2 His Friends. LILY Dl'ANK nt liusily copying ft fnvnilte )mttn, almost hidden from the sight of Die guests In Mrs. Oreu vllle'a drawing room by the rich folds of the Itu-e curtatna that hung from the lofly French windows like billows of foam. A dtilnty, daisy-faced girl, with a com. pletlon ns fresh as the morning; with n warm, rosy glow on the healthful skin, nnd the wine-bright sparkles In the big, velvety gray eyes. A happy, earuest hearted girl, on whom all the.ffww! of her paternal aunt, the fashionable Mrs. Ureuvllli', of Lexington Avenue, had been wasted In vain, in so fur as that Jrtdy had attempted to make a stylish city young lady of the little rustic guest. A girl with plenty of common sense, and an innate delicacy' of refinement that Alexouma and Kthelberta Oren ville her twin cousins, might have been proud to have possessed. Now, nestling away among the foamy curtains, Lily listened to the ripples of oonvercatlon that had eddied past her, thinking in the vague, half-distressed way of thought, that hud somehow, come to be quite natural to her, these few last weeks of that short delightful winter spent in New York that of all these people who had met her so many times In her Aunt Orenvilles's drawing room, there was not one who would care when she was gone, unless and Just the faintest possible little quiver ran through her pi etty figure as the sound of Sidney Ellis' voice suggested the pos sibility of an exception in his favor. He hud been very good to her all that winter from the very day that Alexoii iiin introduced him, and told Lily after he hud gone that he wag one of the most eligible young men in the city, worth ft couple hundred thousands, and a perfect love of a mansion on Fifth Avenue, not to mention his country seat on the Hud son. Lily had liked him from the very lirst and liked him none the less when Alexouiua had whispered to her, in greatest possible confidence, that she and Mr. KlUs were so nearly engaged that it whs aa good as accomplished. Liked him none the less, certainly, but somehow she felt curiously strange about it. Not that Bhe was In love with him indeed, no I fihe bad told herself a thousand times that she was in love with nobody, und tried her best, and almost succeeded iu convincing herself, that it was only a little reluctance at leaving all the luxury and the elegance of Aunt Orenville's city house that made her so uncomfortable. Uutil the sound of Sidney Ellis' voice talking to a group of girls near her, aroused her from that sad, distressful mood that hud taken complete possess ion of her. " Then you consider me a fair subject for pity, Indies ?" " Only we don't believe n word of it, Mr. Ellis. Just imagine the incongruity of the thing!" Misa Etheiberta Grenville laughed, and looked straight into Mr. Ellis' eyes. He smiled, B9 if amused. " The incongruity of what Miss 15er tie? I confess my inability to follw your meaning." Alexouma llirted her fun iu a mauuer intended to be the very poetry of motion and took up the line of defense. " AVby, the idea, of you, of all men, leaving the city and burying yourself iu the horrid country 1 What on earth will you do w ith yourself ?" Mr. Ellis looked Across the group to Helsinger, who was vainly, trying to interest Mrs Eustacle Wyndham, who, had her eyes on Sidney Ellis for her de ceased husband's successor. "Helsinger, what, do you think? Shall I stand it, if 1 emigrate to my Wisconsin farm V" "Your Wisconsin farm 1 Bless my soul Ellis is the Wiscousiu farm all there is left you from the wreck of your for tune?" Ellis laughed, us much at the horror on Mrs. Wyndham's face, as at the ready reply of his friend Helsinger. "Oh, Mr. Ellis! you never are going into the horrid Western wilds, because you have uctually lost everything else V I thought surely you meant it for a sort of a lark, you know, I supposed there was a delightful little cottage, and a car riage and everything romantic." . Lily parted the curtains and came out at this juncture, iu good time to see the surprise and growing coldness on Mi's. Wyndham's pretty face. Ellis looked quickly up at her and bowed. " Miss Lily, add your condolence, please. These ladies are horrified be cause Helsiuger has fooliuhly blundered over a piece of news I hoped to have kept quiet." A delicious flush surged over Lily'B cheek. Somehow and how egregious- ly foolish it was ! she felt glad Mr, Ellis had lost all his wonderful lot of money. " I cannot nee why Mrs. Wyndham need feel horrified. I can assure her Testing there Is no life like ooun try life." Then lifting hereyei timidly to Sidney ' oddly expressive face, she added : "I think you will be happy and contented, Mr. Ellis." Etheiberta rose from her chulr lan guidly. ." Come Allle," Mrs. Wyndham said "I promised you a glimpse of my new Duchess set. Mr. Helsinger, Mr. Kills, you will excuse us." Ellis was on his feet In a moment. " Ladles, there is not the slightest need of your taking such pains to mani fest your sudden lack of interest In me or rather your disappointment to learn that I am no longer eligible as a wealthy bait. Tray Helsinger, remain and en tertalu the ladles, and I will retire. Mrs. Wyudhum, Miss Greuvllle, Miss Ethel berta,good night I Miss Dean, if fortune favors me, I hope to say good bye to you to-morrow." Aud with dignity that befitted a duke, Ellis went away, leaving Helsinger at the mercy of three curious women's tongues. The widow Wyndham sank buck among the blue cushions she always made a point of getting where there were lovely a.ure tints to show oil' her pe tite, blonde beauty with an expression of the most devout thankfuluess on her pretty face. "Oh, Mr. Helsinger, I feel as if I never could sufficiently thuuk you 1 Only suppose I had accepted him what on earth would I have done?" Helsinger looked innocently at her. " Indeed, Mrs. Wyndham, poor Ellis must have grown very reticent about his love uflUirs lately, for lie never hint ed to me that you hud refused him." A vivid blush deepened on her fuce. " Oh I didn't mean to say that he had actually offered, you know. Hut if lie hud, and I had accepted liim 5"' "Oh!" Helsinger's monosyllable was eloquent and somehow made the widow wonder if he was making fun of her. " liecause, you see," Miss Etheiberta went on, almost indignantly, " Mr. EI lis has been so very attentive to us all, and indeed, his wealth and position made him very desirable But now" And a peculiar toss of her head and compression of her lips finished her re mark fur better thau words could have done. " I am really sorry poor Sidney lias disappointed you all shall I include you, Miss Dean V" She turned her flushed cheeks toward the group more bravely than she had ever done anything iu her life. " Indeed, you may not. Mr. Ellis is the same to me now aa he was when he owned his mansion and horses and money, aud a true friend of his will es teem him none the less." Mrs. Wyndham tittered maliciously. "Why, my dear, what a beautiful display of Quixotic interest. Pray do repeat it to Mr. Ellis, Mr. Helsiuger." He arose gravely. " I shall do so Mrs. Wyndman, and being myself the sort 'of friend Miss Dean describes, I shall carry Quixot ism still further I shall select Sidney Ellis' friends as mine. Ladies, good night." After he was gone. Alexouma turned with a scowl to Lily still standing be side the low ebony elegere, with the same sweet, flushed excitement on her pure face. "You brazen little witch! Why couldn't you keep your mouth shut? You see what you have done actually driven Mr. Helsinger from our house." "I think not, Allle. If you will be reasonable, you will see It was your own cruelty aud hollow-heartedness that did it." Mrs. Wyndham laughed hysterically she really was terribly cut up at Ellis' sudden ineligibility. " Cruelty 1 hollow-heartedness! Fer hapg, Miss Dean, you would not refuse to apply an antidote to Mr. Ellis." Lily looked quietly at the vexed woman, hut niade no reply, and then went to her own room where she was to pass the last night of her long visit the visit during which she had learned so much of the hollowuess of society, so little of what was ennobling, save her love for Sidney Ellis. She knew it now knew it was a con viction as strong as death that the ill fortune that had come to him had de veloped In her what it had crushed In Eustucle Wyndham. She admitted it, with thrills of glad, solemn joy, and prayed God to give her his love before she laid her bonny head on the pillow mat nignt. With the niorrow he came to bid her " good by," as he had said the night before. The parlors were deserted the shrewd women of the Grenville house hold took excellent pains to keep out of tne way of the penniless man, who might have Lily and welcome, if she were fool enough to take him. He met the girl half way across the floor, and took her hand warmly. " Miss Lily, I want to thank you for your womanly words of eucouragment ; and more I want to tell you that you have Inspired a holler feeling than even the highest respeotful admiration Lily, can you not see that I love you dearly, dearly? Look up, little one, aud tell me I am to have you for my darling, my wife 1" It had come to her at last, this love of Sidney Ellis, and she sobbed out her own weak confession on his breast, the happiest girl that ever the sun shne on. "And are you sure you will not shrink from farm-life, my darling ?" Her eyes answered blm before her Hps framed the words. "Shrink from Itl Oh, Sidney, I al ways loved the country, and with you It will be a paradise ! Iam used to it, you know, dear, and 1 can see to the bulter and eggs, and poultry and every thing. I will try to be so good, Sidney, aud saving and maybe you will get rich, someday." " My noble, brave darling." He took her in his arms, and she did not see the loving smile on his lips, the pride In his eyes us lie bent over her head. " Listen, then, Lily, while I toll, you shall superintend the dairy and poultry yard to your heart's content, but only when we visit our farm In Wisconsin every summer, shull it be, dear? And at other times, dou't you think we can be very happy in our house on the ave nue? Because little one, I have not lost a dollar rather gained a fortune iu whining you. I had no idea that Hel siuger would carry on the Joke; but thank God he did, for I have won you, and learned to distinguish the gold from the dros ! Mrs. Wyndham never visits the Ellls es, although she is ready to expire with envy whenever she meets Lily in her elegant phieton ; and the Grenvilles never tire of boasting of "the Ellises our cousins, you know !" ( A Pretty Tough Story. The Newark Ailveflinev says : " There lives in Sulem to-day a man who seven teen years ago was buried under the ground for thirty-six hours. He was slck.aud in the course of time was given up for dead. He was .burled, and iu digging a grave adjoinlpg his, thirty-six hours after, the grave digger heard a noise in the adjoining grave. Procuring help, the grave and coflln were opened, aud shortly after the buried man opened his eyes, regained his strength, aud is walking about the streets of Salem to day." A Pig full of Huckleberries. An empty pig aud a pull full of huckle berries were forwarded by express to Lapeer, Mich., the other day, and arriv ed an empty pail, and pig full of huckle berries. The company was ready to deliver all the goods, but the consignee refused to receipt for them on the ground that the consignment did not tally with the bill of lading. E3?"The other week George Wenrich, of Swatara valley, had a little experience iu hauling hay. In backing out of the threshing floor one of his horses turned up a plank or two, nis mud nmos caught, and on attempting to extricate himself, he slid into the hay rack and from there fell head foremost into the stable below. The other horse followed suit, and strange as it appears they both escaped with few scratches. tSS" A little child of Mr. Davis Myers, living south of Veedersburg, Ind., was bitten Wednesday by a rattlesnake while playlug in the yard. It died Thursday morning' after suflering great agony, the limb which was bitten hav ing swollen to several times its natural size. This is the second child Mr. My-, ers, has lost in the last few weeks by snake bite. tS"A. Mrs. Howard, of Burlington, Iowa, was awakened the other night by a strange Bensation about her ankles, as if something was twisting around aud binding them. Making a sudden spring from the bed and crying for help, she dlsovered that she had thrown a large rattlesnake on the floor. It was killed with much dilllculty, measured, when stretched out at full length, 31 feet. ' 63" A man wagered that he coull crawl through a drain 500 feet long at Steubenville, O. He went in through an aperture scarcely larger thau his body aud the spectators waited an hour for him to emerge at the other end. But he gut stuck in the centre and had to be dugout. The Job lasted all day, and when rescued he was almost dead. C3TA horse belouglug to Mr. John F. Segar, of Hampton, Va., deliberately committed suicide a few days ago by walking into the river and drowning himself. He could easily have swam back td shore, if his purpose had not been as indicated. The same animal has long been regarded as a confirmed crank. . . 83TAt New Sharon, Iowa, a constable voluuteered to watch a Btore which was to be robbed, but he fell asleep, and the robbers took his watch, money, pistol and mo'st of his clothes, and poured four gallons of molasses over his body. SUNDAY EEALI1T&. Do Your Best. ' "When I was a little boy," said a gen tleman, one evening, "I paid a visit to my grandfather, a venerable old man, whose black velvet cap and tassel, blue breeches and huge silver knee-buckles filled me with great awe. When I went to bid him good-by, he drew me between his knees, and, plaolng his hand on my head, said, "Grandchild, I have one thing to say to you ; will you remember It?" I stared Into his face and nodded, for I was afraid to promise aloud. "Well," he continued, "whatever you do, do the best you can." "This, in fact, was my grandfather's legacy to me, and It has proved better than gold, I never forgot his words, and I believe I have tried to act upon them. After reaching home my uncle gave Marcus and I some weeding to do In the garden. It was Wednesday after noon, and we had laid our plans for something else. Marcus, fretted and ill-humored at his disappointment, did not more than half do his work, and I began pretty much like him, until grandfather's advice came Into my mind, and I determined to follow it. In a word I "did my best." And, when my uncle came out, I shall never forget his look of approbation as his eyes glanced over my beds, or the fourpence he slip ped Into my hands afterward as he said my work was well done. Ah ! I was a glad and thankful boy, and poor Marcus was left to drudge over his beds' all the afternoon. "At 15 I was sent to the academy, where I had partly to earn my own way through the course. The lessons came hard at first, for I was not fond of study ; but grandfather's advice was my motto, and I tried to do my best. As a conse quence of this, though I was small of my age, and not very strong, my mother had three offers for me before the year was out, and one from the best merchant of the village, "a place" In whose store was considered very desirable. When I joined the church, I tried to do the Lord's work as well as I did my own, aud often, when I have been tempted to leave the Sunday-school, or let a hinder ance keep me from prayer meeting, or get discouraged In auy good thing, my grandfather's last words, "Do the best you can," have given me fresh courage, and I would again try." Here, then, was the key to this man's character. He is considered one of the best business men, one of the best citi zens, one of the best ofllcers of the church, one of the best friends of the poor, one of the best neighbors, fathers, husbands, friends; in a word he is uni versally beloved and respected. And what is the secret of it all ? He always tried to do the best he could. Let every boy and girl take this for their motto. Acted upon, it will do wonders for you. It will bring out powers and capabilities which will surprise and delight your selves and friends. How to Keep a Situation. Be ready to throw in an odd half hour or an hour when it will be an accommo dution, and don't seem to make a merit of it. Do it heartily. Though not a word be said, your employer will make a note of it; make yourself indispensa ble to him, and he will lose many pf the opposite kind before he will part with you. Those young men who watch the clock to see when the very second of their working hour is up who leave, no matter what state their work may bein, at precisely the same instant who cal culate the extra amount they can slight their work and yet not get reproved who are lavish of their employers' goods will be always the first to receive no. ticc, when times are dull, that their serv ices are no longer required. R5It Is an easy thing to find fault. It is easy to say that nobody is honest- It is easy to say that the church is to blame for It. It is easy to say that the church would be all right if the minis ter would do and preach what he ought. But it isn't easy to look on the best side, to see that there are hundreds of faith ful preachers, thousands of honest, sin cere men and women, countless acts of justice, charity and humility, which out weigh all grumbling of the grumblers, so that it lreally only the finest dust in balance. Let us be fair, and cheerful. The world is not all wrong. Everybody isn'ta rascal. Our neighbors are not all trying to cheat us. The church Is doing a good work for the world, and even the growl ers are not half so disagreeable as they seem. t5P"Duty itself is supreme delight when love is the inducement and labor. By such a principle the ignorant are enlightened, the hard-hearted softened, the disobedient reformed and the faithful encouraged. 0"Vhen a man owns himself to be in an error, he does but tell you in other words that he !s wiser than he was. ' f (V & h iElMllElEOl RHEUHftTtSttl, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, Backache, Soreness of the Chest, Gout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Swellings and Sprains, Burns and Scalds, General Bodily Pains, Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted Feet and Cars, and ail other Pains and Aches. , No Preparation on mrlli finals ft. jAmm On, as ft Bttfe.Httr', tltnpir hii'I elinip Exlenml Keuiedy. A trial entallfl but the comparatively trifling; outlay of tin renin, am) every one piini.Tlut; with ain can have cheap ami positive proof of ita claims. lilrectlons In Eleven Languages. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS AHD IJEALEE8 IN MEDICINE. A.VOGELER & CO., Tlnlttmnrr, JIM., V. S. M May 3, 1SS1 ly jyjUSSER & ALLEN - CENTRAL STORE NEWPORT, PENN'A. Now oiler the public A HAKE AND ELKOANT ASSORTMENT OP DRESS GOODS Consisting of all shades suitable for the season BLACK ALPACCAS AND Mourning Goods A SPECIALITY. BLEACHED AND UNBLEACHED MUSLINS, AT VARIOl'8 PKICE8. AN KNOLKS3 8KLECTION OF PRINTS' We sell aud do keep a good quality of SUGARS, COFFEES & SYRUPS Aud everything under the head of GROCERIES I Machine Needles and oil for all makes o Machines. To be convluced that our Roods are CHEAP AS THE CHEAPEST, 13 TO CALL AND EXAMINE STOCK. No trouble to show goods. Don't forget the CENTRAL STORE, Newport, Perry County, Pa. PURE TINTED GLOSS PAINT ! DOA'T make experiments on your building with untried aud unreliable amides, at jour expense. DO'T PAY for water and benzine tl.fO to IJ.tO per gallon. I0 BUY the Lucas reliable and guaranteed Tin'ed Gloss PAirSTS. Circulars an J Sample Cards of Faint mailed on application. JOHN LUCAS & CO, 111 North Third Street, 13ni Philadelphia, Pa. 1 1 pi iAYolimelvea br maldnir money when a roldeu Hhl Wi-hanee If otlered. Hereby alway keefiu IlkLI poverty from your d.or. Tho who atway take advantage of the tom1 changes for makiittf- money that are orivred, treut-raiiy O'.-ci.iim wealthy, Ulle tboe. wlio lo not improve ;u'h chutjees remain in Hetfy. Ye want mauy men, women, buya aotl mrl to work for lis ri,.-hl iu their own I.M'alitiea. The buine. wul pay more thau ten tiniea ordinary watte. We furiuh in exieiiiv.j outlit and all that you need, free. No one who eUirata'a fails to ma!: money verv rapidly. You can devote your whole time to the work, or only your apare moment, t'uh inf .nnaliou and ail that i needed aeut free,. Adarv.asTl.NsoN CO., Ponlaud, Majna i- ESTATE NOTICE. Notice Is hereby given, that letters of administration ou the estate of Kev. S. 8. Itlrhniond late of Torone township. Perry County. Pa., dei'eaed. have been warned to the undersigned. P, O. Address LaudUburg. Ferty County. Pa. All persons Indebted to said estate are request ed to make immediate payment and tfco-us having claims will present them duly authenticated or settleineut to ALBERT E. RICHMOND. Cms.H. Smit-It, Att'y. Administrator. May 10.