SHADOW OF A NAME. BAMY PAINE'S TRIBUTE TO THt MEMORY OF CHARLES CHADBANO. MbM-rles nt a Talented Man Who Bore the fninnniio of One of IMekens' Celebrated Characters Wrote Brilliantly, but Wonlit Hot fnhlLh. At 4 o'clock on thrtmnruine: of Enstnr rlnmliiy lit hi linnin lii iir Mnlvprn Well rlircl Cliiirle Climllnmd. With tho liiunn of C'limllmiiil, thank to DiokMi, thn ri'mlliiu world I fimill lur. It In HHBtM'liilcil with ollincss, hy pocrisy nmt Rclf necking. At tho very win ml of tlin imnio tho rctiiinlnociit Rrin itnrtH on nil fiirc. Ho in n national Jokn. But we pny for nil onr luiiKhtcr, nnil wn hnvo piild for thn Clmilbniirl Jrst. I do not menu to miy that the nil hnppy nroident hy which Dickon Be leoted the unnio of Chndlmnd for 111 Impostor wns the cimsh of the tlenth of Chiirlr (Jhnriuatiil. It wm not. Ho died of nt) ordlnnry dlscitse consumption, In flint. Hut Unit unhiippy ucoldniit did overshadow the whole of C'hiirlei Chnd band' life. It did prevent him from taking the place nud fume to which he wax Justly entitled. It linn prevented the pcneral public, from rending one "In gle lino of 111" very excellent worki. An his literury eieentnr I have had no choice hut to dentroy every line of hid mnuuHcript, In accordance with hi orders. Not n Hingln copy hn becu taken, and not one word of hi work that hi friend remember may be com mitted to writing. I do not easily be lieve in the existence of geuins, but I believe that Oniric Chadband had genius. Home, far more competent to jndgo than I am, thonuht tho same. Ai I wntched tlin Inst spark die out in the big pile of burned paper it seemorl a pity thnt ho much work and such won derful gifts should be all wasted for inch a stupid, ignoble, maddening ron ton bpcntiso tho author had Inherited thn name of n character in Dickens. He wn very sensitive, but, unlike most very scmdtlve men, ho wn not affected or vniu. When I was first in troduced to him, he said, laughing, that he was no relation to the original Ohndbaud. He reveled In Dickens nnd would quote tho original (Jhadband freely. I had known him a long time before I knew that the coincidence of the name gave him any trouble at all. It wm long before I could make out why he would not publish anything. He used to give the most absurd reason for hi reticence, nud when driven into a corner be would say that he was going to publish, bat not yet. One night, when I had Just finished a long story of hi, I implored him to lot me take it away with me to Loudon and ee what could be doue. "No," he said. "No body would publish it " I told him that it might be refused by five men out of iz, but that the siith would afterward be proud that he had aocepted it. Then, quite unexpectedly, the secret came out. "No serious work," he laid, "could possibly do anything associated with the name of Chadband. " He said It io light heartedly that I thought he Was onoe more putting me off with a wrong reason, but I soon found that he wu sincere. He imagined reviewer making jest about hi name and owned that he would not be able to stand it This surprised mo, for he frequently joked about hi name himself, and w did hi friend. He defended himself. "That's different," he mid. "That ! in conversation, among men that I know. But I could not have some vul gar brute who did not know me at all doing the same thing in cold print It would present my stuff from the wrong point of view. No, the association of the name are too strong. If yon are called Chadband, yon are called Chad band, and there's an end of it You may do what you like in private, but you can come before the publio only as n intemperate, hypocritical, delioious is, and in no other character what ever. " He wonld not bear of pseudonym or of anonymity. If his work succeeded, the secret wonld be found out, and he would be ashamed. If it did not uo oeed and he did not think it would it wa not worth his while to add to the annual output of bad books. "Why make all this fus about nothing?" I aid, angry with bis obstinacy. "If yon thiuk it matters one straw though it does not obange your name once for all and be doue with it " He said that it would be sheer eowardioe, and he oould not dream of it - Very unfortunately, he had private means. Poverty might have driven him to overcome his sensitiveness and ' to publish. Had he doue so it would have been curious to watch the growth of an entirely new set of associations around the name Chadband. I think be was strong enough to have redeemed the nam a He was unmarried said that he did pot believe in the hereditary principles s applied to jokes. His real reason for not marrying wai, of oourie, the dis ease of which be died. He worked ex ceedingly hard, and, as be knew, to no purpose. He would not own that he took pleasure in hi work. "No," he aid, "it's like smoking I get no pleas ure from it, but I should, miss it if I gave it up. " Ho took enormous pains with his work and finished it as thor oughly us though it were to constitute his appeal to the world on the follow ing day. He kept the final copy of everything he approved, but bis in structions were that it was all to be , bnrned as soon a possible after his death. Barry Pain in Black and White. Making- Antiques. In o ouse before a London magistrate the question was as to the ownership of some antique ormolu articles, and two workmen, who stoutly claimed the ortioles, said that they "made" them. To prove their assertion they set to . work iu oourt and showed how ormolu , was made "antique" with pumioe powder. 8TREET CAR CONDUCTORS. thrf Work Harder sad Rata Lower Tnaa Their Meant Knad llrnther. Yon often think it's hard fur thn pan longer conductor of nil accommodation trnln which top nt two or throe sta tions to the mile, to tell who has paid hi fitre nnd who has not. Thn conduct or of a short run accommodation train tspcclnlly must be a peculiarly gifted Man. He must be nt mice both cool lieaded nnd even tempered, or if not bo I a total failure. But if thn requisite of a railroad onndiietor lire such, whnt urn tho re quirement of thn man who runs a com mon street car? Why, ns much n those of tho rnilrond mini nnd several times morn. Tho railroad accommodation con ductor oil one of tho short run train which lenve thn big cities ha little morn work, little more responsibility and require less real skill tliau the man who by grace i called "conductor" on a trolley car of one of onr cities. Both men, of course, have thousands of rare. Tho rnilrond man has a certain number of stop to make and a certnin schedule time allowed for getting over hi run of tho railroad The street oar conductor has au unonrtnlu number of stop to make, yet he still ha hi cer tnin scheduled tiuio to make ou hi run, nnd he must mnkn It, too, or be nbln to givn an "A No. 1" exouso for failure. Tho railroad conductor I alway thn biggest man on hi train. I ever thn street enr conductor the biggest, unless every pnssonger I off nnd the niotormiui nlsnf These things make It hard for thn patient man, who must be polite and who I expected by the company for which he work and spurred on by a dozen or so sharp eyed "spot tera, " or "street car detective," a thoy call thoiuselve, to fenl a lovely a a spring morning, nud they make hi already nervous work donbly so. The railroad conductor doesn't meet that pliaso of existence ouoe in a decade, or if so not any of teller No one presume to expect so ranch from tho knight of the ticket punch as ho doe from the knight of the trolley rope Every one who travels on street oar expect the conductor to know every cross street on hi line nnd Just whore it strikes that stroet, and, in deed, ho should know thi much, hut in addition he is expected to know every one who live on the street along which hi line run, every one who livo on all the counties street which cross the route of bi car aud then all the immediate streets and their inhabit ant the whole length of hi line. The stroet cur conductor I expected to be porter a well on his car. Ho must help peoplo on and off, lift up aud lift dowu huge baskets and bundle, never got tired of all the questions which only the city directory oould answer, and then, in addition, keep all of the strict rulos of the company for which be works and see to it that all of hi passenger do so too For thi work he get f3 or 13.28 a day, while the roll road conductor, who is a very king in comparison, draw hi f 8 or 18 per day, or $1 35 a mouth, aud I not classed n a "social auipeot" either. Pittsburg Dispatch. New Boa-lead Meetlag Hoasee. Cotton Mather aid: "I Mud no Just ground in Scripture to apply such a trope a church to bouse for publio worship A meeting bouse I the term that i most commonly used by New England Christians, and every town, for the most purt, oan say we have modest and a huudsome house for the worship of God, not set off with guudy, pompous, theatrical flnerie, but suited unto the simplicity of Christian wor ship. " The people were seated in the early days, says Dr. Ezra Hoyt Byington, in hi book on "The Puritan In England and New Eugland," on rough benches, men and women on opposite sides. Pew were not provided first Now and then a special vote wa passed by the town authorising some person to build a pew iu the meeting bouse at his own expense. Square on the floor, about 6 feet by 6, were deeded to individual, on whiob they erected pew to suit themselves. The best seat wa some tlmos assigned to the man who paid the highest tax in the parish. Sometimes the committee was instructed "to have respect upon them that are 60 years old and upward, others to be seated according their pay. " In one in stance we have a record that the com mittee was instructed "to have respect to age, office and estate, so far as it tendetb to make a man respeotable, and to everything else that hath the same tendenoy. " Turks and Sleersehaiim, According to the best authorities epon the subject, the idea of nsing white talo iu the manufacture of pipes is of comparatively recent date, com pared with the age of the habit of smok ing, and what is still more ourious is the fact that in the oriental countries I which produce white talo, or meer : sohaum, as it Is oalled, and where the j use of tobaoco forms part of the eduoa ; tion of the faithful, the people never dream or making this substance into pipes. They make bowls and goblets of it, but no pipes. It may be that the long pipestems which allow the smoke to cool and lose' it aoridity before reaching tho mouth leave the oriental smoker quite Indifferent in regard to the quality of the bowl. At all events, one never sees a Turk with a meer schaum pipe, Courrier des EtatsUnis Tba Ancient Umbrella. On coins in the rock carviugs of the anotents the umbrella often show it familiar form. This goes to prove that Jon us Hanway did uot invent the um brella, but bo saw the vulue of the east ern sunshade and soon it beoanie the fashion to curry this usoful article. There must be a great difference be tween the umbrella of the cightuuutu century and the modern steel ribbed, silk covered, slender article which it is regarded ns misfortune to get wet Irish Times. Vaeelaatlne; John Bright. Sir Wemyss Reid gives some interest ing reminiscences of John Bright in Cassell' Magnsine. The great Liberal lender often sal in an old fashioned nnnchnir In the Reform club. Ho de lighted iu talk and wa fond of repeat ing poetry. On one ocoasion he began to talk to Sir Wemyss about hi favorite hymns, and a ho warmed to Ills subject lie ronrnted some of them. It wn a I strange subject, perhaps, for n clnb smoking room, but it wu still stranger j to observe thnt n ho spoke with thnt : wonderful voice of hi tho other men in ; thn room first looked up nnd begnu to ' listen, nnd then, n though drawn by nn irresistible spoil, drew nearer to him, until before long ho had them all sitting round him iu n circle enjoying that "mnsio of the human sjieech" of which above all living men ho wa a master. John Bright reciting hymn in 'a club smoking room I "There," ex claims Hir Wemyss, "I a pinturo for nn artist if ho only know how to trent it " Doe It Fay to he Sick ? llt'siiics thn discomfort nnd milTerlnjf, Milieus of nny sort Is expensive. ; Hundreds of people consult thn doctor , every day alNMitcoughH nnd colds. This Is Isttcc Hum to mi (Tor tho diseaso to run nlong, hut, those Mho uso Otto's Cure, for the throat and lungs dii bettor i Ht lit. It cost less nnd the euro Is ; pertain. You can got. n trial hnttlo froo ' of onr nirent, H. Alex. Stoke. Ijirgo hI.o i"ie. nnd .r0o. I.lvrry slntile keeH-rs should always keep Arnleu nnd Oil Liniment In Ihe slahle, nolh Inii like II for horses. Arnli-H A Oil Miiliiiint Is eiiiall.v sinhI for man mill lieiixl. 5ft and Ml cents -r Isillle. I'orsaleliy II.A.HIoke. Thoasanfls walk -Ihe earlli to-day who would hi NlecpliiK In Us Ihmiiim hut for Ihe timely use of llown's I'.llxli. Fur sale liy II. A. Htiikc. Corn mild. -ill Iihi lie ami ellleleul Ionic, uc HiiUrr's Mn nil rake llliiers. livery Isiille wnn iniled. I 'or wile liy II. A. fluke. DR. HENRY BAXTER'S MANDRAKE BITTERS. CURES CONSTIPATION AND BILIOUSNESS. A delightful tonio and lax ative. Can be taken hy young and old. KodiotingnecosHury. , Eat anything you like and . plenty of it. Builds up "run down" people making them well and vigorous. Try it. At Dragglata. Only 5e jmt toMls. Henry, Jotuuo 4 Lord, Prop,, Burlington, Vt, For snli! by II. A. Stoke. o o o o o o o ooooooooooooo fl. D. Deemer & 60. are busy opening up a new stock of goods for their ' Fail and Winter Trade 00000000000000000000 A Note Ftom the Editor. Tho editor of a lending stato lnpnr writes: "If you Inn seen my wife Inst .luno mid wore to neo her to-day you would not hcllcvo slio was the huiiio woman. Then slio wus broken down by nervous debility and sulTored terribly from constipation and sick hendaclio. Iluoon's Celery King for tho nerves made her n well woman In one month." II. Alex. Htoku will give you n froo (ampin package of this grcnl lirrbul remedy. Lurgu size 2."e. nnd ode. V A NT F. 1 1 !' A IT 1 1 1' I I , M K N OH WHMKN to travel fur i i'niitMlltle eitiilillMhed house lii IYniiyl unlit. Hillary S7sti nnd ci- Iielces. I'nsill'Hl iel-llllllH'lil . Itefelence. leeline self-inldreiseil slumped eneliis. The Nutlniial. :liir Insurance Itldir , t'hleiiuo. OF KKYNtHMSVILLE. Cnpitnl, Ntuiilus. 850,000. 85,000. '. milrhcll, I'rrsldcntl MrotI Ha-4'lcllMiMl, Vice Prea. .loliii II. Kuurhrr. ('ashler. Director,! C. Mitchell. Keolt Mcl'lellnml. .TO. Kin, .liilin II. Curlieil, (1. V,. Drown, (1. W. Kuller, ,t. II. Knueher. Iiocs a achcriitrmnklitirhiislnpssnml solicits the iieeounls of mcrrhiitite, profesMlomil men. farmers, ineehatiles. miners, lurnlicrincn ami others, immilsttur the most, careful attention to Ihe business ol all is-rsons. Hiifi lietHislt Honc for rent. Klrst National Hunk hulldlmt, Nolan bhs-k Fire Proof Vault. L. M. SNYDER, Practical Horse-stioer and General Blacksmith. Morse shoeing done In Ihe neiitesl manner ami hy Ihe latest liniirnved methods. Over liridltrcreht kinds of hoes made for correc tion of faulty net Ion and diseased feet. Only Ihe lif'st make of hnc and nails used. Kc ttalrliiK of all kinds carefully and prompt ly done. Hatiskaction (iCAIiANTKKI). Lumber men's supplies on hand. Jackson HI. near Fifth, Iteyniildsvllle, Pa. WTANTF.n-KAITIIrTt. MEN OK WOMEN lo t rM Vsl fl.P r-f'ttiMlllwHllft Mttl.llllalhlte . liuiiMt In iVmiHyivHiifn. Hnlnry $7h0 and x , ihmihi'h. f'fhsliiori iMirmiuifnt. I'ft-n'tice. j KnrlrH Mtlf lulilrpMsod HlnmiHr1 t?nvnlriie. Thtt Null. mill, Htur liiHurtMict) Hliitf., I'IiIi-hko. irst National liaok I will close stock of DRY GOODS, Clothing and Furnishing Goods at less than mfg. prices. HENRIETTAS, Hold nt 75c. and H5,-., " .rc 49c. " 0. 42c. " f0c 39c. HEROK, " .',:. 49C. " Mrs. 45c. " 80c 21c. DKKSS FLANNKL, " .(). r7C. " 75c. 57c. " 50c. 40c. UKI) FLANNFL, " 50c. 38c. " 25c. , 19c. " 20c. 15c. White Flannel at the name price. LADIES' RIHBED WAISTS, Hold at 25c, now 19c. 15c. 10c. " 44 41 10c. 08c. RED TABLE DAMASK, 25c. 20c. 50c. 40c. WHITE " " 75c. 57c. 50c. 39c. 40c. 32o. 25c. 20c. CORSETS formerly sold at $1.00 now 79c; formerly 75c, now 57c; formerly 50c, now 39c CAMBRIC at3ic. a yard. TAFFETY at 8 and 10c a yard. O. N. T., Clark's Cotton, 4c. Spool Silk 4c. CLOTHING Childs' Suits $1.00, now .75 Boys' Suits $7, 8.00, now 5.50 14 44 1. 50, 44 i.10 44 44 5.00, 44 3.'75 2.00, 44 1.50 Men's 44 4. 98, " 3.85 44 44 2.50, '4 1.85 44 14 5.00, 44 3.75 4.00, 44 2.75 44 44 5.00, 44 2.75 Men's Fine Worsted Suits reduced from $10.00 to 6.50. GRAND ARMY SUITS reduced from $8.50 to 5.50; from $10.00 to 7.50. x . Shirts reduced from $1.00 to 75c, from 90c to 67c, from 75c. to 62c, from 50c. to 42c, from 35c. to 25c. :JOB -THE- JoD Work Department OF The Star OfQce Is replete with the Latest Styles of Types. out my entire now 57c. WORK! Neat Work Done on Short Notice!