jr&5 V-iVt 5iyk, f I I)C tfiljatljam Uccorfc l)c Ijatljnm Hccovb. IJ. J.OiM)(), ED1TOU AM) FKOi'KIKTOi:. URMSOF SUBSCRIPTION, KATES ADVERTISING ;Onc square, one inertum Onc square, two insertions iOiio Kiguarc, one iimnlli . 3.60 One copy, tmrs year One ropy, six nnxit lis . One copy. Cove i!.nt 'i ; $ I. on :.o VOL. VIII. PITTSBOiar, CHATHAM CO., N. C, SEPTKMHKK 17, 1885. i Fit li'rer advertisements liberal con j tract will bu in;tie. NO A Morning (all, M hr i slu ;llf him rt'ini'iij f-ho xvi.ie n Kelt li;cl round hot li a 1, I ItT pipcllil villi. In liiiln. 1 In- fl wiu-im ui hit skirts xvi-ro loin, lli'i j-I nrs xvciij untied, lll'l ,j K'kl't XXaitl'll Imttoiis, unit "I'w.ia net exm-ily clt mi, And tlirttiili In i- win ii -out sli'ovod iiiifo pkiin llcl rllmvs i-i.'uhl he seen. 117. "i the ttrtivrt Imn l'l n lipi'li'.nw I i'i fliilVi Ihiir l.il.n Ian; I' il -nil-hint- l iv, II. i .n-m Mnilii i Hill Im.l ymvn IV I it It 111 I ililiiir.s :iv, lie i I lllr -.hoes nc di-ct.cl Willi luitvj, Sllllll' Illl-Itdnw flolMTs llllll;; Ni :u lit i l !i lltitiit, mill limn In r jnlo A -.-ni.dl n'tni-linitle Iiun.;. .1 ' n'a ii suit- thtihj 'I hut ni-viT xel lor conjurer I II I 1)1111 l.i', It Hlll hvl.ill, J Imn ill. t lining limn rvnl.i il ulnvrnnio I'ii in de a morning dill. 7,'iii'i7i'iiii .rics. An Uncommon Proceeding, "How cull it is growing," said Miss AViiit, tin) teacher of tliu common school in the then liri.sk lilllu manu facturing village ol' shall tick villi', lis she tietl on her .soft Miiu htitiil, button ed her warm Manuel cloak, looked at th window fastenings of the not over commodious or attractive but snug schoolroom, loe'icd her desk, and care fully shut the damper of the airtight wood s'ove, preparatory to quitting her domain of labor for the night. As she picked up her rubber over shot's ami stooped to draw them over her shapely kid boot, she cogitated: Oh, dear! Tommy Howe's red toes sticking so pathetically through those old gaping shoes fairly haunt me. 1 wur.iler if, in all this prosper ous, busy village, there is no way of getting that jioor child decently clad. I must think it over and see what 1 can do about it." Twenty-four hours later the leading man of the village, and the owner i f I he little factory there, who, years be fore, when a poor boy, h id stranded down from Vermont to this little hamlet, eccentric and brusque, but kind-hearted, keen-eyed, anil observ ant of all that was going on within his domain, was walking along the street and met i. bright eyed ami sprightly lad of 10 speeding ahead with that amusing, unconscious, con- sequential air that a boy carries with his llrst brand-new pair of limits. "Old Sam" Wliittier, as this gentle- man was familiarly called, not by reason of adv meed age by any means, but because of his supremacy as tho mill-owner and employer of all the help in the hamlet, took in the silua- Hon at a glance, and called out to the absorbed child, "Hullo, yotingstcr! where d'ye get them fellers?" "Teacher gave them to me, sir," and the lad's tattered cap came quickly off, and lie stood with it in his hand. "Does she buy boots for all tho boys In the school?" he growled out. "lines! not; but she bought .Toe Mriggs a speller and .Linn Cass an arithmetic, and shu gives away stacks of sl.tte -pencils ami paper and ink, and such things." "What made her go and buy them nice boots for you?" "Mie saitl she wanted to, sir; ami when I saitl I had no money to pay her for tht in. she said she'd rather bo paitl in perfect lessons; ami I will try ii iv best to pay for tlu-m in that way, you may be sure, sir." "I'reliy good .sort of a teacher, is she, bub?" "Oli, yes, indeed' I guess she must be the best teacher that ever lived, sir she tells us about so many things that we never knew before; and she wants us to bn good and honest anil not tell lies, and she says we shall be men and women by and by, and she wants us boys to know something so we can own factories our own selves some time. The other teachers we've bad only hcard our lessons and let us go, but she's so different!" "Well, well, bub. I shall have to think this business over a little. Now run along, and go to scratchin' over them 'perfect lesson.0.' 1 don't sup jioso you'll find a person in Shattnck ville a hotter judgo of perfect lessons, or how much they are worth, both to the teacher and to the scholar, than Old Sam' Whittier. So, bub, look lifter your ways, and 1 shall look after you." Tho next morning a liltlo note writ ten in a coarse business hand was dispatched to the teacher by the hand of one of the children. It ran as fol loxvs: "Miss Wait: I have heard of some rather uncommon proceedings on your part as a t.'acher toward your scholars. I would like to inquire of you person ally as to particulars. Will you do we the favor to run over tu my house tli'ectly afte. the close of your school this afternoon. "SAMl l-.I. WlllTTIFU." "What can 1 havn i!oie?" thought that little teacher. In su h n pet orbed stu'.u of mind that she i or rue ted John- ny Pnow's mistake In his multiplies t ion by telling him seven times nine was fifty-four. Indeed, she let the mistake go .so lung that every little hand belonging to the second primary class was stretched up in a frenzy of excitement. "Let me see; what is it I have done the past week? I switch ed liobbie linker pretty smartly, to be sure and I kept Sam Woodruff after school -and 1 kept Marion Fisk in from recess fur whispering; but 1 must keep order. Well, dear me, L havo tried to do my duty, and I won't wor ry;" nnti Miss Wait resolutely went back to "seven times nine," anil so proceeded in the usual routine. Hut she ate no dinner that noon, and hail a decided headache as she crossed the big bridge over the hill to the mill-owner's residenco. "1 shall not back down in anything where my clear duty and self-respect are Involved," thought she. "I havo set up a certain ideal as to what a teacher of these little common schools ought to be, and 1 will, Hod and my mind, good courage and health not forsaking me, bring myself as near to it as possrhlo. Moreover, 1 will not consider, in the premises, who; her tho cholars aro children of the rich or j learned, or of the poor or ignorant, j For the time being Cod has placed in my care ragged, dirty little wretches of a factory village, as well as clean, well-dressed, attractive children." '(out! evening, good evening, ma'am," said "( ld Sain" Whit tier, in his gruff way, meeting the teacher at the door. "As 1 said in my note to you, I heard to dav of some rather un- j common proceedings on your part. 1 saw, ma'am, little Tommy Howo in a i new pair of boots this morning. Do ' you know how he came by them j "1 bought them for him, Mr. Whit j tier," wondering whether the local ; magnate suspected the poor child of stealing, j "Oh. you ditl! Are you in the habit of furnishing your scholars with such . articles? Was the providing of boots j a part of your business contract with ; tint committee? If it was, 1 can put i you iu the way of buying boots at wholesale in lioston, where I get my j supply lor lux re." j "It will ii i iixessary, sir," re- i plied the te.n I . with dignity. "I , thank you for your kind otter, how- j ever." j "Why did you fi.rnish boots in this particular cae. if I m ly inquire?" j "The lad is very poor. His mother ! has her hands full with the smaller children. Tommy is learning rapidly; 1 tee marks of rare intelligence in him. i it would be a pity to have him taken out of school at this time when he is so much engaged, should ho contin ue coming clad as he was in such weather as this he would be ill soon. I could not take the risk in either ease." "Are you able to let your heart get tht; better of you in this way?" "I have my wages only." replied the young woman. Willi dignity, j "ihen you probably will have to ; ret rem h not a little in your ow n ex ! penses." . --If 1 do it will harm no one's purse 1 or pride but mv own. In this instance j it may be the matter of a pair of ; gloves or an ostrich tip with me. j With him the little act may make ti ! difference that shall be Listing through j t'me and eternity." "Von have been attending that school over to South lladlcy, I hear?" "Yes, sir." "Have you been through it, or grad uated, as they call it?" "Oh, no; 1 havo attended "but two terms, lint 1 am fully determined to complete the course." "I I mil all right. Miss Wait, you seem to bo doing some good work among the children over the river there. I mil going to think it all over; but look here -if any more of those little rascals need boots, let me know. I shall consider it a privilege to provide t hem. You know 1 can obtain them at wholesale ha! ha!" ami the noxv greatly relieved teacher's interview with the mill-owner ended. "If she goes on teaching on and off, ami then taking a term on and off at Mount Ilolyuke, she can't graduate for years," ruminated OKI Sam Whit tier, as he watched her tripping on over the hill; "it's ridiculous." And so it came to pass, when Miss Wait was paid her small salary at the end of tho term, she found in the en velope containing the order on the town treasurer a check with a slip of paper pinned to it, reading thus: "This may bo an uncommon pro ceeding, but 1 thought it over and have concluded thai you had better go right abmg in your studies at South II ail ley until you graduate. Alter that, with your pluck and principle, you will be able to invest in boots or books, or in any way you see lit. Very truly yours, -Smi I I. WlllTTIl;l!." 1 leave this true little sketch with out comment, it curies :is own lev son, both to struggling young t.ucMers LAND OF THE ESfJUMAUX. with hearts and brains, and to pros- j perens men of affairs, who may lend a borne Trnits or the IVuple in helping hand to deserving one.'. j tim Arctic notions.. (,'nml's 'Jype. J A oavace Kaco who C;m Draw Maps and "Oath" says in an article on (it neial j Have Tremendous Appetite (rant in the Cincinnati Kiiiihi r: In J the great men of the past we find ; Writing about the F.Mpiimaiix in mmo of the tvpe of (ienoral (irant. j the New York Tim Lieut. Schwatka Cromwell ami Wellington suggest noways: "They are rude topographical resemblance to him either in origin or ! engineers as well as sculptors, and are temperament. Among modest hemes j extremely good map makers for such like Admiral De Kuyter he might bu j unkempt savages. Nearly every while classilicd but for the supreme honors ' ,;,, explorer or other-vise, who has ho has attained. Jt was told of l-M, visited their country and as.soci.it ed Hoyttr that on the morning after a j wm, t10m speaks of this trait being battle of four days a visitor found him j VL,ry r(mspicioiis in them. It seems sweeping his cabin ami feeding his especially well d-v eloped in the worn chickens; and "when decoraled with rn, although manv of the men, 'from honors and titles by every I'rinceof Kuropo he never In the slightest tle greo overcame his innate modesty." Ilolh De Kuyter, who was taken out of a nipe yaitl, ami (ir.int, out of a tannery, were sincere republicans, graduated by a sense of duly that sup- pressed all restless, vulgar ambition (irant is the earliest, fruit of that per fected and simplified republicanism which was seeded and ripened beyond the Ohio river. Ho is not only Amer- icau, i.iu .win-western, rcopie wno . Rre.,t falljh. ,. ra,.e whk.h cil,)S are seeking in him traces of the old J ,,. Anieri'can Continent. Xoth- Colonial gentry, like Washington, are ; jM!, so ,,ieased the little ones of the ignorant of tjjeir country mid its ex- i,,nuits as a pencil and a clean piece pansion. What Washington but dim- j ()f ,,.,,,,. whi,.,1 U(.y C()llM ,,r.lw ly conceived the ago and locality of J ., WouM ., Krp (irant have fully realized- a powerful : iU,.lil, s.,1(iin!, ml,isAn producing democracy and its home heroes. lie . fearful hieroglyphics, until the sheet was lorn on the public land, went to h,kni uke ., ,,;Ut,.rr, sheet from a la-land-endowed Public Schools, and was I ,;,,.' fils.i,)n ,,,:1,,..1i,. The nautical tho son on both sides of pioneers. Tho whole machinery of tho l-'odcral Con stitution and the statutes of tho gov ernment of tlie North-western Terri tory hail gone into operation wlu came upon the stage. No other Presi dent except Lincoln had been exclu sively Western grown, and Lincoln was born in Kentucky, though of Pennsylvania descent. (i rant's stock is Puritan and Penn sylvauian. He is of I'.nglish Puritan stock, which came to this country in li':!", ten- years after the Pilgrim Fathers. New Theories Alnul Failing. Dr. I;. M, J lodges, once read a paper lief ore the lioslon .Society for Medical Improvement, in which he touched on this question upon which doctors disa gree, ami said: "It is a common im pression that Intake food immediately before going to bed and to sleep is un- ; wise. Such a suggestion is answered by a reminder that the instinct of ani- j mals prompts them to sleep as soon as j they have eaten: and in summer an after-dinner nap. especially when that : meal is taken al mid-day, is a luxury i indulged in by many. If the ordinary hour of the evening meal is six or seven o'clock, ami of the first mo.ning 1 meal 7 or 8 o'clock, an interval of twelve hours, or more, (lapses with out food, and for persons whose nutri tion is at fault this is altogether too long a period of fasting. '1 hat such au interval without loud is permitted explains many a restless night, ami much of the bead ami backache, ami the languid, half-rested condition mi rising, which is accompanied by no' appetite for breakfast. This meal it self often dissipates these sensations. It is, t her fore, desirable, if not cs-en- ti.il, when nutriment is to he crowded, ! that the last thing before going to bed j should be tho taking of food. Sleep- lessness is often caused by starvation, I and a tumbler of milk, if drunk in the 1 middle of the night, will often nut n people to sleep when hypnotics would fail of their purpose. Food before ris ing is equally important and expedient. It supplies strength for bathing and dressing, laborious ami wearisome tasks for tho underfed, and is a better morning -pick-mo-up' than any tonic' " A Trick in the Coffee Trade. New methods of imposing upon the trade are continually being discovered. Factitious strength is given to some things by tho addition of strong acid; low grades are being mixed xvith high grades, anil imitations of popular names are very common. I he last enormous appetite, an Ksquimau hoy, new dodge is in the coffee trade, supplied by ( apt. Perry, of the royal Kvery buyer likes to have a glossy navy, while wintering among them, bean, but of course as the beans grow 1 devoured in one day over In pounds oltl a part of this glossiness disappears, of solid food and drank of tea, collee, and the purchaser can tell that what ii anil water over a gallon anil a half, shown him has been gathered a long A man of the same tribe, (one of time. Modern ingenuity cannot thus , those not far from North Hudson Hay, be put to fault. Tho coffee beans of i where 1 wintered,) ate 10 pounds of an old stock are placed in a revolving 1 solid material, which included a couple cylinder with a fexv -drops of cotton- ! of candles, and drank of various liq seed oil, and the cylinder is then set in ' uids a gallon and a half, and these motion. The small quantity of oil thus people were only about 1 to 1' feet in introduced restores the collee to its or- ' height. I might give some instances iginal appearence, and the manipulator in my own party, but being a practi can sell his consignment for a cent cal convert to tho theory of the neces inore a pound than he could the day sity of considerable food in that cli beforp. The frail 1 can be detected by mate I shall desist, putting a number of beans into a cof- The Fsqtiimaux have often been ac fee cup and filling it with water. In a ' cused of eating tainted meat. This is few minutts there will bo a lilm of nil I true to a limited extent. The fat on the surface. Cow. Lnuinr. I their greater amount of journey'ngs I over ar.d around a country, are often ' in a position to make more accurate I drawings in the details or particular I places. 1 have hail several occasions I to use them as man makers, and find j rlll(. ,litL, ..,.ratP( g,i rnough at least to enable me to recog nize the places I was trying to make out. Thesti propen-dtics for drawing and carving have often been utilized bv ethnologists to show the origin of almanacs an I books of tallies for the party were profusely ornamented xvith these rudo drawings, and tho more im portant records only escaped a similar fate by being kept under lock anil key when not used by us. The ornamental displays in the sew- I ing of I he women are those which are conlined to the limited varieties ol colors to be found on the seal and reindeer. The fur of the latter in its prime is in the darkest-colored ani mais quite a glossy black on the back, the flanks and belly being white, and between these extremes every shade of gray can be found. The skin of the former is tanned in two ways, one of which makes it black, tho other a dirty white, and their Dost sewers combine these furs and skins in de signs often quite intricate, anil not without pleasing effect. None of the men or boys know much about sew ing, although I doubt if like other savages they consider it degrading, in so many things do they assist their women with. their work. As a war party is wholly iiiiknouu among them, and these are the only kinds of parties I among most savages una-companied I by women, it is seldom that the In ! units have not their footgear in the very be.-t condition, and somebody al xvays xvith them to keep it so should it get otherwise. , ine of t he dut it's of the F.squiinau women is to chew the linles ol the tinli-ju'.li (great seal) that are intended for Hie soles ami footcovenng of th-i sealskin boots, this process rendering them more nearly waterproof, ami they may be seen thus engaged in almost every tent or snoxvhoii.se. lSy the time they are old crones and too weak from age to i hew on the sole leallier any lunger, their teeth are worn down almost to their gums xvith the constant attrit.on. They will often do this labor as a pastime while employed al some other work which urilv t-Pn II i lltiiilll ll.ill' the ill t en t inn i ,. . , , , . 'llllil the IIS0 lit nlle 1 1 : 1 1 1 1 :is f'linkllii. j leaving tho other hand free to roll the j great bolus of seal leather around in the mouth, thai keeps opening ami j shutting all diiy xvi'h the regularity of a w i lull 1 1 ill pump, and with just such spasmodic variations, according to the ; intensity of the mental xx ind. It would hardly do for one to imag ine that an Ksquimau could tin! his jaws xvith wagging them, so constant ly do soma of them keep them going in eating their almost continual lunch es of raw froen meat and hot tidbits from the stone kettle hanging over the stono lamp. As an example of their , i s of seal and walrus are stored away in tho .Summer fur future us?, and this fat is a true preservative, j never allowing the meat to go beyond I rancidity, that is to putrefaction, and I no more in that state than is caviar, I ami some kinds of game and cheese, i All the lean meats, such a reindeer I or musk oxen, are generally dispose I ! of immediately in the warm Summer j and only put in caches alter freezing i weather has come on. The general I impression of people is that they drink oil (rendered from fats ) of all '. kinds almost a copiously as we drink water, and yet 1 have seldom seen them do this, and understand thai it is only done to avert starvation, except i salmon oil. 1 doubt if they use as j much oil as sumo civilized nations. : In the shape of huge chunks of blub ber from the whale, seal, or walrus, i they consume enormous quantities, but to drink it in the pure state, or to even use il as a dressing for any oilier cooking, is very rare indeed. The Ksqiiimaux in and around ih- month of lilack's (ireai Fish Hivcr catch quantities of fat salmon, and a great deal of oil is obtained from these fat fish. This oil I have seen tin in drink and have soured It myself. About ; the middle of December, I To in our midwinter sledge jonraey from the Arctic Se.i to Hudson liay. uur supply of twiil win (reindeer fal ran very low. and so did the thermometer, and we noticed the disappearance of our fatty food very conspicuously in the greater effort that was necessary to keep warm. Alter mailers had been .running this way two or three days, one of my Iuiiuit slcdgciucii came to nit: and show cd me a couple of recep tacles, being reindeer bladders, each holding nearly a quart of . salmon oil, and poured me out a gill of the stuff from one, which he told nm to drink to drive a way the cold. My repug nance for the odor 1 soon overcame, knowing the usual after effect, and I downed the dovasan old toper would his morning drink, but xvith a horrible grimace. I might add that the effect of warmth, a pleasant glow all over the hotly, was apparent about as soon as if I hail taken that amount of alco hol, although one xvoiild imagine that the oil would have to digest a rding to known laws of assimilation before producing warmth, several times af terward I repeated the agreeable dose, ami always found the same effect of g'Hiial warmth. (rant's I'eruli u Mc. In battle or in command he wore a blue blouse and no sword, a plain slouch hat, dark trousers, and top boots. Kven his horse equipments did not indicate his rank. When he went to Kuropo in 1STS he was com pelled to buy a new uniform, as his old one was worn mil. lie bought but three while general of Hie army. At table ho ate but litlle, and lli.d ol tho plainest, and in the hitler years of his life used no wine. As an escort, for ladies, the assurance of one ol the brightest ami most lovely women who has graced Washington social lilc.lh.it "(ieneral (irant was the most accept a- ble of all the escorts she bad ever h id at dinner," is warrant enough for tho statement that he xxas a gentleman in social life ami at the table, lie xxas entirely a moral man, never using prol.ine language, ami ha I a contempt for vice and immoral men. He xxas fond of children and they id him- be cause of positive evidences ol liellBVo lcnce of loth head and heart. He stootl fatigue readily, and c mid go without food or sleep lor a long time. On horseback he sat easily and rodo with gr.ve as West. Point men usual ly do. Ho had a keen memory for those who abused him, either by speech or in the press, and never for got them. Ho hated and liked with manly vigor. He had one old-timo I virtue, fast becoming obsolete, devel oped in the highest be liked bis friends and would stand by them. I'liihiilt liliin I'nss. Mexican Policeman. The police system of the city of Mexico bents anything in America. A Mexican policeman is a strong, line looking young man, xvearing a military uniform anil openly displaying a six shooter. He does not. spend his tune walking the sidewalk, lust to sight in a crowd of people. His heat is the , middle of the street, where ho can set 1 ami be seen. He does not dodge ve hicles, but makes them dodge him. No nonsense is tolerated, and the po lice rather cnji.y a row. They keep splendid order - Wlnihn-i lnjii-tir. I I So Near ami Vet so fur. I iHihiti lUnlr "Melintla.how did you I iiko my serenade last night ?" Mi lhnln" didn't like your posi tion." "My position ? My attitude, you mean." "No, your position. You xveren't I far enough away for me not to hear ; you, and you weren't close enough ! for me to scald vou." Call. HOME OF THE ELEPHANT. Interesting Description of the IslHnd of Ceylon. A Mountainous Country with a Steadily Increasing Population. Tho island of Ceylon is 70 inib s In length, 150 in breadth, and very mountainous near the center, (here being mountains ranging between ;i,oiln and 7,1)1 M) feet high, ten of which are above the bitter limit. Tho high est is Pidurutalago, S.lI'.Mi feet. Large tracts of the island aro still covered with dense jungle, in which many wild elephants arc to be found; but the wanton slaughter of these useful ani mals led tiie governmenl to prohibit their destruction except under special permission. Of late there havo been great progress and improvements in the means of internal communication. There aro good roadxvays, metaled and graveled, ami noxv IT miles of rail way ami Pi7 inilciof canal, which have done much to promote the interests of (lie country. The population has been steadily increasing, and noxx it numbers J.s-.in mm, Therearc Kuropi ans, Kura sians, and lsurghcrs, Sinhalese. Tamils, Moors, and a tew Parsees, Alghans.Ma lays, anil others. The Sinhalese inhabit theinterior and pails ol (lie coast, ami comprise nearly J.m union ,,f the peo pie, xx Idle the Tamils occupy the north ern portion of the island, and number about t'liin.iiiiii. The i'.uropeans are comparalixely fexv in number, being under fi.ni.'i); but of Kurasians and liurghers there are nearly Js.imiii. There are 11 ,"" Moormen, xx ho are to lit; found iu large numbers all over the different provinces. 'I he postal service throughout tlie island is in a very satisfactory state. Scarce a town or village but boasts of a post oiliee, ami ere long they are to have added to them tho all-important savings bank, which tloe-i so much to iniluence thrift and economy. I he island has many institutions for the sick and the diseased in body and mind, and in education the people are far in ad vance of their northern neighbors. Knirlish is pretty generally spoken, and particularly a ng the domestic class. The products of the country are very varied, and consist of rice, cinnamon, coeoanut, paints, tobacco, sugarcane, ami cotton, and bitterly coffee, cinchona, india rubber, and tea have been added. The land is aduiira bly adapted for the gioxvtli of rice. Tho cultivation til t units has been gradually increasing, ami, though a large quantity is exported, a largo trade is done in the coir liber from tho husk and in expressed oil Irom the nut. The cultivation extends nearly all along the west part ol Hie island. The great planting industry, boxvever, is now collet' and tea. For many years, timing the orciipation of tllt Dutch iu 1V4". the cultivation ol cof lee was oi.nmicd to the low-lying country, hut il. aiiot until the oc cupation by Ho' llrilish, xxlu ii eomiiiu nii alion bet ween Hi'- hill tountry and lhecoa-t was made, that it .gin to lloiirish, and since then it has lieen gradually extending all over the ten tiai i ii-1 wc-ieru provinces. I'ho opening "I I be rail xx ay bet with Kail tly and i o,,iul did much to stimulate Ho-industry by supplying heap free labor and greater facilities lor the market. Large quantities of jungle were cleared an I planted, and every thing seemed to insure a permanent good investment, hut an em my ap peared in the field who beitan his devastation and has continued steadi ly to dimmish the productive power ever since till lie has reduced the ex ports to less than a lifth of what they were. Tho enemy is a ininut" fungus on the leaf. II appeared in a remote corner td one ol I he young collee dis tricts ami spread with the greatest rapidity all over the entice gardens. The leaves assumed a bright orange spot, ami then they withered and de cayed. Tho consequences of such a failure, following on the investment of a number of planters in the high districts, lcil to the most serious con sequences and ruin. These losses convinced many that the climate ami character ol the soil were admirably adapted for the cultivation of tea. ami tho result has heen that thousands ot acres under collie cultivation have noxv been (hanged to tea. and the jungle is being cleared for the exten sion of the cultivation of the plant. -aiiistmr Hi mill. A Texas I.niiillnily. Mrs. Flayjack (to fat bo,,rder): "How long will you be absent from Austin ?" Hoarder --"Why, I'm not going to leave town." Mrs. Flapjack "Will you lie here to supper tonight?" Hoarder "Yes, mum." Mrs. Flapjack- "Then why don't you wait till then for a second cup ol coffee?" - I'livs biftinjx. Hope. ptoi tn ovei hunting Dal Kens tho (iluiii! Jt-uct- mod tlimutil Itimluua tho bruin. 'i lie wind (hut puanoi live! tho mitt sll Sounds in th kiussis Milieu nnti lntLsIi. Ilouii linn' the duikiir-ua t titlini; its tviiy, l.ii'iiins fioni the heavens line binlii my. 'J'ht-M! hi tho (etniest, I hietil) nnl xvith Illicit, I III' (ltll'le lloxver Sp.nkles Willi lihl' Iln hml I.. Jliiir nn in thr Current. Ill MOKOFS. looking and lying are tho lisher man's crying sins, A cyclone is like a waiter. It car ries everything before it. Tho bird family must havo a jolly time Hoy have so many larks. The burglar, like his friend the phi losopher, "lakes everything as it come-." "I I where tloes beauty linger?" de manded a (junker City poetess. Asa usual I hing. she lingers in tho parlor until lu r mother has cleaned up tho kitchen. ( if the seven successful candidates lor the Presidency during tho past txveuty -eight years live are ilea I, while of the seven unsuccessful aspirants live art alive. There's a fanner bov in Ohio, who has the making of a "funny man" iu him. lie recently wrote an ode to tho dead mother of his pet laud', and called it ii Kxvc logy." A witty paragrapher has relieved his mind by saying that "Miss Liber ty" will not be lonesome way down on Hotline's island: .-he will be out with the "buoys," you know. In Kentucky a bolt of lightning cut the rope by which a mule was tied without scorching a hair. Lightning takes terrible risks sometimes; but tSis was the most fo ilhardy thing tho electric lluid ever tlid. Next limu it mav not got. oil so ea.-iilv. Ciiitciic) of the Ciinnih.'l Mantis. Mr. Waller Come has described some, curious moneys of the New He brides ami the Solomon Islands. On one of the islands he noticed a neatly kept house, which he xx as told was tho money hnuso. Filtering it, be found a number of mats hanging from tho roof, beneath which a lire was con stantly kept up, under tho effect of whuh they became covered with a black glistening coating ami adorned Willi festoons of soot, it xxas a man's business to keep the lire always burn ing, mi l so b-w as not to scorch tho ma's. A well-colored mat is worth about as unit b as a well-grown v igo rotis boar, This is tlm strangest of all Kinds of money, for it must never he taken from the money house, even xx hen the tit lo is transferred from unit exx nor to another. The inhabitants of S.int.i Cruz Island use for in-mey, r-.pe-emls. alioiil an inch Unci., and ornamented with a st arlet font hers, which are worn about the waist, i'ho traxeler could not obtain new coins of of this kind, but found them current, everywhere. The specimens lie bought were already c'.-J, and the Icat tiers I grown dingy. The money of the Sol- onion Islands consists of neatly work- e l pieces of shell of about the size of jour sliirt-hutttiiis. They are strung j on strings about four yards b-ng, ami I are distinguished under the names of ' rod and white money. Dog teeth are id higher value, and comparable to our gold coins. They are usually worn on a string around the neck. Mr. Coot e saw a necklace oi this kind that xxas valued at about one hundred dollars. Marble rings are also worn on tho breast for ornaments, and as valuable money. The Man with the Camellia. "L'lloinine au Caiuellie" ('i'ho Man with the. Camellia) is the heading a French paper gave lately to a sketch of one of the many original figures to be seen mi the Parisian boulevard. Though invariably clad in the shab biest attire for excellent reasons tho imlix itlual in question is never without a uiaguuict nt white camellia at his but ton hole. A v ear or two ago he hail, it seems, a rare run of luck at the green table, and with eccentric prudence, he determined to ensure, in tho season of his priority, that, whatever priva tion the turn of fortune's wheel might bring with it, ho should never want for his favorite flower. He asked his thin-Mi one day accordingly what sum she would take to supply bin. with a white camellia every day ft the rest of his life. The amount fixed upon a very considerable one, as may be sup posed w as paitl on the tipot, anil noxv the ruined gamester struts daily along the asphalt, rejoicing in the possession of a camellia worth rather more than the coat it adorns. TP"