is?
the; WILSON
pyANCE.
5.'
KIKA-V At
THE WILSON ADVANCL
-:o:-
IIatka op AnVKKTlSINOf
Pim.rsri i:n
1 C:"I.IN A
One Inch, One Insertion, - - $1.00
r " One Mouth, - - 2.W
. ) :i v i4i
I
joriiisiiwius.!- p
r inl rmirii'lor.
1$. ' -.
feUAitVANcis
g 3 1 . -
4 " Three Months - &."0
" :" Six Months, . - 8.00
" " Que Year, - - -. 15.00
Liberal Discounts will be Matle
for Larger Advertisements and for
ContracU by-iim Yewr. '
Cash niost aecomitauy. all Advti
tisenientn : Unless good reference is
given. ' . '. !"
S U K 1 1 'T I I -V 1 1 A l .Sj
I.
1
One year.
Six months
.::.tio
-. 1 . I
I
'.' ; 1 F
f? -
Aloncv cant is
Money
Order or -Kegisttjrci
Kisk. . '(;
itfer sit
re -,: '
our
The fesoN ApNcil
.';;.', f LET AiL THE ENDS THOU AIM'ST AT, BE THY COUNTRY'S, THY GOD'S, AND TRUTH'S." f :lj ' . . '." j ",;fj'j;
vol its. . - v.: - P1; . :'v-;.:iwi'iiSox, x. cy friday august ior iss. . ? ."'CaSiaii
ANINflS.
(.'ongfess an" jonrne 1 j
August Ittli. J I
etlnesilav.
f
i.
There are 1411 jf liilMisi i it tin- Ox-
lord Orphan Asylum.
The Fruit Fair hl-1
ft
(llt'CHS-
boro last week was 1 i
ai success.
ii
Siiih.11 Pox is doing ltf
us work
amoiig the- Indians
'territory.
David Davis, jjPit
ijil-
1 Italian
itlebt
'of the
ia!rt.
Senate, will, it is-, nil
liiarrv a
North Carolina Jad'y
' ! '
iiijated for
islricl hy
Gen. 'Scales w;ts If
; IIOI
Congress '" f''t
fift Jl M
acclamation. " Ninth
;
liiliiia has.
hardly had an al
;eprj-sentat ive.
.Madison, the sj-coi
Leach, who has just
the Lilicrals, sav.-i he
Imi of J. M.
uouc. over to
K!i I
del-stood thai lie 1st
"true lilue." Hei(sihU
;idenitterat,
I -Jqiing
man.
ii .
. - t
An Iowa editor ai
t
VeHjsed livev
pads to the amount o
2il and took
it .ill out in pads'.
Then
1m
was
al because his hired gift wouldn't.!
nr.
iredj;f
fiH-'-twd!
take L'S of tlieni
service.
S nn nit lis'
. it in.
daiicuia: master
A Pliiladelplu
predicts a crusadf a;sinHhe waltz
as at present nniiiodestlyf iiaiiced, to
Ik' led by Mrs. (len. Hheirii
in, ltev.
Mr. Mayiiand,aml other ilk iniiish-
ed ladic
and ienitlemini
! I J
On Thursdays last ie
k Hon.
V. M. Uobbins was nominated for
Conuress in thesexeiitii disjlricf. Me
is one of the best St limit slidakers in
-P
the Stale and will mak.c ii
canvass, and be electiid 'v
majority. . ' ;5 '
irilliaiit
a laiiie
"llusli. my cliil.l. Ii-i.thi-1 :ui. 1 1. Ih I
Kit f xiimplr 'if tiiiiiitiii win-K.
!
Karly hi' c lines iin-I 1 11 1 . lit-
llr wn-i'tH tin? woiiM'Ui wil h I'tiinlti ii-Titri-;
II-kiss'S thi-liaty s iln tv Ijv'': '" I
Hi iulls to tin-fi'iii-i' thi' l:ihinTj win k:
llr Imivs Ihi' tiu rrlmnt: lie t(f.ri-riu'i li'rk:
Thi' lilHi kriinitli. whili-liisnlU il jirE'-.j
lit- uri't't,'. aii.l thi-; is 1 In s. ici" liiblii:
"Hi.vv.ly. Ii.iw.ly. h.nw .1 ;
llnw is your wilt'. uini Iikv ti r y isi
Ah. il tits my list as n iillii'ilViiru-J
Tin- hui'tiy list i f rln' ivmi I,mi h.iiii
' : ' i ' -1 II
. The must "to:ic; sl, h' M
a wed-
dim: now is to presenla ea
. T . i , . - . i
-IK-st
with a piece oi i ne itnnaij r.
tke in a
box
tied
shaped like : ;i ln
se" hoi' a ml
willi a
I rue I i ' i.
' k -ljnot of
white satin ribuii, Ihe i iul jut which
. 4 l
bear t he lnouoram
I
IIm
bridt
and griNini.
i i
On Saturday, alleruotui :ttj
Mays-'
ville. Ivy., a younu m itt c.itijiecled
with the United Stlilsl k 'irclis
made a Walloon asccnsi0n ist
.ea leu
I on
a trane'e-bar. . The b
.iillMlli
I t I t
eil in t he ( )hio K i vi-r
lini'lL
al
looms! :was drowned. 1 1 ctw 1111
. . . - .;. , ft i
t ive of ;Faiglaiul.
tl
. s t -i -i r.j
The Pcteisbiilg Imh j Hy
that '"Messrs--John Arin;t
il says
n and
Sons have purchased tjht&A
eldon
water pow
for the suui Nst
!Mir
in round
llllllllit 1 ts II UK
l .. r. .4 ';'; i
Ma
ui in
lioue and Don aim
oil! U:iM
terest iii-the property v liiiti Kill be
I
utilized for purposes ol hii:i:ii nl:i-t nr.
iug as soon as tin- sal
istrai) nave
been confirmed by t he id
Molt; 1 'hairiiian ol flic
can lCveciitive ( oiiiinit fee
Itt'pul.li
dfcllhcd
to arrange a loint mUi-Mi
bet fell
Henuett ami
I o ki i 5
mil. now
.liulge Jiennett has .wntjtMi
- - 1 s
tit Dock
erv himself to arrange; iii
I
ucii a
canvass. A
give Heunett
pun! cait;iH-i; would
: Mi
a
real al3itiigc oe
cause lie is st much t he li -.Ispt;
tk
and for this reason itn jsttiaved it
cannot be brought about?. ii4;
it, .p.
. It -is orooosed ilo lornj na- slock
;! . i :i i
ciirooration at Aslievilleiil'i under
I; i II r I I
the naiue of the Aslie:vll1iY tiotl.
Pulp and Paper ('ompauVi.
v'fiiu. ....
gage in the
maiiularlitivl sot
; - '- iiii
wot d
pulp ai'itl. paper,
o ai'itl. oaner. iiamP Mull; jbuiltl
mill for that purpose. ;totl pulp
ing aboiimls iu the. viciiiftv ! Ashe
villc, andean be obtaniethleh veretl
at the null, lor less pel"
cord. I
III
'-' -' ' 111
1
A ooor bov iiol man V:hiars a no
.lohu Watlsworth is nov .ne, ol the
richest men in ("harlotte.i ii. here is
. -' 1 . . nil m
no inslery .attout Ins fsiitj'ss in
life. He rais il I his j if, II 1
bushels tif wheat fo I lies fatiffe," and
.... .. . . - .. . -:- :'.
los liushels ol oafs tivtlte acre
When Wadswoilli boiighl :t.he land
. . : -.a i
a tew ears ago it iwas a,N ,pr as he
was a lew years belore. f :l Sijli have
grown rich. P.os, taktl
eiHtunirai
if irs.
nient. I Write tor partic
The.right nt a Iwom
if ;ast the
age td'L'l years to Intai i i ,swL
I..
pleases has just 'been iiidibated
- . - ' I I : Si
in
Missouri. The fathef fi
l.aura
luibbs,, agetl J7 years, ait (jempted lo
hold Ijer to eont Hilled sttltvtt-e in the
p.iieriiai iiome ov iockihl iter up m
a rooiu when she had uiudela verbal
colitiip-t to become t he -.il'e ol (ieo,
V. l'.Uhop. A writ othlfeas coipn
,...i.v..t ii. i i - :-. :,i i
limn Kin me uoor. and wtlie mar
liage tiMk place lit sute lit ft he 1 ith
el's obe.ct ions. s "j f i
...f'i-- , III'
Klclillioml (Nip Vn1, i f 1 lit old
North State Democracy jksidiws how
to get up enthusiasm imtlien cani
paigif. and u misiiake.! Al Pophu
leiitou; Monday ilastjmt leatur.
ot the day
was i twin i(iarrtages.
l.l,-c i nil
1 1 tlui grouml.
i ne Mimes u it tWiehu) putty
. young girls ol tint .oiij,lj iml ihe
grooms weieiwo l.i,, ,, , m)st, ,i ,,,,,1
-well-to-do fai iiu is I Ih,; lHjih swtri'
giveuaway hy oiie;.,r MiU. DenuK-ra-tic
sjieakers As p, ttl the at-tracttoiis-diewan
imim'iiS uoaiI.
THE ADVANCE
"Verily crime is on the increase.
Nothing can le imagined more das
tardly than the follow ing summed
up by the Star': '-. W. -White, a
graduate of Trinity and a High
Pointer, has lieeii teaching school in
Wilkes. lie ruined a .highly re:
pet-table you ng lady, Miss Hol-
brooke, who went to school to him.
lie tried to take his life, recovered.
promised to marry her, got his
brother to steal a horse with which
he tried to escape, was captured
and is in prison : hv'this time. ' His
brothel has been aVresteil for. horse
stealing."
The wife of Moses ( "l oss, of It ieh- f
i ......
monu, lor years suo.nme., to u.e .
ibuse whu li lie Jieujieii upon ner ,
... . .
wneii ne was oiuuk. i-,:u" ' 1
1 1 . . . I I, 1
however, site has come to think
that forlM-arance was not a virtue, .
and when Moses started -to correct j
he a few lavs atfo she blacked his f
eyes Willi me piker, scaioeu uim i
with hot water nntill the skin peel- I
ed otf his shoulders, and then had i
him arrested. Moses will -never .
le so handsonie as lie was before
this occurrence, 'but he will have a
jreat deal more respect lor his i
wife. ;
I IN 1 WIIII lllllt WIl.I'VAAVV-,
straiiirer is 1101 quite me
proper !
thin to do. 'But Miss Tillie Tiin
ble, of Brooklyn,-N. Y., didn't, de
bate the question when .she discov
ered a bnrjjiar ransacking her bu.
reau, but slipped down stairs, sent
the servant girl torn policeman, and
then slipped back, stole up behind
ihe unsiispectiiifi bureau explorer.
threw.-' her arms around his neck, j
i ....... I.:... ...;i.. ,,il l..,.. .....i
IHIZUt U llllll U II II IH 11,1 lllllll , lllll ,
. ' I
s-reamel like a locomotive . turned
loose, till a policeman arrived, re.
lieved her of !n-r ch:li "'e and took
A curiousiutliistry is to be found
at NewJiei ne. It is I lie inakili ol
wooden plates and trays, sin-h as
are used for butter, Hour, tc. The
timber for this pui'poe is cut out
l the adjoining swamps. A huje
!" is rounded by a circular plane
and then pill in a machine of great '
aci'inaey anil swiltness. mat peels
oil' l.ierstfleii of the thickness of
veneering. These thin strips-are
cut into square pieces by machinery
ami laid up to dry.- As soon as
they are dried thev art
teamed, !
I
ami while pliable are put into i
ol jilates. The factory i.; now niak
iug .100.000 phftesw.per lay, ami
has contract ed its eiitm
pi.
bu t ;
at figures;' ol protit toi
a year
to I
conic.
Brother fleecy. Editor of the
Hcoiiomisf one of t he oldest aud ug-
li"st (we hotiejie'll parilon us) ;edk
tor;; iii the State is reported by the
Xcirs-Olisiircr to talk thus senti
mentally,:' -There is more court iug
and llirlirjg lo the siMiare loot now
going on at .ag s Head than at any
nt her place iu the State in propor
tion to population.- In fact it's a
dangerous place logo to, and we
are trail inchnetl not -to run l lie risk
of going dow ii t here an more this
sMinmcr. rourting" ts like unto a
quicksand or a cral hole-r-il you j
put your foot in it the hist thing
you know on -are sucked in." ""Old
Uhrrygraph" will please give Bro.
(Jleet y asiiitalilt lecture on the du
ties ol age of a man tilhis age ami
osition.
The Charge of the Light Brigade.
The (Jrevnsborti litriot says
there passed - through that town
recently a gay frolicsome party of
six tiling girls eh route lo me
uioiiiitaiiis. They were all robust,
good lookg, full of life ami energy
and bent on a frolic. -Dressed in
uniform style of walking habit, slight
ly shorter even than the prevailing
fashion.' made of excellent' ami tlur.
able linen, plain but pretty hats
easv shoes with high ankles for
dust, Ihcv were the personification
of comfort. Each bore a Knapsack
upon her back, ami was armed wit h
revolver ami a large liowie kmle.
TFle trip lakes in nearly all the
mountain counties. Some nights
they camp out and others they pass
it hotels, as humor 'or convenience
may happen. With no baggage or
equipments except w hat each car
ries upon her person, this might be
11 l .i .il IC..-I.I
caiieti i ne 1. 1 large tt ii uigm
Brigade., - Three of t hem are Virgin:'
ians ami three. Marylantlers.
An Arkansas Snake Cnariner.
Mr. lUat'k. who resides in Ilills-
boi'o. Ark., .exhibits a 'control, and
influence ! over the reptile family,
astonishingly mysterious. In the
w oods, creeks or - wherever he tiiitls
a snake, it matters not what type,
of deadly poison or venom it may-
be, he succeeds in capturing it alive
ami suU'ei iiig as little from .a. clasp
of its fangs-as if it were an ordina
ry pin scratch, lie handles and
fondles them aliout his iersot! as if
they Were so manv harmless tovs.
He will allow the largest rattle
snake to deliberately strike ami
bury its fangs into, liis 1fe:.h, anil
apparently sufler no iucoiivciiieiice
or serious consequences from the
tragic risk. By a certain weed or
growth of Vegetation he.-claims-to
destroy the ell'ect of the bite. When
bitten he chews ami ' .swallow.s the
juice of the weed, w hich acts like a
charm.
v NEAIMiY Mm
' - 4 1
i-
The Week ;: I tit ;
fie".
.cvs Ciatlimil ft -1 nirKe
M)ilcrs iiikI "Veal If dipped
from tHt- ..iiiuerNs .Xeili-
tons.
Hi
Kriinkliii romity nduiiatiug con
vention wilt be lield ii'. L;tlt: --
Scot land Kee. willfmit-e ;Silv
SeffeilMMrisl..
. ' 4 I ' '-' jf ' V,M
. Seventeen uw hujldnis .are in
the eon rse f erf ct ioi i ;tt ( ) ieenVlHe-
,y ; ; i: Lf4 . !
Mr. Willis iiihuins asShat tljjg'j'ar-
boro (Jititlt' will sliofcdt! be lijuir'
ed.
.. , 11r.ll-,.H to
I I !-
nionu-
miut :'oy,. tin
ave f he 1;
ite la-
mented Dr. ( lfiss
Dr. W- T,
Momit, has
D
iurlittitlA' oi K
cock.v
relnoveif to
Nashville
where he will prai tii' ni'dicine.
9
K. (5. I'.rowii
Esi.,ri4been elect -
ed Jhairiiian
of the Teinoeratie
Executive Coumiitti
e iflTFrankliii
county j and .loil K. JJrown, Secre-
tary.
TNT-TarlM)ro
folks
h;:d a minstrel
show last Friday ni"ht;
Anion;; the
lauL'habh
leatures was a
i 4
reprodnc
! iion oi the i -"mi . roinioiieau con
1 .
veI,tJUU'
Edtfwoinbe'd hew county ('oni-
nusHioiiei's are
ineti f solid worth.
They are ('ol. V. II. Kniiiht, D. P..
P.atts. .(',eo. I
Cbetfr Viand Eli
.;:Vn.i beily, .1.
is C'arr.
T.
Mrs I)einpsey ,Tenkinslias been
re-eleot'Hl Siqte
-iflteiideut of Schools
u 1 1 1 , . " "--We .coii
liuigist rates on the
in Educomlx
jiiatiitatc tlie
- 1 .... !
wisdmn of their clioici
Colilslioi o 'Mr'gM-Htirr : ""The trial
of Jei ry Cox'fi r the inui tler of Mary
Eliza. Hawkins is set forvl'hursday
ofthetirst wek of Nash" Superior
court,- which begins its ..session on
ie 21st iiisi.
Tin
cords
'So ii flier ,
show.- t
rriyx that the rc"
iut denjoerats. rim
iirrty for 7000 less
'I' VM This one
decomlie ei
yiian - the
jadii
fact Lt ilroug jgiinieifc-futor
of the present 3 cJujatV ejnBient
system. ' ; 1
The SttM'kholders and mi&ibeiiB ol
3
It.
the Executive Committee ilill Sneet
at the Fair GTOyid.iHJJiHjiiiiSiit
at 10 q'e1oe.kr ou 'H,uttla, A.nst
ll I. 1 . . . i
-'llth. l'ssays will thread .an- low
other subjects()J' iinpmta"ueeil be
lis-.usaed. 'niitiiuMlt1PfD' in
beou hand lov exhibition
Fn- ii
sumption sa.j tlj-;Bdt?kj Iofl
nt
iii,,6,w,: mill
The Love Bog. .
i
A ("alitornia
physician who' tlis
tlisease love., mad
covered a new
n ess has beeil
experimeiif ing with
the persons a Hicted therewith and!
has priMliiced the 'love
parasite
oroacillus mict'occus Thi.
he cul-I'enera-
tiyates up to lie twentieth
! tion, ami with
the parasite of that
generation Iu
inoculated u number
of subjects
'he iiiociilatioii was
ui ai'iahiy ; sin
t'ssiul, symptoms ot
the tlisease ap
tearingiii ;i very short
operation. A bach-
lime alter flu
elor, agetl o0
years, .. on' the first
"tlav after nioriNl.i tion hatl his whis-
kers 'dyed,-ordered asnitot clothes
... I ; -
i nt I a set of false teeth, bought a
bottle of hair it
storer, a dianmpid ring ami a guitar
anil began residing Byron's-, poems
The iiioi iilatioii -protluceil sv mtoius
of the same lhtturt
ill a young lady
. .
of -1.1. She Kpent ." at a drug!
store tor cos in -tics, bought a lot of
new; .hair ami a t roquet set, sang
"Empty is the Cratlle," sent out
imitations loi a party, and com-,
plained tiiat the ( 'hicago young
men do not go -into society. An
iniK iilateil yiu h of 1 7, 'employed in
a country sttir , tlitl up a gallon of
molasses iu, :i i a per bag, -and also,--iu
a lit .of absiMit-inintlediiess, put
the eat in tire buffer tub aiid threw
sonic fresh
itifttei-Hut of Ihe Wiu-
dow; Finally
jhe sat in a basket of
eggs while locking at the
pilot o-
graph of a prtty girl ami w as
dis-
charged for thi
Chicago dictti:
ami w il soon
observations 1
world.
s carelessness. . The
is still experimenting
ay t he results of his
.tt'orc the medical
An
Open Trade.
We
speech
qienly
arc- informed that in his
;t Mai
hall Col. Ike Young
declared that Hit existing
coalition betwieeu the Ecpublicaii
(the boss wil iL" ami the Litierals)
mi tlie result A' tin open trmlv ; that
the liepnhlic; ns siurenderetl no
rinciple, and jthe rank and file of
the party w ere iu itetl to extend
the right hand of fellowship to the
Liberals.
Old line Kepiihlii-ans can now set
what their leaders, or -rather' their
drivers are; ttoinff : and doubtii
it' . -
DeiiKHiats -will find to whirethev
are drifting. .xhriUe Citin ii
Tlie Chicagi
Timex notes lhat
mi appropriation, al
Salt -river -got
though it' js. crrtaiu to -have a heavy
carrying trad
this fair. The omis
"a. disregard for - per
rations which many
sion indicates
sonal ctuisiihi
Cougressinen
will regret. '
A Few Suggestions.
. If the etiteeined coiTesiHifidents
of the .-Advance will .punctiliously
observe tlie following suggestions,
we will le greatly obliged: t
Tnroinulf'atin J ywu; e'stteric Co
ltiioiio fridatii Injierftcial
sentiiiientalities and pliilosophieal
or psychological observations, le
ware f platitudinous ponderosity.
Let your iiuliteineiit possessiji elare
itieil coiicisertess eonipaeted cjiinpre
heiisiblene.ss, iuiaileseeut eolisist-
eney, and a concatenate eoeiu-y.
exteiiiHiaueOiis deseanitinjjs and
unprenieditated exiatiations have
intelligibility aiwl veracious vivaci
ty, without rhodomontade or thras
onical "hoinoa'st. ! 1 Sedulouslyl avoid
all polysyllable profundity j ,lM,in-
pom j4t: ysitl',s rf'U't.V
vcfLi'iKiirii lverosity,l aniP van
litMpient vapidity. Shun .! double
enteiidies, prurient jocosity, and
pestiferous profanity, obscurrent
or apparent , , , ,
I !
A Parallel . Cm.
The strong point, for theui iu the.
leive, t he county government ques
tion. They talk very patriotically
about, the' rights of the people, but
say little about the extravagance
and rascality practised by them un
der the old system. In his 'speech
at Eayetteyille Judge Bennett gave
a case in oiiit which every one
should read. I Ie said in substance:
e What has the Republican party
in the PoligreSs ofthe United Sta
tes don1" for the District of Colum
bia ' .According -to the census, the
.listrHUf Itftif l$l)fiiie v.i-
publicans in 'oiigress had; passed
k ni t 'tin ning over the District to
tlie'. government ol the people living
in it Th ix nits hist thi' local aurtrn-
nunfjidwiUdiwl Vf Xorfk&'an !
7.1 fviil llt hi iLnltJ The !
.Lrf rfr of the District! united
will, ti.e worst of the white ele, i
ineiit, and in less than two; years,
owijig to official profligacy and niis
inahagyinent the nioiievil obliga
tionsii iiyiiliHlttjvrorth on
ly 't.v t;lA-eft o!i'r3.t4tUlar.-
Wlmt ' Tlollowetl ?' Fouling 'that
this local self government, did not
I xvol; VV). tn, i.piil
Uh the-act 'ivin
iliean juirty re
pealed tlie act giving u i ne goem-
iiieiitof rJi strict to the .voters,'
intl to tlav it is gm ernetl by olti-
eers' aimointeil bv the Pl'esitlent of
the II i.itetl States! bv au. ' with1,
the advice ami consent of fhe Sen-!
; ate ! '-Shtw your, faith by
you r
! w oi ks.'; t
ti "n... t. . ;ii. n. ...,....
I menting on it, says:
'-IJaviiig tried it tmt 1etnnoi
s, long as -they compelled ns to sub-:
mitto it iif -North' Oavolili, they
found the credit of the District was
destroyed. Theveialed thelaw,
i ,,;,i uv a. ,'ict of Cohmibf.i is
l her ac,o4ypiirAtimS ot ntu
hffHrfity ijieluMieieBt,
find asmine anefctions. Let your
govenieil by ..nitvis apjioiiifcil lmvv elonds, black and threatening,
Ihr IWsiilviit of t'hr United StutcHV intl over each other till
bv ami witli the advice' and consent western sky. What a marshall
.1 i : i ii .. i... It. ,.r.,:.. a
of the Senate. This is the result of
Uepiibliean legislation. Tijs is
eiif nelj-ijorernmciit with a reuijemiee.
Negro 'government, ' -according to
their ideas, is gintl enough for poor
old N'tiilh ('arolina, but it is alto
get'her too gross ami degrading for
hhe wealthy ami ietinetl liepiililican
aristocrats, who roll in tine carriag-
i .. .-. . i : . 1
cs over l euiisx in auia .wenue, mm
inhabit jialalial mansions in the
Capital City of the natron !'
A Strong Campaign Document.
In. last week's Journal there was
a communication urginr that the
present Board t if. County Commis
sioners he not reelected tor it
would give the'; opponents' of the
'county government system" a
plea tt use in the .present campaign.
The election has been held; the old
Board reflected; anil one; little in
cident occiiring w ill make if a strong
Democratic campaign plea.! Alter
the reading of the report ( of the
Chairman, E. R. Dudley, Esq., a
Republic-a n .lusfice, arose, ami, on
motion to reflect tlie old j Board,
gave it his hearty endorsement,
and stated that alt hough he 'favor
ed another system of electing Com
missioners, yet in view of the excel
lent Iinanci.il in. inageinentbf coun
ty atiairs by this Board, they "had
his heart v annroval and would get
his Vot-l '. : t -
J Soit'fi,y go (out to t world
iluvt tiieipraotical workings f the
present system in Craven! county
meets the endorsement yvtM) '
' those who are opposed to tlie theo-
'ry. Practkk vs. Theory.
S'eirberne Journal. '
Women Should not Suffer.
' . i ;' -ri - r ? j ?!? I
! j Oil ARLESTfCt,; H. CU f
Feb. 10, TSS1. i
11. Warner & Co: Sirs A
II.
member, of my family wnas cured of
a complication of female diseases
h'v vour Safe Kidney' ainl Liver
j (.'are. .,':... ' -- ',
Wm. II. Gray.
.Texas shiiietl its j first bale 'of
new cotton tw t weeks ajo. Ala
bauia followetl suit last, week and we
suppose that by this time they have
begyu. to pick; the ntw citp in neatly
alHle; Svrtithci-uj 'Mt
NOTES FROM THE FARM,
The Last Load A Midsummer Picture.
If there is anything more exhilar
ating than the odor of uewiy movru
hay piled high upon big mows, as
one walks over the main floor of a
well filled Itarn, with the hot breeze
rushing in at one open looranlout
of the other, on one of these mid
.suiuiner days, we don't knuw where
amid all the sights and sounds and
fragrance of town or country life, it
may lx encountered. We are la.
miliar with the vivifying odor that
comes from the fresh running brooks
of the earliest spring-time, while the
snow yet lingers iu huge patches
here and there along the cool sides
of the little hills, slowly yielding
their stored-np moisture to the fra
grant rill at their base, telling us
that winter is over and past ; with
the fragrance of the freshly turned
furrow as the patient oxen slowly
phnl over the ridgy field, with a de
lightful mist rising Iroin tbegrouud
as each new furrow goes over, the
robbins and sparrows hop aud sail
iu gjee- behiud our plow promise
of the delightful spring tune winch
has just opened; with the luscious
smell that comes from riie apples
ruddy aud cheerful, as in the early
October mornings' they lay in gen
erous heaps under the trees upon
which they were so recently the chief
leauty, awaiting transport to cool
cellars on their wav to tue crown
ing joy of the social eveuing festiv
tivities of the farm but more grate
ful and more significant than these
and all beside, there is the exquisite
fragrance from a barn full of herds
grass and clover, verual grass, aud
meadow foxtail.
It is mid-day. We have just
eaten dinner after a forenoon fol
lowing the mower and tedder". Tlie
tumbles of hay, cut yesterday, have
been ooened to sun and air. The
great floors at each end of the barn
are wide open, and an empty hay
,!U'k ,sl ust
been run out of the
the floor the sweet hay
fevers the planks like a soft car
l-t ; while way above rthe braces
even to the lieains, is piled the har
vest of field and meadow.
We stnd on the floor aud catch
the -soothing iutiueuces of the west
wind laden with tnlor of field and
flower as it euvelopes us like the
pel-famed waters of a Turkish bath,
coming atjoue and goiug at anoth
er entraned. The landscape view
etl fnun the big door is of marvel
ous beauty. A wooded hill ; a pas
tore in which are cows reclining
the jthade of the treein, their
riU-es windward chewing theircutls;
a running orooK ; growing grain
ileitis anil the tropical indian corn
. - . . , i i .
piayina in tne oreeze ; an orcuaiu;
i a -winding road over which is a tlus-
! 0,o,m1 ,','0,h t,,e l,ilss'"
"' :l nel(l w,ncu worK
j .men were i.urriedly bunching up
j outsreaiWiay.
thi,tf ""R
distant thunder. Look! Ihe bil-
1 "osus .i an, iiuuioe. mne..
ami rain tilled! Down to the field
goes the big rack; the tumbles are
piled iu; ithe forks and rakes Hy;
strong men sweat under the great
forkfuls of hay. The clouds gather.
Every moment au accurate eye
sweeps the blackened heavens,
ineasuriiigthe distance away of the
shower, ami computing the rate at
which it is; traveling. There is a
strong rustling of the leaves; the
breeze increases anil is laden with
the odor of rain drops; hay is blown
from the rapidly -moving' load; the
chickens run for shelter; the farm
gate is blow n tin its hinges; the
sound of ithe rain is plainly heartlfc
Hurry! The hay rack strikes the
platform leading to the floor: the
load plunges into the barn with a
thud, - the. boys on the top of the
load bounce as upon a' pillow, as the
wheels strike the sill; down, comes
the rain in torrents,. There is a
merry ring of glad vojees it is the
last load. ;
ltYK This crop is sow n by many
at the end of August, others sow iu
Septeinlier. For cutting green for
early feeding or for fall pasturing,
it is better to sow early and make
successive sowings. For these pur
poses. 1 wo bushels of seed wheat to
the acre is not too much, aud for a
crop of grain one bushel is not too
little. A soil that is too light, for
wheat 'will often give paying crops
of rye, but the laud ought to lie in
gotwl tilth. Frequently indeed,' as a
rule,, the straw of rye brings as
much as the grain, where a city mar
ket is convenient, and tuns often
makes it more profitable than wheat
When rve is to be cut green for
sttK-k tjie land ought to be made
rich, the yield is larger and it comes
earlier. N. C. Farmer.
All About Egypt.
"'Egyptian troubles and complica
tions, which eventuated in actual
w;ar, have attracted unusual atten
tion to that section of the .world of
late. Egypt is a wonderful coun
try, wonderful iu her autiquity, her
history, her people, her rulers, her
monuments, her arts, and her liter
ature. If not the mother of nations,
she seems to have been their school
i - .
ma'am to a considerable extent.
Her histor' reaches back to the re
motest jieriotl of time, aud is! chief
ly w ritten on ancient monuments,
so shattered aud fragmentary as to
affprd little chronological certainty,
the most skillful archaeologists tlitl'
ering some thousands of years ia
their calculations. ' J
was an old etauitry when
Jacob sent, his sons down there to
buy corn. SeeuIators had cornered
the, provision market in Canaan, it
will le remembered, and run .corn
up 'to famine pritses, and Egypt hatl
to be resorted to for relief. ! Fortu
uate was it for thei brethren that
their, brother Joseph was iu : Egypt
in advance of them. The Egyptians
were skilled ih the arts and sciences,
and inveuted an embalming pro
cess that has handed their ; bodies
down to posterity if it has not their
names. The human body was sa
cred thing to the Egyptians.' They
believed in a transmigration of
souls, and that after a spirit - hail
w audered about for some thousand
of years inhabiting t the btwlies of
different animals, it would finally
seek its origiual tabernacle,-and
then, as the remarkable foresight
of Mrs. Totxlles enabled her to re
mark, "how handy it would' be to
have it in the house." j
But a demand for fertilizing pre
parations beyond the auiiualover-
i- '
flow of the Nile was unknown then,
aud they, of course, could not fur
see I a day when their precious
mummies would lie ground up to
enrich " a foreign soil. Now, when
a poor, tired Egyptian soul, having
accomplished a trausniigratojy ca
reer of five or ten thousand years,
during which it has made the round
of the entire menagerie, ''would
fain re-enter the old familiar .casket
in which it had much fun, lo! it
is not to be found, ami a writ of ba
lsas corpus issuetl by the Supreme
Court would be unable to turn up
so much as its toes. The utilitarian
sentiment of the nineteenth icentu
ry reduces to naught a theory of
existence evolved thousands of
years ago ! i
Those Egyptian embulmers were
men of great importance ih their
davi They put on as many airs as
a fashionable undertaker tlos now
and their charges wen; nearly as
heavy, -though not quite. They
graded their prices according to
the wealth of the subject; If it
was a king or a mighty warrior who
was to lie packed away for futurity,'
they work etl tiverhim for mouths
ami mouths, injecting essential oils
through t he arteries ami veiis, till
ing the skin with camphor, 'bal
sams aiid various salts, and loading
the system w ith enough to start a
newry graduated phamaceijtist in
business. Sometimes the body was
nicely: .painted, and striped and
varnished, ami aiming the aristoc
racy igold leaf ornaments in fancy
scroll work -were added. Wrapped
in linen clothes of the finestj text
ure a ml placed ina nicely fitting 1
coffin, for which it hatl beeij care
fully ; t measured, the mummy be
came ah ornament of w hicji any
household might well Ik- proud.
Indeed, they were brought upfront
the cellar ou festive occasions and
stood ! at the heatl . of.fhet table,
w here; they heljietl toexcite jhe ap
petfte, If the mummies responded
tq any of the toasts, howevei', there
must have been a lack of spontan-
iety, everything about them jwas so
cut- and dried. ;
Kmbalmers didn't take much
pain's, with 1he potir, tht'y pickled
theim in the.siinplest kind of w ay,
wrapped them in common jbrow n
italic r and Hacked them like sar
diues in a box. What axutjrc.it is j
upon human vanity that priin e anil
pauper, the lofty ami the qbseurc
arenow ground up together! in the
same mill to fertilize like soj much
guano the improverished soi'h
One. of the chief iiiilustries of the
Egyptians seems to have lMfeii the
constfuction ot iyrainitls.i lliey
evidently embarked in the business
with the idea, of supplying the
wo'rh with those remarkable struct
ures, thinking, no doubt, thtit they
w ould command a ready sale. But
ere was apparently no demand
for! them, so there they stand, 'mon
uments of the errors that at
e fre
turing looketl
quently made in theinanufVu
business. It might have
feasible to the man w ho pnijected
it, however. Lalsn- was cheap in
Egypt ami there were alHindant
stone quarries up the Nile. An en
tire 'desert could le rentetl tor little
or nothing on which to do the work
and exhibit their waresL Kiit,
strangely enough, no other nation
seemetl to care about havnjg pyra
mids.' Strangers woultl go and
look at them, climb to then- .sum
mits, explore their interiors aud
chip off pieces to carry ai ay as
relics; same as they do nowj but no
one ottered to buy one. Sorne said
they came tin high, others made aii
excuse that they hadn't any! deseft
to stand one on, and others enquired
if they hatln't some little pyramids
for teuceuts. Failing iu the pyfa
mitl business, tliey embarkfyl cau
tiously iu the manufacture f otie
lisks..' They built a .small jiumjier
of them, but it was thoitsanjlof
years before there was any demand
"lor the article. Only two have
been .sold thus far, one to England
the other to the United States
Cincinnati Saturday Xiaht. j
IN LIGHTER VEIN.
i. Bill Kje's Polar Expedition.
The Boomerang reporter Kent out
to find the north pole aloiit IS
months ago Jias just 'been heard
from. An exploring party, recent
ly found Htrtions of his remains in
latitude 4 11 44, longitude son'
west by sou', fnun the pole, and
near the remains the following frag
ments of a diary : .
July l, j 1881 .Have just been
out searching for a sunstroke aud
signs of a Jhuw . Saw nothing but
ice floe ami snow as far as the eye
could could reach. 1 think we will
have snow this evening unless the
wiud changes. , ,
July 2.- Seut the afternoon ex
ploring hprthwest for right of w ay
for a new equatorial and north jole
railroad that I think would be of
much value to commerce. The grade
is easy ami the expense would be
slight. Ate my last dog "t outlay.
Had intended him Tor the 4th, but.
got too hungry and ate him raw
with vinegar!. I wish I was at home
eating Boomerang paste.
July. Vehad quite a frost last
night, ami it looks this morning as
if the corn aiid small fruits must
have suffered." It is now two weeks
since the last of thw crew tlietl and
left me aloiil'. Ate the leather entl
of my snsjieliders to -day for dinner.
I ditl not need the suspeuders any
way, for by tightening up my pants
I find they will stay ou alright, and
I don't look jfor any latlies to call,
so that if even my pants come off by
some oversight, nobody would lie.
shocked,
July 4. Saved lip some tar roof
ing and a bottle of mucilage for my
Fourth of J uly tlinner and gorged
myself to-day. The exercises w ere
very odiiy attended, and the. cele
bration a' failure. It is cltmdinjr
up iu tlnvwest aud Pin afraitl we're
! jroing tt havtf sutiw. Skeins to me
1 we're having an all firetl late spring
I here this year.
July or Didn't-drink a tlrop yes
tertlay. It yias the quieest Fourth
I ever put iiki I never felt so little
remorse over the w ay I celebrated
as 1 do to-day I tlitl n't do a thing
yesterday that I am ashamed of ex.
cept to eat the remains ot'a liox of
shoe bhwkiug for supper. .To-day I
ate my last boot-heel,-stewcil. Itioks
as though-we inight have a hard
wit ner. ..'''.
July r.-f Feel a litt le apireheusion
alnuit soinet hing to eat. ify cretlit
is alright here, but there is no -com
petition, anil; prices are, therefore,
very high. j Ice however, is -firm.
This would , lie a gtMid '..Ice-cream
country if, f here was any demand
j but the conittry isst sparsely settled
i that a mail fetds as lonesome here
as a Green backer at a Piesjtlential
election, t ;p j . ' .'
! July ti.-.Vte a pouml of cjitton waste
soaketl iu iiiiichtne oil -to-day. There
... i ' - i . .
is iiothingjeft for to-morrow but ice
water anil yii' tiltl pocket-lKHik for
dinner.
Looks as though we might'
have snow. I . '
July 7.4-This is; a good cool place
to sentl the isiimmcr if provisions
w ere more plenty. I - am wearing
a sealskin undershirt: with three
wot tie u oveishiits ami two liear skin
vests to-day ;Suiil w hen the dew I'm-'
gins to fall I have to put tui my liutfa-
! lo ulster to keep otf tlie night ;rir
I wish 1 wfas hoj ne. It seems pre-,
tv louesttnie ; here since the tither
Ikivs tlietl. ldti' liot know what I
will get lor dinner to-morrow, un
less the neighliors semi' in' some
thing. A! big I war is coining
down ihe hatchway as 1 write. I
wish I could j eat him. It would lie
the first square nieil in two months
' It . is, ' however, a little mixed,
whather, I will eat him or -he eat me.
It w ill U; ii i.ctlld tlav for me if he
: ,;;; - ; . -
Here the diary breaks ofl almijttly
anil from the chewed up apieareuce
of the book v.e are letl to entertain
a horrible i fear asto his safety..
A Sleeping Car Episode.
A comical scene occurred on a sleep
ing car that jeft Clevelautl;the other
night- Aiming the passengers was
a pHiin, 'staid, western reserve
"school-inarm," whow as going w est
tu a vacation, hhe had . secured a
lower berth,'! .but when alsnit tore
tire discovered that a gentleman
wa.s toocciqjy the shelf altove her.
In the language of the. porter;- she
made! a '"holy; kick," against t his ar
rangement, and Hatty declared that
a company, that had no more re
gard for .a siiigle lady's feelings than
to make it was unworthy of Jhe pa
tronage of resitectable people. The
coiidiwter wis calletl, intl aftercon
siderablt-trinible got the lessee on
the shelf to take a lower Tjirth in the
next sectitai. The gentle damsel
retired without disrobing, aiid lat-r
iu thei 'night! .had .to get up tor
drink of water. Before leaving her
berth she, pinned a piece of pajer
to the outside of the curtain iu or
der that she; might make sure of it
on her return. Her movements were
observed by the gentleman wlMshe
hatl caused to be l-emoved, and he
lteing a bit ol a wag, bethought him
that now ws his chance to get ev
en. Hastily removing the pAl, he
pinned it to tbe curt&lh of the berth
of a Boston d mm wet,' irhft a 1 1 de
cidedly on th !naah and then
awuited deveJopmuUr ' 'lo st Rttle
while the lady iaad4ne beal htimt
way to where th4 paper mkaiaffiwbd
and gotSntobed.! .A,niutnt- fter
a success Km of pWKWi4 if
sued from the berth, luUoe4.V.
alarmed lady , aud . tnei awafaMteu
drummer. w hobounel out alter her
titKi "aliaf th ilovil -tint! rd.k ol
was alwut,'. Toe scene thai 'eilMed
beggai-s tescrinrionJ! ,uiVJ )pab 1fe
faintly imma'gined.' It t.Sbk' the icon
ductor aud porter a' hof 'byi 'the
wrocu to pacij Ute eiifagefl Malei
and eveu then, she TefMsud toi be
mtMlified uu'H she w ivsglveii a'siate
room fer her sol usei lo4!th i re
mainder of the niifht.'' ii 'i,:U
Tbe Het4 For. E fiicUlca.
N.w i,.b.im. for
considering this questiOB.H Jlitefi
gent and right-minded ipftretote ree
oguize that they have a aeteflknire
Nponsiblity iu . the matter.!. Peeph
have no right to get; unftrHed- j
bring a kit of helpleiat (sataree in
to the world, . unleaa they,,U(Uo
the sacred;, duty , of j parfeiitage,
namely to do the best. 'they cau for
the mental, , moral, iaud( iihjica.
training of their offspriug. JToi iuan
has a right to eteuse' hrmielf iy
saying that his daddy waa'j negll
geivt, or too 8tingy'ti lend ' hfiu to
school,, and ; subwerte ftr -fcfiafrs
to teach him to love to rea4.i;Tt
very fact that he blames hi own
parents lor net giving him jii. edul
cation and a fair chance in life,
shows h i m ihe path ' -of ' AiHjr'ae! to
his own children.' Moreover, this
solemn obligation in fttrqager CMtay
than it was yeteitlay,-4it ia'iuore
binding on the preeent tha it was
in the past : geueratio bmutte
the world ia advaneiuf .and human
ity is more enlightened, ,:, awX the
niHid of Education is daily, growhig'
more and more imperative. 1 j
( )ne- hundred years ago, a nian
of gt kmV family, and 'gobtl chatai't
ter, and snjrior iifttilral energy,
might achieve prorairierice 'jprJ
quire wealth, even' though "ijuHbte
to write his name. Bu . mehlhl
of this dy: and "geuetathsi i dan
hope to attain any eott dfnwnil
ueuce among: his lelluwl. uwu mij
les-s he have at least wt . wnUnaii
English education. - " . : . ,- :
Have - you the, right, : to jboui
yttur i: h i 1 d r e a to IgnoriUici
Would you like to see iu your . old
age the children of your ne.gro teii
ants '"'.'or neighbors 'smarter' and
more intelligent than ' your u
sons , and 5 daughters f 'Suppo
you t leave them afortnAe which
you have gained Ivy. stinting j an4
saving, and keeping theiij tit homey
ami depriving fieTn"f baokif and
paiers which would have tonight
them,tokiKw the worltMn.id gaid
agai list, rascality, let in tollj y$u
the experience, of the jast twh
ty years teaches that no maniso
likely to die imm)1 as the son j who
.was left .a fttrtune without an eait
cation! Ami this will glow more
ami more nianifest.as the world In
comes mure cnligbtcnHil jand lihMd
with sharpers I Farmer and M-e-
ehaitic. ' I i
Lumbeiton JioUenuiUan: At.loug
Creek,' Pender etiiinty, alniutj two
miles altove Lilliugton,. liu Sujitlay
last, an old gentleman by' the name
of Timothy V. Orr had 1k4h chastis
ing his youngest stm, XelsoJi.ttM
stniie act of disttlMMlieuce w-liei the
latter drew a knife and stubbed his
father twice in the "abdomen ! iH
tfictingtwo terrible woiintls, i froni
which his intestiuea iwotriitled', U(f
wheu hh.oved in at one cavity would
gush out at thtt other. The i&Uy
substance also protrutled and: bad
tt lie removed with a kuile4 At
last uccounts the w onmled man was
considered' iu a critical jcttnditiouj
Mr. Di r. Is a highly resectable lar-mer.-'aired
In-tween fifty ' ami Mtty
years, while the author of so much
trouble and suffering I is about
t wclve or fifttM'ii years old. I j
s .
A FLOWKB IN A DKAli lUllV'H
Hanij. After a young child; hwl
tlietl ami had lieen laid iu its casket
in Auburn, a few days ugtt, a rose
bud was plucked from al neighbor
iiiL' tranlen aud the stem Was placed
iii one of the lifeless little; hands,; A
tlav tr two elaitsetl lietween thW in
eidetit and tuefaneraU'erev.T.: In
the interval thr. ruseLud iu the hand
of clay wan Me to gradoally ; ou
r..i.i W ben the service waa held
the bitd hail leemett blorisoin. Tin
plieuomeiioii gave ieculhir plertf jre
to the afflicted family, and was very
mettilv referretl to by tlie clergy
man, who'inmipared the m(i4diag
of the roeelaid fo tlie hIotBiag in
heaven of the child, Leikinlv He.
Journal. ' .: ..'' j j j
The A. T. Stewart farm j" at Oar
tleii t'ity i the model fafnl iff Long
Islautl. Every thing is growing W0L
There are uinoty solid acres of je
tabxts, MM acres ol oata, 500 atBB
of com, .300 acres ef rye, forty acre
of turnips, ten acres of carrots and
over 500 acres of grass. , There jaie
800 sheep on the farm. One. ban
tired men ami sixty horses are em
ployed untlerthesupervisiou of Mr.
Cunliff. It has yearly been increas
ed in size and its earnings are very
large. i ,i
THE UUIKT UOUB.
Seleetiasfor Sunday Eeadiiig
. 8V JULIA H. BMKTT.
. The irte Garland-Addison tluel
in Lnenburg couuty, ,Ya7 resulte!
in the tb'-ath or yoUng; Addison.
There was a touching incident con
ueted with .h death. Alter for
giving his slayer and leaving kiud
mesHagM fur his , frieuds, he asked
that "the blinds might be opened
aud his eyes jieriuitted to rest for
the last v'nie on the morning sun
shine." A tew momenta ' htr b '
folded his 9riH4 upon hH breast, and
quietly . taasd to his eternal rest
0teii ihe shutter wide' to the light,
The glorious light of the day
So with pty Just , failing ight i
Keating ou skies that are bright,
; My spirit mayaHS fromthwclay.
f - KSSSt
Not when a busy day is doue,
m ith victory won,
i Do I take my laat look at the light.
In tle bright glory of day.
In the full aplendiMi ol light, .
Fold 1 my hauda while 1 pray . t
Xot even asking' to stay---
JDotio witb rt work ami ita atrite.
.tip from the sunshine here
' Into etprna! light ; ' ! '
Here, whore cleada of! apiieiur, .
Cellintf of jitoriu that are near ; . '
There where no clouds mar the .
' ' Might.' ' . - - -
So I bathe In the sunlight hlewt,
-'Waiting for what inay come ; ' -.
And uiy Fat Iter, who knows the rest,
(Will judge my life at U Ixt . ' )
( AVTien II i angels carry nm home.
The tlses of u Enemj.
BT HKV. PH. BET.MS.
ii;..
f Always keep an enemy on hand
a brisk, hearty, active cntuuy.
. lleinark the urn's of an eiieiny. '
1. The having one is proof that
you are souielmdy. Wishy-wnshey,
empty, worthless jsople never have
enemies. Men who never move
never 'run againist anything; iuul
when a nian is thoroughly dead and
utterly buried ntithing eTr.'.riius
against him. To le run agWust is
roof of existence mA iKmitim ; to
riin agiuost Homething is roof tif
Uttiell. ;is ?! '"-:'-
j-l - S.. au euemy is, io:ay ih ,n-.ioi .
uot partial to you. He will not
natter you. He will n exaggerate
your virtuea.. , It is very phibable
that he w ill slightly magnify your
faults. f The lieueflt'of thai is two
fold it iermits you t kfiow that
you have faults, ami are, therefore,
hot a monster, ami it makes them '
of such size as tti lie visible and
manageable. Of course, if you hate
a fault you deeire to know it ; when
y iiu Itecome aware that you have a
fault you desire to eoriet t it. Yttur
enemy dotis lor you this valuable
work which your frieiid c.innot vi -
foriii. ., . '
' 3. In iitldition, your enemy keeps ,
you wide "awake. He thais lint, let
you slecpt your iost. There are
two that d ways keep watch, n;m:
ly, the Ittver and the hater. Your
lover watches that you may sleep.
He keeps off noises, exchules light,
ad justs surroundings, that nothing
may disturb yon. Vtsir hater
watches that ytai may not sleop t
He stirs you up when yi uaie nap
ping. He keeps ytmr faculties oji
the alert. Kveu w hen he tbs-s with- .
ing he wiy have put you in such a
tatj of iiiiutl that you cannot' tell
w hat lie will do uext, ami f lu meu
tal 4 'rite iuust.be worth Kiine
thing. 4. He is a tletective among your
friends. - You need to know who
yttur frientls are, aud who are not
ami who are your enemies The
last or these three will disci i mi uate
the Other two. When your' enemy
goes to one who is tied her friend m r
eiieiay, ami assails ym, tho indiffer
ent one will have nothing to say or
chime iu, not le-austi he is your
enemy, - but because it iii so mitt h
easier to assent than to oppttso, aud
esjiecially lhau to refute, lint your
fnentl will take up cudgels for you.
on the instant. He will deny every
thiug ami insist on prtmf, and prov
ing is very hard w ork. There is not'
a truthful man iu the world that
couhl afford to undertake to prove
one tenth of all his assert ions. YtMii '
friend will (rail your ennui.v to; the
pnsif, and ir,the iiitlifferent person
through cHielessneKM, repeats the
awMrtuuis of your enemy, he is stion
made to fwl the inconvenience
thereof lv the zeal, your friend
ytmr
manifests. Follow ytur eueiu
around ami you will nud your
frientls, for he' will haye tb-veloitetl
them'so that they cannot Is-- mis
taken. , .'
The next 1 test thing to having a
hundred real friends is to have one
open enemy. ' r
We' are sure of this, that iu some
way, we kuow uot how, 4wi nhall
see him." 'ot with the vi-in of
-'-
faith merely, not as now shining 'aud
Bomethnea darkling through all this
veil of the material universe where
with he wraps liinmt'lf; but in open
viaim, 'as he i" O eyes m filled
with weepifliT, Oeyes that havclieen
blind from your birth, ye shall "see
the k i beauty aud the land
thai is very far off." The Deem
Birth-Day Book.
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