Mhm Record. CWfim H. A. LONDON, Jr., AD v iiKTISINCl. msqnafe.oneSBseniuu. - x. One avian, two tmarttone, LM OMBnare,oti. munth, 1st MTTSP.)!i) CHATHAM CO.. N C. JANUARY 31, 1881. NO. 21. eiMTor. 'D ntorunnuu, j mm TERMS Of SUtfSCRIPTIONl lhMCrr Mtl-rar, M0 - Owt.HT.tlnwim.mtl'.. VC)I. VI. , I , The Fountain or Lire. Die Fountain of Llfo! It prklos, Its diamond Jets on high, Till lu waters, clear and peaily, Reflect on the azure sky. The Ornybeard tits and watchos His treasures with jealous caro, Walclic. and waits fur visitor. Visitors pure and rare. For lie who would drink of the fountain Must puss the portal of blue; lu pasi-nge is rock and craggy, Surrounded by precipice. And he who would drink of its n;o Hint sprkle.8o o'ear and IurIi Mu-t live the lilb of the righteous, For tlio lighieons neTerdio. Philadelphia Vail. JOAB'S RUSE, It was a bleak, bitterly-cold Decem ber night. The frozen houghs of tho buttonball-trea rattled in the keen blast. The ground was tight-fettored in a cruel black frost. Xow and' then the sickly moon struggled through tho bars of cloud, illuminating the dreary landscape for an instant, and then, as if discouraged, vanished onco ngain into tho Muck, vaporous masses. Joab Millson sat before tho looking into its blazing heart, feeble candle burned on tho table, otherwise the farmhouse kitchen lire, A but was quite dark. There was a tall, wooden clock in one corner, garlanded with the bitter sweet berries which had not yet lost their autumn splendor, and a monster Jerusalem cherry lice, studded with tiny scarlet globes, occupied the win dow. And honest .loab had just laid aside the last week's paper, with his spectacle case on topof it, as his wife came down stairs. He looked up. "Well," said he, "how is she?" ".She's dead !" said Mrs. Millson, "Pear, dear !" said the kind-hearted old farmer. "Dead, is she? And poor little lris-what is to become of her?" "I think you'd a great deal butter say poor mi," exclaimed Mrs. Millson, flouncing into a chair, in extreme irri tation, "with three weeks' board tin- paid nnd not a cent left !" j "Not a cent, eh?" repealed Mr. Mill- j son. ! "Sho told me a deal just before she : died," said the farmer's w ife. ".Shu ran i away from her friends to marry Iris' i father, and he died and left her w hen I Iris was a baby. And then her folks wouldn't have nothing more to say to j her. And she has supported the child ' ever since, the best she could." j "Poor thing !" rcpt ad d Joab. whose heart was as gentle as hismanners, were uncouth. "I might ha' knowed from the haggard look in her fa e that ' she had seen trouble." "Three weeks' beard, to .say nothing of the medicines I paid for, and the ; doctor's bill !" said Mrs. Millson. "Folks oughtn't to be : ick if they can't pay their way ! It's what I call down- ! right swindling !" j "Where- is Iris?" asked JoaK "Asleep, upstairs." "Don't she kuuw her mother is dead." ' "Xo !" snappishly retorted Mrs. Mill- j son. "Whore- was the use of calling i her? Ain't there trouble and confu- j sion enough a'ready ?" "Poor dear !" said Joab, tu 'chauically j rubbing his knees "poor dear ! It'll' be a blow to her." j "I shall see Mr. iriggett up at the asylum, to-morrow," said Mrs. Millson. "Of course, the town will bury Mrs, Ilrooke." "That's 'most a pity, ain't it, my dear?" said Joab. "She was a proud spirited erector, that Mrs. Ilrooke," "Poor folks hain't no business to be proud," said Mrs. Millson. "Rebecca," said tho farmer insinuat ingly, "couldn't wo" "No, 'we couldn't !" sharply inter rupted his wiff. "We, indeed ! with that thousand dolla's vou owo to Mun son Miner, and the mortgage on the farm eating up our means as fast as ever it can. Haven't we done enough for this womnn a'ready?" ".She paid her board as long as she could," mildly expostulated Millson. "Then she'd ought to have left off livin when she couldn't pay her way no longer," said Mrs. Millson. "Yes, but- -" "I've niade up my mind," shortly enunciated Mrs. Millson. "This here house ain't a free charity. I shall see the selectmen to-morrow, and Mr. Criggett into the bargain. I don't suppose I'll ever get that board money, but I don't mean to throw another cent after it." At that moment it little, shivering, white-robed figure appeared at the door the figure of a child of ten, with auburn gold hair t-trcamiug down her back, largo blue eyes, and cheeks crim soned with grief and terror. "Mamma !" she cried. "I dreamed that mamma called me!- and they won't let me into the rooiu. Oh, Mrs. Millson, is she dead?" "Iris, go back to your room at once !" said Mrs. Millson sharply. "Yes, of course she's dead ! What else would you expect? lo back to bed you can't do no good !" But the honest fanner, melted by tho child's look of wild, dumb distress, opened wide his arms. Iris Brooke Hew into them, and burst into a wild tempest of sobs and tears. i with her face buried on his shoulder. "Xow, what n the use of that?" slid Mrs. Millson, impatiently. 'If you wa to cry a gallon measure full, you couldn't bring her back; and iVs downright folly of Millson to encourage it." "But what a:o 1 t i do without mamma?" plea ted the child. Where am 1 to go?" "To the asylum, to-be-sure !" prompt ly answered Mis. Millson, heedless of her husband's gestures for silence. "And be thankful that the town find so good a home its that for you. Now, Millson, you needn't be gi imaeing at mo in that sort id a way. Facts is facts, and I'm only speaking for the child's own good!" "I'd rat her die," breathed Iris in so low a tone, that only Joab Millson heard the idunld 'ring syllables. "Oh, please don't si n I me there!" The child's pathetic words served only to strengthen a resolve that was gradually forming in the farmer's kindly heart. "lle. l.y," he ald next morning, to his wife, "don't send to the asylum authorities until I have been to the city. I'll siv Mrs. Brooke's folks. You say you found their addre-s among her papers?" "Yes," said Mrs. Millson. "Hut sho told me herself they wouldn't have nothing to say to her since she married against their will. Where's tho use of spending time and money to" "Death is a wonderful softener," said Joab. "1 shouldn't bo surprised j if they'd bo willin' to do something for ; the littla gal, arter all. Anyhow it's worth trying for." His expedition, however, proved ut terly fruitless. Mrs. Brooke's relatives, a sour-face 1 old nvii I and a tlinty hearted .ship-broker -were inexorable. "Sh" made her own bed," said one, Now let her lie upon it." "1 warned her just how things would : turn out," said the other. "I told her ; I wade I my hands of her and her I concerns. And 1 am not one to go I back from my word. What's that you say? 'I'll.' little girl is not to blame? I am ted chopping 1 igie with you, my good man. I am s ingly stating my determi nation to haw iioihing to do with cith er Charles lirooUe's wife or daughter, (iood mi n:iig." Joab Millson came back home with his mind made up. " !ii'-!. :s iii'r.V," said he to himself "to t il a I t 1- lili a 'pious fraud, the elder wo.il-i call ;, I "sp .-e - or to be a ;l!l .h 1 r'i'c. (ue thing's sartin! I aim g'tiii' to li t bitle Iris be sent to any a ylu u! And llebecca s one them wo i.i-ii ;i, has got tube managed. "Well, ' Mrs. Millson said, as he got onto' box wagon that had been sent to the depot to meet him, "What did they say?" "Wi ll," said Joan, with n little twist of his features, "it aint convenient for them to receive Iris just now. lii;t we are to keep her." 'in what terms"." said Mrs. Millson crisply. "Six dollars a week," declared Joab, inventing as he went on, "That ain't unreasonable," paid Mrs. Millson, complacently, "But about her clothes and schooling?" "Oh, we're to supply all that, and they'll pay us!" "They give mi money to pay for it," said Joab, who had stopped at the bank on Lis way back and drawn out all his little floating balance of cash. "Well, I declare," said Mrs. Millson, with a gratified lok. "1 wish we'd thought of applying to them before. They seem inclined to do the right thing." Joab screwed his face into worse contortions than ever, the minute his wife's back was turned. "I s'poso I'm a mis'able sinner," be thought. "But there ! What's a fel low to do, with Iris' big, mournful eyes looking up into mine? I've lied like a trooper; but I declare to gracious, I'd do the same thing over again to keep little Iris out of the asylum." And looking toward the child, be said, uhuul: "You'd rather stay with us. Iris, wouldn't yon?" Jm nestled fondly up to his side. "You are good to me," said she. "Hut I would starve sooner than go to those people who neglected my poor mother in her worst need." So Iris Brooke grew up, wild, lovely, untrained as her beautiful namesake along the river shores. And Mts. Millson looked out as sharp as ever for the main chance; and hon est Joab, discouiaged by poor crops, haunted by persistent creditors, and perpetually puzzle! to keep up the mystery of Iris semi-annual allowance, scarcely know which way to turn. But thero never yet was a secret so profound that a woman will not lind it out. And one unlucky day, Joab was driven by dire, necessity to confess all to his wife. The hank money was gone the mortgage was to bo fore closeddebts gathered darkly around them and the whole conspiracy came out at last, in its full enormity. "I )o - $ ou -mean," said Mrs. Millson. with ominous distinctness, "that all these years you have been supporting Iris Brooke out of your own im ny, and pitying for her schooling? And buying her gowns and bonnets for her, which were a deal too nice for her sta tion in life?" "Don't speak so harsh, Becky," said the poor man, faintly. " There was no ono else to do it but me. .she has been a real comfort to us, you know, and' "A tostly comfort !" Mrs Millson. "But it shan't go on untitle r nmnii nl. Oh, how I have been deceived !" "Don't tell her, llebecca," falterei, Joab. "It ain't her fault, .she nevei suspected it." "It's any one's fault to be living on charity," shrilly uttered the old woman. "And us without a cent, and home less. How are wo to live, do you sup pose." "Tho Lord will provide," said Joab, feebly. "Fiddlesticks!" said Mrs. Millson. "You've done all this to keep her out of tho poorhouse. Xow, who is to keep yon and me oil the town, I'd liko to know ? ' Just then the door opened. Iri. Brooko herself came in, out of tin breey, golden November a'lii. sphere, with an open letter in her hand. "Oh, father! oh, mother "' sho cried, radiantly, "the day of magic trans formation is net over yet. I am not Iris Brooko any more; I am a good fairy, and 1 have brought you money, wealth, case and rest, in your old days. Look ! it's a letter from a lawyer in New York. Uncle Sea! ord is dead and he toro up his last w ill, the week be fore he died, an 1 never made a new ono. An 1 I am his h ire.A oh. what shall 1 ever do with lil'ty thousand did lars, mother - iharesl, best. if friends--but to give it to you, who befriended me when 1 was alone ami friendless?" And sobbing with joy, sho flung the letter into, loab Mdlson's lap, and knelt down beside him, covering his bn wri hand with kisses. Tho old man looked exultingly at his wife. "Didn't I tell you," said he. "that the Lord would provide?" So the matter settled itself; and the declining years of the old couple were brightened by tiie love and devotion of Iris Brooke. And then, mid not until then, did Joab disclose to her the sys tematic deception I," ii.nl prit tici'd fur so many years. Sho looked at him wi'h large lumi nous eyes. "Dear father," said she, "1 can't love you any more than I did before; but it I could " And the tears ended her sentence in a torrent of mute eloquence. IhUn Forrest u'ruo.3. For Newspaper Writers. The following version of tho "Con tributor's Ten Commandments" is tak en from a Swedish paper: 1. If yon wish to send a communi cation to a paper, do it at once. What isnew at this moment is no longer so to-morrow-. 2. Be concise in your statement, for thereby you save your own time and that of tho reader. Kxplanations, not words; facts, but no reilections on them. 3. Be simple, write distinctly, do not talk about to-day or yesterday, but give the name of the day or tho dale. 4. Begin frequently a new line, which gladdens the compositor. Writo short sentences, for the benefit of the reader. I'se many stops and comtnns, and do not forget to put them in. 5. Do not correct single letters or numbers, but cross the whole word out when it correction is wanted. 0 First and foremost, write only on one side of the paper. A hundred lines on one sido can be cut into ten pieces, and net up by several composi tors in ten minutes. If written on both sides, only one compositor can arrange it, which will take some hours. 7. A MS. paper which takes some hours in getting into type, is in dan ger of not being printed the first day, and is passed over until the next day. R What is kept until the next day is no longer new, and may not get in. Each day has its own trouble; yester day is always in the wrong. 9, Put your name and address on the back of your copy. 10. Above all, speak the truth, and nothing but the truth. If you talk about yourself, use the third person, say what you have to say without false modesty, but also without conceit AttRKR What II I. nml Imrfi I ouml-Th T"f lu Wlilrli It I. rm. A gentleman well acquainted with the curious substance known us am ber, said to a Philadelphia 77 won re porter: "In oldon times ttuibur was much more esteemed than gold. Its natnro was known then, and two thou sand years ago, Pliny tnld them it was fossil rosin of an extinct con:fer,'--Um ihillei. It Is fo ni l in many countries, hut tho givah d deposits have been found on (lie nhonsuf tho Uallic, whe-o man) thousand yoars ago a conifer forest extended from Holland over the Ceninn Coast far into tho adiie ei.t. countries, II w as the rosin that dropppel from these tree: just as we see similar deposit of gum on our spruce and other trees of to-day. As it ran down it entangled insects, caught lizards in its sticky embrace, holding them fa-t, and final ly burying them up, hanleiiinr and preserving them intact for unknown ages, (in ,' o the finest deposits U lo cate 1 in the II.iuptvat rland, where on the Poiiicrauiau plains tho peasant taku it I ron i the surf ice clay, and near Brandenburg pieces weighing lour pounds have been found. The pi n u sula of Saudaud is noted for the rich ness of its deposits, and formerly all tho amber le ro was claimed bv the Crown, the tinder t being carefully watched bv gendarmes and receiving one-tenth of its value." "A ro largo pieces rare?" aked the reporter. "Yes," was tho reply, "both rare and costly. There is a piece weighing eighteen pounds in the Berlin museum for which floi." was paid, an 1 previous tothis $0000 wits ivfiuod for a thirteen- pound lump found in Prussia. In the earliest days amber seems to have ex cited the cupidity of man. I luring the reign of N'eroan expedili-ci was sent to the Baltic coast which brought back l-'l.OOO pounds of it, including ono specimen that weighed thirteen pounds. This was nearly all obtained in the regular vein or bell, that lies be- ween Pilluu and i!ro- llubeii icken, on the Prussian coast. Here are regular mines for the workers of amber. They evteti I to it depth of -100 feet, penetrating under a stratum of Mind, and then into a .st'a'nm of bituminous wood forty or lifty feet in thickness. These old ti links or re-; mains are more or less impregnated with amber. The supply d ies not di minish and pices are washed up after storms, showing that the ancient for ests are now under Wider far out in the Baltic, and thu gum being broken off during storms rises and is washed up. Such great 'iiiaiitities came ashore formerly that tho peasants ii.:ed nets to : catch it and dredges w ere used to drag tho bottom of the sea. "Tho mines all along the Baltic , coast yu 1.1 yearly about ;!')0,n.t pounds, and some one hits estimated that the amount still in the amber dis trict is worth ,' '. The vast amounts taken seem iucreirole, yet probably since the begintr'ng of this century 2''i0 tons have been unamcd and for the last 30 00 years over 00,000 tons have been taken from tho Baltic locality, aud made up into jewelry ' and articles of luxury. As the amber is taken from the mines it is pla. ed in baskets and stowed away in vaults arranged according to. the size and quality. In tho vaults of Fatcher Douglas the records can bo seen of mining as early as l,"o0." "Is amber found in this country?" asked the reporter. "Yes, it occurs at (iay Head, Mar tha's Vineyard, and Camden, X.J. In the latter dace, some years ago, sever al barrels were taken from the irreen sand, but burned by mistake, or rather through the ignorance of the finders. At tho present day it finds lH gnatest value a an adjunct to the smoker's outfit, but in olden times it was consid ered a jewel and worn as such. In an Irish tumulus a cup of amber h is been found that would hold a half pint. Tho C;ar (if of Kiissia possess es a tea set cut from amber blocks that are probably worth much more ' then treble their weight in gold. "For commercial purposes tho raw material is separated into different classes. The finest generally goes to . Constantinople, there being made into j mouthpieces. The next class, compos ed of small pieces, is made into beads. They find a lively sale abroad, but go j off rather slow here. A set of ambtr j jewelry pin, earrings can be bought very reasonable here, but at present there is no call for it. The low price is on account of there being no duty on it; curiously enough, it conies un der the head of gum and is admitted free. For the last year nearly 150,000 worth of it was imported, showing that there is some demand for it; but, its 1 have said, it comes from smokers. The dealers here buy it by weight; where about two bundled and fifty pieces make a pound it is $1.50. but w here four pieces go to the pot nd It runs up to $50 or ?N'0. as thi ca:o may be. It has many colors, lire n is most valued, though otV rs pr. f r Ida -k, t'.at matches well wi'h colored in fis hauin. The ro.d antl er yi-llow. how over, brings the be t pric"; tho cloudy is pietty, but not so valuable The Icy End. In the winter of "73, a man at( uint ed to cross tho froen surface of thu Merrimae. When about !'"i fo-1 f i t tho shore he broke through. A work man in ataw mill nrir by seized a plank and thrift it out to the drou n iug man. Vnf '..rliuiately, one end of th" plank wi'.s cvci-cd with i - e, an I '.li.it -'' '-lie Woil.maa, in hi ' ox- it ic .d, h el ex tended to the fcli-ogiihug iiiau. lie caught hold of it . v r.il linn -. an 1 tried to pull him ii If u,i I th !'jli-l "C B'lt at each atb mpt In hind -:'!: ' 1 and he fell hack in'... IV w it. r. At la.st h- cried in llieag my ten-, r "l'or hien y'., sake 1 '.i't f.-.e a t!-'? tho icy end i i the plank ! " A pcrpk'X'cd st ii.li .-!!, o if,1 went to a college pr s-.-ii' f : !:"';' in fl cm-tain study. -I am wili.ng to help you," tho professor said, w th chilling cour tesy, "bill i f i -e,;i'-' yn:i know th.it my time is fully o-cupicl, an I I can't mvo special intention tu every .tadent i What ' The yo.ir dlilicultv V tilde!;', statcl what had per plexed hill). (Hi that'.i nothing," an swcr3d thu prol s;. r. "yen don't H'"' 1 my help to g 't oat of that ui:!'c ulty. Still, when v-ii real I v lie a -sisiauoa I ccitaluly will ni'-'c it- ,Vi won't forevt that tiiv t in i. li'it yuu is v. tillable." Thu student bo ,v I !o- thanks and le , i ihg the he!;' ; departed, without he really nee led. 'I he i-y ,-:id of lh- ut t-j li '.n. From t'a.-t plank was held day ho bitterly, though tin. u.sll classed all the college pr ifev;..rs together, a--cold and imsymp.tl'ietk I to larricl this prejudice through his college course because ho had been denied ,i little j sympathy, j A few yea a a young minister and his wife bc-an tlcir work inn growing westen town. 'I heir people wero attentive and courteous, the sal ary was a up'.e, an I a new chinch cit. i lice was creeled. But in .-ss than a year the minister en 1 bis w ie ...nght a smaller chinch and a lower .-.ilnry. A friend, .siiri'rise.l at the change, ask'-d : "What was the matter? MdYt tie climate suit you ? "Perfectly." "Well, wasn't your church luiii, oni ons? " "Yes." "You had n fa r salan ? " "Yes, niorothiiii 1 get ti'. w." "Why li joii h ave, th"!i?" "Because iny will an I Iweret'rcd of liv.ng in a moi.d r. !rige;at. r. I'.vcrv one was kind, bet it w is a kind- ness wrappe-i in e e, s ii hey We had ...niiy." bad I e n I li.d v- -fe. were afraid it wo-il help enough, but n The icy end of tin extended to the iiii i!; A ('niitiiuii II.iI 1 1- A New York cunv: ll V.-'ii;!". i onth nt tell.s this st-iry : "Huntington, the N" v York railway lnagnaie, is a very iii'iltou man, a Wall street t peiator t. -Id me recently, "lie never gets left w here prudence will save him. I'm' instance, net long ago an atiuaintaiic..' of mine who lal been having some transactions with Huntington, went into h;s oilico and attempted to carry a icrta.n point by persistently claiming that Mr. Hun tington hail said so itii-1 so during a prcvio is conversation. 'My memory is very poor mi such tilings," said the magnate. "Mine is excellent; it i ns fresh us if it Were yc-'ei day," remarked my ne.'piaintaiicc "The lad is, my m.'O t ry n v ) .n.r 1 daro not ti list it, and I never .!puto my fi i mis in whom 1 have i te.r.deiu -e," continii"tl Mr. Muntimiton. "Thank you, thank you; I know 1 am right!" eja (dated my now run- fldent acquaintance, w ho was delight- fully thinking that by this little stroke he would be it few thousands better off than if he hadn't suspci ted I lie rail way man's defective meinoiy. "Very likely you're right - very like ly," quietly said Mr. Huntington. "But William! William, br.ng vonr book, turn to Jan. 1, lS';d, and see w hat it was 1 sai l to Mr. W." The stenographer stepped out from behind his little screen, brought out his littlo book, and my friend's little game was up. "Your memory isn't as good as you thought it, was," saiil Huntington. "William, perhaps you hail better w rite out what the gentleman has been saying here to day and read it to him so he won't forget it." As Huntington gunnel at this cruel sarcasm my iliscimiiite I friend sudden. l reiiciubi re 1 he ha 1 nu engagement with his brother, and lni..tened away. PEARLS OF THOUGHT. Kn'-ts get tangled worso by toying-Kindue-;?, pn farmed by rule, i.- no kindness. Sho neglect her heart who . lies her glas3. Industry is tho ci, . ;, H ; : of honor and indu.s'ry. Impatienco dries the blui.s - .-r than ago or sorrow. To succeed it is re. c-ifry to have tho air of succeeding Love, faith, patience the thr-- es sentials to a happy lit". We blnino others for slight th:ng:-. and overlook greater in ourselves. There are in woman's eyes two sorts of tears, the one of grief, the other of deceit. Women are happier in their illusions than iu their most agroeablo expe riences There are no pr rso-.s nv re solicitous about the preservation of rank than those who have no rank a' all. Xo a-;...;, will b- consid' red as bla.ncl unless the will w.i', s i, for by the ,ii '. lie (l"t H .1 i Oi. I. lied. power i-irns a deaf ear to tho reproaches f th s- who nr.1 without thu power of redress li- t.n ir wrongs. They w ho il l ,st !-. 'lli-i themselves, do so mostly iii the .-crest way of proving how iic-le ' ami . an lid tiny are. I. is th? gre .t art and ph:h-ophy of lifo to Iil.iUe tho best of the present, win tlier it be ,o id i r hud, to lit ar the one with resignation and ate re-o. and to enjoy the other with thaiiAluOies: and mo !! at ion. Every man hai in lu.i own f d'h. cno'.'gh -in his own n.in ! ti. ml !o ciioii 'ii --in tin; peri. i nt. i. ice i-f his t!i, 'it . tic;: ieii -ics ciiot gli in l.i- own fort iirn-s evi.s i-noiigli- - w .tho'it in lad ing it her j e-ipleV. b'.i -i:i'1 Winn! rfiil Western Wilier. H e pr,n! the following st .ry to -show that theiii lof Western wonders has not hi en i eat hid : "Thcie is said to If a p.-:i i i-.i-:; r Turkey Creek in Wauio Coii.ily th.i'. pes e is the rc inaii.ai.le power lhc 1. add oil e (if draw ng things up to it. They .say it is d.mireron.i for peoi k to go near Ihopond lest it draw then it t i it an I swallow them up. Th-1 way tho fe. liiark.i'.le nature t f tie p.m 1 was first discovered, is as follows; A fanner moved to the neii.libiiiiir.ud i.f the pond and soon discuvcrcl that by some mean or other he coiil I raise no stock As fast as he turned h ssto. '; out they would mysteriously dis;i;.;-ev. never to be seen ng.vn. On'- t'ay p happened that h" wn- parsing along and riw a flock of his .shetp, whit h approached the on-! to f;et water, one by one pass Irom the !...-, k into th- water, and dis appear Lcu nth its surface. It is said tho tree lor raids around 'ill ban toward the pond, btillg IHibient ed by Its altia tivc power." Live for Sinai thin :. ThoUvtii ! id it.-ii hrca'.hc, move ar.il live. pa;.s of tie- it t't "i l ie. and li ro heard oil" n.i n: -fe. V.'hy ? I le-y did n-t a p.nti. i. of .;. la t wo. 1.1. and lion were ! .- .! I tie :,. Collld J-.li! to tin - :.. I'M. ::-s f tiioir rclciiiptioi; int it lint1 th y wrote, not a word tiny ;-;inko eoild recalled, iiml so they pt i . - 1 their light went out in t!:e darkn- -. mid they w ere not rctm-mln red more than the insets of yesterday. Will you thus live ail-1 die? l.i c hi : fine' h ill:.'. Io good, and leave behi i i oii a in :i um.-iit of virtue that th. '.iil (.f time can never destroy. Write your n.i.ne by kindness, love and it -.ivy on the hcii'ts of the th i e-ai. !s yon come in Contact w ith yen by car, i d ; i w II never be f.-i . '-.!' n N'.i. v-ur n.i oe. you r dec'b, t.ll '.. -is I- . i h ,m t:-o hearts ol tlio n yon ie iv.-he.ti.i I .e. ilie stars on the brow f cven ng i.ot d deeds will shiie- a bt dit mi the r art u ns the stars of hi-avcn. del. I in New SmUli W.de.. .Notwithstanding the search for gold has been camel on ( .r thirty years in tho colony of New sotith Wales, new dcpos.ts are Continually bi ing discov ered, some of them in 1 i alities which were supposed to have Lt i n thorough!; cxaoiimd. Some ol tne fields recently iiiscovcre.1 preini-c tu epial i l cxtei,' and richness any discovercl in tin rarlv (hiy, while the iiliicsl field , though apparently exhausted, so far as the miner, unaide I by i.ipitnl antl skill, is capable of exhausting them, yet ion tain deposits of goltl wlihh w ill yield a rich harvest to the skilled miner w ho shall bring to bear upon them appli ances such u.s are being sin ccssl ulu employed els. v.h -re. tiuld lias alway -been fouid in a -iociatiin with certain fot illations, and th extent of coiiiittv ocilple 1 by these is seventy ilioiisaiiw s.jiiare lud s, or tie. il ly oiie-luiii tli of the whole art not the colony a o n aiib r.-'de jt-r!l. " f-rh'. h lire not L;n touciied by tho pick, ami ham oe.. The Three M '"or s. Tli( fli'tcfitno wooiig r!i --'.- r . Ati'l Mender look in ! c An I thonmi'li'ii lt-'e, i I .'' ;; ' ' Twm tli swci to-l . i, , - I: i ! e e 1. : An 1 lei tin-" el-- "Hl-O'i '' '" I I..!... 111? i..Vl, u. il .bv I - - ill ' Tlio H-Cf.i ' ivi'le- oi tit; ".'i.il i 1 Willi tie in-.--' i.fii i'-w ! ' " u"!dft i At. i Hie tni.iii.-i n ; ti. 1 ! !T U.i I to- linli- l"c t It'-r );'"' 1 . : o- -' : Aid l.er t,l llne'li.-i .It - ' 't'-oO ' "I t.att- l.ti. mil let l-.vi !;::" . ft- '- Wiu-.i r,,im. tin- il-.i-t, will, bi-im'litt ; l-l-.-:it, A ltd v.-.ii.i .;, tlie sin o .tun le :ott. Whii never a t-V.i. t i- '"! 'i''. TikhiIi sim km h t' woimt wn- 1)11 11 icli. "TltUll lilt., O I t-l't, KM. 1 i '(! O'l-t !! j Ami luiiinijK will I si ' i !i l'-c-" iiiMoitors. Makes tracks The ridroid builder. Brought down the lion I liO build ing mover. A bad ch rk is the w n nu man in the write plrn e. Edis..n says it is ma b's "lights" but his liver that is troubling him- Josh Billi'c;s lias made his success by throwing a peculiar p -!l over the public. Horse-dealer: "Why do ;. '! want to sell that pretty col'. '; He i.i u d broke yet, is he?" Owner: "Xo; but I fun." Women never will bo paid as much for lecturing as men, s.mply be am they have 'lone s" inm-h i' i to nothing- Tho High School girl heard Amy ro n. iii k yesterday: "Uli, keep dill; you make me tired." And she promptly informed her she should say: "Desist: you fatigue inc." "Do you believe in woman's lights?" she demanded, jai bmg him in the ribs witli her umbrella. "Yes," h" replied, as he moved to a safe distance, "I be lieve in woman's funeral rites," "Love lightens labor." "Yes, it does," is Burdette's conmvnt; "and when you've taken a fat girl out for a sail, and the wind goes down to a dead calm, and ou have six miles to row against the tide w ith a steering oar and a canoe paddle, 'labor lightens love,' now you bet your blisters." A scientist has discovered that there is three cents worth of gold in every ton of st ii-w. iter. Maybe there Is, but it is not. tie -light the information will lead to the establish) u nl. of a factory or mill, to gd ihe gold cut id the sea It Wftlld keep il lllilll too bllSV, sorting over a ton ol v.alcr. to find the three cents. "I know of a woman," '-ail the good deacon, bea.tiing mildly through his spectacles, "li . wants to be toicmost in all good work... but she is ,,i mortal slow that she never ffts ih. re till the good works h"i nil d'iie 'low? Why she's so si.iw that iV'n f l1 ii'itb-rtakos to malic an omelet, th ejg- spoil be fore she i an brt a', tie it. intothe dish." And the dca-on sighed until his sus penders r.cscd his troiis rs el. an up to his Knees. Prepared for a Whippim:. When llcv. Dr. Fid; was the pre siding o'ticer of Wilbraham seminary, there wa- one boy as full of mischief as a boy only can lie He taxed the well known clastic patience of Dr Fisk to the hist degreo. Finally the doctor said to him, after a e.iji.t.d a't o' misconduct. "You must prepare yourself l- r a seven- wlupj in.' Vlien the appointed tunc tame the doctor w is mi hand, more iiiecteil. ap I aren'ly, than the irrepressible mis chief maker. After a solemn iks-cours" in that most meitimr lone of voice that no inie can ever forget li . has heard it, the doctor drew bis rattan and l tid it with considerable Miction in on tho boy's back. Nothing but du t follow ed the blow. The subj. ct of the disci pline was entirely at his ease, and quite unconscious ol th" stroke. "Take oil your co.it, sir," was the next command -for the do tor was u little roused. Again win tied the rattan uro nnl the boy's shoulders, but with no m ire effect. "Take off your e.t, sir!" shouted the doctor. Off went tho vest, but there was another under it. "Off with the other!'' and to the astonishment of the n Iminist ra ter of justice, he exposed a dry codii.sh defending the ba :k of the culorit liko a shield, while below there was evi ilcntly stretched over other exposed pm lions of the body a stout leather apron. "What docs this mean?" ."aid th doctor. "Why," said the rogue, in a particu larly humble and persuasive voice, "you t.dtl me doctor, to prepare my self for punishment, and I've ). .w th Ir i! I could." It v 'it if th" 'I'lestlon to pm sua tho act of discipline any farther at that time. And it is doubtful whether it 'as resumed attain. ( hrMiun HW.Zj, v! s4 n V. -Vi