IMi- Fh. Cjjhalhnm Record.!' H. A. LONDON, Jr , . rrnoB and i-rocrietok. j?-.a. a1 jjfc3 or ADVERTISING. Out nina.ro, one. Insert lu, Oueaqutre.lwoliuertlnnt,. One square, oonmrmtli, . . TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION: t.80 On er y, one yr.i r. On copy m uch Cne copy, thiee innplli l.n .40 VOL. IV. PITTSBOR0 CHATHAM CO., N. C, APRIL 13, 1882. NO. 31. For larger adverflseinmU liberal contra-f w(U a 'Annie Laurie." She'd sang the songs that rule the day, The brightest, sweetest, latest, Till every chord had owned her sway, From slightest uulo greatest. ' And now my favorite," he said, As turning, die ceased singing, The pure, full uoteg her voice had male Still iu his bosom riuging. The light hand turned the leaves of song Along the repertory, Till 'mong the ballade old and strong, Jt stop't at Annie Laurie. The light hand struck the soft prelude, The notes began to quiver j And then the grand old lovo-song flowed, Like Mini? deep, happy river. Adown itsciirreut.'teiidor, deep, That (lowed with ease, "full-throated." His ovory care soft-soothed to sleep. , A happy dreamer Ik'Ht'd. The singer san?, th dreamer di'iit. The music's mystic glory, And in hie bosom deeply sunk The lore of Annie Laurie. ' bhe's ail the world to me," sang she, With cadences love haunted ; "n swelled the song-stream to the sea, The dreamer etill enchanted. And when at length (he song was sun;:, !t last sweet echoes dyin j, f viff to his feet the dreamer sprang, Hi full breast throbbing, sighing. The throb, the sigh, broke from control It was the "old, old story.' Love lit her eye, love swept his soul, And elm was Annie Lauri". Oh, singer, sing : Oh, dreamer, dream ! And may your singing, dreaming, No'er know of glory less a gleam , Jfor fall from its high seeming. PATTY'S LETTERS. "We don't keep boarders," i t Mrs. Farqnebar, looking in owlidi fashion through her spectacle glasses a' Mr. Stuart, Waller. "We've got plenty to spare without the trouble of 'era. You'll Cad the tavern about three-quarters of o niilo below. Yon mutt havo come right past its door?." "So I did," said Mr. Waller, who possossed the insinuating, cbivalrio manner that wade every lady whom lie addressed feel herself for the time be ing tho only fominine creature in all tin universe ; "but no amount of money would hire mo to make my homo in a place like that. Ilero it is like o glimpse of paradise," locking around admiringly at the nhady lawns, the ele mil is bordered porch, and the rone hedges all sprinkled over with pink bad. "I am sure, mndam, jou will roconsider joar decision, and take me for a few days, and I will promise to bo no more troublo around the bonne, than a kitten." Mrs. Farqnbar was Imt human, and the npshet of affairs was that Mr. Wal ler's trunk arrived the next day. ' Oh, mother," said Patty Fat.iihiir, knitting her pretty eyebrows, "why did you let him in? And we so peace ful and comfortable here I" "Child, why shouldn't I ?" said the widow, "lie's to pay ten dollars a week board, and I have no use for the little three cornered room over the par lor." "J don't know," said ratty, slowly, "but it seems to me I feol exactly us Eve must have felt when Bhe saw tho serpent writhing his way into Para dise. "Nonsense?" exclaimed Mrs. Far Quhar, almost angrily. But Tatty only laughed, and ran away under the shadow of the pink buds to meet her lover, Morris Newton. 'Little one," Baid Morris, imprison ing both her soft white hands iu his, "I have got bad news for yon." ' "Had news, Morris?'' "I've got to go to Omaha next week to Fee about those silver mines that one of my clients has an interest in." ' Ob, dear," said Tatty, pursing np her strawberry of a mouth. "I shall be gono six months." "Worse end worse," said Patty. "But if you say bo, Tatty," drawing her to his tide, "we can be married first and make a wedding trip of it. "The ideal" flashed back Tatty, di awing herself out of his embrace "And I without a single dress made 1" "We can buy the dresses after ward." "That's all a man knows about it." "You're sure it's impossible?" with a disappointed air. "Oh, quite," tsserted the little bru nette. - "Then," said Mr. Newton, with a eigb, "you must write very often, and be getting your fol-de-rols ready to be married as soon as I eome homo." "Yes," said Tatty, gravely; "that's more reasonable." And Bhe went ints the house utterly ignorant that at the same time Mr. Stuart Waller was laying a waiter with a boon companion at the Easteworth Arms that "he could cut out that eon ceited lawyer in less than four weeks." For Mr. Wallor was piqued by Tatty's ccol indiffcrenoe, and, unfortunately, bin were the "idle hands" for which Satan is f aid to have planty of mischief to do. "She's pretty after a fashion," said he to himself, "and I mean to make her dead in love with me before I'm through," Mr. Stuart Waller was a man of the world. Tatty Farquhar was as young iu experience as in yearp. They were an ill-mated pair, and it was hardly three weeks before the tongue of gossip began to busy itself with the widow's dark-eyed daughter, Mrs. Farquhar came into Tatty's room one afternoon, end found her crying as if her heart would break, and with an open letter in her lap. "Heart alive, child ! what's the mat ter ?" cried the old lady. "Nothing, nothing, nothing I" cried Tatty, hurriedly wiping her eyes. "Only I Lave got a letter from Morris, and it makes mo feel so glad and sorry." ' Folks didn't cry ever lovo letters when I was a girl," said Mis. Farqu-bur. Bat the letter was moroto Patty than her mother suopscted. Every trusting word, every caressing adjective was an envenomed arrow In her heart. Tatty knew that almost unconsciously she bad been led into what scorned to her an innocent flirtation with Stuart Waller. She had walked with him in the twilight, and she bad written him two letters, when he was temporarily absent in New Y'ork careless, girlish letters, which, although she had no thought of harm at the time, she would now give worlds to recall. " I'll ask him to return them to me," said Tatty to herself, "and then I'll turn over a new leaf. I will go to Aunt Prudencia'f while ho remains here, and begin my wedding clothes in good earn est." But when Tatty Farqnahar preferred her innocent request, Mr. Waller laugh ed in her face. " My dear Tatty," said he, " do you take me for a fool ?'' "My name is Miss Farquahar," siid the girl, with flashing eyes. " Excuse mo ; bnt when yon say ' I) jar Stuart-"" " I never said such a thing 1" inter rupted Tatty, with burning cheeks and eyes aflame. ' " In tho letter." I said 'Dear Mr. Waller," " panted Tatty. " Excuse me onoe more. Your memory plays you false." " Will yon retuui mo the letters?" " Miss Farqnahar," with a low bow, " they are a great deal too precious to me." " You refuse ? ' " I never refuse anything to a la-ly , bat" Patty did not stay to hear the conclu sion, bnt flashed out into the afternoon sunshine, with a large lump in her throat aud a curious seusation as if nil her blood was turned to tiro. " What a fool I Lave been," she thought, paring up aud down tho tiny grave'led walk like a chained panther ess, and biting bcr scarlet lip. "Oh, what an idiotic, unreasonable fool ! Aud what will become of rue if Morris Newton eees those scrawls? But surely, surely, in the wildest moment of infatu ation, I never addressed him as 'Dear Stuart ?' &3 that as it may, however, 1 must and will get those letters back." Fired with indignation, Tatty Far qnahar resolved herself into a private detective, soarched Mr. Waller's room and even got a false key to his trunk and went through the contents, but all in vain. And Bhe bad tho satisfaction of perceiving by Mr. Waller's amused and patronizing manner that he knew all about it. "I'll have them yet," said Fatty. Miss Farquahar was standing with lasped handB before the wide-opened door of the old-fashioned oven, built on the sido of the kitchen chimney and ex tending a sort of hump back excres cence out into the lilao bushes of the back garden when Mr. Waller camo iu with a string of speckled trout depend ing from bis finger. "La Tenserosal" said he lightly. " Tardon me, Tatty, but why are you so grae ?" ' My thimble," said she, ' it has roll ed down into the oven my little gold thimble." And you can't raeu it ?" ' It is impossible." ' Nothing is impossible when a lady's behest spurs one on," Baid Mr. Waller, gallantly. "Stand aside one second, Tenserosa." And he sprang valiantly into the yawning depths of the old brick oven. It was decidedly warm, for the fires had just been taken out ; it was decided ly da 'k, but no sooner had he entered, than Tatty, a brilliant inspiration light ing her heart and face alike, swung the massive iron door to, and j fastened it with the sturdy bolt. ' Hello I" Bid Mr. Waller ; " what are yon doing, Tatty ?" "I'm shutting the door," Tatty breathlessly responded. "But I cin't find your thimble iu this Egyptian darkness." " I don't want my thimbie." "Tatty Misa ; Farquahar wlatj do yon mean ?" " I mean to have those letters back, announced Pattv. " Do yen w ant to roast me alivs in this blaokhole of Calcutta T "I don't care mnoh whether you roast or not," replied Tatty. I shall shout for help." "Shout away,'' Baid Tatty, with a laugh, "Dorcas is banging out clothes by the river, and mother has gone to the village. Do shout !" " Patty," imploringly said Waller. " Well ?" " Am I to bo prisoner here for life ?" " Until yon give me those letters." "I can't," said Waller, "I haven't got them with me." " But you can tell me where they are, I suppose," rejoined Tatty. The oven was hot and dark a sensa tion akin to suffocation stole over Stuart Waller. " L?t mo out," said he, giindiug bis teeth, "and I will givo them to yon." " That won't do," retorted Patty. " I must have them before you come out or not at all," " Impossible I" "Nothing is impossible when a lady's behest Bpurs one on," mimicked mali cious Tatty. Mr. Waller nttored an esclamntion which was certainly not a prayer, "I can't stand this broiling hole I" shouted he. "In tho little summer house under the loose board of the table Q lick, or I shall be stifled to death !" Tatty flew off ns if her liny feet wero garnished with wings. In the summer house, under the looso board of tho table, lay tho two letters, ns Waller had said, wrapped in oiled Bilk, and tied with a yellow cigar ribbon, ('itching them up, sho tore them hurriedly open. " I knew it wasn't ' D?nr Stuart,' " Bhe exclaimed mockingly, and then tearing thorn into a shower of infinitesimal pieces', she dung them to tho snmmcr wind. Half a minute later, Mr. Waller, crumpled as to liuen, frowsy as to hair, ami streaming with perspiration, crept out of his Bultry cell. Tatty curtseyed low to greet bis egress. "Walk out," said she, "coward and liar. Mr. Wallor made no reply. What could he havo said ? He left Farqnahar cottage that even ing. He Baid he had received a tele gram. Terhaps he had, but Patty had ber doubts on that subject. At all events he disappeared, and Tatty Far qnahar breathed free again. Mort is Newton camo back in October, and Tatty married him. Put sho never told any one, even ber husband, of tho episode of the old brick oven nnd the two letters. A Vast W heat Itr-giiia. Kxst of the Cascado mountains the early comers to Oregon paused over a vast region of country then considered almoit a desert, but which, in the last few years, has proven to be equal to the great prairies of the Mississippi valley in its wheat producing capacity. This region is being vapidly settled and its development is demonstrating more fully, year by year, the mistake of those who once considered it a land tit only for the habitation of the wild animals and savages that roamed over it. The wheat-growing section of this stuto and Washington territory, is embraced between the 43J and 40th paralols of north ktitude, and the 117th and 121th paralels of west longitude, embracing about 180,000 square miles, of which at loast 25 per cent., or 23,000,000 acios, is good wheat producing land, and, with fair cultivation, will yield an aver age of IS bushels to the acre. Tho total yield of this vast region, uuder possible, development, therefore, would roach tho enormous quantity of over .'100,000,000 bushels of that eareal which constitutes so important a factor in tho commerce of tho world. Illinois, in 1880, produced abont fifty million bush els, but hero is a region that has a capacity to yield six times ns much. But ndmit that, in this goraerahon, only one-half this land is subjected to cul tivation and used for this purpose, and we have within the next score and a half years a product of one hundred and fifty million bushels, enough to furnish freight for a railroad along ev eiy water-course and tr and down every valley in the cntiro section. Portland i)regonan. Forestry in France. One sixth of Franee, including Cor sica, is under wood, but notwithstand ing this an immense amount of timber is annually imported into tho country from the United States and the north of Europe. In 1820 the Nancy School of Forestry wai instituted, nnd a new codo of laws was adopted in 1827. The fact has of late years boon recognized tha'. the floods which havo proved bo terribly destructive in France have been largely duo to tho absence of trees en mountain sides. A forest acts both mechanically and and hydrogrnphically; In the former case by preventing any large body of water from collecting, aid as a sort of permanent floodgate; in tho latter by the trees themselves absorbing vast deal of moisture. WEIX-KXtNYX' PIIR.1JSIS. lion I he FuIIswIbc are FnM In !! Originated, Hrjnn.n. This word, which is so frequently shouted, in this country es pecially, originated among the eastern nations, where it was used as a war-cry, from tho belief that every man who died in battle for bis country went to heaven. It is derived from the Slavonic word, "Harraj," which means "to Taradiso." WnAT Arn You Giving Mr. ? This oft-repented expression indicative of disbelief which has been added to the vocabulary of slang, has no leas a source than tno Bible. It may bo found in the thirty -eighth chapter of Genesis. A Cat May Look at a Kri. This saying is said to have the following origin : When Charles II. was fleeing, in disguise, from England to France, ho was sitting on deck directing the course of the vessel, when one of the sailors filling his pipe near by, blew somo of the tobacco in his fa;e. The master of tho ship ordered the marine to go further away from the "gentle man," when he, grnmblingly, replied, quite ignorant as to the quality of the passenger : "A cat may look at a king." "Swxet By-ANn Bv." This popular hymn was tho work of two men Jo seph T. Webster, now dead, who com posed the music, and Dr. F. S. Bennett, at the present time a resident of Rich mond, 111., the author of the verses. The two wrote a hymn-book in 1871, and "The Sweet Py and-By" was one of the pieces jointly produced for it. The sugfreKtion came from a chaneo lemark by Webster, who was habitually des pondent, thatall would be well "by-and-by." Bennett at ouce made the rhymes, and Webster brought the music out of a liddle, which was his customary aid in composition. The bymn-book bad its day, and is forgot ten ; but this one tune is put into every new publication of the kind, and has a sale of about 10,000 copius a year in sheet form. Dr. Bennett says that he and Webstor wore not orthodox Chris tians when the hymn was written, and that he is now even a less believer. As Dead ah a HEnnrNo. This ex pression has a simple origin. The her ring, which when fat is called a "bloater," dies immediately upon its removal from the sea. It wants air, and can livo only in salt water ; where as eels live a long time after leaviug its native element. Swimming bo near the surface, as it does, the herring requires much air, and tho gills when dry cannot perform their function that of breath-ing- Oiioo. Admiral Vernon, the same after whom Mount Vernon was named was the first to require his men to drink their spirits mixed with water. In bad weather ho was in the habit of walking tho deck in a rough grogram cloak, and hence had obtained the nnmo of "Old Grog" in the Sbrvice. Such was tho name applied to rum and water. Ljmuo on LiMBis Lat. "Limbus," a border 1 A tegion supposed by some of the old ccholastio theojoginns to lie on the edgo or confines of hell. Here, it wan thought, the souls of just men,, not admitted into heaven or into purga tory, remained to await the general resurrection. Such were the patriarchs and othc? pious ancients who died be fore the birth of Christ. Hence tho "limbo" was called "limbns patrnm.'' According to some of tho schoolmen there was also a "limbus puerpomm'' or "infantum," a similar place allotted to the souls of infants dying unbap tized. To theso were added, in popular opinion, n "limbus fatuorum," or fool's paradise, tho receptacle of all vanity and nonsense. jAnj Ketch A hangman or execu tioner, commonly so called from one John Ketch, a wretch who lived in the time of James II., and made himself univereally odious by the butchery of many brave and noble viotims, particu larly those sentenced to death by the infamous Jeffreys during the "Bloody Assizes." Hau'yon Days. Halcyons was the wifo of Colyx, and the latter having met his death by drowning, Haloyone cast herself into the sea with the dead body, nnd both were transformed into the kingfisher bird. The animal lays its eggs on rocks near the sea in calm mid winter, and the "halcyon days" are therefore seven days before and after the winter solstice. A Bone to Ti r. It was an eld mar riage enstom iu Sicily for tho bride's father to give tho bridegroom a bone, Baying : "Tick this in order to show how you can manafto a wifo, which is more difficult than picking a bone." This is a common explanation ; bnt the practice of throwing boues to dogs is a more natural method of accounting for the saying. A finely dressed lady slipped and fell near the post office recently, and the gentleman who helped her to rise in quired, "Did you break any bones, madam ?" "No, I guess not," she re plied, "but I am just as mad as if I had broken doicns of 'em." FUR I'll K FA lit SEX. Fefihlon Note. Dark straw bonnets and hats will be the fashion with plain suits next sea son. "Cold pressed" flannels that require no further pressing are used for dresses. Embroidered edges appear now on all kinds of spring and Bummer dress goods. Openwork embroidering of black silk on net in patterns over tit inches in depth, will be much used for trimming black grenadines nnd vailings next season. nigh heels never go entirely out of vogue, but sensible women always hnve several pairs of low-heeled walking and heellcss house shoes among their eh assure. Efforts are made iu Paris bs well as London to introduce the fashion of wearing tho hair short and arranged in small, flat, ronnd curls, in the fashion of the first French republic. Tho tops of v.oru out ten button length monsquelairo gloves can be sewed on to two or three, button gloves with obvious economy. The joining senna will be completely hidden by tho wrinkles in the wrist and the bracelets now nniversp.lly worn. Many of the vailing suits nro made with a gracefully draped tablier over a kilted skirt, nnd for back drapery a largo donbl.i-looped bow of moiro lined with taffeta silk. The ends of the bow are square, and reach only threo-quarters down the lenglh of the skirt. MousquMaire gloves are the most popnlar, but ladies of good taste went buttoned or laced gloves, if more be coming to their bands and arm". Tretty little slips of pale-blue. r.nd pink baptidte aud ginghams are the first suits for cbildrens's wear. They ore trimmed with white Hamburg era broideries. A Hioit of A rrhim Jliinnn. A baron told mo of a sceno that he witnessed at the opera long years ago, the trial-hearing of a pale, plain girl, with abundant fair tret-sea and great bine eyes. Ho brought, by his de scription, the scene vividly before me ; the dimly-lighted house, the fair-haired child upon the stage, and, in the pro scenium box, superb and haughty, tho splendid prima donna of the day b'osina Stolz, whose empire over tho opera and tho heart of its manager was so supremo that none of the operas composed for the grand opera in those days contain more than one female role of any importance, ns witness "La Favorita," "La Reine de Chypre," etc. The song ended, Madame Stolz leaned over and said something to tho man ager, who advanced to tho young singer, expressing iu polite and empty phrases his regrets that her talent and her voice were nnsnited to the require ments of tho grand opera, l-fhe heard him in silence, and folding her modest shawl about her she glided from the stage. Arrived at tho exit door she looked back. "I bid yon adieu, mon Bicur," she said quietly. "One day you will implore me to return, but I never will return." A fow years later, when every opera director in Taris was at that young girl's feet praying ber to accept any possible terms, the memory ! of thnt night stood between her and the Tarisian public and deprived Taris of the delight of ever listening to the greatest singer of tho centniy, for the pale, blue-eyed maiden was JennyLind. Paris Corretj'milcnt. A Bottle's Long ToyaRe. In the autumn of 1S7!, the young son of M. de Bille, tho Dauish minister to the L'nited States, on a voyage from Copenhagen to the Sandwich Islands, throw overboard in tho Atlantic ocean a bottle containing a message to his brother in-law, nn officer in the Danish navy, then stationed nt St. Thomas. The bottle an ordinnry soda-water bottle, tightly corked was sot ndrift in tho lntitude of tho Capo Verde Islands, with no idea, of course, that it would reach its destination. The ex periment being the mere fancy of an idle moment, it was forgotten before the voyage was over. Two years had passed when last October, tho Danish consul at Fuerto Tlata, Sin Domingo, Mr. G. A. Zoller, walking one day in his garden on tho sea-shore, observed a bottle thrown up on the beach by tho surf. He picked it up and found th a it contained a message, tho writing of which could still be read, though it was much faded. Mr. Zeller is a German and could not read it himself, but un derstood the language well enough to know that it was Danish. Accordingly he sent the bottle aud its contents to the editor of a newspaper at St. Tbomast who happened to know the officer to whom the letter was addressed, and who had not long Mnco returned to Denmark. He sent it to his address iu Copenhagen, where it arrived a few weeks ago. The bottle bad boen carried by the Gulf Stream across the ocean to the West Indian islands, about' 2,600 miles. THE BANK OF EXULAXO. JourualUi's Vinita the OrrnteM Floan. finl limlllallon In (he MVrld. In his notes on bis recent Eagiish tour.Howard Oarroll.the New York jour nalist, says: Thanks, too, to one of those same policemen we may cross safely through the maBS of whirling and rumbling aud rattling carriages from the Royal Etchange, and "merchants' walks," and the house of "Lloyds" to "tho old lady in Threadneedlo street," so called by her Loudon children, and known to other people as the Bank of England. Until some other, corpora tion can boast a capital greater thjn I'll, 550,000 perhaps they may bo per mitted to call their favorite, ns they do now, "ihc richest old lady in the world.' The bank is a low, long structure, which covers eight acres of ground, and in which there are employed a thousand persons, managers, rloiks, messengers and porters, whose combined salaries amount to about 225,000 a year. It is a private corporation or business, not a department of the government, ns mnuy people suppose. It has existed for nearly 200 yeaiy, having Leon founded in ltiUl by a shrewd Scotchman named William Tatterson. As now urrauged, the business of the concern is managed by a governor, deputy govornor, aud a board of directors consisting of twenty four members. Of these eight go out of office annually, but they may be and generally ore re-elected term after term. It is stipulate 1 that the governor roust be a proprietor of the bank stock to the amount of A'1,000, and that tho deputy governor and directors ubnll orn Ktock to the value of i'3,003 aad C2.0U0, re spectively. So well ik tho bank man aged thnt tho dividend npi;n the stock is seldom le:-s than reven per cent., a high rate in England, nnd one share of the par value of A" 100 can usually find ready Bale for 200. Aside1 from its privilege of issuing notes payable on demand cri p, fresh, beautiful notes tht y are, and good in all parts of the civilized world -the Bank of England has from the government the additional ad vantage of bein.T allowed to manage tho national debt. To secure tho note is sue, as may be stated by the way, there is never less than i'15,000,0UO,aud eome times as high ns 25,000,000, iu gold bars and silver, besides other securities, in tho bank vauT.. Every bar oftthe gold weighs sisteen pounds and is worth about 800. To protect this great treasure at night a company of militia is employed. For tho manage ment of tho national debt, which now omounts to 00,000,000, the bank re ceives 200,000 a year, a comparatively small commission when it is remember ed that out of it it must be paid the ex peuses of keeping the many accounts connected with tho colossal debt, the paying of dividends to its holders, tho collection of the income tax levied upon it, and the transfer of stock. Aud all this vast business, in addition to the other affairs of the bank, is con ducted with bo much system nnd care that losses or error are almost unknown. Inthe paying of!iee,the telling-rocnand the rotunda, millions upon milionn are handled every day, grent heaps of pol are shoveled about ns though it was r much sand, nnd piles upon piles of banknotes are counted nnd sorted about with the rapidity of the ind. Yet so well trained nre the cler'.:s, nnd so delicate the weighing machinery, that a light coin or a false note is never passed into tho bank. That nothing is Btolcn from it is due in great meas ure to tho vigilance and fidelity of those qniet-lookiiig beadles who all day long sit so silently at tho doors. As wo pass out they nre sleepy nnd lietloss npparcntly as when wo went in, but lo a suspicious character or a pro fessional thief enter, and their eyes will never leave him till bo is in the street again. In short it is no exaggeration to say that the Bank of F.Dgland is the most carefully watched and guarded money institution iu the world. A Lnng-Lived Family. A Pcaracola, Florida, eirretp;iudeul of the Louisville Courkr-Journal uMcgtw that Robert A. Wright, of Santa R ise county, Florida, is Beventy-one years of age, but in nppoaraacu, speech and ac tion, ho nould pass anywhere for a well-preserved man of less than fifty. He is abln to, and does, more and better work than nt nny period of his lif-3. He has not lost a day from labor for thirteen months. lie in the father of five children, of whom his soiis Bnrrell, Amos and Akbub, nie triplets, all uow living and fifty-two years of age. He is the sou cf John Wright, who is now living in Canada, nnd is one hundred and B'xtecn years of age; is the nephew of the late Davis Eaton, who lived and died in Giles county, Virginia, at tho advanced age of ( as nenr as it could bo computed) one hun dred and thirty-eight years, aud who has been one hundred and two years a mem ber of the Masotio order. Di tiering from the conventional young-old man, he oats heartily at all times; formerly he was an inveterate consumer "of cof fee and tobacco, but has eschewed buth for the past five years. My Wedding Day. I rarnot sleep. I tremble fo And ueh a tumult tills mv bmn ; Ii neisl be Joy I feel I know, J! u I oli, hmv near it scorn to aln ; The wind iii'ijiis through the old pear tie The mom if cild and dump and grav. H'h" would have thought the world would ha So sad iij"ii my w I Hug day ? No li-- I bvu thc-e, Charlie Hay ; Cod Kiimu.4 my heart is lull of thee So full, that if I Kih-vI to pray, Thine innge only can 1 ere. And I would ii' it exchange this morn - Jt cold, itw mini!', itH hoary rime Tor all tho u'!i'ii'l"re Hint adorn The young d.iy i.i i-oiiie fairer clime. Hark, hark ; he comf '. He still my heart -lie s'ill ! ft" ntill in v heart Wliut need bust tle u t.. h lie and start When Charlie come-- -my Charlie Ray 7 He '-omr -he ocih.-h '. an l I must be All smiles and wipe tiie? tears anay , II mould be nron ' i Jet linn f-e, I've neet u' in my wedding day. ITfcMS Or IMF II ESI. Over 2,500 men in Utah have more than ono wife n piece. Trained nurses readily got from 815 to 820 in New York. A child with t vo heads was recently born near Gad, toil, Alabama. Baldwin county, Albania, has no resident lawyer nor has it a jail Chicago has the Ingest Hebrew pop ulation ol any other ity of e pud num bers in the woild. The city of Boston eontaius 41,92 dwelling houtie:;. valued at 31,013,000. There are, besid ;.-, 7.1 hotel-, and 117 fcunily hotel:' in the city. The total number of blast furnace anil rolling hiill establishments aud steel works iii the United States was H.'S in 17 J, 1.0i.". in 1SS0. The value of materials used was SriO,52r,UI2 in 170 and I'M, 271, 150 in 1SS0. An unusually brilliant specimen of "red snow"was recently presented at the meeting of the Han Francisco Micro scopical Society. It. was gathered on tho Wasatch mountain at nn altitude of about 10,000 feet above sea level. It is uow very well understood that the color of such snow is produced by a minute, cellular plant which reproduces itself by rapid subdivision. IIUMOKOl'S. The speech from tho thrown dm'l hit a folic w when bis down. The man who is forever airing his knowledge is newr nt loss for wind power. The young lady who banged her hair at n looking ghu s did not break the glass. A lady says that i1 take? ninny men a whole life time to loam to carry n 810 bill homo without breaking it. A ninn with a felon on bis hand is en titled to sympa'hy. How much more the keeper of the Stalo Prison, who has a great many. Said the leader of the train-robbers'as bo boarded tho Tiillman car: "Don't disturb the passengers, but seize the portor. He's got nil the money inthe crowd by this time!'' A Miss Buchanan once rallying her cousin, nn cficer, on his cournge, said : "Now, Harry, do yon really mean to tell me yon can wa'lt up to a eannon's month without feoi.'' "Yes," was the prompt reply, "of to n Buchanan either." And he did it. A Washington f.irl, Gertrude Ne'.son, won a prize of live dollars, by writing tho best, letter accepting nu offer of marriage. That is all right, Gertrude, but let us tell you nud any other girl, that when n man is afraid to come to the house nnd nsk for you right to you face, but sneaks oil behind tho postoffiee nnd nsk lor you at a long range with a three-cent declaration of his love, the best nnawor you can make him is "No," iu five-line pica. Poisonous Snaps Mothers and nurses cannot be too careful about the soaps they use on the little ones. Few but physicians know many of tho so-called skin diseases among children are caused by tho use of adulterated soap. An analysis of several cakes of the pretty and perfumed toilet sonps (bnt are sold on the streets showed the presence of solublo glaso, ground glass filex, pip clay, rotten Rtmie, borax, plaster of Turin, tin crys tal, magnesia, pnmico stone, oatmeal and other substances, which nre added to give the soap weight, hardness, toiiphuosa or eloaru ss. Tho common coloringw nre vermilion, Venetian rel nnd oarmine, ultramarine, preen, pot pigment green; copperan, Spanish brown, ultruuiino blues, yellow aud scarlet anilines and burnt umber. Many of tho perfuming ingredients, though harmless iu themselves, Income chemically poisonous by ndmixture. Adding the dangers from all these to the rancid, diseased, putrid qualities of the grease used, nud mothers mny well be appalled at tho permanent evils these neat looking, delicately scented blocks of toilet soap contain, ready to be re leased wheuever moistened and applied to the baby's body.