[T LOST TO SPAIN. 3 RICH COLONIES WHICH SHE HAS DRIVEN TO FREEDOM. One by One the Arrogant Dons Have Been Stripped of Valuable Possessions Which , a Little Tact and <>ood Government Would Have Retained. • The general rebellion of Spain's American colonies occurred in the ear ly years of the present century. Not only were Spain's affairs in a desperate condition abroad, but also at home dire dissension prevailed. In the autumn of 1819 a considerable army had been brought together at Cadiz for the sub jugation of their revolted possessions In America. But the officers and troops refused to embark, and a series of internal disruptions followed. The revolt in Spain's Argentine colo ! nies in South America broke out in 1810. In that year Chile and Para guay successfully rebelled. The war for Chile's independence lasted eight years. The Argentine Republic estab lished its independence in 1816. Ven ezuela, Ecuador and New Granada, or Colombia, were lost by revolt in 1819. The revolt in these States was led by Simon Bolivar, named El Libertador for having rescued South America from the Spanish yoke. Bolivar also led the Insurgents in Bolivia and Peru, the lat ter State being the last of Spain's pos sessions on the American continent to establish its independence. This was in 1826. The Spanish conquered Peru early in the sixteenth century. Peruvian silver was freely poured into Spanish coffers, and was drained out again to meet the expenses of the wars which the Spanish home government maintained. At the outbreak of the war of independence in South America, the Spanish Govern ment had already declined greatly in internal strength. Spain was distract ed with the dissensions of a regency, and was racked by civil war. HoVev er, in 1820 the Spanish Viceroy had an army of 23,000 men in Peru, and all the large towns were completely in the hands of the Spanish officials. Brazil belonged to Spain ih 1573. In that year it was wrested from the Por tugese, who had discovered it at an earlier'date. During Spain's troubles with the-Netherlands, the Dutch cap tured Brazil, and from the Dutch the State gained its independence. As to the States of Guiana, their ti« ties were much in dispute for many years. Spain owned what is now Brit ish Guiana in 1580, and lost the prov ince in 1602 to the Dutch, from whom it went to the English. Mexico was the richest and most pop ulous of all the Spanish-American col onies. Frequent insurrections occurr ed here during the Napoleonic wars in Europe. Pending the war for Mexican independence the most revolting atroc ities were perpetrated on both sides. The Spaniards conducted hostilities with the most wanton cruelty. The war was one of extermination, the in surgents being slaughtered like brutes. In 1824 the independence of Mexico was recognized by every country ex cept Spain. Spain relinquished Florida to the United States by treaty and purchase in 1821. The Bahamas, which were Colum bus's earliest discovery, were depopu lated by the Spanish and were never again settled by them. The English occupied them in 1629. After the wa ta with Spain and France the British se cured the Bahamas by the treaty of 1783. Jamaica, which was discovered by Columbus on his second voyage, in 1494, was taken possession of by the Spaniards in 1509. The inhumanity of the conquerors was so great that fifty years after the Spauish invasion the native population is said to have en tirely disappeared. Oliver Cromwell sent out a British expedition in 1655 which captured the Island, and in 1670 it was formally ceded to England by the treaty of Madrid. Haiti's early history corresponds with that of Jamaica. Within little more than an age after 1492 the abo rigines had been swept away by the re morseless cruelties of the Spaniards. The eastern part of the island finally wrested itself from the Spanish in 1865 and established Santo Domingo. When Magellan, in 1519, circumnavi gated the world for the first time, he claimed all the islands of the East In dies for Spain. The Philippines alone to-day remain under Spanish domina tion. The other islands of this group fell to the French, English and Dutch during the wars waged by Spain with these countries from the time of Phil ip 11, to the close of the Napoleonic wars in 1815. Loaded Down With \nniei, Rutherford County, North Carolina, is a place of queer names. The chil dren in one family are going through this vale of tears as follows: Zeno, Zula, Zezulon, Zinnle, Zolen, Zaco, Za luski, Zenix, Zalf, Zeolly. Still another family boasts these names: Kansas Love, Qullina Quiltina Quinn, Eulalia Valtsia, Flabanico, Anifesto. Another thus disfigured their children: Linsco, Lansco, Stumpeo. Language Before Knowledge. Berlin University, owing to the large number of foreign students frequent ing It, has established an instructor ship in elementary German to enable them to learn k he language in which the lectures are delivered. Germany Hu No Servant Problem. Empress Augusta Victoria of Ger many found 144 German servant girls to whom phe could give the golden servants' cross for having lived forty years with one family. Only one was found in Berlin. CIVIL WAB EXTBAS. THERE WERE FEW FAKE BULLETINS IN THE DAVS OF '6l. How the Nem of the Firing on Fort. Sum ter Waa Spread iu a I.ivoly Western Town —The Mysterious Horseman Who Carried the Tidings. "I remember the news of the begin ning of the civil war as it came to our town," said a man who is not yet a vet eran. "I was about 16 years old. I was returning home in the afternoon. I saw coming toward me a horse rid den, as I recall it, madly by a man. As they came nearer I heard the man shouting. The horse was blowing like a locomotive. I noticed that the man rode bareback. Every time he yelled he plunged his heels into the sides of the horse. I do not remembor tbe ex act words of the rider, but they were' about 'war beginning.' As he rode people in the street who saw him stop ped, listened, and asked one another about it, many windows along the way were hoisted, and as I proceeded home ward the women who knew me called from the lookouts and asked me what 'that man' said about the war. "When I reached home I found my mother's parlor a scene of confusion. The neighbors had called into tell her what they knew and to ask what she knew about the war. The negroes about our house were frightened. One of them tool; refuge in the cellar and came out only after she had been threatened. Her fear was the 'abo llshiners.' The word 'Yankee* aa an approbious epithet had not at that time come into use. "There were two newspapers in the town and each one got out what was called an 'extra.' It was not much like the extra of this generation. The news of the firing on Sumter consisted of less than 200 words, was printed on a small slip of white newspaper and was set in the same width as the columns of the papers which issued them. There was no advertisement or other news on the slips. These extras sold for 25 cents a piece. From that time until the close of the war that was the sort of 'extra' that was issued by the papers in the town where I lived. "A long time afterward 1 heard talk about the man who rode the horse and who spread the news. Me was tbe son of the town miller. I never heard where he got his information, but as soon as he heard it he mounted the horse that had been hitched to the rack in front of the mill and carried the news of his own accord. There were four boys in that miller's family. They enlisted early for the Confederate cause. Not one of them returned. The one who spread the news was killed somewhere in the 'Wilderness;' at least, he was known togo into one of the engagements of that series of stub born fights and never came out. Ilia body was never identified. "I recall that at the time of the fire on Sumter, many of our people were still 'on the fence,' as we said. The Lincoln electors had received few votes in the town. It was a Breckinridge section. I remember that the tendency was in favor of the preservation of the Union, but the people were afraid of Lincoln. At that time they believed he had been elected for no other pur pose than that of 'freeing the niggers and stealing the horses.' And so it happened that negroes and horses were locked up often at night, together, not in the same room, of course, but often iu adjoining rooms in the outhouses. I have often thought that, if the people had understood Lincoln in the begin ning of the war as they came to know him later, many a man who went South would have fought for the Union. And if I am correct in that, would the war have lasted as long as it did? "I remember a gathering at the house of my father one evening in which the military genius of Gen. Scott was discussed. Some present had been with Scott in Mexico. It was the consensus of that gathering, and this was before the Bull Run light, that Napoleon came first and Winfleld Scott second. What an impression that made on my mind. 1 remember hear ing one of the Scott enthusiasts say that Scott would end the war in one flfjht. "I shall never forget the news of the first Bull Hun fight. My people had arranged to leave the town on a short vacation, but this news kept them at home. The second day's news gave more particulars. It told of the rout ing of the Union Army. And then I saw something in human nature which I had never seen before, of which I knew nothing. I saw the fence cleared, to take up the old metaphor. And ev ery man and family came off to join the Southern cause. I recall that Scolt was called a granny, and very soon af ter his name was forgotten. The first Bull Run made recruits for the South. Several regiments enlisted in my town and county. Success of the South in the first engagement of any conse quence carried with it the doubters. And in nearly every instance of this life which I have observed, I have found that, as soon as success is estab lished, those who shook their heads be came followers, and yet you and I have known some successes to turn out fail ures, paradoxical as that may sound." Now For Aluminum Type. Aluminum type for printing purposes is one of the latest novelties patented. Type manufactured of the new metal is said to have many advantages over the old style of lead type. Sanitary reasons are advanced for its use, as the lead dust, which has often been found to endanger the health of compositors, la done away with. A company has been formed at Frankfort-on-the-Main to further the invention. jWHAT ARMY OFFICERS DO. They Are Kept an Busy an Any Man in Private l.lfe. Officers of the United States army do not And their time hanging heavily on their hands even In the piping times of peace. Some are assigned to the big Government arsenals, where their life is as busy as that of any man connect ed with a private factory. The officers who have charge of the maintenance of the great and expensive post fortifica tions have responsibilities which do not give them much leisure. Guns, carriages, emplacements, powder mag azines, electric and steam plants and scores of lesser carc-3 demand a daily routine of duty which must bo follow ed implicitly. The officers in charge of ordnance find enough work in the line of testing, proving and recording to keep them at it day after day as steadily as If they were working for a private business firm. The Engineer Corps is in demand al ways. There are dozens of dredging operations to be carried on along the shores of the country from Maine to Oregon, which must be clone under the supervision of an engineer officer. All the planning and building of fortifica tions, the mounting of guns, the de signing of gun carriages, the mainte nance of channels in all the harbors of the United States; supervision and ex amination of bridges over all navigable waterways; care, maintenance and erection of lighthouses, come into their department. Here are some things that an officer of the United States Army has to know if he expects to be ready for any call: Algebra, geometry, trigonometry, as tronomy, metallurgy, mechanics, pho tography, electricity, optics, ballistics, civil and military engineering, c hemis try, submarine engineering, and, of course, he must be well up in the ge ography of his own country as well as in that of all other places where it is at all possible that he will be sent. If he is detailed to lay or command sub marine mines he must know enough about the action of tides and waves to understand just how the mines must be laid and to guard'against any accident to them. If lie is to take the Held where the country Is difficult, and large bodies of troops have to be moved quickly, he must be able to build bridg es and' perhaps to make roads. A knowledge of surveying is almost in dispensable. He may be assigned to report on the best powder to use. In that case a knowledge of chemistry and an inti mate acquaintance with explosives will be demanded of him. Hardly any offi cer who expects to be detailed for any service except the dullest routine duty can afford to be without a knowledge of photography. It is used in almost all departments of the army now. So a man who wishes to excel in the ar my can find plenty of work for him self. Don't Tobai.T . I ifr Away. To quit tobai co enMly rind forever. t>e nine iietic. full of iife, nerve Hint vigor, tulte No-To Hac. the wonder-worker, that makes weak met •trong. All druggists, 50c or sl. Cureguarun leed Hoolilet and sample free. AiUlrc*: Sterling lietnedy Co . f'liieapo or New York Are Yoo &>'S • E 1"' * i? Easily iiredr Just remember that all your * • strength must como from your*J ' food. Did you over think of ♦ ! that ? 1 ! Perhaps your muscles need * ' mora strength, or your nerves; ♦ or perhaps your stomach is ♦ ■ I weak and cannot digest what | ' you eat. ♦ '■ If you need mora strength ♦ I thon take j SCOTT'S i EMULSION ] | of Cod-Liver Oil with Hypo- t ! I phosphites. The oil is the most ♦ ; easily changed of all foods into ♦ ; | strength ; and the hypophos- t f> phites are the best t tonics for the nerves. ; SCOTT'S EMUL- i BION is the easiest J and quiokest euro for • weak throats, foj: | coughs of every kind, * and for all cases of do- * bilitv, weak nervoa, ♦ and loss of fle3h, ♦ ;; 50c. «nd Ji.oo; a'.t druggists. J ; SCOTT & BOWNH. Chemists, New York. } £CATHARTIC U fca£ca)wto CURE CONSTIPATION ioc all 25c 50c DRUGGISTS m J^OMMSflCEW^g ss^^^ ..r Stirrer n.rnrdn. Prtoe. tn.oo. Send for fr« K„. «« Surr-r. Prk,-. wlib curt»ln«. 1«M, nn. An flood a# sells Ux 3-o. Cataloguo if all our styles, shade, aprou and fender*, SCO. As goedasacilt forfrjo. ELKHART <'AEBL*GE AN:» lIABNESS UFO. CO. W. B. PUATT, Bc»>. KLKHXBT, Dm. What does A stand for ? WTien soma friend suggests that your blood heeds A sarsaparilla treat ment, remember that A stands for AVER'S. The first letter in the alphabet stands for tho first of sarsaparillas ; first in origin, first in record, first in the favor of tho family. For nearly half a century Safstparma has been curing all forms of blood diseases —scrofula, eczema, tetter, rheumatism, erysipelas, blood poi soning, etc. There's a book about theso cures —" Ayer's Curebook, a story of euros told by the cured," which ia sent free on request, by Dr. J. C. Aver, Lowell, Mass. The book will interest you if you are sick or weak, because it tells not what it is claimed the remedy will do, but what your neighbors and fellows testify that it has done. Will it cure you ? It has cured thousands like you. Why not you ? Mount Vernon's Onard. Edward Parker, the little old color ed man who occupies the sentry-box at the tomb of Washington at Mount Ver non, lives in Washington. That is. his family live here, and he comes over by special permit of the organization which has control of the old home of the first President of the United States. For years the tomb of Washington has been constantly before this old colored man's vision. He has never missed a day from that dingy sentry box since Mount Vernon passed into the charge of the ladies, and before that, dating from 1841, he had lived on the place. He was a slave of John Washington, and 1s the last of the old servants now living. Every other Saturday Parker comes over to Washington, always carrying with him an old-fashioned carpet-bag, so common in the days of reconstruc tion. The following Monday morning he may always be seen a half-hour at least before the first train starts for Mount Vernon, waiting around the cor ner of Pennsyl vania-ave. and Thir teenth-.«t. Ho hits never missed the first train since the electric cars began running to Mount Vernon. Before that the first boat to Mount Vernon, on alternating Monday mornings, al ways found him a passenger. Parker is, indeed, a character. He assisted in burying the last person consigned to the vault in Washington's tomb. After that the key to the vault was thrown into the Potomac. This was in the early fifties. Something Like a Search. A Welshman who was In London when extensive sewering operations were in progress lost his watch. He reported the matter to Scotland Yard, and the officials said they would leave no stone unturned to find the missing timekeeper. Shortly afterward Taffy again visited the metropolis and saw street after street turned up. He was told that in all thirty-six miles of road were in the same condition. He rushed down to Scotland Yard and exclaimed to the wondering inspector: "I didn't think I was giving you all that trouble. If you don't find the watch by Sunday, I wouldn't break up any more streets." Stone Boot Soles. An inventor bas hit upon a method of putting stone soles on boots and shoes. He mixes a waterproof glue with a suitable quantity of clean quartz sand and spreads It over the leather sole used as a foundation. These quartz soles are said to be very flexible and practically indestructible. Better Than Cats. A savant has discovered how to slay mice and rat 3 by means of a bacillus, which he has named after himself, and which is supposed in Le far more fatal than the cat.. Something to know! Our very large line of Latest patterns of Wall Paper vv ith ceilings arid border to match. All full measure ments and all whife'tpcks. designs as low as $c per roll. !Window Shades^ with roiler fixtures, fringed and plainV. Some as low as ioc; better, 2fc, 50c, \ Elegant Carpets \ rainging in prices 20c., 25c., j;c„4sc., and 68c. \ | Antique Bedroom Suits \ Full suits SIB.OO. Woven wire springs, $1.75. Soft top mattresses, good ticks, $2.50. Feather pillows, sl.7s per pair. j GOOD CANE SEAT CHAIRS for parlor use 3.75 set. Eockers to match, 1.25. Large size No. 8 cook stove, $20.00; red cross ranges s2l. Tin wash boilers with covers, 49c. Tin pails 14qt, 14c; 10qt, 10c; Bqt, 8c; 2qt covered, sc. Jeremiah Kelly, HUGHESVILLE. Onr Declaration of War Has been in effect for a number of years and our Bombardment of H gh Prices Has created havoc of late in the sale of MOWING MACHINES, DRILLS, HARROWS, PLOWS, LUMBER WAGONS, BUGGIES, and ROAD WAGONS all at the lowest cash price. PHOSPHATE, ThiJty tons of different grades will be sold at a low figure. W. E. MILLER, Sullivan County, Pa. grand spring Shoe Stock y [ Comprising Correct, Stylish, Comfortable Shoes for every mem §. ber of the family. We are now ready to show you as fine a line of footwear as was ever shown in town before. We are constantly adding to our stock a higher and better grade of shoes and at prices decidedly less than others. That the public appreciates our efforts in this direction is attest ed by our daily increasing sales of high-class footwear. You are cordially invited to call and examine our stock and we are positive that the styles and quality, combined with our usual low prices, will please you. Elegant Spring Shoes for Ladies Our showing of Ladies' Shoes for spring wear will be more fully appreciated by those who desire Stylish, Comfortable Shoes, with out paying extravagant prices for them, and we trust to increase business to make up for reducedjprofits, A stylish, up to date, tan, cloth ttop, lace shoe, sold eveiywhere for $1.75, our price $1.25. The %tme redaced prices prevail on our $1.75, 2.00, 2.50 and 3.00 linfs. We guarantee a saving of from 25 to 75 cents on each pair of shoes. Our line of Clothing, Gents' FdKiehing Goods, Ladies' Capes, Skirts, Corsets and Shirtwaists flcomplete. Come and «ee for yourself. B I -_.L The Reftble Dealer in Clothing JaCOP P6r Boots aft Shoes. _ ■UGHESVILfcB* PA*