- "I SALISBURY, N 0., THURSDAY SEPTEMBER 7, 1893. ..-FOURTH SERIES. - -.-.'- 1 , -W. -- - m - -. T a ' mm'i'm i iiiVilwwi-pwJ - ' " 1 " " r toria is Dr. Samuel Pitcher's sjxd Cbildrcn. It contains neitlicr CVium, Morphine nor ,ther Narcotic substance. n for paregoric, Drops, Soothing: It is Pleasant. It3 guarantee Million of Mothers. Castoria the Mother's Friend. . - Castoria. I nomiccnJ It aa superior to any rscriptka known to me." n. Ju Acna, 1L P.. Ml o. Oxford St., Brooklyn,.!. Y. IT ' Castoria ' te so universal and H BcrtU w.ll known that It aocuiii work T -ptio. to tutor U. Fsw are th Jtfaticvao io aoi kocp Cfcor rjutji tAj roach. . v New York CHt. TERRIBLE EXPLOSION I Too High Pressure. In theae dars of keen competition in every rne when the hHsiness m.iii is compelled to 13 hi inMU-rt ami every energy to lie ' mxce of his business ; the c.erk, book Letwr i rr.fess:o!!nl nwn and laborer, to dr.re themsi-lveH at a terrific rate, there can 1 but one r.-fciilt an cxplii-n, which, it nol resulting in immediate deaih, k-ayea -tnm ith - shattered- .brains at:d bodies. " iher are. funning at too high- pressure. Tho' strain is Uw gn at. Something must ,nj give way. T!is 18 eqnnl.y. true of TlmTiuh their sphere , is . more liu.iu-d, thev have their dnily burdens, frets, ! woiriei and the remits are the eame as iih their stronger companions. TLw rondition is growing worse eTery dv The rapidity ot its increase is awful " io'mntcint.late. Our homes, ho.pitls, and jnui.e aiivlums are full of these unfortunates, and arebeing crowded till further. 1 hero iV but one wiutiou of tie n-.atter. Reeog r,ixe the impoitance of the situation at once, aiul take the new-twary measures to over come it. J f voir have "fai.ii g mi uiorv, hot fluhw, ditziiWs. i.onous or tick headache, lilioiwne, irritahility. ri.elHmholy, slccp les fainting, nrrvoo dyKpepia, epi-i.j-y. etc., fcrrw that aar one of thet tsbat k.vmj'toni of the calami y tlvat may befall and'evm thonph eii hare osed so r.lU remedies and treld with reputable thrwicians with little cr no benefit, give Dr. MiW Ke-torative Nervine a trial. It is !') only renit-dy that may be depended mn for nervous di-order.'. "Two Tramae" I ui-ed lr. Mitca' Fnsforative M.rviuewiih market twnlit. and later induced ,n .w. w ho had toen irk with catarrh of tbe l.la.Wor five verf in the handa of onr best pby iri1,..t..trr it tether witta lr. MIW erye mi tl.lTer He wainn wnndVrfolly bem fited thi he u atiendii.e to buinrea epain. liy wife a'o u-e-l Nervine with moft excel cnt results. K nf u tnpptlier have not iwd more than tx bottle .r Nervine. Several of our friends have al. uwd It. an-1 aro jrreatly imprTed. 1 ouis i GM, Burher r.ihba How Co .Canton. Ohio. ' nr Mi:e' Retorative Nervine is Kld by all lTOiritiion a positira nirntee, -r aent MDr. MH Veliel Co.. KUhart. I'.d.. on receipt . irl.e,l Mrbottle,ixl'OUlc..eiprenprepaid. h ii rvmtirely free from opiate or dangtrouf druja. Free book at drugsiau, or by mail. For S.tlc hj-all Diuist-. The Fundamental Principle of Life Assurance is protection for the family. Unfortunately, however, the beneficiaries of life assurance are often deprived of the pro vision made for them, through the loss of the principal, by following bad advice regard? ing its investment Under the Tontine Installment Policy of The Equitable Life you are provided with an ab solute safeguard against such misfortune, besides securing rerri5lo accident lo Hie Western JliX a much larger amount of in- : press N;, lo, Br.st.on & Albany Uil- surance for the ;same amount of premiums paid in. For facts and figures, address W. J. RODDEY, Manager, For tho Carclinas, Rock Hill, S. C. Cavesta, and TraJ-MsMc obtainc!, ar.d all Ti.tr tt btauirw ecntlncteii for H95tTi; Fees. Ou 6wrzi IS OpoiT O. S. PtTtwt OFflCC and wo can focurc. ia;cnt b leaa time Umiu tlioaa roinofc; fr,rn Waihinston, ' , , ,Sad modol; drawing or phoiA.,rrtH descTln t'on. We advi?e, if. 'patentable or aot, no of thare. Our fee not oua liJ latent 5a t ccr.rcd. , Aamlct " now. to Obtain ratits.,wita taic of actn..l::..-Kt inyocr tiite, cciinty. ot fcwa, wnt free. Atlirc?, pp. Patest OFricc. Washjkctcn. Dw C. PVIdren Cry tcr Pitcher's Castoria Wh is: ' - ; - prescription for Infants is a uunmess suusmaio Syrups, and Castor Oil. is thirty years use by is the Children's Panacea . .. Castoria. Caataria cures Colic, Constipation, 7 Sour ytomach. Diarrhoea, Eruciatka, ZiUa Worms, Kfo deep, e--A promotes df geation, - Withovt injurious medloaUon. Tor Borend -yeara I bars rwcatnnxmd&d your Castoria, ' and shall always contiiiia t do to as ft ha UvarUbiy produced boaaucia town F. PxRDBe, M. D., 130th Street and Ttii if., New York C3y To Ckktauh Coicaxt, 77 Mcsbt Stxijct, New York: Crrt rmmm KJ&T & v' Pi na f S r V M t K 3 Cure? all Finale Uii. plaints ana jsiomuiy irro5ul0r.tr, Tjcuc rrbtea or Whites, Pain in Back or Side?, streii-l;ons the feeble, tmilda up tbe t. hole system. ltha. cured thousands and rvill euro you. Druggists have it . Scad etemr f-.-r 1xoi. DC J. Y. BHtKf!P0.F CO.. TjtaT!Tls. Ky. WACFTiC C2LI lailant Killfircf Pain. p3?! ' Intsrnal ar.rl Ettornal. IT 2 J i ..... ... i r . ri . nrt T T-G1A, Liuao B; Spnan, Bruises, - i v. 5 .Sweiiiiur, im joiuis. robiosnii - p-.t. ':TCKAM 1-S swtHitiy. v. noior.T anoi Uierao-: rt'Wj-rfiil and Vanf trntiug I .ininiflnt for Meta or jieiii't ia existence. lrgs fl tixn 50c e iOc JOHriSOK'S OmZUTAL GOAP. Medicated nd Toilet. The Orent 3k-n Cure and Fce l:aautifierr Ladio will find U o most dolionta and hisMy perfurnod ToUct Snap cn (hoa.arVet. Jt is abuoiute y ru'a. Makes the tL;n aoft f-'-ii vr lvoty and restores the lot eom plsxion; 1- i luwiTy for tbwBatKfor Infnnts. It alaya ltchinp. clcvuiee Ihoe.-wlp on:l pTOUiOa -tha yrowth ot Iialr. Price 25c. For said fcy ED Will C UTHRELL, Sausltry, N. C 5&tore should be assisted tf tUroTT offimpurities of the blood. Nothing docs it so well, so promptly, or so safely as Swift!s CURES poison Specific. LIFE HAD NO CHARMS. For three years I was troubled with mala rial poison, which caused my appetite to fafl, and I was greatly reduced in flesh, and life lost all its charms. I tried mercurial and potash remedies, but to no effect I could get no relief . I then decided to try O a fow'hrttrles of this Wonderful ri,ffji ivi medicine made a complete and permanent cure, and I now enjoy better health than ever. f. A. Rick, Ottawa, Kan. Our boot on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed free. - ... . - Switt SPEcmo Co., Atlanta, pa. Henry M, Stanley contributes to Mc Clure's Ar September one of the' remark- Ahle stories he collected in Africa. In an interesting introduction Mr. Slanley tells u !.;. ViV rxibtile ivure related 1 J ' ' i ill- T a v a'" wm . g b the I'sUvesaUnit the ortmp fire at niglilH during his journey h in A f lira. Springfield, M iss.. August 31. A oad,due at Springfield at 1:15 olt k, happeiu d, a! the second railroad bridge east ofjClle tcr this afternoon. The bridke -col laps d. lettfuo; the train t'ntyigh into the river below. Five jv.'isons are r reported killed and nine . i . " iimireu. Edwanl Everett Hale, whose "After noon" wit lr Dr. Oliver Weirtlell llotiues was descj-ibed po iaHcinaliiigly in Mc- Cl tire's' Magazine for July, is himse?f the subj -ct of, hii intcrvioiV fr - Sep'.em'ier McCluruV, wiitten by Herbert D. vVaiU. TTfcen Kat y was aiek. wa atr tier Caatoriai Vfcu sh waa a Child, the erisd for Caatoria K"hen ah boeama Mica, sa clung tt Caatoria. HTbea she bad Cluldrsn, she ga? U ,sii Caatu U r rr- s.vi.!Tn, urouii.uipinena, core iuiai, T); rfCC pf)lyn Eppcia'.l prepared for A STREAK OF LIGHT. . jOaj'ArxfB Happy Vinion of BrVjht enlng Skies. .IXard Timea Dtapper!oar Time Will Set 11 TfclMiya Klght Aihcaeiaeut 1. A Good Medlclno. . Atlanta Conatitutlon. Tbe time certainly look more bope fnl w feel it in the air the caldron has been boiling and bubblingthe froth and scum have been thrown, over - and we bepin to see the bottom of the pot through the clear liquid that haa been so dark and muddy. Tims ia a good doctor in a little while the pa- rtient will convalesce. Old' folks can t be fooled and alarmed like young folks. When I was in Texas last year I met "hundreds -of good, honest people who -were wild with excitement about Clark and Hogg. The cry on one side was, "Turn Texaaloose,' and it seemed like, the great state was bound and gagged, and her ruin was inevitable if Hogg was elected. The newspapers - end tbe people in the towns and cities cried in frantic tones, " Turn Texas loose." But Ilogg was elected, nevertheless, and Terns is there yet in all her glory and all her strength.- I never took sides, for it was none of my fight, and I was too old to be alarmed. Memory goes back now to grep.t ex citement, both political and financial, and when I hear the wild screech of the politician as he predicts ruin! mini ruin! if they don't do his way. I teel like it is history just repeating itself, and the storm will blow over as usual. A little time is all that is wanted time to reflect, and resVand recuperate. 7 Th3 great Dr. Abernathy was aked the secret of his success as a physician, lie replied: " I amuse the patient and let nature do the work." . Just so the nation's finances are now sick, and congress is the doctor. Up to this time the doctor hasn't given any medicine, nor done a blessed thin? except to amuse " the patient, and 1 verily believe there are signs of re cov'erv. s' The truth is the doctor might safely be discharged and the patient would o-ct well. Jnst let cotton bejrin to move, and the south will be all right. England will move it if the United States cannot, and there will be two or three hundred millions of dollars put in circulation down south this .fall end winter. Ther will be probaluy thirty millions na'.d out in VJooria, and probably three hundred thousand dollars in Hartow county. Good gra cious--what a pile of money!. 1'vv! fr'-t no cotton, but surely I will get a little of that money. That will pay lots of debts, and that will turn Georgia loose uiui turn Texas loose. That money will not be hoarded nor hidden. Most of it is owinjr now to merchants, and tbe merchants will watch the farmer when he sell. That money Is bound to circulate, for they Fay that ten dollars paid to a debtor does not htop, but keeps on paying from one to another until it has paid hundreds or thousands, and is as gootl or better than the clearing house cer tificates of the banks. Hut we haven't lost conllderice in congress. There are some statesmen there men whose patriotism is above party men who rise above self-interest and re-election and have the good of the people at heart. At the last they are the men who control. They are the men who will settle this ques tion of disturbed finances, and they will settle It rlsrht. So let the wheels roll on. A year from now we will al wouiler that we were so much alarmed. The truth is the common people, the bone and 6inow, the farmers and pro ducers, are not panic struckand they wouldent know there was a panic if they dident read the papers. It is the towns and cities and merchants and bankers that are hurt. TKe only ap prehension of the farmers now is that the money kings will pull down tnc price of cotton so as to speculate on It and get richer and richer. They will find money enough to buy at a low price, J , vhen but have none for a fair price. hen will the millionaires get rich enough? Like the horse-leech, their cry is "give, give," and they keep on bearing what they buy and bulling what they sell until they suck the life blood out of the working man. The government ha passed laws against combines and corners, monopolies and trusts, but thero , is a way to dodge all of them, and no one man can af ford to go to law about it. That's where tho people's party comes from. When they eee in the papers that pork j dropped 50 per cent in one day and : wheat V per cent on another day they ( know that the speculators had been . bulling it after they had bought It all ' up, and when the hand they played bursted the drop came. The producer would be willing for his bread and meat to be cheap to the poor. If he did not get a fair return for his own labor it would be a comfort to know that the millions of poor consumers got more of it for their scanty wages. But these greedy speculators in the necessaries of life, these vampires who j buy by the million and hoard and keep and bull after they buy are the curse of both, the producer and the consum er. The people understand all this, and so when some schemy, ambitious fellow gets on the stump and kildeea around and talks about Jcffersonian democracy and how neither of the old parties can now be trusted, they fall ' . . x a ' w into line ana loou to mm as a mioses sent to deliver them from bondage. But parties cannot remedy these evils. There is a Taw now in our code ' forbidding the carrying of concealed weapons and yet half of the young men of the town and the country carry them habitually. Just let a row or a quarrel begin any where, even at a camp meeting, and see how many pistols are drawn. The trouble is that .' the courts do noyexecute the laws. The courts fling this charge back upon the people and say why don't you prosecute why do vou dodge party duty why do you fil to come up and testify? And so it seems that every body is to blame more or less for everytbirg. Our preacher said la.t night that he ha 1 been a close ob server of the troubles and afflictions of mankind and in nine cases out of ten they were the crop that was planted. 'What ye sow, that shall ye also reap." Ercn the poverty that many coznplais of is the result of their own planting. If a young man spends net of his time hunting and fishing and frolicking- with & little whisky thrown in and after awhile marries some thoughtless girl and children are born to them the jfamily starts oat on the downgrade And soon comes to poverty. They reap -what they sowed and they try to lay all the blame on other people, espec ially on the rich, 2Co, we can't regulate everything In this sinful world, but we must do the best we can, both by precept and ex ample. A bumblebee stnng me on my bald head this morning. I said I reckon it was for some of my mean- ness some crop that Ibad sowed,' but In a- few minutes one stung my wife on her head, and I can t account for that.' He made a mistake I reckon. The little varmints have got a nest under the floor in the upstairs piazza, and. be cause I stopped up their hold the out siders are savage and would sting an angel unawares. I don't know what such thiu gs were made for, but maybe I'll know some time. I hope so. The body might be an accident, but the sting- In his tail wasn't. As the law yers Fay, "it vt as put there with malice aforethought" and that's the way ho uses it. HILL AUP. PYTHON EGGS. I A Ug Snake In Conaofltleat Lays Half a Ituahel r Kcra. Perhaps about as curious a thing as Dr. Knox ever had in the line of cu- riositiea, sa3's the Danbury (Conn. News, la his African python snake, ' Ev, as she lies coiled about a half- j bushel of eggs laid a few days ago. It is an event that ophiologista will be j interested in. , The discovery was made one morn ing. For some time Adam and Eve, two big African pythons, have been domiciled in the big snake cage in the doctor's back oCice. The bottom of the cage is covered by a deep la3'er 'ot' dirt and gravel. Doth these snakes have been in Dr. Knox's possession a year, and have sometimes been on ex hibition. One evening Dr. Knox passed tho cage several times, going to and from rm front oiViee. l'very time ho panned tha cajre the python snake hissed at him. lie paid no attention to the Kiiulre, and was more amused than otherwise at the incident. Later in the evening he locked up his ofirce and drove over to Brewster, where his fam ily ia now stopping. When the doctor opened his oiiiee the next day the lir.t tiring he remembers doing was to examine his make collection. He looited in the cage and saw what ho supposed were several new potatoos lying under the python snake. Eve. lie opened the cara to remove them, lioing oloe to tho snake, it hissed at him. -This made him pause. Then he took a second look and was surprised to see about one hundred snake ctfga under her. Two of the eggs are on the writer's desk as samples. They vary in sise and are rather heavy. They aro soft to the touch, oval in form, and ashy gray color. Tho smaller of the eggs is tho size and shape of a duck's. Tho larger one is no thicker, but about six inches long. They were slightly speckled. It ii "said that the shell will become hard. I Perhaps a snake laying eggs In cap tivity is not unusual, but the only ease, called to the writer's attention was when a python did a similar thing at the Paris zoological garden in 1844. This serpent laid three dozen egjs. She brooded on her eggs and hatched young ones. She deposited her egafs on the 5th of May, and the first young one made-its uppoarancc on the 2d of July. Whether Dr. Knox's collection of pythons will be augmented or not by the eggs is a matter to be seen. Trouhlcaonta 7Celli1ora. The wild Cossacks, living away down in the southernmost part of the Russian empire spend most of their time har-y tesing the Turks. They are peculiarly j savage In appearance. Their uniform In the Cossack coat, full trousers, scar- let undercoat hooked up to the neck,, big bootR. and as an overcoat they wear a bourka, a circular cloak made of ooarse felt with long, shaggy hair on one side of it. This cloak is big enough to eor the rider and much.of the horse. The most distinctive point In their dress, howovcr. Is the cylin drical hat of black astrakan whih they wear, tit all seasons. The top i of cloth or velvet. They form part of the Russian cavalry and Uve principal ly on plunder, stealing during their raids into Turkey ar thing they can find, from a chicken it a cl '.ld. People Who ()ura to HwlBimn. Tlic seemingly strange uggestion i made and stringly pressed in England that the men who man the nary should be taught how lo swim. Ordinary nailors are instructed and expected to qualify in swimming, but the marine, firemen and engineers are not, and It is a fact that a Wgc portion of the lat ter large bodj- of men who serve on rwnaa i t. j ; i .Hi innt ii j nn v ujui lut-u from the Victoria but for this fact; also that many sailors who wi re good swim mers were undoubtedly dragged down by the men who were not. The mat ter has been taken up in parliament, and it ia probable that swimming will be insisted on as a part of the training of every man serv ing aboard ship. Ilornrtt aa Taper Makers. The hornet v. as the first paper maker and holds tbe original patent. The paper it makes is about like that of the newspaper, nearly as Grai. and made of essentially the same material woody fibers scraped fi ora old and boards. . ... - -- j j ANGUkNT ARCHITECTURE. (Important Discoveries at Cam ' fcrldstj College, England. V fntereat Arouse! bv ttim I'lMrtv tag f Baaunanta of Walla Erected - la the Thirteenth CeBtttry. Nowadays, in England, if old build ings are touched at all, it is too often with sr view to their restoration a word which in this case is a synonym for destruction. Therefore, when de liberate effort is made, not to gire a new version of old work, but to free that old Work froinevery modern en croachment, the event is one of no small interest to all who are concerned with the history of the past, of no small importance to all who have made study of architecture. And this is . exactly what is happening just now at . JbsuQ college, Cambridge, says the New i5a'ork Nation, Tho college, it will be remembered. was not an independant foundation. but sprung from the old nunnery of St. Radegunde. The chief portion of tho earlier buildings still remaining is the chapcL Its attraction to the modern tourist, no doubt, is found in the Durno-Jonea windows, which, it may be noted in passing, are quite the finest examples of stained gloss that artist has yet given us. But, to the architect and archroolcpist, it Is tho church itself, with its nave and tri angle anfl its beautiful early English piers and arches and arcades. Of course. King's stands alone as the great architectural marvel of Cam bridge; but Jesus chapel, in Its own way, is only loss fine if at first glance it must seem less imposing, while in historical associations and significance it is supreme. Ucecntly an aged fellow of the col loge, remembering that when masons were putting a now coat of plaster on the inner cloister forty years ago ho had fancied he distinguished tho fcpring of an arch purtially concealed in tho old stone work, determined to have the plaster pulled off. What he has found proves to bo one of the most important architectural discoveries made in England for man- years. The arch, which had been jv.st indicated in the stonework, has turned out to be just one of three, and these have been almost entirely net free from the wall during long ccnturie.-J gradually built xip about them. They belong to the purest period of the thirteenth century, good authorities aflirming that they tUvto buck- to I'-- 0, or thereabouts. The reasons for this bclbif are the capitals, which still show some suggestion of Norman influence, and the beautiful detached shafts, which later architects never introduced, having, learned that y greater strength, if less charm, was secured by connecting them to the central shaft with bands. The moldings and the carved foliage of the capitals are in the most wonder ful state of preservation, and the stone is of almost dazzling whiteness a whiteness to be attributed, perhaps, partly to whitewash and destined not long to survive exposure to the foggy English atmosphere and the smoke of Cambridge. Thanks to their chance burial, the arches have escaped tbe re htorcr; indeed, they have been brought to light at the best moment, now that a few men, at least, begin to under stand the folly of tampering with the none too many relics and monuments of the past still left. Not so far re moved is the time when the old piscina was discovered in the chapel; then the one idea was to restore it; now college dignitaries arc of another way of thinking. The arches form the door way and near windows of the nuns' chapter house. Its floor evidently was much below the level of the present cloister, but the necessary excavations have been made to the very base of the central door, so as to show the propor tions of shafts and arohes in their original grace and purity. Nor will the floor be filled in again. The cloister here is, in term time, one Of the very busy thoroughfare! of Jesus; but for a little space it will be narrowed, in order thnt the off ect of 80rj 0f their prominence in lines of this beautiful bit of the old monastic . , ... , , buUding may be seen In all its loveli- business that may be aflec.ed Uy a ness and perfection. In the course of change in the tariff, have a reasonable digging, the workmen came Upon a . n hearj ' J,e ,arj,,gs will fine stone coflln with sculptured top : " the coffin of an early prioress-and this begin Monday and end Svpr. U. probably will be "left lying exactly ; Speaker Crisp did a v-ry unusual al Where it was found, turned t j east and j unprecedented thing when t, even though a part of it must re- 1,m,l " c main hidden under o much of the he called llepreentative li:caaniou, ol pavement ns utility refuses to sacrifice ' Tennessee, to the Speaker's cha r ai.d rTt. Jt wIvViil o arenas ogy xn - bridge. A LESSON FROM LIFC. A Xagnetlaed Cane U! W FTOa4 Old Man of FUUburjrli. y Sometimes the simple action of a man .Hi imlicAte his character. One of Pittsburgh's wealthiest old gentlemen, BCinff,t? rJoinUng hi9 cane upon some object upon the pavement every now ana then. What "caught on" he raised and placed In his hand. He was col lecting tiny nails that had fallen from merchandise boxes. Me continued un til he had gotten a handful. Then, picking np a piece of paper from tho the pavement, he wrapped up the nails carefully and pocketed the packago. A bystander asked him what sort of a cane he had. "Oh." he said, "it s noth ing but a steel rod covered with leather." "It must be magnetized, for it attracts nails and saves you from stooping." "Not thr.t I know of. un less the placing of leather over the steel has done it.'" be replied "1 saw you picking up some nails a short time ego." "Yes," interrupted the old man, 'I need" some of them." Then looking downward, he exclaimed: "There's one I missed!" and picked it up witb Lis -magnetic servant Taking the packago of naU from his pocket he placed this lar,t in with the rest. As an instance of frugality this, incident is interesting, and as a key to Xtie man's success in life it is pcrhap likewise. Highstorall in Leavening Tower. iABSOlJlSBa PURS WASHINGTON LETTER From our regular correspondent. President Cleveland, in accor.lann with t r.P annniinrpmnnt moil. tub... 1. 1 . m i . . ' . le" 'VashlUgton, just after t-jpextrn session met, is b:ck at liis desk in tiit White House, and his appearance i the best refutation of the nianv $ill ' sensation! stories that .have bern pi.b !t-l 1 it . . . i; vi .;n,; 4k l i y i i n. Ilhed Wlkhm the lask week about ht dangerous condition he was in. He probably nerer dreamed, when he wy. having those two truublg?rae teeth ex tracted and their ulcerated roots cut out, two months ago, that it would h and.by grow into an operation in which the greater portion of his jawbone woulJ, in the mind of -the sensational writer, have to be cut away in order to remove th; terribly cancerous growth. In short, it was but another version of the familiar old atory of the man who vomited three black crows. President Cleveland is not sick, and he has not been sick since he left Wash ing. In fact, there were few duv while he was away that he did not per form some of his public dutiesis tin records in the office of his private sec retary will show. The passage of the bill for the un conditional repeal of the purchasing. of the Sherman silver law by the House has focused public attetitioi upon the Senate, where financial speeches are now the order of I he l;iv How long the Senate will talk be fori voting i u question that will he an swered differently by nine out f e?ery ten men in Washington. Tsvo wte! s is the shortest time given by anyone, and the longest goes away up in the months. An agreement of some sort will have to be reached before a vote can bo taken, and th silver Senators led ire they will make no agreement, unless the Yoorlues bill, which has been reported as a substitute for the Wilson bill that was passt d by the House, is amended in a manner satis factory to them. The democratic lead ers, however, ure coutidtnt that an agreement will shortly be reached. Procrastination may be the thief of time, as the oM school adage says, but it isn't getting a chance to steal much of it from the Hou e Ways and Means committee, which has buckled r ght down to the tariff question with the determination to report a reform tariff bill at the ex'n session, or very early in the regular session. While the committee is not disposed to encourage long-dream-out hearings of every 1 m, Dick and Harry who may think them selves tariff experts, it will grant prop er hearings to all parties who by rea ; Qf iMuU lo repW to the unjut and uncal!e:-foi attack rrhich ex-Speaker Red made upon the new rules of the Hou-e. Mr Reel was surprise!, and U-foie li t Speaker got thorough disu-ted lo it.. himself justly held up t' the -cm ot ! the House and the country for hav-ng j falsely claimed t hat t he i,.w rules were in the line of the notorious rules with .... i - ? . - I.- t,: Pd lbe I louse of the F.f ty-H,st Congas. It. is not the first J . . . . tune mat air. ir sp u-.s roTe'i luuiiii more than a match f -r the Main ! terer, and it will nut-be the lat The diff.-ivuce lietween the new roles . 1 the , 4 i i . u H.aive and the notorious Heed ri les is 1 . t.r -ciseiy that betue-n the g .v. tnment of the U-utpil S a'Ks Hud in. Govern ment of R-ivii.i -tii- ue.v ru' s put the mi hoi it v f,r shutting . ff h 1 ste in the hands of the niaj'irity of le House, A here it alone M;mg, and the Heed rule put it into the l.a'..'.s of Reed, u -king him more of an ..n crat than voiil l lw toer.'e.l i.i a;iy legislative o !v of the world. It is reg:. riled as sig:ii- t that Waki-r Cri-ii ih..nld liave ;ttachedT I If I am in Washi&gicn on 'l at date Latest U. S Go t Report. F ' his aervptnnce of ,n inv leliver a -borl ial eefebi-itiou of t..'. , . .-orrjer--fu' of Hi., f on the 18, of -inv o mean that tho - ! xtra session may aj; ;urs: inf late, and eonsetj ie. v n. t- ; i1 en- will prompt i: actot Vorhees bill. It is queer u,y- .. it. Luni It ii uo-.v s;tiil i hai. Lincoln, who Ivj.-i. uissiouer uuder 11 .mi., ;i I dely gained some. i:. ,r. ucly Hoiiuiiucing his in'.iv in the com is ihv iii;,k -Jt t,. y " oi sioner ot reiisi f s rs, except in iH-fS w'- en to have iet-n uwi ii o-cuiiii- pension, s'oMhe ehune up tor uo oth . er purpose than to boom his candidacy for Commaiidcr-iu-rtneS' ot the G. A. It. at the coming eiicuiiipuivtit of that or auizition at ludianapotu. the Happy 11 v Inir Hjcscr W.arex it;:".. Mow happy is In-, i.a Ur.'. ii. i i That itrveth not r ; , U liose aimor us lu ii .-; ... i, Ali i sinilc HuU liiti;;!rl K ! WllOSf-pllSSivd;.- ! .-it I ;- .-.- i ; :. ( Wlwsf foiil is sub u s : . United unto the Wi r..r :v H' pub'ic 1iimo or : r . , Who euries none that ekuuee a 'r v it v; ho i.t-t r i, , . - -1 II lii-t'jtt si w(inii(!s are givfti bv .Nor rules ot Hate, but rules of good Who hath his life from humors freed, - Whose conscience is strou- retreat; Whose state canueitlu-r tiauorer feed. N'or ruin make accuser j great. Who God doth late and early pray More of his grace than gifu to lend And entertains the barmleas day With' well-chosen book or friend. This niAn is freed from servile bands Of hope to rise, or fear to fall Lord of hirnself, though not of lands; And hare nothing yet hath all. Newspaper Laws. 1. Subscribers who do not givtT ex press notice to theontrary nn- co r ed as vvishiugt o continue their u inscrip tion. 2. If the subscriber order thediscontie uance of their periodicals, the publisher may continue to send then until all ar rearages are paid. 3 If subscribers neglect or refuse a take their periodicals from the i JEc. w which, they are directed, thejr r.re -spoil sible until they have settled tl j bill and ordered them discuf.uiiued. 4. If the subscribers n ove tc other places without informing the publish and papers are sent to the former direc tion, they are held responsible. 5. The courts have deiided that refus ing to take periodicals from the. ofice or removing and leaving them uncall ed for, is prima facie evidence eMu tentional fraud, 0. If subscribers pay iu advance they nre bound to give notice to publishers at the end of their time, if - they a. not wish to continue tuning it; oiher- wie the- publisher is , .authorized to send it, and the subscriber v ill h re sponsible nutil an express nod - ' payment of all arrearages isi i4i ui: .1 - : "w uu.uCr. The latest post..! iaivs are ,o,h tn.t I navcninar nnhl ia hare , 11 m n ti . i - one for fraud who takes a paper and re fuses to pay lor it." Under this law 1 1 i ii i : i t : ... . ,.;.. -j j ' run along for some time unpaid and , , ' v. hnn nrrtAra fh. rwwt.Miastpr to mark it r reiusea ana nave a posui caru rea: notifying the publisher, -lays liiuself liable to arrest and fine the same a for thefttc Tlie Atlanta Joiira d says: Ia Chica go a fiw d lys a5fo, a mob threatened t loot the immense department store of Seigol, Co tnr & Co., a vast establish tuent, containing merchandise of all de scriptions. T;i3 prjmpi adjo i o the police pr2ve:itd thr- att ck, ami the lno-) was dip3M.d. ''f S4