Delta Herald, The (Newspaper) - January 27, 1888, Delta, Pennsylvania Petto PUBLISHED WEEKLY BT THE Herald Publishing Company PA. OFFICE IX f HE f 1.60 per In f paid within aiz attar MX A failure to direct at the expiration tha time subscribed will be considered AB a new Ha 1 af time by all AN INDEPENDENT AJTD JOB PRINTING WILL Special and Prompt Attention AT THK EITHER PLAIN OR 5N VOL. YORK JANUARY 1888. NO. Prices Terms Cash and Business Cards AT TEFFERSON 429'K BEL MO. 1HAS. A. Pa. Careful attention given to all Legal ty AT evenings days until 41 tf JAMES R. 45 St. Paul Md. J. S. MAIM Business can be left and cada at the law office of Hon. Branch Office at Glen Tu. s days and A. Will give prompt attention to business to his TT W. PA. Street July F. Bay H. C. NILES A Successors to Blackford it Office Opposite the Court Pa. Con- in English and g. J. R. 7 EAST MARKET Hon A Carl's in English and dec 19 B. PA. 1 Centre second J W. N. W. Corner sep 10-'81-tf EVI in English and Office in opposite eep 10-'82 tf L. General Insurance in either York or Harford ties wi 1 receive S. Justice of the PA. All business attended to with care and fane 13 p P. Watchmaker and Opposite Court Honse oct 0. his professional services to the tit by strict to o merit their Prices erate and satisfaction 0 P. M. Main OF WOMAN A Office 10 to 1 to and 7 to 9. Evening hours applied to the treatment of Nasal Catarrh and its result without the bee of a9 100 and 100 Engravings in Sael 43d A Send three 2-cent stamps for sample or of the Oldest and Best agricultural Journal in the ORANGE 781 New William Merchant 108 S. George Odd hand and Do E. A. BARNITZ AND JEWELERS Ha 3 W. Market Pa. W. PA. AGENT FOR THE Fire Insurance Co. OF PA. ca Property r Stock by Light ning paid nether ensues t ESTATE PA. Real Estate in York or Harford ties bought or sold ou I MY O life my Child of the Thou chUd of child of joy and Of pea e an 1 my O Begot in and in sorrow i By warring doubts bewildered and J With tumult rife Art my O my j By shadows vainly by shadows hands outstretching the i With silence rife Art my j Hjorth in ARMSTRONG'S c. to GEORGE W. OF Woven Wire Hari Cotton and Husk and all Kinds of IN ALL ITS 132 134 N. Geone PAPERS Window Window AMD TABLE OIL 39 NORTH GAY STREET Opposite Odd 1ID. JACOB THE OLD AITD Paper and Window Shade Store Of Now prepared to the latest styles ol fall and send samples to any at lie country when application -s mat e JACOB 39 North Oay Has no branch or any connection auy other iu tiie SMALL CO. Small's Sons Building PRICES Near the N. C. R W. Columbia Bicycles And MANY wait on And health on the practical which T ed subjecting the qualities of steel from which it is constructed to tne standard of Government I free to assert that you may claim that the NOT ITS TV QUALITY Of all of which is shown in tbe tabulated results in J. U. S. Inspector of POPE MFG. ASD 1886. F U E N I T U R E E. N. GST The Largest and oj Furniture in the on all of T K and ui in Tablet Lef fit N. Ci jy In the days of days ot or the golden of you a certain miner's camp on Yuba lived a queer named He was an j honest not materially l from his excepting that he had j a habit of talking to From tlie simple that from the common custom in he was of course voted by the other To call all persons who do not follow the customs of the ma is a constant habit with n. But day after day Armstrong worked away with his p ck and caring nothing lor the remarks of h'S and seeming to for no partner iu his toils or rest save the personage whom he always ad- dressed ia the second person and with whom he was almost in and earnest The drift of talk while at woik would be as io tough wo a pound tinie to waste ii I don't wish I wus in the This mighty hird what a fool you are to be talking that with three ounces a day right under j our and nothing to do but just to dig it His conversation would be duly with strokes of the pick and lifts of the loaded And so the days would pass and Armstrong worked and slept and talked with bis invisible it happened in due cours of time that the class o human Commonly called made appearance at the camp where Armstrong had been As lie was not above fol owing the example of his he paid the newcomers a It is old After watching tho gam awhile he concluded it was the simplest thing in the t-o he tried his luck and any ex- would set Armstrong to ing aud talking to worse than It was so this lie as he about going to work the next is the Uyou in your What's the use of your into a hole in the ground to dig for three ounces a fact you are You are not made for kind of Suppose you just throw away your pick and e the buy a suit of store dress up like a born and go at some business that suits your Armstrong was not long in uniting these thoughts and sayings into He left the diggings aud invested in line Me looked like another but he was still the same He was not long in an opportunity to try a new Walking forth in his outfit he had just concluded a long with himself about his bright when he halted in front of a large tent with a over Armstrong went in. It did not seem to him that he re very but it was long enough to work a wonderful revolution in his When he came out he a changed is to he was 11 He was He had his lost his new his everything but his new Clothes and habit of talking to It K useless to siy that he was Armstrong was very ljut there was no one to be ma 1 at but Armstrong so self number two was in for a rough you are a nice fool you I need not ro- peat all the bird he Like j King he within himself i no pity for Uut mere words were not t. Tt was a for Hut 1 thought of or any other form of i Ho was altogether too as well as too sensible for Yet he re- soiled on something real and cal in the way of reformatory He felt the need of a self-imposed decree of bankruptcy that should render the e ss as and prevent a similar in the S i tiie broken firm of went forth ia long and of his thoughts were almost too deep for Bit finally he stood by the dusty road along which the gieat freighting wagons were hauling es to the mining camp up the Sacra One of wagons drawn by six yoke of was just in slow came the reports of long f shouted the driver ns no cast a sidelong wondering all them store was a when strong lhe long column of dust behind tint wagon he taken with an So he shouted to the driver to know if he might be allowed to walk in the road behind the in and said the said wish to you crazy the accommodating as swung his Then came the of met Greek more than did the two contending spirits comp finu of Self that the bead of the git right ia the middle of that and walk in that dust behind thaf with these it is fifteen and dusty all the sin take the squander your money on three-card I'll you a the as he looked over his with a mingling of contempt or Wonder on his dusty More and more spitefully snapped the swinging whip as the ed oxen toiled mile under the heat of a ber And therein the road trudged Armstrong behind tne 1 but not lie was a man who always his serves you i Any man who will fool his money away at three-card monte deserves to walk in the d will spoil these i don't you deserve dust till my any man who gambles all his dust away at three-card monte i to have dust in his alkali dust at dust chokes any mm who will at monte deserves to be Keep the middle of the road up to the Do you think you will ever buck at monte And so the poor sell coughed and and walked nnd alter hour after while the eat wagou groaned and the driver bawled and swung his the patient oxen gave their shoulder to lhe aud the golden sun of tember sank toward lhe The shadows of evening were beginning to fall when the wagon halte 1 at called Packer's on the we sighed just his I as he looked at the you the head of the buck your money away at monte and talk go light down the into the As the command was and a spint of obedience the Armstrong obeyed without parley and down he over head and store clothes and into the cold ta n It was a long time that he remained in the water and under the He would come to the surface little while to t you understand It was impossible for Armstrong to for- bear would say iis he came up and the water from his buck your money card will How ilo you like the water His words of duly punctuated by ir- regular plunges and catchings of the bre It s happened that the man who kept the shanty hotel at the Packer's had a woman for a being a kind-hearted besought her lord to go down and the poor crazy man out the paid the ox ain't a a He walked behind wagon and talked to himself all the way from Thereupon arose a lengthy discussion about the difference betu een a crazy urxn and a But after a while the lord and the ox driver went down to the ml agreed to go Armstrong's ist bucking ai monte in the future if he come out of the he came out and went up to the have a cup of tea or said the said will take Is sure as can said the But she brought two cups as and she in- kindly as and red answered do believe he is a said the as she went for the pepper and with deliberate put a spoonful of red pepper into the tea and a spoonful of mustard into the Then he poured the two together into tin Then the old conflict aid high above thedin of rattling tin cups and sounded the stern drink it A momentary ition and a few desperate gulps and it said our as his throat burned and the tears ran down his eye buck your money away at three-card do the above very nearly ended the battle with poor He was silent for a and everybody else was After a white the landlord tured to suggest that a bed could be provided if it was said sleep on the Yon said eyeing the landlord with a peculiar fool has been squandering pold dust at docs not deserve to sleep iu a Armstrong 1 the day's battle by going to bed on the Then came the He Krst dreamed that j he was sleeping on tho Pole and I his bead in the alt the in were in h s dreame 1 he hid d Mount Hiast i for the o d mountain had suddenly become an volcano and and acres o' hot Then the and he seemed to have found his final abode in a place the Ics of h And he and groaned ii a nl saying to him in a mo king buck our money away al three-card do Put even th s troubled sleep had an end at When at himself in the liung on tho wall his face of wisdom tint lie never there So he think hav a s m. You can go back to your mining aad leave monte showed that was His was The looked when he at and hint r. lift he had learned a of them md never poor AT RELIGIOUS even giving it to monte But the lirm was never broken in that way but After whenever he i saw one of the peculiar or j Armstrong would shake I bis head with a knowing air and say to j himself as he passed i you've been you know you don't buck your money away at three card i Some of Last Year's I Ace to the New York here 1 are some of the inventions made during i A round rubber with little spikes all over on which the cashier di ops the silver aud from which the ei stonier easily picks it. A cheese of a swing knife which the grocer cut ten ounces from the cheese j whenever the customer orders half a j A balloon which carries a lightning rod high in air over oil A selling that drops out au clips the end and ex- poses a match and a piece of eo a nickel or lead is dropped in a slit iu the side of the A protector by which a woolen pad is snugly carried on the end of the nose in cold An electrical boot blacking in which a brush is rapidly revolved in a i The whirling brush brings the shine in of the time of the old vibratory elbow 1 A rubber funnel may be fitted over the big end so ai to en- close all the hair while the barber p A tube hangs down so to carry away the while a for out the a funnel and a tube are A monster with places for two men in H basket swung below che who operate the machine with levers 1 geared to the A decoy duck with a variety of de- Au air pump to force oil from a tank I on a ship over a stormy I A fa i rotated by the wheels of a baby carriage to keep the Hies oil the A h pen that looks like i but comfortable chairs A device will prevent the restless individual from kicking the clothes off the It the invention of a Chicago A new g n with a the i and which have coils of tinum wire is. Pressing the trigger connects the coil with the A rocking chair and cradle 1 t A combined kitchen ventilator and being a device for con- t the ventilator wheels commonly j placed iu windows with the lumily at A German paper publishes some inter- esting details of the daily life of Prince says our that the Prince hardly ever gets tip before unless he has to attend an important Parliamentary Hut it mint be that he only goes to bed after working i. every In the bedroom a lamp is kept burning all the numbers of messages often requiring his personal attention being brought in during the In con- sideration of the late hours kept by the snipper is served late iu the and seldom finished before mid- Beside the Princess Count and Countess partakes of almost every regularly leaving the palace at p. when a class cab always takes them birthday is always a great feast and holiday of the In the kitchen a barrel of wine is vided by Princess two bands are in and the ilies appear on the The Prince comes talks with the and distributes sweets to the The pleasant relations between master and servant are also evident from the fact that the Princess always gives six Easter to each of the The police for the Prince consist of a Sergeant and eight If the Prince is away from home four bles go with him and four remain at the and all of them arc entitled to ar- rest any suspicious be it at at or at It was at where Bismarck's large dog Sultan was The declared at the time that she would make provision for life for anyone who could point out the Sultan was more intelligent than but i is more faithful of the and will take food out of the hand of any member of Prince but I never from a as one of the men has learned to his It is well known that at Berlin the lor is rarely and only some of the inhabitants of the Yor Scrape have the privilege of seeing him sometimes ing in his Brain The man who possessed the heaviest I brain yet weighed was an American who does not seem to have been otherwise even for the excellence of his iron Since that i though greaf pains have been taken to ascertain the brain weight of celebrated not one record exists of the of famous The brain of Kliot was The following passage in her the j in was so much with the grand of her head that he Evans up to I to h ivc a cast thinks after that of her head showd the largest brow to any person re- W Prairie There is a chain of prairie dog towns ihe Texas and Pacific for a of of the villages cover five of Hunters say it is almost impossible to kill one of 'the and get h's fo quick y docs ho into his hole at the of Deluging their biles with will not drive I THE PAKT HK WAS TO PLAY IK LINCOLN S ASSASSINATION lo the Into Total 1'Ian Spoiled n Trivial Franklin Kilts tells in tlit 1. i how an employe at would have an important art in Lincoln's tion but fora trivial incident spoiled the well-arranged Mr. Kilts The man 1 to was tin gas man of Such a person is an important factor behind the s He has sole of the and at the signal of the staue ers and the turn off nnd lights up the etc All this is done by hing different electric but at Ford's the clumsy system of that day was in Turn cocks were attached to the pipes in a chest set well back on the out of The gas mai kept the and he alone had to the ll is mistake to regard Booth as a bent on executing his scheme even at the of his own public manner of the his to the in full view of was adopted ou the pressure of the when his i wn matured scheme had de Much as he wanted to kill the he never wanted to be known as the His was and its very seemed to insure its party having been seated in their at a given the was to 1 c turne 1 leaving the whole house iu having marked the t position of h's at the and having to would promptly d t the the So would be the confusion and uproar in the audience that lucked the h u e. over the mere fact of total the horrible just anil accomplished could n -t be m known for time so thai it could b- understood The gas man have lo. kc 1 the chest aid quietly 1 the key in his probably route for it might be half nn hour the house could In meantime the of the crimo had been hidden by the It would not be iu the case of the llu for although Booth had taken the precaution to a i ready iu the he j 1 it a mere There would be no nothing more in against h m if his 1 for lhe turning off of the gas wus thought to be the master stroke of the plot None but a nun with a ong instinct could have ch it. the render the The fall of and and pursuit and surrender of I ee hud lowed in occurring but a few dais Tho North wus in a transport of Washington full a thousand of them would al Ford's thut and it known that the President would teml The saw that something besid s the rather tame play of must be to satisfy the of men's So it was made part of the gramme when the President's was several quartettes should take the st and sing the 'Tis of the naturally joining in. A line of this anthem was to nish the signal for the gas With the last short line of the first freedom the whole theater was to be plunged in and the murder would swiftly Down to a time possibly not more than one preceding the singing of thj fatal events seemed to march straight on to the consummation of the The overture Has the Major Hathbone and Miss Harris had ar- rived and were amid the of the of from the stage had Booth at the box one hand on the the other on his the gas be- hind the scenes went to his And It was the at I who that the sublime to the is but a The truth of the ing was nevei proved as it was in that An of the any had for days been on what in days is commonly known its lie was lingering about the wings on this evening in a boozy when the caught sight of and pro reeded to give him Todo I so more at ease he plumped the de- i down on the and I took a seat The gas man i and saw at on c that the could not be He did not dare to draw attention to his by j the manager to To I be watched was to insure him the i The went freedom j was rolled through hou c. the lights were undimmed th finished with wild pi iv was And there in the lobby was with striding now by -i d n different h s han I arid his public assassination that au Him a poor .i with a wick fitted into up a aii to puss thus -i of to the interior well i circular flame At gand lamp without a h day he was in his work ami sitting before burn ipg His little brother by pla a bottomless oil different Suddenly ho it upon the of shot up tho neck of With increased v It for it fl mind idea or a limp his invention was In. menu to ilo it. some 1 We to tins I That is our souls lo our hearts ft hush That is to let them I Ttio of I We mean to do it. i When il is We'll sit and th come j As tbe .it tlie u To for the angels passing We our hearts tnat when the stress i Of the life work readies the I i When the weight that we groan with i i We'll welcome sneti calm As banishes i And ealt the in. The ilay tlint of cutnes at length of And broken In spirit of AVe drop the door of j And wait mid watch as tho tiny wanes angels we meant to call are gonel i I of the A religious has recently into existence this name I The title is not It is t upor i the fact that every Christian whatever kind's o inspired authority j yo shall mv sons and daugh kn w how even wi republican attach to anv tion from royalty To have 1 ecu presentee at to h id a a from or prince or prin this Is to proud and w-e the memory of i to our Yet wl at honor of liow little worth in and at best few can attain it But a higher is tu each t ne of not h the o the king ot tint h waits to adopt u into Ins muke us his Theie is no empty honor mote Jt is not n t tint when lio in iho are the King's h on we shall when irs it titles passet The kind's Ant father is nn Inni ed no He is the maker ot the To him and do c Hs tills thi he What a to daughters of such a kinji This confers upon us sweet solemn aro What i ore the privileges of ihe common o an To his dignity nnd to wear his to ex tend a helping to ottier in til tunes of the i has it which should considered our dear tst The king's do not refer to particular no nia of their exalted nnd may be lound in lowliest nnd in humblest But their lives nne you will to they Liko Brotner they go doing They live no for Ives but lor Perfect do not to but t ey are so dai ly for more conformity tu tho imago likeness of First and then Tills should he motto of our First be his children i hU luve in our do hN so shall we prove our right to called the king's do not need to go far away from homo t claim our i are not required to We cnn ft cup of water in his we cnn spenk a kindly nurse a cnn sit for ai hour with the aged or can take a feat flowers to brighten an cai lend a hook to some oao who It even ministries ou we cull at by our patience ir privation ard our serenity in affliction find show that wo are abiding in His lovi whoso daughters we F. of Shall the 18.SS be one of the of more mai more than was true of it What graver inquiry can nov press alike pulpit and upon pew every That veteran and most Rev. Theodore L. O. thus urges this matter home to hearts in tho Xew York amid all the mysteries that are cori M it h the of there ale some livings wrich ar- tolerably One that a church keep in such a state of warm normal activity that shall not need any Then will be no slumber to out of Hichard of Kidderminster never had uny of declension Mr. Spurgeon's Church in i set m to pi is at i anthracite glow nil the so t the condition of the We admit there are such things ns waves of influence that over a church or a citi wo ack our often pours out more rit one time than stilt the s remains that n mav keep up to such n. high marl of and watch ing it no declen ions of sin U Christ go Of ai e is no long p rml disgraceful tion and no for a It is neither E or a condition of n iiro to of and up nn I thawing i ar fine year and the next Vo in that int rmit why should hundre t ians attempt to do a j Another fact is that while the i Spirit present in n i-l The manife -ions ol the Spi pov r moy Then nay t e at on i -on than 1.1 not i he only t- ue lidemark of a in ic I i ot ue that di ife there in warm cm laming after leto ftt out tint as them in A gi of the hir to 01 f c Mfi I know of ministers whi n to the in nl t N t do not how fast out at the r Con- to Chust are not tney t If a eh is in a co declining stale here is it liv True re- It mint i pull up nto and To a re- Scriptural em- aril not n In 1 i was whence irt and n' and do The first in a- Kf h- The r of 4 I rs night fter int r. own f. TIT aid the n hole did iot a nnn to i d He to meet His half Oo I o if you a