T 1,1 Bjr Powder mi 3hoL f publication. y at otherwise led until . . ulscriler do not to .-.Ilia, - form- 0 ) Hi Pa. itSOTABTFCBLIC. i."1-1 8.Mne. Pa. " ,meiwi. Psun'a. i rx:U Pa. rsjuieiaet - 311 k'ilY. A.- ......r-l H " soa", Pa. .4SKtr.utKK. uu. XL. pa. if 5. -..& t -a i-i-aw, Somerset, Pa. .ijartBx. oi.piU! lart iLNLV-AT-l-VW, bouicrbct, Pa. SuNEV-AT-LAW, ar x t J. U. OliLE. Llt.tVS-Ar-LAW, -Hjuicri-it, Pa. , -.iwaaun to la.iue eu- Vtiji.- mu- li'H.ujom"u tiiAV. A. L. Ct. HAY. bouieraet. Pa, -f.j kiiLua t ail b-f -0 en- . IVI iM i- -'.' - i - iittLii i,uca. 0. iviiUitL, AiijuM-l-AX-UAW, boiueniel. Pa. . .... , jmiii-ubUsI Ui till -.uH,OIUilli ClWuUtt, W1U1 . buinCnu jgi ilUt lt . vjiuv v ' Aiuii-Ntt-AT-LAW buiiK ' t, Pa. .Iiuw-ii EiociL, up . ra. fcn- uiitexiii!ueu,nii ail .B.i;Litsi u :m yrouipuieiia Ji. I- L. C Cui-BOR". Ij .'iX 4 LX.iLBuivN", L . 1 I U oouii-rt!, Pa. jfjtM i our care will be -ijujiiui-j .tcuu.-J Ui. CoileO inutiw ix-u.orii and adjoui ud couvejaiicifl - ulit Ur.'lu. Ai lUiwV i. V -AT-X-A W . bouitrhct Pa. - .limtliUUKlcU Ui iiiUl Will lUuli. Je.a.li. W. U. KL'PPtU A.iUik. . k S-il-LAW, boiiierbct. Pa. iau"iw im ir care will Ixf -Sj,jveH i.puelle 1 III Ullm iili'LN, M. "- -: .iLii. luuk. v.ju tt..u uj nit rare of the ,1 VUIUUK ull ruieiiel. Pa. iff. eiiMA, oypi-Biw U. B. ioiufrcM-u Pa. 'rV'U-JJi; .rvitr Uir C1U- v'm uitj. uxaec corner --iO vlWl. ---w, rorol iiu diore. 1 a- OiiLL, r M-rv:ck to tb clU- L-l'vl Lt-ilJl'. . 1 H 1M tin b- 't"'."'" :r c""":' '"'LiiKt al lu of- --uiiuii .o tue preervaUon iii i-i kia iueriel. '-r"l u.iiiUt'ir. utile . .".' c a. Go ktora, uiiC i'..'lol .l-ku. i-aud fcurvej'oi- IKE t "ki'-luaU-t by iusur- -t e i!i!"ure Town and ' J- W riic for in fomiatiou. JA-'-. J. ZOKN, becretary. 'L Uk '"'U r.iar:iiiil-d 'r 'wr,,1' """irl" impruvruiMib """" mu. 1 pui. " 1"si'l'rler alien Jm Mui-ray. 6 L! r iss and Embalmer. 1 OD HEARSE, wi to tonera.il furo- tUMft. CT , . pa. V VOL. XLYIII. NO. 0. NO USE TRYING 1 can't teke plain cod-liver oil. Doctor says, try it He micht as well tel! me to melt t lard or butter and trv to take a .... j . tnem. It ts too rich and 2 ...:tl . L 11-- -i L r . upMi inc siomacn. Dut you can take milk or cream, so you can take Scott's Fmiilsinn It is like cream: but will. 9 feed and nourish when cream 1 will noL Babies and chil dren will thrive and grow rat on it when their ordinary' r it . .... J i :ooa aocs not nounsh them. Pcrsonj have been knrjwn to gain i a pound a day when takintf cnl ounce of Scott's Emulsion. It gels ine cuesm-e machinery in working ' order so that the ordinary food is' property digested and assimilated. i " "il C .1 ..... SCOTT & BOWSE, Oman. New York. THE- First Moil Bank Somerset, Penn'a. Capital, S50.00Q. Surplus, S4O.O0O. UNOIV'DED S4.000. PhOFITS OCPOSITS aectlVC IN LAKQC MDM ALL .MOUNT. rTllI OM OCK1KO ccounrt or .mcHtiiri. iii, TOCH OCLtF9. NO OTH IK1 BOLICITtO -DISCOUNTS DAILY. - BOARD OF DIRKCTORa CH AS. O. S I LL, UKu. K. N.'l'LL, JAM KS 1 PI ,H, W. H. MILt.r K. JOHN R. S'HI T. KOHT. K. SCLUa EDWARDHTLL : : PREsinFNT VAU'MINKHAY. : VICE FKhXlUKNT. HARVEY il. BKkKLEY, t:ASHlEH- The ruDrts and wantlm of tlil imr.K are no- careiy proTvil in a rfl"tirHifd Cokliss Bck slak Pkoov .AFt. Tue only sute made abo luU-iv uuniiar-prooi. Jacob D Swank, Watchmaker and Jeweler, Next Door WeM of Lutheran Church, Somerset, - Pa. I Am Now prepared to supply the public with Clocks, Watches, aud Jew elry of all descriptions, as Cheap as the Cheapest. REPAIRING A SPECIALTY. All work guaranteed- Look at my stock before making your purchases. J. D. SWANK. KEFFER'S NEW SHOE STORE! KEN'S BOYS'. tfCMLrS, GIRLS' twi CHILDREN'S SHOES, 0XF0SDS ni SLIPPERS. l;lack aud Tin. Luest Styles aud Shapes at loweKt .....CASH PRICES.. Adjoining Mrs. A. E. Uhl, South-east corner of square. SOMERSET, PA. y.lA 50 YEARS J ' EXPERIENCE onlrkl ascertain var .pini.. tre whh u uJnrl!rSnnClenU. Hn.1tw PaJu Ptrw tkn ttaroneta Munn A Ut. recelTe iporuri wotiee. witbal clm-ve. la tl Scientific JImerican. fMNNCo.3S,B New York BriLct. oX..2S F PU Watfliwio- ! C Get an Education Tb Hrt oatSt tn lifr. Be nitliod ad at CENTAL STATE N07.MAL SCHOOL LOI k lilt tSI t'llataa ('.). Pa. Stronr taml'r, TnJ conrM. food library, inol.ui piar.t j. is lal.oral-.fT ai.d mow litortMin. Wtidiue Mtpu.iw cr-'UDd. sa irifct um, IrtM .ii.ii.-, Stta au Vu to-d-nta In irhinxn t. icuir crw-, n tiTpwnra i.'(Trrl in S!nTC,Sh"rtliana.Tjpa irntmr. rmd fi liiuTral4 caalora. JaMI rLUt. r.U- l-rtartaal. I H"w - 1 X .? i H t i t A: fa'. !'- 1 i i "'1 ' r ' 11 li. li.tr .UJI.:: v. 'ti r: i- r.-r il-"'.-...v.t! . . nil! 1)1 i f J r:..:l ?::o;t tx-f,';.- : fc r., j-t i....-- r:'J- :tlj.t...-t-..l- i J '"I .- v; i ; I ij; - i i! 1 ,ii.i., !. 1 io... .i ij I uj.: ur 'ii. i: v; lv- 3 1 -J I f.lt Sat K 1 DUSK OU THI V.!0I, LCW PLAIN. r-,wk cn t:' I-1-.v f-Uin. An. I 3 i;lu:t lit i tu t.r vrtiund I;. in R:t.r In.rfd ly a ri.; ? trLi:itii.u wl.itpriRf 1X1-j . An i over it virz "inz I ats Aa: ih k l it the k!i:.Jtf " r iny. Aad rci:nf it ihr l K.e wind in network of bh:rn wvii. Duls on th low tlain. And h cr in the rii;.:r.c-- pririjr Over tlx -mtsi jKks of nf:in. anishiny blue. An-I an 5k !r- t.'.jit n tlK wifj, AJ a I. ar- !.- i:;-; .ff mruuli tiie r tearing. AtJ. out iter- t!.i- tamnui loaa. tiie birat of a 'ctit!-rin Mir. Pusk cn t'.p u-ii, low j,!c:rt. Arl a Tu;ie (j the po: dvxrtlinc Ard a-ilt .ii.T( iIm- mntL-iiit a:t. the flit of a frn::itl owl's ftin. ArJ a hawk I' aiinj; homo to his port h Whrnp iv t U,u.'s w:i the t-rcst ri blending. Aai fcha -s of t'tv .j.-;rn:r.s niUl ruund tlt U-m-rniiitf ft-thi;li (iitiic. W Jli-iD Ihii iq I'oJth's Cumpanion. MISS MARIA'S ROMANCE, i:y k p. bkxsox. Author or "Dodo." From thp riiilad-:ibla Tiimn. Though both the Mij C'herrcsid might be rffscritied iu stable parlane as "uped," tliere was, jierhaps, a dirtVr-etii-eofttn years between them. Th eliitr one. Miss Jane, was of Htrou;r mind and ft-eble body; Miss Maria, tlie younger, was of a romantic turn, and swarthy. Morally, Miss Jane, was iu tbe habit of bitting on Miss Maria; iu ell'ect, Mi.-s Maria bad beeu known to burst into tears at the moral weight of her sister, leave the ro;iai with the tread of a grenadier, aud bang the door behind her with such force that the pictures trembled. They lived in a charming old red brick house in the city of Winchester, a house too large for their needs, but enabiiug them each to have a separate sitting room, to say nothing of the joint drawing-room aud a small dark cup biiard domestically kuowu as thestudy. Miss Jane was not much of a reader, and only one shelf of the handsome oak bookcase which stood between the windows of her sitting-room contained books. These Consisted of tiie com plete works of Charles levei- aU a few volumes of the modern aud pre posterous Kuglish school. A galaxy of medicine bottles occupied the lowest shelf, and the other two were empty except for a box containing four aud twenty mild cigarettes. Originally this had beeu a Lox of twenty-live, aud its purchase w as induced by a jierusal of the preposterous novels referred to above. She had siiuked the larger part of out; she had no immediate intention of saiokiug more. The twenty-four cigarettes and the row of medicine bottles were, in fact, the pro jections of Mi:-s Jane's feebleness of body. The rest of the furniture was the product of her strong miud. She had a knee-hole talk, with a stout, mannish, military desk on it, and by its side stood an ashtray iu w hich she kept nibs, no If ss. Two or threesjKirt iug prints hung on the walis, aud on a ide table was a mounted hoof of a horse, which she had bought for oue and niueence iu a pawnbroker's shop off High street, bhe ordertd dinner aud wore browu shots. Miss Maria, the younger, wore ring lets and wrote pioctry. Poems formed the staple of her small but well-assorted library. Her favorite authors were Longfellow, Mrs. llemaus, aud iu her wilder moments, Lord liyron. The diction of Shelley she found obscure, and she considered Keats coarse. Iu confidence she would have intimated that she thought Shakespeare very coarse, for she sat in unbiased judg ment on the socialist authors, aud look none iu hearsay. Not that Miss Maria would ever have uttered the word "coarse," for her method of intimating it wa9 to shut her lips very tightly and take down from her shelves a volume of Marie Corelli, w ho to her mind ranked almost as a poet. She had an enormous admiration fur what she con sidered jiowerful; she considered the "Sorrow of Satan'' very pow erful, in deed. For the most part Mis. Jane and Miss Maria used t' live together in the mcst sisterly harmony. Their breakfast hour was five minutes past H, or, as Miss Jatie said oil one oceasiou, w heu Miss Maria had been le;t waitiug, ''Call it a quarter pi.:!'' Tney passed au industrious, ewuan ard.i us, morn ing; for while Miss Jane wa ordering luuch and dinner, washing up the breakftrt service of Crou Uerny, aud truculently hxiking for snails iu the ga xleu, Maria retired to her roniu aDd rad 8 m;ly masses of poetry, the greater part of which she transferred in a tine angular baud to prodigious folio extract book. Indeed, shculd the wjrlis of Longfellow, Mrs. Htuiaus, and Lord liyrou be ever bst to the world, the bulk of their masterpieces w.U he fou-id by ttie delighlej auti ijUiriau iu Miss Maria's extract books. An hour or two of such inspiring labor produced, as was natural, inspi ration, and f -r some two hours before lunch they lunched at a quarter past 1 Miss Maria would write poetry. Years ago she bad used a rhyming dictionary, but by now, it may tie fair ly slateU, s!ie was acquainted with ail the suitable ruyniis of all the words she was likely to employ. She was at tie present lime employed ou atragedy oflheui'K-t surprising nature, wnich Was to be complete iu live acts. The names of the principal characters wete Olaudo aud Anuaoel; they met in a grove. Tnere were among Me dra matis persotiae a perfect leglou of shep herds, sheph rdesses, executioners, armed uiob.-, nobles, foreigners in exile, and princes iu di.-guise. After lunch Miss Jane went on her bicycle, wb:ch she rode slowly but firmly. Tue bicycle bad ueu the cause of tbe last great disagreement between the sisters, lor Miss Maria held that a bicycle was a moderu and detestable development, and that tde great wo men of romance would never have nddeu such thiogs, eveu if they had beeu invented in their day. Miss Jaue had retorted rather unkindly, saying fc!ie didu't care a pin's head which was true f r the great women of ro mance. "You and jour tragedies!" she wouud up. The door had slam med. The country round Wincheter is ru.';l, aud red roofed village Leslie i SOMERSET, PA., exactly as they should In green hollows of tbe swelling downs, but it is not de signed for bicyclists of 50 years and feeble body. Thus in Miss Jane's ex cursions the chief iDgredients were trudging up hills up which she could not otherwise for her bicycle, and trudgiug down hills down which her bicycle would otherwise force her. But as long as a bicycle remains the most mcnlern development in the history of individual locomotion, there is no doubt that however hilly the country, Miss Jane will continue to employ it. The disagreement between her and her sister she did not regard as a reason for its abandonment. She naturally sup posed that it would pass, as other dis agreements had passed, aud to all ap pearances it did so. But the danger of superficial judgment is proverbial, and w hether it was that Miss Maria's retlection on the occasions of the fortieth birthday warmed her that it w as time that she too took a Hue, or whether tbe bicycle was the last Htraw, which did not break toe caoiel's back; but rather led him to revolt agaiost all the other straws, it happened, at ajy rate, that it gave Miss Martha an idea. Such ideas had occurred to her before for she was romantically made but as the ory only, this one she should put into practice. The Misses Chermside were not letter ridden folk, aud the handwritings of their few correspondents were reason ably well known to each other. Con sequently, when on a certain morning three weeks after Miss Jane took to her bicycle, she saw on coming down to breakfast a letter laid at Miss Maria's plate, it was a matter of course that she glanced at the writing to see who the author was. It both puzzled aud piqued her that she did not recognize it, and the first ruminating sip of eofTeee did not make matters clearer. To so sound and practical brain this was very an noying, and Maria, who was very late that day the ringlets had been excep tionally tiresome got but a sour greet ing. "Good morning, Maria," said Miss Jaue, "or, rather, good afternoon. You may call this a quarter past 8, but it isn't. There is a letter for you; and whom is it from ?" Miss Maria took up tbe letter lan guidly and examined the address; theu she laid it down by her cup. "Good morning, Jane," she said. "A little butter, please." Jaue dapped ( there is no other word ) some butler ou to her outstretched plate. "Whom is it from?" she repeated. "I haven't read it yet," remarked Miss Maria, just as if she did not know the hands of all her correspondents, but she cut tbe envelope with her kuiie aud took out the letter. Then she be came abstracted (a habit abhorrent to her lister), and forgot to put sugar iu her colTee; she sipped it, and with au absent hand scattered half the crystals into her saur. Now, it was not Miss Jane's habit to ask l wire, still less three times, so she nreltlj emitted a guttural interjection, which would probably be written "faugh," and weut on with her break fast iu silence. Later Miss Maria helped herself to some marmalade, tethered a roving eye and read the letter through again. Then she thrust it hastily into her pocket, aud began to chatter with vi vacious incoherence about snails, bicy cles, cold mutton and poetry. To Jaue this vivacity was a degree more con temptible Jthan her abstracted silence, for her powerful mind had grasped iho fact that Maria's letter contained some thing out of the common, and such devices were fitfully transparent. How ever, curiosity conquered pride, and when they rose from the table Mi-s Jane said a suappinh grace and seized the euveloe which was lying on the table. After examining it carefully, she transferred agorgou gaze to Maria. "I don't knowthe hand," said thi remarkable woman. "I dr--e say you don't," replied Maria for the worm had turned. Harmony being thus a little jarred. a;id Miss Jaue being possessed tor the time being by that subjective phe nomenon which, when it occurs in children, is termed crossness, the two parted as soon as they left tbe diuing- rMim. Miss Maria went straight to tmr r.vtm nnri fiTan hftlrimrnrrliir- f ed as ascetic dinner, marched with ! more than Usual energy out into the i garden, where she collected snails with. ) fanatic vindictiveuess, sparing none, and spudded up plantains with tbe nf Mil I ilttlMn nhif f tn w'al r- hunting expedition. j Now, Miss Maria's sympathies, as ! has beeu remarked, were with tbegreai women of romance, and beneath her ringlets, in spite of her forty years, lay the shapes of surprising and niarvel ocsly colored idylls in no abstract guise, but touching herself. Thin aud taw dry little day dreams would there apjear to tbe alien eye, and he who should play hero to her heroine was. budded of the same stulf as herself. He bad a croouing tenor voice (croou I was a beautif j1 word and rybrned ob- I viously,) au s polio curl to crown an iu- tellee'tuai forehead, he was slim and dark and Italian looking, but she did not think him insipid. They met for tbe first time iu me street, and eye flashed an aosweriug fire. Mis-tMari (so these dreams told her ) beat a chaste retreat, and looked not back till she could naturally do so, as she opened the front door of tbe red brick house, yet, oh! what pleasing sreririce wa this renunciation. Then, glancing carelessly over her shoulder, she saw that the slim unknown had stoppe and was looking, gazing rather after her. Next day, and the day after, ibey would again encounter each other ever with tbe same confusion and flut tering of tbe heart. lie sat opposite her iu the cathedral, and bis crouning tenor called echoes from the vaulted roof aud thrilled her through and through. He would ride fidgetty horse down tbe high street, displaying the most consummate mastery of the un ruly brute (she would make him give up that horse for her sake,) and at the end they met most conveniently at at diuner in the bouse of a minor canon. - Here it transpired that his name was Percy Elpbinstone, aud that bis great-uncle was a baronet. lit erset ESTABLISHED 1827. WEDNESDAY. JANUARY 3. 1U00. asked Jeave to call, and leave was given him, and thus in the fulness of time the rosy-faced children who lived in the cottages round the baronet ical manor house curtseyed with grateful humility to Sir Percy and Lidy El phinstone. Such was the main feat ures of that vision world In which Miss Maria passed sj many happy hours, now so familiar to her that she regard ed its sumptuousness with calmness. Embellishing details were always hot from the mint of her brain, but the broad outlines of the vision wera in variable. Yet this morning, after tbe affair of the letter, it was with some excitement that she went to her room, and with a new sctise of the beauty of that much admired piece that she read Mr. Longfellow's "Golden Legend." For, indeed, her romantic weaving, seemed extraordinarily real to her, and her heart went out with a feeling of akinship to the creatures of the poet's brain. Now, it must be understood that Miss Jane's seemiug impatience with her sisterjat breakfast sprang from no more vital or intimate emotion thau cmiosity. Hot and burning curiosity it is true, but no morj than that. It was therefore, no great CJQCssion when, au hour later, she saw Miss Maria drifting towards her across the lawn with a letter in her hand, that she was fully prepared to welcome her possible revelatious in a sisterly aud sympathetic spirit; she even at the mo ment spared a snail because it ' was so little a one. "I have come to consult you, sister," began Miss Maria, in some confusion, "about a matter about a matter iu which I should wish, if possible, to be guided by yorr judgment as your longer" (she could not deny herself this little thrust) "your longer ex perience of life. This is the letter I received this morning." And, stepping back after giving Miss Jane the letter, Miss Maria, iu her maidenly confusion, upset the basket of snails. But there are more poignant emotions than snail -catching, and greater issues than their destruction, and Miss Jaue took the letter and let tbe snails lie. She read it through and theu again. "Mst extraordinary," she mid, still retainiugiu Maria bridled. "Most extraordinary," repeated Miss Jane, calmly oblivious of her sister's feeliugs. Then for a moment she stood in si lence, and her intensely practical mind reviewed the situation and grasped its issues. An unknown gentleman, Per cy Elpbinstone by name, had written to Maria in a neat, almost copperplate hand, asking her to grant him the fa vor of an interview ttt afternoon, or the next afternoon, or auy afternoon, in the Cathedral close, opposite the west door. He might be kuoA-n, be said, by bis wearing a piece of helio trope iu his buttonhole, and he would be dressed iu a gray frock coat aud a top bat. His intentions were honora ble, his heart was not his own, though otherwise disengaged, and he threw himself on his charmt-r's mercy. A mind lees remarkable than Miss Jane's might have failed before the magnitude of the situation, but she remained her self. For Maria's sake she was delight ed, and then there was something about the heliotrope and the frock coat of Percy which fairly enslaved the imag ination. "Where is Percy's top hat and the heliotrope?" Now the sentence tripped otf the tongue! Thus senti ment stated the case, aud business an swered. If all went well with Maria, Miss Jane would be much better oil' than she was now, for she would sell the house which belonged to ber and buy a smaller aud more economical habitation. That would leave ber less fettered in many ways; she could get a second bicycle, though indeed the first had scarcely enough exercise, and if she ever purchased any more cigarettes they should be gol 1 tipped. She bail often surmised that it was only their cheapness which was so indigestible. She looked up at Maria. Her re flations had been almost instanta neous. "You must go," she said, "you must certainly go." Then, witli an air of fine resignation "It is lietter that I went with you. Though I am pressed for time today, I will go with you. We will go together this afternoon." "Thank you for being willing to give up so much of your time," said Maria, w ith a faint acid note in her tone, "but I think that will be aeedless, sister. Percy I mean Mr. Elpbinstone might feel less able, more timid I should say, if he found two of us. But do you really thiuk I had better go at all? It would be so dreadful for me, Jane, if he was not quite all that one would naturally expect from his note." "Most certainly you must go," said Jane, w ith decision. "You are getting ou in years, Maria; you ar no longer quite young, and it is time that you began to thiuk of settling down." Then, as curiosity rose like a torrent over her : "But I think I am sure I had Ut ter come with you." "I cannot conseLt to go on tuch terms," said Maria, with finality. Miss Jane stood awhi'.e in thought. "It would be more regular," she said at length, "if I went first aud got a good look at him. Then if be turns out to be the sort of mau whom I could fancy for you, Maria,, I would say you had a cold, or something of that kind, and ask him to tea. That would be the more prudent plan." "But I haven't got a cold, Jane, and I wouldn't drag you" replied Maria. "Also, it would look as if I distrusted him." "I don't know that you have any reason for trusting him as yet," retort ed Jane; "he may be a mere adven turer." ' Percy Elnhinstoae !" murmured Maria, as if the mere sound of the name was sufficient to banish sus picion. Miss Jaue was not unmoved. 'It certainly has an aristocratic ring," she couceded, "Moat extraor dinary !" The third repetition of so uncompli mentary 'an ejaculation stiffened Miss Msria, and with standi in ber tone : "I shall Cf and aea him, siuce you XL recommend it, Jane," she said, "but I shall go alone." Miss Jane wa sileut a moment, for she was an honest woman, and she wished to make clear to herself exactly bow much of ber anxiety to see Mr. Percy Elpbinstone, his bat and helio trope spray, arose from a sisterly desire to shield Maria from the wiles of pos sible adventurers, bow much from pure curiosity, a defect in her nature which she acknowledged to herself, though to no other. This analysis was compli cated, but eventually honesty prevail ed, and she yielded. "If you bring him to tea, then, Ma ria," she said, "there will be a cup ready for him, and I shall be glad to see him." Tbe snails for the most part made good their escape during this conversa tion, but Miss Jaue was at pains to col lect only the least distant of tbe tru ants. Romance had stooped from heaven and touched tbeui, a sudden flower had opened on the bloomless stem of their quiet cathedral town lives, and, though Miss Jane had no great opinion of meu in general, it would be bard to say, though beyond doubt, top bat and heliotrope written in a copper-plate haud retained some subtile aroma even through the post. She wondered whether if she too had gone in for ringlets, aud bad stood like a sentinel on duty, ever listening for tbe footfall of romance and ever ready to salute it, she, too, might have had her Percy Elphiustoue. Both she aud her sister bore time's stigmata in cor ners of eyes and fading hair, but to the casual observer she would have ap peared at least no older than Maria. But Percy was evidently no casual ob server; like the digger of an artesian well In a soil of uncompromising dry ness, he had conjectured and struck that perennial fouutain of romance, which, irrigated and Hushed with the green of youth, the imaginings of one whom a not unkind appraiser would call of middle age. And she stilled a sigh of regret for the days when she, too bad been only 40 years old, aud thought to herself that she would go for an unusually long bicycle ride that afternoon, and p rhaps even r duce the contents of her box of cigarettes to twenty-three. Miss Maria was trysted for 4 o'clock, opposite the west door of tbe cathedral, aud, strange though it may appear, she set otr in a state of greatly excited trepidation, for her romance was very real to her, and, in spite of, or in con sequence of, her day dreams, Percy Elpbinstone seemed to ber a quite pos sible contingency. Also she had a strong dramatic sense, aud certainly at this moment she held the stage. The play might be "Hamlet," with the title role omitted, but, whatever it was, she was acting in it. The day was brisk with autumn, and a bright sun made the air crisp and sparkling, and for half an hour or more she walked to and fro about the close, now stop ping to read a moss grown epitaph, or watch tbe gathering of the swallows, but busy all the time with the thought of Percy Elphinstone. Indeed, had he suddenly appeared in the lime ave nue, top hat, heliotrope and all, she would not have fell it to be strange. Since she had received the letter signed with that magic name, he had become more vividly corporeal; her own fiction was convincing and had certainly all the strangeness of truth about it. Meantime, like the poet, Miss Jane had passed through the towu aud out of tbe street in something resembling a tumult of soul. The suu if romance had shone ou the red brick house ; she was invigorated by its rays. Snails, a bicycle, ordering diuner aud washing up a set of Crown Derby had hitherto been proveuder sufficient for her psy cbine needs, but now her capacity for spiritual adventure had suddenly been enlarged. Wider horizons were un folded to ber gaze, aud life was really au affair that presented problems, that held the germ of the unexpected. She had never hitherto contemplated the existence of the unexpected, and the prospect was exhilarating. A new light was shed ou the novels of Charles Lever; they described things that ac tually might happen to actual people. All this was illuminating. She had left Winchester by Hyde street, and tbe exaltation of her spirit was such that the milestones, so she pbrased it to herself, literally flashed by her, and she was already four miles from the towu before she knew where she was. Then, taking a road across the river, she wheeled her machine up a hill on to tbe dow us, and, striking the Farnham road, came back at a breezy pace by tbe golf links, aud dis mounted to walk down the steep hid leading Into the lower end of Win chester. Once on the level again, she remounted and rode with great caution up the broad street towards borne. Shops and lamp-posts and people were vivid to ber eye ; she noticed a hundred things the had never noticed before; tbe flash and exquisite white ness of the river as it plunged out of the darkness of the mill; the graceful outlines of the trees already showing through their diminished foliage; the topaz of a retriever's eyes, aud, lastly, as she Feared the High street bill, a new butcher's shop. The butcher him self, a good looking young man, was recommending a piece of loin to a cus tomer. He held a chopper iu oue hand, and with the other he slapped the joint. Now, Miss Jane had been for years in two minds about adopting vegetarlansm; the thought of dead sheep, especially if her mutton was a little underdone, sometimes caused her a strangling feeling in the throat muscles, and this cheerful slapping of tbe meat sickened ber. But before she looked away she caught sight of the name above tbe shop. - It was Elthiustone ! The world turned giddily round her. Who then was the slapper of the loin, the man with the chopper and the blouse, but Percy? Fresh from his tryst with Maria, he stood In the open shop, patent to every eye, and spoke of tbe price of mutton. Perhaps he had eveu killed that sheep with bis red right hand butcher did such things and Miss Jane got olT ber bicyle and walked by Its side, for there was no more spirit left in her. " Black anxiety was by ber side, for the cheerful butch er was just such a one as might take K1 Maria's eye, and no doubt he had not revealed to her that the hat and helio trope were purchased with blood money. He had a black moustache and a fine open expression, and even when employed on his dradful busi ness his manner was engaging. Miss Jane's great-uncle had been Mayor of Winchester, and the pride of race wa bers. Indeed, her stories beginui'ig, "My uucle, the late Mayor," always commanded a respectful silence. "My uncle the Mayor my brother-in-law the butcher V Oh, what a fall ing otf' was there ! She let herself In by the gnrden gate and went straight to the drawing room. Maria was there alone. Without pre amble, she plunged into the midst of things. "My poor Maria," she said, "hss Percy Elpbinstone gt a black mous tache and a cheerful manner?" Maria was startled, but her romance glowed in yet more vivid colors. Was there then, after all, a real Percy El phinstone? She was quite prepared for it. But why "my poor Maria? ' "Yes," she replied, "his moustache is as black as night" Then, with a sudden gust of Mrs. Hemans Hooding her brain, "aud his manner is as bright as the day." Miss Jane bowed her head despaii ingly. "Be a woman, Maria," she said, "and be brave ; he is a butcher." "It is impossible," said Maria, faintly. The interview was long aud harrow ing. Miss Jane advanced a phalaux of argument; vegetarianism, proper pride, mesHlIiauce, my great-i nele the Mayor, all warred against th inuee tion. Aud Miss Maria, though light ing for romance and torn by a hundred dramatic emotions, was in fact severely relieved. Eventual exposure, a thing which even in the first blu.h t her romance loomed ashily iu the back groumb, was no longer formidable. What had passed between Miss Maria and Percy, her sister, in a spasm of unusual delicacy, forbade lo usk, but towards tiie close of the painful scene Miss Maria promised with a gulp that she would never see Percy agaiu. And at the end Miss Jane kissed her with peculiar tenderness, and said she was her own Maria. Since thei some years have passed, and Maria has had no practical ro mance. Time has brought a healiug of the wound, and now if she speaks unkiudly of tbe bicycle, her Mister is not afraid of wounding her too-deeply if she retorts with tbe butcher. Bobby Knew. A Springfield lawyer has a son about teu years old and a daughter about twice that ajje. The boy has been around the court bouse a good deal with his father, and the young lady has a steady beau. The other evening the young gentleman passed the house, and the young lady desired to speak to him. "Bobby," she said to her little broth er, "won't you please call to Mr. Brown." Bobby knew the state of affairs, and he hurried to" the frout door aud called out in the usual loud monotcne f a court bailiff: "John Henry Brown, John Henry Brown, John Henry Brown, come into court." Mr. Brown came in, and Bobby withdrew to a safe place. Ohio State Journal. Quoted Hi. Pa- Out in one of the suburbs, says '.he Boston Transcript's "Listener,-"' a gen tleman this fall has been eng .ged in teaching some youDg lys litt uatural history. One of the subjects which he took up was but terries and moths, aud he told tbe child rel i a good many of the chrysalides and wcoons. After be had got the boys well .instruct ed, he showed one of the sjii llest of them a very nice, attentive lit le boy one of the cocoons, and asked : "What butterfly is this thei -ocooo of?" Then the little boy looked up and said, slowly and resjiectfully : "My papa says that all cocoens) Jook alike to him." "Grasp All and Lose AIL" Many people are so intent on " rrssp ing all" that they lose strei. rth "i nerves, appetite, digestion, ealth. Fortunately, however, these lojiy ber restored by taking Hood's Sarss tan ilia, which has put many a btisiiit ss man on the road to success by givi ig him good digestion, strong nerves and a clear braiu. It does tbe suniet thing for weak and tired women. Hood's Pills cure sick heac ar&e, in digestion. Foil of Crooks. "Boston is noted for her crooked streets," said the Chicago mm. Great Scott T' retorted his Hub! cusin, who had been held up three times, "there are more crooked s leetss in Chicago than Boston ever dreamed of." Tempered 'With llercy. "Yes, I was drunk, your honor," the prisoner said, "but I've been p retty well punished already. I had SoO rbeu I weut out on the street, and a I )t of gamblers got hold of me aud swir. died me out of fVi." . "Under those circumstances," re marked his honor, with a sympat belie cougb, the court is disposes 1 to be leiii eut with you. The fine will be$ L" Chicago Tribune. Mrs. W. A. Palmer, Ithaca, I Iteh. ays, -"I bad La Grippe four t jnes, each time worse than the time pre vious, any unusual sound would fetuse nervous chills, everything used : ailed to help me until I used Wbe eier' Nerve Vitalizer which cured me." ' All coughs and colds yield to B -ant's Balsam. Bottle so large will sane a whole family, 25 cents. For i aieat Carman's Drug Store, Berlin, Pa. ,ad Mountain A Sou's Drug Store, flue nee, Pa. T" I dliOlo WHOLE NO. 2527. The "Fire" WatPatOut. President Brown, of Norwich Uni versity, the military school at North field, Vt., was formerly a naval officer, and is a warm friend of Admiral Dew ey. He recently told the story of an amusing experience wnicn tell loine lot of Admiral Dewey white be was serving as ex-eutive officer on the Col orado at the cl seof the Civil War. "A new oriWr on b-nrd a ship," said President Brown, " is put through a 'course of sprouts' by the jackies the common sailors wha are pretty skill ful at that sort of hazing. "It is often disagreeable and embar. rassiug fir the new o:lh:?r, but the sail ors usually manage it so clevtrly that they keep w ithin regulation?. "One o." the rules ou board ship is that thj mn shall uot carry matches. A lantern is kept burning for the con venience of smokers. "As young D.-wey came on deck early one morning, oue uuwwu do's roughest characters said to a ship mate who was conriued with him in the 'brig,' or ship's prison, in a tone loud enough f.r Dewey to bear: " 'Bill I've got some matches iu my pxket, aud I've a blamed good notion t ) burn this oldship under bis fcet.' "Dewey didu't say a word, but im mediately turned ou his heel and rang the fire bell, at the same lime call! ng out, 'tire in the brig. "Such an alarm, sl early in the morning, liefore the men bail tumbled out of their ouarters, was unwelcome, but in a few seconds the decks swarm ed w ith half dressed sailors, who man ned the fir xierful tire nozzles which protected the brig. "Of course, Djwey, as executive cf ticer, directed the streams, aud in a few moments two very wet, very cold, very much disgusted and half drown ed sailors were howlinit f-r mercy. "Dewey shouted: 'Fire out! Make secure !' Then be turned totne dip ping sailors and said: I guess those matches of yours are too wet to do much damage now.' "Youth's Com panion. I want to let ttie people who suffer from rheumatism aud sciatica know thatChaoiberiaiu's Pain Balm relieved me after a number of other medicines aud a doctor bad failed. It is the best liniment I have ever know u of. D. A. Dogeu, Alpharelta, Ga. Thousauds bavr U u cured of rheumatism by this remedy. Oue application relieves the pain. For sale by all druggists. Just So. MackO'Bell What a comic poster! It represents a sailor chasing a big ostrich. Luke Warme H'm! Another case of tar and feathers. Chicago News. - Their Little Weaknesses. ' Xa'.ious and women are a g-xd deal alUe." In w hat way ?"' "Well, wtieu oue woman gets a new hat her neighbor wants to go right away and gel a better one, and when xie nation builds a uew warship all the others start riht out to get bigger ones." Cuicago Ti.nes-Herald. To accommodate lU'ise who are par tial to the use of atomizers in applying liquids iuto the uaal passages for ca tarrhal troubles, the proprietors pre pare Ely's Liquid Cream Balm. Price including the spraying tube is 7-1 cents. Druggist or by mail. The liquid em- txhes the medicinal properties of the solid preparatioa. Cream is quickly absorbed by the me;uora:ie and t'oes not dry up the secretions but ctiauges them to a natural aud healthy char acter. Ely Brothers. . Warreu St. N. Y. Ahead. Brokeleigh He called me a scamp, but I have the (test of him. Stokeleig'o H i' )? Brokeleigh I owe him SI). New York World. One ICaa's View. "Wait is a degenerate, anyhow?" was asked of the shrewd old lawyer. "A degenerate is a fellow who has committed a crime and can't prove an alibi. Fly Time. The lover of l;)j whispered in the fair otie's ear: "Darling, elope with "Alas! Ho cm we go? Did not no-lie one puncture tiie tire of your siutomobile?" "True! B-it we can fly iu an air ship." "But pap w ill Uy also." "He has no airship. He cannot fly, "Yes; he will dy iu a passion." Chi trago New. That Hateful GirL Eila When I refused Fred he said I i had sent him to his death. j Stella But ha has since proposed to me aud I have accepted bim. Ella Then he meant a living death. San Francisco Examiner. Daily Notes. Much milk requires much feed. Millet is good to increase the flow of milk. Do not breed from a cow that has aborted twice. Don't use beef cows if you want to aucceed in dairying. Cows will not do their best unless well housed and fed. Are squash gesxt for ru lch cows?. aks a subsciiber. Yes. Don't expect for skim milk cheese the price that Elam brings. ,No successful dairyman allows bis cows to be chased by a worthless cur. It is not always meanness that makes a cow Lre-achy; it is frequently hunger. Now, Johnnie, do you understand thoroughly why I am going lo whip you? Yes'm. You're in a bad Lnmor this Booming, and you've gt te 1 -;k some 04oe befa.e you feel satisfied. Most of the amnvmit ion usl by t"i Boers, says the London Mail, is of G r mau or Kreucli manufacture. A com paratively very small quantity was made in England, and au equally smalt proportion was manufactured at the Trausvaal Government works, near Pretoria. A vast amount of mystery and se crecy surrounded the Government pow der factory, as it was called, and no one was allowed to visit it, or even to ap proach within half a miie of the In closed buildings, with.mt a very extra special permit. The factory was entirely run by Ger mans, and, curiously enough, tbe head thereof was a Mr. Kruger, who was al ways careful to assert that he was no relation whatsoever to the Presideut. This seems quite likely, as he was a very decent sort of fellow. The works were near Daspoort, about four miles outside Pretoria, and in the immediate neighborhood of the cement works, where so-called Transvaal Port laud cement was very badly made. The powder factory is most jealously guard ed from intruders, and even tbe Ital ians from the dynamite factory uot many miles away know nothing of its internal economy. It is thought ques tionable by many whether auy actual manufacture takes place here, tr w neth er, as iu the case of the dynamite works ("Maatschapij voor Ontplotfoaren S:of fen" iu trie "laa!"), the imported in gredients are just put up in cartridges on the sjiot, so as to appear to carry out the requirements of the exclusive con cession. Ttie ammunition is taken away at dead tf night ou mule wagons to one or other f the forts around Pretoria, and a portion is often scut over to the Johan nesburg fort, but not by rail, as the jolt ing might be dangerous in the case of the very carelessly put together explo sive. An escort of artillery rides with the wagons, and reports the due deliv ery of the amniuuili n. VIA l'KI.ACOA PAY. In the ease of fo;eigii-iu.ported am munition Lee-Met ford, Mauser aud heavy guu shells it tomes by German, French or Dutch steamer to Delagoa bay, and is there unshipped, stored for a longeror shorter period in the wretch ed tiu shanties on the w harf which do duty for bo i deil wan houses, and thei., when all the extraordinary Portuguese foru.a'itie-s are complete, it is forwarded by train, via Ivmiati lirf, to Pretoria, wh-re il is taken, nuiii at the dead of nighr, from the railway station toone of the f.irts or to the Government mag- j azine out ou tiie veldt, beyond the race course. No- and again, as indeed bap lelied jusl tiefore the present w ar broke out, the Portuguese cfticials at Lorenzo Marques ( Delagoa Hay ), for some rea sons best kuown to themselves, refuse to pas the ammunition, ami theu there is au angry and heated exchange of let ters iu a queer mixture of IVrtuguese, Dutch and English, and after a long delay thegooiisoiay arrive at their des- ination. or they m:iy t;ot- AN AMl'.ilMi to.NTKKTEMPS. In at lea.st one instance an amusing contretemps oe-curred. A large lot i f aminuuuiou, some l'M boxes, went as: ray at the jrt, and could not ! found. The por authorites wert sure that they had lieen landed, but the rail way officials could not aciiuut fortheui n any way. At last, after the lapse of many mouths, it turned out that by some unaccountable error the whole lot had lieeu n-shlpped to IVira and had got through to Buiawayo, and was comfortably reputing in the niagnziues of the Chartered Company of British South Africa. The Boers indignantly claimed theirammut.ition; Mr.-IJhoeles' oiticials said: "Very well; come atd fetch it; but, as we happen to wai t some of .this particular brand ours dves. you had better let us pay you for it aud say no more on the sui j-ct." This ac tually happened, but it was never found out whether trie mistake occurred ou purpose or by accident. KKF.NCH AM.'.tt'M TloN KELIAKI.K. O.i Ihe whole it lias lieen found that the French ammunition is more relia ble than that made in Germany, aud here has aiso b-eu less palm-oil, le?s bribery and corrupt! m in its purchase. shipment and dilivery. In the case of one particular bit of German cartridges It was reckoned that the origiual cost was quadrupled by the lime they reach- e"d Pretoria, owing to the number of hands through wiiicu they passed, aud the number of otlk'iuls who had to be 'insulted'' U-fire th-y were passed. Not only that, but when these cartridg es were uooaciiej a:ni Uistrinuted among the farmers it was found that they were faulty and dangerous, so that the whole transaction was eminently unsatisfactory from every poiutof vie w. These were Mauser cartridges. The quautiiy of ammunition stored in the Transvaal is absolutely colossal, aod would autiiee for a t?ti years' war, even at the present ra:e of usage. It has been demonstrated rtreatly in every state in the L'uiou and in many f ireign countries that Chamberlain's Cough It 'inedy is a eenaiu preventive anei cure for croup. It has become the universal remedy for that disease. M. V. Fisher of LiU rty, W. Vs., only re peats what has Leeu said ar.,u:id the globe when he writes! ' I have u-d Chamberlain's Conga R-medy in my family fir several years and always with perfect sue-Cess. We tsdieve tUat it is not ou'y the best cough remedy, but that it is a sure cure for croup, it has saved the lives of our children a number of times Thh remedy is for sale by all druggi.-ts. Pazibl. "I want t get a riag for a lady," saic the customer. "Sweetheart or wif-?'' asked the clerk. "Both," replied the customer. "Siy! Now I .u all atsea,"' said the clerk. "if it was for a s veetheart I'd show you something haudso.-ue in this cant; if for a wife, I'd send you farther dowu the aisle for something lesis expensive. Bj". when a mau comities the two. Say, you'd better look ever the entire stock. It's against ail precedent and I'm not competcut to give you auy ad vice." Chicago P.-st. Haviag a Cteat Ran on Chamber lain's Conjh Senedy. Manager Martin, of the Pierson drug store, iu forms us that he is having a great run on Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. He sella live bottlers of that medicine to one of any other kind, and it gives great satisfaction. In these days of la grippe there is nothing like Chamlierlaiu's Cough Remedy to s.op the cough, heal up the sore; throat aud lungs and give relief withiu a very short lime. The sales are growing, and ail who try It are pleased with its prompt action. S ?u:h Chicago Daily Calumet. For sa by ail dru A man whose w isdoui probably comes from experieccj says that a wedding lour very ofteu turns out to be a lecture lour.