1 ( P A TICK ADVLRTISINO. On square, on ViMirflnn . tl.fls Onswpisre, twoliiM rtloni,. - l.an Ooeftjaare, one month, lAB H. A. LONDON, Jr., EDITOR AND FItOrBICTOH. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION! nfliry, nnyfsr, Onroj,.y ,nlt ni.mlhi One copy, three months t-2.00 MO vol. v. PITTSBORO', CHATHAM CO., N. C, JCLY !'., 188.. POT larger SJlvortlssmMitt liberal '!,' lll NO. i:. Thither. A Roldcn haze melts down (lie purple skits, Where ((lows the lingering day llie ujouii tiuns o'er) 'On noioelexa win9 the Mlo hnttPi flics Drill o'er the riut.icil inrmlow's vernnl flooi ; The diowsy hlnsom of the vcMiiiore BieHthe heavy O'lors on the rlieatiiy air; Hall drowsed Willi homy, drones the wemy hee Across the m u .-lm to his li'illnw troe. While liom the ens! the sulty hiecru heir The lur-eff echoes ol tho open sen. The ioy tide of Milliner's lic-iu'y dic3j From Irosiy eki s I lie gules ol autumn ronr; llie rrnpni'H song is dene, mi l i t Ic lieu II a thiniuK scythe he.ii.le hi loin ly iloni, The sweet hud niioU lo the dny no more No more the little hliiehii'l ciwim hi pmvci ; Hut winlei'a loorinlft thii In-ti on the I a And hush in ii: llie hioiik 's luw melody, Whilw lourler ii-c. from rocky iviverna hute, The Im -off echoes ol the i.jkmi im. So change our lives! When childhood lit my eyes I dreamed that life eternal iiimmcr wore J dieamH the earth would he a pniHdise My sect should through the shilling yeais ezil le; I saw tlioguy tiitils into heaven soar, And fancied I as deir as joy should share; Aud when the cold woild told ol death to Die i could not undereland what deith might be; III sorrow never brought to ine a cin e Tboee furor! echoes ol the open acu Just ftid, I lenrn the rhanfcc thy nr-nsi -n) hcai T'heie is a twettn.nn in the ini-ioi key; Dlest me we while we li , Meet when tioni thee We hear that summons low that calls us whci e fJo echo anaweis Irom the open sen. Erit W. Shu i lit). JOHN AND I. ' "Come, John," said I, cheerfully, "it really is time to go; if you stay any longer I shall be afraid to come down and lota the door after you." My visitor rose a proceeding that always reminded moot the genii emerg ing from the copper vessel, as he measured six foot three ami stum I looking rcjiroai lit 1 1 1 1 v lovn at me. "You are in a great hurry tu get rid of me," he said. Now I didn't agree with him. fur he had made his usual call of two hours and a half; having, in country phrase, taken to "Kitting up" with me so liter ally that I wits frequently at my wits' end to suppress tho yawn that I knew would bring a troop after it. He was a fine, manly looking fellow, this John Cranford, old for his age--which was the rather boyish period of twenty-two and every way worthy of being loved. Hut I didn't love him. I wax seven years his senior; when in stead of letting the worm of conceal ment prey on his damask heek, he ventured to tell his love for my mature Self, I remorselessly seized an Knglisli prayer hook, and pointed sternly to the clause, "A mart may not marry his grandmother." That was three years ago, and I added encouragingly: "Ueside, John, you tire, a child, and don't know your own mind." "If a man of nineteen doesn't know his own mind," remonstrated my lover. "I would like to know who should But I will wait for you seven years, if vou say bo fourteen as Jacob did fur Bachel." "Vou forget," laughing at his way of mending matters, "that a woman dries not improve with age. Hut Seriously, John, this is absurd; you are a nice boy, and I like you hut my feelings toward you are more those of a mother than a wife." The boy's eyes (lashed indignantly and before I could divine his intention he had lifted me from the spot where I stood, and carried me infant fashion to the sofa, at the other end of the room. "J could almost find it in my heart to shake you!" he muttered, as he set me down with emphasis. This was rather like the courtship of William of Normandy, and matters promised to be quite exciting. "Don't do that again," I said with dignity, when I recovered my breath. "Will you marry me?" asked John, Bomewhat threateningly, "Not just at present," I replied. "The great, handsome fellow," I thought, as lie paced the lloor restless ly, "why couldn't he fall in love with Borne girl of lifteen, instead of setting his affections on an old maid like me 'i I don't want the boy on my hands, and won't have him!" "As to your being twenty-six," pur sued John, in answer to my thoughts, "You say it's down in the family Hible, and I suppose it must be so; but no one would believe it; anil I don't care If you are forty. You look like a gir of sixteen, and you are the only woman I shall ever love." O John, John! at least Ave millions of men have said the same thing before In every known language. Neverthe less, whea he fairly breaks down and cries, I relent for I atn disgracefully toft-hearted and weakly promise then and there that I will either keep my jwn name or take his. And John looked radiant atthiscou jeeelon, for love is a very dog in the manger. It was a comfort to know that if he could not gather the flower himself, no one else would. A sort of family shipwreck had wafted John to my threshold. Our own household was sadly broken tip, and I found myself, comparatively young in years, with a half invalid father, a large house, and very little money. What more natural determi nation than to take boarders? And among the first were Mr. Cranford ami his son and sister, who had just been wrecked themselves by the death of the wife and mother in a foreign land one of those sudden, unexpected deaths, that leave the sunivors in a dazed condition, because it is so dilli cult to imagine the gay worlding who hits been. called hence in another state of being. Mr. Cranford was one of my admira tions from the lirst. Tall, pale, with dark hair and eyes, be reminded me of Dante, only that he was handsomer; and he had such a general air of know ing everything worth knowing ( with, out the least pedantry, however) that I was unite afraid of him. He was evidently wrapped up in John, anil patient to his sister which was asking quite enough of Christian charity under the sun, for Mrs. Shellgrove was an unmitigated nuisance. Such a talker! babbling of her own and her brother's affairs with equal indiscretion, and treating the latter as though he were an incapable infant. They stayed with us three years mid during that time I was fairly persecu ted about John. Mrs. Miellgrove wrote me a letter on the subject, in which she informed me that the whole family were ready to receive me with open arms a prospect that I did not find at all alluring. They seemed to have th"ir hearts set upon me as i. per son peculiarly fitted to train John in the way he should g". Kverything. I wdi tuld, depended on his getting the right kind of a wife. A special interview with Mr. Cran ford, at his particular request, tout bed me considerably. "I hope," said he, "that you will noj refuse my boy. Miss Ivlna. lie hat set, bis heart so fully upon you, and you are everything that I could desire in a daughter. I want some one to pet. I feel sadly lonely at times, and I am sure you would till the actut nithe." I drew my hand away from his caress, and aloio.-t li lt like hating John Cranford. Life with him would be one of e.i eaii l luxury; but I decided that I had lather keep boarders. Not Imtg alter this the Cranfoids concluded to go to housekeeping, and Mrs. Shellgrove was in her glory. She alw ays came to luncheon in her bonnet, and gave minute details of all that had been done and talked of about the house in the last twenty-four hours. "It is really magnilicent," said she lengthening out each syllable. "Ilrothe has such perfect taste. Ami ho i6 actually lurnihing the library, Miss Kdna, after your suggestion. You see we look upon yon quite as one of the family." "That is very good of you," I replied, shortly; but I certainly have no ex pectations of ever belonging to it." Mrs. Shellgrove laughed as though I hail perpetrated an excellent joke. "Young ladies always deny these things, of course; but John tells a dif ferent story." 1 rattled the cups and saucers angrily; ami my thoughts Hew olf, not to John, but to John's father, silting lonely in the libiary furnished after my sugges tion. Wasn't it, alter all, my duty to marry the family generally? The house wa linished and moved into, and John spent his evenings with me. 1 usul to get dreadfully tired of him. Ho v. .is too devoted to beat al' interesting, and I had reached that state of feeling which, if suiumar ly or dered to ta!c my choice bel w een him and the gallows, I would have prepar ed myself lor the latter with a sort of :lacrily. I locked the door upon John on the evening in que .1 ion, when I had finally got ritl of him, with these things in full force: and I meditated while tin. dressing on some desperate move that would bring matters to a crisis. Hut. the boy had been roused at last, lie, too, had rellected in the watches of the flight; an 1 next day I received quite a dignilie I letter from him. tell, ing me that business called him from the city for three or four weeks, and that possibly on his return I might ap preciate his devotion better. I felt inexpressibly relieved. It ap peared to me the most sensible move ment that John had made in the whole course of our acquaintHnce, and I be gan to breathe with more freedom. Time Hew, however, and the three weeks lengthened to six, without John's return. He wrote to me, but his letters became somewhat constrain ed; and I scarcely knew what to make of him. If he would only give me up. I thought; but I felt sure that he would hohl me to that weak promise of mine, that I should either become; Edna Cranford or remain Kdna Car. rington. "Mr. Cranford." was announced one evening, and I entered the parlor fully , prepared for an overdose of John, but ' found myself confronted by his father. He looked very grave, and instantly' I imagined all sorts ol things, and re proached myself lor my t-oldiic..;i. 1 "John is well?" I gasped finally. I "(J. lite well," was the reply, in stub ! a kind tone that I fell sure, there was something wrong. What it was 1 carel not, but pourel forth my feelings impetiiuu-ly to my astonished visitor. "lie inii.-l not conn! here again!" J e.xelaimel. "I do not wih to see hint. Tell him so, Mr. Cranford! tell him that I had rather remain labia Car. rington as he made me promise, than become Kdna 'ranford." "And he male vou prone se this '" , ' i was the reply, "flie selli h fellow Hut. Kdna, what am I t-i do without, ' the little girl I have been expecting? I am very loru-ly so lonely tb.it I do not see how I can give her up." I glanced at him, and the room seemed swimming around - everything was dreadfully unreal. I tried to sit, 1 down, and was carried tenderly to a sof.i. "shall it be Kdna Carrington or Kdna Cranford''" he whi.-perel. "You need not break your promise to John.'' "Kdna Cranford." I replied, feeling that I had left the world entirely, and was in another sphere of existence. If the thought crossed my mind that Mr. ('ran fun I had rather rlu-ei fully supplanted his son the proceeding was fully justified during the visit which I soon received from that young gentle man. I tried to make it plain to him that I did him no wrong, as I had never professed to love him, though not at all sure that I wouldn't ret rise the shaking threatened on a previous oi c tsion, and I endeavored to be as tender as possible, for I felt really sorry for him. To my great surprise John laughed heartily. "Well, this is jolly!" he exi I timed "And I am not a illian alter all. What do you think of her, Kdna?" He produced .in ivoiy-type in a rich velvet an a pretty, little, blue cyed simpleton, woo looked admit seveu'eeu. "liosc," he colli ililied, "Itosi- I 'ai ling: the name suits her. itoeen't it ? she was staying at my un- U-'s in Maryland that'., where I have been visiting, you know, and she was .-in h a dear little conlidiiig Ihing that a leliow couldn't help falling in love with her. And she thinks no end of me, you .-.ee; says she's quit alraid of me anil all that." JAhn knew I wasn't a bit a'raid of him; but I felt an elder sisterly sort of interest in bis happiness, and had never liked him so well as at. thai moment. And this was tlie dreadful news that his father had come to break to me when his narrative Wits nipped in the bud by my revelations and the inter view ended in a far more satisfactory manner than either of us ha I anticipat ed. So I kept, my promise to John, after all; and as Miss Hose kept tier's, he is now a steady married man, ami a very agreeable son-in-law. Itniiutiis Kcadlii?. An example of the pernicious in Huence exercised upon the mind of the young by the perusal of the exciting lit erature prepared especially for them is found in an occurrence that took place a few days since in Murkhain, (hit. For some I ime business houses and dwell ings have been biirglan. cd, and no i lue could be obtained to I he perpet raloi s. At last the suspicion of a banker's wile were directed (o a young man employed in II Hue of her husband, and she detected him in the act of biding stolen plunder, lie confe.-sed his crime aud the invslcry of the burglaries was re vealed. It appear-- that it number of boys sons of the most re -peclable people in the town, had formed an organiat ion for the perpetration of crimes similar to those related in the lla-liy literature they were permitted to read. Members of the gang retired as u-iial with others ol the family, and when all was quiet slipped out of t lie lion -e ami re paired to the nude out, whi-h was a cave near a graveyard. Th" laptuie of one of the thieve., led to the' recovery of much of the st-'h-n propel ty, and the high standing of the paicnt-i prt vented prosctution of the boys, who were allowed to escape w ithnut suffer ing the penalty they rii lily deserved. Comment is superfluous. The eil effect of the promiscuous reading of the Hash literature so prevalent among the young of both sexes at the prcs'-nt time has been many times discussed by the press. The only remedy lii-4 in legislative suppression of the evil. Chrtlnnd Ohio) Heraht. CHASED BY A LOO. experiences of the Michigan Itlvrr Driver.. Few people have any adequate idea of the dangers ami discomforts attend ing the life of a "river driver." Four months of the year, and these during the raw and chilly spring, when he is working Irom daylight to dark in the water, his clothes are often wet and frequently froen for a week at, a time. If he falls into the cold river in the morning, he must keep on with his work till night. Often the heat of his bed for the rivennan's etiquette teaches him that clothes are to be w orn, riot hung on a chair at night is only sufficient to thaw out the garmenls without drying them. I talked with one of these river drivers, livery bit of information was given grudgingly, though earnestly and with candor, lie said: "1 have followed the river every spring for twenty years and there arc mighty few striauis in Michigan that 1 haven't gone to the bottom of. "Dangerous business? Well, that depends on what part of the job you are working at. If you are tin-cook, there ain't mm h danger, unless the boys find pebble i in the beans, or mil e in the blackstrap. Hut if the crew are 'breaking a jam' and the old man sets you to "hit" hing on' things are liable to be pretty lively. What is 'hit' hing on' and a 'roll way?' lAet si ea high bank at a river? Well, loggers draw their logs during the winter to the highest bank of a stream they can reach, and roll them down it onto the ice below, piling them up by thousands and lens of thousand-). In the, spring these piles of logs have got to be loosed so that they will lloat down the river. That is what is called -breaking a jam.' Now about 'hitching on.' "Sometimes they 'break a jam' by prying out tin- logs with cant hooks and sometimes they run a rope a- in.s the river. A yoke of oen are hitched on' to it, and it is thrown around a log. The oxen aiethen started, and -na'.e out' the log. Why is that dangerous ? It olten happens I hat one log is wedged in such a shape that it holds from lilty to a thousand other and to ...tve time this log iiiiisl, be hauled out lir-t 'I hen if th logger i. u't minding his i oiicerus -when the pih-slarts. the w hole lot is onto him in a jilly. Did I -' r meet with any a-cident -? Yes; but the most serious a'cidi-nt I ever met with didn't turnout wry badly. He wi re breaking a jam' at tie- highest rolhvay mi the Muni .) liwr. I'lu ie were million-, of logs on t he bank, and it was pretty ticklish work. I ha in't as many turns of rlit-iini.it ihen as I have had since, and I called myself as limber a man as everdodged a Norway. I was hitching on,' and alter I ha I been at work a while the boss, who was giving orders from a- ross tin river, sung out -Do you see that loose log up m ar the top?' I looked up Therollway was about. 1 feet high, anil there was a big log ten or lifteen feet from the top that appeared lo be loose. 'I started up over (he logs with my peevy in my hands. l'he log was about twenty I'vet long, aud I shoved my peevy into it to sort of sen how much work it w as going to be to loosen it. I found out, I tell you. I no sooner touched her than sliest. irted hkca lladi of lightning down the rollway. There was no chance to run around Hie end of tin1 log, ami il. wa-t loo high to jump over, so t he only cham c I ha 1 was to turn and gin- her a fool-race. We were, as I said, near 1 'a feel from the drink. The river was aboul sixty feet wide, and was pretty deep. Thai va in my lax or, if I could only re.eli il. I didn't stop to cah ulate cham c or pick nice stepping pla-es, but I jitsl made jumps .-r all I was uoilh, and before I'd I. inly light away I'd go again, aud mhi bet thai log tight alter ine. I could feci the wind ll.-hi it, and it steincd every lime I stunk that it was on to me. I don't In hew my heart heal, or that I breathed, going ilovv u that rollw ay, an I I thought of every 'tear' I had ever been on and every mean thing I had ever done. 1 kept ahead all right until I got willnn about Iwiuly led of the river, and tlu-n she .--I rin k me. I was in the an, and when the blow ame I went like a cannon ball mil into tlienwrand to the bottom. A '. I came up a do, en of the l oys gr.il'ln d me and brought me a. hole. They had been wad hing me from the oilier bank, ami when they saw ine shoot out into the stream they rushed into the water to bring out what they thought would be my corpse Hut 1 wasn't hurt a particle, though it took some time to get my 'bellus' into running shape again. That log struck me on the hips and threw me fully fifty feet, and that was what saved my life; for if I had landed near the bank that log would have crushed me." "That was a close call!" "Tolerable, tolerable." Detroit Free Frtifs. TIIK OLD MEETINU HOUSE. How the -v F.Blaler of Mjiy lears Ami Attended Mmrrh. The meeting-house of New England was m ver lighted, except ov the sun, mil il singing-schools made it necessary to introduce ivndh'j and rude chande liers. Night meetings in the meeting hoii -e were ( on idered highly indeco rous and quest ionabh- even by the most zealous. No liring was provide I for. stove were utterly unknown and lire phe es w ere riot to be thought of. Kveii tin- rude and dangerous devices, whi'hiiM rward were mat ured intothe not un-oinfoi-table foot-stoves were at lust unknown. The New Kngland meet ing house was never warmed by artificial heat tdl fr JM' to 1 if a co. winter morning the breath of the worshiper, not .infre.iu. ntlv " would seem like sutoke from a hundred furnaces as it cone in cont.e t w ith the fmsly atmosphere. The walls which had been alino.-t congealed into ice by the lierce northwesters of the preceding wet k, would st l ike hill into the frame of inanv of ihe congri it ion. That they should roiue to such a pla- e as t hi on a snowy morning, plow ing through un-wepf walk, and plunging through fearful drills man. woman ami child and sit with half-froen feet under long di r es on knotty dm trinr s, make ii -hi . i r a ; we think of it and say from the heart "herein is the patieme of the saints." And yet the w riter's memory i an distinctly re- -all the observation and experieni of scene . like these. The e-1 erii-ni e wa" not mi i rm l as it night seem. Mani fold devices against the cold were pro vided. Some that are now deemed in- ib -p- iisal'l... were not needed. The free-handed and open-In .-u-ted hospital- it v oi (hi hou -, m-ar tie- in eting I ,e wa freely pioMered aud as read- My .i' i -.fi d. Kuoi minis kid hen fires . w ere ex pre. ly replenished for Sunday it I,. .,ie w h! h s'-oies ol w orship, cr- Irom a di.-t. im e warmed their pi r-s.n-.iuda'e their him h"oiis. and a win h thty lepli-ni-.lii d their foot-st-.w.-. Th" merchant, th" inn-kei per, the squire, th" d'H tor, the retired luoiiey-h ii !ei. th- wealthy widow or La lv r.oiiuiiiul who lived mar the meeting house, all esteemed it their duly jiud their pleasure to manifest, this r. .is..ii.:l.e hospitality. Might and n itiual as il was. it helped to bind ami le Id together the little community by the in- o' common sympathy. To pro- tde ag.uiisi all i out iugent ies, ad joining neighbors from a dis'ancc would s ine tini'-s i re. t a plain struct, lire Upon the meeting boll e green -a :- ibbath-day hoii,e, o i ailed of one or I wo a; '.il l ni'-n's. w ith .iniph- lire-places, uhii h relieved s iiiiewli.it the dealt up on the ov ri i-ueih ne-1 hospitality of those who dwell under the droppmgs' of the s i'ii t uary. Thee structures have nearly all disappeared with Hi" oca-ion which brought them into being. Now and then the remains "f one are id.-ntiii d by some village auli- 1 1 1 in , as applied to .'iiic baser use of alahlc or graii.u v. Xi ir .''' A Siioileil Piclure. st. I'clci slmig h, i narrowly i sca ed losing Ihe iiio.-I precious of ils art treasures, the celebrated Madonna del la Stalla of l.'aphael. l'he pi. ture, which for nioic than three cent uries with me Tiniest oi cigars-mv cigars and a hall oelongi l to the stalla fami- ' they look like-much better madethan ly, wa purchased in 17" by the cm. . the larger article. If curiosity had pi roe ol Ku -la for v 1 J, Jtai, and was prompted an examination these little by him piv .olio (.. the late liiiipic.s, , cigars would have been found to have w lio.il In i d. a'h be picalhcl it tothe art been made of the best tobacco and museum at the Hermitage, 'l'he heat- very fragrant ly scented. These small ed air ol the gallery in which the pid- 1 specimens of the cigar-makers' craft lire was Iniiig ten nlly split the square are the new form in which the appe piue panel on which l.'aphael paiitd-d tite of opium smoking is indulged in his ma-tci i i and for a lime it was in a more open manner than it can be ' feand that the damage was irrcpara- , bc. A i i I .un at I ist ii. inn. I snloioM . Volunteered at l.l -t, h"W ev er, to set . matters ngbt. Alter larelully t-up- "i I ing the l.n e nl tin- pi. I me w il h II in ii 1 -,i. K 1 1 by a slab "I niaiMe. he la- ' bmioii iv iiibbelawav the panel. Hist ; with lib and alleivvaid with pow- i deled gl.l -, and then silo I .'.led ill j mounting tin- thin rem. lining him on i i an V , . in I he tour -e of I his dcliiilte loiicralioii it was discovered that in l 1 stead ol the hook whiih tin- Madonna in the pi. I tne now hold-, there was originally a pomegranate, towards j win. lithe infant .le.tts stretched nil' his hand w ith childish curiosity. -St. j ,i.-;,i-.s' lit,:- H' . I la Cii-.e nf lire. If your ilnthing takes lire, y.mr life may depend upon your own good sense, slide the hand down the die keeping them a i lo.f to the body as possible, at the same tune sinking to the Hour by bending the knees; roll over on the tlonr, and, if possible, gel hold nf a nicer tear up the tarpet. and envelope yourself in it. Nothing so quickly quenches the lire as to smother it. It niav be done with a coat or bed-t lothing, or elTect ually by -. . i, ,,..,... i"""'!"'.' ;; ' veloiung the person in it. Jlall . Journal af Jlealth. SCIENTIFIC Sdi ATS. Mr. Earnest Giles, the eyj lorer, r .!. templates organizing ; grand hu.d e .- pedition f0 traverse the iwnaiiiing m.- explored portions of the Au.;;!:.;i, continent. We read, says the .', . ,' ;,v Ai.t ii enn, every now and then of a-e.iii which burglars are supposed t hav rendered their victims ure on ions by holding cloths wet with c!:loioi.i:n to keyholes before entering an apart ua-nt. Of course, the absurdity of s n ii a l;c tion is apparent. Whether sleeper.. 1 can pass from natural t chloroion.i eleep if it is held near the Le e. is still u niiuliiin 1 Mtherwood and llaiilan have "pressed the belief that excessive rnental work produces a rapid d.-ay ..f the teeth. As an explanation of the alleged fact, ai. other writi-r suggest . that the overworked brain steal ,'t!l for the phosphates ami 1- av es none f-,. the teeth, or else that too nvi-l, s'u !y causes tne general fie.utu to 'i -i -i i - J lie miw I no ii. is ii i-M.-s-. ,r mental work can o it i I ncm-i- .-r;-ous disease, but thinks it i;e-:e pro! a. ble that ill effects result Iran tic worry- vvhii h wears upon th" v-i' in like friction upon the engine a! !i-:..- ing such work. As to position in writing, n Gorman professor maintains t ha, while t'e-n -r mal distance bet '.vein 'le- eye, an-1 th' desk ought to be tw-nty-tive ci r.'i metres, fappro iu;,-t' -. t' ri i:r ! ,,, it is but rarely that this ally observed, in very no more than sevt n ' inihes) being permit i!i-t ii- ae II iii.-uy ill-'. Ilice lllliie I Cs i ' 'ed. I r-.-o tlii- cloe application of the h -a I ! to' desk, and the ein urn-1 a-.i C at in most c-ises tlie body in m o,u j-1-. isf ed to the right, thereby iiinin; an eh-' ration "f the right shoulder, a i nr. a ture of the spine ( do flop- ! to Iron, thirty to forty per cent, ani uig g:rNi is not infrequently brought iiU til. It was further remaii.e 1 that ol the hil-l-rm examine I only ten p--r o n!, wen naturally short-sighted, and that, as among wild races defei live v isi'-n is a matter of great rarity, tlie tn.ui.ie in question was a prodm t of m .d.-i n civi- lization and the existing system of class tea' hing. Opium ( tears. There are few persons outside of those in polite circles and diah-is in articles consumed by opium uers that are aware how widespread is the use of this noxious drug in s.m I'ram i -i ... Druggists an tell of the riuiinrotis calls fur it in liquid and powdered form. and the polii e have only ;i paitial knowledge of the number of p'a. i s where opium smoking is surrcpt ii i"iis. ""' ' '"""s tuip.cgnatc, won ine iiimes oi ine oiugnaw i"iig been sold, and in this way the habit of opium smoking has often been unron Bcioiisly acquired. If the several forms mentioned in which the drug is made to supply the demand were not enough, another;' ml more insinuating at the same time as innocent in aji pearance as any, has been introduced. 1'robably some of the readers of this item have recently seen small, eh gant jy made boxes, an inth or an inch and a half wide by t wo inches long tilled Usually followed by the devotees nf the pernicious habit. Opium is too costly to be mixed with the tobacco of these small cigars, and il is a qn. -I i-mi if it is not in a more poi -onoti , shape t ban when used ill the way ol a liquid sti. Ii as laudanum, or a powder, or in the usual pasty form, l'he tnb.mo ami good tobacco is used -is put in a brazier and held ov cr burning iq-ium, until the weed i ; thoroughly impreg nated with the fumes of the drug, and it is a que l inn if it is not stronger thus smoked than when inhaled direct from the paste. Those who know thn terrible eld-Is nf drinking anything from a glass smoked" withtoba.eo smoke tan probably appieciate the strength nf these innocent looking small cigars vv hen sal uratcd with the fllmf, f opium. These igars are m.t. j S(1, i,v tobac. onists, and ai e diilii nil. to get even by those v ho u-e them. Tin y are sold on the quiet, so it is said, by Chinamen who are strictly "no sabee" to any one they are not certain if. Two sie.s were shown tho writer, .one an inch long aud over an eighth nf an im h in diameter, the . other nearly halt an inch longer ami proportionately thitker.both kinds w. 11 made. A small mouth-piece, similar b a cigarette holder, accompanied thu box, which contained Utteen cigars. .. . ,. llie Man in the lo'in. , tlx- M '., i ',, M ... i ii..- u rink iu hisbacJ V... . U eee is' A 1 1 1 I f I il him ? Ai. I i. n ' In. in""- il i.t i- -uiile anf i. ... I. ; A i.'i 1. 1 i . .h- i wi' .k I lui i t hey wiiter anr. i ni ! i. . I. , i . - i,, a,. , . v. ii lie It. I tit tho sun, fc,, I,., j ,. 11. ,ilr , M !-, 19 tun iliKlOIS S.J- 1. Il it i-t.'l le- i.cT II. - j i-t .licim-. I -'i.i-. s Oh- iWtois fcUdo' AikI lie- M.iii in tub M-xiii h .8 a biil on bit IMI. IV. V.'i i VV i.nt .'i i2 ii'm thiny' I lorn.-' l ut tli ire l i t uiu authentic, mj l-.ir-- Xiipii a I. I..., I on his en, itii-l it coin on iiii f Inn - II.- rwW il ii .ini !-. I il -I tuple ti' k inj f il n.i-l.i l,r; a (iiaiju lun.e i over, you Kcov; HI. ii ' ii.. l.v. i PI tlinlv ft' Ii ini-.lit 1 1- .1 ii. ie I'll i e.l over, n know! An-I tin- n, mii i.i il- iii'.kii I.,.- ii lh'-uiuittif k.i..-, (,.-. 1 V'.'i. o VV i. a i . H I l.n' i-' An-I hi- t io ..e . ii I-i-l n.'iii'l wln-re hi. I . .1- on hi I.. I..-; MtiliHioo l,i Hue Is to ji N'.nh h oe. ,s..'l'll. Al.-l I I .... I. .' I I III," CllllllllS ! 1 II .'I II.- lll"'l II. A i.'l I"- I i 'i-!.. s lie in "ll we h ii .1 i..ineie InD, Wi,i. V, !,, ' h.it it lit ll V'-liitl- 111:111' V'-'i, 11 1 ii vi i 1 . hi ,1 !.i!-K 111 11 M-I'iil-'illil'l' -. II . (.". I I M.iiM I'UI MilSU'IlS. The s,,e.-s .-I' night ga';n-r in h'W t illie. 'I lie Ml alii- Age -liet vvcell thilfy and n't;.. Meat 1 1 -..p - are .itdy 1 oiisidered good 1 i .11 at til" pi nit' n! 1.1 1 ;". i he;.- - em to b no i all lor in ex hibition .'I I i t at .1 1 I' ll. et the au'li. in - i - ..I ,v ,i,-i:i t iv. V. I1.1t i . tin- .hit. 1 . in b t .wen a timid ii 'Id ,i'i I a s,'j,. n- l..'i sailor f Oil" I.I, ! ' i.i.-. ...a .iii'l tin' other to 1,1- soar. II ymi 1 -ii g 1 oil. lo.vcl out of one y., rd oi 1 1- th. Ii".'. '11. my lowel-, -an 1 ..ii ..I two yards? Ilia' tlc-pei.d-- ..I' ig' I'h r on lio.v many there .!' "Il ti:" I iotlc I'll '. 'I .1 11 ). Miig I-, inn l"i" ilat" treas urer." said .1 p. -bin i in I t all acquaill l.iu e. "I ii.it 1 10,11 . . .-aiy ." the ae qi.aiiit oi' c 11 p!:i .1; -wad until you're, cic. t. d. iiirl lie 11 .1" your running." The in i-t d rrii'lv li ippoiat -d p-r-s.. w Ii ,r e e 11 dill tig th" prc-.cllt ii-iiturv w a . 1 In-y 01111 ; Ii iy who took 1 .t ,,, i, .i 1 1 nl u 1 11 -1' to a 1 1'ielid's hou e, and who wa . not a-I.ed to sing llllllllg the whole eve g. Uli! I s. e. you ;tr - afraid nf me," said Lev. sydney Snulli one day to a y oung lady whoi ai be.nl" him at din ner. Vnii crumble your bread, and that is an undeniable proof nf shy ness." ! il-. it. she n pin d, -when 1 sit by the liiVii... of London, and with bntl hands when 1 sit by the Archbishop." 's ,11 W ilde is in lav or of giving one's wile, 1 11. nne e.l hit ically suggest ive ol In r hu'-an d's business. A good plan. A 1 In mist's wife would bcthen A1.11 l.li.a; a liintituie dealer's. So phia; a dinner's. Tilly; a fisherman's, Nettie; a totisnii.il artist's, Itarbare; a I'.iw 1. broker's, .lew lia; ii burglar's, Kit ty, au ,'iltoiiicy's, Law-r.i; a bar keeper's, Liii-ev ra; an editor's, Kit-a. A Minister. Ill Is". 7 the Ihlce.chief olliieisnf the ship t il I ibail 1 aim- upnll a sca-sel'. I cut in the o can in the v n-inily nf St. Helena. li 1 I. mug that then- heaved it si II nut ol 1 In s a, all . ,it I w . tit v yards di. I. ml Ii. .in the -hip. a 1 ic.it lire with it head sh.ipid Ilk" il lltlll-biioy, mid sew 11 i l eight lee! ill diameter at the laigct p. nl, with it kind of si roll o I I ol I - -kin 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ling it near the top. 11 ocmei to be some Jlltl feet iu leiigih, and vvai nf a diirk color potted vv uh v ii il . Combining all the I. I. I all I allejat tons lint cntlld be fol ic te.t, t he 1 a .1 111. 1 le out by the advo cate, ol tl e.i serpent theory was t'l.it Hi -. 1 'tur usually apiearcd in until qui nied si as and calm weather; that it had a slender body nf perhaps piii I eel ill length, ii broad, snake-like; In a I w ith prominent eyes, a long and II. in., w in-, k .in-1 Im , and was com in. -nly of ad. 11k 1 olor. It svv am swift ly :ii the surl.i 'i', vv ith the head ami ne. k t h v atcd. progressing apparently by a crt ii al luidiiliilinginotinn. There, did not seem to be any fish to which tlieaiiim.il cnidd be referred, but it w a maintained to put the matter in ils plainest form that there might be sum - liioditie 1 type of the secondary cnalin-auriaus ( marine liard ), or some form intermediate between them and the eh'iigated cetaceans.