L Somerset Herald. (-ye BUSH ED 1C7. ..-- -it: i-C I , Wednesday morning at i. rantc"" v." ". .,.iin wiH discontinued " J 'J . trr paid up. I)etroaster DC SJ- f.t-Km removing fnm one postoffle to ' . . rtf th form- LuiJK'"""" ' r'1lbtpnIltm Addneai SOXtUIT, Pa. 'A FVn " sev notary rcBua l r I . if VV I IS .4 .... tuwiK-l, Jtenn'a. :ns-ous J i. , m,t id floor- . i;;.,."'!""'"!'"" tfe" WALKER. i I .TT.'HNKYS.AT-1-VW, J nJ NuTAKY I'l'BLlCV - I Somerset, Pa. t I .,niururt House. No- iTu r ourth iU, Pitteburg, Pa. KEY-AT-LAW, Somen Pa. T xi nri'UM.KY. 3 ' t: rsoiuerset. Pa. x Kin-l National Iiiuk. A CHOLliEKT, , I AnoKN--AT-LAW, 7 ' , -Suuientet, Pa. r tan J""- I ., i ;. II I III. Ail c -- t houien-t, Fau I tTfD. W. HIliSECKKlt, I Li Anvi;kV-Ai-i-Au, f J tioiucrftct, Ta. t fit. kott, , All vl..s r-1 -a " v (somerset. Pa. T"1 J K r- 1. 1 i, T' J AUultXEY-AT-LAW. 1 . .- -i. V. t K-K'NTZ. J- ti- U- 4 . .v-t- t- if ; I I-"" il 'l 1.1 1 I . ' ' 7 f Allui.t.lS-Ar-LA, "1 isoiiicrset. Pa. -ive t-r.Hi.pt atte-ntiem to busiuetw cn t. i "u. ii ran- iii NiiiTsri miu amuiuuif Jr J !. i.:li.-t- iu 1'iuil Hon l'i owoiiUj tHlentink hay, If " A lK'ii.s t:-AT-LAW, f bomentet. Pa. j u;.-r!ii FMat-, Will au-nd to t ', -niruu-d u His curt- wall iiruuipt- 19 jU ulit llt.v'- TjiN H. I HI'. t; f AliulLS K Y-AT-LA W, I ckmienict. Pa. t-I i.niiiitiv a!t-ud to nil lut.iu tn- Vu; w mil'-" i"" ' aviiwa uu cii t .1,-. .iali-r lu Mamniotli Uluclu L 0. KIM MEL, A mU t Y-AT-LA W, tSuuieixrt, Pa. jiiriid toull buin eiitruiitl l-bl mhi. nn uJ mujimuiuk cuuuutm, wnu . . t . m itit. ..ii Mum ( 'runa nwlim iiuuiij. - ..iwvi oBru'.u ijruixTJ' "lure- MF I- I'l'iiH, A 1 loK t Y-AT-LA W, tiiicret. Pa. in M..inuith Klot k. up iiulr. Kn I Mini Cl Miwi-U twliwtiou (. iiai. k UlcU, mini rxmiiin-d.aud ail i .i-.uw utiiu-l lo WUU l'roiiipLui-s i'U'I;N. L. C. IXjLBtiRX. .lloKX & COLIWUX, A 1 it.i;N t S-AT-LA W, tSoUKTM't, Pa. " um m:rur-t-d to our mre mill be j -. ami tiilliluliv utirudtxl U. Coill-O-iu foimri-M-i, JiiilorU ud adjuiu i .iu-j. Mir mg ud couvcjiuicliig i ii roiluUv U'llll!. i L. i:aeu, , Ai fi. 'UNEY-AT-LAW, i tSoiut-nut, Pa. S pnn'tHv in Niimrrsot and adjoining I . A.; t.uiiii-v i-utrusu-d to Uiui will I- irxiiiii.i aiu-uluiu. i Mi ll iTH. V. II. UI PPEL. j: r l'.UTH i Rri'l'EL, )Ani'K.LVS.U-UW, troiiii.-rM.-t, Pa. a:n- i n:rust-d to tli-ir cre wiil be iia lyuiuiuaily attu-udt-d to. Utlioe W. (.-AIJOTHEKS, M. D., l'inli IAN AMi.-L'UOtOX, iiuerw-l, l'a. nr: I'tn.it stm.t, near IL K. La lion. P. V. SHAFFER I II 1 ADM ' ' s.ru !-t and H-iuity. ottiit: next 6- ' : toiuii-n.ui litW. - J. M. LOUTH Ell, 1 11 V h 1 A N A mi S r K i EMS, a Mjiu tIo-t, n-ar of I'rui utore. L II. s. KIMMELL, k : hi .n.f.si,iiHl sT ii-o to tlic citl i .Hii.-rM-i ami H-niin. I n!.- pro- -.. .-in;.ti li. -iti m- louiid at tiia of Mm u l-i: of I'ljiaond. - J. S.M.MILLKX, 'r,iuj:-in iK-niistry.) " ," imi mi. iiiK.n to tiir nation ii'.u.-ui i.. in. Arniii-ial n-u iin rt-l. -i.ii-.li. (ikiiuiiHtMl Hiiiklm-iorv. iitn-e r...;ilt., ji lliiv 4 Morej 'nnr mid l'alnoi sim-ta. h. fui Fiurrn, Kuneral Director. - Main Crorns Sl lU.vident, -140 Patriot St. '!t. J. F. Bracbv. Real Estate and Collecting I Agency. ' t"r!vi ay "T '""nnortown '""nil at ourofflor i;, Knt-tN-r block. .'. 'Ili;i.ii, ,l Ik- fivm to all mail ln r.ardiujr pn-v and Ua-ation of rop- ?!. !EII.KU KUl llV Kli tirr KlK-k. bouirrnet, l'a. Pils! Oils! mlI;:'11: n"'n Co., Pittsbarg IteparV 'Ulanurm f.,r tlw u'.n.wuj tnmt tut flm-i-i brands of Wing & Lubricating Oils MpMha & Gasoline, a W nu,d from Petrolram. We cbal-rrl-l ,uu-lriou with every known Product of Petroleum If you wlb tb moat niilformly atisfaetory Oils -IX THE American Market, furonrw T- . - i nar lor Kommet and viclni- L V 'UliplkTl by tX" K A BEERITS and UEAbE KOfEE, Buiuemet. Pa. 1 lie VOL. XLIY. NO. -THE - First National Ml Somerset, Penn'a. Capital, S50.O00. Surplus, S20.000. DEPOSITS RECEIVED I LARGE AWDSMALt ACCOUNTS OF MERCHANTS, FARMERS, STOCK DEALERS, AND OTHERS SOLICITED DISCOUNTS DAILY. BOARD OF DIRECTORS. I.iltl-E M. HIC KS. GEO. R. SCULL, JAMES L. PIGH, W. H. MIU.EK, JOUN R. tSCVTT, 11BT. 8. SCULL, FKED W. BIESECKEK. EDWARD SCULL, : : PRESII)LT. VALENTINE HAY, : VICE PRESIDENT. HARVEY M. BERKLEY, . CASHIER. T-V... Ame iuvii ri i i of tliis bank are se curely pruUi-U-d In a celebrated Couliib Bl K- OLAB PkuoF Safe. I no oniy aaie inaue ut- lutely burglar-proof. ft Somerset CmtT Moaal AN K OF SOMERSET PA. Or. Established, 1877. Orgasbsd is l Kstlossl, 1890 CAPITAL, $50,000 SURPLUS AND UN- nn DIVIDED PROFITS $ID,UUU. h Chas. I. Harrison. Pres't. Wm. H. Koontz, Vice Prest. Milton J. Pritts, Cashier. Directors: SAMUEL SN YDER, WM. F.NDSLEY, SI AH Sl'ECHT. JONAS M. OWk, JOHN H. SNYDER. JOHN STUFFT. JOSEPH B. DAVIS. NoAII S. MILLER, HARRISON SNYDER, J EROM E STL r FT, SAM. B. HARRISON. riionirK of till bank will receive the most liU-ral tnntiiientconiiiMenl wit liaafe banking. Parti, w ishing to .end money rant or weal can lie aeeoniiuouaUd by draft for any amount. . Moii. v mid valuables aeciirea ny one oi oie- laild'n eelebrated afea, with niol improved time lock. ... Collrctiona made In all parts oi me i niiea Stairs. 1 liarv modemte. Accounts and aeioKiui souciu-a. Wild & Anderson, Iron & Brass Founders, Engineers and Machinists and Euffin Bnilders. -Manufacturers of- COAL CAR WHEELS and AXLES. Xew aul seexinJ-hanit Machinery, Miaflintr, Hangers and Pulleys, Injectors, Lul'ricators, Oil Cuun, Ktc ERECTING OF MACHINERY A SPECIALTY Strictly First-Class Work Guaranteed. Shop on Rroa.l St., near P.. A O. Depot Johnstown. - - Pa. TE ART AMATEUR. Best and Largest Practical Art Magazine. (The only Art Prtodical awarded a Medal at the InmlHobte to all u ho ru-A to tmttf thr ir lirini art . orttmakr thtir kumrU.liJul rOn lUCi we will send to any one a fC mrunonibg thi publication a eurri Mil nni mm m lib tuprrti color piaien II I ( for copy mgo"- framing and supple X.J mentmry pages oi aeigiu imum in SSe). Or CT4D OC wewfllsend al "Painting lUn Z0C for BeB.nner"(3UJit). MONTAGUE MARKS, 23 Union Square, New Yark. ARTISTIC JOB PRINTING A SPECIALTY. HARRY 31. BEXSUOFF, UAHUFACTURIHG STATIONER -AND BLANK BOOK MAKER HANNAM BLOCK, Johnstown, Pa. 11. Mr. A. J. Davenport Impure Blood Caused large Bail. aay fan mmt meek I wm told to taVe Jlood'i Sarsanarilla faillifnW Mood's Sarsa- . parilla ly, and after using 3 -tHC bottle was free from M Ll-X Cj ail eruptions. I am per- L, lect!y cured and in ex- Celient health. A. J. Davf.port, Milton, N. J. "Hood's Pills are purely Tegetablo and de Sot puree, pain or gripe. Try a box. Sic Campbell & "The People's Store. Smith. Stock Taking Over. . . Oar Surplus Stock is much larger than we expected. We find many lots of goods that must bo Fold during August, before the arrival of our Fall Importations, Septeiuler 1st. Price will be no object we will not carry these goods into another season, so look out for extraordinary values during August in Domestics, Linen Goods. Wash Goods, Silks, Dress Goods, Ladies' Waists. Ladies' Wraps, Millinery, Ladies' and Gents' Underwear, Carpets, Curtains, Upholstery Goods, Furniture, Housefurnishing Goods, China Ware, &c. Watch the Pitteburg Daily Papers for Particular, Campbell & Smith, Fifth Avenue, PITTSBURGH, PA. Jacob D. Swank, Watchmaker and Jeweler, Next Door West of Lutheran Church, Somerset, - Pa. I Am Now prepared to supply the public with t'l.Kks, Watches, aud Jew elry of all descriptions, as Cheap as the Cheapest. REPAIRING A SPECIALTY. All work puaranteed. Look at my t&x-k ln-fore making your purchases. J. D. SWANK. A. H. HUSTON, Undertaker and Embalmer. A GOOD HEARSE, nd everything pertaining to funerals fu ru in lied. SOMERSET - Pa omer SOMERSET, PA., WEDNESDAY, THE FITS' OF IT. BY AXX1E IMirOLAH TtKt.L. How doth the little busy boy Ik-light in snowy weather! With merry mates, and shouts of Joy, Ulmbing the hill together. "And does It pay, up hill to run. In npite of wind and weather?" "till, yes Indeed, It U Mich fun To ride down hill togclher." They nam the Helds for berries sweet. The Hummer sunKhiiic scorning. Tall nut-trccx climb with nimble feet, Nor fi-:ir the fruxty morning. "And does it pay, my little son. To work so harJ for plensun-?" "Why, ycx! You know we call It fun. And boys don't stint the measure. They seek a Fot the Are to make. Then roast the chestnuts fragrant; With sooty hands tlie leant partake. And clothe like any vagrant! "And does it pay to burn your skin. To wear your clothes In tatters?" "Why, to be sure! When boys liave fun. Those are but minor matters.' THE PASSLVU 15ELL Hut t!ienpt 11 of the old-time tone HringK uiuiware unto lip and brow The light of another aone." No one seemed to think of the incon gruity between the style of the build in and iU occupants. It was on the beautiful main street, and was built In the jauntiest, most inconsistent style of coinrloiuerate architecture. It was de signed for the Old Ladies' Home, and was the pet chanty of the moneytl women of the little town in Vermont where it was situated. All the build- in irs near were homesteads ofa cen tury's standins, which had apparently grown from the earth as naturally as the trees surrounding them, thus mak ing more conspicuous the garish new- ll-ss of the Home, which sneuereu three old women. Two of them were tj'tlimr in the window looking on to the street a diversion that to one of them never failed watching the movements of the neighbors. There goes James L. Haight, full arain " sahl air. I Irton, Willi a pleas ed Mailed at her own rviteratetl joke, as she peered out of the window at the 8ia illest size of street car, slowly u rag ged bv a lanuuid horse, which knew toj well the certainty of hills in the village to hurry over the levels. "There never was a straighter man than James L. Haight, and it does soeut a shame that after he's had the favor of bavin' the new horse-car nam ed for 'itn, you should take oil from his glory by your jokln', " responded Mrs. Marden : but she smiled to soften the words, for although she had plenty of pepper in her composition, she al- wavs softened to Mrs. I pton. f.very- laaly did, just a instinctively as one handles with tender touch a morning-glory- 'Who's in the car this noon? ask- eJ Mrs. Upton, trying to indicate by remix ing her glasses that her ability to see was merely temporary. Them glasses of yourn seem to al ways have some niluia on 'em just, when you most want to see," respond ed Mrs. Marden, with hard hearted mischief. "I believe it's the rVhool IJoard orsomtthin' on the car, there's i many men aboard, an' there's one stranger. I wonder if they can see in?" she said, preeuing herself a bit a mirror between the windows. There was a scarlet bow on her hair, which was black and abundant, for all her seventy years; and there were scarlet laws on her slippers which half concealed the prunella. "Ked's my color, you know," she always said, with a pleased laugh, if any one tried ti remonstrate with her alxmt her Ircss. anil their attempted reform rip pled away on the sound of her laugh ter. "I don't know why I'm looking, as though I expected somebody," mused Mrs. Upt-m, positively. "The folks that belong to me don't travel in horse ears." "Nor didn't neither when they was alive, for, even though I'm a few years younger'n you, I can remeinKr all about the horse and rigs you and your folks had. I needn't do no look- in' on my own account, neither, for if saw Corycomin' right here to this Old tadies' Home, I'd never speak to her. She deserted me once, ana now 'd disown her." "She's your own daughter, Myra, and she only left you lecau-4e you wouldn't let her marry Jim Leeds." Hut where is she now? wrote to her three years ago, to that town out West, jest after we got them new let- r-loxes put up, and mailed it myself in one of 'em. Why didn't she answer An' what does she care for her old mother? I'd be town poor if it warn t for them ladies that runs this house, an' that's the truth. We may try to hold up our heads here because we live in a Oueen Ann house right on the main street, with all the fine peo ple for neighbors, hut were pauper for all that, an' some days myself re- speck it 'most gone." She stopped a moment in her excited monologue to nick ud the red bow. which had fallen from her head la violently walking to and fro. "It was only this moriiiu', " she continued, with swelling indigna tion, "that our housekeeper, Mary Ilartlett, whose freckled face I ve wash ed many a time when her mother was helpin' with my kitchen work it was only this mpruin', I say, that she tried to talk to me about the sinful extrav agance of a lace ruflle alout my garter. As though she thought it was any or her business, anyhow ! Who's she, I'd like to know!" Mrs. Marden rocked her capacious person violently in the wooden rocker, and shook out her skirts in anger. Her bright eyes snap ped, and enough red flew to her cheeks to rival the bow on her hair. Poor, brave, faded Mrs." Cpton slitv ned out of the room, lest .Myra .Maruen should see the agitation she had uu wittinelv produced aud catch a glimpse of her filling eyes. Tears lie very near the surface when they have been meat and drink for years. What Mrs. Mar den bad rudely blurted out was true. sadly true, but the only way life at the homo uiu endurable was to build almut it that hedge of self-deception without which all happiness is incom plete. It was impossible for this pride preserving, self-deception to live in the ruthless light of Myra's plain state ments, so Mrs. Lpton crej away. Once in her room, she prepared her set KSTVBTTSHISD 3827. self for the street, thinking a walk would set her straight. She put on the black cashmere shawl with narrow border, that had been for years her richest imssession, a black bonnet with the widow's line of white next her soft gray hair, which strayed in tendrils when the wind blew, and a pair of black silk mitts. Out beyond the village, on a lovely hill side, with the wooded river run ning near, was an old house of solid uuornamental construction, generous in size, dignified and elegant in pro portion. Around it were old fashioned llowers, and over it hung the graceful branches of high elms. The place had Ireen Mr. Upton's home before fate played IU grim pranks on her and hers. Whenever her riMour prupre had received a wound, she found a rein stating comfort in walking the old familiar road and fancying once again that she was on the way home the kind of home that is written with a small initial letter. On the way she stopped to visit at almost the only house she ever entered now a small house which was seti donymed the "Shot," liecauie the mother there found her prototyie in that other woman who had so many children she didn't know what to do. This was one place where Mrs. Upton felt herself not only welcome, but an actual luiiefit, for when she amused the little ones there an hour she knew their overtired mother had that hour for rest, or at least for employment without interruption. One of the sad dest things in growing old is to" lose the feeling of being necessary to some body ; the transition from a caretaker to an object of care. Mrs. Upton never felt guiKTmious at the "Shoe." As she left the crowded house she lifted her head to the grand hills about her, and felt their inspiration. She would like to be even as they, patient, strong, her head high in heaven, then she would do great things for all the world. She reveled in the feeling, for it had been common to her younger days, aud it made youth seem nearer now to resume its habit of thought. The sidewalk had lost all pretcuco to a name, and was now a wavering thread-like path by the road-side, trod always by a solitary pilgrim, or by its narrowness separating groups unsocia- bly into Indian tile. Mrs. Upton trod it in reverie, with her head lowered, and stopped iu surprise as a man step ped aside to let her pass. ' She looked at him with interest. He was a stranger she had looked on all the village too many years not to know its own. He was well dressed, albeit with a graceful attention to the fashion of twenty years ago rather than to that of the hour, and lie was like herself, far iast youth so far beyond it that even middle age was counted within its happy compass. He raised Ii is hat slightly as he waited for her to pass, tiiat he might step back into the path, and she passed on, after satisfying her self with a searching glance that she hail never known him. She mused alniut him idly as she went along. Her life was so alrsolute- ly colorless that even the sight of a stranger was almost au eveut. Then, too, the interest was increased by his age, for we are all most inten-stcd in our coiitcinorics. We have odds against us in competition with those younger or older, but we stand on a level with those whose years are even :is our own. When she had almost reached the old house she saw in the path a large fresh folded handkerchief. With a natural impulse she picked it up, then noted that it was tine, and embroider ed with two initials iu t'le corner. "I H." she read aloud, then smiled a gentle rctrosj.eetive smile, as though that combination of initials was pleas antly known to her. She hid the band- kerchief lovingly iu the bosom of her dress, and stepped on her way with more alertness than common. "I've heard that there's a rage for antiUes," Myra Marden was saying, as Mrs. Upton went into the general sitting room of the Home, "an' if we don't watch out some onc'll lie buyin' us right under our noses an' takiu' us otrto the city." "Wouldn't it do just as well to leave us here and call this a museum ofan ti'juitics?" responded Mrs. Upton, at tempting to wound herself, that she might not feci so poignantly the weap on her less sensitive friend was using. "There's been some one here already to-day tryin' for you," continued Mrs. Marden. "Leastways he asked for KliJiieth Hunt, an' that's the name I first knew you by. He said he know- ed you was married, but he'd forgot the name. I told him you was out, an' he's to call again. Kxcept from lieiievolent ladies of the town, Mrs. Upton had not had a visit since she entered the Home, nor did her pride allow her to waut any. "When did you say he was coming, Myra?" she asked iu agitation. "He didn't cpMite say, but I think he meant to-morrer. You're tuckered out," she added sharply. " o an' rest a spell. Whatever do you want to walk your legs ofT for?" Her tenderer feelings always irritated her, for they were in contradiction of her estimate of herself as a hard-hearted shrew. "I'm goin' out," she continued, "to see the new fire department that James L. Haight takes so much pride in. It goes oft" at six o'clock, w hen the town clock rings, an' they say them horses is ready to leave the stable iu three shakes of a lamb's tail." Mrs. Upton climbed wearily to her room, after Mrs. Marden aud the un popular Mary Itarlett had disappear ed down the wide elm-shaded avenue. The only other occupant of the house was old Miss Oreene, as she was call ed even by her contemporaries. She had never been young in spirit, and now her body had caught up, as it were, and there was harmony between her physical aud psychical natures. She was silent always, and unsympa thetic, and knitting endless numbers of slumber slippers, during which absorb ing occupation she resented interrup tion; so Mrs. Upton, even with her longing for eompauiouship, had but small temptation to enter her half closed door. Once in her own simple room, which she had touched here and there with tasteful fingers much to the disgust AUGUST 28, 1895. of the inexorable Mary Bartlett, who, before all things was a rigid house keepershe sank into a large rocking chair and wandered into a delightful haze of reminiscence, in which the men were always young aud the maidens al ways lieautiful. There seemed to lie in her mind one figure of which she w as almost unconscious, so linked it was with her own icrsonaIity, and that was Iter own younger self; and always in-ar her was another, a man, but he was always out of reach. He was an iynit fit'uiiK, the brightest light in her you tig life, but always beyond her. Tired at last and chagrined, the girl in the day dream relinquished her Iiojh-s, and united her life with one who jiersist ently sought her, and from that time the light that had so long led her went out in hojK-less distance. The old woman in the chair was looking far away to the mountains, and reminiscently singing, in a low gentle voice not uite under control. "Iive was once u little Uiy, heii;ho, hriuho! Then 'twits fun with him to toy, heigho f when the sound of win-els, and then the front door U-ll, told of an arrival. The dream of vanished years Hew away, confronted by the necessity of the moment. Miss Greene's rheuma tic knees would not allow of her de scent, and all the others were out, so she must open the door. She glanced hastily in the glass to straighten her soft lace cap, but quite missed seeing what was patent toall who looked on her a sweet, unselfish soul shining from her eyes and making pleasant marks alstut her mouth, quite in har mony with the lines etched thereby sorrow. She opened the street door, and in dicated to the entering visitor the way to the sitting-room, around the walls of which Myra Marden had arranged il luminated texts brought from the last home she had owned. Her amiable intent to please the visitor was express ed by "Welcome," in shaded blue, placed where the eye would meet it on entering; "(iod Uless Our Home," shone resplendent in red and yellow where all could see ; and "Come Again," in subdued purple, uttered the graceful wish of the establishment as the visitor passed out. Mrs. Upton followed the tall form into the room with a trembling curiosi ty. He was the man she had met on her walk. "I want to see a lady whose name was once Miss Elizabeth Hunt," he said, courteously Isnving to the lady liefore him. "I have been to her old home, where I used to know her, and was told that I should find her here. I tried once liefore to-day, but she was out. May I ask of you if she is now at home, and if she will receive her old friend tauren Hamilton?" The slight frame of the little woman trembled and the color Hushed her delicate pale check. Her sweet dream of by -gone years, from which so com mon a thing as thedoor-lcll had awak ened her, was lieing linked with the present. Standing liefore him, with her face upturned to his so far alvc her she clasped her bauds to control their tell tale trembling, from her eyes, she said simply, "I am KliaU th Hunt, Lau ren !" The moments that followed were too filled with emotion to lie reckoned by the ordinary annotation of time. The man stood mute before the woman, his anus folded across his breast, breath ing dtvply, with his head thrown eag erly forward. Motionless save for his eyes, these scanned piercingly every lineament of the face la-fore him. He noted the soft white hair with straying tendrils, the refined contour nfhro- ind check and chin, the piteous eyes upraised. His eyes travelled over the little figure, upright, though the should ers drooped a bit, the clasistl hands appealing. Within him rsc such a t'Jinult of thought that it heeds must ti ul an outlet. His heart was young; the image of this woman which he had cherished within it was also young. He could not in one brief moment tear it out and in its place set the picture he saw before him now. KliaUth I 'pton waited. She had waited through life ; she well might wait a little longer. The silence was like a mighty cavern in which each heart-beat sounded an iufre pK'iit b.-ll. She quickly traced on the smooth shaven face of the man some of the fulfilled indications of his youth. And she chided herself for her failure to recogni.e them in that quick glance of first meeting. Later, when this dread ful m.itiiul scrutiny ami endless siieiico were over, she would beg forgiveness. He had come now as her deliverer ; she felt that. He would once more give her a home of her own, and her few remaining days would be spent within its happy retirement. At the thought her lip trembled, her eye brightened, tauren noved as though to speak, and she listened with both soul and sense. "I do not see any trace of what you used to be. I never should have known you." His voice was deep and slow. Kach word drove mercilessly into the heart of the woman before him ; but, consumed by the grief of his own dis appointment, lie, all unseeing, left her with a heavy sb-p, youth dropping from him as a lo;sened g inm-nt. And so he passed from out of her presence for the last time on earth, taking with him such a bundle of dead hopes as it would seem impossible to have raised in so short a time. "Can't you hear me. Mrs. Upton?" asked Myra Marden, Is-nding over her as she lay in bed the third day after tauren Hamilton had left her. She had lain quiet ou her narrow white led ever since they found her insensible on the floor of the sitting-room. Now she opened her eyes, and Mrs. Marden was trying to muse her. "Don't you know me, Mrs. Upton It's me, Myra, an' I've heaps to tell you. My Cory's come track with Jim Ix-eds, an' is a rich woman, an' has found out that the mail-box wasn't never opened that had my letter iu it, an' she's goin' to make a home for me, an' you're to come too. I)o your hear? A home of our own, with no visitin' committee. Just ourselves, an' flowers, an' earthly thiugs we love. Won't you please wake up, Mrs. Upton?" The early sun purpled the moun eraio tains, putting brightness and color in to all earthly things, and reddening the masses of cumulus clouds, but Klizalrcth Upton awoke to a far greater glory. Under her pillow they found ajlarge folded handkerchief which had on it the crinkyiqrots of many tears, and in one corner were the embroidered initi als "1 H." Myraojicned it with tend er hands and laid it over the silent heart. The solemn ls-11 of the church tolled for the dead, one stroke for each year, sounding over the village and reaching far out to the everlasting hills which bad surrounded the scenes of this com pleted life. The whole town seemed to to pause to count and Iist-n. The first stroke fell upon the air with a joyous ring, as it told the happy year of baby box I. A score more of strokes, which sent their gladness away off to the grim hills, carried the littfc' life to womanhood, and then the tom-s began to lengthen and ileejs n w ith an om inous bum. It was the utterance of a disapjtoinled life, one depressed, and deprived of the love that makes life livable. Forty strokes were sadly reached, aud culminated almost in a groan. After that the knell was slow, regular, impassive, and at fifty seemed to say, " Who enters here leaves hoiie behind, "so flat and lifeless were the tones, with dreary waits la-t ween.' The U-ll struck iu accord with the hearts of women at work iu homes where la lror and privation were not made en durable by love and encouragement, and awoke in them a sympathy with the finished life they had never known when Klizalrcth Upton was a fellow worker. At seventy-five the un willing bell lagged feebly, as the added years bad done, and every one in weariness had stoprcd counting the strokes save a little Iroy in school, who f rund in them distraction from his task. And the last stroke of all it was not a rounded pi can of victory claiming out triumphant to the sky; rather it rung like those preceding it, and hung qu-s-tioning in air with au upward tone au unfinished phrase, awaiting its com pletion in the other world. Helen Churchill Candec, in Harper's llazar. Not So Very Poor. Over two weeks niro W. I. Nichol son, of New Zealand, arrived hereon the steamer Mariposa and put up at the American Kxchange hotel. He was so roughly dressed and so unique in appearance, with a queer bunch of whiskers on his chin, that he seemed a walking advertisement of hard luck. He had arrived in the steerage, and he bsik one of Mie very cheapest rooms in the house. Under these circtun staiiccs Manager Wiseman was inclin ed to keep a wary eye on him. At the end of three days Mr. Wiseman broach ed the matter of settling the bill. The queer guest said be would pay the bill iu the next day or two. He did not, however, and he was spoken to again about it. Still there seemed to be a hitch, but finally the New Zealander said he would go up stairs and get the money. After a while he came down with it and paid the bill. Then he explained that the rea.soti why he hadn't paid it ln-fore was that he had nil his money sewed up in his vest. On investigation it was shown that be had a surprising amount. There was no less than $,)i in bills and Kng'ish sovereigns, nurstly the latter, besides ?-4,lm in drafts. The sovereigns weighed the vest down till it was as heavy as its owner, and all :ui able Ixrdied man could carry. They were skillfully and stoutly sewn in from the Isittom up, so that all around his sides and front there was money, and the iKieKoi tne vest nan to ire strengthened with leather straps to keep the garment from Wing pulled to pieces. This queer contrivance loaded with coin, bills and drafts, the man with the billy-goat whiskers has Uvn liiiTging with him wherever ho traveled. There were fears at time that he would Ire robbed, but Nicholson has always insisted that he could take care of himself. A few days ago, after ret u mi ng from a warm walk down town with his load of cash, he threw oil' his heavy vest in his r.smi and put on another one to cool otl". Ho finally stepped down-stairs, leaving the door open. He sat at a desk for a long time, forgetting ab rut his cash. Sj.ldonly he recollected it, his face assumed an ash en hue, and ho vanished up-tairs like a streak of light. His precious vit was there, though hanging on a chair. He grablred it and put it on, and situ-.-then he has worn it constantly. Nicholson came over to invest his money, but did not find anything to suit hint, so the land of the antipodes will get him again. Ho sailed on the Mariposa, the same steamer on which he came. San Francisco Ex aminer. Why Women Prefer Low Chairs- One of the things that no man ever will or can understand is that women invariably choose the lowest chairs they can find, usually selecting for solid comfort one that is alrout six inches from the lliror. Schopenhauer's con temptuous allusion to them as the "short-lejLged sex" generally occurs to him as the final solution of the problem, even though he be too polite outward ly to hint at such a thing. That Is by no means the real reason, according to a bright little artist. Women, she says, seem to know intuitively when they are looking their best, and they know that rarely hapiens when they are sitting on a chair sufficiently high to make the feet dangle stitlly down ward, barely reaching the floor. In all the celebrated pictures of sitting feminine figures the line from the waist to the knee Ls elongated as far as possible, and it is to secure this grace ful, easy length of line, as well as for comfort, that women instinctively turn to the low chair or stool. Detroit News. Life's often lost from little Ills Which might bc saved by little pilU. That is to say, if you sutler from biliousness, coustiiation, dyspepsia or toipid liver use Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. 1 WHOLE NO. 2300. A 'Three girls domiciled in the next room! There's an end to my writing for one month, at least! Kenneth lloss pushed his piqs-rs in to a confused lit up, shul bis desk with a vindictive snap as be lighted a cigar. "Tbnv chattering, noisy jfirls, each w ith a tongue three titiii-s its procr length! There's my cousin Flora, Alie Aymer and liirsa Ferna!! blue eyes, black ccs ami melting gray; by the way, that little monkey ltosa, isn't bad looking. I rather fancy that ccu liar shade of brown hair. Site would make a tolerable study for my next heroine. I may as well put her to some useful purpose. Heigho! I think Aunt Meg was crazy to invite all those girls here at once!" lie paused a moment, as the merry n-al of girlish laughter echoed iu the adjoining apartment. 'They're laughing at inc. tiirls al ways think a bachelor fair game." Tap! tap! tap! sounded softly on the panel of bis door, and he had ju-l time to take bis heels oil the table before Flora Kdgcwarlh put her head into the room. "Cousin Kenneth, are you there?" "Well, what's wanting now." "May we come in?" "I may as well say yes!" "I just want tht girls to see what a dear little den you've got here." Flora threw open the door and td mitted her two companions. "Here he is, girls! the old Iw-hclor, as he appears iu his native wilds!" "Now, young ladies," said Mr. Hoss, throwing his half-smoked cigar out of the window, "I'll trouble you to lie a little less uiuvrcmonious!" For Alice and Flora had pounced on his sheets of linrse manuscript like hon ey bees oil a bed of heliotrojre, and were laughing over the rather iilegibie chirography. Miss Fertiali -tood near the dsr, a litile confused and very pretty, in her blushes and uneertainity. "D.m't Is- cross, Kenneth, ' said Flo ra. "We're going down to the post of fice now. Ii-rsa Feniall has written a twelve page letter to her swi-etheart in Canada" "Flora!" exclaimed ltosa. "And," pursued the relentless Mora, "we're going to jxrst it. Come girls." And Mr. K-rss was left alone with the heavy musk rows nodding at the open casement and the dreamy murmur of maple troughs and far oil" N-es in his ear. "A twelve -page letter to her sweet heart!" he -.Hindered. "She mast have had something very interesting to write. Canada, eh? I wish it was Van Ilieinen's Land!' Mr. IJoss rose from his easy chiirand began to walk tip and down the fl ror. "It's tiro confounded hot to breathe here!" he said, impatiently taking up his hat. "I'ii g r and take a trsinp in the woods." Flora Edgewortn hadsuovetded in planting a rankling thorn in her cous in's breast, all unconscious thouga she had U-en. The sun was low in the sky when Kenneth returned from bis abstracted rami'Ie in the woods, and the wide, old fashioned country house was wry still as he ascended toward bis own apart ment. "Hallo!" Mr. K'ss gazed vacantly around the room with something of the U-wildert-d feeling that might have In-longed to the Fa-tern Priinv when ho felt himself transported from pole to jmle iu an en chanted dream. "I'm in the wrong nrom, I U-lieve for tin re is Flora F.dgeworth's light wrap on the K-d, and H-isa's hat anil no end of rihlrons and gloves and lace col lars on the bureau." He balanced the c.xpletti.-h little hut on his hand. "So this is the fashionable style of chapcau, eh? I wonder now whether Kosa's hat would tit me!" Mr. K-rss adjusted the article jauntily on one side of his curls and viewed himself in tin- mirror. "Upon my wor-J, it don't look so bad! And now w here's the saequo! A little tight in the sleeves, but other wise quite a decent fit if a fellow holds his arms well Iwek. There's Alice's blue uiiisliu dress. I've two minds and a half to put it on, just for the joke of the thing!" A momentary silence ensued, broken by the rustling of muslin. "Don't meet round the waist by a good six inches, but I can hold it up. I woodcr what makes the thing drag on the ll ror and cling round one's legs so! Oh, I know the crinoline ought to go under!" "I'm not certain but that I should make quite a nice broking woman," mused Kenneth, strutting backward and forward before the mirror. "On the whole Tomb of the Prophet! is that the girls?" Mr. Koss gave a blindly desperate jerk at the sacque, ami a pull at the crinoline; but all in vain. The gay voices, intermingled here and there with a ringing laugh, or a snatch of song, drew nearer and nearer. For an instant Mr. I toss wildly con templated a rush through the hall to his own door, but a moment's reflection convinced him that sucha retreat would ; le impossible. "I must stay and face it out!" lie thought, "but hold on! there's the clos et. It's just possible they will only stay a minute or two." And totally oblivious of the "majesty of man," he tied precipitately iuto the closet. "Why the deuce didn't I think to se cure the key?" he thought, as the girls streamed into the room. "However, I can hold on to the door handle if any one attempts to get in. Uy Jove, if the girls should sit- me in this rig I should never hear the last of it." He leaned against the shelves and breathlessly awaited the progress of events. "Why!" ejaculated a soft voice Ko sa's own "where's my hat? Was I careless enough to have it dowu stairs? Flora you have hidden it." "I wonder what you'll accuse me of next!" said Flora, in an injured voice. "You told Mr. Koss that Cousin Si io in' l.-ll.T was to tiv " I "Your sweetheart? Well, he ought to I-, T'n' sure. He Is the 1 anlm -t young man I know." "fib. Flora, he don't mm pa re with Mr. iCs." "Ursa, be hones?,' said Flora, "u hii !i do you like la-t Cousin Ken or Simon M-riitrHsc'" "Fl-.ra!" "Tel! me now, honc-sUy." The answer firnr.' ii a low, half in-ati'ld-lf.- oil :. "Kenneth!" The heart under Alii-e's saopie gave a great jump! Mr. Kis's bead came in contact With somethiie on the tipper -belf, and down caiue a nin of b.ucl tioxes on his occiput ! There was au in-taut's terrified -i-leliev, and then all the girls U-gati to scream iu chorus, "How silly we nil are!" said Kosa tremulously; "it's only the cat." "As if a cat could make such a noise as that."' said Flora, "( all Uncle John! Alice, do look and see what it is!" "No you lirok," fain-red Alice. I'll lo,k mysel'," said U-rsa Fernall, bravely advancing to the rescue. Kut wh'Mt the do r handle r fused to turn, evi u she blanched. "Someone is holding the door inside. Call the men!" "There is no ii-ii-s;t y," quoth a voiii? from behind the pa:;els, and the next mom -nt the door flew op-n, disclosing a tall form in blue, and a eountenau-e whose litter sheepish ncss can never lie descrilred! "(.'ou.-iti Ken!" shrieked Mora. "Mr. Koss!" faltered Miss Fernall. "Why, it can't U- possible!" ejaculat ed Alice. And then the three girls clung to each other in paroxysms of laughter! "Tin? fact is, adi-s," commenced Kenneth, coiifiis-dly. "I - Won't soine one b.-lp me oil' v il!i this inoii-e trap'.' Mis Alicv, I'm very sorry I've split yirtir saeque, but - Well, if Joil Won't stop laughing 1 can't explain, that's the long and the short of it!" IJut K'rsa Fernall bad stopped laugh ing alre-a ly, and the pink other checks was deepening into scarlet. She had just rcm -m'sercd the words careles-ly sjsrken not five minutes ago. In an inexplicably short space of tine Mr. Kows bad torn oit'his feminine adornm.-nts and lied igiiomiuiou.sly, followed by peals of laughter from his cousin and Aiiiv Aymcr, strange piece of contradiction had begun to cry! "Poor little thing! she's hysterical," said aunt Meg, who had j-lst apii-ared on the scene. Hut K'rsa was not hy.sterinil. The full, delicious iicioii of summer was in the mid-heaven that night as Kenneth K'rss strolled into the garden, in -fcrdily pi::ting a eig ir, and contem plating the foa-ibility of leaving War-bu-g!i t r avoid tile girls' san-asm. "I was a to . I," said he aloud; "but Who's th -re?" It was K-a, coming from the low. -r part of the garden. l',y the full brilliant n:-n!ight be saw the traiss of tears on her cheek. "K-rsa, yo-i have Ireen crying!" "No, I haven't!" And to prove the trut'iofher as-s-rtion, Kosa U-gaii to cry afre-h. "Lor!t here. K-rsa," said the young man gravely, I have 1kv;i thiakiug of leaving Warburgo to-morrow." Kosa cried on. "Kut," pursued Mr. Koss, "I'll stay if if you'll oniy tell me to my face what you told my cousin when I was hidden away like a fooh-h rat in a trap, Kosa. . Speak, little o:u ! "What shall I tell you?" faltered Ko sa. "That you love me! that you will Is my wife!" And she told him . so iu thelaiiguag" that lovers Is-st like to hear. And Mr. Koss stayed in Warburgh, and braved the ridicule of Alii-e and Flora, with litile Kosa marshalled on his side. A' ' Y'irl .V The Good Housekeeper. The ''' M-t" ;: ttr, in an article on housekeeirers, docs justice to an ort'nv which it says requires -f a woman the same qualities that are necessary to make a good statesman cool judgment. ' equable temper, and a gra-p of details, however small. The average woman, the '(: tt,' contends, in order to devel op those qualities, needs to have the companionship of man, to live with him in the marital relation, and to Is-rospm.-ible to him fr his daily needs and e rmfoi is; left to herself, free from the discipline of male d rminatioii and needing only to provide for her own wants she will shirk the cares of housekeeping and maintain hers-lf up on the most meagre diet, mainly one of toast and tea. As regards the profcssioal houe-keejr-er, who is held to a strict accountabil ity, and is called upon to provide an nually In'-"', appetizing meals for a fam ily and satisfying one for domestics, to make the servants do their U-st work and to prevent jars and bickerings among the-m, she requires an amount of tact, character arid kindliness never found in the scinnd-rate worn tu that the housekeoJH-r is supposed to lie. She mu-t be cheerful, prompt and calm iu emergencies, g-ri-tern p-ere,t ami pa tient. The household ovi-r which she has supervision must lie so organized that during her temp rrary absence or illness tiie whole thing will go on by itself for a time at leas?. That the p-.rs.ses.sion of such qualities is rare in any woman the Unzittt holds to lie true from the fact that the owners of large town and country houses in England are constantly on the lookout for this ideal housekoci r. Such a wo man will easily comi.-.and au annual salary of -fl, m, if not .more. She is treated with great respect, she has her own apartments in w hich her meals are served, her hours of lalxr or duty are reasonably brief, and siie is not ex- ls-ted to hold other than official rela tions with the domestics. The Whirligig of Tima. An old c.umtrv darkev was sitting on a curb uptown, watching thecloe-trie cars as they swept like a smuroii thnuigh the Kosottan Sahara, when suddenly he started to his feet with an exclamation of wonder, and then an expression of pleased surprise as thick as the cloud of dust that olrscured a reevding e-ar occupied his face. The dog catcher's wagon was passing by, and a big negro, who takes iu un wary canine's, had just swesqn'd derwll em one', and after a brief struggle had auilcd him a prisoner. "tlreat tJawd!" exclaimed the old darkey em the curb. "Be-fo elo wall they usto hah dirgs tor ketch do niggers now doy has niggers to ketch de dogs." New Orleans Item. Ad rseof IV. Fowler's Kxt. of Wild Strawberry brings immediate relie-f in all ens of cramping p.iins of the stomach or hrwols. It is nature's specific for summer complaint in all its forms. A man has generally, the giaal ir ill qualities which ho attributes to man kind. She nstoue.