r H A l: " ' ' , LAMANCE .y-ljEANl VOL.: XV. GRAHAM, N..C, THURSDAY, AUGUST 29, 1889 JNfO. 30. PR0FE&SI0NAL CARDS. JA3..E0YD, ' ? ATTORNEY AT LAW. ' in' Grcentboro, -ZV. C. Will W at Graham on Monday of each wtk la attend to professional ousiuets. -aeu joi TWO WORKERS. Two men strove ban): One acored success. And men allowed bli rank; Tbo other mteaed the world's caress, alen act him down a creak. , HONEST IIAUPJ. VJ JI. KERNODL.E . ATTORNEY AT LAW . - OBlll.M.K. C - " Practice to ilia State and Federal Cours trill faithfully and promptly attend to all Iid aesentrusted to him DR. G. W. WIIITSETT, Surgeon Den list, GREENSBORO," - - N, C. Will Also visit Alamance. Calls 1n the country attended Address me at Greensboro. . dec 8 tf JACOB A. LON(J, ATTORNEY AT LAW, GRAHAM,-.? May 17, '88. IV. C, ADVERTISEMENTS. DONT BUY, , ; " .- i . , ... ........ . Sell or exchange any kind of new or second fitna nacmncry, wiggles, kc ucrore no tauioMPrlco from W. R. Burgess, Manager, lOreeneboro, N. C. I.artro line (i Engines, Boiler. Mills. Shafting Wood-worklmr Ma ' chinerv. "Threshers.. Cottnn-Oins, Presses iLight Locomotives, Pole Road Lacomotlvcs, Boiler -feeders. Lubricators, Tobacco Ma chineny, Oils, alinoet anything you waut at wholesale prices. . Say what .you want, mention this paper and save money. sh. ia, of-i SUFFOLK . Collegiate Institute. . ' - CHARTERED 1872. Preparatory, Practical- or Finishing in nd the Fine Arts. .rP;J. E2UN0nLE. A. Principal, ' -Terms reasonable. 'rjotli sexes admitted in distinct departments. ' ' The next sessioii opens Monday, Sent. 17th. 1888. Write to the principal for catalogue at ?;o eujtolt. va. , luiy. i, u. - V. G. HUNDLEY, iB'su'raBfifilgeniS .-, GREENSBORO, N., C. Jire, ' LIFE. Accident is mlv tS'w4.nici nitTKMnus eMfnce opposite the Court House, sUtjNortb Elm Street, ; ; -: ,. r Ocfl3 t' - i. Durham Marble Works, WhitakefiSsHulin, Owners, successors to R. I. Rogers, i Durham, N. C. e-3-V .1. W. Cates. at Burllncton, c how you designs and give you prices. Ma Sly , Xv SHAW; JEWELER, J1EBANE, N.C., 1 e r v, ' Pealer In wan-hen. clocks, jewelry, spce clcs, eye-glasees, Ac. I ' BEPA1KING A 8PECIALTY. Any part of a watch, clock, or piece f jewelry can be replaced at my bench f'e nllj and asclieaply as yon can ham it done anywhere. All work tent tbronti Hie mail rtt by rzpreaa (bail nayc prompt attention. - - - . Konrs trair. Oct 4 it "smw.- .11 wor rvf ' mif.. WUl Lane. WJ sriiul o lue buwuMb ad Mili too- UiWW ll.r.DIIRCORUS. I. n. fj..r -r-nort to IJiel.t k'.rtUS . wr iw I do not mean that my friend evef bore this nickname among' his school fellows, because nicknames, more s the pity, bare a knack of beinir un complimentary; yet if ever a boy de served such an honorable epithet, it was liarry. I You had only to look at that frank. open face to guess that he fras ."as iionest as the aay was long." . ' " ' In the good old days of stern disci pline and unsymnathetio desBotisrn. the tremblers under the rod seemed to have judged anything ' fair ' which helrjed them to cheat their tyrants. so long as they stood stanchly by the cause or weir companions, cut now that teachers appeal more to the con science and less to the back, the tm nils, I think, commonly come for ward to meet them on the ground of mutual gooa wul in my recollection the code of schoolboy honor' has changed areatly for the better, " J i I am writing, however, of a school Iwhere this reform was still somewhat incomplete, and where it might well 'happen that a boy had to choose be tween doing what he thought WTong and earning the ODDrobrium of a 'traitor to his fellows. . . in wmcn tiarry iouna nimseu nara ,put to it on the 'horns of such a di lemma. it was a wet afternoon, and some of us had made our way into the class room ten minutes or bo peroretne ar rival of Mr. Greig, our mathematical teacher. ' ' . Then, to pass the tune, what must Beece do, the wag of the class, but proceed to execute in chalk on the blackboard an absurd caricature of l"01d Greig." with his long nose, his jspectacles, his bushy whiskers all as jjarge as lite, ana, in fact, a great deal larger. Keece was clever at this sort of .thing, and, with a few bold strokes. 'succeeded jn so bitting off the master's 'rather ludicrous features tkkt there could be no mistake as to who meant. . Absorbed in admiration of this work of art. none of us had heeded how the minutes went, till another knot of young mathematicians, bursting in ;wet end muddy from the outside, gave 'notice mat mr. ureig was at nana. and that it was high time to have done with our fooling1. ' , I "Where's the dusterf exclaimed iReece, ' in confusion, since he must neeas maKe ail naste to wipe out ms compromising, performance : Alas I certain other idle hands had carried off the duster, and wero play- catcn wun it, ronea up into a the farther end of the room useful article not being immo- making a dash at the blackboard with his sleeve, but too late to do more than smudge out ouo corner of thai miiiuckv aesign. , ir r : x it. ti.. j. way, commanding, wim stentorian tones: . . Seats this moment I Do you hear me, ooysr tie off to our desks as he strodo rna- iesticallv ud the room and took .his T.i . r. i f t k i, l i l i a jrace ngm oeiore mat DiacKDoara, witn tne portrait staring at us from behind the back of the original. 1 As yet he had not cast his spectacles upon it; but sooner or later, he must turn round and then t Reece began to think that for once his clever an gers had served him an ill trick. No sooner had the bustle of taking; places subsided a little than a titter broke out and rolled along the desks like file firing, which caused our teacher to proclaim silence in the .sternest tones. ne couia not mase out wnat was amusing us so much, why some boys nuds-ed their neighbors, whv others stuffed their handkerchiefs into their mouths and grew red in the face from tne exertion to control themselves be comingly or why all eyes were turned in his direction. "Silence I" repeated he, thumping wenemenuy witn a pointer, ana try ing to overawe his giggling flock by a solemn frown, wiucu - gave nim a greater resemblance to tbo caricature than ever, so that half a dozen of hurst outright into a guffaw. ' . Mr. Greig grew seriously aogrv. "If this foolery is not brought to an end at once, I will keep in the whole cuuw, ue cneu. , With such a threat hanging over us. we made a great effort at composing ourselves, casting down our restless eyes, so as not to have them drawn to to the blackboard. Still, from time to tame our risibility was on the point or .breaking out afresh, while we sat in 'an agony -of suppressed excitement, awaiting the moment when Mr. Grajg should discover it, as every moment .he seemed on the point of doing. -! He kept casting glances of puzzled suspicion in front of him, on each jiJo of him, everywhere but in tlie right direction, and we could see him feeling his buttons and 'wiping his face with bis handerkchicf, as if to make sure there was nothing wrong there to amuse us perhaps a smut on his note or a splash of mad on his shirt front. Instead of going to work at once with a proposition of Euclid as usual he began that day by examining us in tha definitions, which of course pro longed our ordeal, tor it kept him sit ting in his desk with his back to the blackboard. Thus, presently he called me up and asked me to dense a paral lelogram. ? "A parallel el -el" I began, but fairly choked, and broke down in a helpless stutter, "Look straight at me, sir t Don't mumble as if it were a secret between vou and the floor." f So I had to look up; then, as my eye tmoe more fell on the caricature over I Mr. Greig's unconscious head, for the j life of me, I could not help exploding. tne sniggering an- one, for this little into the room after us Mv examnlo sot off others like a hair trigger; and, in spite of our teacher's wrathful displeasure, thero was a gen eral roar, loud, long, and the heartier iroin its naving been pent up till now. ' Our merriment broke loose like an avalanche, gathering strength as it went; and, as with noisy roosters at a poultry show, one fit of cackling and crowing . had no sooner begun to spend lUHiu iiiiut auuuitir waa ruisea to pro- yoke fresh inextinguishable outbursts on every hand; ' f or a minute or two or. Greig's voice was drowned in the din, as ne sprang from his seat, and, noticing now our eyes were ail aireeted one way, at length he turned round, saw what was on the blackboard, and started in astonishment and ruffled in- aignation. ' ' - . . Keece afterwards asserted 1 that ha Jumped two feet into the air; but Reece could hardly have been a calm observer at this point. If he had any aouDt as to wno was tne suDject pr tne pioture, our redoubled laughter must nave told him the truth. . - Now, if I had been Mr. Greig I think isnouia nave passea over tue matter good humoredly, pretended not to re cognize me caricature at ail events, wiped it off and said no more about it. But if I had been Mr. Greig, indeed, I might also have failed for self noases- sion to take such a sensible view. There could be no mistake about his having thoroughly lost bis temper, and Tl 1 11 ' our mirtn soon souerea aown wnen we saw how angry he was. He stormed over , the insult which. he declared, had been nuroosclv offered turn, ana denounced dreadful ven geance on the head of the audacious artist. , "Stand ud. the boy who did itt Let him confess this moment, or it will be the worse for him in the endl" he thundered, and seemed ready to make an onsiaugnt iormwitn on tne revealed culnrit. Nobody, however. 'responded to this invitation. Some of us looked slvlv at Beece: but he never moved, being effectually cowea oy tne storm ms ui timed Han diwork had called forth. I am determined to know. I will not let him escape 1" raged Mr. Greicr. "Every boy here must answer me. one by one; and if you persist in refusing to confess, I will put the whole matter into the hands of the professor. Do you know anything about tbisf" ho said, addressing himself to the boy nearest mm. "No. sir," was swer a truthful fellow had come the teacher. , "And youJ" He turned next to Beece. and those of us in the secret were all ears to hear what he would say, "Perhaps it mav have been one of we. Wilsons boys, sir," said Keece, trying to look unconcerned. Mr. Wilson's class was the one which had occupied the room last before us. We were a little astonished at his coolness. I have known indignant exclama tions of "Ohr uttered when an un popular fellow gave such a shuffling reply; but schoolboy morality is, 1 fear, much a matter of moods and cir cumstances, and this time we all held our tongues. L for one. was nreDared to back Reece up in not betraying him. We held, indeed, that the teacher had no business to- put such sweeping ques tions, as mr. trreig would hardly have in. i-i 1 1 i uune u no nou not oeen in sucn a rage. "Don't try to put tho blame on Mr. Wilson's boys. You must know; and you must tell me. (Stand up, next boy!'" ' --- , ' It was Harry whose turn now came to be interrogated sorely at a loss when the teacher peremptorily de manded of him: ' - i "Do you know who did this?" Harry knew Very well. He had laughed, among tbo rest, at Reece 's work: and had been scarcely able to keep his countenance ever since Mr. Greig came into the room. .Now he stood dumb and confused. wanting even presence of mind to take refuge in the conventional "I would rather not say, sir." yet un willing to get out of it bvtellino- a distinct lie. ' - ' . . His distress was evident, and the teacher misinterpreted that awkward silence of his: indeed, it was so un usual to - see Harry with downcast eves and flushed cheeks, that Mr. Greig might well be not alone in jumping to a false conclusion. "I am glad to And you at least ashamed of yourself." he cned. grily, and made a step forwards, as if to strike the boy. But be only dragged him on to the floor, made him take a duster and wine out the obnoxious caricature. Then. putting a check on his . feelings, he said, coldly: "Very well his favorite phrase wnen t rungs were very ill nrou will I- a 1 . . l rt i i apvua. wuw auuut tuis aiicr school. Not another word for the present" We were all concerned for Harrr. whether or no wo knew bow the caae really stood. Those who did looked curiously at Reece; but he made no sign. 1 liUlo enviud his feelings dur ing the rcst-of tho lesson hour, which must have seemed a very long one to him. ' When it was over, and we had to leave Harry alone with the offend ed teacher, -the rest of us hung about the door.-eager to know what would happen to him. Of one thing we were sure that he would not tlL" even though then he might have to talte the punishment himself. But, of cours, it was not allowed to come to that. Moved by fear of public opinion, if not by his own con science, it behooved Rocce to confess before more mischief befclL Harirg taken burned counsel with one or two friends he returned into the class room to get over this uncomfort able business in private. After all, he enma through with it better than would be expected. Mr. Greig was one of those people who ; fly out into a. passion very readily, then, all the sooner, become rlafahia ! asrain. Either because he felt sIianid of -his ft of temper, or because he was aa'pleaaed with Harry's scrupu lous sense of honor, he let Fx-ee q1 Ivith a lecture for the caricature and UI. , Nor did this clemency turn out ill, for I believe that was the last time in pur class any boy told the teacher a lio without: taking shame to himself. t Soon afterward we had A. dispute With this same Mr. Greig Cout a lea- . V .' 1. 1 1 11 1 T 1 suu wiucu, uy ueeuiessness, no aouut, he had given out shorter than our usual amount : of work. He would have it at . first that we were all in league to deceive him; he was always inclined to be so suspicious with or without reason. . But this time, before going on to storm in his frequent fash ion, be called up .Harry, and asked him if it were asthe rest oi us asserted about the lesson. ' .. "Then if you tell me so, that is enough," said Mr. Greig. "I must have made a mistake. I Know I can take your word for it" A compliment which Harry certain ly deserved, but he blushed and look-ed-Yery uncomfortable under it He did not like to be praised for what seemed to him quite a matter of course. There was another scruple in which Harry set usTa good example: JIe never would use eribs, as some of us were lazy enough to do. He considered himself on honor not to get up his les sons in this slovenly manner, and bis way of looking at the question so far commended itself to me for one, that, in order to keep myself out Of tempta tion, I gave upto our teacher a prose translation of Virgil, with which I had provided myself, and asked him to lock it away so long as we should be in" that book. ' I fear I must have wanted to make a parade of my brand new honesty. "You are a great deal to straight laced," -was Reece's opinion.. "What is a crib, after all, nut continuous notes? and why shouldn't I use it as well as a dictionary t" . "That's all bosh I" said Harry, in his downright way. "You know very well you wouldn't like to be caught at "Ah. but I shall tafro care not to be caught at it" laughed Reece. He did not laugh a few days later, though, when our class was put on its p's and a's to find the strict professor come to take its Xenophon himself, as he would do every now and again in all parts of the school. ? " Reece, as usual, had given very lit tle care to preparing the lesson ; so he congratulated himself op having his crib about him, which he brought out on the slv, and had just time to learn the English off by heart, after a fash ion, before we were called up. ; ' Presently, who should be put on but Reece t ' Then we were all amazed at the ready style in which he plunged into the task of construing. But soon tho head boys began to stare and smile, for they perceived what all of us did not that he had gone on at the wrong placet ; The professor said nothing looking unutterable things, all the same but let Reece go on swimmingly for a few lines, till the boy himself grew sus picious of the boding silence that re ceived his Uuenl delivery. He faltered, stole an uneasy glance at the professor's face, saw us grinning and tunica very red. "Stop behind;" said the professor, in his driest voice. - Ho was a man of few words, who never demeaned himself by getting into a passion, like Mr. Greig; but Veil we Knew how far more pregnant with direrui consequences was bis la conic displeasure, and well might Reece shrink and cower down on his seat in sore dismay. His interview with the professor would be no laugh ing matter. ."" - : You are not to understand that be cause tiarry would not crib his lessons, ne was one or those smart 'fellows AN INDIAN HORSE RACE. to whom Latin and Greek seem to come almost as easy as eating apples or read ing stones, un tue contrary, like many other hearty boys, he bated les son books, and deserved all the more credit for tackling to them manfully as a disagreeable duty. Ue had one powerful stimulus umnar him to work. His heart was set on going to a univer sity, at which- bis lather before him had been educated. He worked bis best in our class: and in due tune presented himself for the test, with out little hope of success, as cleverer schoolboys had already failed in tne same attempt. icamer to our surprise, then, we heard that Harry had passed muster. after all, and henceforth we saw no more of him, except during tho holi days. It was years later (hat, by chance, I came to know how he had been judged worthy of this honor. The examina tion, it seems, was not a very formal one. The professor of the university merely asked him a few questions, to see what he was fit for. After bum ming and hawing over Harry's imper- iect grammar, he gave him to trans late an easy passage of Latin, which he was supposed not to have read be fore, and as soon as Harry saw it he said: "I ought to tell you, sir, that I read uiat bit only last week at tho school where I have been." "Why do you tell me sof" asked (he profpor. ' "Because you called it an unfamil iar pasaage, and and I thought it wouldn't ce quite fair." "Come," said the learned professor, "I can see you will do for us, even though your irregular verbs are a lit tle shaky." So, without further question, Harry was admitted to this exclusive society of future great men, and if any of us bad been inclined to sneer at him as too nice in his notions of truthfulness, for once, at all OTeula, honty proved the beat policy. Aacott R ILt in Golden Days. The "Francis I banouetinr hall" is what the dining room in WT K Van-1 deriiiits house is called, it is two j i. . ..... , . tmncm 11170, ana wainsrowa in 01a oak. On the south wall is gallery for musician, Enormous fire places ornament the two end Oppoaits U.e main entrance of the room is the far tuous window by Oudinot represent ing liie meeting or I rarx-ta 1 and ILenryVlHon the Field of the Goth of CML Mother Earth a Stakeholder for tlx Speea- latins Klowaa and Half Breeds. , An elderly Indian of great dignity of presence steps into the ring, and 'with a graceful movement throws bis- long red blanket to the ground and drops on his knees before it, to receive the wagers of such as desire to make them. Men walk up and throw in silver dollars and every sort of per sonal property imaginable. A W in chester ride and a large nickel plated Colt's revolver are hud on the grass near liie by a cowboy and an Indian, and then each goes away. . It was a wager, and I thought they might well have confidence in their stakeholder mother earth. - Two ponies, tied head and head, were led aside and left horse against horse. JNo excitement seemed to prevail. ; ' - - Near me a little half Mexican Co manche boy began tolishbe until he stood clad only in shirt and breech cloth. His father addressed some whispered admonition and then led up a roan pony, prancing with impatience ana eviaenuy ruiiy conscious .01 me work out out for him that day. With a bound the little fellow landed on the heck of the pony only half way up; but his toes caught on the upper mus cles of the pony s leg. and like a mon key he clambered up and was in his seat The pony was as bare as a wild horse, except for the bridle, and loped away with his graceful little rider sit ting like a rock, no, not uke a rock, but limp and unconcerned, and as -full of the motion of the horse as the horse's tail or any other nart of him. A Kiowa, with loose hair and great ooarse face, . broke - away from the group aud galloped up the prairie until he stopped at what was to be the starting point at the usual distance of "two arrow flights and a pitch." He was followed by half a dozen ponies at an easy lope, hearing their half naked jockeys. The Indian spectators sat about on their ponies as unmoved in countenance as oysters, being natural gamblers, and stoical as such should be, while . the cowboys whispered among tbomselves. "That's the bay stallion there," said one man to mo, as he pointed to a racer, "and he's never been beaten. It's his walk over, and I'vo got my gun rtra. rtsa Vi im Mritli an Tn -inn Mgr VU 1TJUI tS.41 &Jbs It was to be a flying start, and they jockeyed a good deal and could not seem to get off. But presently a puff of smoke came from the rifle held aloft by the Kiowa starter, and his horse reared, The report reached us, and with a scurry the five ponies came away from the scratch, followed by a -I 1 - M 1 n-i . a n it 1 ciuuu 01 uubu 1110 qniria new mrougn the, air at every jump. The pomes ouBcneaana pattered away at a name less rate, for the quarter race pony is Suick of stride. Nearer and hearer ley. came, . the ridors lying low on thoir horses' necks, whipping ahd ky-yi-yi-ing. The dust in their wake swept backward and upward, and with a rush they came over the scratch, with the roan pony ahead, and my little Mexican fellow holding his quirt aloft, and his little eyesnajping with the uorvous excitement of the great event He had beaten tho invincible bay stallion, the prido of this Co manche tribe, and as be rode back to his father his face had the settled calm which nothing could penetrate, and which befitted-his dignity as a young runner. Fredcrio Remington in Ceu- The Otand Prlaa or Fara It is now more than a hundred Tears since the fashion of horse rac ing was introduced into France from Lugland. History hns preserved the name of a French horse named l'Abbe, hclongingto the Princo of Guemene, who in 1776 hod the honor of beating several opponents . that . : bad ., been brought over from Knglahd. The following year reqes took place at Vincentics, at FOntaincbleau, and on the Plaine dos Sablons, but the pro motors of these Urst essays were'ouly able to organize their undertaking in a rudimentary manner; they did not even lay out a regular course, The revolution ( interrupted the races. Napoleon' I'' re-established them, but they only came into use, they began to take coiisiderablodevelopmentonly, between J630 and 1840. . In 1836 was created the jockey club stakes, or French Derby. Old sports men vet remember with delicht the joyous lifo they led during the week or 1110 ueroy. nie fans uruna rnx. is of a more recent date. It was found ed in. 1863 for three-year-old horses. Since thon it has been run regularly each year except in 1871, the year of the Uonmiuiie. Twenty-live horses buvecome off conquerors in this trial. the most renowned and most numer ously atlonded .race in our country. Of these twenty-five winners thirteen were born in France, ten in England,. ono in Austria, and-the last 111 the United States. These results show Uiat the international character given the race on its creation has been well preserved. The stakes, without reck oning the increase caused by entries and forfeits, which as a rule amounts to about 40,0Q0f, are 100,000f. Of this sum the Villo de Paris contributes ouo- half and the five principal railway companies tho other. It is a timely generosity-for the receints which this fete procures tho town and companies amply make up, on account of the nunioer 01 passengers ana uie great ness of tho trnfllo, for the sacrifice which they have imposed on them selves. I'aria iiiustra. MOUNTAINEERS OF KENTUCKY, ' - thm Jester. : There hos probably never been any greater : degradation of genius, nor many sights better ablo to make gods and men weep, than the old employ ment of tbo court jester. After the custom of having a court fool had held sway during many reigns, the fool gradually ceased to be - tho dwarf or imbecile who bad been an object of general ribaldry in the beginning, and became some one superior in intellect if not in person, to most of those about him: a man very treauentlypf un doubted genius, not great or master ful or well born enous-h nossihlv to direct' the tod rse of empire or be the crown's minister, in an age, too, of warriors, but often fully capable of understanding and criticising the do- tails of statecraft a man of nrtdaunt- ed courage, and of the readiest wit and the sharpest tongue, yet he was put in motley, a jerkin buttoned down Literary pursuit Do Wot Shortest Ufa, . In considering occupations as they are likely to affect longevity, those which obviously tend to shorten life need not be considered. With respect to the learned professions,' it would appear that among the clergy the average of lifo is beyond' that of any similar class. It is improbable that this average will be maintained for the future; the duties and anxieties imposed upon the clergy of the present generation piace tuetn in a very dii forent position from that of their pre decessors. Among lawyers there have been several eminent Judges who at tained a great age, and the rank and filo of the profession are also charac terized by a decided tendency to lon gevity. The medical profession snpplies but few instances of extreme old age, and the average duration of life among its members is decidedly' low, a fact which can be easily accounted for. Broken rest hard work, anxieties, ex posure to weather and to the risks of infection cannot fail to exert an in jurious influence upon health. - No definite conclusions can be arrived at with regard to the- average longevity of literary and scientific men, but ft might be supposed thnt those among thorn who are not harassed by anxi eties and enjoy fulr health would prob ably reach old age. As a general rule The duration of life is not shortened by literary pursuits. A man may worry himself to tletilh over bis book or, when tired of them, may seek re creation in pursuits destructive to health: but application to literary work tends to uroduce cheerfulness. and to prolong rather than shorten the lifo even of an infirm man. Dr. Rob- son Room in Fortnightly Review. MarrtaswaMa Agmt a tmrvpo. In Rusaia the men are allowed to marry at 18, the women at 16; in France and Belgium, the men at 18 and the women at IS; the same hold good in Hungary for the Protestants, but tho Cathohra) may marry, the moles at 14 and the females at 1?. as also in Spain, Greece, Portugal and Switzerland; in Austria both nx-n and wonvn can marry et 14. In BriL-iin and Turkey there 1 uo minimum limit of ago. iaruily. Th R.M mt rhtldhooa. A party of Evo or six street gnraini were gaUiercd et a rwxxr tabic LLXanc around an Italian rag-picker whom Uity were making frauuc by then occasional mud throwing and gibes. ."Wot's the capt-rf inquired a new comer as he rushed, to tie scene of ac tion. . "ILfipa; come jioe wid un," r-ntied one of the crowd, 'we're plnyin' de Mfrrchant o' Wennioe.-" New York ewa. . the back, his head shorn, and a parti colored cap with bells and an ass' ears and a cock's comb on it, a stick strung with bells and called a bauble placed in his hand, and thus made a mockery of already, he was further rendered subject to the insolence of very silly courtier or page who, as the old saying goes, did not know so much in his whole life as the other forgot every night" f '' Gradually, however, from this low beginning, the court fool became a per sonage whoso powers of entertainment made him valued as any great come dian is now by those that can com mand him; his reparteo ceased to be of the ruder and grosser kinds-but was a renned and amusing pleasantry, caustic and pungent very likely. whence he became a person to be fear ed and appeased, while often he was a creature of pure .wit and infinite lest With the advance of civilization, and tne opening or tne press to the people, this class of mind found itsonnortnnitv in print and the court fool ceased to - . T , . . . , -a. exist. xiarpers xsozar. - I But has Hatllsaaahss, , , ; Up in Berkshire county, Mass., the rattlesnake is bunted every summer or cur oil, wnicn sometirrrea fetches f3 an ounce. lien is a description of tae way ue xanicco outwits the pent: "Choosing a hot summer day, the rattlesnake hunters saunter forth. One man carries a fish pole, another a sharp scythe. The flshpole has a stout wire attached to it, and there is an or dinary pickerel hook on the end of the wire. Moving cantionslv through -the grass, so as not to disturb the sleep ing snaito. wno is almost always found basking in the warm sun near a loose ledge of rock, one of the men prods his snakeshlp more or less gen tly with the flshpole, being careful also to hold the book invitingly near to tne ratuers neaa. rue snako wakes up angry, makes a dart at the nearest imiauns: oDiect. wnicn is tho flab hdt)k. and very accom modatingly allows the sharp tines to penetrato bis taws. The man with the lhihpole holds the entrapped rat tlumoke at a safe distance, wbilo his comrade moves up ' and severs the snake's head from his body. The body is then deposited in a bac and the hunters go in search of ""tW saaJce." Chicago Times. 1M Um IWa Dalay. . There is one man in St Louis who appreciates the law's delays. His name is Divbcrger, and in May, 18s3, he deliberately shot aud kuicd a man in Loose car. On his f.nt trial he was promptly convicted of murder in the urst degree. The supreice court revers ed the judgment There waa a newtnal and Le was sentenced to twenty-fire years' imprSonrueot That sentence seemed too severs to Dierberger. Ha appealed, got a new trial, and was sentenced to ten years in prison. But even t' is concession did not satisfy bim. The ease was taken np on Lis renewed appeal, and was corn promised on ono year in jail and 11,000 fine. Let othr Speak slightingly of tue law's delays. Dierberger w ill always aay they saved his hi a Ikwton Tran script " 1 Peculiarities of People Who Are tJo . known to tn Best of the World. It was early in tho morning of n perfect April day that we went dowa the road that leads to tho banks of th Bullskin a creek that traverses a part of eastern Kentucky. It was a charming ride through the misfa anil shadows of the early morning. Out destination waa the house of an old. man named Barger.' It was a quaint, old - place, much 4 cleaner than the houses in that .'country usually are, with the 'remarkable luxury of ai up stairs." - Old Mrs. Barger waT, preparing dinner when we arrivedv and we sat'down. to dine at 10 o'clocli in the morning. We told tha family that we dined , at home about eigh t, hours later than that, but they woul 4 not believe it ' In the evening I joined tho groujv sittingabout the Are waiting for sup per. .iThey were "Ihb boys come tr. from the farm work With several. neighbors who bad been helping Darkness had fallen, and the menJ about . the fire were as silent and se-j date as only a group Of mountaineers-' can be. The silence was suddenly? broken by the- entranco of a hale. hearty old man, whom all the partvr addressed as grandpa and treated with great respect The old man placed himself with utmost care on a stool j near the fire and waited until Mrs. Barger bad resumed her work at the fire and the men had gone back to; chewing their "long cut' and to si lence; then he looked about him withy an air of enjoyment and slowly re marked: , - "I lav I'm goin' to leave this creek. "Bud Simpson has done beat Joe' Baker's wife all to pieces with a fence-' rail and run off and lef her for dead," Various exclamations came from alV sides, whilo I sat by and listened toy tho details of what seemed to me to be. a shocking assault Grandpap ex-, plained witn slow care how the quar rel originated with the "dawg? andr the hawgs," and finally concluded by repeating: "I tell ye, I goin' to leaver' the creek: it ain't safe." Mrs. Barger returned to her bacon with the astute.' observation; "Well, that beats: my time," aud took no further part in the conversation, but the men were thor oughly aroused and discussed the out rage wim solemn eagerness. One tall fellow, who seemed to be ar man of soma importance, reached, 2uite a fever of excitement and all the, ttle circle stopped to listen when he delivered his opinion. "A man ain't, no right to beat a woman witb a fence. rail. A man shouldn't beat none of' my women folks with a fence rait. If Bud Simpson wanted to beat Tiddv- Baker why didn't he -take his fist and, beat herl A mnti ain't no ri?ht to. beat a woman' with a fence raiL v lis, orter to have took his fist",; Tho party all agreed that punish ment with the fist was the proper' mode for. ' Women and silence soon, reigned again. Cor. Waahine-tonl- Star. A ; v-ft. . ''"' A Hrstcrlema Watah. ' Mr. L'E. Isaacs, of No 419 Smith-' ' field street Pittsburg, is the possessor' of a watch which is a novelty in that line. - St Paul says that faith without works is dead, but here is a watch that, hasn't any works that any one can,' see. save the hands, and they point - the time accurately; and as a lime. JMTCpci- II- WTHU1UT uu k UOU. All Bp-- pearance it is a tnetallio frame with a glass center, itt-which are two hands, which' appear, to have no connection, .with anything txeeyi the glass. On opening the border, however vary complete but minute machioery is seen at the base of tho stem, but stilt no connection can be traced between, the works and the hands. -' Borne people have suggested that the, . chaiq form a circuit from a battery concealed in the region of the small of' tha wearer's back, and that tha watch, is operated by electricity. One man. gave it as his opinion, after critical . investigation, that the watch waa the. device of the derih -- The curiosity is called tha , "JIyv torkms Watch'' and its value eonsuts mainly in its rarity, being, it is sai y the only one in the United tat4 v which fact, Uke the rarity of an oljj volums or picture that cannot bo do-, plicated, makes value. It was broagilji from Paris and coat $50, and tha coal is certainly not in the case. PiUsburg. purpatch. r : tke Masta? V "Whereabouts is the A-tho-oiumf required a long, lank specimen of a. hayseed old gentleman who was stand ing on the corner of Court street and; CoruhiU, munching a banana. "Th era are two atbenejums, one is a library building and the other a nlace of amusement which one do yoa want, to flndr" replied the gentleman adr' dressed. '1 waut the place where they play act My folks don't believe ia theatres, and 1 beared Uiat thev nlav- acted at the A-the-nium. I thought i'C I went there 1 could lick the dml, round tho stump, sorter eh 1 Xh rural gentleman1 was directed to Cow ard street Boston Budget Ia 17S3 Robert Aitken. printer an bookseller in Philadelphia, pub!'-!"-, the first American edition of the L.l . '. in English, the publication binr in, quarto form. In 17U1 Isaiah Thor" of Worcester, Mass., printed in. fia form an English ediuoa of the T.I -a. This was tne second edition of tia Bible in English to be published in. America, and the first to be usued. ia, folio form in this country. Irish names out of Ireland are not all found iu America. 'tain hsa had ORyou, and the late miois!erof wa-, O'Donncll. O'Donnoiu. arid as ror. ernorof Cuba, OT.it-liv. and as vict president of tho tnwiisli snalis. O lJonnell. France basils XlacMahor O'Neilis. O'Connors and Nueuts. bt Patrick's day is celebrated each. yer. bjatiie Franco-Irish. Jerusalem seems now to baa rspi "r growtrgcifv. 1 bis is due to V-o r pumbcrof Jews wtoare tocki;: - . yearly. Tby now t.- ' , more than ti.e f..os.iem eoa t. txwuV' oa coib,..:'h L - x - ;