K DEANEK. f:' 'l i.Milmji! AIM G . ' -V - 1 1 ;-:v .'-v-c'lf tKK-i tit s - 33 v.- r VOL; XXIiIr: - w- KEEP YOUR r-. r. t- DEfilll surety. it utv vrviu . "- j .. . . 1 - if is not jirxions Liver Regulator. Nothing else is the same,' It cannot be and npverhas been put up by any one except J. H. ZEILIIM & CO. And it can j ie easVy told by their Trade Mark PROFESSIONAL CARPS. Attorn ey-at- Law, 2i GRAHAM, - N. SVnntlM. In the. atnfce mill Fft'1lrnl courts Outce over White, Moore & Co-'a-store, Main ' Streets 'Phone No, &. : . ;- H ; . . .. - '. Hi.' t. KEltO I I iK. -fATfOMEY AT LAW GRAHAM, N. C, itHit 0at Bvjo.; W. P. BYXV. J. "VVt. nn, Counaelofs at law .Pmcrtre. .rotuliirly riniire etnlT Id tlie CMirtH of Ala - Alt. 2, l.v ; DR. W. S,.LONG, JR.. ', ", DKSTIST. . GRAHAM, N. 0. OltSceln Vestal iJuillin. OSice hiiuw : 8 a. m. to 4 p ,m-:: Dentist, ' GRAHAM, N C. cmce at resilience, opposite Ituntlst ("hnn'h. Ilwit work -it r'nftnn-tH1o prlpos. Ill nffles Mondays and 8atur. Livery. Sale 1 Feed STABLES. :. vyu. mooke, mop CKAHAM. N. '. .. - seka me tall traliw. 0k1 l 1 ! -1 1 n t di 1, . Ckar(e woilnntie. . -.-S-Oiii 1 HK t'H AUI.OCI'K MM! Nokth Cabouha's FOPEMOS'f KEWSI'ArER. 1)AILY and Weekly. . Intleiicntleni and fearless; bigger and moro attmctire than ever, it wm , . ""w4 .I, I, f MS i ..ua..Tr.... Ttrdlom iu uniform who were in the , tlie ofrtco, 1 lie dab or work room TlMTDatly Observer. ; " 11 the news of the worlel. Cmr ''.," plcte daily reports frin theStatc - and National CtapitoU.M year Tlie Weekly Observer. r " - A 'jwrfort family joiininl. "All tlie news of the week. RcinciiilK.-r the s cckiy vimnLpzz;- Onlv OimN Pollnr a Ttiir. Send far samjiic cojiica. Acltlrc" TU B OBSERVE it CHARLOTTE, ARE YOU UP TO DATE r - Ifrnn an- nnt r hj-Ku urn i rt ? Okfr-nreiii Stfbscrilic Inr 'it at ISiST once and it wtllkccpyoa abreast Of the times. I . Full Associated; Press dispatch- ,. .' r - a 111 Ih. n.i. UMiail H I u. .mesne, caiionaj. siaie ana local f ' all the time. ; , , " Dalv News and Obsenrer $7 , t nor rear S3 50 fejr fi mo. . U . Weekly North '. CaridimatLi t. per rear, 50c lor 6 mos. :r: NEVTS & OBSERVER PUfL CO J ' ' " ' - Kalewh, X. C. . '. - - ' ''"-,--. . . ........:. j- "Tbe Xortli fsnJinian srhd "Acimaxce Glk.i:k wHl las The sent for one year for Two Tbdkr.s ta ad ranee. Applrat n. X."'C TueGleaskb - oiScc, ti.-aJi.-uu irjtoiO hA. ..RAjHAM..N.C.f THURSDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1897. EYES OPEN! it. 13 ATCiD Sc nt nn n nnrUnrrp HE: SAW .'LINCOLN, SHOT. Hill Apprfwd the Ousrda and Helped Mr. Lincoln Fritm the Theater. n JnmeH N. MillH of Brooklyn eayB: -waB born in 'irtoklyrf irf,'J845. I bo that tit tbe outbrenk of tlie war l was under 10 years of ace. I want ed to go to the front as a drummer J lxjy, but whejn I applied to(tbe oflB ' ccrs of a regiment called the lirook- I lyn Pbalunx, afterward known as I tbe First Long Island regiment, they . told ine 1 was too young. I after waidjiiado my..wny to Wanhington without my mother's consent and enliHted as a drummer boy in 1C2. I rl eryed.in tbe Arruy of the Totomac; f for three years,'arid during the clos- f ing days of the w,ar. was a clerk in the war department , ; ; ; I . VOu tbe night of tbe assassination of President Lincoln I attended tbe theater to fceo Laura Keeue in 'Our American Couffiu.' The theater wns Micked. There must have becu 2,000 leoplo in the bourie, every one dc- uiruuu mi hviiuK jne ; KiL-fKieiJi pirn- -I- A I 11 .-i 1 : A .1 i-General Grant, who wasalsoeipect-' -..1 1 . . a J . .tv . :.l i. Jobk bin Feat , in the box antl tbo cheering ceased the crowd was ab solutely ftill. " I ' can account for their tilenee by the' fact that it was a cot-moiKjlitun crowd, representing about every regiments located near from every state id the Union. '.'General Grant did not attend, J and, Mr. Lincoln, accominied- by Airs. Lincoln and Colonel Rathbone of the United States uruiy, made r. the preMtlentinl party. ; They occu pied tbe right bund box on the dress circle:' -f-- ." "Tbe third act of the play had be gun and Harry Hawk, an actor in the company, bud ' just apearetl on tbo t tage from the left, when there wns .the? jcytH't -.of , a.-pietol ihot. Looking over at thc'pieirident'fc box, I h;iw a man t-tandiug r.nd gesticu lating t the occiitmutH. - An hihtunt later the man juni t d' from the box to-the rt: go. tuinctl, lotiketl at the audience, and tbon c1itnj x inoil. lie imitteittl Kincthir.g as he looked toward tbCaiitlicncp, lilt I havo never lieen tic said. able to recall jutt what "Instantly tho audience! arose 'ad if s, elllHjULd. the wbirpeiings of a moment Ijfove bccaine A roar of voices, and when it dawned tiion 1 the iindienc-o that the president bud. ! been antjassinated the confusion wus . j indet-cribaLle: -I made niy.way-ttt-I the bend of the stairs us quickly as the crowded condition of the bouse ' I would t-ei mit, ard, poshing out into Tenth street; gave, tbo alarm to the" provost "gnartls. ' Tbe gjiart'.s, by the way. were statiemrd at. all thca- tern iu .'Attuijue; nit; iunK.-n us poi city after ulghtfulL The- guard I ejsike to ran around to tlio alley en-J trance of tbotbeatCTonFstreef and t entered tbe back door. '' ' " . "1 returned to tbe front of the Greater and made my way to tho tlreHS circle and to thn iirivnte liox oi tne preswtntiul paityjurt as Air. Lincoln was being carried ont On tho shoulders of two men. One of tbese was the proprietor of a saloon. ml i.ri nine ihn ibi-fltpr. Hn wnu In bis shirt sleeves, tbe bend of Mr. j Lincoln resting on bis shoulder and tbe blond tiick ling down tbe sleeves 1 and tbe back of Lis shirt. The pres ident was can fed - down stairs and serosa tbe street into Mrs. Peterson's boarding bouse, directly opposite the theater.- As Mrs. Lincoln was for tbe moment without an escort, I gently gntsptd bcr arm and ted her from the box. She was nearly j hysterica1, crying and. robbing bit terly, vvo louowofl me men as tney carried Mr. LJncolu ncroMe the street. I l'la-tl on Led in a room tioor.ithcrc bedkxl tlw fM,Jtag wtafT . . . - .T1 .,x i, LTZtlZ :iersmieqwmi) - luicrrreti me mat , . ... . .. .... . . . John W likes Bootli bail ejeuit a rew motrents iu hie place just before tho tlose of the se imd act of, fhe t'luy. " Whiks lluie Ledrack oearly f a It of brandy.' -Xew York : pun. . nam. ... .-. , t ; Scene: German art gnllery. Pena ai:t Women (not icing an artiel copy ing cne of Ite old master) Why do they point tbbt j k-tcre twice! ' Her Husband W by, tbat'n onite plain.'. Wben the new' pitlnre in itu1e.iheThaug tb.t ,i the w, II :1 V . . . t . . a e . e-v 1. DiowwtiM ono saaj.-mr itARM A COW' STABLE. With Stall! For IVTilch rnninat Adraa ' - ' . ' taffea Are Claimed. ' " j , A stall tbtut will allmt n cow to rat' and driiik its alio pleases, that will pcr- mit her to lio down And yet keep clean without au unreasonablo amount of COW STALL AND M ASCEH. bedding, is something which is still tinh viorwinn til itifinv stfililoa 1 in no. coinpauying cuts from Ohio Farmer show a stall which has given satisfac tion. , . Tho upright bars in front of tho stall are - placed) faif ciijn;h apart to utduiit tho lowei part ef tho head, but uo moro. By this urrangomcut tho cow 1m enabled . to clean out tho munger ns , thcronglily ! as though her head nud neck "could bo thrust over it, whilo at tho muuo time. :sho is compelled to ttaud well back iu , tho stall. j Ou tho floor crosswise of tho stall. .1 and, just back of tho hind feet of tho cow when . she. is in place, 11 piece of timber-in nailed. 1 Tho jdacc for this i:t , , - a, . . . Hl, :,M,.-f " h, ti,w whnr,. " ' " - ; her feet will bo clear .f it. A 2 1 y -1 fcantliiig will answer tho pnrposo very well. This biduccs tho cow to move her btxly a little forward when lying down, so as to keep clear of the Hcilntliiig, whilo tho droppings fall beyond it, lxth when isho is standing up, and , lying -i rrn. 1 .1 .1 i t 1 .j. 1 a. 1 1 tho coumum alL At OII0 rido is the water trough, which is nraingnt for tivo stalls It i t divided by a partition which U.hung at i ..CM) ViKWOKCOWfcTAI.I, t'jo toi t o as to swing freely. When tho cow jmlj in her head to drink, she chore tho vartitim to tho opposite, end if the tr'Uf.li, which preveuts tho other cow T.-oiu interfering. Ey this means a Km; 11 tron;;h uir.y to used. At tho oth-1 cr-rido cf the stall U tho box for suit. , Of conrso the cow it tied with n'roiw cr J chain. Ju (ho uittl StntPS tbo ,rhcRt states rn, lUotc ..r tte-northwest, and fin iimrn: I hern, in an wtluinry year, with ' r.n liveniCK lirrdnet f CC. 000.000 lmxh- cls is slinuesota.. .TJien comes North ' Didcuta , ftd;nceut, 'With a pnslnct of 00,000,000, and Couth Dakota, with ! CO, 000. COO. Tbo average of Kansas is 1 about , 2.-,000,000, and c:f Nebraska, I 1(1,000,000. ITieso ant fho group of Wheiit states, tnt thcy.are not tho only ! ones,. Ctoliic;niia.. reducing in ordinary , years wheat to'lhcimumiit of 40,000,000 , ,..1. ft.t - , i i DiLsueiH, nun uuio. naviuit an averngoi ctod cf 85.000.003. Wisconsin, which ' adjtiius Minnesota, pmdnces n-latively TJ "uionmw, uui juH tijr.iu una, i wu " ,DO a'K wmfiKnais are gmsi. ..H" m"' u ni in. iir- j ing--its-; wheal acrewgo cousbUirably. I Amtaig the whesit states t f tho atl muisyivunnt stanrts tu-st. witn an av- j cragc crop e f 20,000,000 bushds. Mary- , land folhmuig, with 8,000.000. aud New York, with J, 000,000. Thero is j . compsinitively little- wheut raised iu i 'New Luglnud anil sesrorly any in tbd j Pub? states. Missouri is a largo wheat ; crowimr state, exceeeliiu; cither biduinn ' or Uliuois, but ArkaiiKss, south of it, I yiel ls vc-.7 Iittlo whett New Yrk- Suit Smutty Corn. - "There i.i ho dimbt thut corn smut lives. bt the gmnnd is- ou its surface vrtr year ami is ready next scant 11 to. begin its wirk,'suys American Culti- j vatt. 'Ftr this renscn. Ix-fire iIkj smut ucs iTried so I bat it er.u be blowu alxrut' it i hould be plae ked from tho stalk's aud every lainiele afliictcd by tho fr.nrus Lo bru in d. The iractiiv of bay. ing ceni en the land every isber year. gnrwbig a lever crop between, miwu 1tb spriiMt grain. Um a gced It albjw ibecbjrc .oget growth ' cae to do the soil Ibe grad that a thai the fengn-cf is o r oifcbt Uis tbej ib feagtwef v . 1 - - rin-elrr, rieli soil ibaiVas w-oded with clover. We tavo becrd fiu-ntirsrsy that, j nutauiYu was whtre cb-vtr tro- ' . Tcss.-Isiw.tit, i:u:ye-jly rann ! that tbe soel wrs enricbed by tbe clover : te r : B JUaLlAyVitellJorf Tjr jdLJiltlsave f rat rcebatnred to get lttrr prepcgattvl to it nvoTrjipkUy.' nv.vftttij It. i. .... . . I . I . - . . J'-a.lsg Tomato faa, . Tquccrb tbo amis into rlccn water, W-.-vV fbcm tr.e from jnH. ultlumh it rw.y ritmire m vcnJ wsrbincn, nanl put the n ill grtsTTs" latter trjya to ri-y. ' t ana JiAirn.il etpL ins tiat ihe word ib-aetai.ll.enioiMarti and tiny dry i4ct.kly: 1'jvf Hiu tba be pat away, as ,.! f.-, ! i..-..e 7" ROCKS AND LEGHORNS. Wlijr Thy An Among- the. Beat of All Breeds of Poultry ' f . Mr. Ei 0. Roestdo, tho well known I poultry "breeder, rays In au exchange; tbnt the breed par exocllenco known . from one end of the country to tbo otht r J Is tho Barred Plymonth tlock. Thero is not a fitrnier, nmatcnr cr fancier who (lors rot at once recognize the sterling V qualities' of. this moHt popular of ' nil brcccls. It is almost nacless -to cunnier- 1 fttQ their qtinUtics, they are o well known. Yet they live tip to thf bo ocall tics and mniutuiu year after yonr the .cxccHcnco which is tho foundation of thtir "tppakrity. For egg protluccrs, whc eggs are highest iu price, thry are reliable. For gocd; largo bodied rpcciincuft, when meat is demanded, 'they seldom fail, and for hardiness and goncrni health they havo no Kuperiors. I Thry are not beautiful, except in the eyes of t!i3Jfc admirers, yet there is a certain OtiidjbnHincwiliko air about thot.e plain Bpeciaaeus which appeals to all claxHes and stamps theiu tho great money makers of ponltrydom. ' It is Fiifo to say that the demand for. Plymouth Rocks is far in excess of that for any othi breed. This does not re flect unfavorably en tho other Lrceda " fP'y Jm jnui mcy aro mo puo- - i.vw3 The very best quality any breed can have is hardiness. A vigorous constitu tion in fowls is the first thing to con eider. With it we may expect a good growth,' an early maturity, a good egg yield and a fine carcass; without it wo cannot depend upon any of these results with certainty. H nlth uud prime con dition go band in bund, uud both mean tho best results obtr.imitlo iu poultry. The healthy ben is the egg typo and the showroom specimen. Condition should be tho first consideration. Where can bo found a healthier, stronger uud moro relinblo breed than tho Barred Plymouth Bocks? Cliir.atic conditions do not affect them. They lira bred iu all sections of our country. They are alike indifferent to cold or heat No matter how low tho tempcrafuro, this popnlur American breed attends strictly to business, and if they nro comfortably housed at night and kept busy during the day wo may look fur a full nest box lit gathering time, btill. they lay a brown egg, and if the den n:id should lie for white eggs, or both white uud brown, we must look for another I reed to run side by side with thein, lu order that the demand for both may bo supplied. Among the business treed which lay whito cggi cur choice is limit d we have tho Leghorn. Mint reus and Au- dulushius. The Aliiiorcus lay a large. fluo rcir. and. if nroticrlv handled. r,l n fy (.f them but arc thi7 business erg machines? Tl:o Awhilnsimis also ore prolific layers, but if we breed fbcni to perfection is tho demand sufficient to justify their Lting kept for profit? We tro ferei d to fall back t n the Leghorns. Hero no have truly egg machines. Qui i tliev Iki be.iteii ill this nnalfrr? Tbo choieo ,f tbo entire family is protably tho White, Brown or BuiT. It malters Iittlo which wo sebft it is a fancy; j udmirersof each claim rnperiority. Are ' they popular? Yet uhr.ost' as much so ' as tho Plymouth Rrx-ks. They aro well distributed tnrongliout theconutryrTho public has adopted them, cud the deT uiiuid fur them lias been, is and always . wjh ntrong. nuij;o niouiy - Any person who cannot 1 out of egs nud keeps j White. lirnre.u or Enff LtarlMirna dta-a i a Willabfl Mil ( ffttfnij,o ixrJ nro active, healthy, betiatifnl and miiitnblo. Does any ther treed Lino more gotsl qualities? -HHir enemies, anil they novo some, call ihci-i sjiring and summer layers. They will lay asstnua ui tbe dmd of wiuter as any other brerd if imirerly I boused. Being a (! ly feotbentl va- nety. they need warm nuartcra. Keen . tbcni-chct up all winter iu a house 1 uIhto the water ihit freews iu tbo ' ,mUB feed them liberally and keep Ibcm inT njid they will lay continuously . ! nift u-liirtt Mnriam awl fl, vtimt. ! (T Br rarmits them to ruu out they jjkM .j 0,), tmH. hurcase tbe-ir egg yiebL but tion. They nro tbo Plymouth Rocks1 for egg produe-tiou. Bi'iug a nousittiug variety, tbey arm tiunu thn laying whi n tbo Plymouth IU-ks U-craiio bruuly. Ibe (not objection to tlto Leghorn is an 11 1 to bo its suuill enreass fee market purjewes. This is burdly an objtt-tb n exit pt ,to those who demand size and weiglit aleMiu Aa tbo chicks grow vi-ry rapidly ami are very active, they im be made U lima na fine a broiler fie i sweeit. fluo graiMd meat aa any Lrerd know a aud at tbe earliest brnileT sea- I eon. As rewstt rs tbere is mshing better , than swell la. tod. three pound Legburn oudcn-L j Th fiwv Imte thnrefian. ar mar mn. . rff, , fhal ,lr bnsiness team of all ! Ibe bni-da to tbe Flymooili Bock aud tbo Lrghtiru. i " " . j fn rgga at Homo. J Farrorrs should never ship rngsnnfil yrm e nr iiarui wvnr iM-uiv. a tim j would retail tlx-ireg? and nsrk csatom erx. a lare ram would be adek-d to tbe receipts from peanltry.' Fmb are always anU.ble, f.r rery fjouily mnst at times have them. It fnnnvtilly Mp- - : . . . . . 1 . . 1. . vn. wbn t-!s are marre. that iste tjrr.ner xuvxt ly tlietn from aissl(r. jost lu every vilbiKe and, trwn will t foexd ibew w!io pn fr l bey fr.u tbe fiknuvr tlltui freaa tbe dealera EUROPE'S HIGHWAYS ; " SPLENDID SPECIMENS OF THE ROAD- ; BUILDER'S ART. ' 1 Ohjrrt Leawna of the Tala af Good Boads. . Built For PleMore m Well aa VUlltr. Moeb of Onr Labor and Money frpended ' on Honda I Waated. To the advocates of good road tbo prosroM rootlo iu Europe is fall of en- renrupemeut. It wan ubout 1820 beforo Macadam was able to arouse Scotch and ' English seutimcnt iu favor of his proj ect lie had no army of wheelmen at his back to eucoaruge him and to com pel tbe public to listen, but wherever a mile of mucuduut road was built tbe slinrp contrast between it . and tha wretched roads about it compelled pub-, lio attention and approval. Telford, the Scotch engineer, turned aside front his great engineering projects uud auve the uiove incut bis powerful support. In lest than 60 ycurs tho gospel of good roadi was spread not only llirouahont Great Britain, but through all the settled dis tricts 011 tbe coutiueut. Now good road of tho luaruduui or telford type are everywhere, writes V. M Diekiusou in Homo Magazine. Every day in tbe year tbo J rasont furmer of Enrope can haul to market as heavy n load as be can draw ocrou his I brushing floor. Ho makes one trip insteud of two or tbree. There is uo mud, uo stouo working up to tbe sarfuee. Ilis beust of burden am bles along eusily instead of the fret and strain from itouo and rut and wubbliug wagon uud would doubtless sing his master's pruiso if he had tbe power of speech giveu to tho beast ridden by Bulaam. ' Kor is the good roads movement in Europe coufliied to highways tbut are strictly necessary. It is ascoutasious a measles. The governments ere taking it up and building expensive roads, which.' mast be largely for tho special delight of tourists. A splendid road bus just been finished from Sorrento, Italy, to . Salerno, fully 80 miles. Except for few inconsiderable villages it run along tbe rocky and auinlmbitablo coast of the gulf of Salerno, uud much of the road is cut tlirouxb the almost per pendicular liui'stono cliffs that riso from 1,000 to 3,000 feet ubove tbe sen. A mirr koau ts ii.i.inois. I From L. A. V. RnUottn.J Iu many places there aro long tmwoli through the rock, and in others the mark of the blasting drill where tbe rork has been torn from the face of' tbo cliff is to be eecu fully CO feet above the road. . ' This is cno of tho mosfstopendons pecimens of modern roadbaflelinn; iu Europe, but something hardly lest diffi cult and rxpensito is the road now in course of construction by tbe Swiss gov ernment from tbe Bhoue glacier over the Grin-sel pas to the bike of Briens. The road is already completed from Xlelringeu to Iluudegg falls, pi-rhnp IS miles as, fine and difficult a specimen of maoodam as eon be found anywhere and from iiatulcgg to Ulione glacier hundreds of men aro at work catting their way tbrrmch the rock, over barren summits which am always in or above the clouds whenever clouds aro in the ky. With tbo object lessons in road build- in: which Enrope presents, why boald not public sentiment in Ibis coontry 1 apprahd to throesb eviry medium in favor of good rouds7 What Europe baa done la lbs lart erntnry Amcrira may do iu tbo next Tbe obstacles of cost aud "maanineeut distaueri'l wiH look less formidable aa we spproseb Item. In the state of New York slows, outside of villages and rlfira. more than 000,000 is cxpeodixi aauually In Ihe so called rruuir aud construction cf rnoela. 1'ho tnnt of f hla l:nnii uae inn 'is thrown away. Expended uikIct the direction cf competent engineers, it fn grratiTiroiitirOOld Inild from f.f.O to 600 milrs Of fit mates f(T tbo tbe best macadam pavement. At Ibis rata bow many years would It take to embalm Uocadum and Telfcrd and'ali their wisdom nudcr evrry high way awl eowpuf h iu the state ef New York? And ibe inrrraard value of farms brought nearer to market iu wet weather as well a dry, Ihe saving of time aud wear and tear on men aud horara aud wagons, would more than offset the la tire coat. Aud why slsnold not tbe stats prisons be open' d and tbe convicts Uoght toadbuildiog on tbe Eurepran plan? SuirTlatei:tlf ol Lalhrop reports lbt over 1. 000 prienocrs are Mill oat of imployment. What wortbii-r wot coo Id be given then I ban tbe building of good roadaf " The af Ifition for gocd reads .hould not 1st rouP'wa 10 ine sevrrai Starrs, Prrsiateut appeals shcuM be made to I ha grueial genremrof ol."Cotigreahasn mrial warrant auder tbe coutitailou 10 taild roadav Jo l9 aa net of coo- grrss sotboiijrd a national road from Baltimore to Ibe west. It was boill foe fl&O 01 i Irs, 80 fret wide, with btokea stone SO feci In w idtb, ao a atone loon daiioo, tbroogb Ptuusylvaula, Ohio and Illinois. Though osl of repoir. it is still a aood toasl it ought te be 1 steaded at tenet to lis Missouri river, and tbe states throegb a bicb it pasea slioeij baiid IU If macadam systems iuto Ibis great uatsuoal. artery airrWilLf aCiOa Ibe eoutiveui. . GRANT COULDN'T TELL HIM. One Thing About Which the Great Gen eral Knew Little. The late General Ln Fayette Mc Laws enjoyed an intimate friendship with Grant, both as" general ami president. - They were students to gether at West Point, and it was there tbe friendship that ripened in later yeurs was first begun. Mo Laws as a uoldier fongmkIudinna in tho west in many cuuipuigna. He was on the frontier undei Taylor during the Mexican war. When tbe civil wur broke out, he cast his lot ' with the Confederate cause, and finally attained command of a divi- siori tinder General Longstreet ' l)Urjng the four years of strife Grant never forgot his friend. Like wise McLnws cherished the friend ship for the Federal general. ' When General Grant was elected president, tho friends of McLuws urged him to apply for the &ivan - nab iioHtofflce. The Confederate general hesitated for a time, feeling th.it hv .Inlnir an Iip wniibl noiir ilin ... . censure erf southerners Like Grunt, however, he was broad minded and had accepted the result of the war like a soldier and a true type of an American citizen.. He thereuion decided to make tbo application for the office and took the train uortb to seo Grant in person. The presi dent had loft Washington for Long Branch. Going there, .McLuws sought him ut his cottage. He had Homo misgivings as to how the piesi dent woulel receive him. They had not met in years. McLiiwh won dored if tbe accession to the high office of the nation had "swelled-' Grunt's head. Approaching tho cot tage, tho Confederate goneral found tho president sitting on the veranda, with his feet upon tlw balustrade, smoking ono of those cigars which finally helped to end bis life. Like all other presidents. Grunt had loft Washington to avoid the office seek, ing iKist. and he did not want to be distuibed in bis retreat. "HelloT MacTWhcro did yon come from?" was the greeting that ; .1... . .1 1 ,1... g 1 . ! 1 11c jireniejciu giiie 1 ill! virwrniltu n 1 ho drow ucur enough for recogni tion. "I am truly glad to see you. t came over hero to rsoatw, tho office soakers. Pull up a chnir and tell nit bow yon have Isten getting along anil ull about yourself rineo we last met," Grant continued, with that warm, pletisunt and uffublnmr char acteristic of him. - The greeting was so 'cordial, do spite the reuinrk about the offloo j seekers, that General McLuws final ly found it an easy thing to bring up the Havnnnah postoffice mnttcr and announced his enndidacy for tbe ajipointinent. General Grant assured him that he should buvo it und thut it would give him u great pleiistiio to make the appointment Then they talked about their life at West Point and reviewed their ex-1 js-rienccs covering tho years up to thut time. In some respects they worn alike, Neither bud the faculty for nccutnii- I.. l. ... .wl ....-.,.. ........... 1. ........ I McLaws confessed thut ho did not i have ft ami addressed the question ! seriously to the president: "Can you tell me, general, bow to muke and save monoiy t" '-'My dtnr Mac. 1 havo not tho slightest idoit iu tho world," replied . Grant. J It was true), for Grant never could save uioney. Ho h.id no business ' instinct. Bnforu tbo wur he had as ' bard strugglo as noy man in tbe -t- a . r i 1 aa - wuntry, nun oven oner iw leu me , I iir,Mii1i,iiav tin wmi mi anuu ! for schetners, who uted lit tit in i sw indling schemes which ho thought I lioncsl until their dishonesty wus L IMiMcel. . - --.i, - 4 - Whe'U G'?ncTiil Td -Lows returned to Hrivsnnab, bo received tho ap- j Nintinent as mstnHstcr, and tbo : friendship between the two lasted until death. Chicugo Tiinos-Her-aleL Irarr oa Ike Kongo. J Before tho urrival of the Arol-s ' Ivory bad uo valuo. Tlio natives often did not store it. Ha vine; killed un elephant, they took only the nitwit, ttu'l when tne Arabs came and. nointinu to tbo ivorv. wished t bny tbe nativei bunted about in th wtsjdtt fr ivtwy of elephants ibnid s bn lime, and big aint were sold for a h indful of Is-uils or a coppeT ut brjss ornament. Ki bongo was tbe first to settle after Btsnley's pussage. ' He ' is said to bare bought im:nense stores . of ivory. Irtit all semui to have srvnt all they bad. All the nutivo along birr jeiineil Tippu Tib ou bis way to i'ttanley fulls let e-iablisb biinself. and they fought ami tmk imrt la r.tids for him. Journal of Lute E. J. Glare in Century. Still Ignorant. Pa! P:i !" Iittlo Johnny began. "Now. what d you want I" asked bis sufferiU'4 father, with the ew- piiaiie ou the "noar. "Will my hair fall off. when it's rii like Vonrsi" Whin, the "flat rnlor bad ceased , falliug oa Johnny, bis thirst for ku..wledt liJ disappeared. Pick :,.NO. 37. Royal aukea tha feed para. Absolutely Pure Ji THE UKV OF THE LOON". I , low wetrd to rm to tbe Wn. tmAm aa thai -r u, kmfi onhVucaorer riiu-y and hiii. - ' J And wood and mere are nnoannlly atlllt 801 !". lada! There Kimniethina;IOknor. . A oft tllM , , I Hr wigwnm fires that no ton-h can mww. 1 A tola oft tfibi In an In kaf aim A tale that ends with the aoylng. "! El-komlk-too-anl Glonrajier' -The loon ia aalling on Ulooakap! - '. X. i Gloonkiip wna God to I he oat ntored nttnd Lit by the livhta tl.al In nature we And: -That hrardlhitnliomlU!Wrdlt thnmaon AaaomethlnK "twoio Mirrtleoiona to donbt. And once ke ww flcni tbe niarse of lako A flock of loutta o'er the wide water make Tliriro lor the land, aa hi rirelro int-v flaw bo miM the tale with the nyilig, Kwwmjo l.l konilk too ojnj Uloorajial . ' llio loon to railing on eilwkiipt Then up the mnrar, in a lino from tho take, lie anw tbrro eoine wUi iipiittau'Wd bla and "Bo iMir 10 na who bare songht after threl ' Pe near tv tut who thy wrvnnta would lie!" Nodding lie mid. "1 will learn oneand all What l ijuill know a prnyiTfnl ralL" And ao lie trnlhl bat i heard, lade, tar yon. And he-nce aroae that old aaying. "Kwtnioa El-komlk-too-ajnl Oleomiml" lne loon ta raUlng on Ukioakap! ' " Glooakapwaagood. and methinkayoa will find If yon, my In da, kiep thla burad In jefad. Tl:at fnroff rty, which la only n nrayan, Will inn ml k-H weird In tha pW, moony air Or mak In wild and leaa aTewariene the nighit hvtt all U still over valk-y and brtght. Bat, bowao'rr It may Lr, latav with yon, WlM-ro'iT you bear that lung cry any "Kweiaaa El-komik-ton-ajnIXIkiorapal" r ' . The loon la railing on Okioakapf ' f flph H. rhaw in Ke-w Vorli Ledger. The Joumaltat In Cows. ; A journalist stands on a Very dif ferent plaue from the advocute, tbo physician or tho priest of rborch Whose tenets jiresc-rils? cwofeasitNB. The immunity of tbe' first bus a I-. ways been rocognikxd both Id tha Roman and common law, alt&tmgh one civilian thought fhat an advo cate might lawfully Im qitit "to the tort pre and compelled to revrnl the) tKiTets of a client, but thin duclriuo appears to have met with strong disapprobation on tbe part of both the luch and bar. The rloctrlne as to tbo' immunity of tbe physician and priest' was a later Outgrowth and rests upon gronndf tow.tibvious to 1 e discr.sscd. But orrery differ, rnt state of flirts is present! jl when we come to consider the. case of a. ' reporter or editor of a nwsjiaiei. While conceding tbo importune of tbo rose us a factor in tbe nncarfb- i ing of wrongdoing, it would seem j to Ihj exceetlingly inexiNtlicnt to permit it to ' take shelter behind - 1 ..!'..( ; Where newspaper articles hara liecn publisbetl Injurious to rbaruc. tcr tbo ls isoll lil.th'el tdioabl-.baVtf a right to find out at wbtsw iastiga tiou and upon whose authority Ibe might haji)cn, to hayo liecn jiittcu. The dctrino 'ol privilegetl -tuimu-nication should never lc used to bide the Hint binntioustif wuiic secret cnciny, simply liccaiiso ' ht ' rosy choose to diu-ct bis uttue ks through the medium of tbo public lsrem' It fj at - 1 -- II A? can nanny u saiti inai powie out rinl ftlii ie fittUl lnvlolv u on alllae ' tiationei:uinst vbeinr n ttutrgj' tnf innlfcnsHnce iucftie-ebns wrongfully Iscii brought, should be lestricted tej Ins reu:ely nguiutf tlss -tcwsi. rr itself in u 1U1 suit ana M1 be iciu;ittul to cbti;in the pair of. hie true Hicpstr.-Uuiversity''J3jr .Be- view. 'i " . Raindrop In the Sen.' ) - Those who have oUsvm4 tbe Eiuootbinc dow n, of a turbnre-ht sea ' beneath a pelting of rain will. Is pbts tcrcstcd in an English seleniist'l e. pluuation of tbe pbenoiiienun,.' Each ' droiv be says, st utlii lelow fJe or facoa cei tniu quantity of water ta " torittor rings, anun. witngraa- !"y decreasing velocity and Jn- rreusing sie, descend us mix U af it inches below tbe surface. Thenrlura when rain is fulling on the sea there is as much motion iui mediately. .be neath tbe surfuce as itborei only the drop are larger and fbcir.woiutt slower. Thns, ncseen by tbe bunnm eye, Ibe water at the norTisce; b lad ing uuidn to'etwriunaycbarhge places with that lneath. and hi this way the wave motion ia dent roved. J. New York Journal. 1 . J A Cocb Tratea "What woukl you say." asked the fond pupa of tbe"mvepted s trit or, "if I were to cite vou -a -bkark of business bouses for a wedding ls-. 1 entl" ' - . , I 'T1.I I.I !. an anirvklay aa-nneaa 1 UHI II a ril ill iser aj stiaa a J wrmt triini In IsfV as niil hff kWllltlll ajaea IB a r H a aaroa , w.Tnpwan. a " "oj ,:n in a se-cml wsr:lrtt in Ibis i-tstnne-e thee lireftie- "a tea ' - . ' 'i1 4 i-e Ui. - .-. -"r? : ' v : r ir