visit him, aud they shot duck and geese aud prairie chickens, and 8o:ue wild turkeys aud deer. Game was just, swaraiin' at that time. All the while Caton was doiu' what law basiness taere was to do, aud Brainard thought he ought to 1m doiu' some doctorin' to keep his hand in, so he Adked Caton ifjthere wasn't any cases he could take up surgery cass especial ly he hankered after, setin' he had moie carving tools than you could shake a stick at. He &ed him particularly if mere Jtosa't anybody he could treat for "strabismus." The squire ha-.ta't heard of any body dying cf that compiaiut, hut when the doctor explained that strabis mus was Fteuch for crosseyes he natural ly thought of poorAoj DjJge, aad tae youcg lawyer was right up on his car. He sineiied the ha tile afar otf, And 'musi. before you could say J.:fc Kubinson the squire sad the docor were on horseback aud down to the Dodgti farm, too, cheat and all. Well, it so happened that nobody was at home but Abe and Ephe, and it didn't take but few words before Abe was ready to to set right dawn, then and there, and let Anybody do anything he was a mind to with his mUfortunate eyes. No, he wouldn't wait till the old folks com.? home. Ha didn't want to ask no advice. Ha wasn't afraid of pain nor of what any body could do to his eyes could not be made any worse than they were, what ever you did tD 'em. Take 'em out and boil 'em and put 'em back if you had a mind to, only go to work. lie kn.-w ha was of age and he cuessei he was master of his own eyes such as they were. There ;wasn't nothing elee to do but go ahead. Thedo;tor opened up his killing tools and tried to keep Abe from seeing them, but Abe, just come right over and peeked at "em, haad'.ei 'em and called 'em "BpicaiLd," and so they were, barrin' having them used on your on flesh and blood and bones. Then they got some cloths and a basin and one thing Another And set Abe risht down in a chair. (No such thing as chloroform in those days, you'll remem ber.) And 'Squire Caton was to hold an instrument that spread the eyelid wide opc-n, while Ephe was to hold Abe's head steady. First touch cf the lancet and first spurt of blood, And what do you think? That ornery Ephe wilted And fell fiat on the fl oar behind the chair! "'Squire," said B.-ainard, "ttep around and hold his hea l." "I can hold my own head," says Abe as steady as you please. But 'Siuire Caton he straddled over Ephe and held his head between his Arms And the two bandies of the eye-spreader with h'.s hands. It was al! over in half a ruinu'e, and then Abe leaned forward and shook the blood off his eyelashes and looked straight out of that eye fjr the first time since he was bora. And the first words he said, were : "Thank the Lord ! She's mine !" About that time Ephe be era a led out doors; sick aa a dog, and Abe spoke up. Says he : "Now for the other eye, doctor." ' Oh," says the doctor, "wo'd better take Another day for that. "All right," says Abe. "If your hands are tired of cuttia' you can make soother job of iL My face ain't tired of bein' cat I can tell you." "Well, if your game, I Am." So, if you'll believe me, they just set to work And operated on the other eye, Abe holding his own head as he said he would And tbe 'Squire holding the spread er. And when it was all done tbe doctor was for putting a bandage on to keep things quiet till the wound all healed up, but Abe just begged for one sight at him self, and be stood up And walked over to the clock And looked in the glass and says he: "So thAt's the way I look, is it? Shouldn't have known my own face never saw it before. How long must I keep the bandage on doctor ? "Ob, if the eyes ain't very sore when you wake np in the morning yon can take it off if yoa'll be careful." "WAke op! Dj you sappose I can sleep when such a blessing has fallen on me? I'll Uy still, but if I forget it or yon for one minute this night I'll be so ashamed of myself that it'll wake ins right np !" Then the doctor bound np his eyes, And the poor boy said "Thank God'' two or three times, and they could see the tears running down his cheeks from under the cloth. Lord ! It was just as pittifd! as a broken wi ia hir 1 '. How about the cjri ? Woil, it was all right for Abe an 1 all wrong fir Epher All wrong fir E-.be. B-jt that's all pvt and tone px-it and g'.ne. Folks come formi!es and miles to s"e cro?s eye J Abe with his eyes as straight as a lo jn's le. Dr. Brainard was a great mia f jrever af ter in those parts. Everywhere else, to, by what I heard. When ths doctor and the 'Squire come to go, Abe spoke cp, blindfolded as he was, and says he : "Doc, how much do you charge a feller for ssvin' his life making a man out of a poor wreck doin what he tho ught never cod'.d be done but by dyin and go'.n' to kingdom come ?' ''Oh," says Doc Brainard, says he, "ihat ain't what we look at as pay prac tice. Yoa di ln't call me ia I cainecf rayslf, as though it was wHitwjcaila clinic If all goes well and yoa happen to hare a barrel cf apples to epare, you j ust send them up to 'Sq:iire Catou 's h juse iu Chicago, and I'll call over and help eat 'em." What did Abe say to that ? Why, sir, he never said a word, but they do say the tears started out again, cut from under the bandage and d wn his cheeks. But then Abe he had a 3-year-old pet mare he'd raised from a colt pretty e-' a pict ure, kind as a kitten and fast as split lightning and next time Dc came down Abeheju-.t siipjed out to the barn and brought the mare round aud hitche-1 her to the gate post, aud when Doc came to be going, says Abe : "Don forget your nag, Djcior ; she's hitched at the gate." Well, sir, even then Abe had the hard est kiad of a time to get Dae Brainard to take that mare, aad w hen hodil ri le oif leadin' her it wasn't haif en hour before back she came lickety split. Die said she broke away from him an.! pat out for home, bat I always inspected bedliii't have no ne for a ho-is h couldn't t".-!l nor hire out, an I cou'dn't afford to keep in the village that waa what Chi-.-no was then. But come along toward fall Abe he took hr right up to town, and then the doctor's practice had growed sj cju.jh that he was pret'y glad to g-t her, and Abe was glad to have him have her, seeing ail that had come to him throt:i;h bavin' eyes like ether folks that's the schoolnia'ara I mean. How did the schoolma'am take it?" Well, it was this way. After the cu'.l'.n' Abe didn't show up fur a few days, til! the inflammation got down and he'd had some practice hacdlin' his eyes, so to speka. He just kept himself to himself, enjoy-in' hiuisvif. Ile'i go around doin' the chort-e, singing so you could heir him a mile. He trasalw?ys great on sinia' Abe was, though iish-tmed to go to sing ing school with the rest. Then when the por buy beg mi to feel like otner fiiks he went right over to where the school -rua'am Happened to ba boardin' 'round and walked right up to her and took her by both Lands and lroke.1 her straight in the face and said : "Do yoa know me?" "Well, she kind of smiled and bltfe-hed, and then the corners of her mouth pull ed down and she p-il'.ed oris hind aa ay, and, if you belier , me, that was the thirl time that girl cried that season to n.y cer tain knowledge, and all for nothiu' ei:h ertime. What did she say ? Why, she jst said she'd have to bein all over srain to g; t acquainted with Abe. But Ephe's noes was oat t f joint, and Ephe knowed it as sa ell as any body, Ephe iid. It Wij Abe's eyes to Ephe's nc-?. Married ? ( h, yts, of coarse, un 1 liv ed on the farm as lonj ai tho o!d f is lived, and af.trwar l, to, Ephe stayirg right along like the fool heal.vays had be-n. That feller never did have ai much sense as a last year's bird's nesf. Alive yet! Abe? well, n. M ghthave been if it hadn't been for Shiloh. When the war broke out, Abe thought he'd ought to go, old as he was, so he went in to the Sixth. May be you've seen a book written about the captuia of Company K, of tbe Sixth. It was Company K, he went into him and Ephe. And he was killed at Shiloh just as it seems t J hap pen. He got killed, and his worthies brother cime home. Folks thought- Ephe would have liked to niirry the widow, but Lord ! she never had no such an idea. Such bait c3 he was compared to his brother ! She nevtr chirked up to sptak of, and now she's dead, too, and Ephe l.e just toodles round taking care cfthe children kind of a he dry nurs?. That's about al! he was good for anyhow. My nam?? Ob, my name's Ephraim EpLe they call rce for shorL Ephe DJg?. Ab was my brother. J.wyh Kirliiii l in Uimtv'-U-- Oiurltr Xmru.il. Honor Dear Old Mother. Tim? has scattered the snowy flakes on her brow, ploughed deep furrows on her cheek but is she nit s-x-eet and beautiful now? The lips which have kissed many a hot tear f r;a the child ish cheek are the ssreetfst lips ia all the world, ssys the "15 ig'e GV.!." The eye is dim, yet i; glows with the rapt radiance of a holy love which can never fade. Oh, yts, she is a dear old mother. llersindsof time are nearly na oct, but feebie as she is they will go further and reach down lower for yoa than any other on earth. Yoa cannot walk into midnight where she cannot see you; you cannot enhvr a prison whose bars 6hall keep her eat ; yoa can never mount a scaffold too high for her to reach that she may kiss and bless yoa. In evidence of her deathless love when the world shall despise and for sake you when it leaves yoa by th wayside to die unnoticed, the dear old mother will gather yoa ap ia her feeble arms, carry yoa heme And tell you all your virtues until yoa Almost forget that your soul is disfigured by vices. Love her tenderly, And cheer her de clining years with holy devotion. Different Ways of Working IL rteUeo Hear about that burglar that was driven off the other night by turning the hose on him ? Domm Yea. I got rid of a burglar pretty much in the same way once. But he took the hose with him. How was that? I had my money hid in an old yarn sock. He found iL Stcvo Elklns' Playmatos. "Do yoa know that the most darlrg train rtbbvrsithis country ever knew were p!a iua.es of Sieve F.ikins, the late Sec retary of War?" asked John B. Casaidy, a wealthy merchant of southwestern Missouri, who was chatting with a party of story-tellers At the Treiuont House yesterday. Everybody knew that Steve Elkins was a pretty bad Republican and was an expert in the art cf "holding up" people ia a political game, but nobody ta?pected that he ever associated with train robbers. " Wei!, as Chicago people are begin ning to think that lii'e is dreadfully mo notonous if they cannot read a scnsa'.ioa a! account of A bo!d train jobbery every other morning bef -re breakfast, 1 will tell you cf Steve Elkins' acquaintance with train lobbers," rtsaaied Mr. Cassidy. "Steve r.nd his b.'other were boys to gether ith Bob Cole and J;m Younger ia a S'uall ton iu Missouri, not a great way from K iiisas C.ty. A short tune prior to the opening of the war t-teve left the college at Colciibus, Mo., and taught school at Harrisoavil'e, Cass C3iinty, Mo. An:e:i2 the students whs Cole Younj-r. and Steve told me the !at time I taiked with him that Cole was aa exceedingly bright boy aad an obedient student. Bat it is a little singular how those boys came to join a gang cf freebooters and finally a?socia:e themselves with the notorious James gang. Il happened ia this way : Old man Harry Younger, the father of the Youtger boys, wasa staunch I'aiou ist. Oae night about the lieginuin of the war, he visited a small town near Kansas City oa a matter of business? and he went to start homeafler nightfall i:h 5'i' ia hispockeL His friends pleaded with Lira to remain until tiext day ar. i warned l.im of the risk he was taking, as the surronn ling country was alive w ith Federal Soldier. B it I'nc'e Harry ntoun'-'d his horse to start oa his journey and remarked to hi3 f'isnds : N , I hard ly think anybody will harm m. I aia not a'raid of Yankees and there are no n;lels ?.ay where near my route.' Hi ha 1 full coR'.'s It-nee that the L'uioa sol diers would do him no har:n, because he was a Unionist himself. So he started for lio::se. "TLat night l"nc!e Harry's horse trot ted up to the barnyard bars at hoiiie and wl.ia:si.;d to b j k-tia, bat the animal bore no rihr. Thrt next day the body cf Cncle Harry Younger was found lyiug cold ia death by the road side. Tao ri- i ll-j balls h id entered his back and torn their way through bis boJy and his j p.-K-SEtts had been rifled. The Yankees ! had loaidered an 1 ro )bc 1 him of i. ' Ef to this time the Younger hoys ha 1 t.ika no de.-i.!e J stand either for cr aitain-" the Union ca-rje, but whoa they lea rat-i that their poor old father, who w. a strong Unionist in the mil-t cf a relsjl euuatry, La l.btea mur lere.i by the Yankets they sore lasting vengeance ag-ainst the Federal?, and the boys mad their oath g-o-l by immediately j icin VJuantre!!9 brvid of guerrillas, which was then iu thai part of the Stale. Tiii-se Your.gr boys were all brave, determined j aT J courage.')!'.-?, even in the fa;e cf da.i-g--r si i dca'h. After the war was over j X icy j .ine l the James c,' an 1 were the fir t to st.irtle tb. e--.nitry b a train r h heiy at ; , Vi ii;-!, m .,',it K ;:l i;,- .a '7 p I'Mothut tl.i.2 the" h-;!.lib uar.f trai.-i h 1 r.;v-r l;j h iar 1 -f. hi: the bas'.nt-a s-'V.i bc.-a iie quite fi.-,hi maMe ia .Mi.-r; t:ri and t:; I-i iiaa T.-rvtory. But ih-ere ': pr.gr. i-. e.-rytliir ia ti '.titer .! iy f r.;a.-..-.ith evut ury, and train r-.hUlr.- is no ex. on to the r ile. T.:? V'jin.T h ya kne li'.th it about the u-e f dyra.aite ia th-.se, ti .ies, in blow i:;g opt-a an expre-M car. These train lubbers ar..:md Chi - ao have the spirit i f Chicago pa-.h an ! pn ttress, and I hey caa u-e a stick of dynvuite as euily&sthe Yo ing-r b-ys co.il 1 their revolvers aa I sxa have an express car lying in sp'inters over a tea-acre loh B it the Yjti2ger boys were bora for an hon jrai.le career, as they were g-jod fel lows at heart b-:"jre c:rcu:n?!aaeea per suadej them to become freebooters." C.ii 'iyo H r il l. Thoy WersSkiilad Men. "O'.i, yrs," stil the sad-vlsageJ man for tiie twentieth time; '"Oh, yes, I was one of the pMseugi-rs oa that Like Shore train the 'guig held np at Ksn.lalv.lle the other night." "Were yon in the sleep jr?" Aske-1 the reporter. "Yes, I had lef: wh?a I rache 1 the station ia Chicago.'' "Ah, yoa had been at tae World" Fair, then ?" ' Ye?, tt hat else wou! 1 take a man to Chicago?" "Were til the sleepers full?" "Ye." "Ail returning from the Fair, I f.ip- pce?" "Of ccurse." "D.d any of vol hear the dijtarbanca going oa ontsi ie ?'' "I gaess we all did ; it was like A bat tle." "Were the passengers frightened ?" "Nat a bit ; at least, I wasn't." "DiJu't yoa exoct tae rohhir to go through the train ?'' The sad-visagvj man's fa:3 shore! a cloud of c a upassioa for the reporter. "Young man," he said, "do yoa sup pose them robbers stopped that train for fun?' "Of course not." "laen why do you Aik that kiad of a quiation? Dan't you know they knowed the passengers were coining home from the Fair, aud that they might as well have gone through the p 3r house look ing for gold bricks." IhtroU Fete iV . Evidence of Good Faith. "Ol course your are willing to work," observed the la Jy. "How can you doabl it?" protested the tramp, when After A shoit rest he attack ed with renewed vigor the chicken leg she had given him. An Observing Boy. Mother (severely j Why did you grab your hat before the minister was half through the benediction ? Little Dick Ithort I'd start early to avoid the rash. To care nervousness your nerves must be fed by pare blood. Hood's Sarsspa rilU makes pare blood. Taxi it now. o WHOLE NO. '2201 A Child's Ki33. He was a bounty jum:ier and had been .-.hot down while trying to es.-ate from the guard house. He was a burly, big man, fierce of look and ro'.iith of speech, and vhen they brought hiai into the tvspit.il l.e tuned an 1 raved in a way to make you chid. Hi had recvived a mor tal wound, but death had no terrors for him. When the surgeon told him that he most die within fo -ty-eight hours he replied : "Bah! What of it? The only favor I have to ask is that you keep snivelers away. I w ant no pray in and singin' about me !" He had been a wicked man. Ha boast ed of it. He ridiculed the idea cf A here after aad cursed the Bible and religion. Men and women came to speak with him. so that he might not die as a dog, bat be mocked and cursed them. We who were watching for the end saw the shadow of death when it fell. He realized that life wasebbing, but still he cursed and revil ed. Aa hour before he died the wife of a wounded sergeant came in to visit her husband. She brwnght with her a little fair-haired girl 4 or 5 yeir9 old, and as she talked the chiid slipped away And wandered up and down the aisles to in spect the cet and their occupants. A score of us tried to coax her nearer, but ghe ai coy and bashfal. When she reached the cot 'n re lay the bo-ic'v-, juaij.er, the pa'i.'r cf ih-ath on his fa.-- j but righting the specter away, she jus- ; ed aa i stared at bi n. When he saw her j a s'hi'e llit'.-d over his face and the fierce j light died oat of his eyes fr the first j tun?. He Uckoned her t3 approack.j at; 1 to our gret surprise she heaiUt icgly ad.-anefd until she stool luaide Lis cot. Tii' ni ' her ro9 up in a'ar.n, bat the curse whis'-rc 1 to her not to call the : child. ' ' Is ycu sick?'' que tied the little one, I as the ii. an re-. hed out his hand and touched her g jlden cur's. " Aye, h;l I, I aai dyii.g," he whisper ed. "An-! ain't you g-.t rc;ljly to speak to yoa? ' "!. idn't want them." " lint you wanted me, didn't you?" " Yes God bless you 1" " i-i you shot, just like papa?" " Y-.'s dear.'' M'l-eso s,rry. I guess I'll kiss you." A!.tr lips touched his chevk the death ratt'i iu his throat frightened her aud she ran away to her mother. The kiss was still warai when h'.s eyes closed his hfa 1 f-!l back and he shivered and died. " S.e the won lerfal change in his j fae !"' whispered a nute. ! Aye, it was wonderfal I The hard lines i had meite-l out a.:d there waj a saiile hovering a!otit the mouth. That savage i expression which hai inlcniiijd as the j hours rasd And the end carue ! i nearer had been kisse-J awav bv the iit- tie child- Bat for her he would have died cursing his ( rod. Mayhap in the seconds between the kiss aad dissolution be ha I allied f.r taer.-y. Z ''' I' -'.-. His Crime I; w.s only an ordinary lynching party ia that para liee of boomers, Oklahoma, an 1 con-e qicntly ought not to have attracted any attention or oavnent from partners '.y. Bit the onscieace-stricken au 1 palpably g liify look oa the face cf the pri-wat r an I the stera ouutenaaces of tr.e iyr.c'-.ers in licated thecoiniuis.-ion of isi.ate gru.e criaie. Ser.'rai citizens, however, tlieir :nrtti ity be:ng ur ijs. 1, ventJrei to aldress the leader o the prty. "W! at ba this feiio v dj::-; ; nnr lere 1 soin oa-: ? ' '"Nj. Worse," returned ihe lea ler. "I be a tn-tler?" "Worse si ill." "A horse thief ?" "Far wor" was still the rei.-orse. "Then what is it?" "Stranger' said the leader, "we fellers was !i-tenin to the only c;era troop as ever attack this 'ere town, and the primer donay had just sung what they called a 's!o,' when this chap yelled out, 'That solo woul la't be bad if it wasn't so low," and that's why we're lynshin' him." The faces of the inqiirers blanched with horr. r at such un exK-ra'ole pun aa 1 ad.iiitted that the prisoner deserved his fate. 1'iii.lvt- ii'.'u-.V. A Slight Difference. A gentleman ri-liog through one of the pine wastes so common in noddle Geor gia, some years sgo, overtook a young man whose sat k cf corn under him on tbe farm horse he nde irave evidence that he was bound for the grist mill. Some conversation between the two developed the fact that he was the son cf the author of a popular almanac. The gfiitleman aske-l the young man j jccwly : "Aa l do ycu eve.- make escalations upon the weather, bke thoae f T which your lathrr is so celebrated ?" ' Oh, yes," he replied realiiy. "And how do your calea'ations agree with your father's?" inquired the gentle man. "Very well, indeed," replied the young man. "We are never more than one day apart in car reckoning." "Why, that is wonderful, certainly I" exclaimed the gent!e;uan. "Only one day ?" "Y-?," he said, wi.h a twiLVe in Lis eye. "he tan always tell the day before when it is going to rain, and I can always tell the day afterward !' Y-jtith's Com p.in.n. It is hard on A yonrg roan to spend three months deciding which of two girl be will choose f r bis wife, And then to find oat when he proposes that neither of them will Lave bim. Irate Father "I'm going to pat a check to your extrAvagance, sir 1" Impudent Sja All right! Give me the check. More Than he Asked for, What did he strike for? Eigh hoars. What did be get? Three month. " -- J -.' t k. If a s.". ha, fr ,' ,-, t i .-.! t;:. :! v -j t ( .- ,i:il : u !! I b.. In: ti :'.,: 1 -ii Li;-! to h.ht h a t; .'. a h.; a pronr' - hrotig tt? an t-e aiadsj t-a enjoy the night as a t::re r. livsk i r the Wautiftil m.H-n And stars and to love his ledtiine hour. Amnt my small friends there is a Stlikirg evidence of whit ran be tloiif ia that line. A baoy of 3, who, when Al lowed on some special occasion to Bit np ley.nd his Ix-dt.me hour of ti o'cl.H'k, soon asks to be put to be 1. No matter what the fasi inations of the hour, so strongjs the habit and so perfect is his const. tutiou from sensible treatment that hecheerf'jlly bids everyone good nighr, and, when he is comfortably tuckered in his crib, says : "Please do out now and sat the door." Soir.e allowance must, of course, be made for temperaments, but judicious training and treatment can bring up any sanely constituted child without fear of darkness. The trouble with grow n peo ple is that they do not give children cred it for half the sense which they possess, and so tell them any silly story to make the passing moment easier for them selves. T3 tlNI.NT. KMlItS TO OlttY. The old-fashioned tirttie of obedience is not inculcated to anything like the de gree that it should be for the health and happinese of the chil l. This is one of the fir t lensons, too, although parents rarely realize it. A ba'iy who Will not mind you at months will not do so at It years or at any sub:-q-ient period. ne of the c.iiuifonetit exi-riencrs t f every mother is to ha.e ':er chil l cry hen nl.e haves it. I once kne a mother ia i;t h thrall l;n that if she b-;l the r-K-tu to into the next hir 2 year-oM Ky v-t ap a hwt. This is a ti.itsira! ir-t uct, and a lovir.g one. I think, but one that ria b trained. Another mother, w h !aviT prji-a'-ly loved Li r, qu.te as mtichia tsU'a 1 of slipping out uno'jr-rved, rw.1 h sit dow a before leaving the hotis and ho!.! a long cenv-rat:..n w ith her year-and-a-halt" old boy, explaining to Lita w here she was g ong, hy it was necessa ry ' j ko aud hat she was going for, ail this ia taniu suited to his baby compre hension. A few sesnious of this kiu.l and the ciL-tom of mamma's going out becaa.eeotahi.shed. and his baby mind grasoe l that w heu she did so it was all right. Children reason at a much earlier age than is p-neraliy tielieved. The obedi ence of this same boy, who is now nearly 15 years old, is a matter of wonder among all his friends. If he is disappointed ia the matter of a row or ride or a feast of i-e cream, a sensible reaon for the dis appointment ia given him and he reigns hiuisvif to the inevitable in a manner worthy of a Spartan. as n ANSWei,:N; .Jl KSTloNS. Ia the matter of answering question we rown-ones iTttudo chiidren serioti wrong. 'i coarse, no phil.jsopher lives wise enough to answer the eouutlews " hys'' of these peripatetic interrogation points. B-it 9imti!y saying honestly that you do not know, or in soaie instances assuring him that he is Lx young to un derstand, and putting the eager little ui'iid off .a ith a careless or A frivoltis answer, are two very diirrent things. I n subj.fts that yo a are, but ought not to be, ignorant of, one of the plainest duties of fathers and mothers is to eee to it that they possess themselves of nrc-s-sary information, bi:t when the small philosopher route to ycu with big, grave tarn-1'. an 1 a bigger, graver and nrre earnest oui-stions that yoa are Dr n means tii to grvpple with ! brave enoug't to tell hiia that yott don kn, but that some day you an-l be will rea 1 aa 1 ria 1 oat when he is ol i.-r. Then he!j the !lule D.in-l to unbend by giving hiiu some simple task to do, or by telling hiui some fairy story, f it it is not well foryoaog min is to reach out to j far. I once over heard a boy of 7 ask his mother who sLe thought had had the greater an-l better int! in '.e oa hi g n ?ra.io3, Napjleoa or Ce-ar? It is needless tosay that this boy died young. L"t r. parental vanity lead you to foster precocity in a t-Liid. Make hint a healthy, obedient, loving little ani mal rirst. traia his i ntellt i t later. Three Dangerous Women. Beware of tii ree woman the cae who des not love children, the oue who dees not love fljrers aa 1 she who openly declares she does not liite other woman. There is something wanting in such, and in all probability its place is supplied by sonic unlovely trait. As Siiakspeare says of hiai who Las) no sou! for music, such a woman is lit for treason, strategy and spoils, and a wti-jtaa iat"t)t on those is ten thousand tiiness wor.se thaa auy man c ml 1 be, for standing higher, she tan fail lower. Many may saiile and jest a little oyer the tenderness lavished on a baby, but a.'u-r ali.the prattle any womaniy woman itivolanUriiy breaks into at the sight of the tiny being is very sweet to mafeulir.e ears. It was the it. at language they ever kcey, aud in spite ot the jest or smile the sweetest on wife's or sweetheart's lips. They may la i-ih it the li'.tle garden poois, whieh yeen; like playthings to their strength : but a their hearts they associate, and li.'hliy, purity of character and life with the pursuit of gardening. And it f .r tha woman w hod.-es not care f r her own s-x and boldly avows i she is a coquette pure a! simple, and one of the worst and lowest type, too, as A genera! thing. '.V.iea F g; w n th.-in doa by the electric cr into "he lap of A dignified old la ly he said he uow knew what it was to sit ia th e seal cf the scornful. The Veil ed X w coils for the aSolitioti of the house cellar as a "noisome nuisance .' It erees with K lwArJ Atkinson, who con sider tae cellar pro and con in the Ameri can Architect, and reaches the conclasioti that cellars are unnecessary and pernicious. He an4'i'Sj that fram a sanitary standpoint the cellar is a menace to many households. It is generally a dark place in which refuse of all sorts is deposited to get it out of sight, and in which vegetable are stored (or Win ter use. 1. void ot hgbt, damp, and with mould. nj; refme and rutting vegetable Uls ter, a cellar cannot be other than breeding place for disease. Many a hou that b kept in tbe best coa-litioa aa to its outward and internal appearance rests upon brick orstooa walls which make the (idea of a Pandora's box of evils. Ia cities the cellars of hooaea arc needed Cor furnaces and laundry par pteit. but wbea these nerds are supplied further room under tbe floors of bouses is nn Decenary. The abolition of tbe cellar, oe tbe limitatioa of the excavated and walitd in s'ructure of buildings, would reduce the eoat thereof. The grocers atore vegetable for their patrons, and there is little Dead for toot cellars in cities. iU OMiLnct lus miwuum at k mast