' . . SmmmmmmmammmmmmmmimmmmmimmmmmmmmmmKmm . asas nMn SEASONABLE RIIYHES. The Vacation. Season. owto thjbA "mnt-ina. there to . ' ..lB Mauser jers, hu rMOffcaiL-Ir ' rarol T t I The Merrj miden. rtk"1 ,40,?e' tlut "t with pride al. Ia now in camphor eafely laid iwaV W e.Un, havoc 'mon, th. htll.'ofWheri there The Maa'Wno CoupUlna of the JVeather .A,tt'nheet amtiet. And makes him swarthy as a creole : ; owd to rromble. o3d m'2Si p And now ho san1' lis hot heol SM I i. .;"V:' j . lie Catchea It. TnHbor boomWoV th lesj iLrzrm9n utaa nahott office, nimble bumble bee, tleeotchM tt; then to tha oool - a!UrS2 h.w hand to eool. , no naa gone w msaoou Recognizes a Friend. . watermelon rroon I BOW (Ha , it M ho pajtse by. nnmA6.6 theso instances from bcftL?? "ile" sLoali nver t4n qm ,: me word "wnile77 V t t me - same time aadverb, means 0061 "He is loot mean "moder Jt "entirelv well. 'uite a number" a large number" is and the phrase. pretty ,n means pretty, not moder- og. gnatore" lias been by the phrase. This change the idea that 'lb- t by neatli, and the fact are usually placed ' a letter.--But the allied to tlin Latin tvftmd the expression Vg'i and seal' or 'un v.J perhaps, "under 0 f 1 "i 1 a swv noA1 oa Mating and cheering. , t Freeman, of Ox- it has a strict and it means the r a victory which st importance, or r a commander not T . f- xu bucu a case JUin state to the jfiedAlree'p, while Xne was drawn sacrincea a duii. on, then, means a and should not be idents. governors, I In command, or the ositiou. s admirable book, ntaiu8 the state en Anne's time no S used umbrellas, rhose avocations to be out, what per." Even web f. which is not ex- remarks "that rd for vocation is .oA)serHhab r?Vnd netiave iStlone's 1. WavocatVs a ;oS,J:t9ioiiitthe tzrr fro. i :. in at P. -ps ua.v2r:rvmttjas ot 'c, Aft to V " ' .1 r- an V --.-I. M rTB-rPt y cl t .4iAToaaa. ir; A State- Atw ? trvot " ? soutnel. - ttt ve uc' , -roud . niiun IH hat I !to UcJ i Prorerbs of San Jones. - The following are some of the latest proverbs of the Ber. Sam Jones, whose reputation as a re vivalist has rapidly spread over a continent : I would not let my cook go to a ererman. Dancing is nothing but hass'ws set to music "I have doubts, 'f says one. Well, vou inst aurt vour meanness and you will quit your doubting. i If a man hasn't enough religion to pray in his family he hasir enough to save his soul with. It's not so ranch when and where a man ioins the church. It's all richt. just so he sticks up to if. -. Be honest and pay your debts. There are too many men in the church boarding with their wives. Get in the right I attitude' and taith will come. Bread is the gift of God, at the end of a plough han die. ; 1 . ... ' i Have religion at home, train your children right, and no revival will be needed. - Beligion is catch- ing. There is not a man in Chatta nooga who doesn't f have' ' family prayers that has got as much re ligion as a goat. Twelve years ago I consecrated myself to God, and since that time have never had an invitation to a ball... . . -: . ! A man's hates and his likes de termine character: a man's affini ties determine what he in and who he is. i . "j- - i I got mighty low down, low down indeed, but I never got low enough to. be a member of the Georgia Legislature. I . ;-j There was never a sinner in this town, however hoary headed, who would want the churches done away. with. ! '.f Do you think a pale, weak look ing fellow like me could preach four times a day the year round if I wasn't uplifted: by the grace of God. In certain places they tell you if you want to get into society you must join our church, j If you want to go to hell join that chnrcb. That is the plain English of it. If I could have my choice getting into heaven between church, Sun day .school, prayer meetings and a good mother, 1 would take the latter and be sure of the better home above. i There are two kinds of talk we should not indulge smutty talk and gossip ; of the two, though, I would rather be smutty. One throws mud on you, the other stabs your character ; one you cau wash off, the other destroys you. Slagalar Tenacity f Life. -, PittoiCh-onWo- . 'How little it takes sometimes to kill a man, and then, again, what wonderful tenacity ot life some men have," said a red-headed man who was reading the paper. "That's so,77 said the others. 'Just listen," said the red bead ed man. "Hero's: a brakemau ou the Nickel Plate road. . The paper says : He fell in front of the car which passed diagonally across his body, and lived' V "Begosh I knew a painter who fell off a church steeple and got weH again,", said the cross-eyed man. - , "I k no wed a man shot a bullet through his heart and lived ten the man who looked ke a farmer. ! was a J man in Salem. Wh&a. T AfttnA from, that ho1 fnnt ton faii on nim and hea auve yo gaj the one-armed man from x??lilMtho rod headed mm a si w a noiia iee.1 Where was 1 1 Oh 'fell in .Jipt the car, which passed diagona a r.vl hot a ifuji AAtsftBB k an bVaI tao ents." n. . rmmt Flaatern lSwYorkS4r - .. The exact sixe of Nk . not been determined dellYArklhas Wording tOKSIaaac but calculations, based on his gpu a " . v a.v. of thelengtu oi a ei w"vT iiiatorieal barge nl !,-- hften 010.0-5 I ecu wu8, w ":;r"" m wn. The m tonage of sine ark waa 18,232. -r-,o fit-oat Eastern was Ooo leew loni?. 83 feet w de, ana oo w ' awn . a 1mai - a -".film measured 2S,01W tons. b ZZZ& Though the Great Eastern was no. 1 no well proportioned as mem-. - "' rZ double the carrying 4Vronacit it uer cu" : i'w f.inf her. because she ?wero Vil" th ark was . r. . n rm an iniu a.ma wmv - oiP ,Vn!a wooden ship. j ".Tine thacw. tc 1 Amateur farmer (for the mmej MJVv-jrhatcow I bought of; you :ctb!eftt8e8 to give down any milk. . an flXT former That ain't right. he gave twenty-eight quarU a ibenlaoldihertoyou.- j 1 . . rmrI know M. At first I had no trouble. I C,uld go out any time and geta 'ass Sf milk. But ; yesterday we L..i iittl for dinner and ( l didn't get a drop, and to dayi She must Von thA KaiTVH WHY. ( y &. MV V or cow. X Chance ef Heart. western liquor deaier n.follows: "Having expert, voftnit is expect i l?c . ?d Ci .rf.anM of heart througu pru- , Yx blessed efforts oi Ult0ov- ,f. to a'Tmrnous friends and 's that at the end of the Sth I j shall retire from i . traffic forever. rmrmr.onhandwmbe reduced e oue, come all 1 Bales for Plenlca. j 1 VArer take food to a picnic i . Take plenty oi wholesome to and 8ometumg rn tn a great distance. Never toke very small children Do not stay long, 3ave a hearty meal as soon as :t bene. -;f r." - SnleMeBMaltln-rfiraaa a Joke. ; A telegram from Boston.. says: Robert Stbison committed suicide last week at ' West ' Stockbridge. He was twenty-three years old, and the son of ex Judge Stinson, ot Norristown, Pa. He had spent several "summers at West Stock bridge, coming all the way on his bicycle last - season! . Mr. Stinson met Miss Clara Edwards, of West Stockbridge, and the acquaintance ripened into an engagement three years ago. He was studying law and hoped to. be admitted- to the bar next spring. He started from home a month ago on a visit to West Stockbridge, stopping on the way at Oswego, New .York, where he officiated as best mau at the wedding of a college friend. One evening as he was rowing on the lake with Miss Morrow, his friend's sister, she Jokingly said that she thought the young lady in Massa chusetts bad better be informed of his gallantry to the fair ones of Oswego. He replied in the same vein, and at once gave Miss Mor row the address of Miss Edwards, telling her that if she did not see him the next day she had better write at once. V She did not see Stinson the day following, so she wrote the letter. Miss Edwards received it in due time about a fortnight ago and was greatly shocked to read that Sun son had mysteriously disappeared, and that his -Oswego friend felt little reason to doubt that he had been drowned in the lake. When she. finished this sentence sho 8woomed and remained uncon scious for some time. Her father at once telegraphed for particulars and in a few, hours there came a dispatch which read : 'Bobert has returned and is alive and well. It was all a joke." . Stinson went to West i Stock- bridge the uext Tuesday. While there he heard so much about his reported disappearance that he be came morbid and for the first time in his life took to drink, appearing one evening in the presence of his affianced intoxicated. He was so shocked, upon recovering, at his conduct that he at once purchased a revolver and shot himself. A Oradnated at Noon, Married at Midnight Charlotte Obserrer. . It doesn't often happen that a college commencement x nowadays winds np with the flare of Hymen's torch and the tinkling of wedding bells, but that is just exactly the way the curtain was rung down on the Davidson commencement. sAt noon Thursday, Mr. Isaac Raymond Oeland. of WUlford. S. C, deliver- ed his graduating address on "Ag nosticism,' and bad the degree of A. B. conferred upon him. He re tained the bachelor part of the de gree until midnight arrived, and their he artfully cast it off and took unto himself a wife. After the society halls were deserted of the promenaders and flirtation couples, the lights turned down and the air of a banquet hall deserted had fallen upon the late scene of gaiety Mr. Oeland, accompanied by a few of bis young friends, repaired to the residence of Eev. WJ P. Wil liains, where the expectant bride. Miss Annio Withers, of Davidson College, awaited the bridegroom's coming. Mr. Williams performed the ceremony and. the newly wed ded, went at once to the depot wherd they took the train for their South Carolina home. j Sana Hoaston's Inaaprral. ICalreri Comrior. . The Texas ? Congress once took exceptions to President Sam Hous ton's uabtt of giving them his mes sage orally, and insisted that he should write them out; that the habit of delivering them orally was highly dictatorial, and lacking in respect . for Congress. Houston agreed to conform to their wishes, and, as the next day was the oue set apart for the delivery of his in augural, he made his appearance in the halls of Congress with a roll of paper in his hand tied with red tape and marked ; in largo letters, nangnral." He addressed them the roll in his hand, waving fully that all might see it, a n concluding; handed it with ttr to tha clerk, and atirnfln ed it Vchamber. On being open- paper. Nond t0 b a roll of blank UOn. ueta Editor Shot, tor of the (KQnnninbton Edi- Known vuruufcv.. . . - inrougu iu VaM was shot . 1. w.A lAtrT " Virginia, uu o in, west man wlio esca w tit ' Th y by a imscu ..7 v lint VMf. much cxcitemeni increr;-; r ton had worked lor tuer MctJormick, tue Kep"Vf RorMuue Collector. -A too" day I she Reveuue a Democratic successor Hormick was appointed una that, received an buuhj ta. inouncing hini as a trait) wrarnimrhlm to leave town ..itrkt. wake up ww " " . and find bimseii m " be a MatheaaaUca. , (invUlphta RoBord.) ' i TK-r tru a deficiency in the ternal Bcvenue Bureau last uc - , nil. rr vilQ uie mbww - r "in covered into that , Treasury, anda 8avingof pat- 000 is looked for uexs jwt. is practical and inwiiigiuie iw i I. :..ⅈmHiA ni the clinking oi ;..toiiirihla as the clinking ...wv. coins and the leeung ii notes, i . j . j j THr Ina-redlents SatUfaetory. George (after the theatre) Do you know what this ice xsream ia made of! - . Ji . v .j drink it Clara (scraping, ner uisuj George It's made ot skim oleomargarine, cora siarcu, I o-lncose. 1 Clara eninuiaanicij- What a nengnuui raixiure i , ' An Age4 Maa'a Marriage. A Baltimore dispatch says :- JAn inquest of lunacy is now pending in Carroll county, widen promises to become - one of the celebrated cases of -: the State, Joshua Sell man is ; a well known: farmer, who lives uear Westminster.! He has a number of large farms, and for twenty years he has been the lar gest stock raiser in the neighbor hood. He is reputed to be worth nearly $500,000. In 1871 his wife died, and the old gentleman ap peared to be inconsolable. About a year ago, although he was then eighty four years of age. he mar lied a woman of twenty. The mar riage caused great indignation among his children, eight in nam ber, the oldest of whom has reach ed the age of fifty-six years. Mr. Sell man shortly after his second marriage- sold some ' of his real estate and purchased a house in Westminster, and has been living there since that time. Last year be made a deed to his wife of the town residence, and in January, being desirous of selling a farm of 500 acres, be conveyed it to Unas. T. Beifsnider in trust to be sold. Mr. Beifsnider was to pay to Mrs. sell matt 93,000 of the proceeds in lieu of her dower interest therein. Mr. Beifsnider advertised the pro perty, but before the day of sale arrived some of the children or Mr. Sell man i filed a bill in equity en joining the trustee from selling the property, and praying the court to set aside the deed of the town pro perty to his wife and the deed of trust to Mr. Beifsnider. To this bill tho defendant demurred, and the demurrer was sustained by the court. The case was taken to the court of appeals and the judgment of the court below was affirmed. Yesterday John B. T. Sellraan, a son, and 1 Isaac W. Buckingham and wife, son-in-law and daughter of Joshua Sellman, filed their peti tion asking an inquest to bavo their aged father declared a lunatio and a committee appointed to take charge of his personal property. The effort to establish the old -gentleman's mental failings is not apt to be successful, as he Is hale and hearty. He says that he thinks he has as much right to a wife as any one. tie is a first cousin of tbA Carrolls of Carrollton. Charged With an Old Murder. A warrant has been issued at Martinsville. Henry county, Va., for the arrest of Peter Goins. color ed, who is charged with the mur der of George Paunill, a popular citizen, in 18G5. Mr. Pannill was found dead in his office. Upon ex amination it was ascertained that he had been shot, the' ball entering his mouth and coming out at the top of the head. A pistol was found upon the floor near him, and his door key ' was upon the table. the door being locked. It was supposed to be a case of suicide until Saturday last, when Goins' daughter made a statement which led to the issuance of the warrant. It seems that Goins was formeily owned by, Mr. Pannill. and having been thoroughly chastised for some rascality swore that he would kill Lis master. The story goes that he made a key to fit the office door, and that one autumu afternoon, in 1865, he entered the room, where Mr. Pannill was standing with his back to the door. He (Goins) took np a pistol from the table, and as Mr. Pannill turned to face him he fired, the ball taking effect as above stated. . He then placed the door key on the-table and locked - the door with the false key and escap ed.. The accused lives near the county line between Henry and Pittsylvania counties, in an obscure out of-the way i mountain fastness. tie Is said to be a desperate charac ter. ...!' . . 1 i r ; i A Timely Warning. Young ladies of the marriageable age cannot fail to have perceived, if they bad read the newspapers, the frequency with which rejected suitors, of late, have killed the ob durate fair one. In this particular the fashion has greatly changed, and altogether to the advantage of males. There was a time when "the dismissed bachelor" went off into some quite spot and hanged himself or blew bis brains out. and hard hearted beauties rather plumed themselves on the number of their suicide victims. BntTiow the case is altered. : The ' Lady Clara Vere de Vere of the period had better look out for I herself. Lovers go aronnd and shoot on slight provo cation, as before, only they don't shoot . themsel ves. Giving j the mitten has become an extra hazard ' ous practice,- and young - ladies 8nouiu ue very indulge in it. careful how they The llanect Gambler. ISaa Francuoo Chronicle suppose the story is old as the o but it is just as fanny to day .i rr as years ago whrn it bap- olv the Mississippi boat, the acoamblingnt its height. An emcfibarn had stuffed four ged ? tUy ,nto his boot for an gracefuQotber expert twig- In year.' own use. fetlt and eouallv - the poker i them tor i.;- of ther ieainemtarrived aud the "Holdonrxjijo band io swp wov . been cheating ne , AWkelyTexaa , w " fShermaa Conri - a l.iio-o necrro boy, h niAK and hard at work Ym-rm i:ki .nil nn tne uoi hw t.v- i novel sight witnessed by nir his novel sign p""-, au account of the killing of JS'mX rattlesnake. The xu, wuu . . have been z ipli rattles and four buttons, strength, riBgpVffi who beat Ed Pmy milk. he was waning, t " ati ftlonff in a manner gei to the treatment given like work. a auwcou iv in . I- A Mnrderer at Eighty Yean. A special tothelTew York TTorM from Erie. Pa., Jane 25, says : , At West Mill Creek Hugh. Brown, nearly eighty , years ' old has been arrested' for murder. He invited Charles Dunn,' a Grand Army veteran, to share his thanty until better times came;- and Dunn, who Is about forty years old, moved over there. ' This morning ' Dunn was found outside the shanty with his head ' severed from bis body, his heart cut in twain, and the trunk gashed and hacked with an axe belonging to Brown. The ac cused says be came home after midnight and thought Dunn was sleeping on j the floor, : and that wheu he awoke this morning he saw the pools of blood and found the body as described. He declares the crime was committed before he came home, I The assault was evi dently committed iu the house and the billit of wood which the victim bad for a pillow served the assassin for a block upon which to perform the deed of decapitation; The axe passed through the beck and buried itself, in the block of wood. The body was then probably dragged outside the door and placed where t was found.! Brown has-the repu tation of being a demon when in bis cups. A! few years ago he was sent to the penitentiary for shoot ing x nomas i x nornron anu previ ously he had; done time tor arson. . j : : ; . . On Taking Oat Yoar Watch Daring a j - j - Sermon. ; Correspondent Charch Mowenrer. This is no small exploit. There are many j advantages arising from it. In the first place it will be known that you have a watch. In the second place he will show that the sermon has not very much af fected him. 1 Thirdly, it will boa modest hint i to the minister that he has about preached long enough ana snouid bring his sermon to a close. Fourthly, it will take up a portion of time and attention so mat a part (it not ail) or the ser mon will pass by as idle breath. Fifthly, it will show what estimate that man! puts ou the message of grace, sixthly, it will turn away the attention of others In like man ner, i Seventhly, it is an act very much in harmony with that pas sage of Scripture: "When will the new moon be gone, that we may sell ' corn f and the Sabbath that we may set forth wheat t" Amos viii, 5j A Bolt from a Clear Sky. i lAtherUlo Citixen. Our Morgan ton correspondent gives ns the. following information. It is siugular, and with few paral eis. x wo or tnreo years ago a drayman was killed at mid day on Carey street,' Bichmond, by a bolt of lightning, shot from a solitary and almost 'imperceptible cloud. The same year a man iu Missouri was killed at the plough by light- uing from one solitary ; and very small cloud, I , i Our correspondent says : Yes terday about 2.30 p. in. the wire was struck by lightning about 100 yards from the deport, slightly splitting one of the posts. It also entered the office and burnt the instruments, rendering part of them useless. No other damage was done. It came without any warning whatever. The suu was shining and there was no sign of a storm at the time or ot a cloud. - Pleading for a Life. f A Chattanooga, Tenn., special of June 23rd, says : .The speech of Senator Voorhees in the Johnson rial to day was the most remarka ble on record in? this section. ' He began early this morning and fin- shed at 1.20 o'clock, having spoken about four hours. His 'defense of Johnson is regarded as simply won derful. He presented every point with great clearness and force, go ing carefully over the details ot the evidence. In 1 making his appeal to the jury the pictures he drew were full of pathos. The vast crowd was still as death except; when disturbed by the sobs of some of the auditors. The jurors broke down and wept like children, while the lodge allowed large tears to trickle down his cheeks. The scene was the most touching ever wit-! nessed in this county. An Aaahnlance for Office Seekers. : Cbiesfo Herald. . Even ' sleeping car porter will have their jokes on the office seek ers. Two sad-eyed, breathless men rushed up to a Baltimore & Ohio rain that was about to start from Washington and inquired of the uniformed ' colored man who stood on the steps: "Any berths left.in this sleeping car!" ! "This hain't no sleepin' cab." "It isn't ! What is it, then r ; "It used to be n sleepin' cab, but now we calls 'em ambulances." He Was Honest with Ills Lawyer. iXow York Sua.) "If you are innocent," said a law yer to his client, an old darkey, who was charged with stealing a ham, "we ought to be able to prove an alibi." - 1. j "I don' 'spect we kin," thodar- key replied doubtfully. f "At what time: was' the bam stolen t", . " - "'Bout lebben o'clock doyaay." "Well, where' were you between 11 o'clock and mid-night, in bed T" "No, sah, I wah hidin' do ham." WMh Nineteen Rattles. fLsory Csnrior. Ed Perry, sou of ' our esteemed friend, Judge John O. Perry, of aker, comes to the iront this week tao wsiM Mivnn leet loner, wiin ,5- U entitled to the simiii i"v . 9 I knK " Tol - nn ilnnhr. mia. norse iu 1 "viL ----- I is trUbe voung rattles for - Mesnake never uses - ' -. : rd bis wife never i . "Ting thatca. me sausnarv cabinet, i Prime Minister and Secretary for Foreign Affairs, the Marquis of osuisuury. .. j; : . -.... j First Lord! of the Treasury, Sir ocanoru xoortbcote., ;.T V- f - Chancellor of the Exchequer. Sir Aiicnaei u. uicks-iseach. J - . Lord High j. Chancellor, Sir Har utnge uiitord. j Lord President of the Council Viscount Cranbrook. Lord Privy Seal, the Earl of Harrowby. ; .: I Secretary for tue Home Depart ment, Sir Bichard Assheton Cross. oecretary for the Colonial De part men t, Colonel Frederick Stan ley. - . j . . ! j : - ,r Secretary of War, Bt. Hon. Wil liam Henry Smith.-. . I - Secretary of State for India, Lord xuindoipn unurchiu. ; First i Lord of the Admifaltv. Lord George Hamilton. I ; President of the Local Govern ment Board, Arthur James Bal four.- J ... Presideut of the Board of Trade. the Duke of Bichmond and Gor- don.. I . .- ; ;. i Vice-President of the. Council. I Hon. Edward Stanhope. 1 - i Lioni Lieutenant of Ireland, the xubti ox Carnarvon. n Lord Chancellor of Ireland. Eight xxon. Edward liibsou. Postmaster-General. Lord John Manners. ' Chancellor of the Duchy of Lan caster, Henry Chaplin. "L" Jb irst 1 Commissioner of V orks. Bight Hon. David B. PlunketL ' Parliament Secretary to the Trea sury, Koland WiDu. - ! Parliament Secretary to the In dian Office, Lord Harris. j. Secretary to the Admiralty .Chas. T. Ritchie. . i , Civil Lord of the Admiralty. El lis Ash mead Bartlett. I- j The members of the Cabinet pro per are Lord Salisbury, Sir Stafford Korthcote, SirMichael Hicks Beach Sir Hardinge Gifford, Viscount Cranbrook,- Lord Harrowby. Sir Bichard! Assheton Cross, Colonel Frederick Stanley, Bight Hon. Wil liam Hi Smith, Lord Randolph Churchill, Lord George Hamilton, Lord John Manners, the Duke of Bichmond and Gordon,. Hon. Ed ward Stanhope, Earl of Caniavon. and Bight Hon. Edward Gibson. j . . iv. Fralt Eaters Need no Doctor. I tfcnral Now Yorker. ' ; We were strnck recently by vthe remarks of a doctor friend ot ours, who said no 0110 thing will do so much to make people independentof the medical profession as the daily free use of fruit. He had noticed that those farmers in whose fami lies fruit was largi ly and regularly consumed, seldom needed h!s ser vices. We thought what a pity that every farmer could not be con vi need of these truths. It is a de plorable fact that farmers' families do uot ienioy that, yobust health which country jtir and, out door life, with plenty of exercise should give. It is!aJ0 a fact that living on farms woejMajficres are arching to prut fCfuaiit crops 01 tue var ied rrti-aijt very few have plen ty, aud many never have any fruit, except it may be an occasional ap ple. The standard f food 111 a ma jority of j farmers' houses consists largely of bread, butter and meat (mostly pork) fried in grease, and where pastry or cake is used it has lard in large proportion in its com position ; and this food is eaten at least twice, and. in many families. three tiroes a day, year in and year out. Is it any wonder that they are not more healthy, and that their prevailing diseases are sncb as indicate an over consumption of greasy ' food I 11 fruits were ex pensive or difficult to raise, there would be some excuse ; but there is no part 01 tue country witnouc plenty of varieties adapted to its soil and climate, aud just such as are fitted by nature to both nourish and cleanse the body, and no more - . 1 a : . 1 . 1 SKiu is required 10 grow meni iuao to grow corn or wheat. Why islt that so few farmers make any at tempt to provide an adequate sup ply of what wonld add much to their pleasure and save many times its cost in doctors' bills, to say nothing of the sufferings and loss of their dear ones T . We entreat you not to let the next season pass without planting a- fruit yard. Surely it is better than to be continual to grow fruit y dosing with medicine. The I'm-to-be-Photographed Iook. Rochester Detooerat-Chronlcle. It is the hardest! thing in the world to get some folks into airy kind of a natural position, or ex pression of countenance. They will put a kind of I'm to be photograph ed look ou their faces when they come into the gallery and it gener ally stays there. Then the way some women I They: have au idea that the more colors they put on the better they look; and the result is that when they see tueir photo graphs and the curious effect pro duced by the colors, they'll blame the photographer, though we al ways tell them beforehand. Nearly all persons look better in a picture than in reality, except those hav ing clear complexions. Some la dies, for ' instance, would ' be! con sidered beautiful iu side view of their features, while a front view is decidedly disappointingJ Of course in photographing them, we take the side new. some look bet ter with a hat on and some in full out door costume. But there is one thing you may not know, and that is very few ladies look well photo graphed in white, yet the only pic tures many have taken are in their graduation or wedding dresses. .; , ,. ,;; A Great Change. . , De Twirliger Have' yon seen Jones since he was married I ! Ponsonby No t why t v j y De TwirligerHe is so changed from the dude be was. ; I i-onsonoy aub ducd now, 1 sup 7 e-- 'V- v? ; - . " (aasTMSt. j ys :i Oncernlng North CafS555a55a!5S!f55annsjnn Baltimore Manvfacturer't A cord, in reply to a correspondent iYv. A correspondent from - Hudson, N. Y., writes to know (IV "what re vuc pnucipai prouuctsoznorin uaroiina ; 2) where is the Hidden ite gem stone found: (3) is corun dum found in large quantities: U) why is Ashevillo called the 'land of the sky ;' In reply : (1 The prin cipal products are cotton, 400,000 bales : tobacco. 30.000.000 nounda 1 rice, 5.000,000, and wheat, 4,000,000 uusueis. (Z) Mae ; gem stone is found at Stoney Point, Alexander county, N. 0.: address Prot Wm. Earl Hidden at that place. (3) Corundum is found in great abun dance ; a company headed by Wal ter uamuton, Esq., or IS ew York. is now mining it at Democrat, N. j. xney expect to take oat ten tons a day. It is shipped to Ger mauy. (4) Ashevillo is called "in the land of tho sky" because the villiage is in the wildest, most mountainous country imaginable. anu is very elevated. The name came from a book by "Christian Beid," (Miss Fisher, ef Salisbury, N. C) entitled -'The Land of the Sky,". It is a love story, the scene or which is laid near Asheville. l i jNot an Intimate Acquaintance. ' : ! Arkansaw Trarollot. MDo you know this woman f asked a lawyer of a negro who had been summoned to testify before court. I ! "Yes, sab, I knows her." I "Do yon know her verv intimates iy r' v , 1 rao. sab, kain't say dat I do." How long have you known her P "Wall, I got er 'quainted wid herer short time before I married herJ? .1 . , j "She's your wifej thenT j 'Yas, sah, sorter." j "Thought you did not kuow her intimately I" r : f i "Dat's whut I iackerlated." "I don't understand, then, how sue can oe your wire." ,; . "Wall, yer see, sah, she longs er de church, de singin' s'cietv. de oisiers o ue sacred urooin. de a a n - Daughters o' Ham Ian' two or three ittle side shows. Er 'oinan whut is kep7 so busy, sah, ain't got no time ter fool er roun' home." $ ; Gold Shot. Asborillo Cldsea. M uapu .tKinson urougnc i us a a. -a In a - SC shinning pellet of gold about the size of a squirrel shot, the product or a small quantity of ore found on Avery's Creek in this county;- The vein from which the ore was taken curiously escaped the usual notori ety. A good while! ago, we do uot know bow long, a man found quartz rocs: on tue creeg, ricu with metal that he wonld not believe it had value, classing it as "mundic" the a - on o.atT m cornish name for iron pyrites. Since the gold discoveries on Boil- 8tou Creek, be thought there might be something in his discovery, and returned to the locality, but has not yet been able to identify the exact spot, ue .obtained - some good specimens near by. of which the "shot" is the product. Perhaps a bonanza Is in store for some body. Burg-la rs Tort m re Their Victim. I Saturday night, letween 10 and 11 o'clock, four men went to the residence of James -Maynard, an aged farmer, who lives with his sister about three miles from Con neaut, Ohio, and! rapped : at the door, telling him they had a letter from his brother In Con neaut. Mr. Maynard went to the door,' carry ing with him a poker. When he opened the door a revolver .was presented at' him,! but he knocked the man down with the poker. All four assaulted him. knocking him down. They bound and gagged him and his sister. The thieves then! demanded to know fwhere their mouey was. IThey refused to tell : and were tortured by being burued with liehhted cigars from the hand to the j shoulder! The thieves searched the house, but overlooked $950 and a riugJ; i ,- i Ixwer Bates for Clergyaieii. Clerk (to Mr. Isaacstein in hack room) Mr. Isaacstein, der shentle mans who is looking at dot peauti- ful seventeen tollar coat says he yas a clergy mans, i . Mr, Isaacstein Make dot alien- tlemans who vas a clergyman 20 per cend discouud off. f N j Clerk Der shchtlemans says he villi give five tollar for dot coat, nnd not a cend more. ' 1 Mr. Isaacstein Let him hav dot coat, Jacob, but .doud make no dis couud off. i A Question for Casuists. I Hoosae Valjjoy Xsws. An old darkey was preaching some time since and he saw one in his congregation asleep, so he be gan : . "You remember-when Paul was preaehing in de temple a dam Bel was asleep in the fourth story, and she fell down smashing all ter ismashers, and the fragments they picked up twelve basketsfnl, and whose wife will she be in de resnr rectum P:, 1 i I --i : i An Unknown Present. i Oh, Harry I What a beautiful birthday present I I am glad to know 1 that you didn't forget me. Pure gold, isn't it f I Hairy (her betrothed) Yes, dar ling. : j i ; . 11 r ' And the case is lost superb. It isu't a charm uori an earring, for vou would have bought me ft pair. I never saw anything like it before. What is it, Harry T If Harry It is a thimble.! I Frightening Grasshoppers Away. From tbeUy of Mexico Two Befwblies. ' be people ef San. LniajPotosi re making; war on the grasshoi- . . . .. 1 pcrs i in an onginai manner -uy shooting fireworks off. The pyro technical crusade is succeeding ad mirably in scaring off tire pests. JM op-inrCREaT. SU has disaPp3red from stct weapons used in the Aus-e ado lancer ti?i i ly and satisi eht cavaIyiaea. f of my mothe?fech sanisoklnd. "v w r the Latiorte - JInht the inntrnl thanks of a mourningeires ia The Chicago Public"1?' no w eleven 3 ears old, contains 621 volumes, and has he largest number of readers of any library p in the country except that of Bo$L tou. ,ivj- The Bev. Thomas Harrison, the "boy preacher." who has gone! from Louisville to Denver, esti mates that he has "converted" 40.- 000 souls since the beginning of i cvMugensuo career. i . Prof. Burdon Sanderson. cno of the ablest of English physiiras, said, in a recent lecture onchc' " '1 that if the disease intended V ' ' tack London this vear it V long ago have been on the mr "Tommy 'Atkins" is gr accepted now as the tynir for an English soldier, just as Knll ifl ffii on PnfvlioKtneti M curiously too, the first GuardJJ. wounded in the Soudan was geant Atkins. . . , . . Coal is said to be an almoi known luxury to the Chinese o Francisco. Their mode of cooki is to have an empty oil can ?'' as a stove, upon which they 1 their tea kettle or a cooking 1 They start a fire with to or tL small sticks of wood, which ti add to as they burn, and in tl, way manage to establish am uegree or heat with but a small penditure of fuel. , The London IVitf k gives following original, observations astronomy from a sermon 01 Welsh curate preaching to an 1 glish congregation: "A starr. but a lidl dot in the skyee. .& many Starrs mek one plannat. Si many piannats mek. a constellt shon. Saw many constellessho mek one milkee we. Six milk! wes mek one rorriborriallis." The Bev. H. L. Haweis write "Morning literary work is usual characterized by freshness, con tit uity of prasp .and vigor; nigU- work by fever, excitement and less 1 condensation. This I believe to-bo 7 the rule, and with exceptions,, tit ' speaking thus generally, it is,;o' course, imiossible to deal. Of or thing I am certain, that for al head workers, especially literary men, the following rules will be fnnJ nU . mn I 1 i 1 r . 1 1 1 to work before 7 : as little liquids ' as possible, and no smoking before r DreaKtast." M The Western Medical Reporter i i i says that a grocer who had an aged - and disabled horse wished to get ; v rid of him by as painless a death j ' as possible, and gave him forty j t ! grains of morphine. Having made ; ! j ' preparations for the funeral, the i i ; grocer proceeded to the stable. ; where, to his astonishment, he H .! found the horse in excellent ntnU and eating his oats with his forr habitual haste, so ' as to be re( for the early trip to market. Opk is sani to nave oeen used succe fully iu India for many years neviug horses irom the c quences or old age and ove ' The Journal -of Inebrietw t that the cumulative action of a hoi on the brain centres exists greater extent than is general supposed Many men who drink" regularly ' through the ' day 'and seem no worse tor it, become toxicated late at night, although they, have not used spirits during the evening. "It appears," says the editor, ?that alcohol,, like bro mide, may remain in the system' to some extent without producing any marked action, and then suddenly, from some unknown cause, burst into great activity, producing pro-J; tound intoxication.77 The reasons . for this do not seem t be definite- ly understood, though they are. ; thought to be of a combined pby- Biological and psychological iia- , tare, and partly due to, Climatic conditions. . 1 Frightened to Death. Iladson Kepublksa.1 Last Saturday evening as a 11 urn ber of men, were passing tb of John H. Swarts. about tw east of Elizaville, Columbia cf they came noon two children daughters of Mr. Swarts, wL nlar On a est tha nitrtv. ft I the remonstrance of the 01 thinking to scare the girls, t' a large stone at the damej calling after them in somerS manner. The children t&?i. startetl up and ran. 1r,Z if' named Cora, about ran but a few steps aw w, T!imlnatmn art A vrr- 0 deadfrightened to tt J:". ' 1 , "T, llicconghs for Thirteen pajra.' Lineoteton Press.) ' Bev. J. E.GreenhilI, of Triangle has bad an experience which ,h don't care to repeat. About tw weeks ago, while he enjoyed hi' usual health, he wastaken wit' hiccoughs, which continued will out cessation -for thirteen day j! when his physician finally succeed ed in stoppiug them. By this tic Mr. Greenbill bad become so pro trated as to beat the point of deat A Snperstltioas Yoang Woman. Boston young ' lady was picki her way in front of a partly fini el building when a bricklayer in the seventh story Shouted stentorian tones:- ) ' " "MortF ' ' "Hush P she exclaimed will shudder, at the same tir vclasn her escort by the shoJ "turning deadly pale. "1! hear a voice say Ueath j er r If common sense 1 brilliancy of the sun, fixity of the stars. 7' frro. ' V ' hi 7 i r in' ' 1 -n -. I toV ' f I 1 ) w.. - " ! 1 1 : a - poso. v t 4