fsonasrt Herald. publication. noraing at otherwise discontinued until " , ..rplkb ...ai'.''' . ., lnt.ia masters Ber bers do not respouaible etc'" pottoffice to tit'r'! . ... ihe name the form- '.lUu. o Add. LB. S..XKK3KT, n F- n'htJ NOTARY PUBUU. jj Aiiv fc 1 tjomenot, Pa. K twmenet. Peon be at- a u r boiutntet, fa. J. A-tV-AT-LAW. buiuentet Pa. "T-l- V M- BERKLEY, IX souientet, Pa. I J 4iiv- - s IX$ somerset, ra. . ..liecnubiiaupsuura. AUuK-StV-AT-LA. p& w;ui0tl.Ai -law, A cuuieraet, Pa. jesleft-Jiuii Uw "PI"11 Coan 8 Jt buiuereet. Pa. V EY-AT-LAW, 1 somerset, Pa. 4 E. K00STZ. J. G. OGLK. K1 Iiic.i4.Ni.Vt-Ar-iAW. tsuuienet. Pa. J jollier iu i'n .1 riouse riow. uppustto ASILSfi HAY. A. L. Q. HAY. UiY 4 HAV, Atiou-Nr. 'S-AT-LA . tfcatw bouicntet, Pa. J0H" H. L HL, J AiiOii-t-AX-l.W, tSoineruet, Pa. pr.upt:y attend to all b " en- fOHXtt KIMMEL, J AilUlifci-ATl-At txuuenet, Pa. uad ton busiuetsa eutrutsd to bta K.iiixurernl iiu aojuiuiuK oouUea, wiU rwepuraf ud Danny. Ollioe ou Malu tJ .uovc..UijU, uruccrv blunt. lAilES L. I L'liU, J AHolCtY-AT-LAW Boui- 't. Pa. OSain JJniiiioili Block, up - re. En tuct . Maai t-ruw bUwU -oliocUoaii t it -u.itl. Ullra eaiuiul,ud all a"i no aurudl to wiUi iroiuitnia fttLBOKN & tXLliUKX, U AriuK.NtVs-AI-UW, Soineraet, Pa. 1L traia e utrutta to our care will b ruapv uu uiiliiuny aiwudtjd to. Colleo inm audr ui MmrwL Utlmrd and adjoin K cuiu,ua. burwyiug nd oouveyancin ieuu ruwuiuibit; tcrui. CT L BAER, lit AlTOilS E Y-AT-LA W, tsonieniet, Pa. ffUi prkctee In Somerset and adjoiulne cu'M. A,! liUMUen enirukted to luui Vlii t H. OOFFEuTH. W. H. BL'PPEl.. f WFKUTH A RUPPEL. V AHOiiNLVS-AI-LAW, Somerset, Pa. AD Imsinmseul rusted to their care will be '.:: Mjd puuiluaiiy attended to. Office a Hala Cruet btreet, opposite Mam moth Let. HL MAIISUKX, M. D.( l'riV;i lA.S and frL'KUKON, soiuersct, Pa. IttxPTCrKiM N'atitiual Ink. irxi kib iiiMi, tin'u to the can" of the .r 4 u, v.if irvai int-iil ol fhtoltic ut oi; at iUirt-. itrU-pUoiie. J. W. CAliUTH Eliri, M. D.. PUVslCLi S am &L'HtikX)N, bomerset. Pa. CtSca.00 BUei onpoaite ck.ii at oCoe. U. B DS. P. F. hHAFFER, tKiaiclAJi ASD8LRUEON, Homerset, Pa. ldltrt his prif.jisiOQai seirice to the citl- m Suuicrt anj vicinity. Uflice coruer ir iiU i'airiot alreel. T)K. J. M. LOUTH ER, 00 I'-t, rear of Druj (tore. D H. g. KLMMELL, Ia!hipmf!on!llj ervice to the Clti B,"lrt vicjuity. L'nleas pro Wcaii - Hl-d tie can Oe (ound at hia of- & of Kianioud. JJS-J SMcMILLEX, OraJuaie In UeuUstry.) Ur? u''""n o th the preaervatlnn ctal aela luaerted. " in ''i ntitcur-. Office k. , .OVw U H L'"vu' "tot. t -n and Patriot ctreeta. PP"K B. PLUCK, LVT v. Land Surveyor (XkjI'EIUTIVE MUTUAL FIRE LNj-.,Iii;RLIx, PA. lusuranoe at a-tujil by insur JJ home. We in8Ure Town and PPmy. Writ for information. JA'J. J. ZORN, Secretary. A, HUSTOX, tr,:!ertaker and Embalmer. 1 &O0D HEARSE, Pruln! n to roiMraU tarn- ! SoERSET - Pa VOL. XLVII. NO. 43. Your Doctor Knows Tour doctor kno-nrn iooas ana medicines. The next time von Vilm j'JEt ask him what he thinks i SCOH'S EEESlSlOa of Cod-Liver Oil wi'h Hypo phosphites. We are wihicg to trust ia his answer. For twenty-flve years doc- 1 tors have prescribed our Emulsion for paleness, weak ness, nervous exhaustion, and tor all diseases that cause loss in flesh. Its creamy color and Its pleasant taste make it es pecially useful for thin and delicate children. No other preparation of cod- . liver oil is like it. Don't lose time and risk your health by 1 taking1 something- unknown and untried. Keep in mind that SCOTT'S EMTJLSION has stood the test for a quarter of a century. yc -kJ ft ca : all droggifts. SCOTT & BOW.Nb, Chemist, New York. THE First llional Bant Somorsot, f'enfi'a Capital, S50.000. Surplus, 837,000. UNOiV'OED S.3000. rnOr I 1 i OCPOSITB XCCCIVC iNUDCt KDIHtU MOUKTB. PTLC ON OCMaNO ACCOUNT or MCHCHANTa, MMCMS, TOCK OCALCH. Al0 OTNtRI SOLICITtO DISCOUNTS DAILY BOARD OF DIRECTORS. CHAS. O. SCU1.L, UKO. k. scn.i JAMES Lu PL'H, W. H. M1LLKK, JOitN K. S)TT. ROBT. H. bCUiX, EDWARP XCriJj, : : PREKIDKXT VALENTIXB HAY. ; VICE PKhIUKNT. HAHVKY !. BtKKLEY, CASUIfcK- The funds and ecurltlfof this bsna ar ue- eurely protectl in a celebrated Coai-lsg Bra- glak Proof Hafk. Tne only safe made abso lutely biirglar-prooC Jacob D. Swank, Watchmaker and Jewtler, Next )oor West of Lutheran Church, Somerset, - Pa. I Am Now prepared to supply the public with Clocks, Watches, and Jew elry of all descriptions, as Cheap as the Cheapest. HEPAII11XG A SPECIALTY. All work guaranteed. Look at my stock before making your purchases. J. D. SWANK. KEFFER'S m SHOE STORE! EN'S BOYS'. WOMEN'S. GIRLS' ind CHILDREN'S SHOES. OXFORDS tnd SLIPPERS. Clark and Tan. Latest Styles and Shapes at lowest ....CASH PRICES- Adjoining Mrs. A. E. Uhl, South-east corner of square. SOMERSET, PA. J If." A- "- J a I " v ' VV Eleml moit softly and pi-iV tnObl ciicciucij . festive wenc wlicutarown 53 hi waxc!:i canults. 'The U'Jt tbu bcihtcrs iK-aaty cuarm, u.ui y. rs mc touch to Uicurnwirig uintnj; room, is tlte mow ol WAX CANDLES Sold in all colors and shines to har:uoaiz; with any interior hangings cr decorutiors. uaiij MniiftnreJ ty QTlNnARf) OIL CO. Tor sale evprvwltere. .a1 Get an education Tb bt sot fit in lira. Bat nwiaoda Md at CEXTB&L STATE KCR3UL SCHOOL (ItmCMr fM-vKy, vrid tw good lihrtrr nuiiara iprto ta ltxtrUJtf mnd rraioa tan. Halwib bi diB,t'rii rnxuidc hHurttMt tiB, If44l (M&a, MU lul W tig. rjAut la vi1itMra ti rcuir 9amrr, ) work ia Mar.Mi"Ttbiid,Ty' writ) n ir. h-rxt ffic iilo-i ri-d rUAlofq. )AMta BUH, rifstjil hita, ft. 50 YEARS' V tAftnicnvc Traoc MK.a Dcions CovRiaMTS Ac. Atitoo tnng a n1 (-ni""' mar uh!r rmnmn onr tnMi 1rm wbr aa laruiunn ml.ir lalfU"! rn,oin(r trmir!f KUi- Hamlb. un I'Monia ant 7rMi. itt airafwr f(?r awcriuc patenu. fatMita laaea thmtuh Muna A Co. mcclr. yral uik, without chary, la the Scientific American. A liitaomelT nimrfratad mtVT. LaiTOrt rlr. rulati of anf acM-ntulr f vnal. Taruia. 3 a : f.-or montba. L tsuod bj all n.-lerm. iV LUAi! m a w i I f-TT. " H a' fc-iJ: i! fi." Try! jt I unisliea h roo.n or Is t i r' rt jr AT THE WIND DW. 2 liMir.t tlie wootljHi ker iVokinK, The kup-KUcker sine: I turned and looked out of uiy window. And lo, It was Spring ! A breath from tropic! borders, J Uct a ripple, flowed Into my room. And waslu-d my face clmn of 1U aadnc-aa, B!ew my heart Into bloom. The bixdn I have kept for a hletlme, Sweet buds I have shielded from anow, Hn-k lurtii Intufull leaf and ttuucel, W lien Sprtnif winds do blow. Pur the np of my life goeti upward, Oheylng the same iweet Iu w That waters the heart of the lLUtple, After a Uiaw. I forget my old and grow youthful, Bitlliingln wind-ti le of Spring. When I hear the woodpecker pecklne. The aupueker Ming. Atlantic Monthly. HOW FAIR MADE HIS MILLIONS AMASSED $40,000,000 IX SIXTEEN YEARS. Hii Mining Partner's Story of Hit Streak cf Luck Heads Like a Tale From Arabian Nights. From the Philadelphia Sunday Time. "Virginia Fair to become Mrs. Wil liam K. Vaaderbilt, Jr., and the sister-in-law of the Diichess of Marlborough ! Whew ! what wonderful chanpes gold ruining makes in some folks' lives." The speaker was Daniel Hooley, a veteran gold miner and prospector ainoDg the Sierras. "Forty years ago," he coutiuued, "Jim Fair and I were living in a little redwood cabin at Hogan's Camp, in Calaveras county. We were not worth more thau $103. We were holding down a gold claim which did not promise well, but we had hopes that some day we might find a ledge of pay ore that would sell for a few hundred dollars, and then we would be fixed. We slept together in a buDk; we ooked our own menlsof loiled beans and fried bacon os-er a tire outside the cabin; we washed our own overalls and jumpers at the creek, and we wondered if we could ever get enough together to marry two fiue Irish girls named Roouey, who lived over the divide at Douglas Flat. Hut fortune bad some wonderful things in store for my partner, Jim Fnir. In jut sixteen years from that time he was worth $4),00,00O, and he and John W. Mackay were the richest miners alive. He became a L nited States Senator, the leading millionaire of California, and now his daughter Vir ginia, is to marry William K. Vander- biit, Jr. Well, it Is certaiuly surpris ing." TCo more picturesque soldier of for tune than Dan Hooley can be found. While some of his mining associates Ions airo struck it rich, and then either died poor or in afilaenee, Dan Hooley has chased the fickle goddess, fortune, from one minina camp to another all the way from Chihuahua, Mexico, to British Columbia through forty-five years. And he still has the proverbial miner's hopes. He was the chum and partner of James G. Fair in two mining camps for eleven years. They shared tne same poverty and cheered each other when season after i?eason passed and they never found any pay rock, iiauy a time they were both disheartened at their continued adversity. It seemed as if luck never wou!d come their way. For months at a time Jim Fair and Dtn Hooley, shod with clumsy brogana with soles studded with steel pegs. begirt with leathern straps, and clad in overalls, red fUnael shirts and grea-y sombreros, went prospecting over tne Sierras. Their sole joint and undivid ed possessions were a jackass and the load on its back, consisting of smoke- b? rimed kettles, burned skillets, clankinz. battered tin pails, two rolls of sadly soi.ed blankets, and a bag or two of beans ar. J chunks of salt park. Many old time miners In California are recalling thse salad-days in the career of Jim Fair, during the latter fifties, now that his daughter is to be come one of the Vanderbilt aristocracy in New York. Once Jim Fair, discouraged, abaud- ed mining and wlked to Sacraoieuto to hire out as a teamster. He w as then 37 years old. L-Jckily for him and for the raining world, hb natural fondness for hunting for mineral wealth came back. He and Hooley moved over Into Nevada county. There they found an outcropping of gold-bearing quartz. The bare recital of trie lacis in iue life of James O. Fair from that time in 1K52 uutil 1SS0 is as marvelous as any chanter in Arabian Nights. The vera cious story of the way the Immense Fair fortune was achieved from noth ing iu practically thirteen years thrills even the veteran Californians, familiar . . 1 .. - . v ; t ti tha (nri,l.flta nf llll ay. iiejr bic win u. ..... - - st ory, whenever it is told; to this day. Among all the wonderful stories or how the famously great fortunes in the world have been piled up, none equals that of the f l37.0JJ,OijO which the four bonanza kings dug from the bowels of the Comstock lode at Virginia City, Nevada, trom January, 1S72, to July, 1 S7!. I n 1 S,2 James O. Fair was worth ahoutfSK); io 1 be bad In 1S71 he was worth $-0,000, and io 1SS0 he had in cash and securities as good as g"ld bet ween $12,003,00) and f 15, 0)0,0 JO. Jim Fair and hholi ptrtner, Dau H.K)ley, parted company in 1S)3. They hadaolJ the little Hopewell mine near Grass Valley, Nevada couuty, Califor nia, for several thousand dollars. Dad felt as if he were rich for life, and he went down to'FrisCi to celebrate bis good luck. In a month, be says him self be was broke. Fair, with the first capital heever had, decided lo slick to mining. He first went over the range to his former mining field in Calaveras couuty and mirried MissJenuie Roon ey. The miner had known the bride's father, Peter Hwuey, in the mines at Welch's Btr, and as the R Kneys, Fair and Dtn II o!y had all come orlgiual ly from the County Tyrone, iu the north of Ireland, a friendship had rp-ung up aTi.ug them. My an evening young Jlru Fair had spent a; Somerset SOMERSET, PA., WEDNESDAY, the Rooney cabin. When Mrs. Rxn ey and her two bright-faced daughters opened a little general store for the miners at I) vjglas Flat, Fair and Hoo ley used to drop iu of an afternoon and chat with the Roouey sUter behind the pine counters. Miss Jennie prom ised lo marry Jim when he had made a strike in the mines. With bis bride and a household out fit Jim Fair started over the Red Dog and Plaeerville trail for the Comstock mines at Virginia City. For two years be had been stamping restlessly to get over there, where the miners were making great money. Mrs. Fair was equally anxious to go and try luck in the new diggings in Nevada. So, away they went in a lumber wagon drawn by two rented mules, from Douglas Flat to the Com"tock. They bad their sole possessions in the wagon with them. There was an ancient cook stove, a featherbed tick, a half bushel of eartheu dishes, and a lot of cook in-; utensils, such as pans, pots and kettles. Jim had $.1,0"0 in bis leather belt. The miner and his bride were a week in crossing the Sierras and descending to the mining camp of Virginia City. They cooked their meals along the mountaiu road and they slept out of doors whenever the night overtook them. Many times after the miner and his bride had their millions of dollars, and could not be gin to spend a fraction of their enor mous daily income, they often said those simple, natural days when they had it all to look forward to were by far their happiest. Arrived in Virginia City, Fair studied thesulpburet ores then a novel com bination of gold and silver and soon became an autaority in the camp. Such milliouainjs as "Lucky" Raid win, Sharou and Ralston were making large fortunes there theu, and hun dred of miners were getting thousands of dollars out of the twenty-two mines on the Conistoek lode. By 153 Fair was a boss of a gang of men employed in the Ophir Mine there. Later he was a superintendent. He and another Irishman, John W. Mackay, became close friends. Mackay was a foreman iu the Hale A Norcross Mine. The young Irishmen saved their earnings, while other miners spent theirs In drink and gaming. They also exchang ed secrets they had learned in the depths of the mines as to the forma tion of the richest ledgej in the Com stock lode. At the same time there were two young men of Irish birth, James (J. Flood and William O'Brien, who ran a saloon iu a little one-story wooden building on Washington street, iu San Francisco. The saloou-keepers wereppu!ar with Cornish and Irish miuiuj; laborers who went trom the Comstock to San Francisco to spend their money ia sprees. Flood and O'Brien had beeu told by tipsy miners valuable facts for iuvestors in Comstock shares, aud the saloou-keepers had bjen pitting all the profits of their bar into mining stocks. Naturally, Mack ay, Fair, Flojd and O'Brien came together. I u the dingy little back room of the Flood & O'Brien saloon the mining company of 'Mackay, Fair, Flood A O'Brien was secretly formed one day in 1S7). Mackay and Fair were the practical miuers at Virginia City; Flood and OBrien manipulated the mining stock market in Sin Francisco. In IsiD the Comstock mines began to peter out AH sorts of discouraging rumors were afloat in 1370. The stock of all Comstock properties depreciated mouth by month. The great Ophir paid co dividends for half a year; the Hale 4 Norcross closed for the first time in seven years and the Consoli dated California stock went down 70 per cent, iu the summer of 1371.- The San Francisco newspapers and mining expera said again and again that the glories of the Comstock were forever gone and that the lower ledges were not worth the working. Meanwhile Mackay, Fair, Flood & O'Biren kept their partnership a secrtt, but each member of the firm was busy. Shares in the California aad the Vir ginia mines were bought by Flood aud O'Brien for mere songs, compared with their former selling values. Every dollar the mining firm could get went quietly into these stocks. It took some fs.),(.J to get control of the California and Consolidate!' Virgin'a mines. Three years before the same stock had sold forever $1,400,010. When a majority of the shares mere owned by Mackay, Fair, Flood & O' Brien their partnership was announced. Tnat was January 1, 1872. The new company went to work to find new and rich lodges at a depth of 1,400 feet down in the lode. Scarcely a miner in Vir ginia City but thought they had gone crazy. Hunting for ore at such a depth was absurd. All mining history was contrary to it- For a year the firm bad to exercise every manoeuvre in mining financiering to get money and keep pushing lateral, drifts and slopes through porphyry or worthless rock. The outside miners said, "I told you ." It cost a lot of moaey at.d kept the firm devising new financial schemes but Mackay and Fair kept their own counsels and worked with their gaDg of Uborers like fiends. Then a body of ore that yield d $115 a ton was reached. It gave the firm new heart and fresh capital. In three months more anoth er ledge of ore worth $1.30 a ton was en tered. Four more ledges of equal value were worked in the course of the year. But the greatest natural treafeure house of mineral wealth ever known in the world was yet to be opened by these four miners. Oa what is known in the Virginia Mine as the 1,300-64 level a drift was entered iuto a ledge that assayed $1,2 to the ton. When the ledge was dug into, ore that assay ed $2,000 was reached In a week or more the ore ran to $5,000 and even $o 000 a ton. Aud there was much of it. The mining world of the West went crazy over such a find. Thousands of mineralogists aud ruining experts flock ed from all over Europe and America to Virginia City purposely to see that wonderful ledge of gold and silver. Its richntss is a subject which stirs any re niuUeent gId miner on the Pacific coast to tul day. Some of the rock even yielded $13,000 in gold and aiivtr to the ton. A wagon - load of the ore, ESTABLISHED 1827. J sent as a sample to San Franeitco, con tained $4..300 in gold and $14,000 In sil ver. This extraordinary ledge, kuown j me worm over as tne iionauza or tne Comstock, was uncovered in May, 1S74. The Big Four mining firm hail been having for months a net daily Income of over $0,000, and the bonanza ledge jumped their net profits to $.30,000 ev ery day in the week. Once on the wit ness stand James G. Fair said bis in come in 1S74 was over $7,500,000 from the California and Consolidated Vir ginia mines alone. Rut besides, the firm of Mackay, Fair, Flood A O'Brien had enormous deals in the shares In other neighboring Comstock properties. They kuew things about the deeier ledges that no one else did. Often they doubled the money they invested iu sli a res iu other mines. One deal In Ophir stock yielded over $400,000 profit in a week. At another time the firm engineered a big deal in Belcher slock, which rose from $'J0 to $213 a share in ten days, and they made hundreds of thousands of dollars. Shares in the California and Consol idated Virginia mines which Mackay and Fair were developing rose from $47 In February, 1S72, to $l,2t.O in May, 1873. The 'mining firm bought and sold and rebought and resold the shares aud always made great profits. AH the other twenty-two Comstock mines boomed also. The deep-mining devel opment prospered everywhere. San Francisco, Indeed, all California, lie cauie a vast hive of speculation in mining shares. People abandoned oth er pursuits aud became plungers at the Mining Exchange. Everybody watch ed for the first warning that the bubbl-t might burst, so as to hastily unload mining slocks on other aud less sus pecting people. In June, 1S73, the fe verish speculators began to bear rumors as to the petering out of the Bonanza ledge.- A panic was narrowly averted. In July reports came that the Comstock would earn no more dividends. Early in August the people believed the re ports aud the crash came like the fall of a house of cards. Stocks went down to a mere shadow of their former val ues. Literally thousands of California men and women, who were rich on August 4, were poor on August -5, and have never since recovered their wealth. The panic of 1S75 in the San Francisco Stock Exchange did not affect the Bo nanza mines. The Big Four mining firm disclaimed re?onsibility for the stock gambling of the Toms, Dicks and Harrys of the Pacific coast. There was a slight reaction iu the value of Com stock shares, (Kit never again was there anything like tbeenormous prices paid for them. For four years longer the California and Consolidated Virginia properties" were worked day and night. But the bonanza ledge was worked out by the fall of 1873. Exploratory work was vainly conducted in every part of the mine for further bonanzas. The mines yielded good profits every month until the latter part of 187S. Then the lode bad been dug so deep that it was too expensive to mine there. The mining firm had sold all their sbares bit by bit for several years, and when 1S&1 came it bad left only a handful of stock in the California and Consolidated Vir ginia. John W. Mackay moved to New York that year and invested his $S, 4)03,090 in Atlantic cable and telegraph lines. James G. Fair had drawn out about $43,000,000. James C. Flood took out over $20,000,000 more, and William S. O'Brien, who was an invalid during the last years of bis life and had with drawn early from the firm, about $11, 000,000. James G. Fair made bis home before and after be became a multi-millionaire at a little wooden house ou Washoe street, in the mining camp of Virginia City. He was elected United Slates Senator from Nevada in 1SS1, and when his term expired be went to San Francisco to live. All his four chil- J dren were born in the Washoe street house, and they were brought up like any other children in the camp. Mrs. Fair's bead was never turned by tbe Aladdin wealth that poured in upon hjr. While her husband was adding fSOO.OOO or more to bis wealth, and while bis bank deposits in San Fran cisco often ranged from $14,000,0000 to $1S,000.000, she and her little girls went to visit among the miners' cabins about the camp, dressed in calico dresses and straw bats. Tbe future Mrs. William K. Vander bilt, Jr. Miss Virginia Fair was named after the mining camp in which she was born aud reared lo girlhood. She is tbe youngest of the Fair chil dren. Along with the children of the poor Cornish and Irish laborers of the camp she went to a red schoolhouse on Gold Hill street. The old-time miners in Virginia City remember her as a dark-eyed and Jolly little girl, who played in the street and in the open sand lots near her borne with other and less favored children of fortune. She inherits her father's clear pink- and-white Celtic complexion. In 1SS4 she, with her mother and sister (now Mrs. Herman Oelricbs of New York ) aud two brol hers, went to live in a superb mansion on Piue street in San Francisco. Four years ago Miss Virginia Fair spent several days in the decayed old mining tewn of Virginia City, where her father dug his enormous fortuue. She railed upon a host of her girlhood friends and left rnauy a pleasing remembrance there of ber visit. The possession of millions of dollars brought uuhappiness for tbe lat-t Un years of James G. Fair's life. Mrs. Fair obtained a dispensation from the Pope and divorced ber husbaud in lssi. Vile scandals went abroad about the Senator in California. He gave Mra. Fair $$,000,000 in bond and stocks and he lived wij.b his sons, James and Charles, at the Lick Hotel in San Francisco. James, Jr., after a shameful debauchery, died in an in ebriate institution, aud Charles mar ried a woman whom the Seuator pub licly proscribed. While the veteran miner's income of thousands of dollars a week was piling up be was periodic ally the subject of some humiliatiug public scandal. He wrote and re-wrote many wills in bis last years, according to his mr-ols. Sometimes be woul I disinherit one heir, tomet m anotLer. APRIL 5. 1809. He bad a mortal fear that some woman friend would lay claim to bis property when be was gone. Mrs. Fair died In October, 18!4, and left her property to ber daughters. The Fair estate cases are likely to be on the court calendars of San Francisco for long years to come. A dozen great lawyers are em ployed In various capacities on them. An ex-San Francisco school teacher claims to have been the Senator's com mon-law wife, and she is making a costly fight in the California courts for one-third of his estate. Then many complications were made by the Sena tor's numerou and unique wills, and it is probable that some of tbe Fair wonderful millions may be distributed among lawyers ou tbe Pacific coast. First Up San Jnan Hill Capt. W. M. McFarlane, of the Six teenth U. R. infantry, which did such glorious work in the charge on San Juan bill at Santiago de Cuba, and who is now borne on leave of absence, relates a new aud pretty story in re gard to the first man on top of San Juan hill. This honor has leen claimed by men of the Sixteenth and also by tbe Twenty-fourth, but accord ing to Captain McFarlane the first man in the advauce belonged to neither regiment. Neither was he technically in the service of Uncle Sam. "He was a Cuban nigger," said Cap tain McFarlane, according to the Salt Lake Tribune, "and aUut tbe biggest and blackest man I ever saw. In our firt advauce be bad somehow become a hanger-on with the Sixth and Six teenth. He was armed with only a machete, and from the moment we received the first fire of the enemy he seemed literally crazed with military ardor. He had never seen troops take an enemy's fire in the open, and after the first blood he literally tore from the rear through our ranks, barefoot and with machete in band. As be passed me bis appearance was so unusual and strikiug that he made an impression on me, even with the right raging around us, but onward he ran like a tiger until bis progress was stopped by several Hues of w ire fence. These be quickly cut with bis machete, thereby optning th way for the Sixth and Sixteenth. Onward be dashed, fully 7-3 yards in advance of our first Hue, and my last sight of him was as be disappeared in the Spanish trenches. A few minutes later I was In the same place, but all search for the unknown hero, either dead or alive, was fruit less. "Captain Lassit.T, however, stated that be had seen the man start down bill with the blood streaming trom a bullet bole in his face, and that is the UsTt'nSwTf oftbls hero of SanTuaui hill." This is the simple story of tie fin-t man in the American columns to reach the Spanish trenches, and Captain McFarlane much regrets tbe impossi bility of finding aud honoring the name of the half-savage hero. Discovered by a Woman. Another great discovery has been made, and that too, by a lady in this country. "Disease fastened its clutches upon her and for seven years she with stood its severests tests, but ber vital organs were undermined and death seemed imminent. For three months she coughed incessantly, and could ar t sleep. She finally discovered a way to recovery, by purchasing of us a bottle of Dr. King's New Discovery for Con sumption, and was so much relieved on taking first dose, that she slept alt night; and, with two bottles, has been absolutely cured. Her name is Mrs. Luther L-Jtz." Thus writes W. C. Hamnick & Co., of Shelby, N. C. Trial bottles free at J. N. Suyder's Drug Store, Som rset, Pa., and O. W. Bral lier's Drug Store, Berlin, Pa. Regular s;ze 50o. and $1 00. Every bottle guiranteed. Utefal Hints. It is said that if the edges of carpets are saturated wilh alum water it w ill effectually destroy moths. If the floor is uopainted it is always well to take the precaution of washing it up with a solution of alum before laying tbe carpet. Tbe same liquid is also an excellent remedy for black ants. If housewives who rely upon the lemon essence of commerce will take the trouble to pare the yellow rind of the fruit very thin aud put it into glass jars, covering it wilh alcohol cr recti fied spirits, tbey will secure a supetior quality, at the cost of the spirits, about one-third that of commercial extract. To purify a room set a pitcher of water in the apartment, and in a few hours it will have absorbed all the re epired gasses in the room. The capac ity for purifying is nearly doubled if the water is reduced to the temperature of ice; hence very cold water that lias stood in a room for some length of time If unfit to drink. Nat ui ally. This story, relating to a young pork packer in Kansas City, is circulated quietly among his acquaintances: A new baby 'had arrived iu bis fam ily, aud be was very proud of it. While several friends were congratu lating blm in his office and smoking cigars at bis expense, oue of them asked him : "By tbe way, how much did the cherub weigh?" "Ten pounds, dressed!" exclaimed the delighted young father. Not that Kind. The Argonaut tells of two fresh-air fund children in the country, looking in wonder at wine live chickens. "Didn t you ever see any before" ' a lady anked them. "Oh, yes, mum," the eldest child answered, knowingly, "we've always Beeu 'em lota only generally it was after they was peeled." Ordinary household accidents bave no terrors when there's a bottle of Dr. Thomas' Electric Oil io the medicine chest. Heals burns, cuts, bruises, f. rains. Instant relief. TT . . JJL iL V JL (U1 WITH THE C03II2JO OF EVEN. BY AMNK3 URoZIER H EBHERT N "It is ouly the wind," said the Poet. He threw himself listlessly upon the hard leather couch, and turned his face to the wall. Tbe waves dashed madiy upon the rocks below the little cottage; with angry shrieking the wind beat up the waves; aud the mom of the storu came upon the a i id. Tbe Poet heard alltbse, and smiled wearily; youug In years, he was old in spirit, in experi ence, In enjoyment ; they had no charm for him. He opened bis lips now iu di.cou tent. "They bave written to much about the sea that one is dead sick of it alL" He sighed ; "I can find iu it nothing that has not been found be fore." He himself bad written not a little concerning the beauties of the , but ills band had lieeu young iu sooth when it held the pen, aud bis eyes not yet a weal y. He turned restless'y ou the couch, bemoaning its hardness, and curving the friend whose advice had sent him to recruit at this little fishing town, throwing all the burden of his disgust of life and his own feebleness into the cursing. Then through and betwixt the voices of the storm came a wailing cry ; tbe cry of a lout soul at God's gates; the cry fr the unattainable from the lips of a ebilii of earth. Ri.siug higher and higher, it U-at sobhingly ujm.h the wind ; it cried with the echo of the seagulls' ' waruiug; it scattered with the soft sea foaip; and sank bushing and palpitating into the mutter of the waves. But ouly to rise again in a mel ody so triumphant as to override in its grandeur the voices of the angry ocean. "It was the great sea-spirit," said the Poet. But the sound had hardly seemed to come from the sea rather from above. He rose and walked to the window. "It was not the wind," he said, alou.17 It was still howling, but the music had tvased. He threw open the win dow and looked out. The wiud fell ia a blast upon bis thiu face, and tossed his hair. The sea shouted at him with angry menace. The look of the sky upon hitn was without a glint of a smile. But again the music rose ; but so soft ly that be bad to strain his ears to catch the murmur of the half-hushed cratlle- song. V hen it ceased again the voices of the storm seemed to be sinking, and the sea to be aweary of rage. The wind fell, ami into the ky came u white glimmer where a silver star sought its entrance to the heavens. The Poet stood there long, bis arms re-ting on the sill, a dreamy look ou his old-young face. There had come to him one of those moments which be fancied bad left him forever, when his mind, like the worn out sea, could huh its crying and be at peace. It was only w hen, on bis way to his bedroom later, he passed bis landlady on the stairs that the problem of the strange music he had heard returned to him. ''It seemed in the house, and yet not in the house," he murmured to himself, stopping her. "It has Ueu a wild night, Mrs. Lewis." "Indeed, and it has, hir, but it lus settled down nicely." "It was 6 1 range; but I thought I heard during tbe storm the sound of a violin. Some one has chosen a strange time to play." "There's Miss White, sir: the has the room above yours. She teaches the fiddle' in town goes up every day. ll.t she's not been playin' to-night, 6ir; and she's the only one in the place that can." "O, that explains it ! She must have been playing. No doubt it was she I heard," ' "'But she hasn't been playin' to-night, sir ; I beg your pardon for saying it. I've been sittin' sewin' in the room just above her head, aud never a sound have I htard. She's been that still, too." The Poet laughed, but went on bis way unconvinced. "Strange playiDg for a teacher of the violin," be thought, "and a strange time in which to play. She must be a strange girl." It never occurred to him, in their rogance of his few years, that she might be more than a girL Indeed, be speedily forgot the whole matter. But in the dead of the night he rose, and, hastily donning a few garments, tat till tbe gray of the morning inscribing the thoughts of which the Btrange strains had sown the seed. He bad found in the sea what be had Dever found before. II. With the golden eye of the sun upon him, be threw himself upon his toss ing tied and stept until after noonday. Afterwards he rambled upon the shore, reluming, tired and lislltss, at length to bis chambers. "Mis-s White, she's leavin' to-morrow mornin'," his landlady told him, as she laid his tea. But the Poet was not interested. He wondered who Miss White might be. "Indeed ?" he draw led languidly. He roused himself to poke the fire as a stopper to any other attempt at con versation ; and Mrs. Lewis took the bint. But in the evening w hen, with the coming out of the star, a delicate thread of sound wound itself through the stillness, his interest came back to him. He threw himself upon bis couch, and gave himself up to pleasure of the sweet strains. Yet was it hard ly pleasure, but more a flue pain. There was in the music naught of the wailing of yesterday's, naught of its pleading, naught of its paseion, naught of its bop. It was like, the Poet told himself, a wire of polished silver, a wire that might turn and twist In one's flesh forever, yet never cause a mortal wound only an infinitude of pain. But that of yesterday was tbe broad blade that kills at one stroke. And again as it broadened and deepened, aud faded, like a moonbeam, away "that of yesterday," be mur mured -was renunciation ; with Its batt'?, iU victory, its sublime triump'i, its transient peace ; to day's Is risigna- liou ; a subnuttanee w liich has naught i CLo 8 :vUJLL WHOLE NO. 2488. of halt If, of victory, of triumph, but only pain. To-day's is the end, an end that has no end." But as be lay there, bands clasped behind his tired bead, lips parted in a smile a smile uulike his, for it bad naught of scorn in it there broke upon the silence the opening bars of a little prelude, dainty and sweet in itself, but the manner of its playing a veritable triumph in mediocrity. It wailed aud cried laboriously above the Poet's head, and echoed above the window. It broke into painful snatches and indifferent rhythm. . The Poet sprang to his feet with an exclamation of impatience. "To spoil that with this !" he cried. " , how can she?" He bit his lips wrathfully; Irtit he did uot intend to have his dream altogether spoiled, and, his anger con quering his wearinc, ran lightly up the narrow stair. He burst iuto the room of the stranger w iihout preface or prelude, aud began, iu a high-pitched, womauisli voice : "What in tbe world" Then he au ed, for he found she was crying. A lit tle, middle-ageil woman, with a wrink led face, and funny eltiti locks that fell in a cloud atout it. She was standing in the middle of the room, with ber music stretched out flatly on the table, and ber violin and bow in ber hands; standing, the tears running thickly down her pale cheeks, without making any attempt to wipe them away. The Poet felt even angrier than be fore. Women of that age had no right t cry so oj-nIy, be thought; it went against a!! bis theories. He was an gry, t"M, th.it be had imagined ber to be young. "What an abominable row," he said, savage'y. "And what are you crying alxiut? But it is enough to make any one cry!" He was not far from tears himself with vexation. She looked up at him wistfully she was but a little thing and without any apparent surpriie at bis presence or abrupt entrance. "Ah ! I should not bave played again," she sobbed, "after after I had given it up." "Then I had guessed aright !" cried the Poet. "Yesterday it was renun ciation, and today resignation. But what hud you giwu up? What have you renounced ? To what are you re signed?" "I don't understand you," she said, uneomprehetidingiy. She laid her vio lin on the table, hanging over it as a mother does over her child. "When you played yesterday" "But I didti't play yesterday !" she cried. I wanted to -(, so badly ! The storm cried to me ; the wind cried ; and the sea cried ; ami I heard them all. I took my violin in my hand, but I could tell nothing ef what I heard. , how unhappy I was ! Then I drew the bow backward ar,i forward across the strings, but without touching them, and imagiued it all. I caught the sob bing of the sea-g nl ru the end of my bow ; I sent out the cry of the gulls " "And the spray of the sea!" cried the Poet. "And the eddy and gathering of the foam--''' 4 And the mutter of the waves !' "An i I thought of how I might have played had not something, something beeu wanting. (), I cried to God to give me the ower to play as as my soul could play, ImiI forthis thin -this me that cannot." "The cry for the unattainable," the Poet whUpcred to himself, but she did not hear or heed him. "I madi a resolution," She dried hvr tears briefly at the recollection of it. "G.kI would not give me my de sire, so I gave up my semblance of it, for I wanted to keep my ideal. Then, when I bai quite m ule up my mind, how I could have played then ! But it would not come." "The triumph," said the Poet. He smiled imperceptibly to himself. But t -day it was all so dreary. It was all over, and there was nothing lefC Aud after I bad thought how it was all over and my last note played, I thought I would agaiu say good-by to my fiddle. And I fetched it out aud played goodby, but without making a sound. And I felt not a bit sorry, but only a strange feeling here;" she put her hand on her heart. "So I played a real little bit to see if it would take it awav." He did not speak. His dream had come back to him ; aud his thoughts, like white clouds, floated far, far away. "But I am going away to-morrow," she said, w ith white lips, but firmly, aud I will never play again. Wiil you take if, please? Will you take it with you? I shall never have one again." She placed violin and bow in his arms, and he let them rest there, seeing ouly the U-auty of his dream. Then he turned away, and her eyes followed him as if her heart lay in his arms. But at the door he paused. "You have given me a gift for which I can never thank you as I should," he said, simply. Slie thought he w as speaking of the violin, and ber eyes, full of pain, smiled in corroboration of his words. "But I shculd never play again." It was their first meeting it was also their last. In the early dawn the poet blotted the last leaf of what he knew to be the greatest thing he had ever written, or would ever write. "It will make the world weep," he said, through his tears. Black and White. Glorious Sews Comes from Dr D. 3. Cargile, of Washita, I. T. lis writes: "Four bottles of Electric Bitters has cured Mrs, Brewer of scrofula, which had caused her great sutr.-riug for yeara. Terrible sores would break out on her head and fa-e, and the best doctors could give no help; but her cure is complete and her health is excellent." This show what thousands have prov ed, that Electric Bitters la the best blood purifier known. It's the supreme remedy for eczema, tetter, salt rheum, ulcers, boils aud running sores. It stimulates liver, kidneys an t bowels, expels poisons, helps digestion, builds up the streugth. 'Ooly 50 c?nts , at J. N. Snyder's Drug Store, Somerset, P., an l G. W. Bralller's DJg S:ore, Berlin, Fa. Guaranteed. Th 'Art and Science &f Washing as Tuld by an Ex vert. A correspondent sk for some ex plicit directions for laundry work, the burden of which iu the household rou tine she rightfully deplores. It Ls a pity that at least in the cities there shoe Id not be established co-operative laundries in which household washing could be done at minimum raUa. Some careful housekeepers protest against this suggestion, saying that nothing would induce them to send the family washing to be Liunderei with a pro miscuous lot of soiled clothing coming from everywhere. This objection how ever, would not exist iu the prtjer!y managed laundry conducted on hy gienic and sanitary principles where the clothing was properly disinfected. The French ruauage these things belter than we; all washing Is done outside, and ia consequence "blue Monday" is eliminated from the household week. However, siuce washing day iu mt families comes once io seveu, it Is de sirable that it should be met in the best possible way. To begin with, the question arises whether clothes shall be soaked or not the night before. The best laundry teachers say that they should not. If done at ail, it should be in lukewarm water and without soap, or, if soap is used, the greatest care should be taken to see that no stained article is put in the tub of soapy w ater. Hot water or soap sets many stains, and often there may l what is called a blind statu. which is one imsiisjiected unt.! brought out by the hot water or soap. To wetk clothes over night in water iu which a washing powder has Wt-o dissolved yellows, rots and practically ruins the clothes. Of course, flannel are never soaked. To sum up, if tempted to soak clothes dou'L The process of washing clothes taught by Miss Emily Huntingdon, the do-mestie-ecience expert, provides as a first process the careful sorting of the clothes; the table linen, the fiue clothes, the bed linen, the coarse clothes, and tbe towels are separated in the order iu which they should be washed. A strong suds is made by cutting the soap iuto small pieces aud dissolving the pieces in warm water. The water should be warm but not Isiiliug hot. A little more sonp should b u--d during the washing and this ou the ui'wt soil ed plaivs of the articles. The garments are washed on U)th sides, care being taken that the finest and nitst clothes are not rublied on the board. The ta ble lineu is washed first of all; then the fine clothes. B rth should be put into the boiler in cold water and brought to a scald. To put them in hot water sets any staius. When they have been scalded, they are drained out and put into clean, cold water. The coarse clothes and towels are then washed and put into the Uiler for twenty minutes. Too much loi:ing make clothes tender. . When the blueing water is made, car U-ing taken Hint it is not too blue, the) fine clothes and tnM'e linen are drained from the cold water and put through the blueing-water first, the other clothes passing from the liler into the clean water, aud theu into Ihe Llueiug-water. where Ihey may remain until the tine clothes have beeu bung out. Clothes should not be wrtiug out aud left any length of time in baskets, as in this way they become streaked. The hanging-out process, if proper'y managed, has a direct influence ou the irouing of the clothes. All articles should Ut snapped and pulled smooth aud even and hang np on the wrong side. Tbey should be dampened at night and roll ed tightly, the starched things being ironed first in the morning. Iu sum mer they should not be sprinkled over night, aa they w ill sour before morning, and there is danger of mildew. The starched clothes should be hung in the sunniest places. New York Evening Post. Ninety Per Cent. Of the people are alViicted with some form of humor, ami this causes a va riety of .list-a.-. The reasou why Hood's Siirsa par ilia cures when all others fail is fund in the fact that it elVectually expels the humor. Scrofula, sMt rheum, li!s and all eruptions are permanently cured by this great med icine. Hood's Pills are th; best family ca tharticand liver tonic Gentle, reliable, sure. Depression. J suppose Washington will seem rather dull after we're gone," remark ed the statesman. "Ob, I don't know," said the amia ble lady with whom he boards. "Of course, it will take some time to for get all these debates, and yeas and nays, and such. But it won't be more than a wek or two befcre we begin to liven up a bit." -r-Washingtt n Star. Bisma-ck's Iron Nerve Was the result of his spendid health. Indomitable will and tremendous en ergy are not found where Stomach, Liver, Kidneys and Bowels are out of order. If you want these qualities and the success they bring, use Dr. King's New life Pill. They develop every power of brain and body. Only 25c. at at J. N. Snyder's Drug Store, Som erset,, Pa., and G. W. Brallier's Drug Store, Berlin, Pa. Unimportance. "What has become of the Chinese Emperor?" inquired ooeof the leading citizens of Pekin. "He doesu't seem to be alive to the situation." "Yes," replied the mandarin who knows court secrets : "as a politician he is so completely off the earth that the empress doesn't even thiuk it's worth while to announce any more fuuerals for him." Washington Star. Volcanic Eruptions Are grand, but Skin Eruptions rob life of joy. Bucklen's Arnica Salve cures them, also. Old, Running and Fever Sores, Ulcers, Boils, Felons, Corns, Warts, Cuts, Bruises, Burns, Scalds, Chapped Hands, Chilblains. Best Pile cure on earth. Drives out Pains and Aches. Ouly 25 cents a box. Cure guaranteed. Sold at J. N. Snyder's Drugstore, Somerset, Pa., aud G. W. Brallier's Drug Store, Berlin, Pa. Before the Open Door- Algernon thought he was on the free list at the house of the revenue officer whose fair daughter had welcomed him so many times before. But on this occasion two watchdogs met him at the foot of the steps and thought it their duty to levy a tear-off-. That was why he custom. Ah, yes! Life is fuil of such hor rors ! Chicago Tribune. A lazy liver makes a lazy man. Bur dock Blood Bitters is the natural, never failing rem.9 iy for a lazy Uver. t ; I- ' i