VOL XXVII. I'ttoFESKK >NA L CARDS. . . /. IM M t RMAN. I, R | . 4 .. .*:••• i 'Hi t i SAMUEL M. lilf'PL'S. |Oiy.-n i:u. ..i:«t Surgeon. -. .. 1 I • I . I . l;< 1. M l«i lln. i » W. H. TiTZEL. I'll VU IAN ; KG EON. .» U Oorlier Main and North HI Butler. i'a. J. W. MILLEK, Architect, il architectural und en i. •iHiif v. mi. No charge lor driving if I i oiitract the wort-:. Consult your be*t in terc-t*; plan before you build. In lorntu tion ctn erfullv A share of public palri i age ; solicited. |\ tt !:■ x 1« <>7 Oibct S. W. ol Court Uous-, Butler, Pa. C. t. Wi UUISI ION, \M» suivkyou, llfllll Nh.VU IIUU'IM' HCTI.UK. I'«. J .1. DONALDSON, Dentist, butler. Fenn'a. ArliM'ikl i-'ila Ifc-trlcll
  • 1 11 etli, \ llall/dl Air amnllilstereil. or., imi l< frr«in Strut, mo Joor Kant ofLowr) llomtc, I p Stairs, iUlice open daily, except Wednesday* and Ttonr-'la-.i. • Vminuiileatioiis by mail receive prom i»t attention, V I>.- The only OMMIKI iu liutler li.nl makes uf lee til. •J. w. 11 U rCHISON, a ili.t.M-i A'l I AW. tit 11 i n ■. • nil "I lie- Museltou block, 1 !i*liaai* IkNfin No. I. j*«ooiid iloor oi lluscltou |{|D( k, iMitraiwe uu LiLiiooijtf. A. E. RUSSELL, ATIOKNKY AT I .AW. oil Het'ifltU 1100 l <»l "Nf.V -VtA'l*'. OH bio' k Main Si..- near Diamond. IK A McJLNKIN. Attorn. . at I aw, ofllce ul No. 11, Kasl Jeller kuii Kt., liutler. I'a. W. C. UNDLEY, Aliorniy ul l««\» uml Km I I -Utte <>f ( (i-of 1.. Z. MiU IH II H office on north | 01 Dfciwond, B>itlcr r I'a. H. H. GOUGHER. AllOf!i**y at-law. Offlct* on h< .:oml JJool' ol Auder-ou m?ar i'-ourt Hoube. Jiutier, i'a. J. t. bK ITT A IN. All i af l.im - OjHc» il S. E. Our. Main Ml., ami j I'iaiiioud, liullti, I'a. NEWTON BLACK. .Ml >al t i\\ onon SoUlli bide of liiainonO ilui ii.r. Pa. JOHN M. K US SKLL, Altuinev-at-l.nw. Ollicc Oil Hnutll *Ule •>1 l>ia niolid, Hiitiei . I'a. L S. MrJUXkIX, liiHiranrc ami Kcul EsUitc Ag'l 17 fc-AST JKFFKKIjON Sl'. MUTLEIt, - l»A. lii EABKAMS&OO Fire and Life I N S IJ It A N C E liisuniiie k Co. <»i N'.rtb America, incor |iurHtrd 17:*', capital j ;,CIHI,OIIII mid other ntrocK wuiijiuii s lejireienl I. New York I ile Insurance «I. , »—ets s'.lO.tltilljOtXi. Office New llnselU ii building near I'onrt House HliTliKK COUNTY ./ititis.-.S f ire insurance Go. j;!:cs Oor. Main & Cunningham tits. ■ l. C. ROKHSINU, I'ItEHtuKNT. li. IIKINEM AN, SKCHRTAK*. i'Oiib: 1..C, Itiw'v inn, Henderson Oliver, J. I. Kiirvli, .lame* Mtepheiison, A Trout mail, 11. Ilelnemaii. Altreil Wick, N. Weilzel, lir. W. 1 rvln. !'r Itlikenliach, J. W. Hurkliart, l>. T. Norris. LOYAL MMUNKIN, Gen. a in'L HIR, Tr > A - UK( SHORE HURSERUS. MH I FA. All r«tuck j/u.iranti ,1 t<» in* in good Con dition when dHifcred. Wt* r« |iU( f nil trff-rt that Uil to grow KKFKRKNCKS IN HI TI,Kl: ; » 1. > . \V 'I M»« JJHIM* . liaiior, Jr ,-I I. loi , 11.#?, (no. hliairiM*r 0 V. aik«-r, K-.j I• hI liuiln't K.-.i and I) < l<-i land. G. F. KiNG, AGT. 1.1 11. J111.1.i li 11,11 .. 11l II l li, I' \ Siil< snit.il Wfinletl I>i eauv:,.--H tor tli*' m,i> cf i.iuxerv slm k. .Sit ujtl'.os |.. im,io> el. -alary soil . \neitHCH Iruin ii,. si.nr. <{Ulck-i|UiiK taxlallles. .o i\|n r l< ill e l,e. . < Mil nt It •••■. Will, [..rill m> Mat lux U;^e. II I hliuKl «:•«», .Saru-rjiarn II!H sl« r, S. V. y f, ' • .'t > r| . f * •.v. ' ' nt Hit) 4 • ro\> (i ■ :•*; • , ■ ' , y&b ... v ' 5. :D U f?^OMAB, a -MjJi ui,ieU a.i i n *c>..in. -illiiyi** uu w *U»J»'t«a »wrt> Clil^A^'Jr THE BUTLER CITIZEN. "Wilham JLAND. * n =, I ; 30 S;"MAINST *>■ ; j " |$,U-TL' EH 4.—^ ®.IEI , I'EKSOX ST.- j S I) OR N E, • > • ! . in;;! ul l.ujie in. ! love and youth and gladne- White wingetl ciiibieiii! brightest, betare and dingy when a little taste and trilling expen.-e will lint, -form the room into a place of cheer and beauty. And eyery yerd ol Wall Paper from our cheapest at h ceuts » roll, to liirge s hand made, oii.l tint-! ...ml riinb ... shaded sfieciaN at si a roll, every yard i-* au object lesson in biitiiiy, t..-ie •. I citltuii Willi a sUK'k'ot the latent and best in every line and ({epb.-iMeut, t.:,.| -jl -tiien nt't'ou i juJjjement and eiperienc -, we invite our lriends and the the |;. I 'lit- to i | a;, 1 i «amine our ;/)iid» t feeling conti lent tli it we c n satisfy ail reasona ble deicands. HENRY BIEHL i I NOli'i II MAIN tVi I.'KK'J . BUTI bu R, DEALER IN Ihndwiiiv ;11hI House Funiisliino- (hkxls. (2o()0 Stitclie.s Per Minute ) Ai» rit-uitiii'cil Jni|>leineiits, Kramer Wagons, iiu^f-'itJ iu 1., U lit t l Harrows, Hrnniiiier Wsisbing Macliinep, Ni w Suiisliine si mi Howard Stoven, I'aLle anil |mki t Cuflt ry, Iliingiiig Laiii|i», Man tilacl oier t>l Tinware, Tin l'«i.ling ;ii..l t*petlliiig A Specialty. WliKIiE A Cim 1) ( AiN lil \ AS t IIKA I' AS A MAN. .L K. (jK IKb. PROF. R. J. I.AMB. (tRIKB &liAMlt'iS MUSK' NTOHK. NO. Ki SOUTH MAIN ST. BUTLKK. PA. Suit; < Hntler, Mercer and i iitniitj, Packiird, Crown, idirpenter and Netv Eugliiiid OrgitiiK f 'i'uler.s in Violins, iign, Bruno CuitniH, and All Kinds of Musical Inslruments. SHEET MUSIC A SPECIALTY I'ianott and Organs told on iiistallineul». (>ltl liiMtrmnents taken in excliange. Come and see tin, as \\»: can save you money. Tuning and Kt pairing oi all kinds of Musical Instiuments Promjitly attended to. GREAT REDUCTION AT I{. Cxi »' I tOB'SrS, 1(» Hontli Mam St., - utler* L'a. In Wafchcs, Clocks, .Jewelry, And Spectacles. j liepnii'ino I'romplly Attended To. SIGN OK ELECTIIIC BELL. •^soohweP SAPOUOare QUICKLY MARRIED SAPOLlOisoao of the beat known city luxuriea and each time a ca ko ia used an hour ia saved. 0a floors, tables and painted work it acts like a charm. For scouring poto, pants and inutala it lias no equal. If your Btorc-kcopei do •» not keep it you should insist upon his doing 80, as it .ilwayo fcivua satisfaction and its Immense salu all over the United States tuakcu it an almout nw eaaary article to any well supplied store. Every thing shin after ltd uio, and oven tin children delight in using it in j their attempts to liolp aiound tbo liouso. IN AN OLD HAT. An auction .vas going on .it the old yel low farm house on the hill. Bachelor Barker was dead, and his heir, a voung nephew whom he had never seen since the hoy was b.ur years old, had come down to si li tiling" "II- ttum.ir .-aid he intended to tear dowu the old house afterward aud take money lroui the bank and building a fine new residence, with a mansard roof. "It's a shame,'' said one or two. Such a pitj Baikcr did not make a will lie must have had some intention about such a property. He never could have intended all that wealth to go to a hoy he did not like enough to over for the summer. The doctor felt sure he would have founded a hospital, and placed him in it as a resident physk-ian for life, if the will had been made. Tne clergyman knew Le meant to do something for the church. The professor had heard him speak of a free library an.l reading room. Every one knew of some thing. and all the far away cousins Lad ex pected legacies. Kvery one thought the arrangements all wrong, but the heir und the auctioneer, who had made an inventory of the old fur niture—the tall clock, the andirons, the solid tables with lea\es, the spinning wheels, big and little; the tiddle-bach chairs, aud all those other possessions adored by the fashionable to-day but utter ly despised twenty years ago as "old things that were not worth their keeping.'" The young heir would, if he built his villa, furnish it with "sets" of the latest style, with Brussels carpets, with white grounds and bright wreathes of roses scattered over them. "Can't get much for the old sticks," he said, "but I'd like to clear up aud be done with it." Miss Camiohi Brown, silting at the front up chamber window, cutting out calico shortwaists for Mrs. lilack's five little boys, laid down her shears for once in her life, and with her elbows on the sill.watch ed the people as they walked or drove past, and entered in at the gates of the late Mr. Marker's premises. "Poor Benjamin!" she sighed. "1 won der whether up in heaven he remembers the day when he took me iu und walked nie all through the old house.'' "The things are old fashioned, Camiola."' he .-aid to me; "but they were my mother's —and before that they were my grand mother's. I like them, but say the word, i and I'll new furnish." 'Xo, Ben,' says I, j 'what your ma liked to have, I don't want to alter. I like it all; it's stuff'—and then —and then he kissed me." Miss Cannula Tilt f«>r her handkerchief as she said this to herself. "A ml we stood at the grand window and looked oil" toward the mountains. 'We're going to be happy as ever folks were,' said be. Ilcre the tears began to lull. "Oh, Ben," sbe sobbed, •"to think we quarreled after that, and didn't speak when we met. But you never married, and I refused two offers—good ones. But, Ben, I guess we'll meet tip there some time aud make up. Poor Camiola pat her head dowu on her arms and cried softly among the purple blossoms of the wisteria that veiled the window. No one could see her from the road. l!ut her tears dried soon, aud she came back to the present. They were selling the oi l furniture at auction. The claw footed sideboarl, the settle, the big mahogany cradle in which four generations of babies had been rocked —all these dear old things that were once to have been l. r. . as Benjamin Barker's wife, and oho was a poor -eaun tress, an old maid going from l.onse to house for her board ami fifty cents a day; looking for ward lo feeble old age, and with an awful dread in her oul i f becoming "town poor" at last. If she had married Ben, how differ-at it would have L« en. "Why, Miss Cumioln! you've been a crj in'?" said Mrs. Black » load voice, just then, in her ear. Camiola started guiltily, hut she was too candid to complain of a cold or the sun in her eyes. "Well, 1 have cried a little, Mis Black," said she. "You see, we Used to be friends, Mr. Barker and I, and I knew his ma, and I remember all that furniture, and it seems a sin to sell it and tear down the old house, und maybe root up the lilacs anil straw berry shrubs, and, perhaps, cut down the trees. It almost like home to nie in Mrs. Darker's da) . "Well, it must sceio a sin to any one, aud more so to you, Miss Cumiola," said Mrs. Black. "But don't jou want to go over and see the place, and what is going on.' You might as well just take a day, or the re .t of it. I'm in no hurry, and you look tuckered out." Mrs. Dlaek was kind in her way, and felt a certain pity for Camiola. She had hcaid that Camiola was once engaged to Mr. Darker, and might to-day have been a rich and important widow, instead of a poor, lonely seamstress. "(io along, Mis« Cumiola," she udded "l know you want to." "Did she want to?" Camiola asked her self; and from her heart cume the answer, She would see the old homo once more, see the old furniture; and when she could get a chance she would go up iu the garret and stand where -he stood with Ben that day. Her old elbows should lean where her young ones had pressed; she would look out over the mountains, and fancy herself a girl again, with Ben beside her, and his engagement ring on her finger. And Miss Camiola thanked Mrs. Black, put on her show bonnet with the washed ribbons, and the shawl that had been so good once, but was faded, and even mend ed now, auil walked up the road, turned into the lune, ami entered the Darker garden. The smell of the shrub came to her; the lilac flowers were gone, but the willow branches kissed tier lion net as she passed under them. The neighbors who saw her nodded or spoke, but they w ere selling the tall clock, and there was some exeituicent. Cumiola stood at the door awhile, aud listened to the bidding. Deacon Hickory got the clock; Mrs. Amos Mole the daw footed sideboard. A Jewish lady from the village bought the trunks of women's clothing, sold unopened, for next to nothing A unt liurnaby, the washerwoman, got the tub* ami irons very cheap, in a lot, and so on and so forth To i ainiola it nil seemed tragic. She went up stair- v here people wcie poking the beds and pillows, and examining tin; toilet set . and curtain., and she I /in to mount the garret .tair. "Nothiu up there," said a well meaning person, who was descending. "Tain't Worth v. bile to lost breath a cliinbin'." Camiola did not answer. X''thing up there! IJov. lull- people km-*.! There vas the window at which tw olovir li.ul plighted their Tow- There, perhaps, lingered ■nine ghost of her dead pa t, and hi- \v I o It: J di J ,1b rly. and a bachelor. As her head aro e above thy floor, she gazed i ngerly about her. From the raft ers hung some branches of withered herbs, and some ropes of onions. The trunks hud been carried down, und uu old bcreuu. BUTLER PA., FRIDAY, JUNKVO, 181H) A coat hung upon a p«'g; over it. a hut t'amiola went to the window. She would not crv. for she had to face those people down stairs again; but sbe muttered little moans of anguish a - she stood there. She reali/e.l what life wa< at that moment, and it seemed very cruel to her—once young, beloved pretty, and hopeful; now old, un- I .v i wiiukled. at. I with nothing to wish for. Xo wonder sbe snfTered. At last she turned her back on the eter i.al mountain.- urn hanged while lives were lived, and while youth lied and love departed, and graves were dug—and saw the coat upon the wall; Ben's coat —au old man's coat worn long and carelessly—and a lug. broad brimmed soft hat. The worn au went closer. She nestled up against the coat, and talked to it and caressed it. and she took the hat in hand and kissed it. It was worth nothing It had rain stains on it. Xjbody wanted it. But what a relic it would be t<> her of Ben! only sbe could not ask for it. She could take it, hide it under her shawl—all folded tlat. as it would be, and keep it forever. Hen's hat—her Ben's hat! Why. she Lad a right to it. And Miss Camiola obeyed the impulse, took the hat, and Lid it neatly away. It seemed, almost, as though it were a theft. Still, it would not lie wrong to take it. When she came home her the walk had done her good; her checks were quite red; but sbe went early to bed that evening. She bolted her door, and undressed in a hurry. She put out the light. Then she felt for her shawl, in which the hat lay folded, and took it iu her arms. A certain perfume that was al ways connected with Ben's hair was faint ly noticeable —an odor of bergamot. It brought the past back vividly. It almost seemed as though lien's head rested on her heart. She clasped the old hat close, and kissed it. "oh. Den," she whispered, "1 was ready to make up, but you was rich aud I was poor, and I was proud. Oh, Ben, Oh, Ben, Ben. my darling!'' And for hours she lay awake —the Catn iola of the past—in darkness, which blot ted out the changes in her face, and fell asleep at last, aud dreamed of yottng Ben and his perfumed hair, und heard him say once more that they would be happy to gether. She awakened suddenly, in the early dawn, and came back to herself. She dressed herself, smoothed the trim bands of hair, tied on her black apron, pinned the cushion and the sheath of scissors * at and then looked at the hat. Of course it must he hidden away; aud she spread a newspaper on the bed in which to wrap it. and paused to look at it once again The inside of the hat presented itself. The piece of leather which lined the crown looked curiously thick. She touched it with her hand. Under it was a long paper folded into n l";,g slip; she drew it out and saw that something was written on the outside. Taking the paper to the window, she saw that the words were these: "Last Will and Testament of Benjamin liar ker." At this Miss Cauiiola began to tremble from her head to foot, but she was a daugh ter of Eve. Softly and reverently, indeed, she opened the will; but she did open it, and read it through, and when she had fin ished she crept into bed again and lay for a long while; for m it she had found strange things. Some of Benjamin Bar ker's money had been left to the hospital, some of his land to the church, anil there were legacies for many people; but the homestead, with all its furniture, garden, and farm land, and an income on which she could live luxuriously, were bequeath ed "to Camiola Brown, spinster, in memo ry of the love I l;;n her all my lonely life.' No wonder poor Camiola wept. I'u! Mr. Black s on found out tbo cause of Cannula's agitation, and Mr. Ulack v* as a lawyer. The will was correctly made; the witnesses were found. Why Benjamin Darker had put it in his hut lining no one knew. He often carried papers there. Perhaps he meant to leave it in safe keeping, but ho died very sudden ly, with hat and coat on, as he was about to drive out. But the will was found, and was all right. Nothing had yet been tak en away. -She money was refunded to the purchasers of the old furniture. The young nephew had a tolerable lega cy, and made no fuss whatever, and one day Camiola entered the homestead as its mistress, ft was a strange ending to her love story, she thought. She was there at last, but bow ' It aimosl seemed to her as though some spirtual union had taken place between her soul and Ben's; and in the sleeping-room, on a peg near the door, she hung his coat and hat. There they hang always, and to the stranger who sees them aud looks rtt the mild old lady rocking in the great chiir as she sews or knits, it seems as though the master of the house were within—up stairs somewhere, perhaps. It often seems so, too, to Cami ola. Stones that will Swim in the Human Eye. Bye stones are really portions of the cot iug of certain shell fish, aud serve to close the entrance when the animal draws itself within. They are of various kinds, but those used as eye stones are hard stony bodies, about the size id split peas, one third to one-sixth of an inch in diameter, a little longer than broad, having one mr fucc plune and the other convex. When they have been worn by the action of the sea, they are very smooth aud shin ing. Dike other shells, they aro composed of carbonate of lime. When placed in a weak acid, such as vinegar, a chemical change takes place, carbonate acid gas is given off, and iu its escape produces the movements which are popularly supposed to show that the stone is "alive." When one of these stones is placed under the eyelid, at the outer corner, the natural movements of the lid iu winking push it gradually toward the inner side, and when it comes in contact with the mote which is causing the irritation, this is carried along and finally expelled with it. The belief that such stone* have a peculiar detective power, and more about iu tiio eye until they find and remote the irritating sub stance for which they have been "sent," has no foundation in fact. It is interesting to knovr that iu the liu , ug membrane of the stomach of the craw fish thsro are found small bodies which go un.ler th* name "f under the . »n y have some times been mist liken for them, and pre numbly would serve a similar purpose. ,\ml now tie' wfalthy people iu the country town . are making preparations to leave their comfortable, shady homes to ; mingle with the jostling aud perspiring ! crowds at the summer resorts - The trouble with this world is that I there i-. 100 much theory and not enough | practice about it. Any young physician ! will nhmit this. --When a ltus.-ian policeman desire- to 1' obtain royal fayor and promotion he simply goes out and discovers a dastardly plot to murder tin; Czar. Niles on Taxation. -\t the meeting ol the Stale Board of Agriculture at Wcllsburo last Thursday, Hon. J. B Kites, ex-Auditor General of the State, made -omc remarkable state ments regarding taxation in thi- State. He said: The dollar of one man is equal to the dollar of every other man. U that dollar is invested in Government bonds or in mortgages it is no more secure than the dollar that lies in farming land. Both dollars should be under the same subjec tions but such has been the machinery ol legislation iu Pennsylvania for the last 50 years that the dollar of the farmer does not pay :» p?r cent interest and is made to pay five times more taxes than the dollar in moneyed interests pay. "If I only have #5,000 saved." he con tinned, "aud want to buy a farm worth #IO,OOO, I go to a neighbor and borrow the T.'1.000. giving him a mortgage. Then we are both just as rich as we were before, and why should I be made to pay all the taxes t.n this farm when he practically owns half of it? • The capital tax in Pennsylvania is a cheat and trick," declared the ex-Auditor (ieneral, "because it does not measure the true value of corporate capital. A certain railroad in this part of t'.ie Stale cos# $4,"00,000 to build. This is covered by a mortgage indebtedness of fli.HOO.o 0, and the capital stock is put at $1,000,000 only. On this the ruilroad pays the miserable pit tance of #3OO to the State us tax. Why, herein Wellsborn, a single little bank pays SOOO of capital stock tax, aud there arc vastly more paid iu local taxes here in Tioga than this railroad, with its 0 per cent dividends, is made to pay. To-day corporate and personal property in Pennsylvania is earning twice the amount of money real estate is earning, and yet is not paying one-half the tax. The railroad, covered with a mortgage in debtedness, is allowed to subtract the amount of the mortgage from the value of the property, and pays tor the difference, or the capital stock tax. I cannot do that on my farm, but must pay -0 mills on the whole valuation of #IO.OOO, while the man who holds u mortgage on my property only pays :i mills tax under the act of lbsj. So, you see. the Stale is getting tax twice over on my farm, while the railroad prop erty goes scot free." Mr. Xil-s explained the opposition of corporate wealth to the act <»! IS$5, impos ing a tux on mortgages, and said that he believed that if the law of ISS9—an exten sion of the other act—is enforced, it will bring more than three hundred additional millions of capital under the 3-mill tax. v In. li capital has never yet been taxed, 'and that, will help build your county roads anew," he continued, "hut you must see to it in yonr election ol legislator- that it i.s done. "But you must go further to get sub statural relief," resumed the speaker "Make the railroad corporations pay the same share of taxation as the fanners—no Jess, no more. By the report of the Sec retary of Internal Affairs for 18s8 it ap pears that the railroads in Pennsylvania have a mileage of IH.SOJ miles und cost #1,068,000,000. When the present tax laws were made there was not $100,000,000 of capital invested in railroads, so we are to-day living in children's clothes. "The average rate of taxatian on real estate in Pennsylvania i !."> mills, and that is a very low estimate. If the railroad propi rty w as a.- scssed at that rate it would bring jou #15,000,000 for macadamizing your public highways, or, even suppose these corporations were fourths of the full value of the property, as real estate is often assessed. Kven then the State would lie +10,000,000 rinber. "But all these railroads in Pennsylvania paid into the State Treasury lu.l j • ar was #1,230,860, or a little more than I 2-10 mills on the value I' their property. This railroad running north and south across Tioga county, connecting New York towns with Williamsport, Pa., eot #0,270,000 to build. It pays to the State #11,128 —less than li mills on the road's cost—and any of you furniers would be glud to have "your farms ussessed al only two mills. This railroad company has the right lo do its legal business in this County Court House and send its pauper laborci to your poor house, and don't pay n cent of local taxes. You farmers do all that, for its bcm lit. This applies to every county of the State, from Lake Erie lo the Delaware. Now, if this railroad passing out of Tioga county were assessed 15 mills, like your selves, instead of paying #11,128 tuxes it would pay the State $90,000, of which amount the Stato would willingly make Tioga county the pre a-nt of #BO,OOO lo iin prove her county roads, and then the farms in this county will only be paying #30,000 taxes instead ol $210,000, for agricultural property would be ass. svd ut two thirds of the value of railroad property. "Dust year the entire taxes received by the Stale autboritic from all sources was $7,480,000, and that sum, coming from the merchandise in thousands of stores and factories, as well as railroads, is only ei|ual to 8 mills in the value ot railroad property iu the Stute. Why. sir, it the railroads in the Slate were made to pay what they pay in New York State, there would ho enough money to repair every single county road iu Pennsylvania, for it would ho equivalent then to 10 mills or more than $1,000,000,- 000 of capital. What 1 have been telling you is law iu other States. The moment the railroud crosses the imaginary line that divides Pennsylvania and New York, just north of this town a few miles, it has to pay tuxes like tho I'uruis it passes over. This full Brook Railroud, which crosses Tioga county, pays more local taxes in one township of Steuben county, New York—our adjoining county on tho north — than its pays altogether to the State Treas ury of Pennsylvania for its hundred miles of rails within our borders. Bow would it be among you Pennsylvania farmers if tho taxes on railroads averaged #15,000 per mile? Why, your county road problem would bo solved." General Nilcs closed his address by citing the tax law ol' Illinois. Ohio and oilier States to show that they all bring the corporations up nearer to the Hume niaik as real estate. Several papers were read on technical subjects, and at 0 p. m. the board udjourncd until fall. Production of Heat in Llviny Bodies fD.it' - teen nitrogenous bodie--. The average beat id combustion is 0,400 cal tor patty bodies, ft,700 cal. for albuminoid-,, arid 4.if00 cal. for carbohydrates, taking ono grain mo of each substance Tho eoncln ion is drawn that a weakening of the organism, with diminution of power of con umption of the food digested shows it -elf lii-t by general deposition ofthc most diflicultly climii, .led substances, tatty matters, thoti by failure to get rid of nitrogen n bodie . and finally by incapacity to consume the carbo hydrate-.— Attd- »"j of J'mi —fourth of July next. How they Proposed. "One of the recent revolutions in tic tion," -ai 1 a bald tii aded j..!ly old fellow, who sat ia the center of a group that tilled the window ~f a 15roa.lv.hotel the other day. "i- the way in which the heroes pro pose marriage to thf heroines. In this generation the novelists make -tort work of it, but whether they are any truer to life than those who wrote and went to their reward before theui is an open ques tion." "Well, how did you do it y >ursellT" -aid another of the group. "Tell the truth now and then we'll be able to judge, per haps. how neur the novelists come to the real thir.g." '•That's just a little too personal," laugh cd the edd fellow, "and besides, what could you determine from one instance? I>ut I'll toll you what I will do. 1 will relate the incidents of a proposal which 1 know to be true, names of the parties to it not to be asked for. if each one of you will do the same: absolute truth the only condi tiou." "Ageed, agreed!" was the chorm. "You make the start." "Well," said the old fellow, with a tw in kle in his eye. "I remember a nice young mail around our parts some forty years ago. who was of an aliectionate disposi tion.the kind that generally marries young but he bad a saving appreciation of the value of money, which is supposed would keep him out of a foolish marriage. How ever. he fell head over heels iu love with a penniless but beautiful girl, who had a score of admirers ali eager tor her hand. He was anxious to win her, but he did not feel able to marry on the income he had then. Promotion in a year or M> was pret ty sure, however, and he thought he could hint to her that if she would wait until his income was tiooo a year he would then ask her to marry him. •'After bringing the conversation deftly around to the proper point, 'Alary,' said he '1 have onlj- SSOO a year now, would you marry me if 1 had slooo.f •• 'John,' said she, smiling sweetly on him, 'I would marry you on a hundred.' "What could he dof Back out and lose her forever or bind the bargaiu then and there. He was made of good stuff, was John, aud they were married soon alter, much to the surprise of the villagers, who had often listened to his condemation of hasty marriages, and not without manj" misgivings on his own part, but I believe ho never repented." "W bile we arc on the subject of mcicen ary matches.' said another of the company "I'll give you my contribution before I for get it. 1 knew of an attractive widow, twice married, who was left almost penni less by her second husband and did not know what to do for a living. ller last husband bail had a big income and was supposed to be rich, but in reality had al ways lived up to the last cent of it, and had left his widow only a few thousand. She kept up appearances, however, aud met a clever and rising young lawyer, at a bull one evening, who paid ardent court to her under the impression that she was wealthy. "She encouraged him and not long alter sent for him to draw up her will. In the w ill she bequeathed hundreds of thousands of dollars in stocks and bonds among her relutives and various charities. The young lawyer estimated that her fortune was at least half a million. Before long he pro positi. was accepted and married, only to find that his wife was penniless. "I'm a cautious man," said auothcr of the group, "and I'm inclined to think that the best way to propose is with a kind of a laugh, as if it were a joke. Then if she accepts you, why, all right; if she refuses you can snv j. u wen oniv in fun. I remomb. continue J, "two young fellows iu oni town who wore both court in,: the same jjrl. Xi ilher of then. could s:.j which .-he prefem 1, so nicely did she phy both her lit willing to lose either till one had IHCU fairly landed. One evening I —that is, Jim; you understand we will call him Jim. One of these fellows to whom I refer, you understand. Don't your" "Yes, yes, of course," said every one, "Jim. (io on!" "Jim found her ulone, and ho began at once: 'Miss Jennie, do you think you could bring yourself to leave your comfortable home, kind father, loving mother and lit tle brothers and sisters, and go to the city as the wife of a young fellow who ha* his fortune vet to make and has nothing to of fer you but his honest heart and strong ami willing hand?' "Jennie cast her eyes down demurely, and after a moment's reflection said: 'Yes Juiucs, I tliink 1 could, with the right sort of a young man.' " ' '.Yell,' said Jim, 'my friend John (his rival) is going to Sew York to seek bis for tune and wants to marry. I'll mention to him what you said.' ' " 'You horrid thing!'she snapped out, 'I thought you meant yourself! Oh, my, what have I saidf' aud she burst out cry ing and made fir the door. l!ut I caught her and assured her that it was lor my self." "Why, what are you all grinning alt Oh, shucks! T mean Jim caught her and ex plained that it wa4 fur himself, aud they lived happily ever after, as the story book says." "I'm afruid you let the cat out of the bag, old fellow, but now we come to the last man," said the jolly originator of this experience meeting. "You're a bachelor though, llrown, and 1 don't suppose you have any reminiscences of that kind, have you?" "Why am 1 a batchelor, then?" replied Drown. "Come now, I'll be honest with you and tell you my own actual experi once, as I believe you all have been doing though you won't acknowledge it. I hud studied how to propose gracefully, and bought a ring and composed a little speech und had got it down line. Drawing the ring from my pocket. I struck a telling at titude aud said: " 'Will you wear this beautiful ring lor my sake? It resembles my love for yon. It has no end.' "To which flic replied: 'Keep your ring, sir. It also resembles my lovo for you. It has no beginning.' "Thus was 1 saved from u horrible fate which I neve. teuipted ' "Hugh!" g I-d the old chap with the marriageable daughter* "The luau who ■bun* matrimony for fear of it*potty care* m like i no who cnt« n(T hi- leg for f> «r of corns." —Texas editor--A Mormon editor is iu jail for upporiing four wives Wife—You ay he was an editor! "That's the way it reads.'" "Just so." 'Well. I don't believe it." —An exchange says that "the agricul tural college profc -ors hav< figured it out that two Knglish sparrows in ten years will produce an ancestry t>f 275,710,WKt,- 008 bird ." The production of ancestry mui.t be a feat belonging exclusively to the sparrow other animals confine their production to progeny. A photographer paid Stanley X'l,ooo for a portrait. Depew's Tribute to Columbus. in his to the l'res> » iub of Cbi- L6gZ-i. II >n Cbauneey M Depew of Sew York, after of the World's Fair ami it- oljoi is. and also of the former W • rid'- 1 airs belli in this country, paid tne billowing grand tribute to the memory of < liriitopber Columbus. "The Columbus quadri centennial cele hration will be the only one within record ed time in which all the world can cordial ly nod fraternally unite. It is not sacri lege to say that tin- two events to which eivilzation to-day owes its advanced posi tion are the iutrouction of Christianity and the discovery of America. The djnauiic forces of our Christian faith, in the destruc tion of the buttresses of bigotry and op pression. and the leveling up of the masses to common rights, could never have work ed such marvellous results except for the opportunities of h new country and an nn trammeled population. Wbeu Columbus sailed from I'alos types had been discover ed. hut Church and Slate held intelligence by the throat. The compass had opened a pathway across the seas, but feudalism had its foot upon the neck of commerce. Hopeless ignorance and helpless poverty were so burdened by caste and customs, laws and traditions, that liberty lay bouud and gauged within impregnable prison walls. tiut Puritans and Catholics, llugueuots and Lutherans, English, Dutch. German and French. Swedes, most of them fleeing for liberty to worship God ac cording to the dictates of their own con sciences. willing to sacrifice every mater ial advantage and every earthly prospect lor a civil and religious liberty, and all of them seeking commercial freedom, follow ed the track of Columbus to the new world. Here was neither king or noble, neither caste nor privilege. The distance was too great for paternal supervision, and selt-gov ernuieut became the absolute necessity of the colonies. With no guide but God, and no constitution but the Hible, they worked tint upon this continent, after many hard ships and trials and tribulations, the prob lem of the equality of all men before the law. They founded instiutions which have withstood the test of foreign invasion, of political passions, of party strifes, of indi vidual ambition, and the shock of the mightiest civil war the world has ever seen. The influences of their successful experi ment. following the liues ot fraternal blood back to the countries from which they came, have revolutionized and liberalized the governments of the globe. The triumph of the principles of civil and religious liberty upon this continent, the bepclkial effects of the common school, and the universal diffusion of education, have done more than all other agencies iu uplifting mankind to higher planes of in dependence and happiness. The children, the grandchildren and the great-grand children of Great Britain and France, of Germany and Italy, of Spain and ltussia, of Scandinavia and of all the nations of Kurope. will say to their kindred in the fatherland: "Welcome, thrice welcome, to our States and homes; come and see and learn," and then will the era of peace and liberty dawn upon tho world. New continents beyond the ocean which -hould become the seat of great empires, and whose wealth would redeem the Holy Sepulchre at Jerusalem from the infidel, and evangelise the world, were the dream of Columbus. Sustained enthusiasm has been the motor of every movement in the progress of .mankind. Genins, pluck, en durance and faith can be resisted by neither kings or cabinets. The triumph of Columbus is a superb practical illustration of the Apostle Paul's tribute to the power of faith. His lofty spirit and great purpose were undismayed by obstacles, defeat was an intuitive to new endeavor, and ho so carried his poverty that iu the most bril. liaut courl in Europe it teemed a decora tion. Whiii: following Ferdinand and Isabella in their campaigns against the Mon, seeking an audience and a bearing for his grand scheme, small indeed seemed the battles, the sieges and the victories which absorbed the attention of the hour. The armored chivalry of Spain, her march ing squadrons, hor gorgeous court appear ed to hiin the petty pageantry which stood between the royal ear and the discovery of a world. The most romantic picture of tho period was Doabdil, v last of tho Moorish kings, coming out from lirauada and on bended knee surrendering to Ferdiuand and Isabella tho keys to the city, while tho cross ro.se above the crescent upon tho towers of the .Mhaiubra. While all Europe was ringing with acclaim over this expul sion of the Musselman, to one proud and lofty figure standing aloof and unmoved it seemed of trivial importance compared with the grander conquest so clearly out lined before his vision. It was a happy omen of what America could do for woman that when statesman and prolate alike had rejected the appeal of Columbus as visionary, and the king had dismissed it with chilling courtesy,lsabella comprehended the discoverer's idea, saw the opportunities of his success,appreciated the magnitude ol the results to her throne and to the world, and pledged not only hor royal favor, but her fortune and her jewels to the enterprise. Tho American woman with her property rights guaranteed by American law, with her equal position and independence, with her unequaled oppor tunities for higher education and for use fulness, can say with pride to her brother, her lover and her husband, "You owe America to me." Columbus stands deservedly at tho head of that most useful band of men—the heroic cranks iu history. Tho persistent enthusiast whom one generation despises as a lunatics with one idea, traccecding ones often worship as a benefactor. The ragged navigator at the gate of the palace of Caetile and Arugon outranks in fame and beneficent endeavor all the kings and statesmen and soldiers, not only of his own period, but also of those which have come after. Following tho lines ol bis own great conception, this celebration iu his honor is not an empty pageant of music and artillery, of banners and processions, but a gathering of representatives of tho industries of mankind for tho purpose of enlarging tho liberties, promoting the peace, improving tho conditiou und broad ening tho intelligence of a race Signing a ChocK by Electricity. One of the mart els of eieotridty, aad one of tho most striking of the KdlMi ■ xhituts at tin I' iris exposition. *M the little instrument whi,"h enables the operator t" • ign a check 100 miles distant The v l itiuj.' to be transmitted is impressed on Kofi papur with nn ordinary stylus. This is mounted on a cylinder, which, us it revolves, "makes und breaks" the electric current by means of the varying indentations on tho paper. At the receiv ing end of the wire a imilar cylinder, moving ill accurato synchronism with the other, recives the current on a chemically p epared paper, on which it transcribes the ignatiire in black letters on a white ground. co rr. qiondent u ked one of our ex changes "how long girls should be court ed.'" und received an answer: "Just the same us short girls." THE DAIRY. Ft"RE WATKK. Stock man. Much atrees is laid upon the necessity of giving the cows pure water. What it pttte water? One would suppose from what some say on the subject that nothing but water freshly pumped from a well or run | ning from a spring is fit for cow to drink. That is just the kind of water cows do not I like: they like water that is a little warm, and if it is stagnant they don't object to it. Hut bacteria, microbes, etc., will be j tound in stagnant water and will get into , the milk." Exactly so, and they will not j hurt the milk uor the ones who drink it. , The tact is. that where cows drink from a ; running stream, or from a pool in the field, there is no possibility of their not swal lowing myriads of microscopic beings, and there is not the least danger of any inj'ory to the cow or to the users of her milk pro vided there are no germs of infections dis eases in the water, and this contingencv is so raro that it need alarm no one. CHOKIXG CATTLE. A correspondent in the Stx England Homestead has an excellent, as well as a humane, way for the relief of choking cat tle, and he thus describes it: "When the animal becomes choked, I find the obstruc tion by feeling along the throat with one hand, and in nine eases out of ten it is found in the gullet. With the thumb and lingers, the obstacle can be forced out of the way it went in, and generally the ani mal is ready to assist in the removal. A few years ago I had a heiter that was * ed with apples every few days, and i.. ery instance I removed them in this v without difficulty or danger of injuring the animal. I think anything which an ani mal gets into its throat and cannot ge: down in the natural way should not b punched or pushed down, thereby endan gering the life of the animal, but should b taken out the way it went in." CAKBII UDDER. Following is a remedy for caked udder well tried and tested, Iroin the Jersey llu Win: Take one-half pint of aqua-ammoni:' one pint of soft water, one or two teaspooi fuls of spirits of turpentine, one and on: - half teaspoonfuls of fluid extract of bell: donna, one and one-half teaspoontuls < f fluid extract of fluid extract of phytolace:. one and one half teaspoonfuls of saturati i tincture of camphor. Shake well and b ply with all the elbow grease and patien< you can muster. Take abont a teaspoci - ful at a time in the hollow of the hand and gently, but with fufficient pressure, rub i. in the skin of the udder until tho'latter gets dry and quite hot; support yourselfl y putting the unoccupied hand, with an • - cassional patting across the patient's snii After having treated both sides, iu fn . * and renr (the latter as high np as the tvl der reaches), to doses of liniment, get do" under your cow und gently cominei. e knepding the bag. taking first the wh' e and afterwards part of the udder between the open hands, rolling tho formor uu il the formed lumps aro crushed, occasionally milking bag empty. Stop use of liniment as soon as coagulation disappears. lut keep up rubbing and milk often; by nil means avoid graining, feed only very spar ingly, give plenty of water and keep tho animal from getting cold. BREEDS OF CATTLE. By means of experiments at the .New 11ampsnire station by Professor White! er we are enabled to make a comparison of four four breeds, but we will only take the Jei seys and Ayrshires; they produce respec tively 2C7J and 267 pounds of butter from J. 850 and 5.850 pounds of milk respective ly. With the Jerseys 100 pounds of butti r costs sl4 30, while with the Ayrshire the cost is only $lO 70; tho cost of the former is ninety-seven cents per 100 pounds to seventy-eight cents for the latter. Bui it takes only nineteen pounds of milk for a pound of the Jersey butter, while 21.8 pounds is tho quantity of Ayrshire. These facts may be interesting to fanners. managing SBEKP. Upon the ordiuury larrn where sheep iye kept, but in limited numbers, and without a sbepard, it is of considerable important e to be able to control tho flock. This :s very successfully done by taking a ewe lamb and bring it np by hand. Always exorcise kindness towards it, give it a num.? and teach it to come at the call of itsnomo by giving it a few kernels of grain of some kiud or some food that it is particularly fond of. When grown turn it with the flock, and when they are wanted a cnll of the cosset by name will bring it, and ibe rest of the flock will follow. This is a p - culiarity of sheep; when it starts all the rest will follow no matter in what direction they go, so if one is taught to call tl e the others will follow, aud this saves the trou hie of trying to toacb the entire flock ai d will bo the means of saving many steps. CUTTING GRASS. There is a great deal said in agricultural journals as to the proper time to cut grass. Wo hardly think that any practical furuier needs information about this, the oldest crop perhaps ever raised upon the farm, und one no farmer ever thinks of doing without. It is a thing that presents itself directly to the judgement and experience of every farmer. The fanner is perfectly familiar with the difference in quality and in price of hay cut at the proper time— that is just when it is about done growing —und a later period when the bio suns aro dead and the stalk is beginning to lose its fresh green appearance. No owner ol horses, or those having charge of borsrs, who knows anything about hay—rnd thiy all ought to be familiar with this impor tant aud expensive article of food—can readily judge of its quality from its eoli r and sizo or stiffness of stalk. We aro speaking of timothy, which is al most wholly used for driving torses at least, though a mixture of one-fourth or ouo-eightb of clover is preferable by many. Clover should, of course, be out outlier— say whou the heads are in full bloom—and cured as rapidly as posaible, and as moder ately as will answer to store away without fear of moulding. It is then worth a full third more than if allowed to staul until the blossoms are dead, wheu it loses a portion ef its sweetness and becomes brit tle, the heads breaking off and in a preat measure lost. Dining Car Sarrlce. la the— days sf hairy —d »f*d tmm* the dining ear ha* taw a» NMM •IfBIDt Of 9TWJ I'ennaylvalna Railroad was tie pioneer in tho East of this branch of the s -rvi< *>. and its dining cars hsvo won a well m»riled reputation among travelers. In order to better provide for the comfort of its through passengers dining car will, on and after June lOtb, be ad'letl to the equipment of all through trnins ntnning over tho lines wc«t of I'ittsbnrg between the East and Cincinnati, Chicago, and St. Louis. The principal trains on the lines Last ot I'ittsburg are now eqnipped with thoso cars, and their addition to those nl the Western territory will greatly enhance the convenience of passongers destined to the three great Western termini. Scrofula, humors, boils, pimples, and nil impurities of tho blood aro cured bv Hooti , Sarsoparilla. NO S3