3 Otalm fi)rcoi;L ADVERTI6 ING. djjhafham Record. j H. A. LONDON, Jr., editor avd rnornirroit On aqnara, on tniertioiu Om quire, two Intortloai. UK tft TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION: (2.00 100 fn ooiy sU month! On copy, ttirwmortl, VOL. V. PITTSB01lO CHATHAM CO., N. C MARCH 15, 1883. i Fr larger B4vrti!vmntUbfn! oor'rap'. i9 NO. 27. BONO OF TIM How worn a theme is that of Hm Then why do I begin to rhyme Cpou it bow T BeeaoM to-night the air is filled With voioea that will not be tUUed They will not eeasr. And always sing the same refrain Of Time that ne'er will oome again, Of Time that flies. Of all that Time sweeps in its flight The voioea ting to me to-night, Time cores all oare. That is what I would fain believe, My heart therewith I do deceive, With faith in Time. Oh, voices singing, bo yon mote, Yon tonch a chord on my heart's late Bat seldom played; Tet filling ail the air around With a sweet melancholy sound. A song of Time ! Of Time that was, of days so fair When all was young, ntyl love wns thf re Long days a got Be still 1 be still ! that sad refrain ! I dare not listen once again To that same song ' lliybe I hold tho.ie dnys too hih, And yield them far too oft a sih, Those days long since I Yet as they were the fairest yet Of all my days, then why forget That happy time ? Though if it still should be my faith To live yet happier days, the date Of that tweet time. I'll bury, then, within the grave Which holds all things forgotten, saw The present time. Nor heed a voice which whispers low, "The sweetest song is that yon know Of long ago." 6o with the voloes In the air I mingled mine, and, lo, was there A song of Time. HUMBLED BY ADVERSITY. "After all," Celandine Bellairs said, as she leaned back in her chair, her flippcred feet half-buried in the silky pile of a white Angora rug, her dim pled hands clasped carelessly upon her head, " it was only a joke 1" Miss Bellairs was a beauty one of thoso radiant blondes with complex ions of snow and rose-bloom, liquid, hazel eyes and hair of shining brown, nil Interwoven with gold, whom Titian and Peter Paul Ruben j would have de lighted to paint. And being, withal, of an artistic temperament, she robed herself in palc bluo tissues, creatn-whito nun's veil ing and foiris of Spanish blonde, witli here a doep-colored ribhon, tlirro a spray of blood-red roses a jierfect carnival of color, on wltich the eye rested with unconscious delight. Mrs. IlatQeld sat opposite, the pale, plain married Bister who had all her life served as a sort of foil to brilliant Celandine. Mrs. Hatfield was a w idow, and therefore sho dressed in black ; she was poor, and therefore the crapes were rusty and the bombazine. fdinl4y to behold. Celandine, the child of hrr mother's second marriage, was ono of life's butterflies ; sho herself, poor soul, was passively content to be a chrysa lis, and nothing more. "A joke V" said Mrs. Hatfield, re proachfully. "Celandine, I think you Ki-ow wilder and more irresponsible everyday! What do you snpposo he is doing now ?" Probably congratulating himself upon his escape," said Celandine, with a laugh ; "for it is an escape, if only be knew it." " Hut he loved you, Celandine." The beauty shrugged her shoulders. "Men don't die of love in this nine teenth century," said she. "And Pin sure he never could have supposed that I was going marching around the world after a half-starved army regi. mcnt, living upon a lieutenant's pay!" " Then you shouldn't have allowed him to become engaged to you." " I knew I could always get rid of him when I plea id," said the hazel eyed coquet. " And he wars the hand somest man at the Blue Sulphur Springs; and it was rather amusing to git him away from .ill the girls here and bring him an humblo slave to my t ha riot-TV heels." But, Celandine, stop and think," pleaded Mm. llatficld, who was, in her humble way, a sort of second conscience to her beautiful half-sister. " If you read this thing iu a novel, you would think it a cruel and wicked thing. To deliberately lay yourself out to charm and attract this young officer to win him to a declaration of love, to accept him and 6e his ring" " And a very pretty nog it Is, tool' murmured Celandine, dreamily, glanc ing down at the flash of the diamond on her tapering finger. " To plan to go with him to a picnic the very next day, and then deliber a -ly, during his temporary absence, to trtke the tru.n and go away, Uwing neither mew-age nor address 1 Ah, Celandine, think of it 1" It was time the thbg was brought t j an end,'' said C landiue, composedly: "and I was tired to death of the Blue Sulphur Springs and of Lieutenant Erkskine P "Celandine," cried Mrs. Ilartfleld, what on earth do you suppose he thinks of you ?" "I am sure I don't know," said the cream-skinned blonde, in an accent which distinctly implied, " and I don't care, either." "Don't you think you ought to write ?" hesitatingly questioned Mrs. UatHeld. "Write? What on earth should I write for?" scornfully cried Celandine. " The affair Is over with, and it is a good thing that it Is. Do let it rest in its grave. I shall write its epitaph in my diary, Flirtation No. 1001 came to a natural end July 8, 18 . And I do not suppose that I shall ever think of it again." So Miss Bellairs and her sister went to Now York, renewed their toilets, took a trip to tho wave washed rocks of old Witch Hill, listened to the roar of the surf and tho merry clash of the band at Newport, and then came home, fated with summer raptures, to Phila delphia. Came homo to discover, t ) their in finite chagrin and dismay, that the silver-haired old gentleman who had been Celandine's guardian and adviser since her father's death, had practiced on her tho same extremely skillful de vice which sho had so enjoyed at tho Blue Sulphur Springs, and had disap peared, leaving no traeo behind, except ruined credit, an empty exchequer, and a wholo ream of penitential con fessions, in letter shape. " What am I to do?" said Celandine, turning with a pale, frightened faco to Mrs. Hatfield And that lady, never very prompt at an emergency, answered only with fa fltof inopportuno hysterics. There are fortunately a number of ways, now that tho world is growing wiser and more tolerant, in which a woman can earn her bread, and to these, in hapless succession, Celandine Bellairs turned her attention. Mrs. Moncyland, ono of her rich friends, wanted a companion. "To bo like my own daughter," said that lady, all fat, self-salisiied smiles And Celandine rashly believed that all toil and trial were at an end now. But at a month's end poor Celandino resigned her position. 'Iamsuro I don't know how you could easily secure an easier position," said Mrs. Moncyland, bridling up. "An ample salary and really nothing to do but to snlaco my loneliness." "Yes, I Know," said Celandine. "But nobody could endure being I called up at 3 o'clock in the .morning J to read aloud to you, to mend laco all I the afternoon and superintend ser-j vans all tho morning; to sit stead- j fastly in the house, tor fear that 1 , might lie wanted, and to lose night) after night of rest taking care of in- j valid skyo terriers and sick parrots. Washing or scrubbing would probably j bo harder work, but it would always como to an end !"' I "Youareau unsjratcfulyoung viper!' sobbed Mrs. Monerlaml. ' When you ', know, too, how ell your vufcu suited ' nie, and how dear ("ypny.tl"! dog, liked your ways'" Celandine tried a position as a tele-j graph operator next and failed. Tele- : graphing required practice and nerve, and poor Celandino had neither. Sho took in bead-work and lino em broidery and broko hopeless down at tho end of a week. Mrs. Hatfield, who had accepted a situation as housekeeper iu a gentle man's family, viewed her poor littlu sister's successive failures with dis may. "I'm sure, Celandino," said she, "I don't know what is to become of you! Couldn't you get in somewhere as shop girl or lady attendiint in some furnish ing emporium, or " "1 do not think I could endure the fatigue," said Celandine, faintly. " Poor folks can't afford to be too particular," said Mrs. Hatfield, pursing her lips. But just about this time Mrs. Bridgeby, the fat and comfortable pre cejtressin whoso "institute" Celan dine Bellairs and her sister had been educated, lost her English governess, and graciously consented to allow Miss Bellairs to lill the vacancy at a merely nominal salary. "Just until something else should turn up, you know, my dear," said Mm. Brldgeby, smilingly. And hero, for two mortal years, Celandino drudged on, wearing out soul and body alike in the wretched servitude of an unloving tabk. For Celandino was one of those nervous, sensitive creatures, who are the least adapted to teaching of all conceivable professions. And yet life, Insipid though it was, must be purchased on some terms; and the girl went mechanically through her task-work llko f?omo automaton, day after day, week nfter week, month after month. Until, one day, a gleam of possible deliverance appeared on the horizon. Mrs. Brldgoby waddled into tho room and announced that a governess was wanted at Lisle Tower, on the very edge of tho Adirondacks. "And of course, my dear," said Mrs. Bridgoby, "I recommend you at once. Fivo hundred dollars a year, only one little girl to educato aud amuse, and delightful country air. My dear, it's a chance in a thousand. An officer's lady Stay! where is the card? I declare, 1 thought I had it in my pocket. I must have droppod it somewhere. But tho address is Lisle Tower, near Caldwell, Lako George. You're to lako the cars to Caldwell, and there you are to be met with a carriage. Aud here's your car-ticket, all bought and paid for." So Celandine, much rejoicing, was br rno out of the atmosphere of scho lastic toil into a newer, brighter world, and alighted on tho shore of blue, beautiful Lake George in the gloaming of a soft summer evening. The carriage was there, waiting a dark, wine-colored landcau, drawn ly prancing black horscs.all glittering with plated harness, in which sat a lovely little girl and a handsomo young bru nette of two or three and twenty This Is your little pupil. Miss Bel-' 1.1113, DU1U OllC-- IIIJT U.illllll.l, A1U11U Erskine. I am Mrs. Lrskine, and I hope that wo shall bo tho best of friends. My husband is a lieutenant in tho army, to that I am necessarily much at home, and your society will be tho greatest of all boons to me." Celandino felt sick and giddy. Tho blue hills that surrounded the lake seemed to swim around her. The golden sunshine became as blue before her eyes. Had the idiotic folly of her butterfly days then found her out? Was sho going to Charlton Erskino's very home, a dependent and a drudge, to work out tho recompense of her sins? Ah, how hard it wai to smilo and pay "yes" aud "no" as pretty young Mrs. Erskine- chattered on ! Yet it was not altogether the shamo and the keen mortification which stung her so keenly. Sho know now sho had known, alas ! that Charlton Erokino's imago ha I been tenderly cherished in her heart all theso years. Sho had llung him away liko a broken toy in tho insolent triumph of her beauty, and now she knew that she loved him ! A circular, stone tower, rising up against tho dark hemlock woods ; long low wings, where tho welcoming lights twinkled brightly ; crims.m, baizc- lined doors thrown open, and Celandine j as a menacing portent by Chinese entered, her eyes blinded by tho soft politicians. The comets' resemblancs glow of candles. ! to I'auiiing swords is regarded as "It's tho new governess, Charlie," j emblematical of the vengeance of said Mrs. Erskine; and then, in an j heaven en an unworthy nation. It. is aside "Tho prettiest creature you i stated that in coiisequen. 0 of tho last oversaw, and with the prettiest name, ! comet, an urgent decree has been too MissCelandin.: Mlair." ; promulgated iu the name of the young And then, to her lurror, Celandine ! monarch, stating that it is a clear in found herself faco to faco with Lieu- dieal ion that the officials aro lax in tenant Erskine himself, the old lover I making proper reports to the throne, sho had known so long ago ! j d have been kw ping the emperor in "My engaged wife The said, hold-j tho dark as to pestilences and other inir out both hands, with a smile not calamities iimmig th- people. His entirely devoid of mischief. " Celan- j diue, why did you run awayuom me four vears iitro?" With a throbbing heart sho tried to draw away her hand. ' " You aro Mrs. Erskino's husband !" j said she. "Let mo go for heaven's , sake, let me go 1" ' I am not Mrs. Erskino's husbaud," said he. "The Mrs. Erskine does not live who has any claims on mo '" "Then who is thislaly'r" said Ce landine, scarcely crediting her ears. "I am Mrs. Lieutenant Erskine." ! said the pretty brunette. " My bus- band is in A...ona. This gentleman k mv brother-in-law. Colonel Erskine, who hns lust arrived from hinK- ton. And now. dear Miss ueiiairs, r,tu U,.llnir ' come upstairs, and let them bring you some tea, for I am sure you must be . fainting from fatigue !" But the radiant face which Celandine turned toward her disabused her from the idea. , "I don't think I shall ever bo tired j again !" said Celandine, softly? j " One minute, dearest !" Colonel j Erskine whispered, as his sister-in-law delivered little Lilian into tho care of tno plump French nurse. ' You arc still my engaged wife? Say that you are!" " Oh, Charlton," she cried, " I do not deserve, after the cruel way in which I have treated you, that you should ever speak to me again 1" "I love you, Celandine," ho said, glmply I have always loved you !" "Even when I went awny from the Blue Sulphur Springs?" "Yes, even then." She put her hand in his, with inefT-1 this vicarious style of correspondence, able tenderness in her eyes. . and I was quickly gratified by the ar- "Andl," said she, "have always ! rival at ono (able of an aged woman, loved you, Charlton, although 1 discov '. and at another of a young girl, who eredlttoo late." jjavo the scribe their sentiments and "Not too late, Celandine," niid he. j their soldi, and sat watchins? bis slow "Heaven is more merciful to us than j'jioving lingers with evide it satisfa our deserts." lion. And so, in the pine-scented shadows of the Adirondaoks, Celandine Bel lairs solved the riddle of hor lifo and disoovered the secret of her own h"nrt. CLIPPINGS K0B the crftious. Titles have been abolished twlco in Vrniw... In 171iinit ISIS The first attempt to manufacture Jll .Z vVrr ! 60on after the war of 1812. Tho first temperance sooioty in the , United States was organized in Sara toga county, N. Y., in March, 1808. Confucius was born 551 B. C, but his precepts did not form the Chinese stato religion until llvo centuries ! later. An exchanw says that a set of paper wheels under a truck of an en- was raisrd by machinery until tho n.ntcd beverages is conducive to piety, gino of the Central Vermont railroad snout was about waist-high, when ' m,,nii goodness :;P'! l-".ir !:f If. have been in use twelve years, and ar) another lever threw it upon an incline i,ln,y ,v, p still apparently sound. and it slid toward the sticker, who The first Union Hag was unfurled on siood, knii'c in hand, riady to sever the j Trmtmrni rn !i January 1, 1776, over tho camp . jg;'l;' vein. As the hog parsed him j The Lurui,,n :,jiify .V -.y r'f re of Ciim'l ridgo. It had thirteen stripes : 1:0 by a quick turn, npplkd tho knife ; j,orU Gr.iluuM as living hat it is of white and red, and r.tainl the and the animal passed on to the scald-1 not comc, j,r: tivo. al'tcv a cold is I English cross in one corner. The I'er: ians used sculpture princl- j pally upon the buttresses of the steps placed before palaces. Processions of 'ne,n ro'" ''iT' rent countries bringing vorito decoration, or else files of guards. As is often the caso with men of lis stamp, Bismarck is somewhat super stitious. Ho is a firm believer of good aud bal days, and does not think that any undertaking will prosper if begun on Friday. Ho also dislikes exceed ingly to sit at a table when there are thirteen. Originally, the Aryan nations lived in the highlands of Central Asia east of tho Caspian sea and north of tho Hin du Kush mountains. The climate of this country was then much more agreeable than it is now, and tho soil as much more fertile. The dispersal of these tribes probably took place about 3000 B. C. Some curious facts wore lately re lated regarding hydrophobia before tho Academy of sjcionce, Paris, by M. Bert. It seems' that inoculation w.th mucus from tho respiratory p,is-a,'es of a mad dog caused rabies, but that w !t!i tho salivary liquids did not. Be ciprocd transfusion of blood b.-t ween a healthy and a mad dog caused no ra bies in the former. Effect of Pie Comet in l lilna. The appearance within the last two years of two comets has been regarded majesty has reason to believe that im- j proper omci.us n.no i-cesi 'i'l"""lc . he has, moreover, in tl. seclusion ol bis palace, stibje ted his imperial heart i to a rigorous exaiuiiiation, and he is j much disui.-ted at tlie result. Tho people, he linds, are poverty stricken, and await relief, and the present is a time of c.reat anxiety and embarrass ment. The crisis must be met with prompt measures and a ro ereiit heart; the ministers are accordingly enjoined to exhibit loyalty and justice, and to I strenuously guard memsem-s agamsi the thralldom of official routine. They are to discover the real stato of the country, and to make such dispositions us may givo rise to all possible advan 14. li! and eradicate all possible evil. If '" ' all this lie done, we nave tlie imperial ..... , ... , . assurance iiuii in'1 pcujiiu nin nieiu peare and quietness, till heaven be in harmony with earth, and all harmful influences allayed. If decrees were always obeyed, the comet will have exercised a beiiclUent influence on the condition of the Cliineso people Tubllc Lettcr-Writers. One street sight that interests me specially, says a Borne (Italy) litter, is the public letter-writer, w ho still plies his trade as fn tho old, old days of which I read so long ago. I had quite forgotten there were such pe pie, but ono morning as we were ; lying to lind a short cut to the Pantheon, we t ame suddenly into a quiet little open square round which were established seven men, each with his table and writing materials, waiting for customers. Of course I insisted on wailing to see whether people did really engage in FTFE MTJNDEED AJf nOPR. The Mnrveloan Olrrlev With Wlilch floe- Are Killed In riilrnn Pirk'nn IIour. A Chicago letter eontaias an in- , 1 ,.c nf 1 ..-...Ug aiw.u., ... ... . n,,..rai:nn In tl,. ., ,lin. hnilimnf I the Western monoli. Says the ! western metropolis, says me i writer : We bcffia where the hog werodnvon from th0 stock-yard pens nd flowed them until they were cut Into pork, made into sausage or the hams nut into the smoke-house. The killin!r was not ft vCiiaimt sisht. but it was a wonderful one. The hogs were driven into a narrow pen, some fifty at a time. There half-grown boys lasten a clamp, resembling a handcuff, about a hind leg, booked it to a chain I and a man at tho bench above them i touched a lever. Tims the animal i ing vat, and the man killed the next ; before the first had hardly passed . him. Thus a constant string of hogs was pacing continually. I Five hundred hogs an hour if the average work lor ten n jurs caeh day of each cf the two meu who officiate as executioners in this house. It is expert work, and the men receive $5 a day for their work. Prom the moment the hog is hoisted to the slide it never stops until hung up thor oughly cleaned. It is dead when it reaches tho scalding vat, and when the procession begir.s to move in the morning tho machino is constantly throwing hogs in and out with the certainty of clock-work. As they are thrown out of the vat men scratch the bristles off and lay them carefuly by. Machinery then takes them up and scrapes the hair off. At tho end of the cleaning table a man stands knife in hand, who must sever the head with the exception of enough tlesh to hold it, with one blow, lie strikes the joint every time, and gets $3.75 lw j day for his work. A man opposite noisi me nog on tho table to another slide and down it goes in the long procession that never I d wima, it halts until tho hogs are finally da-sed.s u.turn! t ) ft ,vanu temperature for the heads aro fully severed while I afur uw :ji U(? r(,.u,l(lS0 moving by men who stand, I of tbe v when a person in t he cold hand, to do the work. The entrails are . ..... taken out much in the same way. It is maiiv hundred feet from where the animais go to mo siauguier k. wini1pine lalo the lungs, an 1. cotwe-coding-out room, but they never stop . ,ntlv uiinini.slies the heat, of these from the timo they start until they Ag , fls tho pcrs,m Cuntinn,H reach it. Not a word is spoken by tho jn the wU h(J niJ h.t, huudrcdsof men who take part iu the ifroIu . ,jut M SQon M bt, Yt:Ulrm killing and dressing. Every man . ... , 0 ... ,,,. , . ,... knows what to do and does it without orders. It is a feature of the whole in any of thed..partments. the work j WM.Hsu'.nuiueui.iai oroe. not necessary, and the business is so driving that there is no time for frolic. The cattle are killed and dressed in much the same way as the pork, except that they are t,r-t sl.ot and tl.en l.eng n )iy ,.,,.;,.. iin,i ,;r(.Ss,.,i. it takes j-,.,,,,, (iru, t jV(1 minutes Iroin the time an ox is shot until it i.s bung up, ' cut in half. Prom 1,'H.H) to l.'" eat-! tie are slaughtered every day. Home l.o;ik. people have a set of home Many looks which they regularly put on when about home, the same as fey put on their common clothes. With some it isa care-worn look; with othrs a complaining expression; with many a sickly appearance, as if they were caving in; and with not a few it is an ugly, cross visage. When some neigh - bor happens to come in or when they put on their goo.l clothes and go out vou would not know th them if you ha 1 : . . , i be.'ome acquainted u acquainted vim tiiem when wearing their home looks. Now, what we-'have to say as hygicnists on this subject is that it is not healthy to : wear such expressions. They cer-1 tainly affect not only the health of the wearers, but of the other im nib ts of the family. They are especially do. pressing to children. If worn by a husband, to a w ife they are ag ni '.ing; if worn by the wife they mak-j the husband feel as if he did not care to j hurry home. Our oiitsfrle admirers our good neighbors and others are entitled to no better facial expressions than our homo people. If we must in some instances change our clothes for economy's sake, let us not change what does not cost anything a cheer- ful countenance. Carry that home; at home preserve it; goto bed with it; get up with it; gather the family around the tabic with ft. It is a good tonic for self and everybody. y,-. Fwte'ts Hrtillfi Jfoitthtii. The Vuiled Sta'os spends tlW.OUO, 00 a year for alcoholic drinks. It is estimated that more than l!0t,iM people are engaged in scU'ntf that amount "f liquor. THE FAMILY DOCTOR. Teaetable Mrt. Gunshot and other wounds never T 1 , .... I1RH.1 millTK 111 Uf-311-l ALlkXH UaWWt. vefi-etable-eatincr nations, i iesiv Tl, CLI, - " flammBf j.c.,c, PHpii1:irlv fevers ;l . AvKnntn... I'lw.i-iiidn'.-'-n'-e- in , , f , , unnatural life, . . . 8t!IIMJali,v ,,rinSs on exhaustion, exhaustion demands stimulation, ending in sickness, in sanity and death. A vegetable diet, biised on nlivsioloffical nrincitdes. with , fl sound mlnd ,n a g(),nd Wlv niav be ',,,,.,, H alw, ,,,.., ,. ,.,.,-hMn safc- rJ aainst f,.v,.r;i. i. ,v., jlla'intSi .?,', ,i,.ril. sma'.ljH x nicl 1 com- I similar (ijKrasefli Abstinence f.om animal tltrui tn,iu.r,, sn,.ff alcoholic and fer- r;ight, to m -..!; tho room a pcrs m sits jn lnuchwurnv r than usual, to in r. a-e t10 qUintity of l.e'li lotVs, wrap v.pin nannel and drink a large quantity of hot tea, cruel or other sl. ps, because it will invariably hi'-p-sise l!.e tVverish- ness, and in the majority of instances prolong rather than Ic.en the duration of tho cold. It is well !.n- v. n that confining inoculated persons in warm rooms will make their smallpox more violent, by augmenting the general heat and fever; and It is for tho same reason that a similar practic:- in the present complaint is attended with analogous results, a cold being in reality a slight fever. In some parts A Eng land, among the lower order cf peo. pie, a large glass of cold rpring water, taken on going to bed, is found to be a successful remedy, and. in fact many medical practitioners recommend a reduced atmosphere a 1 1 fro quen. draughts oi cold lluid as tho r.Mat cilicaciy.i.i remedy iv-r a recent cold. iiirtic;il.irlv when the pa- ticufa habit is full ;md plethoric. Dr. Graham farther tavs: It is generally supposed i,h.. t it is the exposure to a ini.i ..r wet ..mosiiheio which rro. time, hf draws in his breath the cold air passes through his nostrils and Il 'lilt, lit" llj'll HI O I;...- I.'" W ........ himself, and very often takes some warm and comfortable drink to keep The inevit he will find abJo ijt l:lt tak,n ,.,,, n:. feeld a llh ,.ring which nlaU., janulraw nearer the lire, but all t- no purpose; the more ho tries to heat himself the ; niore (u diilK A the wl!U.Uvt is . . iolent a- tion of the heat. To avoid this when you come out of a very cold aim .-phere( you should not at first go into a room that has a lire in it; or if you cannot avoid that, uii should keep i-r a con siderable time at as great a oi- t.iuce as ; possible, and, above all, retrain from ; . , h w (,r s(r,,I1!: ji,,,,,,,-, when t,(l!J Tlljs rlL, js inumled on I the same principle as the treatment of ' . .. . of the Uyv wh,. frorl.i,i .Cll i lft were to the file it would j soon inortify, whereas, if rull. with j snoWi n. lt:nl consequences f.dlow trom 1 jt jnC.t if the following rule were 1 strictly observed whi n the wholo i l)P(lv or any parl ()f it. is c.j,i:i. .1, bring 1 it jts ni,tlIral feelinR and warmth liv ,iP,,rCesthe frequent colds -v- ex- mrience in winter would in great ' ,,..,. i,t. prevented." j Moh l ow Near London. Mob violence is by no means peculiar to this country. The village of Honns low, near London, was lately the scene of something not unlike an American ! lynching. Tlus was an incident of the : Edwardcs-Whilniarsh case. Pr. Ed wardes, a popular young physician, i committed suicide, leaving a letter which stated that, a lying charge of i dishonorable conduct had been brought ! against him by a woman; that Dr. j Wbitniarsh, his partner, had taken ! advantage of it to crowd him out of a thriving practice, and concluded with the word-, "May God curse Michael j Wbitmar.-li." Edward' had been : popular, and Whit ma. was disliked, Pay after da., there was rioting in j Houuslow, and Whitman-h was forced ' tohido himself an I all his family. He ! was burned in tfligv bricks were j hurled through bis wi ilow.s until not a pane of -riass was h tl, his brougham w as ih ini lishck and preparation were j being made to burn his residence whin the police finally restored order '.M'WUIr.EX.XKrtHEE." flow br IM-'lK'n nf ! p ! r-r!''t f I el-l-rsii'f! in I i; r A rTf.f C.-or.i l.ll.i I., tli Vow - , rr i i iotk Ji-rit I mring Die past prc-i nt ol a mos KU'i.llM.JirO Jl lively and ultra iirient.il a-p-et. Ths great Arab metropolis has abandoned itself to the delighlsof celebrating the graiol religious festival of the M ootid-en-Nebbec- the birthday of the Prophet. S pi ids of th innumerable sects of dervish'-s with th'-ir banners, torches, pipes and drums have been marching and coiititi riearehing about the brilliantly illuminated mosques; re turned pilgrim - aud venerable sheiks from the four co: ,,ers of islam have been riding to and fro on great whit donkeys; the fair and I'rail successors of the now almost extilp t ghaeeyeb? or public danejnif girls who have danced at feasts since times even be fore the exodus, and whom Laue, the king of Orientalists, says "are alto gether tho finest women in Egypt' promenade the streets on foot and in barouches, and the ard nt but timid Circassian inmates of princely harems, wearing.transparent v. i-i'e veils and delicately tinted silk dresses and guarded by thoso other "lilies of the field," the sleek bfcick eunuchs, drive about in closed broughams anil Ihten to the Song of Solomon chanted by the Ah ma lee dervishes, squatting cross legged on mats of straw. At noon I w ent t the large vacant space beyond the southern suburbs of Ca ro that had been fet apart for the Moolid-en-Nel 'bee. Here hundreds of colossal tents, pitched in the form of a square, inclosed a spa.e of over thirty acres. In the center of the square were a dozen huge mats, supported by hun dreds of shrouds and gayly decked with green and red flags and glass balls. In the middle of the northern row of tents was that of the khedivc a vast walled canopy, 6ixty yards square by ten yards high, and the wholo interior lined with the most delicately woven crimson texture of pure silk. On the ground under the tent was spr ad an enormous French carpet. Twenty or thirty crimson silk arm chairs were arranged inside the tent in the form of a horseshoe. At the bend of the horse shoo and facing the entrance to th tent was an enormous arm-chair sur mounted by the khedive's arms, which servt d as a sort of throne. Seated in this chair was the khedivc. His high ness was dressed in a plain black offi cial coat, dark trousers and white waistcoat. Ho wore, of course, the tarbousch. or fez. Seated in the chair on tho khedive's right was the famous Sheik El lleckry the lineal descendant of Abou Beckr, the first khalif aud chief of all the dervish" of Egypt. His holiness was dre.-sid iu a "muff, colored cashmere gown aud wore a snow-while turban. The ther chairs were occupied by the Sheik Ul Islam, the cabinet ministers and h'jrbor offi cials of the palace. At 1 o'clock over a thousand der vishes, headed by their respective sheiks, filed solemnly past thekhedive. Conspicuous among these was the sheik of the Saadeeych dervishes, a wrinkled old man with coal black eyes and a long white beard. It was this sheik of the Saadeeych's who used to peri' r n the ceremony of thedoseh that is, he used to ride his horse over the prostrate bodi.s of about one hun dred (icr ishes. Some of these poor fanatics wmdd bav their brains dashed out by the animal's hools, but the majority often esca"ed with merely j a few bruises on the backs and legs. This terrible feature of the Moolid-cn-Nebbee has for the past two years been forbidden by the khedive and is re placed by the present procession o dervishes. These dervishes are sallow , fced, san -.timoniou-s-looking fellows, with deep basso voices. Their dress is very much the same as other Egpyt ians', and many of ihem are barbers, dyers and tradesmen, and attend to their daily work like other ordinary mortals. Their tenets, rules and cere monies are similar in many instances to those of tho Freemasons, and, like the latter, are not to he divulged to the unitiated. Some of the dervishes who confine themselves to religious cxer- cises subsist by begging. These are much respected by the fellaheen, and resort to all sorts of tricks to make ; people believe them capable of ter ; forming mJxacka. Tho Hussian and Mcnnonite colo I nists In Minnesota have solved the 1 fuel problem, for a time at least by burning refuoe straw and grass. At , first dry prairie hay was abundant, and could no bad for the gathering. , Lately, as this has come into great"'' demand, they grow a late crop ex clusively for fuel. 11 la burned In great stoves having such capacity that tlie fire needs renewing only two or throe times In twenty four hours. But It remains to be soen what effect the continuous burning of the hay, straw and corn will have on fertility.