I If rtfirra KATKS i 1 EDITOH AND l'KOPIUETOK. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION, 4- m. ;' 1 i ry :. j ADVERTISING ume syiaio, one insertion- il.tCf I One square, two insertions 1." One siimre, one moutii - For larger advcrttwmenU liberal cm rm t:) will bo miiilo. $1,50 PER YEAR Strictly In Advanci. mTSIK)R() CHATHAM CO., N. C, SKITKMHKIi 8, I8JI2. NO. 2. VOL. XV. 8 WW WW Tin- ltnyN IVitvh. Pothy day's work, my dear, Though fust mill dark the clouds arc driftim: nrnr. Though I nn' lm litt if lei'l fur hope Bii'I very inucli fur fear. Po lliv day's work, tlioiigli imw The liiiinl nui-l falter umi tin' Ixii'l I""--' how, Anil fnr nlvir tlio lalliiv; font show., the hold ignuiilain brow. Ypi there is Ii ft fur u. Who on l ho viilli " verge sl'ind iinul'lm.; lliii". A light llml In- I ;ir i 'I"' "'('"l foil. t:il nt . hill luminous. ffr run give kindly -'f h. Ami rrn ly helping hands to all anil r eh. Anil patience, t" the voim. iirmnnl. hi sriiil int; sllciue ! ni'li. H ran give gentle thought, Anil ehatity, by Ii f-M loin; lesson tmii;lit, Ami ivl-e5oiii. from old fwi'ts lived down, by to I and failure vv rotight. We urn kip love, iininaticd Jtv so li-li Niinti'.i of happiness. 1111.1:11 red V the keen aims of power or .toy dial make youth cold and hard. Ami if itay hearts reject Tin pets we hold - would fain fail' on tin clicked On tin- bright rmds t lint f. arrf'y yield nil that young eve- r rcl Why, do tl 'lav'- work still. The i .i'in, drop I'mints of oi ni o ! to chill A I'll lionvcit mav yi t tin Ii inr.l yioM. tin' wot k-WOIH Ii ni.l- (' till. ; !l ir'ps K. Slirttei ly. in I hirugo Ib'l.ild. . - JUST IN TIME. Sho followed him nil day long like b little clou. If he 1. in. elm run. fell ami scrubbed her knees, cried mul was lifted up ngain. Tim it wont on from tin? in'ck's beginning to tlio mil. He grew iiri'il of her, ami would have liked to run uiv ay front her. Hut ho iliil li'it duo. for sho was his mas ter' daughter, mul lie was -well, thero v:is tho i ii!i lit' iliil not know who ho wit. llo woke ii one il ay an. I foiiml hiin-flf horn. Tlio sky wm nhuo liini, nml there wou'il hnve heeti earth beneiith his foot if ;n? ha I not niinleil them in (he vron; ilireetion. lie chri'teni'il in n rami nn way O a, 11 11. 1 m jut: 011 lb ' (iiiiRlt, a- 1 bey bay. leiM 0 -iti u look In 11 a- hi share of the pir Kh Inir.leni. W.ien he v. lix years 0I1I In: c mlil be 111 i'l" useful C110114I1 to earn hi fool i'ti'1 bheitur. .leu- O'-trit') llieu wniite.) to M'liil him iiway, but bin liltlo ilau.'liter l!ii:it is so foml of him lint "leeiili'il to kep him. When (('a was twelve yem ehl he coulil kirk 11 caji from 11 nail hiyh above In-lie nl. Illi cit w.is so foml of ()!n tlmt evei ylhinx ho iliil seeinoil Gilmirable. t),ce he auil :i bail wonl ami ()1 11 was wbipi'dl for it. So OI11 wan sent to the mountains; lio roiimeil with his iiliiue horn over the wiiltf moiintiiiii p'liins, ate berries, caught li-h. net traps ami was happy. Ho haiilly thought onre of tlio lit t lo gir! il-jwn in the valley. One diiy ln'e in the summer she citiuo up lo the ilairv with bur mother. M10 tva carrieil iit on liorebiu'k in a binkel. When she sinv him i-lie tiling liersclf ilown upon upon the rass mul tereninvil witli ileiiylii. Mill when her mother h ul rcnetictl tho hut. she tan up lo him ami hue.l him. While the cattle weie be inn milked lie went to look ufier his things. She followed him, pi.nt I in the lliou-ht Hint lie lolerutcil Her. 'l.-ok here," he erieil, lil'iiu up 11 brown hare, "isn't that :i big fellow i ' " What is it ?" she nskeil. "It is a. hare.'' "No, it isn't a hare. A haro is white." "It is blown ill Minimei. It lmn;ei its skin." "Hits he two skiup, one imiile the other?'' luslead of iiusweiiiio; be took bis knife mul cut the lime's skin. "No," be Kiiitl, "ho hinti'l jot Iiioru'n one." . . . . . .j The lime enmo when he bail lo go to the pars"ii to prepare for eoiiflruir lion. Ii so happened that she wet.t bo snine year. Mitt thoiili bo hud a coat now, it wim a eiist-oll' one of .lens Oi'sIi iik', which whs much loo bljj for hi 111. His boots, too, urnl his trouers bad seen belter days, before they nude bi Bi'ipt lillllllli c. llo walked aside fiom the test: bis ears burned when any one looked at bint. Mill if any one dared to mnrk 1 j i in ho u-ed 11 pair of lisi- whi.h in spired respect. He was a b iiidoiuo enough lad and tinely made, but his cloihe4 nml bis frowsy hair made him look itirly. Heavy thoughts eiinin to him, and a tiirce, delimit spirit was kindled wilh iti him It wh at null a lime that Birit ought him and spokt kimjlv to him. "You tiunu'l tn i 11 1 the s',''"" K'10 aiilt"lhey lauoli nl evei ythiii";. They don't mean anything by it. It's just H wny Ihey have. "Sonti boily will ci'tne to harm if you ever do it," ho answered fiercely. Tliai's foolish talk," she jontly re iiionsiriited. "I know you too well, tl'ti. You wouldn't burin 1110." "Ah. you don't underst iiid in ," he said. "It's no ue talking." "Oil. ve, I do uinliTvinid you, Ca," she replied, with 11 smile, "and 1 wish you would let me say one thing to you before I go." "Say i(." "I wish - 1 wWh." she slamirn'red, while a ipii k Mu h siprnnj; t' her cheeks. "No, I think I won'l sny it, nfier all," the linished, mid hurried lo ,' es, sny il," ho entreated, sei.iti"; her hand. 'Well. I -1 wish yon could il as the hare, change your skin." site drew lief hand away from his and ran down the iii'.'.-iile, so that I ho stones and dry leaves flew nbout lief. Thai night 'o picked a iiiarrel with Thorger Sletten, who was said lo be (iltciitiv.! lo Hirgit, ami he thrashed him. All thii followini! winief lie kojit waleh of her from it far and picked ipiai'iels with everybody whom she seemed In favor. "t'limio my skin," he pondered. "I'liange my skin, like the hare. I low, oh, how- can I do it '" This thought followed him day nml night. 0,10 (lay, in tho spring, an emigrant ship bound for America ap peared at (he mouth of the river. )ia packed together bis few traps and went up to t slruo's to sny yood by. lie m il Hirgit in the birch grove behind the barn. It was the time when the buds were bursting and llm swallows ii ul ju-t returned. Wcl , t!ii, whore ate you going T' she asked, as she saw hint coming I'll bundle ami stall in baud. "To America." "America!" she cried, "Anterii a!'' The answer .seemed lo frighten her. She turned p ile and caught hold of a : birch tree for -itp.iort. llo watched I her narrowly. "What are) you g;oiug (o. , , in America, Ola?" she a?ked softly. 'I'luingo my skin," he replied with a vigi l' that stm'thd her. "And if I come back within live years with a c!i!iiu;nl skin you will promise to wait for nie'r" "I promise," she whispered, weep-in-; quietly upon his shoulder. i. l ive years from that day a young man was seen ha-trniug up the hillside to Od-tt'ito. He bad a big slouch hat on his head ami he was well dressed. I lis face was strong, square and de termined, his eyes danced with joy, for in his pocket bo had a royal niar riago license witli which he meant to surprise somebody up at O'slruo's farm. Il was livo years todav siiuo be left her, and it was five years sho had promised lo wait for him. l'or this hour be had toiled, saved and sullered for live long weary years. He had been a silver minor in I.ead vilie when the place was yet new, and he sold his claim for .".ii.niiii. As he was hit frying along nn old woman, who was sitting by the road side, hailed him. (ientlefolks out walking today.'" sho said, holdim out her hand for a penny. '(Jetitlcfolks?" he cried, with a ' bnppy laugh. "Why, (iitiid, I inn Ola who u-ed to herd cattle at Oest l'lio's dairy." "You, Ola! who was on the parish? Then you inu-t have changed your skin." "That was what 1 went to America for," he answered, laughing. The church lay halfway up the hill side. There Ola sat down to rest, for he hud walked far and was tired. Presently he iid music up under the ledge of the fore-t ; there w as one clarinet and several liddh-. A bridal party! Ye, there wns the bride, wiih a silver crown upon her bend and shilling brooches upon her bosom. The procession eaine nearer. Now the liiie-ter of the ceremonies opened tlio chin ell door- wide mid wnl I 1 meet the I ride nml gi until. Ha s it tti'l like a rn.'k ; but a s range numbness came over him As tin: party drew near to the gate of the b'li'i'hviird be aro-e and stood, tall Mot trave. in the mid lb- of liie rend. '1 bene ime Hirgit O sliuo and Thor ger S otleii. She looked pale and sad, I be di Haul. ' "You ilnlii . expect me 10 011r wed. i ding, Hiieii Oisinio?" he slid, and 1 Oared bard at tier. She g:AC a fere 1111 ; 'the crown to I from h -r head, she I u-hed forward mid Hung h i arms niton t hi neck. "Now eomi ," be cried, "whoever it'iie'. an1' I'll nuke a mm 1 v biidiJ " dens Oesiru stepped forward nml upoke. His voice shook with wrath and the veins swelled upon his brow. "Here. 1 am," he -aid. "II yon want tho girl ynu shall light for her." "Not with you, old mini," retorted Ola; "bill with Thorger I'll fight. I,"l him conio forward " The bridal gu "ts mado a ring oil the green and tho bridegroom came) slowly forward. "Hard luck," he said, "to hive to light for your bride on your wedding day." I'iglu':' Hirgit, who in her linppi 110.1 had been blind and deaf, woke up with a start. S 10 unwound her units from Oia's neck and stepped up between I ho I wo men. "Oh, do not light, do not light," sho eiilrcnted, ho'.tling out her bunds litsl lo oiio claimant and then to tho other. "You know, faiher, for whom I have wailed for these live yenrs. You know w hom I have loved since I was i child. Hut vou used force against mo ami threat. Now he has coine bad;. 1 am no longer afraid of you." Whoever will be my wedding guest let him follow," shouted Ola, "for I have in my hand a royal license to be urn Tied to Hirgit, dous t le-lt no's daughter." All that money can buy you shall have," he ndded. "I'll make 11 wed ding the fame of which shall be heard in seven pari-hc around." llo took I he bride's arm and marched Imldiy into the church. Th" wedding guests looked at dous Oestnto, who was venting bis wrath upon the groom. You coward!" he yelled, "vou let the girl he snali lied away before your very nose. I inn glad enough to bo rid of such a -on. in law. Come, folks, we'll have our wedding yet. A girl belongs lo him who can catch her." With a wrathful snort he stalked in through tho open church door, and the wedding guest- slowly followed. I H islon Olobo. 11cicnt ami Muilcm Mress. "I think the ancients exercised vastly more judgment iu the mutter of wearing apparel than 1I0 the mod erns," said Thomas M. Lindsay at the Southern, "t 'outpace the dress of a limim ti Senator with tlio haberdashery of a member of the American bouso of millionaires. The former w'as graceful, comfortable, picttiresitie; the latter is the revcrso of nil these. Wo do not realize how incongruous and iuarlisiic the modern male costume is, because we have In come accustomed to it. A high silk hat, spike-tailed coat and baggy trousers constitute our ideal of faultless aliire. yet ii is sutli eieiit to give mi ji rt i st an acuto attack of mu'.ligrulH. Sculptors avoid it as Ihey would the plague; artists fre. queutly resort to gross anachronisms to get around a combination which makes a man resemble nothing created by the Almighty, and destitute of a single lino of beauty. VVo are con tinually lecturing the ladies 011 tho subject of drcs, yet they have pre served some of the beauties and coin foils of ancient costumes, while wo have siici iliccil (linn all and arc proud of it as an Indian sipiaw who has trailed a butl'ilo robe for a second-hand pair of soldier pants. Kven tho ia iravagaiu ies nf male costume during the Middle Ages were intiuilely pref erable to the stupid garments of the pre-eiit. We w ill probably never re turn to the toga of the Koiunns or the gaudy color of the crusaders, but the baggy tro ters, the spikc-tiuled coal, and tho idiotic 'plug' cannot last for ever. Some genius will yet lead us out of the wilderness of absurdity in to wh ch we have f alien."- St. 1 ottis ( ilobe-l'eiiiocrat. 4 aimed fruit from Pompeii. Po vou know that we are indebted to the old I'oiiipeinns. who lived in tho fir! centiiiy nf the Christian era, for our knowledge of bow lo can fruili' Perhaps mil, but it is a fact, ncvei Iheless. Years ago, when exca vation were first being made oil tho site of the old lava-eovci ed cily, a party from America found a jar of tigs, mil only one, hut several. I'poti openimr one of them the contents were foil ml to be ns fresh and per. feci as w hen put into tho jar 10 cen turies before. Iiive-tignlions iustilii led on H.e spot proved that the fruit had been put into the j.n- in a highly heated state, nml that mi aperture for the escape of steam bad been left in the lid, which, when it bad served its purpose, was seined over with wax. Yankee iiioeuuily caught the idea at once ami the next vear caiiiiiug fac tories were oveelnl all over lb" I'llitcd M ie.--il I. Ui b Millbln, llll IHU'VS Oil MN. UIMIIV. l' W-U.M I saw the momi lie.i In i slender met new. Over my sliou'ili r, ni 11.10 . nr. too, And I wished (or a luviiii'i flutter; So dire.'tly smne iced- in my garden I sow rd; Thru I I'.ikrd mid I 11I1 re I. I Hn'drd 1111 I hoed My neat littlr, swi rl IiiiIi i-met . And tuy garden a j..y the i.;!i lie' lo i;:1'' summer went her, por wishing ami working "'i see, wrni together. .iin:i M I'riin, In Youth's Com panion. 1 1 likl-ll 1 "1 1.1; II. The ancient Turk1 h cornier, nl ways ran wiih bare feet, which grew so hard and destitute of feeling lhat Ihey are said to have had llieuiseU es shod like horses, with light iron shoes. ' To render the resemblance more 1 011." j plcte, (hoy curried in their months bulls of silver, pierced with hole-, and champed these as a hor-e dors his bit. I'llt'ther, their belts and garters ' were furnished with little bells, whirli ' tinkled wherever Ihey went. ' iho fishes lhat many nf (hem died of Hesidcs their pay, they iceeivcil I wo he di-temper. In I"" there wn-an-full suits of clothes every year. Their other eruption in the pre-Christian costume consisted nf an Albanian i is- era, almost destroying Natalia, and sock of damask, or striped satin, ami ; dm last before (ho birth of Christ oc a belt of silk enriched with gold, in j curred just before C.-e sar died. Il was which they carried their puiiard. accepted as a prophecy of the great Later they began to w ear coverings ltmnan's appi onching end. til.oii their feet- long stockings, as; well as a rude kind of shoe. I 'poll their beads they wore high bonnets covered witli silver, from which waved enormous plumes of ostrich feathers. In 0110 baud each man rallied hi hatchet, and in tho other a bag full of i lava (lowed fur nine days, and almost comfits, with which they kept iheir reached Catania. The devout lit-Ki-mouths moist while running. ! iaus of the time relate that its course In this costumo they necumpauied ' was only staid by the veil of Saint Iheir noblo master, and conveyed his Agatha, who had been martyred the messages as fur as lie plea-rd to send year before And buried in a tomb in them. As soon as they had receive'', j tht volcano' h slope. Two more ernp his orders, away they went, leaping lions followed, in I-1' ami M.'. and capering among the crowd w ith 1 Neither of thesn did any damage lo the agility of a deer, crying: "Siuli. ! speak of. sauli!" ('J'ake care, take can!") ( n ; In iro.'.'.i followed the lii-t of they ruslied night and day with .'i-tou- : Llua's eruptions nf which theie ihitig swiftness, taking no repose 1111- is a good, comprehensive ar til they had delivered the message in- ' count. At one ..(age during (bi trusted to them, Harper's oung People. SIHANi.l 1 HUM us ul n i tnlSlliK An Indian who diveiis in a house nt all seems no Indian at all to mo-t of us, who know none loo much about our own country. W e picture him as living iu his wigwam or tepee of bark or hide f ir a few weeks or months at a time, and then moving his "town' elsewhere. There are sonic tribe- nf civili cd natives in the Indian Territory who have learned to dwi.i 111 ordinary houses nnd to give up their roving; but this is a lesson they have mastered mile within tho la-t few years. There is but one Indian race 111 North Amer ica above Mexico which has always lived in houses since their history be gan. And in very similar hou-es ihey dwell today, and iu very much the suiiie style as before the first I uropeau eyes ever saw America. i here are hundreds of ruin-of these enormous community-houses scattered over the territory of New Mexico, and a few are still iuhabitc I. Tho most striking example in use i tho present pueblo of fans, in llu- ex treme north of the territory. That wonderfully pieluresiiie town look ing at which t lie traveler find- 11 bard lo realize that he is in America ha- but two houses; but thev me six stories high and coutnin some three hundred rooms apiece. Acoma. in 11 we, mi county, has six houses, all three stories high; ami Zuni, slill farther west, has a six-siory enmiunuiiy . house, covering inniiv acre and cou tainiug several bundle I room. V for ruins' ol such building, ihey are everywhere. Nunc years ago I di covered, in a remote and dangerous corner of the Navajo country, sin h a ruin. " The Pueblo Alia,"-couiitle-s others in w hi the type of 1 the live- story cominiiiiity-hou-o formed 1111 en- j to n,MV , :, great slieaiu. mid for I wo tire rectangle, inclosing a public j , lays made straight for ihe village of siiiaro iu the middle. ' Nicolosi. The outer walls of these house-I On the 'J I th tin veil of M. galh i never bad doors or windows, M they was di-playcd by the Hishop, and pen presented a blank wall of great height unco services were celebrated, t n to any robber foe. On one side of .tunc I the lava linally eased llow ing, this ruin is a great tower, wiih part of after having reached a point within a the tlfih story still standing, ami still few hundred yards of the vi Inge, showing Ihe loopholes through whit h The lava coveted I "no in res and the besieged Pueblos showered arrow destroyed properly valued at .'.'iii, 011 Iheir besiegers. This pueblo was (inn. since that time until ihe recent a desertctl and forgotten iiiiu w hen oulbicak I Ina has been ipiici - New the first Luropean entered New Mcx- ' York Times. ico, 00O years ago. All these great house were built of stone, very well laid. The omcr 1 edges of all these -lab of stone are as I smooth as if it had bom chi-cled- and yet wo ore absolutely sure that befoie the coiictiet the Pueblos had no metal tools whatever. Their only imple- menta were stone nxes and the like. rSt. Nicholas. A UVHLY VOLCANO. There Have Reen Highly-One Fin pi ion:! ol Ml. Ktna. A Luiik Roiord of Dos I ruction ami Death. Altogether there have been eighty one eruptions of Ptna w hirli me fairly well authenticated. The licsl of these occurred I 17 15. C, the second t-' 15. C. The I bird, o'.'f. 15. .'., was ainoiig the most important of iiiicieni limes, and much damage was done. The fourth is recorded II" l!. C , w ben il is recounted that forty people were killed. In lol H. C. there was , stilt another, followed by the sixth eruption in P.'ii, the results of which w ould please I lie Sicilians of todav inighlily. The innltcii lava so healed the sea that rooked fishes were I blown oil to ll.c "here. Nol much damage was done, hut the people ale so greedily of ll would appear almost as if the coming of tho Saviour had iii;etrd the turbulence of the huge niass.foi it we not unlil J"o A. 1. that, there was Another eruption. I hen its y was most pronounced. I he eruption new wall- were built by the j inhabitants of Catania to arrct the j progress of the seething flood, but j they were found nf no avail. Then I religious processions were organized I nml the people paraded wiih the -acred j relics of St. Atiatha lhat were kept in i j i :il. Hut the lava still 1 Til need, and finally the Kishop and the j been accorded reasonable facilities for Senaic, carrying the relic-, piocerded I acipiiring gcneial infoi ination. is to Mont" di S. Sofa, w here they eicci- j mueh wiser than s men who cd an altar and remained until the have been honored wiih proud pn-i-lava subsided. Many ilmm-nuds wetc ! tion and expensive fimeial-. I ho killed during (hi- eruption, and fol- aveiago (own c..v ran open a -ato lowing closely upon it c nine the eal.iiu- I that fastens with a tune io, !,, -et into itv of IC.il'.. when over t'l towns were ; the garden and do ' worth of destroyed ami nearly i.o.noii people lost their lives. I'uiiiig the present contuiy lliern have been Ihirleen eruptions, none of which, however, emailed auv smh loss of life mid properly as is credited to the outbreaks of earlier days. I hir ing an out break in 1 :'-', while a com pany of people were walrhiug the lava llow near Hronte, t lio front of the inolleu mass suddenly exploded, 1 m-aiieri louth and de-tl uetion. Thirty-six were killed oiiliiglil and twenty others fatally injured. Twenty years later, nn the '.'l-l of August, ls.'c.'. six Lngli-h tourists were killed during an errupt ion, and at one point a cascade of lava formed which fell sixly feel. The al del Hove, a huge depression on one side f t ho volcano, ovi 1 llowed with lava. Iu 1,Mi im'.I, 1 Mis, 1 Mi'.i, !s;:i, ;;, lliere were al-o eiuplions. The last was the most violent. Prom March -J until May l of lhat year there had been tlneali niugs of an outbreak. 1 'n lie latler dav the large centra! crater suddenly sent up a great nia-s (it vapor, nccouipnuied by showers of ashes. The next uiorii iug a violent earilupi ike was felt, and ( a ,.w renter was loiined abmii oono ; 0,. alinvc the se.i level. I.ivn began (.lai ier Delicately Itahinectl. Caciors plunge into the sea ii. ninny cold countries mil polish by drown iiiu, their iliuienibered reniaini limit ing away as bergs. Hut their end is by dissolution where die annual mean : temporal rises considerably above I tho frceing point. At some certain i leve! thev melt faster timn thev can llow, and so icimiuale, Tho level, indeed, i" a Ihietunt'uig one. Icelandic, glaciers are now Meadilv advancing; Siviss glaciers, tn cording to M. T erel, have undergone, during the pie-ent century, live alternating periods of diiiiiiiulioli and growth. The mclci'ologii al changi.- nccasinn ing, mid emphasized by. ih".-e n-riila-tioii are very slight. Their charac ter, however, is iinmi-takuble, and such as might have been anticipated. That is to sav, glacial decrease ac companies a warm mid dry cycle; glacial ineiea-e mie that is d imp mid cold. l.'nn-iderable iilaiin was ac cordingly fell le-t the II iodine; of the Sahara, numbered among lie futile projects of a recent saotiuiiie epoch, should result in a largely iinTcaed snowfall upon the Alps, and the com scipietit ice subniei gence of inhabited valleys. Such fears, it i- tiue, rested on a lueleiirologii 11! misapprehension, yet they weie, in pi im i pie, well founded. The glacial balance i- scii-H : e. A very slight eouiiumiiis pi epomb i anee of supply over wasting might, in o few years, letray itself by ic.ihc for midable and altogether 11 roi-til; t fleets. Without our nddiliou.il de gree of roll, il i- eniio'ivab e thai a pei .-isleiil l -aug inented deposit of snow upon the ( .er-lenhoriicr and the o rstork, .lilhoiih olIoTtti-o scarcely pel ecptible, m:ght en ibl. tho 1 1' In me 1 1 la ie to overwhelm Hrieg. Poll Ibis would bo an exceedingly small slep toward th" re-tor.ii ion of a former mate nf thing-, when 1111 h stream cln.-e upon miles in lem-th, starling from tin sain: sonice, crossed 1I10 fiii.-en or noii-ci-'o'iit I tie of (ielieva, and debouched by Cuio, lip oil Lvi.ns. Without seM'ie ci'M as well ns heay precipitation, ice could not possibly have gained so great nil ascetidetu y. And thi wa- nn local phenomenon ; it was biiuiiilaiieoii-ly prevalent over w idelj -separated Hai ls (f t he e.n th'-!-111 la. e. j I'.tliiiburg lie-view. Tile lloi; lletli foiled. "It is a popular belief that the i l1'"' intelligent ol all imir-innt.-.i aiiima s, ami that next in the mental hore," said lieorge ' Daniel, at the I inib'11. That i-a mistake. The cow knows more than horse and dog combined are capable of learning- An ordinary town cow wlnclihp.s damage before the t xa-peiated owner can lam a dim go of slugs into a muzzle-loading gun. "I once lived 1:1 a village where one half I he inhabitant kopt cow and expected thrill t forage their living etl the othei half. I Hiding llieii-unl gate fastenings of 110 avail, 1 added a holt and slept lhat nigh; .secure. The next morning evoiyrnw in I'ar village was in mv ami so I'm, o rah , luiee that co-l nie .'.' a head loiai-i that ihev 1 u.'d no. go ihrou-'i the ! gale, and I had to knoik il 'W 11 a j panel of tho I'ence t hi tl.cni out. ; That night 1 added a loo-cluiin and a ! paleul padio. s. and .il up in company j w ith a double-b arivled gun in w.itcli j pii lings. An old blind ed she pirate ctinie up and surveyed the hou-e to make -ill H we were abed. Then she sh.ink llu gato and again surveyed the h-oi-e. Next Alio went to vvoik mi the boll with her buigim. In live iniinrc- -lie bad il drawn and si iried t' come in. ! !he looked n.-ed to Hud hn -ri I sni on the out-id II ill a d. v. ii f In r roiupanioiis 1 aim iij- ami sin v eyed ihe new ii'wcli v Then briudle I rol.o a hoi ti 1 1 y inn to lift t he gale cr) it binecs. Ihev iij'peared t" hold n t'oiim il of war ; tl.en a'l old -potted o.mii maud iusci ted a hoi 11 under Un chain, lilted il nvei the po-t. and the w I10I1 drove marched in-idc. I gave il up ami took the gale etl ii- hinge. I now rai-e aii my vegetables al the liliirki I." .!. Louis 1 1 io'.h -1 'eimt cral. Snake Miihin 11 nake Iu looking over the moiiulaiils of Huntington, Point , ilairv C. Nilliu. fi'i liK l ly of Philadelphia, met a Id.ick snakc six feet long. The ebony 111011 sler seemed to be ill nt case, nml it did hot reist death. When Mr. Nillius w as skinning the reptile he leuiprd about a rod straight iniolhe air as be beheld a livo snake, throe feet long, wiiggiing fiom the throat of tho dead serpent. The larger snake had swal lowed the smaller one, ami was suf fering evidently from indigestion when slaughtered. -vertiser. New York Ad- t.obleiiroil. pic the stout yenr be ws.xrn shrewd and t.M. And vvhiie the grnm upon the well piled stark Waits vet tin thrashed, by every woodland inn It, I " stream, and meadow, nnd vvidewssto nut rolled. , ty 1 very fein 1 that skirls the forest mould, iV.len mid thiol., its at tin- reaper's hall. 'I hcv .nine. 1 ipanioic' of the harvest, fi ;ni lirirn forest;. vell.".v in;: upward into gold. I ,,, where your 'liafi of level sunshine g rimiu ! llll "ii those pendent vvriath. those bollllt- 1 "II- plumes (.,. i,i, and -0 -I. Ion : Mark them tt.ll. 1 1 ;;,. and )"-! from siuiiiuer's empty l.-.e.ns. I lei I'ei.i dn i'i ,..i'ii'l tire .nn of drentns, 1 iie Inline- i.' In r -fin ma lo viinble. ."Archibald l.iiupmaii. in Youth's t.'oin- p:iiii"M. Ill MOPOl s. - A heated term "You're another. '' liovv to get inside information: t -e a stomach pump. The .iilulteiating grocer evidently iloe-u'l believe thai holiest tell is t!l8 Lot policy. It i-n'l caiing wlielher school keeps el nol that hoiheis a muii. It's caiing whether the ice keeps Yea-i I ,'o your wife cook well? Ci iiii-.uil.eal; 1 never Iried to cook In 1, but I'm often iu 11 stew myself. " I hey tell inc. professor, that you have iiia-ieicd all the modern tongues." Piofes-or- All but two - my wifo'g flllll her tllO hei's. "Tiie. 0," the -aid. standing on her tlpuus, "1 am about your size." "On the c. unary." sail the disconsolate lovi r, "my sighs are about you " '-In blushed a-slit rend the address, -w 1 1 tly l.er pill -i s thrill . b ivm fioni an "id. "id tlaine; .lust a nio 111. i ii h-i d'l pas bill. ' Wite 1 sobbing) -You Used to any I vou could face death for my sake.-Ilu-baiid- Nes; but it was you r death, not mi no. that I wa- thinking' about. When a man dies and leaves a nicO M iing widow with plenty of money, and you -or her winking out with tho executor on Sunday afternoon, a (haiige is imminent. Wooden -You don't seem to smile al my joke. What's Ihe matter? I. i't you understand il? Wagg Yes, I understand 1'. but I was brought up nt v cr to laugh at old ego. "When 1 gmw up, I am goi'"g to ' live on a farm and eat lot.- of tipples," : -iid a little ini.-s b her younger sister tie ' ' t h e r day, "If vou do," said the, young-:ei. you',! get die apple- H''V " (.oil as 11 Medicine. Avoiding nli 'li-eusiou of tho filer us or demerit- nf Ihe so-called bichlo- ' I'hh'-of-gold chic, now so prominent in the public mind, we propose to show lhat lie Use of gold ns a medi cine 1- not so novel us comniouly thought, ami b ex'racis from early ' wi iter-mi chemistry and iiiedicino to imlli ale Ihe opinions held wiih respect to a.Si'ged "tiiii'tures ef gold" at dif fcieni period during several eeutu 1 ies. The pro toils metal has bem em ployed both c,rniaiiy and internally, in (lie metallic -late, in solution, nml bv iv iiipaliir, for a great variety of the ill- lint 1! --ii i- heir to. for over two 1I1011-.111! yon-. Tiie train of flmiighl w hi' h led the ancients to i employ thi- highly pri.ed nihicfiai i can be we, 1 ii'id 111 theipia.lil hui : giiage of 1 be distinguished Ibl'ch phy sician and ehcniisi. Ileriiiti'in 15oer haavo; writing about IT'.'o, he says; "'I In 1C1 1). inisi will have thi metal iiuitaiii I know not what radical balm nf lite c.l ibie of le.lolilig beaith alld i coin inning it to tie longest period. hat led lie- early phy-irian to im agine -neb vvoiid -iful riiim; in gold vv.islh.il 1 bey jui'iivid i ci tain ilial ' i;ie- lii' ie'.ii which they fancied tnnst : It conveyed lliereby into the body; ' golil, lot iiisiam e, is not capable of : b tug de-t roved, hence thev concluded il 11111-I bo veiy proper to preserve nn 1 mini -ubsl.imes ami save llieui front ' pii 1 1 fact inn . vvhith i a method of i 1 I rca-oliing very milt Ii like that nf somo ; fanciful phicians who sought tot all j assuaging remedy iu the blood of an I ass's car by reason the ass i a very calm Least!'' - Popular Science i Monthly. Had Noticed it Mr. liichfeilii - Isn't Mi-s I e Mine pretty when hc blushes '.' j Mis P.eaiili I noticed it the ol her , dav. It was Ihe fust lino I ever saw I her face color. Mr. Ii - Indeed. What w a she blushing over'.' Miss H. - Over a plain of hot soup - rNc-" York Wt-ekh. 'z?. V. tSlW.vUMH.'W.V.O.'' WJWIgjtjt WWW