47. C. H3CX.VST Emma PaoFxiBroa. y Lsr Mm Who M&to JFo Nasr 33 Fas Fiaar, JfsPiSMr, Si SO Fjss &.Yxtv Itf &dBidBriv oraxca VOL. 6. Sty DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA, V, JDNJ5SDAY, JAN. 6, 1886. NO. 34 ttu J. W. Gbaham. Taos. Roffiv ; GRAHAM & BUFFIN, AT TOUSETS AT LlWi HILLS BO RO, N.C, Practice in th counties of Alamance, Caswell, Durham, Guilford, Rockingham, Person, and Ounce' ;, , A. W GRAHAM, ATTORNEY AT LAW. WLLSBORO, :N. 0. PRACTICE In the Courts ol Orne,Chat bain, Person, Wake andOianvUle. Claim eollectei inU parts of Hit State, - v . " Zw1,y. W.W. FULLER. . ATTOBXEY ATJLAW, DURHAM, N. C. Or PRACTICE in State tod Fede ral Court, ; ' S. O. RYAN, ; ATTORNEY AT LAW, RALEIQU, N. C. - ; rNov.28-ly SAM'L T. ASHE, Attorncy-at-Lawi t ; DUBI1AM,N.C. Special attention given to Collection of claims. ' - . Junel7-ly DRG.V COPP, ' (Graduate of the University of Maryland) Dentist, OFFICE OVER DIKE'S BOOKSTORE, IN RIGGSBEE BUILDING, Durham, N. c. ' . : ; sept2i Jons Maxsino Cha:el HilLN.C. J. S. Mansino ' Durham. N.C MANNING MANN ISO ATTOBHEYS) AT LAW. DURHAM, N. C. . Practice in' State and Federal Courts. Office Plant building. John Manning will be in his office on the 2nd and 4th Saturdays of each smith, , .Jan. J S&S.2Z' Lj SMITH, FEATHER, DYEING AND CLEAXIXO ESTABLISHMENT. Feathers senf by mail can Jbe furnished it one week time. S08 NORTH FIFTH STREET, onU-ly RICHMOND, VA. RICHMOND STEAM DYEING, CLEANING AND CAB PET CLEANING WORKS MRS. A J PYLE, No, 803 N. Fifth St., Richmond, Va Gentlemen' and youths clothing cleane! dyed and repaired. Ladies dresara, ehawlt cloaks. elova Ac cleaned and dred. Da mask and lace curtains made to look like new. Satisfaction guaranteed. --Mentio this paper. janll-ly DR. HARDEE, . toerai Pf aclilionsr of MsiiciiiB. DURHAM, N. C. Office with Dr. Carr, over Vaughao A Tennjrs Urug More. July 22. v SHOES. 0 For a fine pair of Ladies or Gents LW and Shoes Trunk Leather Value or Club Bag as well as Sole Leather Shoe Uppers and CalfSkins, send or w r' to to HELLER BROS. . Shoe and Leather House at Raleigh, C. Bennett A Barnard fine Lwlica Shoes, Zcltflers fine Ladies, Childrensand Gents Boots and Shoes and Ifannan fine Hand end Machine sewed Gent and Boys Shoes. Send for price of coot frceifriprm or maU. lep.$J. EIGHTY-FIVE EIGHTY-SIX. 0 shall we grieve with tb sod Old Year, - O shall we mourn for the year that is ' dving? . 0 shail we bring to the new crowned King. Our paeans, dead grandeur, defying? - Here's a song for the New and a tear for the Old; - . . O friends we may not thus sever ' . The years in their flight, be they Lanpy or sad; - ' They're Companions Fate lino! forever. The New nay not lose all the jovs of the Old. ' . And the Old may not cast all its burdens On thelight-benring wings of h new-com-ing heiij ... - ' Each has iUtwn sorrowJ and 'guerdons. The griefs of thejpast and the joys of the past. " In our memories still mav vet linear'".' But each year has its death and each year has its births, , Marked out by Eternity's finger. And in the New, in the days to be bora. Where Destiny's veil is unlifted, There hover new hopes, new sorrows and joys W'nich Time fur our trying has sifted. So let us weep low for the year that is irone auuKiuisiuguiw lor me year lliat is , nearins; In the merciful hauds of the axcient of DATS Leave all ournewhopingand fearing! THE NATIOKlIi IIQTIU tfaut'Me, Virginia. This New Hotel Is Central! located near the Depots. has sew rcitsif cwt and is heated AT STEAM. ELETKIC BELLS AND OAS IN EACH ROOM Has splendid Bath Rooms for Ladies and Gentlemen. Has large, Light Sample rooms for Commercial travel Tli Proprietor havs had long tt ,ri.n( in the busiocs. and by careful Attention ta the want of the traveling public, nope to merit ana receive A Snare Ol meir paironage. YATES & RICHARDSON, Accommodations For 300 GUESTS. BOARD 12 AND $2.b0 per day lAmerican Hotel, nter r sue tlty. -J. f ' Fighting Randall Over the Rules. Members mar protest as much as they please that no personal eijjuifi cance attaches to the proposed cliange of the House rules, but we fear it is a mistake. We confess that it looks very much as though the whole busi uesa was inspired by the haters of Mr. Randall and the proposition to change is prosecuted chiefly by his impiacaoie enemies. posed in its nakedness, it is claimed by some to be simply a mean effort to humiliate one of the most loyal Democrats, and. erhaps, the ablest public man of the Union; and if so the transaction from beginning to its present stage is ex ceedingly discreditable to those en gaged in it.' If many of the men who are seeking to degrade Randall pos sess one whit of his statesmanship or practical sense; if they hare discov ered one-half of bis courage and pa triotism, the country has failed to note the fact and; excepting a few personal organs, tbe Democratic party places implicit faith in the fealty and soundness of Mr Randall. It is no discredit to Mr. Randall that the Washington Pott hps systematically and incessant! subjected him to dis courtesy and abuse. But it is a con summate piece of assumption for that journal to impinge the personal or political integrity or anr Democrat of high and honorable repute, and it is a ridiculous pretension for it to pose as tbe organ of the national Democracy so long as it continues it indecent assaults upon the ablest of that party's leaders. The most humi- iatlng spectacle, however, that is presented to our subserration, is the concurrences of one or two Southern jouanals, which, suppressing the com monest reeling or bumamty and for getful of the memorable battle against their own degradation and enslave ment fought and won by Samuel J. BandalJ, assist and applaud every savage and vindictive thrust made at the courageous and generous defen der of Southern equality and Anglo nnxon superiority. Lynchburg (Va.) Newt. . fritish Spoliations. Speculations in England are ad verse to the success of any plan to give Ireland Parliament of its own. It is said that Mr. Gladstone would not be able to carry out the plan with which he was credited because of tbe incurable split in , his party. But there are others who hold that be will be able to solidify the Liber al onon anv plan he mar propose. It Is not probable, to say tbe least, that the Tones will be able to hold oflke many months longer. It will then devolve upon the opposition to rorm A Ministry ana it is almost cer tain that Mr. Gladstone will have to be Invited to assume this grave re sponsibility. There will scarcely be any other Alternative. I no lories will be almost certain to bo defeated anon some measure ana not neces- narily Irish, for England ha a com plex policy snu a great many inter ests to be consulted, llie Irsn may not find it to their interest to support mo Aone in mo uuiuv.mu bihi furJun policy, and so a few of the t'arncllite uniting with the labcrftl would drivs the Ministry from power. In that event it would bo inevitable that Mr. Gladstone should be called upon to form a new Ministry, as be is the only man in opposition who could Tally the forces and give A guarantee of anything like a success ful term of olGce. In tbe meantime Mr. Farnell is the uncrowned King of Ireland," and hold the balance of power in the British Parliament. He can kill and he can make Alive. It is in bispow er to defeat the Tory Ministry and to rive the Government to the Liberal or tice una. He u an able, cauti ous. wel noised man, and will use bis great influence for the prosperity and glory of bis own people, no uonui. Wii Star. Thomas Stevens, who tfartaJ from San Francisco to ride upon A bicycle around the world, ho arrived at Teheran, the capital of Persia. His U the most noteworthy cycling tour of lhi1irt century of cycles. During the recent parliamentary Wions in England. Queen Victoria showed her sympathy for the Tories in many ways. Presidents of the United States in Succession, and Their Various . , Opponents. W. in the Home First Washington crime the good and the great ; Then the Federalist Adams became ruler of State Defeating Tom Jefferson an . old Democrat, ' Who wanted the chair in which Wash- ' inton sat. - ' -Then Jefferson a second time offered t . his name, ' . , And defeated John Adam at his own little game; And again was elected in 1804, Over C. C. Pinkney by 'quite a large score. John Madison then followed in 1808, ollowed by Clinton and Piukney at a very slow gate; He again was elected in 1812 Leaving poor De Wilt Clinton laid up on the shelf, n 1816 Monroe entered the ring And knocked out the Federalist, poor Rufus King, n 1820 be again took the chair, Beating John Qnincy Adams in the race "fair and square, hen John Quincy Adarai in the year "twenty four" Beat. Jackson and Crawford and Clay to bo bu re; But Old Hickory came to the front , is the year twenty eight urned the tables on Adums and set- tied hi Me; - And again was elected in the year thirty tr:o Over Clay, Wirt, and Floyd, and beat the whole crew,' Next Martin Van Buren in the year thirty six, Left, Harrison, Webster, Manguts, and Whito in a fix; hen Harrison in 40 our ruler was made. And back in his "own cotu"Van Buren was paid; But he in a month, from from tbe sceue passed away, And left President Tyler, the seep-, tretosway.' n the year 44 James K. Polk took the chair, And beat Clay and Buraey the ambi tious pair. Zach Taylor in the year 48 then was chosen Over Smith, Lewis, Cass and Martin Van Buren; But he, poor old fellow, did not live quite two years ; So left the office for Filmon with all ' of it cares. n the year ol 52 Franklin Pierce made it hot ' For Hale, Webster, Broome, Troupe, and old Wiufield Scott; fe carried the day, as you plainly can note By almost the entire Electoral vote. n 57 Buchanan then took his seat And Fillmore and Fremont and Smith met defeat. OlJAbc Lincoln cext in the year sixty one, Mid the storm clouds of war his reigning bfgun, Leaving far in the rear Stephen Doug las and Bell, And Brcckenridge also the story to tell Jo then best McClellan in the year - sixty four By a popular vote of four hundred thousand or more. le lived until April in the year sixty five; And but for Wilkes Booth might have been alive. Andv Johnson tbcnv followed and 0 filled out the term. Though they tried to impeach turn, he stood his ground firm. Tbe Radx they accused Mm of cban ing his coat, And they fulled of their purpose by only one vote. Ulysses S. Grant in the year sixty eight Beat Horatio Seymour by the de crco of fate; And again took hi seat in seventy three, Beating O'Conor and Greely as slick as coul 1 be, Adding Hendricks and Jenkins, ' Brown and Black Coining out clear ahead tt the whole yelling pack; Now Rutherford Hayes la seventy six Piavcd on old Sammy . Tilden his -juggling tricks," In the raco too, was Copper ind Walker and Smith, But their hopes like poor Sammy's, proved only a myth, For the Rad were determined the country to rule, Or send the whole bullion away down to liool. James A. Garfield took his scat in March eighty one; But in just about six months his short , race was run ; He fell by the hands of old Guiteau the crank; Giving the office to Arthur, the next one in rank, Thank Heaveu at last in the year eighty five From Radical rule we have had a re z i ' prieve, . . " And Grover Cleveland, with . his mighty arm, . ; ' Will shield the whole country from ' POLITICAL HARM. . A Somewhat of a Fraud. We have received another bulletin from our state bureau or department of Agriculture so called. This deals with certain insects (the-invisible) that pry into upon plants the in sects and their parasitacal tendencies were discovered by other scientists than Dr. Dabney and assistants. But our purpose is to call attention to the following introductory to the last circular : In addition' to beinz a chemical bureau, this Station has been , made by the law a bureau of information for the benefit of the farmers of the Slate. Every farmer has the right to pply to the Station for any informa tion which science should supply, and if the Station has no expert in the special department of inquiry in its immediate employ, it will take , due steps to secure the information de sired from some of its corresponding scientists. In addition to informa tion on all agricultural chemical sub- ects, including the composition and value of fertilizers, the production of fertilizers, composts, dec. at home, and our resources for making the same, the analysis of sous, marls, mucks, waters, minerals, ores, feed- ing-stufi's, and the examination of seeds, for which we have apparatus and experts have been perfected whereby examination of botanical material, such as grasses, weeds, un common plants, of insects injurious to vegetation, or diseases or domestic animals, etc., as mentioned in para graph 2-4, section 2189 of the Code, can be made through the agency of the Experiment Station. - I his as the introductory states we Iways suppoxd was theobjuct of the aw creating this department. And this so fur as we have heard has not been tbe object of the bureau. -For the farmer except worthless circu lar nothing has been done. Tarboro Southerner. Tho Heritage of the Southron. Fancy a country of varied surface, mountain and plain, hill and dale, symmetrical klupes and rounded knolls, broad savanna carpeted with perpetual green, and breezy upland purpie wiin rising ana euiug buds. a land vocal with the song of bird and tbe murmur of rippling streams, where rurrowed held maKe generous response to the appeal of tbe husband- man, and rore-t or primeval growth keep guard over measureless areas of soil never yet touched by the plough share; a land or flocks and herds, or fruits and flowers, of grain and grais: a land fruitful of whatever is needed for the sustenance, the ' comfort and happiness of man, tor his highest physical, intellectual and moral de velopment; a land of soft atmosphere and element skies, of bold rivers and broad estuaries; a land of kindly hearts and hospitable homes, of brave men and beautiful women; a land consecrated by noble deed and illus trious with immortal names; a land or pure hearthstones and undcfiled sanctuaries fancy such a country, we say, and, if you b a dweller in this fair land of tbe South, look Around yon, and, beholding ali that you have lanced, lift np your heart in grateful recognition of the good Providence that has placed you To the midst of so many bleings. The original legend on irginia's Seal of State shonld be the daily remembered motto of every southern mau: Deus hases nobis otia fecit. Et. F.JEiVa DATJGHGTERS. 7r . ' - V ' A te-tain paper says the best wives in tt V world are farmers'- girls. We believe it is true. Net but that many mcchnic' s anf merchant's and bank er's i'.As make good wives and excel lent comen. But the rule is that far mers gins are heaitnier, Ireeher, fairer, more useful and sensible than any other class '-of joung women. What is a girl good' for who has no vigor of body, whose waist is like a wasp's, whose lungs are cramped ln tuiall" their; proper size. whose spine is crooked and diseased, whose nerves are as weak as a splccoy old woman's, whose . physical organization is so weak and unstrung that every wind gives her a cold, every change in the weather a neuralgic attack, every ac cident a hysteric fit and every spider that sets foot in her pathway a fran tic terror? What is a girl gooi for if she has no useful information, whose hands can serve no useful turn.who can neith er make bread nor butter, nor clothes, nor wash, nor nurse, nor mend? Wives live to some purpose, or ought to. Theirs is a great mission. ' They have noble service to' preside over the interests of the thousands of homes that dot our country. The dress, the comfort, the' taste, the health, the happiness, the intelligence, the virtues of our homes, sre not a little i their keeping.- All the in terest thai cluster around the fire side are confided to them. Not the politicians at Washington, not the professors in our colleges, not our men of commerce in our seaports, not the bankers in our cities, not the merchants in our shops, not the men in our professions, not even our ministers of the gospel, have commit ted to them a grander or holier charge, o! have in their keeping interests of greater importance than the wives of our country. Our civilization, our intelligence, our virtue, our progress in all that is great and good, depends as much upon our wives as upon any claas of tbe community. Ibey ahoold;" ThenV b3 healths, strong and useful They should know how to do something that will be of service to their families. To eook, to wash, to make, to mend, to pickle, to preserve, to cure, to nurse, to instruct, to please, to bless, to en tertain, to serve, to encourage, to cut; to knit and sew are some of the offices devolving npon a wife. If she knows not all of these- things, she must fail in some of her duties. If she cannot put her hand to some of these services, she cannot fulfill her mission. To do these things she must be well stocked with common tense and useful information. To em broider, to finger a musical instru ment, to paint, to read French, and nurse flow-pot and lapdogs, is a small Eart of a wife's mission, To go into ysterics over the lost novel, to weep over a newspaper doggerel, to study the fashion-plate, to feast on the Lady B ok as though it was solid food, to snuffls over love stories and be de lighted with coxcomb literature- are accomplishment of a very ones tionable character in a wife. ' Half a grain of common sense sprinkled in to a few hours of useful occupation is worth more than all or them. Uecause farmers' daughters are freer from these fooleries, are sounder in health, are trained to more useful employ ments, is the reason why, as general rule, they make better wives. All trua accom il. Aliments are to be prized: but the first and best and ever to be esteemed accomplishment is to be useful. This always makes one agreeable, always makes one honor ed. When usefulness in joined with intelligence, virtue and graceful man' ner. it consummates the character of a good wife. Mobile RtgUkr. In Paris, last rear, there were 80, 70 births and 72,735 deaths. One of the Faroe island has been swallowed up by the sea. An extensive iritttn of railroad is shortly to be commenced in China. The total value of the trade of India exceeds f 230,000,000 annually. Tbe Missouri Cremation society ha 400 members, twenty-five of whom are women. A crazvnuilt shown in New York actually i put down in cold figure as worth 13,000. From C0.O0O to 65.000 people cross the Brooklyn bru!ue every dat in the car, while about 11,000 walk over. Two death have been caused In Enttland this seas in by the trame of football, and quite a number or brok en limb are reported. A Georgia man ha kept A bale of cotton lor twenty years, winning mat each year would see tne article atine price which he thinks it is worth. AU the fruit and other tree In banta Barbara. Cal.. are betas dug op and Luglish walnuts punted in tbelr stead. I he crate U rapidly rprcadmg. There are now three clerks and messenger to to every United States .Senator, and it cftU I1U.0W to I12, 000 a year for the delivery of the Senate mail. late made great progress in North Carolina, as in other Southern States, and it is highly probable- that Mr Jamais one of its partisans. It is wrong to accuse him of drinking cocktails without positive evidence oi tne tact. . . AFTER MANY YEARS. Tobacco culture enters largely In to the 'agricultural industry of the United States, for the amount raised this year wilt doubtless not fall short of 500,000,000 pounds. As ft is one of the leading . money crops, and as maiy of onr readers ire - inter ested in it either directly or indirect ly, it may not be out of place to give a few points in regard to its early history and its nse in ancient times. Tobacco derives its botanical name (nicotuina) from Jean Nicot, who in troduced it into France. It is' some what uncertain whether its nse as a narcotic was known in the East be fore the discovery of America. When Columbu first put foot on the soil of the New World he found it extensi vely cultivated here, and its cultiva tion then extended far North of the regions in which the plant appear to be indigenous. Meyen, iu his "Geo graphy of Plants," expresses the pinion that the smoking of tobacco of great antiquity among th Chinese, because on very old sculp ture he has "observed the very same pipe which are now in use." Mey- and cannot be received as t i not improbable that the smok ing of tobacco baa been long practiced n China, but it is not certain. When tobacco was introduced in Europe tome-lookikg turkey buzzards, so fat, from America it soon became ex-1 nd fearless that they scarcely tremely prevalent amongst all Ori- m"nout one' wj Jne7 "ehe Tt. .A:.-. fcayengers there, and it is lorbidden bacco was found by Coltimbug to be I I eot out there about 4 o'clock in practiced in the West Indies, where tho afternoon. Haifa dozen scantily- I clad, evil-lookine. sturdy rascals rolls, wrapped in maixeleaf. It has - - uu uiilii ii i n t'M in riiw ii si in sii .iica auinH been prevalent from unknown anu- noder tha ihed With them were quity amongst tbe American Indians I several half-naked boys and flea-in-as far North as Canada. With them feeted dogs. It was not long until it even bad a religions character and tD "bouu of vaqueros and the tramp. . . ... . .. , ing of hoofs heralded the approach was connected with their worsh.p and 0f a drove of cattle And. a Vew mo- with ail their important transations . menu after, twenty-five or thirty wild Thus the Calumet, or pipe of peace, wis indispensable with them to the ratification of a treaty, and smoking together has a greater significance of friendship with the Indians than eat ing together has among nations. On small, agilo ponies. The corral-bar thUiubject Wilson, in his 'Prehis- ere put up, the ponies tethered, and . . . n .,... r the vaqueros and the butchers, climb toncMan, says:In the belief of , th- enclo8io3 fence the ancient worshipers, the Great .winging the nooses .of their long, Spirit smelted a sweet savour as the snaky rope lassos over the smoke or the sacrea plant ascenaea heads or tbe doomed animals, to the heavens; and the homely im- Two lassos were deftly thrown, at tbe plemeot of modern luxury was in sami lis taut almost, over the horns their hand a sacred cause, from of a steer, the corra'-bar were drop J arris is Solid. New York Sun. Our esteemed contemporary, the Philadelphia Press, returns to a sub ject that was more tamed about t wen- ty-nve years ago tnan now i "Mr. Cleveland's Minister of Bra zil, ex Gor. Jarvis. of North Csroli . ' r . t: .1... na. write, iron atiu u uo i. wuug levons in the language of that coun try three days each week. Rather an expensive schoolin,r-il0.000 a year. and Uncle Simuel pays the bill. Of . - - - a course It Is not necessary for many oi foreign Ministers under a Democratic Administration to speak the langu age of tbe countries to which they are sent. Signs and motions will get liquids, but in Brazil there is no sign for a cocktail, and poor Jarvis is alhtrst. He must learn the language up dia of exhaustion." It is not necessary that any minis ter to a foreign country should speak the language of the country for tho purpose oi aiscnarxiDz we viuuiw duties. Our Philadelphia contemporary is also mistaken in saying that, the Unitod States have to pay for the Portuiruess lessons which Gov. Jar vis is now eettinir. Tho United States r him tnr heimf Minister, and if he chooses to devote a large part of his salary to studying Portuguese that 1 hi affair. . By the way, how doe the Vew know that Mr. Jarvis is A drinking man? The temperance cause has of SICKENING SLAUGHTER.. HOW CATTLE ARE KILLED IS VENB ZUKLAA, SOUTH AMEHICA. Dr. Ditmars, of the National So ciety o f Microscopiats, believes that he has found in the tissues of ani mals that had been killed while suf fering torture, or frenzied by fright, cnanges that rendered them dan gerous for uso as human food. It wouia do well it that could be made such a deep-rooted conviction in the public mind that tho slaughter . of animals for food would be rendered as nearly painless to tho victims as possible. But it is to be feared that the effect spoken of is not sufficiently certain or deadly, to force considera tions of humanity as necessary for self-protection. I once witnessed the vied with each other throwing at the poor brute's remaining eye until it also wo knocked out At length they got tired of torturing hint aad . went for a fresh victim, leaving him sUnd-.' ing there, in all his agony and fright and fever, for nine or ten hours, un til daylight the next day, - when it would be time to kill for the market. Cook. , TARRING A RAT. ' ..r .. Rats are Conello, and Venezueia.and have ever since felt regret that the mee t killed mere was not transformed into an agonizing, deadly poison, of which the butchers could have been com pelled to cat largely'.- To have seen them suffer would have been a great delight. : ' - In that hot climate, where there is no ice, meat ban to be killed from day to day for immediate use. The abattoir of Pureto Cabello is some distance outside the town, between a thicket and a great bare flat on which stagnant water lies in the rainy season. In the edge of tba.thicket is a corral, or enclosure made with a fence composed of the trunk of small trees laid lengthwise like rails. Some twenty rods in front of it is a mas sively constructed, stone-paved shed, with hpfiv nnst fWnlr hi. 1.1 Ail in en's authority, however, is greater as the Erouna at short intervals around botanist than as art archaeologist, it. Around the base of each post the ground is trodden down in a basin and soaked deep and black with blood. On the ridge-pole of the shed. on the fences near by, and on the ground are hundreds of black, loath- wonderfully clean an Imals, and they dislike tar more; per- haps, than any.; thingj2lse, for if It once gets on their Jackets they find it most difficult to remove. Now, I ' had heard it mentioned that pouring preliminaries of the butchering of I tar down at tha" entrance Of their some cattle for the market of Puerto, holes was a rood remedv: also nlao- o . . decisive. ing broken pieces of glass by their holes was another remedy. But these remedies are not effective. The rats may leave their old holes and make . fresh ones in other parts of the house; -they don't however, leave the premis es for good. , I thought I would try another experiment one I hal no. ' heard of before. One evening X set a largo wire-cage rat-trap, attaching inside a most seductive piece of - strongly-smelling cheese, and next morning I found to my satisfaction . that I had succeeded in trapping a very large rat, one of the largest I havo ever seen, which, after I had besmeared him with tar, I let loose into his favorite run. The next night I tried again, and succeeded in catching another equally big follow, and served him in the same manner. ' I could not follow these two tar-be- " smeared rat into their numerous runs to see what would happen ; ' but it Is reasonable to a&ume that they sum raoned together all the member of ' their community, and by their crest- . fallen appearance gave their comrades ' silent indications of the - misfortune which Lad so suddenly befallen them, or that they (lightened their brethren -away, for they one and all forsook the place and fled. The experiment was eminently successful. Erom that day in 1875 till now, 1883, numer si ancient though it IsTTia' tirel v free from rats. andTTr that there is no remede$ 7 t 4? .uuB.iuir ueaaus wun great Kianuii i . i: eves and wideenread horns, dashed PUB' " Juu " 'uur path out of a narrow path in tbe thicket into the open. There they were quick ly rounded up ard hurried into the corral by the vaqueros mounted on They never came back to the again. ChomberU Journal. house A POUND OF TOBACCO PRE SENTED TO EVERY JURY : IN THE DISTRICT OF - COLUMBIA. : . t -There are peculiar customs in con-' nection wita ths administration of the courti of the District of Colum." bia, relics of the old Maryland laws; bntone which strike the ordinary observer as the most peculiar is that- which the hallowed vapor rose with as ped, and the excited beast came which requires a winning party to a fitting propitiatory odors as that charging nut at a fellow who had civil suit to pay for the tobacco that which perfumes the awful precincts place! himself inviliwrly before the tha jury which tried the cue is sup-,, of the cathedral altar, amid the my- opening. Before the long horns could posed to have nsed during the hear; steries of the church's high and holy reach their object one of the lasso?, ing of the case. Now, It happens days." that had been adoritly cost around a sometimes that not one ol the jurors Tobacco seed were hrst carried to i snubbing-post, tautened o suddenly i uses tobacco in any farm, and yet tne Europe by Uonzaio uernanues ae that the steer near r turned a some, pound or tobacco, or its equivalent. Oviedo, who introduced it into Spain, tault and came down hi side, upon has to be paid the foreman of the where it was first cultivated as an or- the ground, with a stunning crash, jury the instant a verdict has been namental plant, till Nocolo Menardes I0 a moment he was up, standing as rendered. As litigants or their at extolled it as possessed oi meuicmai ir dazed and trembling in every limb, wrncys are not in tne naou oi car virtues. It was first introduced in III. was as handsome as a picture I ry'mg so much tobacco in their cloth- taly in 1560. There is no reference Ui long limbs were sharply and lithe ing, for custom requires a pound be I - L-1 1. . - .A - . . . ... I . L . 1 . ll.. ! M-J. .1 - ! to tne use oi tooacco m onaaspca, i a mose ol A deer; bis body, sinning given tnoiwyeron ue wiumug hub. yet it U certain from other evidence Mark mahogany in color, was slender las toon M the verdict is recorded, that it was well known in Eneland I and well formed- bi hod was car-1 hand the foreman of the jury, $1, in his time. It was first recommended riej high and proudly bis eye- blaz- which is jnst as good as tbe pound of for medicinal purposes and it virtues led with mingled raze and affright. I tobacco. Sometimes a Jury will try were greatly exagerated, but it soon Suddenly be made another rush at a. several cases in a day. ir they do became A general arttclo of luxury. I raan. the second lasso carried mean-1 they will get SI for each case front The Popes Urban VIII. and lnno- Uyie to a more advanced snubbing, the winner, l be juries put ail their cent XL fulminated against it tne post tautened, and agnia -he went tobacco money together, ana at the thunders of the church s the priests nia . .ir ith another somersault end of the term divide it among them. and sultans of Turkey declared smok-1 ,,i .mfl ,(. -,;,s .nnthpr crash, selves, reserving a sufficient sum to in ir a crime. Sultan Amuret IV. ue-i Af,iwiin . mnweharv of those buy for tne ioremaa or tne jury a creelng a punishment of death to all mart rushes, and they woikcd html cane, sorao kind of a present forth offenden. burin tbe early part of .i-k-ntil thev had bailiff who attend the jury, and A the 17th century there was a law in bim drawn up to one of the slaughter bouquet for the judge who holds the. Rusiiatocutoff the noses or ail wno oogta at the etlze of the shed, with hie couru - . ." ' smoked. If such a law was inforced LM nPar to tha blood aoakrd Tha jury has legal claim for the in America to-day this would bo a P.rth. Thcr. at the first snuff of pound of tobacco in every case, but nation of noteless people King hi., hloo.1. ho heeama almost mad I there is no case recorded where tbe James Lot England issued a "Coun I : tormr. hat Mean waa boneless, tobacco has been refused and a test terblaste tobacco," In which he de- with much skill thev cot another case made, un the criminal side or scribed Its at as "a custom loath- .nnti Utfhad on his hna that drew the courts the judges can, if they de- . .a ..... .1.- I : J . . .... . . .1 .t t . i . . r ."... some to ino rye, naicnw mi iuo uov, nt brow wnhin A WOt or tbe post. I imp"" uuu. i munu. vi wbw harmful to tn Drain, aangcrous to Then the Ioawcs wer thrown offend co instead oi dollar, ado penalty tho lungs, and in the black, stinking .h. butchers' fun be?an Thev had for wife-beating is from 10 to 100 m . t-l!. .L. I ' . ' . " . . - . .i..T 1 .1 . Ill lume lliereoi nearest resemuiiiiE ic I ntKnt or limo to n.n. ami thrv nro. i pounus oi tooacco unuer tnej oiu wws. horrible Stygian smoke ol the pit that Poed to enjoy themselves. Some The old laws, however, are seldom, if is bottomless." All opposition, bow- uoUD. $osi n,ey wamteit to train ever, entered, for most or them are ever, was in vain. It use increased .er.midi to tu the thiirh and supplanted by modern ones. Under and has continued to increase to tne hMi r th rriM.l hn.fn. He the former the courts can piercsA present day, and it Is now mote pre-1 fuucht etna kicked at them with All red-hot Iron through the tongue of valctit than at any former time, and u, mi-i,f m ,r,nni itk na ct. 1 every one who blasphemes tne the luxury of th rich and the poor, I fort .nl In Hinuin i iu.n.!i at I Creator, but thev do not do it. There or civilized nations ana savage tnoes. cngth stood tock still, moaning, and Is, however, just as good law lor it as Country Homes endurcfl tho torture, until the dogs there is to hang persons in this Dis ir( liro.1 r M,a mtrt lint IliO tnetl I iriCU SOmB OVeriCaiOUl vuruuaui 1. 1 inked the enforcement of the law the The Contested ElectlOa ll Ohio- fcredso keenly and showcMt so first time Robert G.Ingersoll lectared Laii,.iiii.. m mii h i i,! m I in Washinzton city, but no attention The Supremo Court announced its I. u,,- Oneof thcra took a great wu paid to the request. Kwa under decUon In tha Hamilton count con- stone, colnff close to the steer's stood at the lime tnat woi. Aogereou tested election cases last week, rcver- bea-i, burled it down w ta wen cruel . . . . accuracy of aim aad devilish force sing tne aecuion vircu. voun oneoftho long, oi tnat county ana giving cerHncaire njrinhof,, The horrible agony of election to the Democratic candi 0f it made the beast roar and bellow, dates for Senators and Represent- And th men how they did roar !.. Va AoMAnn ta .nnnunced I With I All filter and cninymebt. i nen in the mandamus nroccedinir brought another fellow picked . up a snarp would be delighted with a prosecu tion of this kind. For doing the slightest labor on Sun Jay, under the old Maryland law. from ft. to 50 pound of tobacco was th penalty. A husband and wiT at Lelpsle, n.rffl.ntf n a mail . 7.!11arV AjAnt1tf byth Governor and Secreury of stone, and, taking careful aim. threw annouDced ta their friends through StaUtowmpelClerkDaltonto StS"tJl!?J teHeSkMrf1111 paper that A a relura of tb election abtrat from one of the steer s eye. The exeeii .iMtL; Itsi ti. i Hamilton onuoty to the Secretary or ent throw was loudly appiauuea oy '- g,ate ' I the scoundrel's comt anions and they been born to .them. ' .