TALKS WITH THE FAEJffEB- rn ii The Wast of Fetertilizera Seeding Grass Fields. Publication. ii oratii at . mJ.va mce, oilier is .Uuiied until subscribe oo not responsible lb I f ptvioffloe to of the torn ii"-s-' . rcun-. .H beat- ' .Vi.ua it ;uc souk, rxl, 1""- .rt - - i'LL, .i..-n-t P. UvkSU''- .imlx-U Pa. i , l,. uj- stain. .tirilxM-Al--LAW. Ml r,U..Tvl, Pa. , i;..u i-oiu: Court tfloUM-V-AT-LAW. mi, it in l, Pa J. U. OoLK. .nii.L, Pa. ' w I'uMiios eu P".1'',' i!--i.i.-uaujuium1c T7yy. A. 1- o- "A.Y. K-u.-.c. Wi.i atteud to ixuii..'.ft, Pa. , -r. . i.i it i L b .- en- t7.,.luu,v.UUWU t Jj U. .i.'iu"- In--. .iiirrxf!, Pa. --,,' i,u-:',-i r;.!iuuJ l li.s -a....a.uS "-u-tA-. w" ,,i,cjuivtw.'i Sioie. AUViLNt.V-AT-I.AA", Nji.k'.i't, Pa. f )L.::iS:.i!ti up t.-'. Ku" j i Ji l l:- !.Utti. i iiiftlui:li .ZaZi.-.. iit.. x..i4.u.-.aa4 all . ;j 'iB. L. I.'. uLlloKN. LV 4 (0LJ;UUN, j.ut-rwS, lu j. I our c.ire will l i'ia: L. l.-i i i. Ui. CoilfO jss:i-ii- 'a.-'iii aiiJ aiijtiiii , .'.r;.;4 .lid cwu'j-auciUK i iii'jli.EY-AT-L.W, Smu'lx-t, Fa. prjt ::i s i:n r : mi l adjoining A A.. ic-.u"v rlill UslcU io il.lli Will iiifi-ia. w. ii. BcrrEi .i.uii & laTl'EL, A.TUNtiVAl-LAW, .)iui rx.1. Pa. :xfct'.r&trtit i..-ir vare will be fce. -jfUauy uiun i'.d t. UItiv '.c.u:Hii-;its, m. D., 1 i,aiv.i.-.VitU:uU)S, -jiii.i-1, l'a, shj;. S-.rw.-t, oMhr.su: V. B i-r.MLm:iu fiU.(.U.V A.M,sL"l'.CiEON, miersL-l, l'a. a pr Asi :,.!lt; rvkx-. (otbe cili- "Si"-is-vi,riroi lirugtuire. -a- - . . . . .. .i..:y. I pro- .---V.li".;i Ii. i.i.riJal Lib of- '-'-.jl i..aUj:i.j. M f -l' MILLKX, J - .ii 1. 1 !,,. prtwrvatitm ... "" 1- 11. I'..vi i tun liiore, '2 I'OIruOTH. erai Director. I'a'.rint Land Stii-vej'or Ss! Oils! 0 'ttslrtir IV-part. Si Lubricating Oils (iasolinc, nu rvc0- known "4lct of Petroleum "'t miiformly factory Oils . ,r "t- and viclni-'""f-dby k "-"tikiiifrEB, .Lie VOL. XLV. KO. Baby's Smooth, Fair Skin Is Due to Hood's Sarsaparllla-lt Cured Him of Dreadful Scrofulous Sores - Now In Cood Health. "At the are cf two nmntk. i - .mo, uiy iauy bogan to have Bores break r ut on his right che k. We used til t he local external ap plications that we could think or hear of .. . uuoan. j. uv.- cores epreaa an over on Jeof his fac?. We consults . JiUJBl cian and tru-d his medicine. ani in 1- j . ncT A the sore was gone. But to my surprise in two weesis more another scrofulous look ing sore made its apr carsnoe on his arm. ii grvw worse ana worse, and when he was three months old, I began giving him Hood's Sarsanarilla. I aim tt iti. Sarsaparilla, and before the first bottle was nniitieci, ir.c sores were well and have cover returned. He is now four year old. but he has never had in, J . b " those scrof ulous sores since he was cured by llood s barsaparilla, for w hich I feel very grateful. My boy owes his' good health and smooth, fair skin to thU great medicine." ME3. S. S. Woetex, Farin inpton, Delan-are. Hood's Scrsaparilla is sold by all drug gists, f 1, six for ?5. Be sure to get Hood's. -THE Firsi National Bank Somerset, Ponn'a. Capital, S50.000. Surplus, S26.O0O. o DEPOSITS RCCCIVC IN LARGE ANDSMALl AMOUNTS. PAYABLE ON DEMAND. ACCOUNTS OF MERCHANTS. FARMERS, STOCK DEALERS, AND OTHERS SOLICITED -DISCOUNTS DAILY.- BOARD OF DIRECTORS. CHAS. O. SC-ULL. GEO. R. SCULL, JAMES Lu WOli, W. II. MILI.EU, JOUX Ii. SCVTT. RORT. H. SCL'LL, KliEl) W. BIIijECKES EDWARD SCI'LL, : : PRESIDENT. VALENTINE 1IAV, : VICE I'UESIDENT. 1IAKVEY M. BERKLEY, - CASHIER. The funds and Rfenritles of this bank are se curely protects In a colcbratiI CORLlrM Ill'B- glac l'Koor Safb. Tbe only safe made abM- lutt '.i bunslar-l'roof. Its Mm Coply National OF SOMERSET PA. Eftablittwd 1877. Oritalzti M a Kitlontl, 18S0 -O. Capital. - $ 50,000 00 Surplus & Undivided Profits, 23,000 00 Assets, - - 3)3,03 000 y. CLas. J. Harrison, - President. Win. II. Koontz, - Vice President. Milton J. Pritts, - - Cashier. Geo. S. Ilarrbon, - Ass't CabLier. w Directors , Win. End.iley, Chas. W. Snyder J.wiab SjKH-ht, H. C. IioeriLs John It. Snyder, John StulTt, J.iseph IV. IavU, Harrison Snyder, Jerome StufTt, Noah S. Miller, Sain. B. Harrison. Customer of thin bank will receive the most liberal IrealnientoMisiHlenl wIlnaajeoaiiaiiiK. 1'arties wiKhiiiK t -ua nnMwy enr an be accommodated by UraU for any amouiiU , , Ionev and valuables seenrea Dy oi.-r- " "j bold celebrated safes, with most improved U"o:IwU"his made In all part, of the Cnltd Suite. Cbar;-s moderate. Accounts and deposit soaciiea. A. H. HUSTON, Undertaker and Embalmer. A GOOD HEARSE, nd everything pertaining to fane rail furn ished. SOMERSET - - Pa Jacob I). Swank, Watchmaker and Jeweler, Next Door Wert of Lutherm Church, Somerset, - Pa- I Am Now pi ed to BUiily the public w ith Clocks, Watches, and Jew elry of all de-seriptloiis, aa Cheap as the Cheapest. KEPAlIUXa A SPECIALTY. All work guaranteed. Look at my stock before making your purchase. J. D. SWANK asm m rmi mmi n ka rami WltJ 9 "' ,o i Ike kalfa. ,n-y . " '""b"t,.1; falL ad hat UK P00" o ,.bu. And boptlal a "a, . . kM mnt Cttfwd. tT. . .t.il. U.M ter ta WWII roa7" crlaSlaaaays. txkUR. cube sizxzrzzzzzz lasa U. atao sr lalsnaattaa. 49 ROBERT THE DEVIL Ofcour the gem rat's will was at the U.ttoiu ,f the afTuir, but the Eve li-hiud these fig leaves w as his second wif. They uM not call heraftepmother, for the general's children were all oMer than she was. The gem-rat was well along in years when she married him, I'M that was her a!l"air. There hangs his portrait i tainted by Copley. Ik at it. You do not believe he was 00 when it was painted? Hut they say he was. He was more handsome and fascinat ing at 4i than his sons were at 3j. Tiic second w ifo was rich very rich, .she ln.tighithe greatest quantity of gold and frilvtr plate into tiie raiuily, all marked with an Arabic cipher, to which fche added the Chevalier crest a terrapin and the motto, 'Xot to tiie gwifu" No one knew certainly who her peo ple were. She s:ti. they were Spanish, and her own api-aranee supported her assertion. Tliere is her isirtrait, painte-d at the time of her marriage. Look at it. Tiie general went to Paris, a long journey in those days, to buy those diamonds she wears, and the ccrbeille. Sometimes, even when there was no one to dine at home but the family, Mistress Chevalier would sail into the draw ing room, that peafowl's tail of green embroidered velvet spread be hind her, her beautiful black hair turn ed back like that in a tour, her arms as naked as Venus,' her xiut lace fall ing from her milk white shoulders, and flashing from hair and ears and fingers aud iiamiug in a fire circle about her delicate neck, the diamonds magnifi cent stones, worth scores of negroes. Ixrd! how the daughters would stare at their plates aud how the sons would sneer at each other as the general would meet her midway the nxim, lead her to her seat at the table aud kiss the dim ple on her shouldeT before l:e left her. They say she loved hiiu passionate ly that often, when she thought they we re alone and he would pass her chair, she would turn htr head upon her lazy cushions and hold out a beautiful hand. And he? Would kneel beside her and kiss her K:negranate lips aud lovely throat until you would have sworn him 2-i, and maybe not married at all. They say, too, it was a pretty sight to see her with her little son. A maid going to help her dress one morning heard so much laughter and such baby shrieks that she first peeped in at the door. Aud, behold, the mistress on her hands and knees, aud baby, just from bis bath, on her ue-ck! She was crawling over the velvet carjiet in her linen shift, looking over her shoulder at the little shouting ras cal, w ho tugged at her hair with one hand while he beat her with tbe branch of jasamine in the other. The black "da" sat and shook like a fuscons mold of berry jam, w hile the young mistress crawled about, crushing the yellow flowers under her soft hands aud knees. The door of the inner rooni sprang open, and in walked the general, his dressing gown with the IVrsiaii border wrap(ed around him. Tliere was shrieking then I warrant you. Those years were the general s holi day time. He had earned it, for his first w ife was a tluelph, aud everybody in Carolina knows what that means. She never got down ou her knees ex cept to pray in her life, and she never prayed for anything except money. She put ou morning the second year of her marriage and never took itotf again. They say she slept in her crape veil. Her children were all born black in the face aud crying, and they cried the greater part of their childhood. The boys got ashamed of it after awhile, for their Knglish blood was strong, but the girls never did, aud ought to have lived in a land of droughts. Their tears would have fer tilized a desert. As it was, there was rain a-plenty and to f-pare, and the general kept out of their way, gave them umbrellas and handkerchiefs for biathday gifts, and! rejoiced greatly when they cried over him at their weddings for the last time, as he thought. But some of them drowned their husbands in tears and came home again damper than ever, aud no one but the second wife could have stood them. She laughed, ordered more fires, brighter lights, opened the windows, and filled the house with flowers and gay company. She called the eldest Niobe to her face aud spoke of them collectively as tl.e weeping willows, for they were tall and liked to be thought willowy. They cried so much over their little half brother that the boy fairly detest ed them and ran away from the sight of them. He grew up strong like his father and lieautiful like his mother, a verita ble enfant de I'amour, but when he was 10 and the general was 70 the fine, handsome old gentleman died sudden ly. The mistress was but 30, just the age of the youngest stepdaughter, and she sat in thsj drawiug room when the will wis read with such a look on her face tiiat nol ly but a Guelph would have dared to cry. The boy sat by her, the very print and copy of hU father, with hi little aquiline nose, his bright blue eyes, and his father's own trick of holding up his chin and stiffening his spins when he desired to see clearly. Now, the general had been good to his children. He had given generous ly t-i his sons and had helped them in business, lie always give uimugB portions to his daughters. They all came to hearlhe reading of his will the women shrouded in crape, with red eye and noses. The mistress sat in the gown the general had loved her the m st In, and everybody stai-cd at it and at her beautiful grief stricken face. The ill stated that she should hold fie old Chevalier place for her mm. It shesurvived him, it should be hers ab solutely, to leave as she pleased. I Tliere should be no ui vUloa of prop omer SOMERSET, PA., WEDNESDAY, erty until the last son was of age. Then came bequests to relatives and servants and that was all. The stepchildren were furiously an gry. Oue would have thought them on the verge of starvation. "Wait 11 years!" they cried. "Wait until that precious brat is of age? And his moth er, with everything in her hands aud responsible to no one? It is not to be endured." And soon, worse and worse. The mistress looked from one to another. "I will not tell you to leave my house," she said in a voice botn sweet and frozen, "or remind you of the home you have always had here. You tier have homes of your own and must live in them, as I shall live in mine. As long as you are in my house you must conduct yourself as your father's chil dren should. Ytmr quarrels and cruel speeches insult his memory." They took flight like so many black birds, but the mistress was so good natured they flew back at intervals, and every now and then the boy was permitted to visit them. He went ith pockets full of gold and returned a total bankrupt. He gave, and they took, with lioth hands. About a year after the general's death the boy came home from a visit to his eldest brother, Robert, who lived in the city. He had been at home for a day, jierhaps, when he was taken ill. nis illuess puzzled the country phy sician, aud a city colleague was sent for. Hut the boy died. His mother, looking at his dead body, sjK.ke out her thought: "He has been itoisoued. His brother has poi soned him." And she called the eldest son Cain and Robert the Devil to his dying day. The pjteech went abroad like a blot of ink in a tumbler of water. Robert never forgave her. There was no proof that the child had been loully dealt with, but the suspicion imbittered his life aud followed hiiu to the grave, aud so they hated each other fiercely. The Chevalier place was very valua ble. Add to that the mistress' money aud plate and jewels, and oue can see why every bachelor and many a man who could not marry looked longingly into her beautiful face. liut one could tell by the manner of her walking, the inflections of her voice and the immobility of her attitude when she sat that for her there was neith er light uor sweetness, nor hope, nor desire, left in life. Aud yet she went about as usual, even after her sou's death steadily, re fusing the shroud of crape and having always in the house light, flowers, ptr fume aud pleasant company. The stepchildren looked curiously at each other as year after year slid away aud said to each other that she would n.'ver die. Many of them died of dropsy and o .her watery disorders, and their chil dren grew up, but at IK) Mistress Che valier was still alive and at 'XI, al though, truth to tell, she had shriveled into a brown mummy aud sat all day and ofttimes all night in a great wad ded chair with a hood over it, stuffed about with cushions and propped with pillows and hot-water bottles. Her bjdy had mummified, bat her mind was as clear and as crystal as ice. Sh ; woul J look with her deep black eyes at the faithful mulatto slave wo man who waited upon her and laugh to hereslf a strangely clear laugh to issue from such sunken lips. Sometimes her step-grandchildren w.mld go to see her. When they were children, they were afraid, but as the years passed they got quite used to the sight of the great colli n in one end of the room. "It is a very comfortable bed," Mis tress Chevalier would often say. And several times, when she thought the hour had surely come, she made the slave woman and her daughter put it on its trestles and lift her in, and she would lie, waiting for death, gazing with a corpselike smile at the general's portrait At these times the family, in all its branches, rejoiced. There were only a few of the direct line left Nearly all had married. Same were rich, and some were pjor, and all were avari cious. At last, one m iming the faithful mu lattos found the mistres dead in her collin. Ouce again the children of the house assembled iu the drawing room to hear the reading of a will the women, as usual, a hypocrital row of veiled pleu reuses. All were present except the son of Robert. lie had inherited his father's hatred, and Mistress Chevalier's death revived the story of her son's. Sj the step grandson staid away from her burial. His portion of the estate should lie the place itself. But the will ran, "To my faithful and devoted attendant Cil ia, or Lucilla, Chevalier I leave the place and certain sums of money at in terest, herein more fully described and specified." This Lucilla Chevalier was none other than tbe malatto slave womau whose papers of freedom, together with those of her daughters and sons, had been declared before the will was opened. Therefore she was a le'gal heir. A gasp of horror ran rouud the room. The Chevalier place! But that w-as not all. If the surviv ing relatives of the testator should at tempt to set aside the conditions of the will in way, on any grounds, the entire property, real and personal, should go to the dead woman's physician. Be tween this man and the Chevaliers there had always been feud and ill favor. Niobe's son received a life interest of many thousand dollars, aud there were a few legacies here aud there among the poorest Ouelph-Chevalier tribe. The mistress' gold aud silver plate, diamonds and other jewels were locked up iu a bank in the city, to lie dispos ed of, in accordance with sealed in structions locked up with them, a year after the reading of the will. When Robert's sou was told these things, he turned white and then green livid, unpleasant 6bade. The Chevalier place, his patrimony, left to slaves! And CJ .xl knew to whom set ESTABLISHED 1827. the gold, the silver and the diamonds were left. The sealed instructions with them would undoubted reveal further determination on the part of the dead woman to insult and rob the family. Mistress Chevalier's coffin had been placed in the family vault lietweeu those of her husband and their little son. By her desire the coffins were on one shelf, touching each other, and covered with a velvet pall, on which she herself had laboriously embroider ed the Chevalier coat of arms, with its t-igniflcant crest and motto. The vault was in (the churchyard of old King William, Seaforlh, facing the salt marsh and flanked by the rice fields. Thilher went, in his rage, the son of Robert the Devil. By his direction the mistress' coffin was dragged out, wrapped in the pall aud sunk iu theedge of the marsh, with not a stone to do it reverence. By night camo 2Ciole's son who, mindful of his life interest, felt asham ed of his cousin's poor revenge dug up the collin and replaced it, dripping, iu the vault. i A slave of his let tlip the thing to a fellow belonging to RoU-rt. Again the vault was opened, the casket was dragged out by slaves, and in the flare of pine knots was delivered to the marsh this time in a tiot where the salt tides rose daily and flooded the place. 1 Then the avenger disappointment and family dishonor biet his cousin in the city street and triumphed over him. "So easy matter, either," he conclud ed, "for the old mummy case was dam nably heavy. Find it again, if you can." He passed sneeringly. Niobe's sou let the marsh keep its secret and bided his time. When the year had expired, the va rious heads of the tribe met, as if by appointment, in the private office of the president of the bank. But each one, as he entered, looked haughtily aud inquiringly at the oth ers. At midday the large and ionder ous strong box was brought into the office and the key inserted iu its intri cate lock. The men and women crowded about the table, squeezing and jostling each other, the women shoving aside their crape veils to see better. For 50 years ami more no one had laid eyes ou the once famous Chevalier diamonds. The box lid was thrown back all the necks were craned. The men's fingers itched for the gold and sil-er, the women's for the precious stones. The box was empty. Empty save for a folded square of paper, sealed and stamped with an Arabic cipher. "Shall I open it?" inquired the presi dent of the bank, looking from oue be wondered face to another. "If you please," answered Niobe's son. Is there no address?" "None whater." Broken open, the letter ran: My Dkak Robkkt Sixty years ago I wronged your father. To-day I re pair the wrong as far as I am able. 1 intended leaving my plate and jewels in this box for you, but I prefer to give them to you with my own hands. Come aud take them from inc. Your all'ee-tionate grandmother. J l' AN A 1K RlLKAS-CllEVALIKK. A card with mourning border drop ped from the letter to the table. Robert picked it up mechanically and read: "Mistress Geoffrey Robert Chevalhr. At home. The Chevalier vault, King William, Seaforth." "God!" he ejaculated, staring at the bit of glazod pasteboard and then at N iobe's son. Theu he seized his hat, pushed his wife aside and rushed from the bank. From the city to Seaforth Station, SU l'eter's parish, from the station to the churchyard, from the churchyard to the marsh. The tide was up. For hours he sat looking at the slow ly receding water. N iobe's sou touched him on the shoulder. "Fool," he asked politely, "where did you bury her?" "There," said Robert doggedly, point ing ahead of him. The marsh was drying, with sucking sounds, under the sun. A slave near by murmured to himself. They caught one word, then waded to the spot and dug, sank a spade, a log of wood and several other heavier tilings aud watched the quicksand suck them out of sight Then they scrambled to the marsh and went each his separate way. Claud M. Girardeau in Lippincott's Magazine. Blaine's Generosity. A good story of James G. Blaine is told by a writer in the St Louis Globe Deniocrat The incident related was a maguanimous and clever act of ti e M line statesman, when, as Speaker of tie House, he got through a resolution appropriating $12,0.).) to the needy widowed daughter of President Zich ary Taylor. This lady got as far as Washington on her way to Paris to see a sick daughter, and, being destitute of money, appealed ta her ouly friend at the capital, Gmeral S'.iermin. His purse was at waysopau to the distressed, but he had no funds at all adequate to relieve her necessities. In this e n ur gency he thought of Blame. The mm from Maine entered into the spirit of the occasion as soon as he heard General Sherman's statement. He called another to the chair, made a five" min utes speech that fairly electrified the House, which passed the resolution that Blaine had penued only a moment before. He took the resolution in person to the Senate where it was also im mediately passed, had the President to sign it the next day, and on the follow ing day the beneficiary got the money. General Sherman always Insisted that Blaine would have made the grandest actor that ever lived, and in adapting his career to politics he robed the stae of a liorn star. Little Oscar Papa. Mr. Fatherly Well, Oscar? Little Oscar When tlod made the zebra, why didn't He cut some stars on him, so he'd ba a regular walking American flag? Brooklyn Eagle. MAY 11). 1807. CELESTIAL TELEGRAPHY. There was a little old-fashioned safe in the depot at Dumphy's Glen, but everybody kuew that it never contain ed anything of special value. It serv ed well enough to hold the books aud papers of the office and a little loose change; there was practically no busi ness done at Dumphy's. If it had been otherwise the station would nev er have Nen left in charge of a mere girl like Lena Stearns. Fifteen years ago it was quite anoth er story. At that time Dumphy's Glen was in the midst of its boom as a prospective summer resort, aud when Iena's father bought tho' barren little plot of gravel and bare granite upon which he had erected his store he had paid for it at the rate of $1) a front foot, and had trouble in getting it at that But ho had died long since, broken iu fortune and iu spirit The big, dismantled "Sanatorium" on the hill was utterly abandoned. Half the glass in its dark, dirty windows was broken; squirrels scurried over the sag ing verandas; the warping shingles blew .down from the roof in every storni; the eaves were a hive for wasps and hornets. The streets that had been so hopefully laid out led nowhere. "Park avenue" started well, but soon lost itself among brambles and bushes; its pretentious name hung askew from its rotting post, held by one rusty nail. The store-, however, was still kept up, for there was a little country trade. Airs. Stearns lived with her daughter in the upper story and managed to sell or barter, across the dingy counter, cotton thread, nails, molasses and pat ent mediciue enough to pay the inter est on the mortgage anil live. Lena, who was IS, had to do aim filing, of course, aud as she was unmistakably a bright girl and had mastered Imok-ket-plng aud tele-graphy, she easily ol tained the unimportant position of sta tion agent at Dumphy's, where she sold half a dozen tickets a week, flag ged a train when there was a passen ger, ami boarded at home. Lena was not only bright and effi cient, but decidedly pretty. This fact had been dise'overed by John Sturgiu, the station agent at Pine Ridge, ten miles above; it was a source of regret to him that he was not the only dis coverer. As it was, he perversely turned his back ou the well-stocked stores at the Ridge, and did a suspi cious amount of trading at the Glen. He also did more telegraphing at times than busiiuss seemed to require. The wires must have felt a queer thrill as some of those messages pulsed through them, though the words were as triv ial, aud as remote from the sentiments they voiced, as iu any other rustic courtship. Although scarcely any' money ever found lodgment at Dumphy's Glen, a good deal passed through it About twelve miles below were the great saw mills at Sabine Falls, and tvery week a heavy cash box was expressed thith er from the city to pay the men. The train which conveyed it, however, seareely ever stopped at the little fl.ig station, but there was one notable ex ception. It was about the middle of March and heavy rains had stripped the hills of their white winter cloaks. " They're just like folks who lay off their wraps too soon," thought Lena, drawing her fleecy "fascinator" more closely about lier neck and shoulders f r the sky had cleared and the air was growing J frosty. "They look as if they were catching their death of cold." She was standing on the platform watching the belated express as it rounded the curve. To her surprise, it slowed and eaine to a stop, though she had uot flagged it. The door of the baggage car slid open and the agent jumped out, dragging the cash bx after him. "Shall have to leave this here to night," he explained. "Bad washout at Tamarack creek, three miles down, and we can't get through to Sabine possibly; orders to run back at once. Have wired to the mills to send men around by the road and they'll be here soon. It'll be all right; uobody else will know the stud's here. Come, we'll put it in the safe for you." So Lena opened the safe while the agent with the help of a brakeman brought in the box. It was a snug fit, though she pulled out all the books to make room for it Then the men burled the train which slowly backed up the line until it was out of sight The girl re-entered the depot, locked the door , threw a fresh supply of coal on the fire aud waited alone for the messengers from the mills. An hour passed, and another and another; at last the hand of the clock stood at 11, and they still had not come. John Sturgin was also sitting alone in the ticket office at Pine Ridge. Thoughts of Lena were uppermost in his mind a thing uot unprecedented but to-night his head was full of fancies. He knew about the cash box, for he had spoken with the express aent as the train backed through. "I'm afraid the little girl was wor ried about that money," he mused. "She isn't used to that sort of thing. But it can't have been in her hands more than half an hour." The telegraph at his elbow was clicking in an uneasy, irregular fash ion, but he had scarcely noted it All at once the signal sounded loudly. This was followed by au unintelligible rattle; even h's practiced ear could make nothing of it, Theu, after a mo ment's silence came words broken and fluttering but to his quick appre hension they sounded like an inarticu late cry. "Oh oh oh Help!" Then a con fusion of clicks aud again the instru ment seemed to cry out: "On Oh Save L " He sprang the key and tried to tele graph a question; but he could not get any rcsnse. The wires seemed bad ly out of order. He was much alarm ed. Something was wrong horribly wrong at Dumphy's Glen. It would uot do to waste time. He ran out of the depot "Look aft er things, Mac," he called to the bag gageman. His bicycle was leaning against the luildini. He bad brought it out that era day for the first time since winter set in. With a quick push and a leap he was in the saddle bounding along the dim, frozen road. Dim yet for mere star light the night seemed wonderfully luminous. But the light was fitful; tliere were moments when all seemed buried in darkness. Then the laudscae bright ened and glimmered as if the moon had emerged from behind a cloud. But there was no moon; he knew that the moon would not rise until morning was near. The railway circled the foot of the hill, but the road ran straight over the summit. By strenuous efforts he had already reached the crest aud the hard driven wlu-el leajx'd forward with a fresh burst of speed, as it felt the down ward slope. Suddenly the air seemed full of rosy light, as if tinged by the glow of dawn. Though he was now running at a break-neck pjee he glanced upward. The J-ky was aflame witli the flicker ing i t il Hants of the aurora borealis. Near the horizon lay a bank of dusky haze, through which the stars gleamed faintly. Almve it wavered a pale phosphorescent curtain, that shivered as if shaken by gusts of wind; from be hind which rud.ly streamers shot up to the very zenith, and flickered and waned and brightened. It was a mag nificent display; but the descent was becoming steeper every minute, he was obliged to keep his eyes fixed on the road. He was now rushing down the rough track with a violence that almost t'e fied control. The overstrained tubing gave under his weight to the very lim it of its strength; tiie machine Ilea veil aud palpitated like a frightened horse, aud shied wildly amid the ruts and stones that he could not avoid. At a sharp turn of the road he swung out so far that he felt the hiud tire slipping on tbe icy edge, and larely escaiied plunging down the embankment; tin n the depot windows flashed into view. After that the bicycle must have chosen its own course, fr Sturgin was not conscious of guiding it Foe the sash was raised, and against the yel low lamplight he saw the dark outline of a mau crawling in through the open ing; another followed. The last figure had scarcely disap peared when his wheel came to a stop in the deep sand of the station yard. He dropped from the saddle, pulled a 4l-calibre revolver from his iocket and sprang to the window. The depot consisted of a single room; the safe and telegraphic apparatus were o.i the farther side. In the mid dle of the floor sto.l Lena, defiant, with clinched bands and glowing cheeks, looking straight down the black muzzle of a pistol that a huge desperado was holding close to her face. ' You unlock that safe right quick, and no sensense," he w;is saying. "I won't I can't," cried Lena. The other intruder, a seedy little fel low with thin lips an 1 a hitch H fai-e, was by the safe examining the lock. II; turned toward the girl. "Ye might as well save trouble," he said. "We know what's here, and we're going to have it This is biz, understand. We shan't hurt ye if ye liehave." The girl glanced at him with angry contempt. Her blood was loUing. "There ain't goin' to be nobody to help ye," the fellow continued. "The road bridge is down-swep' away by the freshet and the fellers from the Mills won't git here yet awhile. Yer ma's too fur off, an' she ain't no good any way. We've got to have that key, for we ain't got any tools haudy. Be live ly now. We kin be rough if we have ter." With a sudden motion Lena pulled the key from her apron pocket The big ru Ilia n beside her snatched at it, lowering his pistol as he did so; but with the quickness of a cat she flung the little piece of steel through the oinen door of the stove, where it slip down among the glowing coals. The fellow grabbed the poker an J plunged it into the red-hot mass, but the key had disappeared. With a cry of rage he sprang toward the girt, but while bis back was turned she had darted across the room ami jerked open a drawer. "Throw up your hands, you scoun drel!" The command came in a hoarse roar from the open window. The despera do turned, saw a fierce, livid face glar ing in from the outer gloom, saw also a leveled weapon and suspected more from behind. He dropped his pistol and obeyed. Laying his left hand on the sill John Sturgiu leaped through the win dow with one bound. There is no record-breaker like love and anger iu things athletic. Meanwhile the lesser villian was struggling with the fasten ings of the nearest window, but when he glanced over his shoulder ami caught a gliut of another revolver in the hands of Lena as she stood by the open drawer he desisted. "Give it up," he said coolly. Ye got me, sure, little girl, though how them fellers got acrost so quick lieats me. Now, don't git narvous with that pop per of youru; I'll rest easy, an' I ain't got no gun anyway." "(Jive me your pistol, Lena," said Sturgin, his voice still quaking with excitement "Now, you two brutes stand here, face against the wall, hands up. Lena, please send a mes sage through to Grandport for a train and a posse," She seut the message as she was bid den, but the steadiness was gone from her hand and the color from her cheek. She felt faint; she threw open the door and gazed up the track. The night had grown very dark, though a filmy veil of auroral light still . flitted now and then across a starry background, tten at length the rumble of an en gine was heard a welcome sound to Sturgin, whose arms were so palsied with weariness and nervous tension that he could hardly hold the pistols. It was just as well that his prisoners were so placed that they couldn't see him. Soon, hovever, they were in the hands of the deputy sheriff, and the strain was over. Sturgin sat holding both Lena's hands iu his. "I can't understand it," he said. "How did it happeu, dear, Id. WHOLE NO. 2300. that you telegraphed me for help so long before those villians reached the depot?" "I telegraphed!" she cried. "Why, I didn't; I couldn't. I hadn't the s'nalle-st chance until after you came, just in the nick of time and saved me, John." "Aeh!" exclaimed burly Mac, who was standing by. ''It'll be them northern lights done it, likely. Ye know what a fiddle-faddle they'll make 'longo' the wires, an' set all the soun'ers clackin". An' I'm thinkin', Sturgin, somebody's whim-wham's done the rest" "It was a message straight from heaven," murmured Lena. And doubtless both she and Mac were right Chicago News. Thinjj We Ought tD Know- That napkins should always 1 folded with the selvage toward the ironer. That table linen should lie quite damp, and iroue 1 uutil perfectly dry, with a very hot, very heavy iron. Tiiata very hot iron should never lie u--d for flannel. Tiiat embroideries should be ironed ou thick flannel and ou the wrong si te. Tiiat calicoes, ginghams and chintzes sh iuld be ironed ou the wrong si Je. Tiiat collars, cuffs and shirts require careful manipulation and must never be undertaken iu a hurry. Tiiat an iron e rch can lie removed by hanging the garmeut where the hot sun will shine upon the scoreh mark. That a piece of wax aud a piece of string paper thickly sprinkled with salt slioald be at hm 1 upon which the iron miy be ruobed if the starch ad heres to it. That white silk handkerchiefs should uot be dampened, but ironed with a mi lerately warm iron when perfectly dry. That collars and cuffs if dropped into a box or pail the right size, will take the proper shape, and wear better than if left straight. That irojs should be removed from th tire as soon as the ironing is finish ed. G-iod irous are rained by standing on the back of the range. That ir ins shoal 1 be kept from du-t and in a dry closet. Tiiat good work cannot be done with out good tools. G so I irons, holders, boards and cloths. Puci'a ?hiloJopb.iej- Wepriz;t!ie!i!.-rty to follow the die tat of our conscience, but we do not al ways exercise that cherished privilege. In the bright lexicon of the Delaware peach-crop there is no such word as suc cess. The man who spen Is his time hop lug for the best hardly ever gets it Two things may be said in praise of the whole-souled egotist; his character is married neither by insincerity nor hyHK-ri.y. For the great majority of us, the eas iest way to get a living is to earn it A distinguished naturalist states that th? hen cackles with unus'ial enthu siasm when she thinks she has laid au eg where it can't be found. This world would be nearly right if every iu in who sees the error of his ways ha 1 the c utajs to change his route. Most of us are inclined to measure our own achievements by what other people haven't done. A man cannot compliment a woman more highly than by asking her to Le his wife; unless he's au artist aud asks her to be his model. The diflicu'tyalmut seizing an oppor tunity is the trouble experience 1 in penetrating its disguise. Not all philsophers are poor men; but all poor men, siouer or later, come to be philosophers. Busiiess in the Blae Grass B3?i3n. The blue-grass colonel relates an incL dent which we'd illustrates the shrewd nes of fie K ;:it jjiy grm ts in b lsi uess a.l lirs. It appears that a farmer lost a ca'f, a:i lan tign'o ir p i -Cured it until the b:ll am a;ited to abwt the value of fie a-iim d. Toe owuer found out oue d ty where his missing calf was and went after it "H w alio it the bill for this?" he in quired. "Well, I've been thinking abiut that," was the reply, "and I've con cluded that if yoj'l. let me have the calf I'll call the m itter square." Toe o'.d m in th i J'it over the situa tion for a while. Then he said: "Bill, the calf is really worth more than your claim, but I'll tell you what I'll do; if yoa will pasture the calf for f.iur weeks in ire for n thin you in ly have it" Chicago Times-Herald. Poultry as a Spacialty. l"se the farm for poultry by giving the ll.K'ks plenty of room, aud work with a view to m iking the hens pay, the sann as is done for the cows, and the results will hi sitisfactory. Fifty heus in one acre c uM give at least a clear proat of 1 a hen, or $') to the acre, and the cist for shelter will be less than for large stock. The fact that so few know how to keep large rl icks for profit is pro if th it farmers have all along neglected piullry, giving the hens on the farm but little notice, yet on the porest farms poiltry can lie m de a spec'a'iy. There are good mark ets for eggs close to nearly all the farms, as winter prie;s will show. From Farm and Fireside. Kansas Editor Hold on a minute, Mr. Llmberjaw! No date is specified in the announcement of the pipulist pic nic, winch you have just handed in. Prominent PopuILst That'9 so! Let me see we don t know what the weather wilt lie. Just say that if it rains on Wednesday the picnic will take place on Thursday, and if it should rain ou Thursday wo will have it on odnesiay. Farmers waste a large share of the fertilizer used ou the farm by purchas ing kinds that are uot necessary to be brought on the farm. Phisphate8 are cheaper than nitrates and the farmer will, as a rule, select that which ho Considers the cheaper, although his farm may not leqnire phosphates and would lie benefited by nitrates. Potash is also greatly overlooked by farmers, and is a substance that is lacking more frequently than is known. Wood ashes or potash salts, such as sulphate of pota-h, muriate of potash and kainit (which contains also common salt), wiil give goot results on all classes cf soils. Many grass fields have been render ed unprofitable by inexperienced per sons, who have attempted to sow the seed by hand. An even distribution of seed is on e of the most imjiortant mat ters connected with a grass crop, and only those who have had long practice should attempt to sow a field to grass without the use of an implement for that purpose, as there are several makes of broadcast seed sowers. Every spring otlers of seed com are made for which extraordinary claims are mentioned as much as J) bushels per acre being given as the results of tests with, such varieties. It is best not to use new varieties of such corn except with a packet of a few seeds, as corn that produces well iu some sec tions will fail el.iewhere. The best seed corn to use is the variety known to be well adapted to your land until by exiierinient something lietter is found. Corn that will thrive on heavy soils m ly not give good results on saudy land, hence the importance of being very careful in variety selected. New strawlierry Usls should lie plant ed without delay, as it may soon lie t o late. Early, medium and late varie ties should be used, so as to extend the fruit-picking season over as long a period as jxrs.s:lle. Of the late kinds the Gaudy is quite a favorite, as it is a stnmg grower, is hardy, and also proli fic. Strawberries are ariong the least difficult crops to obtain iu a garden or on a t-ma'.l plot There are small matters, or mim.r details, connected with dairying which attract no attention. The manner in which a cow is milked may influence her yield. At the Wisconsin Experi ment Station milkkig one teat at a time aud weighing the milk drawn from each teat was tested, and the order in which the teats were milked wis changed at each milking until each teat had its turn of being milked first and Ia-tt It was fouud that the teat that was milked last gave less milk than the others. The claim is that the gland had lieen excited to action and the milking delayed, which gave the result as meutioneiL There is no method of determining how much an animal requires, or how a ration can lie balanced, but there is a rule in use which bases the allowance according to the weight of the animal; hence it is claimed that a cow in full flow of milk, she weighing lot") pounds. should receive from '2 to 1 pounds digestible protein 1-', pounds digestible cirUihydrates, and two-thirds of a p und of fat, which system requires a study of the food constituents, but or dinarily ) pounds of oare fodder and It) jwiunds of grain are used jier l'JO (Kiunds weight. Every farmer who Ls compelled to niret low prices should firt prnlue-e everything possible ou the farm for the support of his family for a year which includes bread, meat, butter, milk and vegetables instead of growing only one or two special crops that may aff ird little or no profit An industrious far mer may make uo profit and yet have a full supply of food for his family. Those who raise large numbers of cL icks liud that the early ones thrive better than those hatched late. The cause is due to the fact that the late- hatched chicks are attacked by lice during the warm days and do not grow. The time to sell j-oung lambs is when they weigh about -V) pounds each, live weight They will Iise from 12 to hi pounds when killed and dressed. Those who have had no experiene-e in mark eting choice young lambs should em ploy au expert at first, as the manner of preparing for market largely effects the price. If the lambs are not fat keep them a while longer and feed them au abundance, using corn meal aud ground oats largely. Early lambs may bring from $ to $3 according U quality. Parsnips are highly relished by all kinds of stock aud can remain in the ground during the winter. They pro duce fnim ii) to Its" bushels per ae-re, according to soil and cultivation. If only a small plot is devoted to them they will be found a welcome addition to the stock rations in winter by afford ing a greater variety. The average yield of milk pere-ow for all the cows iu the country in Is-'iO was 700 quarts a year. In lsUO the av erage was IX) quarts per cow for a year. This increase has been accom plished by the greatest use of improv ed breeds, and is equivalent to nearly doubling the number of cows by esti mating from the amount of milk de rived in 1S). Com fodder coutaius more starch than clover, while clover is richer in protein. A ration of both clover aud fodder is excellent where no grain is allowed, as is sometimes the rule in warm weather. A mixed ration is better at all times than to rely entirely upon oue kind of food, aud for all classes of stock. If you have any land that cannot be cultivated to corn or potatoes do not allow it to remain for the weeds to ex haust it, but mow down the weeds when they are young and in August sow the land to crimson clover, to be plowed under uext spring. It is a good plan to sow crimsou clover on every va cant spot and thus improve the soil by taking advantage of its capacity for gathering nitrogen. "Xot Exactly Eight" Thousands of people are in this ou dition. They aie not sick yet they are by no means well. A single bottle of Hood's Sarsaparilla would do them a world of giwid. It would tone the stomach, create an appetite, puri.'y and enrich the blood aud give wonder ful vigor and vitality. Now is the time to take it Hood's Pills cure nausea, sKyk head ache, indigestion, biliousness. All druggists, tr;. Objlient Bo. "You know I told Johnnie I wanted him to make his essay a hummer" "Yes." "What does the little rascal do but write half a page about the bun saw'"' Detroit Free Presa boiuerM-t, I