Carolina Watchman. COUNTRY, MAY 8HB EVER BE RIQHT, BUT RIGHT OH WRONG, OUR COUNTRY" : - I t T 'I i t I o - I SIXTY SIXTH YEAH. " l (. iA iliBHMltlJI APRIIAIIA . ' ISGROFULA. One of Amcric'i moit fa mous phyiiclam laym "Scrof ula is external coniumptlon." rof uloyj children are often -utiiul children, but they lack nerve, are. ctn- ft gtout muscles end power to ;cUt disease For delicate children there is no remedy . ual to Scott's Emulsion t Cod-liver Oil with Hypo .ohitei of Lime and Soda.. y : out the skin by putting shleneathit It nukes ' i -f t;s red by making rich . It , creates an appetite v l and gives the body ( r ugh todifrcst it Be you get SCOTT'S Emui- AHlftilM nil tthiffltfli ft t 2 H i f IkjWNR, I'lifHiMt, New Vert, KILLED BY MIOHT. A Hauler, CoUetl hi IliU Man! i aP, flnaef tl)B wmt rttiimi'kttble lnc!UiU - af iK'HtU fi'iUt tluit l ever nuno h vom, nay, n trawler, napiienoU . In Mexico- inevtMftl ytor niP. when milking trip tlironli t In upptufior tion of the ri'puhliu ou Uorlutt lc, Vu lad in tli crowd u eouple of Mskah, wiro tJid tiio amp worU pnjj cooked for ihe party, wtiieta int ludcti besides aiy- lr a couple of friends, one evening -ne of the Id'-xicaiis was absent lor i veral hours from the camp.- and I ttrfrted out to flud him. l-ent into the hriish in the direct km I 'liad seen the i T i - -' -- 4- th.ln .1 (i mi rfer of a mile before iUirut -isht of llatiin lo. that hart his uaiftt. r.- lining In a ccmfortable manner gainst the trunk of a small mofcQtlite; bush. As I drew nearer I was surpris ed to see the fellow' faee set in a fear ful store, just as if he mijrht have neon i ghost. M.r astonishment was eon tiderably accentuated when 1 observed rolled In Munuelo's lap. a large rattler, The -sr.ake was swaying its Ueatl inn languorous manner, hissing sllglrvy, but not rnttUng. It had nfft seen in; as ret. I twk oui my pistol with a iur oao of killing the snake, as bad tt inarkewan iw 1 wns. nud I dared not make a noise for fear the snake Voiild Mlfy Its fangs hi the tlesh of the Mexl an. .1 crept .toward the pair. There van a sudden cessation In tim ldflng. ind the head swayed no inoroV It h&U aenrd me. There aviih a rudtlo uu -oiling of Its folds, and Iwforo 1 could shoot the rattler slipped off t lie lap ol llanuelo nnd disappeared. 'The McnI. an still gaaod Into vaeaney with ih ame stare of horror t hnd llrnt no. Meed. I put my hand upon lii shotd- ilt.ifi, r,t w hit i t . t ii 1 1 1 . i 1 1 I 11 was dead-actually, n it turned ott lilted hy frlulit. He must luue ;?oi." lo sleep, and while ntftmberlug the fit :ier had crnwlwl "frnm. tlx tmsh mm its lap. Awnkenltig. the ttnforfunajtf uan-tniiMt have seen the snake liefoff ie moved and. held.tisclnnteil by th ;:!Ke of the reptile, and realllug 'that , r move must be death, be stood the I : rain until tjie horror iiad killed him. The Anawer of Prayen Tlio answer ot prayer atamU knocl; Ujtf nt the door of the prayer meeting in Acts 13. That was too unexpeettHl an occurrence for tho assembly of be lievers. They avowed that the maid bearing the Information was either razy or had seen n ghost. How sur prised faithful Christians often are if a prayer is really heard. Answers to prayer are recounted with unending exclamation marks, whereas answer of true prayer ought to be considered the most natural experience In God's uni verse. Much, praying Is a mere iier formauce. A farmer coming to. town read at a physician's door. ''Please pull the bell." He pulled until a head was poked out ot the window inquiring, "WelTf "Oh, I've read the sign and thought it no more than polite to pull.'' was his respon-so. The only res)ouse that could perhaps be given by many who feel themselves called upon in the i Bible to pray. They do not read that the young Fharisoo transacted many a prayer before heaven said of him. "Be-1 bold, he prayetb."' Their arrows shot heavenward have plenty of feather but no point. They do not spread the lleoce, like Gideon, for the dew to descend up on. F. W. C. Meyer. "Miss Grabbs declqres her girl friends can't deny that her attachment to that gentleman with a title was a ease of love at first sight." "That's very true, 'replied Miss Cayenne; "n uw him first."-Washington Star. Women are elnsfed fta the weaker sex, tut they are full-fledfed BatnftoHsl when It eotnes te geUJfcg til beat of a . ; . 1 -,t. NO. 80. imii numn'Ti inn MOLOttYOH'TIIH HII1LK. Ml,l?l ltHtM i tllf THIll 0f (lt drt (tt iUe Ktw Vork If nld' too. Itlvc suHi.ni. pirrtH,.! hy liftft M. H, uditf i . of (;iiarl9tH, f , Of Tl uht 01 eoRlder oae ftBQt&tr," x., M, 89 t the Goldnn Ilule. P.vnrrnd intha term of frtmUlnr tieBoh uad nrautiiml ae thiii-tha wny In whh'h the corn niiin.l to do unto otliors am we would that others should do upto uh mny be made egeotually npera 9p Hre U the sursum oorda of alf dt aoiittmt with the tuoquulity of bumaa on-(lithiDs-, the i rochmiation of peace in ail Htrirj ot human ojtuion; the solution of th frohlem of capital and labor; tin, con dition of harmony In all human relation. Thoftwo noble brother ol the Hutruw tra dttiflu, secretly iharlng the sheaves of their Mi! 7 harvest with euoh other to mnkn an wHn eaoh conceived that the other lacked f t io clementH of bapnlneM, exempllfled ft. Mr Philip Sydney old no more when, wJuinlcd to the death, h gave t lie draimht f wntir hardly ohtnliiml for his own con Uln ay tlilrt to a Htrb'ken private oillir, Vthg, "Thy uucesnlty U grcatt-r than ftifaf." yi words of the text wore spoken by one of tlje grt'iit tetiebers of tho worhl to thorn, wnhail nnociited themtelrm for worship nadlwork, and whom he would fain incite India IpsjIiMst and purest ami kindliest life. i a Consider one another." Wo would Mjlt r rercivd the lull menuing of (he np. leu should we lino ihn I r fain (liar d nubfesilve wod "considerate" oei tisj I eeiild,'lale uT one another," A long h I "el I 1 1 iiK'Ueles of Ilia fit d hro these nhleh mo dlreclly d 'Iflri ed lit the et nnd t'lose akin to them hljs Melt hhd nf1iose-Jnrgahl.t ions wilhtll Mel , to premottt hiimiin mUt, wlietner tlM',1 b called ehurphes, MlinritlCN or by wliflewr nnti.e else, in all of thei thro M (eMbllitir ef dlffcrcncn and iUllni wihiph will Ueloitf or rMtiied their inmfujj. ne i and value, If we would know hew tUtiie ,.,.-fcii,iiij.ri piny he met and ovej. con to we weed but conceifc of one of the InMruinontaiitles for good la widoh cnU tUeiftbur IK "eonnldemte" of every other, : fl'ljon we should neo tho-strong beapf4fj wt ) the billrmpUa of the weak! tho ve;ik Qt tumbled with the larK'r liherty of thu strong; tho rledi sympathizing with tho mm fffoid trials of th poor; tho poor con iiawatn Of tho crowding cares and euils 6! thje irieh nud zealous that both mny he p4t rer4n spirit and richer in the graces of chi racter. Wo fchould see the old mindful of t he enthusiasm of their own youth and, reiemberiu ild errors, gently gaiding aiid turapering iiot iiow ii ins upun nnd bulfjng-the ardor of tho younger; m m he "(tinu the An of tho hoary tifohi. bnt neltnowh dging that "days should spoilt nnd the multitude of years teah WUlom." If with increase of age Inflnmity hhM come, its very decrepitude would be homered s tho wound of an earlier war fare. Pnrents would be'then not forgetful that they were once children; children that duty to parents is duty to God nnd that he one day may need a paront's lmrgunl tiesi Wo should see tho wise gentle to the Ighernhce of the Ignorant and patient to instruct It; tho unlearned, if need be, tol- j raht of the Irritability of incessant thought nnd exacting study and eager to share the fruit of such toil, and all esteeming it mbje blessed to give than to receive for bt aranee and extenuation. Had any "fallen." all would think how hi tipled was the temptation to tho weak mss It conquered, anil how Improbable, If tl us srset, that any would have rcmalnest te(idfnit. Ib cntanco before (lod would jgJvju the offeiioo to obbvlon In the sight of rOep, save to kindle a deeper sympathy for tlpi trallty that had yhddcd. There would be ibe constant summoning of that charity wfldch Mseekidh.riot her own, thlnkotb'' no eyg, hoi.eth all thing, endureih ull thing." Jjf reproof seemed duty, tho fact would not be overlooked that tl sine hearts tbcro arc so perilously fatd;. toned fdd's touch alone hath tenderness enough Til waken, and not break, tho thrilling string. i i'Lct us be ooaslderato of one nnoltiert" How benignant a law this f'r social inter qoiusc! Jlow happy would bo tho otn mpttllv in whieh it rdgnedl Wo b arn very daftly in this life that thu secret of (MUPhdul and'ph'io-anl living Is a generous r grd- t'leti of the difference between us niol liqurs and a full altov.ance if the right to ellffer. In different age and ollracs otner frJt I'.nnltloii have obtained a to what fdiiNtltnte "rellueiuout." There I one alpine lit in whl di all ages and climes Hgreel e-nrue good preening 1 turn wuicu i eon linerajte cntit, feeling of otlmrrfof what- cr 'lass or condition. iWhv is it that sometimes oven tho ha ted - f IJrcle ofdJOino U darkened with the cloiid p jmlnrui cinereneeg, iu tnar somo wiui d It lack thoughtfubicss ot the feelings htd even tho failings of other? Illgid iu Saeir own ways', they ore intolerant of the i'dlTorent ways of others. Why is it that in jt$o Same circles of society variances iconic, which grow to settled alienations, but that in some thoughless moment a Mord, look or act has wounded tho sensi ibllitles of another, or even .slighted his prejudices, und when regret came somo tretnlintory word forbade acknowledg- went!" Emplover and emplovod! .re thcv.nl- Iways to he at odds? Yes, until each ' von fsiderfc" the other and not himself alone. ; What is there which would banis'i from tfce intercourse aud rivalries of business the personal antagonism which is oitcn en gendered, like tearing down the ghastly legend from tho marts of trade, "Every gian for himself.-' and writing there in stead the kindly motto. "Let us b con siderate ot one another?" j Still, still in mutual sufferance lies The secret of true living; Love scarce is love that never Lno?.-j Tho sweetness of forgiving Rev. CnxRLr.s S. Yrnnr.n, D. D.. faitor Huguenot Church, Charleston, C. COD AMONG ORCHARDS. . Itcv. IJr. Talmace on tho Pomoto;.v of the U hie. : Text: "The fruit tree yielding fruit txfter its kind." Genesis i.. 2. Beginning with tho O-ar len of Eden as the first spontaneous, magnificent orchard, had the expulsion from it of the first pair xcause they tast-d of the forldddii fruit lot the tree of knowledge, Dr. Tuldiae Continued: This story of E ten Is rejected by Sjomea mi Improbabllltr. If not an Impossibility, bat toothing on earth Ifl easier for me to believe than tlm truth ot this E lente ntntr. If or I have seen the same thing in this year el oar Lord 1897. l eould cnlt them by name lilt wefe politic and tlghtpnus to do sue, the ttiPh fno have wrM-ed n pnradlse en earth nnu a peraaiBj in aeareu it ne HI SERMONS. W I II III I II I I 111 II I 11.11 lllllllllllVI - - - , SALISBURY, N. CM THURSDAY, DECEMBER tn. Their house went. Their library - went. Their good iinitie went. Their Held of usefulness went Their health Went, Their trntnortftt soul wcat. My frlend-l tltere Is Just one tin that will turn ycu out el pnrndlsn if yea a set quit ft. you know what it m and (id knows, and you had hen . t drun t i.n hand nnd arm lifted toward that bending boiigtt- before you pluck your wa rnlu. When Adnm stood on tiptoe nud took iu his right lined thnt one round peaah, of nprlcot, or apple, eatnn renabed up and iulled dowu tliu round, beautiful world of our present resb deoee, Overworked iirttst, overwrouabt merchant, ambitions politlelan, avaricious ipeeelelOff, better take that warning from Adam's orchard end stop before you pal out for thnt onethleq more. But X turn from Adam's orchard to Solo mon's orchard. With his own baud ha writes! "I made me gardens and ore hards." Not depending on the natural fall ot rata, he irrigated those orchards. Pieces of tha aqueduct that watered those gardens I have aeon, and the reservoirs are as perfeot as when thousands of years ago, tho mason's trowel smoothed the mortar over their gray nurfaoe. No orchard of olden or modern time, probably, ever had its thirst so well slaked. The largest of these reservoirs Is r.s2 feet long, 207 feet wide, nnd fifty feet deep, These reservoirs Hoiomon refers to when he says: "I made mo pools of water, to water therewith the wood that bringctli forth trees," Hoiomon UMcd to ride out to that orchard before breakfast. It gnvu him an appetite and something to mini; about all the day. Josephus, the hlstoiinti, urorto!4s hlin us golug out "early in tho morning from Jerusalem, to the famoa toekn of Ktatn, li fertile region, dollghtgd with paradise and running springs, Thither the King, In robe of white rode lu hl chariot, escorted bv a troop of mounted nrcficfsjehoseu for I hole youth and stature, nnd lad In TyMim uui'ple, wUoNnlonM hale, pow lt rfd with gold ilustj sparkled In the sun." Alter Molemoir had taken hi niot'it iug rldo In IbepM ItisuriNitl orchnids, he Would wit down. and wpIim tbusa wonderful tilings in til" nihle, druwintf his lllustr (ions frpui the fiuii lie i ud tliut vi'ry inornhii pluelied o'r ridden under, What mean Hohoiohjm eicinipds mid riid omou's gardens? for they seem to miagle inu tW'i iuo uuo n. tlowei nuderfotit. nnd pomegranate m erboa l, To, mo they tugr get tnat religion is a In vary, They menu hat our religion U tho lu-jIous, the aro mstic, tho pusgeat, the ahorosoejj.t, the efitoreH.jent, tlm foiiaged, tho umbragequs, Thwy ibohu what li Iwanl Pay.sjn meant when ho declared: lf my hap(ncK con tinues to Increase, I cannot support it much longer." It means what liapa Padmauji, a Hindoo convert, nionnt when snid: "I long far my bed, not that I may sleep I lio awaHo often and long but to hold cora mualon with my God." Vou think religion Is a Rood thing for a funeral. Oh, yep, Jhu 8nloiuoa's creuan' tneaD.s n;ore. Ileliglou is a apri id prouicgran- Iteii-'ion for too funeral. On, yes; bolt religion for the weddiag lire as fast: re ligion for the brightest spring morning and autumn's most gorgeous sunset. Re ligion for the day when tho stocks arc up just us much as when stocks are down. Religion when Inspiration Is easy, as well ns for the last gasp; "when tho temperature Is normal, as well as when it readies lot. It may bo a hold thing to say, but I risk it, that If till tho people, without rp-3ct to belief or character, at death passed into everlasting happiness, religion for this world -'Is such a luxury that no man or woman could afford to do without it. Tho dear old book opened with Adam's orchard and closes with Ht. John's orchard Ht. John went Into the orchard through a stoitu gate, tho black basalt of tho Islo of Patmos, to which he had been exiled. That orobard which he saw was and Is In heaven. One person will err lu speak ing of heaven us all material, and another person describes h -uivon a all llguratlve aud spiritual, and both are wrong. Heaven is both material and spiritual, as we are both material and spiritual. While much of ths lllblo account of heaven 1 to bo takcu figuratively and idrltaally.lt I plain to mo that heaven has also n material exist ence, How much was literal and how mu 'h wrs figurative, I cannot say, hut Ht. John saw two rows of tree oii each fddo of u river, and It differed from other orchards lu the fact that the trees born twelve manner of fruits. The learned translate of our com mon Dlbtu say It means twelve ilHTcront kinds ot f roll In one year. Albert IJ linos nays lu moms twelve erons or inesanu, kind of fruit In one year. Not able to de cble whb'h is tho tnoro accurate transla tion, I adont both. If It menu twelve dif ferent kinds of fnnt.lt del, ire variety n heavenly Joy, If li menus twelve crops ot the mime kind of fruit, It declares abun dance' In heavulv joy, aud they are both true, Variety llfi, yesl Not an eternity with nothing but inuwlc that Uraturia would be too protracted, Not an eternity of iirocucMjou on white horse -that would be too long iu the stirrups. Not an eternity of watching tho river -that would be too inuehoftbe picturesque, Not an eternity of pine!; log fruits from the tree of llfo that would bo too much of the heavenly orchard, lint all manner of varieties, ana I will tell you of at least twelve of those varloth's: Joy of divine worship; Joy over tho victories of the J.amb who was stale; joy over the repentant sinner; joy of re counting our own rescue; joy of embracing old friend?: joy at recognition of patriarchs, apostles, evangelists and martyrs; joy of ringing lrermoiih; joy uf r denitting broken friendship: joy at tho explanation of Provi dential mysteries; joy at walking the boule vards of gold; joy at looking at walls green with, emerald, and bluo with sapphire, and crimson with jasper, nnd aflash- with ame thyst, entered through swinging gates, their posts, the hinges and their panels o richest pearl; joy that there is to bo no sub sidence, no reaction, no terminus to the felicity. While thcrj is enough of tho pomp of tho ; city about heave for thoe who liko tho j city best, ! thank God th're is enough in j the Bible about country saenery in heaven j to please those of as who were born in the i country and never got over it. Now, you j may hiive the streets of gold In heaven. , give mo tho orchards, with, twelve manner i of fruits, and Yielding their fruit every I month; end the leaves of the trues ore for "tho healing of tho nations; and there shall be no in oro eurse, but the throne of God and the Lamb shall be in It; and His servr.nts shall serve Him; and they shall see His face, and His name fchall bo in their foreheads; and there shall bo no night there; and they need no candle, neither light of the sun, for the Lord God glveth them light; and they shall reign for ever and e ver.' But just think ot a place so brliliant that tho noonday sun shall be removed from the mantle of the sky because It is too feeble a taper! Yet mot of all am I Impressed with, the fact thnt I am not yet fit tor that place, nor you either. 'By the reconstructing and sanc tifying grace tof Christ we need to bo mode alt over. Aad let us be getting our passports ready If we want to get Into that couetrv. As earthly passport is a pr-ronnl matter, telling oar height, ear girth, the eolef of ettf bate, ear features, our comnteitirittj nut! euf age, I eiahnt get tnt i fHttujh pi)H en fear tdsMbsH, nor can you get in on mine. Bach one of tie for himself need n divine signature, written by the wounded hand of the Hon ot Ood, to get into the heavenly orchard, un dcr the laden branch of wrtieh, in ood'g good time, w may meet the Adam of the iirst OMhard, and the Hoiomon nt the see end ofchurd, nnd tim mi, inhn ot the taut orchard, to it sown under the tree of which tho ehurakin the Hank of eauticles Npenkfl when ik say! "As the applo tree among tba trap f the wood. eo I my Ilajovad among tho nam, I m down wn dar Hh shadow with great delight and Hi fruit was sweet to my taste;" and there it my la found that to-day we learned the danger of hankering after one thing more, aud that rellgloa is a luxury, and that there is a divine antidote for all poisons, nnd that we had pasted in us an appetite for heaven, and that i, whs a w Imlo mm and saving thing lor us to have dlaopursed j uu mo pomology oi iuo lnnie, or Uod among the orchard.-. ALASKA FISH. .'hey Are Deed for Pood, Light and Meat hy the Natlvce. A sneolei of lish abouuds In the waters of Alaska that are useful both is food and fuel. They nro taken In immense quantities with nets nnd llnm. after being eatigbt they are dried nmf itored away until the long winter mouths arrive, when It geln dark early Hid the Alaskan Is snowed up, Here wines nu opportunity for ulng them. Nut a bit at a los for light. Ibe Alas kan takes ofie ol' these dried llsh, In terts Its tall brio a eraeg In bis rough wooden table ami light Its uoe, The Bsii burn Willi n blight ami stonily Jtgly of alioiit three on mile power, glv- lug n elear, while light and a very i-.m. i blt I'tiblo nuiiiinil of heal, A fairly '.i rue Huh will buhl fur a period of three hours. The Meutlfle uvpliinntlon Is extreme ly simple, The vjM'twlmie willed fonu suiupu the back bono of the fili are fmun in bo largidy formed of phuphnru, wbieb I hot only enuses it to Ignite easily, but lajtiu aceiiunta fdr the strength of iho j Same and the lu:at developed. The sob j Hanee of the olib7"wbleb eonslsts o largely of fat, nets n a retnrder to tho ' fni bl burning of the vertebrae in pro ; clsely the sauve way as the tallow nets In an ordinary lihmllo, The fa t of M.-h is largely composed of stearlne. .vlrhui Is j:q i he elilel ebeniienl eor.si tc.-ss and eonsl.s.jeU'.-y. Valuable k-bs I- the iish for it? ilght . Y'n- projertlejt, it also bay its value ns a food. If neeessary it can be eaten after having been used ns a candle, it then being Simply smoked, or It can be boiled or cooked In tho ordinary man ner. In whichever way it is treated. 'to a hungry man it serves as a very wel come nnd appetizing dish. In navor it Is much The j the smeH, having the same sweet tast but Is much fatter. Still another .iso to which It enn bo put Is as a substitute for cod liver oil, which. If taken In stifflelent quantity, ! v aiding the natural bent of the body, proves an excellent protective agutitst the son ere cold. Tho oil is obtained j from the fish by Immersing them In cold v.aler and squeezing, the product ftbtalued being 111 most equal In ipiullty i to the genuine codi liver oil. I KLONDIKE'S SCHOOL HOUSE. dilpped In the Hold of n Klwwmer All Wendy to He Nulled Toncthcr. ! The first seliotjjlhoUKO In the Kbuidlgn j ,vas tende In see t Ions ready to ls fit! oil , ntd nailed together nt once upon reach- tig 'y desljuatlon. and was shlpue 1 iu !.. bdbl nl" 1 li! st. rimer Humboldt. Its heneber will be Mrs. O. l lowland. ! "The hb-a of teaching school lu the i Klondike Is not entirely my own." said Mrs. I lowland. You see, my husbanfl lis going up 1 1 .ere nml when yvo were discussing tilings soi'iebody Incut h nod 'that It would lie a good bh-a for 'no to tart a school. 1'hls interested me. as I bad lcard how bard Ii was lo do jifothlug In tliat land, and 1 began to j llseUKS ll among the company that wiia going up on tid' UuuilKildt. The rcsuJl uiih that V'e dei bled to curvy out tip jldea and at once began to gel pointers . from people wit ) knew all about the I ountiy. TheH hool building may look ! i little peculiar, but it is built aeeornl ling lo directions. There is a tint, slop : . roof si.i that the snow can be easily s'.ioveled off. The windows are high rtbove the ground. That is to prevent the- snow from drifting over thrill. Kverythlug lins been eonsiilered that will be condnclVo to comfort. We have i big wood stoi c that will tic placed in i corner and ought to keep things warm. There will be only one ibsev mid that will open into a small room through which a deor will open into Ibe s.-hoohooni. - This part :f tin building will-Is arranged so that one door must be dosed before the other can be aliened. This will avoid all draughts." "Do vou think you can get any j pujoi '. was skcu. "Oh. yes. tleople w!io have been up there tell me; there are a number of I children only too anxious for instruc tion. And, besides this, I am sure there will be a number of grown people who would be glad to put In a few months studying when they cannot work in the u.ints. I tin vt ry sanguine of sue cesa." imm mi The butler Hrind beve'ry ntg'it at the hour of midnight the ghost bnp pears and gronns and wrings its hands. American totirlst-Ah ! Must have died (n tbe cucumber season, Cincinnati Enquirer. . ' The iran who tf&niea himself for Ibe wefit thine that happen to hint ptlt thj blatfle at Ute Htfb4 dooh " 16, 1897- IIP ON 1 010 SOUTH. He Declares That the Country Hat Advanced Backward. HE SAYS HE IS NO -PESSIMIST ' ! teys. That Women Are Fast Taking the Pluces of Bleu in Many Call' lags. We were talking about the old Houth and the new Houth and some said there was no new Houtb; that we were the samo people and hnvo the same princi ples, the same religion and the samo politics that our fathers bad, but like tbo rest of the civilized world, we have advanced in education and general in telligotieo nml iu the uujuyiueut of tbe comforts of life. ! Well, I am no pessimist, but I am grieved to say that in many things We havo advanced backward. We have more books and mure newsistisars and more school, but that crime is en the increase is ktiosvn and admitted by ail wlio study iho records' of tbo coiirte, 'J liere me iiinio bile yoittirt men Hum there need to bo yns, live times a many, according to population, and Hen I'fiiiikliu nu i.t ii. at idlettyps in tlm parent id vice, I t ait pick out a score of young incu in pvnt y town bo are iloiiig nothnig young meu ef good fftuulie and they aru all living ou tbe old man or the old wotuau aud seem to be content, J bny bavnu t bnuu reared to work aud tbey wou't bunt ifur it uow, Fifty years ago we bad no .vagabonds; every young mau worked at homothing, and it was considered disreputable to lie around in idleness. In fact, we bad a vagrant law that compelled the lazy, trifling fellows to earn a living, 1 reckon thnt law is still in theeode.but it is a dead letter. When a young man married a girl it was expected by both sides that ne could and would mp- Taeu wo got to talking about new woman the female doctors and 1 lawyers and editors aud prepchers and teachers and bookkeepers-; and sales women, and now w oman iwias forging ahead anu taking tbe plaees and occu pations of men, and my friend, Mr. oilliains, of California, , surprised us by saying that there were a tribe of Iu dians'in tbo northwest who were al ready far iu advance on this line; that he bad known them ever since he moved to California, in lllJ). In this tribe the women dominate the men in tbe family and tbo Held and forest. They rule them absolutely, make th mi cook and wush and nurse, and actually hire them out and collect the pay. Their principal business is trapping for iurs. The women do this pu ) nell tbo furs aud pocket the money, and many of them have a good bank account in laii Francisco. The men erejnot known in any business transactions. Ho it seems that our new woman ban a sav age precedent. Ilnve wo got to come to this? Will I live to see the day when my wife will lure ine out as a nurse or a cook ami pocket the inouey? Mio knows that I can do both, und I never dodged it nt homo on an emer gency, but I reckon she will let mo stiiV at home aud work in .tho garden ami cultivate her flowers the remainder of my terrestial days. Khej knows that I never bid my money from bei ; wheu I got any I kopt it for her that's all. It was hers just as much as mine, but I Kept it sorter liUe tho old fellow who bad a thousand dnllius in gold and when the Confederate government passed a law taxing gold 2P per cent, be swore he wouldn't pav it and so he' got the bag one night und jut it ou the ruiddle of the tilde and Teal led up lus wife aud lour children and divided it into rivo piles uud gave them ??''() each ami saiil, "Now, the gold in ull yours aud I haven't got a dollar; iin the world; but I reckon I bad better beep it for you," und bo raffed it all into the bag agaiu and locked it up in bis trunk. ibere is no greater contrast between tho old Hotiib uud tbe new South than is shown in the advilnctment and the humiliation of woman. They are uow ou the two extremes. Before tho war there wore no female doctors, or law yers, or lecturers, or others not one and there were no bookkeepers, or typewriters, or 6hop giris, or clerks. The average woman ofr'c'uted as a wife ml mother, or a daughter cherished by her parents and her brother. The wife was the lady of the bouse, bo it ever soAiurnble, and she was content with her lot. it was even considered beneath her pride and dignity to teach Qfbnol and hence there was an annual importation of New England spinsters to teach the children. I and my sisters went to four of them in quick suces sion, for our widowers married them about as last as they came, and they made good wives and good stepmothers, and were tbe most econprnicai uuu, keepers in the world. They were raise, that way and neither the dog nor the little niggers got any piore scraps than they could eat. n But now tho new; : woman is either smart aud aggressive, or site is poor and pitiful She comes to tne iroui uuo her brains oil bT. ambition ami n- i-.rd.dlv withithe men as editor, writer, lecturer, professor in schools aud colleges, aud eve as office seeker, aud generally succeeds in what she undertakes: or else sire takes an humbler place behind the counter or in the press rooms, or perhaps in the factories for n pittance just enough to keep soul snd body together, and every year grows eater and sadder front her work. Most of them are working! meinta in some body Wbe ift hMf and deer lo ibetsh, bn ' -. , , . ESTABLISHED 1832 Royal raakss the fond puN, w hole wme aad del (clew. sown Ukmo sowts eo., sew owu their wages are rarely raised, for they are women. I can almost weep for some I know. They keep their sorrows to themselves and "let concealment likeaworru in the bud feed ou their damask clu cks. " Ah, woman! how great is the peril! How herd is thy lot! Not loigago I received a tearful, pitiful letter from overt-bo border. It wa from a Wife end mother who was an exile from her Htnlo and country, and had not heard from her pnrents In three lotig yenre; nor lib I they know where she was. Hhe did not dare to let them kjpiw, for fear a letter might betray her aadlhe sleuth hound! would get. tut Ibe track of her husband fur tbe reward" that was ntter--ed, and so she ventured to wrlio to me and to tucloe a letter to her father, which I must address in my own band writing and mail from Cartursvtlle, MI saw you once," she wrote, "when f was a happy child and you took tea at my father's bouse, audi know that 1 eau trust you. I have kept my secret frem them as long as 1 eau bear aud it seems to me that i will die if X do not hear from them, for they love me and my heart is almost breakiug," They are happier nowthe child and the parents for they oommunioate through me. I know of other-eases where the wife has followed her unfortunate husband oinan-of Avives ar mothers -wives whose husbands have brokeu their marriage vows and. gone to the bad; motuers whose sons are afar off in orison for some crime, or at home a drunkard. Oh, the pity of it, the pity of it! Is there no way to reform this world and make i better? If I was a young woman and longed for m mate a young man, some ideal of my thoughts and dreams, one who w.onld love me and cherish me and protect me all my life I would hesitate and pon der long before 1 took tbo leap. A mis lit, a mistake is misery. Matrimony is environed with perils, oven when tho husband and w ife aro mated as well as married, for the children may bring grif and sorrow, ht. l!ul enumerated nml boasted of nis truils and tribula tions, but he was an old bachelor and know nothing of tbe perils of woman. Hut this is the dark side the shad ow and 1 only ruminate over it now and then when some uiiful ease is re corded in tho daily papois. There is a brighter side, a sunshine that illumi nates and warms the heart, for mar rioge is the natural state of men and woman, and . there is nothing more beautiful upon earth than the marriage altar, where the bride is good and pure nud the groom is manly, devoted and honorable. l,ovo is the best thing upon this sin-cursed earth. Infact. it is the ony thing worth living for. The loVoVf wife und husband, parents ami children. I heard an aged mother say the other clay that her son her baby boy, as she called him was away out Went somewhere and she hud not hud a letter from bun for throe long yt.ars. There were tears iu her eyes and some camu into initio, Oh, youTmye, young men, mercantile travelers, don't forget your mothers. Hill Arp iu Atlanta ((la.) Constitution siberin Will Mo a Great Country. pibetia Is not an artdte Avnste; peo pfed by a few Russian convicts, but an immense country with vast resource Impatiently awaiting' development. This the new transcohtincttta! railway will at least, begin, nnd. at a date pos sibly not remote the markets of the world will have tor-count with the pro ducts of a region of which a great part is a rich as any on enrth. An EngUeH military attache who reeen-fiy traveled overland from 'St. Petersburg to Vladb vostock by the new route says that the line wuboiibu up both agricultural ant mineral resources which for practice I punos-esrare almost Imhaustible. Sl jerifi. he declares, can produce about ;'very kind r cereal and all sorts of live stm-k. aud it possesses In abundant :piantltles the more important miner als. preciious and other. Owing to tbe fnjrmo'.js disitance and the cost of rans,oin. the Itussiaus have hitherto had no opportunity to place their Si bori.m produce oarytbo great EuropCUn but for years past -the author ities have been gradually, and there fore i M-nma neatly, developing the conn- trv. Tbe construct jou -of a railway thronglu Mam huria will open up a rimulry exceedingly r', Jl ;'1 old and hlghv valuable from au agrleultuxxvi point ul view As he finished drinking hla soda lu inid his hands upon the fountain In an unobtrusive wny and remarked. -I sup pose tbto Is charged r' -les, said tho drawer, reaching under tbe counter ror - i. this:.'' "Tbe-money 9 .., Bald the drinker, throw log Jhmti i tllmc.-Hoston Transcript, mi "ANN i : i - 'M ' -V. I I s