How They Farm in Rowan. i - i .1 He's Ferry roaa yesceraay. to . chairman- ; - mmissioners, went down how the convict force was getting : see 4vvay down the road in the S'y Wocd" section he saw some-'2- that has been heard of before his very seldom seen in this part ot nnntrv' In a large cotton patch - a ffoman was plowing. That would not have attracted much attention of tsef but at the other end of the plow instead of a horse the woman's hus band was hitched up in harness and uilin the plowi As sumissive as a but with a dexterity that would "have made- a horse blush, he-pulled ;.and tugged at the plow, obeying ex 'plici;lythe "gee" and "vvohaw of Words of heer. ROYAL JOKES. te woman between the handles, Salisbury World, Liu k, "-There is no such thing as luck,'.: si:d Colonel North once.' 'r Every body in this world has chances yes,; -ever)'Doa iiuuj tuc wunviug cuuin vvho strikes a seam of coal which was never thought ot by the mining engi neer to the colliery proprietor who gets information regarding . that seam and resolves to work it. Wha; peo ple call luck simply means that a man sees his chance, holds on to ;it, and at the right moment works it for himself. Luck ? Nonsense I Luck is simply the faculty of seizing pass ing opportunities" Exchange. Don't be alraid to speak them. Some of your friends are hungry to hear them. You ,can find no better way of helping people to do better than by speaking words of apprecia tion for what they have already done. Your wife will cook a better dinner to-morrow if you praise her a little tor, the well-cooked dishes of to-day. The parson will -preach ywith' new fire .and force, ifx you can honestly shake his hand, and say that his last sermon went straight to your heart, and in spired you . with better purposes. The mechanic feels in a better mpod for his work, if he is . sure his skill will not go unappreciated. It seems ,a pity, since God has made man with such a deep hunger for praise, that some of them get so' little of it. Re- I member, there1 is no one in whose . - ... - - . - actions' something cannot Je found Worthy of commendation. Cheering words give wings to wearyjfeet, and new life to the laging purpose. Don't grudge the help you can afford your fellow men by giving them the praise and cheer they have fairly earned. They are discouraged tor lack of somebody's frank and honest appro val. Give ,j them yours in a hearty way and jt will set them on their . 4 w . I - way again. 4 Ex. ! 7 It will astonish- you how quickly Johnson's .Magnetic' Oil will kill all in ternal acjies and plains for man and beast. .5i;oo size 50 cents-; 50 cent size 25 cents, at Hargrave's. ' ."Death of an Eccentric Citizen. I Lewis Click died Monday at his home, near Hot Springs, aged SS. centric. It is related that he once sentenced his dog, alter going through .the regular form of a trial, to eleven, year's close confinement, for killing a chicken. The dog was imprisoned for seven years in an old crib, till fi nalijr some one carried the animal away and it was never seen after wards. Another time Click sentenced an ox for tnree years to a pen ten leet square for pushing. down a few pannels of fence. The ox served the sentence Charlotte Observer. ; TjRfcD MOTHERS find help m Hood's Sarsaparilla, which gives them pure blood, a good appetite and new and needed STRENGTH. . . . Nothing but politics ; people talk it, oftentimes to the deteriment o their business interests, politician make speeches about it, mostly full of froth , wind and falsehoods, news papers are full of it, to the exclusion of almost everything else. Business will, to a great extent, be paralyzed until after the oWtinn anH thr rpmilt - - , . - - Will il . I 1 Ml "" uc mat one set, ot incapaoies win :oe turned out and another set equal ly incapable will be put in. Politics .area curse to this country anyway. Argonaut. , Texas is not only the biggest State Ir the Union, but lays claim to the Dlggest hog ever raised in the United States. The hog weighs 1,430 Pounds and is eight feet three inches 1Qng. He measures six feet around the-neck, eight feet around the body ad stands four, feet, one inch high. feet are as large as those of a COrnmn ox and the leg bone larger an that ot the largest steer. He is Poland China and Red Jersey. He eats corn like an ox, takes the whole ear in his mouth at once and eats the . D as well" as the corn, eacing from to fifty ears of corn at a time. ere seems to be - no surplus flesh nim and physicians who have ex arniaed trje hog say he can easily be made to reach 2,200 pounds. The 0vv ner T- Ratigan , paid $2 50 lor lor and has been offered $1,500 0r him. He has a fire policy on the janimal for $5,000. No other hog, it ls said ever reached such tremendous Portions. The oldest ex-UnitedStates Senator living is Hon. James W. Bradbury, of Augusta, Me., who celebrated his ninety-fourth birthday a lew days ago. His health is excellent and his interest in politics keen. jIr. Brad bury has been a lifelong Democrat. He was sent to the- United States Senate is 1846, and occtpied a seat next to that of Jefferson Davis. With him in the Senate were 1 W ebster, Clay, Calhoun, Hamlin, Mason, Ben ton,. Hale, Seward and Cliase. Mr. Bradbury was graduated from Bow doiri in the -famous class of 1825. in which were Longfellow, Hawthorne, Horatio . Bridge, George "; Berrett Cheever, John Stevens, Cabot Abbott, Jonathan Cilley, killed , in j a duel in Bladonsburg, Md., by Wiih'am J. Gravec, of Kentucky, and others who became men of note. Mr. jBradbury considers Daniel Webster the great est man he ever knew. i what He Needed Most. "-".- - i j' A story is told of a now famous American artist vvho had hard luck in his Paris student days. One day he was seen in the street with his clothes in the last stages of rags; and his shoes tied with twine. . There was a wild gleam in his eye when he caught sight of a friend across the street. "I've got $100!" he cried, waving the bill in the air, oblivious of the crowd. :"One hundred dollars ;and I'm going to buy some shoe-strings." Chicago News. ! ; The Landmark : says that a phase of the new woman business in States ville is that she gets drunkj and fights the coppers. For the good name of the town and the peace and dignity of the State, to say nothing of the new woman herselt it is to be sincere ly hoped there is not many of her representating I this particular phase of the business. Ex. j Etoiies Ilajfcl Capers Indulged In fcy Mnarchs and Princes. Royalty dearly loves a joke, and nowhere are practical jokes so much in yoguo as in the palaces of the old Tvorld monarchs. Curiously enough, their idea of joking, like their con ception cf wit, is inclined to rough ness and even to downright coarse ness, as tell as vulgarity, rather than to delicacy, and many a prac tical joke; has heen perpetrated in a palace tlmt -would never have been tolerated in a private house. One of fho most peculiar practical jokes -was that organized in the council chamber of the late Kins: Alfonso of Spain by his intimate friend and favorite companion, the Duko cf Tarn an es, who accompanied the Infanta Eulalia to this country in 1893.. ; ; ; y It was during carnival time, and the king had complained to the duke that it was a very dreary affair and entreated the nobleman to do something to liven things up a bit. The following looming when the king entered his council chamber he was almost pitched over by a most extraordinary apparition. It ap peared to bo a bag such as millers use for flour, and it was terminated by a pair of bowlegs . that were prancing about in every direction. The architecture of these legs at once revealed to the kingvtke iden tity 9f the human flourhag. It was no other than tho little minister of agriculture, who, with the assist ance Of the Cuke of Tarn an es and the apparently grave and auster-e minister of foreign affairs," had .dressed himself in his odd rig. The king joined so heartily in tho laugh ter provoked by the extravagant ahtics of his cabinet cfQcer. that the tears streamed down his face, nor, was his mirth diminished when the minister, after having finally extri cated himself from the bag, showed himself with-his hair, his beard' and his .uniform literally covered With flour. .. ' Another monarch - who is' very fond of practical joking. is Emperor William of Germany, v On 0120 occa sion about a year after lie ascended the throne his right hand was seri ously injured during thorough horse play that takes place every St. .Syl vester cf New Year's eve in the streets cf Berlin. " On that night no citizen ventures to appoar upon any public thoroughfare wearing a tall hat of oven a derby.! The students havo 1'roni tirao immemorial had a sort of unwritten right to bonnet any civilian thus arrayed by smash ing his hat with a sharp blow of the fist upon its crown. Tho kaiser, who had always joined in this form of sport before his ac cession to the crown, on the first New Year's eve that followed tho death of his lamented father' walked out with the collar of his coat well turned up and a fur cap drawn down over his eyes so as to conceal his identity. He soon had several badly, wrecked hats to hi; credit. He then encountered an elderly citizen of portly figure and benevolent de meanor, whose looks, however, be lied his character. He had been bon neted in. previous years and was re solved to teach his tormentors a les son. So he had made a sort of leath er skullcap, thick in texture and studded with long, sharp nails. So when the emperor brought down his fist with all his might on the inoffensive looking tall hat his hand was pierced in many places by tho nails and covered with blood, the injuries at one time threatening lockjaw. The citizen was arrested and imprisoned pending a decision as to whether he should be prose cuted on a charge of "leze majesty. " He was, however, released, as his offense was entirely an innocent one San Francisco Examiner. LUCK OF OLD BOATS. The Ideal Ear. j An ear to bo perfect should be daintily, and delicately formed, with the curves all artistic and pretty. It should be neither too thin nor too fat, but a pleasing medium between the two. It should be delicate rose color on the inside and pure white on the outside. The lobe of the ear should be small and well shaped and should curve up toward 3 the cheek, not hang down in an inartistic man ner: A small ear is usually a sign of birtfy and good breeding, but, like 'everything else, there are vast ex ceptions to this rule: New York World. " : ; " -I - . ; : v - lie Had Her. 1 Mrs. Nowwife You promised that when we were married you would grant my slightest ' wish, and now yoti refuse me a $50 bonnet. Mr. New wife liemember, my dearI said slightest Detroit Tree Press. - - In the Same Handwriting;. ' A gentleman at the Riggs House was responsible for this story: T reached home after business hours the other day for supper and was handed two telegrams from the same telegraph company. After I had read the first I handed it to my wife. It was from a brother out west, who was coming to pay me a short visit. " 'What did he send the other one about?5 asked my wife, as she read the first one and looked at the writ ing on the envelopeof the second. I cpened it and told her it was not from him, but was from another businessman. "That's funny,' she said. 'They are both directed to you in the same handwriting. ' "Washington Times. A fabric made of pine and spruce wood pulp is made into overcoats in Leeds, England. It looks like frieze. In Collisions on the Lakes the Valuable Vessels Fare the Worst. "Did you" ever notice," said an old mariner," 'that when a collision occurs on the lakes the better boat, ' in nine cases out of ten, gets the worst cf it and generally goes to tho bottom? On the other hand, the old boat for in a great' many instances it is an old boat receives little dam age, if any. If she is damaged, her owners send her to some drydock to be patched up. ' "I havo always found that to be the case," continued the old man who for the past 40 years has earned his livelihood on the lakes. "In all tho collisions that I can remember be- j tween a now and an old boat the old j ono, somehow or other, managed to stay on top of the water. Take, for , instance, the sinking of the Lehigh Valley liner Cayuga, which occur-j red on tho 10th cf last May. She col- j lided with the steamer Joseph L. Hurd and was sunk in Lake Michi gan, near Skilligalee light, The ' Cayuga, which was one of tho best steamers on ;the lakes, was bound down with a load of grain and mer-; chandiso. The Hurd was an old lum-1 ber barge, which had been condemn- i ed onco and then rebuilt. She was not worth much, while the Cayuga" was worth somewhere in the neigh borhood of 200,000. L ! "At the time of tho collision the fog was very heavy and lay close-to j the water in banks. A fog bank is a peculiar thing to run up against, becapse one minute you are right in ; the midst of it anl the nest you are ' through it, only to meet another. For this reason they are very puz zling and have a tendency to get a fellow rattled for a minute. .A min ute is not very long, but a man is likely to lose his boat as well as his life in that short space of time. A captain has no business to get rattled,-and especially x when running in a fog. Tho best of them will lose ! their :heads,' and when in that state are liable to give orders they ought not to have given. ; '. . : "That was the way tho fog acted on the night that the Cayuga went down. Tho night signals had appar ently been given, but with hardly a minute's warning the Hurd took a sheer and struck the Cayuga amid shij)s. The Cayuga Went down in about five minutes, and the Hard made for the land,. which was not very If ar off, where she was beached. She was leaking quite badly. ; Tem porary repaii'3 wero made, and she was then towed to a drydock. She camq out again later in the season and ran in the lumber trade on Lake Michigan. "The Cayuga, however,, is still at the bottom, lying in about 101 feet of water, and her chances for re maining there are very good. "Let me cite youanother instance where the better boat was. sunk' by an bid one well, I won't . say she was old, for she" had not been in commission ery long. She was an ungainly looking craft and about the unluckiest boat that had been built on the lakes in some time. She was called the Jack. Her first "feat that brought her before public notice was when she collided with one of the locks in the Welland canal. Navi gation was delayed for several days by tho accident. "The next prominent feat that she I accomplished was to sink the big steel steamer Norman, which was owned by the Menominee Steamship company. She sunk her in the mid dle of Lake Huron and in deep water. In fact, it has been a mystery where she did go down, for they have nevr eribeen able to locate her. She was worth $200, 000. The 'Jack sustained little damage and was soon in com mission again. Now, there are two boats which were worth about $400, 000, and both were sunk by boats which could bo bought for $20,000, and that would be a big price ' for them." Buffalo Express. ' j - . The keenest pangs the wretched find are rapture to t'he dreary void, the leafless desert of the mind, the waste of feelings unemployed. Byron. ; ' From JT.S.Jmrnal of Hedlcint Prof . "W. H. Peeke, who jiiakes a specialty ot Epilepsy, has without doubt treated and cur ed mote cases than any living: Physician ; hia success, is astonishing;. We have heard of cases Of ao years' standing cured oy him. He publishes A valuable work oa this dis ease, which he sends .with a tie of hia absolute cure, free to any sufferers who may send their P. O. and Express address. We advise anyone wisning: a cure to address SzcL7 Bt ? 2 4 Cedar SU, ErwTcr r rrN o CU RE5 ALL 5KIN AND BLDQD DI5EA5E5. Pty nciic eadoro . F. F. spicodid oombla ailon, , and prnctib It with gmt taHtfartioa for th enret of all gyphllst, jSyphUitic Rheaaaatiiai, Soroiuiou Lk:n ad jrei, jaDduIar Swelling!, Klieumatiua, Ma!r., old Chromic Clten t'a.s. hav resisted all trilmsct, C.t-rh, r w r mm 3 2 o UWJ'J CURES a e p RnSQH ctta L.'kfiioJ, Sczema, Chroiiic iwciie CuiiA-mUj Mr curUl Pc'ko?, Tetter, Soald Head, eV., e:c : e. Y. if. s a powerful tntc, iind an err;Ient rpatl3r. rf J ii . .puuulUK f p uh syteiu ra)u'. , Ladttii p boss iVstenis are poisoned and whots blood I la -Bit IK CURES CtrKM&LARIA jN-cuiiariv UeinrliUii Dv tue wontierful tonic uU tlooU- v cleansintf properties of P. P. P., Prfcldy Ash, Pok Root I "I ICFUIIII. . LIPPMAN'BEOS., Proprietors, Pruggifts, Lippman'sBlocIc, SAVAHHAH. GAr Book bn Blood Diseases mailed free. For EGLECTIG magazine. Fore "The Ftifty-second Year. HE V Pr) those Ameri emhrz views the "reade presen sale at Hargrave's Piaramcy. -OF- ga Literature , Science and Art. ' LlTKKATCRE OF THE WORLD.' 8896. ECLECTIC MAGAZINE rei dutes from Foreign Periodicals alt .articles which are; valuable, to kan Readers! Its field of selection ces all the leadings Foreign Re- Magazines and journals, and of all, classes ot intelligent j-s are consulted in the articles ted. Articles from the V . Ablest Writers in the World wiHtik found in its columns. tastes i r ' . The following list gives the! principle peri odicals selected from, and the names of some of the hvell-known lauthors whose articles ap- peareq in the Eclectic. . IVriodicals. ! I Authors. V.Testnlinster Review. ;IIon. W. -E. Gladstone. Couteibparary .KevieAv'A ndrew iMntr, Fprtn:htly Iteview. IProf. Iax 31ueller. Nineteenth Century. -J. Norman Lockja-r, Sc'ieneie Keview. . i ulames liryce. M. P., lilack ood's Matrazine.i William Black, Cornhill Magazine, . iW.'H. Mallock, Macmlllan's Magazine, Herbert spencer. New lie view',- Natioijal Keview, : Chamljer's Journal, Temple liar, Thfe Abademy, I The Ajtheiifeum, j Publiq Opinion, ! Satur4ay Keview, The Spectator, T. P. Mabaffy, Sir Kobert lialh I'nnce ivropotkin Archdeacon l"arrarT St. George Mivart, Rev. H. R. Haweis, Frederick Harrison. - Mrs. Oliphant, Karl Blind, etc., etc. The aim of the ECLECTIC is to be instructive and iriot sensational, and it commends itself particularly to Teach ers. llawyers, Clergymen, and all intel ligent readers who desire to'keep in formed of the intellectual progress of the age. :' : : 'f . -, . Tpiirnfl Single copies 45 cents; one copy one lcimY year .5.00. Trial" subscrition for Ji monthjs $1.00. The Eclectic and any $4.00 Magazine to one address 8-00. .' ,Witfi the Eclectic and one good Ameri cal Monthly the reader will be fully aoreast of the times. J 5. R. FSLTOif, FaKir, Sighth St. Y. Wahted-An Idea S Protect! your ldeag; they may bring yoa wealth. Write JOHN WEDDERBURN A CO- Patent Attor neys, Washington, D. C, for their $1,800 prize offer and list of two hundred Inventions wanted. NOTICE. I want every man and woman in the United States habits k eases. Box and one will be. sent you free. interested in the Opinm and Whiakv to have one of my books, on these dig- Address ! B. M. Woolley, Atlanta, Ga., ....vj J 1 1 1 1 1 i i a m v. V-1 i , - L 1 I 1 Chiergman's Suits at M. T. Young's See our ' Dress Goods. M. T. Young. . -: : j" ... v;.,;;:":i"v;:;." Lumber 1 Wanted Cut Accurately and Rar' iaiy on tne FARQUHAR Variable Friction Feed Saw Mill With Quick Recedtne Head I m i t " iOiocksi capacity a.UDU to 30,000 feet, with Eneinei i a r auu wiiers irom 12 to 40 Horse Power. or run lescripUve catalogue address . . A. B. FARQUHAR CO., Ltd:, :J YORK, PA,