$l)c aifjatljatu flccorb. II. A. LONDOrS', EDITOK AKD I'K0I'KITOIt TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION, ONE DOLLAR PER YEAB Strictly InAdvanci. National Flowers. In. crown and seal the royal Rose fi sign And symbol sweot of Kngland a sover eignty; Old fiance her banner Oiled with fleur ele Us, And (iei m in flags shake out the Corn flow er'o hlit no. The Thistle is the Scotsman's kingly flower. And Ireland proudly waves her Shamrock green. Rut i I cur flag no ono flower might tie seen As emlil in el our greatness. Splendid shower A 'I blossoms on Mir vsstiio.'s-- lily, rose, Tim thistl", slioim-tx k, cornflower, thou - MlllJs IIIOIK, That grow from stern Alnsln to Oulf sllOlO, And hloo-n liy windy bench or mountain snows; All flowers of us- or he-nuty (Ind bestows To grace our lioun lai aes and their se'opo dls eloe. Kmily E. F. ford in Unrp'i'i Wrrlilij. WANTED--AN HEIRESS. HY I'MVX A. IIOtM'KR. "Here's , sloiy for yen!'' said Mis. (Jerry to n li'eisiy friend, Heated in her handsome iHror, Her jolly, mtlronl fare broadened wi h smiles ut an apparently di verting Iccollection. 'You wouldn't civ Jit the incident if you rend it; but hi I wns nn rye-witness, I tan voueli for it. You'll lie paid for listening; it's really too good! "I took what I tailed a vacation nf ter we got dono w ith Asbury Park and Saratoga last summer. Mi (terry was going west on a two-week's business tiip, n ml sai l I: " 'I've worked hard this summer, nnd I'm going to tako a rest. I've talked amiably to five hundred thru a id pro. pie I haven't eared for; I've rowed and Railed nil summer, though it in ik Mine sick, an I luthed roijiously, when I lmleit; I've chaperoned a milt ton pirls to iloiugs of all sort 4, an I even fii-ejed-eil in getting one or Iw.i engvgoil nnd I'vo earned n perio I of pnico. I'm go ing In cpeiM tho two w -e ks of your nb.-ciir-', Mr. fieri y, in a wiodl.iud re treat.' "Well, it wasn't that precisely, bit it was passable. I went, to a l:ttl hotel in the ( 'ntskills. I found to) miiiiy co ple there to suit m , though. O il Col onel Mailow ennie the n--xt day--an cn tomologicil old clank, erivuig his por tion ; he carries n trunkful of dried beetles and things about with him; ami Harry Fosdick was therewith hU friend Mr. Picr?on. "I had met Fosdick before, anl nbom inutcd him for a e-onceilrd sprig and an heiress hunter. Mr. Pieis-m was a lank young denture, with nn inane smilo and n ni 1il lo parting lo his hair. "They wirj two of a kind, ami most congenial, till tho new wn tress burst upon the seen .. If the new waitress didn't stir things up ! "Polly, her name w.ij. Tho other girl were the regulation :ort, imported from tho ci y, I imagine, fn.:.vl hair, r.'d jerseys, pert ways ym knowlhem, "Polly was un oasis in the desert. Polly wa-.n't exnetly prelly, hut she wn.i na frsh ami blooming as a rose, as neat, ns wax, nml ns bright ns a dollar. I fnirly nabbed her for m t.ible.niid kept her; and wo got to bo very good frionds, Polly and I. "Old Colonel Marlow was at my table. Ho luooucd at mo threo times n day through his spectacles, mid talked moths and nio-ipiitocs to mo till I felt liko one of his pin stuck speci mens. "Hut after Polly camo the colonel bent the light of his glasses on her with vivid interest. I thought at first that tho old absurdity was in lovo with her. "Hut that wasn't it. llo followed mo out to tho pin..t nno day; ho looked excited. " 'Mrs. (.,,'rry,' said ho, 'I havj mlo a inn likable discovery cxlMonliiinry ! Do you know tho identity of the young woman who serves at our tnlileP "'I know sho lives down the road somewhere, ' slid I, 'in a vine tl id cot tage, probably, ami tint the proprietor of the hotel, having lion dit Ini' ter and eggs from her father, mi In hoi I to ask Polly to till the vaemcy lift h thi su l den departmo of a waitrcsi, and that Polly being obliging and n t bio prou I to turn an honest penny, camo along.' "The colonel linked si. "That's what tin landlord has given mil,' said he. 'Tho story is a fatiiie.v tion. Listen, Mn. (J 'iryl Thii' young woman is Mits M iry or Polly, ns she is cslle 1 by intimates Miss Polly (iard ner. I m an old friend of her grand father's, an 1 I have S'icn her freiitnptly. Ynu have heard of her) Slio is hoircss to half a million.' "I had heard of her. She wai a friend of tho I.emoynos, an I tho 1,- mo) nes are frie id) of mi no. I laujlied a full nun ire. " 'The last 1 heard of Mi-s (.miner,' aid I, 'he was in Knrope. 1 don't think she's returned.' " 'That young p.-rson is Mis Polly Gauluer, sn;4 (be colonel, pcmun'.oil- 1 1 VOL. XI. ly. 'I rccognizod her at a glance at a glance, Mrs. (Jerry. " 'You are short sighted, colonel," 1 ventured, 'and perhaps a little absent niinde I.' " 'Possibly, M.rs. fierry,' said the colonel with digiity, 'the fact remains that I recognise M'si Gardner beyond doubt, strange though tho fact may seem.' " 'She is, then, out of hor senses?' said I, pitiently. " 'I trust not,' said the colonel. 'But Misi (i miner, Mr. Jerry, is a whimsical young womri. She has a reputation for peculiarity. Her largo and independent fortuno has made her somewhat crochety. I am not greatly astouiihed at th's frcik, remukablj though it is. Evidently she has tired of gaieties, frivolities, an I has taken this cour) for a rompl-to change. 1 have read of such things,' ssi I tho col onel, thoughtfully, 'but never before hare I seen it. If it wero tin n-t of any but an eecn'rie, self-wille 1 yung woman, I cou'd not b dieve my eyes. " 'Hut nobody i u'side of a mad house, said I, and c )nidera'ly more in that strain. "All in vain. When the colonel be took himself an I hit bn terfl,'-ii"t nn 1 his bottle of ether in'.o tho wooils, somo time later, it wm with his phenomenal belief unclrin ;o 1. "'I shall not arrnst hr,' said ho. 'An expo.-uie would uu loubtedly an'ioy her.' " '1'ndoubtc lh-,' sni 1 I. ''That's the first chapter of tho com edy. To comprehend 111-; seipiol you must understand that t'ie c ilonel it gnrrnlmii. Wh- n I saw him talking to Hairy I'teidick, nn I later b .Mr. P.erson when I nb"iii'd them listening with open mouths and bulging eyes I knew what he was mipaiting. "Now, I'm iliscie-t and far-seeing. 1 kpt my coii!iel an I awaited develop ments. "Snro enough, the Iittlo Fosdick j lined me in the parlor one morning. '"Tint is a cliarni'ng girl at your tab'e, Mrs. fierry,' said h". 'And a lady. That is evident. I m ty as well confess tliit I am in le'i iinpressod with her. Home me'i would biuili to confess it, Mrs. (Jerry, nicely became she has not a high social p isition nor money. I,' said t he Iittlo wretch, 'am n man of more imb-p ndeuce. 1 ad into Mis' Polly a id I own it bold y.' "H.ih! how I wanted to tako him by the collar and shake him. H it I knew his sin would ovcrlako him, for I knew his corrupt litibi ha 1 was teeming with thoughts of th'i (iirdner h ilf- million. Wnere pure meanness is o incernil I "in merciless. 1 own that I chuckled. "Then camn along Mr. Pierson, of the lady-like hair. lie referred to Polly in terms of warm approval. " 'When I marry, Mrs. fierry,' he re linked, 'I marry tho girl of my heart's choice, an I int the parti indie.ite.l by worldly prudence. If it bo necessary to slap socie'y in the face, Mrs. fierry, I h ha' I do it.' "If you could have seen him as he ulteied if! His weak blue eyes tried to Hash, but didn't succeed, and ho forti fied himself with the head of his cane. " 'fio on, nddle-palesl' said I, in wardly. 'It's fun for mo. fio on!' "So it was, and for everybody else; though with everybody else they got tho credit of being honestly in love with my poor Polly. I had tho real enjoy ment all to myself. "Polly di'ln'J know how to tnke it. To have two flue young men of a sudden paying her nil sorts of respectful atten tions looking nt her and smiling at her, hurrying through their meals in order to get a chance to speak to her, bowing to her as they would have to any lady when she entered the dining room well, Polly was bewildeicd, that was obvious. "The frizzled and red-jeneyod wait resses didn't liko it. They gigglud among themselves, mil went about with noses perked up. "What Polly endured in the kitchen, I don't know, but tho dining-room at mosphero was an indication of it. "How shall I place (he ensuing period realistically before you? Try to imagine it! "Fosdick gave Polly fresh flowers every day, and Pierion sent to New Yoik for a box of the licit confcctiiiucry. Fosdick hung about selulously when Polly was on tho scene; Pierson I sus pect of having sent notes to her by the beliboy. "Finally, ns a desperntn move you wouldn't have believed they'd have gone to such lengths on mero speculation but Fosdick sent to tho city for his trap, in bold readiness fur the next step in tho campaign, and Pierson walked n mile to a livery stable to see if thero were any suitablo buggies for hir " -1 have relatives, Mrs. fierry," said Pierson, 'who would bo shocked to know of my honest admiration for n waitress. What do J caret I uap my linger a' theuU' l,ITTSIJOUO "And he heroic illy snipp'd. -I do not nsk myself what tin world woul I 6ay, Mrs. fierry,' said Fosdick Fosd tk grew most confidential towaid tho last b-eausa 1 urn not that kind of n man. I urn my own master, that shall be seeu !' "1 presume they fondly b-lievcd that I repeated their remarks to Polly, know ing me to bj on good terms with her. I needn't ray that I didn't.' "Of course it grew warm toward the climax. The hotel was a-;og with it, of course, nnd Pierson mil Fosdick hardly on speaking term i, a id Polly tho ob served of all oh crveri. ' Polly berj herself well. You see, the meekest woman has a spark of coipietry, and Polly, I nui convinced, half enj lyed it, in bpite of her amaze ment an i the sp'een of the red jerseys. I haven't any proof of it but Polly looked dcmuie. "Colonel Marlow nnd his insects tor k themselves oil before the end cmi". "Well that he did! I couldn't have answeicd for tho cuiscipiences if he hadn't. "Well, it cime wit'i a cra'h, nnd I had the real pleauio of witnessing it. I was reading on tho side porch one afiernoon, just the d ly before I rnme home, and Fos-lic'c put in a sudlcn, hurried app ar.-mce. "Hive JO l 6" n Miss Tolly, Mrs. fieiry?' said he, 'I'm looking for her.' " 'Isn't 1'iat she?' sail I sweetly. "Polly was coming round from the kitchen court. Hhe had her hat on nn I Pierson was with her. "Fosdick turned a little pale. Thin presently the pent-up stoim burst. I put my book over my lips and serenely lis tem I. " 'I have my trap wailing, Miss Pol ly,' said Fosdick actually ho did, it seemed. 'I wi.h tho pleasure of your company for a drive. I mentions I the matter yesterday, y ni remember.' " 'I di In't say I c niM go, Mr. Fosu dick,' Paid P.dly. "I mil I seo the p'ior gill was fright ened. H- r v.iice fail ly tremble I. " 'I m gaing lio n i todn -,' said she. " 'If Miss Polly does remember,' said Pierson, siiietciii iusly, 'die will not bo able to accompany you. I have engaged her company for the aftei noon.' "'.Mr. Piers ii,' snd Poly, fainllyt 'I'm going Iriine. I'm expecting some body to get me' " 'No', to day, Mi s Poll,' said Fos dick. 'Don't tell nit' that you are going today. You are going no further than the Peak to-day, with me.' " 'I b'gj-our par Ion, Mr. Fosdick,' said Pierson, glai ing. " 'No more woid.s, sirt'said Foidicit, savagely. "Polly broke out crying from shee r fright, sidling up t me. 1 think Pol ly felt all through that affair that I was her friend. "A big fellow in a flannel shirt an 1 a straw hat came around the porch just then, with a whip in his hand, light heartedly snapping it. "A good-looking fellow, too, with light curls an I sharp, dark eyes. "lie stared at Poll, standing there with her two ndoreis; but he recovered. " 'Come on, Poll,' said he; 'boss 's a-wniting.' " 'What do you mean?' snid Pierson, tinning on him. II i began t- look scare I, ; n I Fosdick was getting white abiut the gills. ' '1 don't mean mu-h,' sail Polly's young man; it had dawned upon me in stantly that it was Polly's young man. Only I'm going to lake Polly home. Olad I got here when I did,' said he, nnd he lingere I his whip rather sug gestively. 'I guess she's b'en hero long enough, fiuess I'vo got the right to take her. I'm g ing to marry her.' "Woe! the bomb had burst. Of course they looked gins' ly. 1 won't dwell on tho way tlry did look. "Only if ('ilonel Mallow had been thero nt the moment, I think hit lib would have bce;i endangered. Making abject fools of two ennceile I ami snob hUh fellows at a time isn't safe, you see. "There was an nwful stillness which poor Polly didn't fully understand. She thought merely that they had rather liked her, nnd were put out. She dried her eves, and even smiled at them apologctica! ly. ' I think that ntti u le, of Polly's ns thnt moment her tim d commiseration of them; hers, a peuni est ccuitiy la t was, afler nil, the h.ttcreit drop in tho bucket. They fairly writhed un der it! "Well, they went, home or some where on the evening train. They went together, but they didn't go ns friends, nnd whcihcr they have made it up I don't know. It wasn't exactly a David and- Jonathan friendship, any how, so it doesn't much matter. "I gave Polly filly dollars to buy her wedding-gowns with. 1 thought 1 hud ha I enough enjoym-nt, on the whole, to warrant it ; an I you know I always pa) ns I go. "I should survlv have atUadod (Jm lrWlrW fl A 11 If vyv YV vv o CHATHAM CO., N. C, wedding if I hadn't c nno nway before it transpired ; I had the mo-t pressing invitation possible. I did a last wicked net; I made her promise to send invita tions to Fosdick and Pierson; Itold her it was ineuml ent. I couldn't resist it. "As for Miss (i inlner, die's jn Kuiopt still, so the L?moynes tell me. If ever I meet her, nnd 1 mean to, I shall give hern good laugh with in little story. "And old C-jlonel Marlow I'm just waiting to sec him once!" bit 'ivtln, X't. m A Watchmaker's Tradition. In a recent emversa! i n with n New York Stur repoiter a prominent jeweler of Mii'len lane told the following story to explain why tlie H man numerals printed on the iliils of watches and clocks differ from those in common use. He said : "It is in thing but a tradition among watchmakers, but tho ru toni has al ways been preserve!. Ym ms; or you may not know that the first clock that in any way resembled thoso now in use was made by H mry Vick in l.'!7'. He madcit for t'liar'cs V. of Fiance, who has been called 'The Wise.' 'Now, Chat leg was wise in a good many ways. lie was wise i iiougii to recover from E igl.nd in ist of the laud which Klwird III. had c jmpicied, and he did a g md many other thiiigi which bendi'ed Friticr. Hut his early c loca tion had been somewhat neglei t and he probab'y would have had trouble in pnss ug a civil sci vice examination in these enlightened ag-9. Still ho had the reputation for wisdom, and thought that it was iicce-mry, in order to k?cp it up, that he should also be suppled to po.s-c'-s bock learning. The latter was a subj-'ct he was extremely touc hy about. "So the story inns in this f ashion, although I will not vouch for the lan guage, but put it in that of the present lay : "'Yes, the dork works well, ' said Charles, -b it,' being anxious to find some fault with a thing h-j did not un derstand, 'you have g it the tiguies on the dial wrong.' "'Wherein, your majesty'' asked Vick. " 'That four sh mid bo four ones,' said the king. " 'You mo wrong, your nnjesly,' said Vick. " 'I am never wroii!-!' Ihundeicd the king. 'Take it away and cm rest the mistake!' and concctcd it wis, an I from that day to this I o'clock n a watch or elm k dial has b -en 1III. iu. stead of IV. The tradition has been faithfully followed." Tho Font Was Womlen. A Michigan avenue car stopped nt Second s' reel lo pel mil a young lady and a gentleman to get on, siys the I) -troit A'cf s. As the former, who was young ns well ns prelly, passed fotwarl to scccpt a seat offered hor, she tripped over tho outstretched foot of an individual who was sit'ing at the reir of the car. In an in taut she. was aim nt at full length iu the bottom of the car. Tho exclamations of the passengers and the black looks they direi tnl at the extend ed stumbling block should have caused its owner to sink through the seat, (nicker alm-vst than she went down, however, she was oil her feet nL-ain, and gracefully Acknowledging tho courlesy of I lie gentleman who : uireiidered his scat. She was greatly embarrassed, and her cscoi t looked like a thornier cloud, and as if he would like to punch the head of the fellow who had caused all the trouble. Ilul he didn't. Ho con tented himself with oica-ionatly step ping vigorously on the still extended foot. There did not ,-eem lo be the len t sign of c liisciousness from its owner, while the passengers awaited the denouement. Finally, with a lurch from the car ns mi cxiane, the foot reca ived another fero cious dig that was vi p onounce I a; to almost twist the mill out of the seat. Thinking Ihnt pel Imps he had really injur 'd the man, Iheen-oil mut tered an excuse that was receive I in great equanimity, with the eiatifiing explanation : "Oh, don't apologize; it's a wooden ono and used lo being stepped on." Wonderful Mexican Poltery. Charles Dudley Warner di-covercl two jean ago iu n shop in n Mexican city, specimens of potteiy rivalling in brilliancy and iridescence the famous fiubbio lustres of Maesiro fiiorgio, who wrought iu Paly in ihe sixteenth cen tury. The method of producing these lustres had been reckoned among the lost arts, nml during the past thirty years much money hai been expended in seeking the secret. M.'. Warner learned that the ware was mill at tho time by Indians in a secluded s; ot in Mexico. Miss Y. II. Addis toi k up the clew, nnd uftT n year of investigation learne I the secret of the brilliant lustre iu it irmote town of fiunuux.ua.to, AUdTST 8, 188U. I HM.niSK.V.S ( OLL'.MN. TnR i itti r. riAiuiKNKn. I known u.-iid-ii -r brig t and spry, I nt for a certa n ri-a.on Hi- emps, ill i Most with cu't'.ire high, Ar tar b"'iind the season. More faith is nhat the lad l e needs, K ir he is ulii ays doulit iu , Ami every day ilis up the seeds To see if they ni" sprouting. )'ol(fi's (.'oaielfliorl Hint TO MIKK fs.lt: I1I IU1I KS. Next to white Castile, the mottled ( a'tlie gives the best rctiKs. Til! soap being olitaiied, a friendly diu.'gst mud carefullr weigh out sixty grains (!or ex.ic.ne s in proportions is nccdTul) foi each ounce of wa'er. That i, one dri'c'im (accordii -g to tin Apothecary's Weg'it of the oil arithmetics), and when tho weighing is done and the obliging drugg st thanked for kindness, the rest is p'ain snilirg. A bottb with a sound cork is the next requirement. It must bo large enon-.'h to hold three or ft.nr times the quantity of solution you wish to make. Do n-t prepare too much lit one time; two ounces of soap folmi in wi'.l be a good quant Jv, an I for this n six or eight ounce but do will lie about the ribt thing. The bottle must Iu well (leaued and well rins- d out with soft water which, by the way, shou'd be u-ed for all lh" opera tions. All be ng ready, the soa;i is rut into fragments small enough to enter the boitle. M'-asuie an ounce of water for each elrieliin of snap; this can be done with n teaspoon, eight spooiiluN making an ounce. Having poured ll.e water and iu' the soap into the botil-, we have now to await p-rlnf solution, which will happen in the i nurse of two 01 three hours, if the bottle be put in moderately waim p'ace. 'i h n add glycerine lo the snip solution, the quan tity varying wi'h our ambition. I have foiin I thai one lull the volume of the solution gives excellent results; that is to say, to each ounce of water add one-half ounce of "lvi ciiue, imasuring tho quantities in-te ul of weighing them, iu both cases. The bottle is now to be tightly corked nml well shaken; then set .aside for two or tluee Imii.s more, and well shaken again. These alternate periods of rest ami agitation slimil I con tinue for a w hole day. Finally, let the bottle stand undisturbed and lightly corked for twenty-four lmuis. Hubbies of great sioan I beauty may be blown with tliii solution. si. .V.i7 e'.n. Ml-. I I.AI.-W.H A l.l-.I.. ) Hillie Hetison i.s the sixu en-year old j son of Farm r Hcu-on, who has a goodly ! mini her of acres right along the banks of tiie Dcluivaic. He h n leen a ianious j eel c itcher for si v i it years. Old Assembly man Wildrick, Warren Count v, who had an eel up in dinner given him by his fellow-m inhere of the House lit -t year, hi-n'l an e el nor can he tell of one tha equals the lt-nson cel. li.lly js a young natiii ali ,t as well as an angler. He mad-' up his mini some monilis ago tint an i-l cou'd be tiained. A' c-i r lingly he spaie l the life of the first tha' h e au.;h'. Ib; took it home nn I jiu1 it iu a box with a glasi over it. After the! repl i:e became quiet Hilly fed it from his own hand, writes a cor responili'iit of Ihe A if i' cur Sp o-.i in, (badiially the eel took a liking t i the boy. It would wind around tho lad's arm and rub its head gently over his sleeve. Then it got so that it wmil I co-no out of the box and coil ilsedf nt Itilly's feet and go to sleep. It made no effort to escape'. Then it learned to follow Ihe boy nround. First it followed him around the room. Then it glided upstairs after him and early in the spring to U to sleeping on the pillow bc-i le him. Huly becimn at fond of the ee l as the latter was fond of II lly. The hoy nam ed the ri'ptile Faithful. In a shot I time the e l knew its name. It will awaken when Hilly calls it an I start atti-r him. So thoroughly eoliie ited h is it beeome that it goes all over lh ) farm with the boy. The rap'dity with which it ran movo is remarkable. It keeps right alongside of Hilly when In walks at a quick pace. Hut the funniest thing the eel does is to go lihing with Hilly. It will lie on a log or in a Lille pool e f water and watch the lad haul in any number of other eels and kill them. It never makes any attempt to gf t into the river. It is, moreover, a cannibalis tic eel, nnd is very fond of small por tions of ceV meat, which Hilly cuts up with h:s jacknife. The neighbors go elaily to the Hen'on farm and watc-li the rept ile. Many of them wonder how tho eel manages to live out of water, but H lly says natural history is fil l of instance's. There is plenty of wntcr, however, in Faithful's box, so that he is in his native cle ueiit most of the time. The orator should wear address coat, tad the iurigcou a cutaway. NO. 49. FAST MAILS. Letters to be Carried Hundreds of Miles in an Hour. A System Which May Revolu tionize the Postal Service. A Huston ronesjiondent of the New Orleans J'ininn says: AVithin 0 t '.M l vein, ii' h from th-j re e nt elate m-ii s will be i ai lied from H iston to New Ymk city in inxty inii.u'c. So say ihe j capitalists who are making arraiig"inents j for the rs:a!iishment of a transport line, j on the so culled "porte'ccMic system," for the conveyanc e of le'tersainl pack ages between the metropolis and the mo lorn Athens. Ev.-u tho least tan-' guinc backers eif the enterprise ure con- j fidetit that, if the cxpci-tcd public sup- j port is given to the vhe-m, not mora ! than two jens will be required at mest ! for tho establishment of tho necessary ' plant in running t rder, to bring j the two enters of population j within an hour's distance by j po t. The said plant w 1! resemble, ns j to its mot es-ential part, a little cle- , vated rail wi.y, supported on n single ; line .f tall iron upiights and stretching j from the p colli e here to that on the is'and of Manhaltin. Along the track J on top runs a small car laden with mail i fieight, which nt certain intervals dur- n ing its tiansit is seen to go under queer- : " hi. looking b xshaiie I nrcbes. The e box- 1 , iihe an anoeiu' iits contain cacn one a coil of wire, passing beneath the rail below and a'ound over the nrch, so that the moving mail carriage runs, as it were, through a succession of coiled wiri-h iopi. And thoo latter communi cate the motive pocscr to tho vehicle. S: e 'i a ho-qi of magnetized coiled wire is e all da "le lix," and po senses this peculiar propeily, that if a bar of iron or steel be placed with ono end near the e enter of the coil, the bar will bo iliawn into that center. Place a number of similar coils in a row stmt an e lectric current through them, i then apply the bar to the liist roil, nnd by cutt.ng off and letting on the circuit ill the proper int'-rva's, so ns to elisen- . gage the bar frcm tho attraction of one i coil in time t i hive it drawn on by the j next, tho I ar may be made to move c on- I t mil ni-ly through tho hoops. In this way it is that the littlu mail car of mag netize I steel is caused to pass along its j laiis iliroiigh .-in ci'ssivu coils of boxed in wiie, the latter being magnetized by j n iiini iil fi mn a dynam i, which the car itself shuts c )T and turns on au'omati- ' rally a it proceeds. The speed j lo be attained by the j car in th s in inner is almost in- ! e ale liable. As is recngnize I in nierlinn ic.s, a con .(ant propelling force is pro- due live of nearly infinite veloc ity, ob- 1 -triietel oiil,' be the resistance of f r it;- ! lio-i. )-i this system the only friction comes Irom the air mid the slight con- lat t of the car w ith tho rails. Two i him bed and fifty miles nn hour is not I thong'itto be an overest in ite e-f the speed easily to be coinpissed by thn ; pmli decline pi-t dispatch. At the stalling point the wire coils will havo lo bi close toge-'.her and on up grades; J but eUewlie e, and especially on down grades, they may be few and far be- J twecn, the niot.vc power needed being j slight. Six stations, placed at inter- ' vals between here anil New York, will supply the n qiiisite currents from dyna mos, j Many experls think that the system is destined to ievolutiiini.e tho postal ser vient in this country. For instance, it is cxp c ed that instead of mails hours ... , , v v , npait between Host on nnd New ork, .,, , , .. . , carnages will be sent over the tracks from either end ef the linont five-minute j intervals, lime rendering unne'e'essary the waiting for mails to close, nnd giving people iu one city an opportunity i to read their letters I wo hours after j they ate wiit:en ill the oilier. Once ' piove th" n it inn a success h"ie and it i w ill be qui -kly a lopt ed every where, liy applying it on n largo scale, too, who knows that it may not serve for the j transportation of passengers seme day? j At the rate of 2.V) miles nn hour one i c niild put a girdle around the earth in four davs! Truly, it is a wondeiful century we live in. Pavni-iiiii (al Ile. The rattle of Hivaria nro peculiar in many respects. They nro said to lie good all-around cattle, com bining work, beef and milk, in good degree. Wo suspect, however, that (hey ran bernlled mediocre cattle, in any of these ri'sj ects, from the Amcricin or Knglish standard of excelleiio, hut they undoubtedly serve the purposo well in a country where the ox, and often the ows are used for draff purpnsei, and where lil Ingc is conductc! mostly by manual la bor. Oxen there draw by (races fast ened to a bar of wood laid across the forehead, and attached with thongs lo the harness. They nro use el indifferent ly for both single and. duubU draft. tfljatfjam tUcorfr. KATES ADVERTISING One square, one insertion- One square, two iniertion" One square, one month - fl.oo 1.60 - 2.60 For larger advertisement liberal cod tracts will bo made. Pefer Noddy. Peter Noddy comes at night, Down the rliimney, so th -y say, (Jews our eyelids fast and tight Till tho break of day. And never yet has anybody Caught n glimpse ot J'eMcr N' jddy". Often have I set my ehnir liy the Are to watch for him, But he took me unaware In the shadows dim. And liefore my eyes would view Mm, He had popjied his iielle through theni. In hi. thread a in mbeam whit". Stolen from liiesky, I wonder? Or, ierhnjis he ten s th" slight Kpiderwolis asunder, And from out their gb ssy shreds. Twines nnd spins his lissome threads. And his finger.- ar so deft, And his need p is so ke -n. Not a 8"ar or nisi k is left. Where Its point ha. bsm. S'i lie cmnes and so lie goes, Wlieneei r wh'-t'ier, no on -know J i. If. Mnhi-1L III MtHlOlS. The les, hend n man lias the mora ficquently he loses it. If you nre out in adriving storm don't attempt to hold the icins. .,T(, l,t.;,d does not always hold ,.,irn the lmgi-licnd for instance. Thn bjn roottor ,)ro)al)lT doesn't L. hu ,M1,inc any better than the who but it has to be (jm . , ,. . i,,..)-- A traveling man says Hint a ho-lon . , . , ... ,, i ,c,.,,.,i ,r 19 a rij,,t after you understand i, .. . . ... ,i,, ,. . , her. The only trouble is that you cm t understand her without consulting tho dictionary. The reports that tho ( zar of Russia is learning to play the cornet, nnd that a fresh plot to assassinate him has been discovered, very naturally reaches us simultaneously. The (I'anic of Chess. The Chinese game of chess is very nnc ent for Wu Wang invented it in 1120 H. C. , but its rules of playing nro I j very different from those used by wes tern nations, says the rxow lorn dtnu. Iu tho play room a large table is erect ed, the surface of wlii- li is divi led into seventy-two squares, of which eight are run together to form a rive r, leaving thirty two on each file; but as the men Maud on the intersect i m? of the line', there arc ninety positions for the six teen pieces used by eae-h player.or twenty-six more than are Use I iu tha F.uro pi an game. The pieces are like check er men in shape, each of the seven kinds on ench (,ido having its name cut on top, nnd distinguished by red or black colors. The f mr squares nea each edge form tin headqu li ters of Iho tsingor, "general," out of which he anil his twos. or "secretaries," cannot move. On eae-h side of thn headquarle rs nro two elephants, two hor-cs and two char iots, whose powers me less thnn those of our bishop, knight and castle, though similar. Tho chariot is the most pow erful piece. In front of the horses stand two cannoneers, which enp'ute like our knighls, but mo.e like our cas tles. Five pao, soldiers, or pawns, guard the river banks but eaiinot re turn when once across it in pursuit of the enemy, and get no higher value when they reach the last row. K ich piece is put down in the point where it raptures its man exeep', the rannoneers As the general cannot be tnken, the ob. ject (if ench player is to checkmate him in his headquarters by preventing him from moving except in check. The want of n queen and the limited moves of the men icslrict tho coinbinalion iu the Chinese game mm-' than in western ; ' I skill. The Chinamen in Molt stiect ! j have had several lourinments which j the pap rs tut in a repori. inn some oi the playcis have attained an amount of skill that would put an American em his mi tile to clefcnt. For mote than seven centuries chess has li'iui a gieat game with the Chinese and i' is held in great re -peel in China and here. Muscle Without Meat. Mr. J. Williams Tlmr i, Hlae khoiso, renn., now past three score and ten, has been a strict vegetarian forty live yenrs living nnstly on whole wheat bread ami fruits. Ale 'Indie liquor nnd tobacco are ne ver touched, "even ni medicine." He is still persistenliy biey doing more of the hardeit farm labir "(ban any ( wo fleh ca'iug woikers to gether, young or old." Ho can walk twenty miles in half a day without in convenieiie'3 or fatigue. Another wit ness appears in the well preserved per son of Henry I.. Fry, who, though just enterin his eighty -third yoar, is still nn active principal in tiio (Jincinmi'i School of Wood Curving, and because, of lino physique, a wonder to many. Ho is not so rigid ns lo eschew eggs and butter, but a main reliance is on fruits md vegetables of his own raising, nnd Food, Jlnnt nnd Ihtrdm says he is al ways ready to give reasons for nbsti. nencc from the world's meat, and drink, tiid argue for its advantage.