""THE CENTRAL 'TWSs : E. F. YOUNG, Manager. "LIVK -AJSTD LET LIYE." C. K. GRANTHAM, Local Editor.; VOLUME I. DUNN; HARNETT CO., N. 0., THURSDAY, JLY 2, 1891. NUMBER 19. .CUC Central tEimcg,' Published Every Thursday DY E. F, Ycaai ani G. K, Grantham, SUBSCRIPTIONS IN ADVANCE: fj.ir Voir, ,Vr Monti:, Thro.. M-u!, $1.00 50 25 ADVERTISING RATES: f ii, ( .lumn, )nf 1 ear, J75.ro 40.00 20.00 10.00 i ,.' Inch, -Tr-(jiitrn-t nl vertis-uiCiits taken at pro j. rliouatfly l u rates. Lfx al n'iti(-s, 10 cents a line. fjl'i-rfl at (if I'nytnffirc in Dunn, -V. C n:. ... , ,r..(7'.v IU'ltt": (Official pit-cctovir CJURT HOUSE. , LILLINGTOS, N. C. COU1MTY OFFICERS. 1 'o'.'N M A ::rv. !-:: .' Ifl- -II. T. Speaks. ;.. A. I- I!yi:p. ( W. I". Maksh, r.i. Smith, j ( ,. i . , -. N. A. SMiTir, W. F. fjwas.v. ( J. M. lIOIKiKS.. TOWN OFFICERS, DUNN, N. C. ' .;.;", J. I'. Pin i Ov. !,i.ff '.,, --X. 7. ;:i:f.i ' ''.,.), '... M.i W a !::. ' ( .1 . A . T A Y I. K, .M . L . G A I N E Y r., i;m. i.v.;-;V.' .j. 11. iiam am 1., r.. lj.k, ! i: !'. vn -.Mi. ALLIANCE. I he CoMn'y Aliimi'-e mens on the 2nd '. Fi . I iv in J;i iu:iry, April, .Inly ami October nr I.illiiigttm, .V '. J. Iloi r, I'r s't. Wm. SE.vrox, Scc'y. CHURCH DIRECTORY. V '.".- .'; V ; -I; i:y. . I. P. Pfquam, 1 as mil. mtrces-itiin:., 'nu snn.lay ins-iu ; :ml lt:i Minuay ami n --it. Sunday School : .ny Sunday :.t ,f o'. i.il-;;. Prayer Meeiine ' i vi j y WeiLie -day m'glit. IHack 's t'liapel, 1st ;-i n'i:iy iiKirnitig. a vera s school Unuse, 2nd ; .-uiiby iiniirim. J .!. va! Ion, .In I Min-Jny in 'Miii:. I!i-i:mhi, .'!.! Sunday ufternoon. V :.,',,, ! llifti.-! f.-ii,;!,, C.irf,'iirft X. C. i." v. V. 1'. Vamin, Iasi-oi;.- Services 'J ; I Sniiday 11:0111 ! n,'' nnjl niht. Sunday S. 'n.; t v ry Sunday morning t I'i o'clock. 1". ay it Hireling every Tliursdiy night. '- '-'' ;(( I; kv. .. Ilo:;ir, Pastor. .- : ii i s vcry 1st Sunday morning nnd night. S m ! iy S. iu.o! .-very Sunday morning at 'J !' i' k. . - " - j. , I : i: v. .1. Ii. TiMii i: I'tsffiR. s.-rv ieeM-very .:.-d Sua.lay laorarng and night, M: ; lav i !h ! -J: .,0 n c'ock cverv Sunday. ' l r.xer ::,e. rin-ev.- y TiiurM' .v -n'iirht . 3 . , i - . - . . - . ,. If, -It i;v. It. A. .lOHX.SPN, l'"-i::. S. i i e every .hd Sunday. Sun-;.--y Si-li d! every Sun lay morning. LODGE DIRECTORY. ! '.kn(v i.(,i,oK xy. iir, i. o. O. I'. !: ;:!! 'a r nn otitic: cvt-rv i uesdav ni?hf. F. p. J-.. X. C, I. W. Taxl-r. "V. ii., (j. K. 1 1: : i.! !ia m. SriTt'ta ry. I'u.M YKA I.:it;tc . I I? A. F. nnd A.' M. i: '.ul.n; -meeiing. .Ird Saturday meriting and 1 li i iv ni.hi Im t..re ii rv'ii.da. :. ' '! ' 1 t. ' . M. F. IV .'o:.es. S. VT., J. J4. lVi!l:;-v .). ". ;. ,. . J, ,:,iiso:i. Tie .surer, S. V !',i ' :e etniv; W. -A. J.Ju'v n and I I ii!;. l.-i . -le-va.t ; 1!. J. Xoiris, Tyler. T'.i- Souti)," annoutu-es the Philadel i :a , ;('. ' will shortly supply the t e-;i :t rv"s lumber demand There arc saw mills running the:;; already." -f the ;i:..000;'000 that Uncle Sam is t i ng to deal out to the sugar planters, more than two-thirds will go to Louis ia -a. cH'tvuite-; the Commercial Arfrer- Thc Australian farmer is already n pi.'d i.i turning his attention to the cul tivation of cotton, and every assistance is being oivoa him by the colonial author- iti'--. There are more women in British Iii'u; (121.000,003) than there are men, wemen and children in Great Britain, r rnnct. and lemiany put together, with trc population Of several miuor Eviro p,::'i States c ist in as well, One imperial heir in Austiia killed liimself under circumtanres of disgrace, n'uthcr Med into obscurity as plain John Vh. while still another is lying nearly oe.id. The hap of llapsburg, moralizes ti.e Washington '' r, are sadly nurcer-oi-'. 1 . "The tnvlitional bow and arrow of the Amrricvi Indian," said a Westerner, "are things of the pist. The average I vhanof to.d-iy is al.out aj skilful with a bow and arrow as a six-year old bov is vith a toy pistol. It s very funny to"sce Eistcrners when theyare trjivcfing out West get Indians to show them how they usc their old time weapons. The Indian's favorjtc way of exhibiting his skill is to fhoct at a quarter or half a dollar stuck in a split stic.x.The money of course, cocs out of th po:kct of the Eastern .wan and the noble lie 1 Man wlll'-shoot -at it from a distance of 'a dozen steps and miss it with the most monotonous regularity. As the small boy would say, he can't shuot a litUe hu Hjs nowadays arc two kinds, both &1 ,ptd from the white" man." One is the rile ",u "e u.-unon his friend the pale M face, and upon his friend's cattle. The other, is whisky, wh'ch he uses unon himself, and it "is quite as deadlv to hH K',if. , , , ueaaiJ to him iu .Duueta .irovidca he can ?8t eaoujU oJ xt-" . - CLD THINUS AHE BEST. 0!1 things arc best. "We wander fcjo strangely and so louely From here to that world yonder, Why nut grow foud and fonder J In tried affections only? Old friends are best. Their faces Enoh year seem deferer, dearer, And kIow with new-found graces; Then, ah! Tbee vacant places But bring the living nearer. Old homes are best. The laughter r That tells of childhood's pleasures Beneath the ancient rafter, Surpass all that's after And all of manhooi's treasures. Old love is best. Its sweetness Makes pleasant sorrow's chalic?, And spite of Time's dread fle?tnesi It gains in calm compleness And laughs at Age's malice. Old faith is bost the teaching Of heart eushrinod mother. A hat prolits subtle preachiu;-, Or blind an 1 eager reaching For doubt that mocks and smothers! Old ways are the best ; the gladness Uf simpler lives and litter. Ere wealth had com with madnes, Or fo!ly left its sadness--. And sin its lessons bitter. O'd things are best. The glimmer Of age forbids new choices. Oh, as mine eyes grow dimmer, Faintly across the shimmer . Waft me the old, sweet vo:ce?! -'Jcorje Horto.iJn Chicago HeruU. . OLD MM MIXALL, KY HELEN FORREST GRAVES. "o you'vc got back ag'in, Lo-i-sy!" said Old Man Mixall. "Ye?, Mr. Mixall," said Louisa Hill," 'I've got back again." "Any news, Lo-i-sy?" cheerfully piped the octogenarian, folding the week-old newspaper so as to briug the "Financial News" on a level with his old steel spec taelesy Louisa shook her head. "Well, I vu.n!" said Old Man Mixall. "It's a shame !" Adam Putney always was as queer as Sancho, aud I do b'licve h ,,rows oueerer cverv vear he lirM T .. - . , ' , Louisa Hill sighed softly, and went about her work of preparing beans. The morrow was beau-pickinir day at "Desperation Hall," and there was at least a bushel of the leguminousvegcta bies ready to be picked over and stemmed. The boarders at Desperatioa Hall were ' partial to pickles as soou as the cold I weather set iu, and the matron was I anxious to- keep them satisfied and happy. Desperation Hall was a lono-.low erec- tion of gray stone that had been a snurf -n u i j mdl half a century ago, and was now utilized for the accommodatiou of the town poor. Captain Elias Fotherindyke, a retired tea captain, avus at the helm of this in ; stitution ; .and his wife, a thrifty dame , of many resources, aided and abetted j him in every respect. 'And of all the ; boarders, old Simon Mixall was the cheeriest and most helpful. - "Can't I help ye, Lo-i-sy?" said he, laying down the paper. " 'Pears to me yo've got a dreadtul job there, with all : them beans. I'm awful sorry 'bout Adam Putney. I s'pose Peter's clean out o' patience with him." The color mounted to Louisa's cheek. "Peter dou't say much,", , answered she; "but, of course, he's vexed. But 1 tell him that the farm belongs to L'ncle Adam, and if his Cnele Adam hasn't a j mind to sell to these railroad people, he can't be made to do so." "An' ye can't no ways be married without the inouey?'' wistlully spoke Mr. i Mixall. Lcuisa shook her head. "Peter has his mother and his lame sister to support," said she, with a sigh. "We shall have to wait, that's all." ! Old Man Mixall shook his head over the emerald drift of beans. , "I hold with the proverb," said he, "that 'it.'s ill waitiu' for dead men's shoes.' And the Putneys always was a long-lived race." ' "He may live as long as he wants for all me," observed Louisa. "I don't ' grudge hira a moment of his life, poor old man!" "No, I don't believe you do," said Old Man Mixall. ' All "the same, it's pretty hard on you and Pete. How's Widow. Bliven? Auy better of the rheu matiz? Me and, Nancy Bliven we've danced many a Virginia reel together in our young days, though p'raps ye , wouldn't think it, Lo-i sy." "She's a little better," said Louisa. "And the young folks are going to have a masquerade frolic at the Lyceum to cam money to paint the old Bliven house and re-shingle the roof before fall seta in. I'm sping to borrow the Quaker dress that Libby Weldon's grandmother wore when she - was married. It fils me ex actlv." t "I want to know!" ejaculated the old man. "And Peter's going to ask old Squire. Lomax to lend him the chest of Revolu tionary uniforms and thibgs 'he's got in the garret of the old house," added Louisa. "He's ;oingto be 'George Wash- - 4Td admire to see him," said Old Man Mixall. "I wonder now if Cap'n Elias would object to me goin' down there and scein' you young folks rigged up?" "I'll ask hirn myself," said Louisa, who liked the kindly old soul and wanted him to have the simple treat. ! "You see, I don't often ask for an 1 evening out." said Old Man Mixall. "Not but what I'd like it oftener, but if I ask, there's forty others would think thev'd ought to go, too, an' I don't want Cap'u Elias to hev auy more trouble thaa's absolutely neceisarv. But I would 1,ke to see how you look as a Quakeress, : n1 1 m mortal sure PeUr Putney'll make &n A N' 1 IicvolutioQerr' Aml ,vhen tbe beans ere au prepared for the morrow's pickle, Old Man Mixall j ttrolled cheerily along tbe frvat of Des peration Hall, tying up some fat African marigold he had planted, and placing new strings for his scarlets runners to climb on, in front of the windows where old Aunt Rugglcs lay sick. For the western light hurt h?r old eyes, and when the scarlet-runner leaves waved in the wind, she babbled vaguely of the green Maine forests where she had been born. "I jest wish I wa wuth a million dol lars !" said the -old philanthropist. 4 'I'd give Pete Putney and Lo-i sy Hill the finest farm in Middle County. I don't sec vhat possesses old Adam to stick to his stony fields and mullein pastures so tight, when the railroad people offer him five thousand dollars for 'em. Guess I'll go raound an' fee hira about it. Lo-i-sy Hill's too pretty a gal and too good a one to be kept waitin' until Pete can dig a home out of the rocks for her. It ain't no pa'tickler fun that I know of, doin' housework at Desperation Hall."" And so, on the evening of the Widow Biivcn's masquerade party, Old Man Mixall trudged around by the Putney Farm to see his ancient con tern porary. Old Adam sat warming his venerable bones in the sun. Sunshine was cheaper than firewood, if less satisfactory, and he returned his greeting. y "So ye won't sell, the faim to the Quantick Company?" said Simon, sitting cheerfully down on the wooden tettee beside his friend. "I cdn't sell it,"said Putney, drum ming hi3 wrinkled fingers on the window-sill. "Why can't ye sell it P "He won't let me." "Who won't let you?" "My Gran'ther Putnev." . ' 'T.anH 1 1 1 o mnn n-Viif -to t i 1 L- i n about?" cried Mixall. "Yer Gran'ther j Putney, he's been dead an' buried this I seventy years !" 1 "I dream about him every night," j said Adam Putney, in the Same slow, mechanical way. "I see him a-settin' j on the old oak stump by the well. And j he's always a-sayin', 'Don't sell the farm, j Adam?' I can't go agin him, can I?" "Wal, I calculate I should if I was you!" declared Mixall. "Dead an' ; buried folks hain't no business meddlin' ' that a-way." "I can't go agin him!" repeated Put nej, with the slow, settled policy of old aSc- j "But hero's your nephew, Peter, as i smart a lad as ever steppped, and Lo-I-sy Hill, the prettiest gal goin.' They'd j have money to go to housekeeping if j you d listen to reason. "I can't go agin Gran'ther Putney." "And here you be, poor'n Job's tur key, holdin' on to the rockiest farm this side o' Serape Mountain, all jest for a consarned whira!" persisted Mixall. "I can't go' agin Gran'ther Putney," dreariiy repeated Old Adam, winking his bleared eyes in the sunshine. i And Old Man Mixall, fairly out of pa- J tience, got up and trotted down the j road, muttering unutterable things a3he ! went. j "There ain't such a dumb fool as he iu I all the foolish ward at Desperation Hall," j said he. And it took a good deal of the laugh- j ter and merrymaking at the Bliven mas- ! qucrade to erase the disagreeable imprcs- j sion from his mind. j Old Man Mixall was a favorite every- , where, and the hospitable dame in charge j of the refreshments cheered him with hot coffee, newly browned wafilc3, 1 chicken salad and frosted cake, before 1 he went in to see the young folks dance. "That's Lo-i-sy!" he cried, shrilly. "Ain't she jest as pretty as a pink in that Quaker gownd and the scoop hat? And f there's Pete Putney cuttin' pigeon wings i in old Squire Lomax's Revolutionary j togs. Wal, I never!" And Old Man Mixall laughed until he shook like a mold of jelly. j Cap'n Elias Fotherindye was seriously j alarmed when his oldest boarder did not return until the next morning. . "Why, I swan to gracious," said he, "I allowed suthin had happened t'ye!" j "No, cap'n" said tbe old 'man, i "nothin' hain't happened. But Pete Put- j ney. he axed me, seein' I was cornin' right past the place, to leave his Ilevolu- j tioner rig to Squire Lomax's; an' when I j got to Squire Lo,max's, they axed me to i stay all night. Dre'tful sociable folks them Lomaxes!" v i And the Old Man Mixall went out ; to water his marigolds aid scarlet run- i ners. j The sun was setting behind the to- j mat vines in the back garden when Louisa Hill came breathlessly up the j path. , ; "Oh, Jlr. Mixall," said sue, "Peter has just driven away! He has taken me for a ride." j "Eh?" ! "And what do you think? W're to i be married next week?" "I want to know!" "And Uncle Adam is going to sell the , farm to the Quantick Company, and give the money to Peter, and he's to live with us !" "Wal, I declare!" i - "Uncle Adam says he saw Gran'ther ' Putney last night a-settin' on the old oak J stump by the well, just at midnight, j And this time he was all dressed in the j suit he fought at Bunker Hill in mus- j ket and cocked hat and all and he 6ays, CAVS he. 'Sell the farm. Adam sell the j y v i farm,' as distinct as ever ye heard any- : thing in your life. And Uncle Adam, he says it's a direct message from his an- j castor, and the deeds are to be handed ! over to-monow. And we shall be happy j at lastl" i "Did you ever!" said Old Man Mixall. "It was a dream, of course!" said Louisa. "Oh, of course!"--said Old Man Mix all. But when she was gone to tell Mrs. Fotherindyke, the octogenarian walked slowly out to his scarlet runners, and laughed long and silently. 'I hain't outlived all my usefulness yet," said he. Saturday Night. The $100,000,000 European bank da posits now being called in by Russia it all borrowed monej. THE MEBRY SIDE OF LIFE. STOHIES THAT ABE TOLD BY THE . PTJNITx MEN OP THE PRESS. Tbe Summer Young: Man Bard AVort Too Celestial Repartee Ye Summer Girl, Etc., Etc. Ob, the summer girl song Still goes floating along. And its strain is enchantingly sweet; But you find though you scan. For the summer young man Not a line that is pleasant and neat. Though now ha may stand With a yardstick hi hand. And deal you out cloUi by tb.3 ppaD, At some summer plac3 With a summerish grace. He'll be king, will the summer young man. ! When vacation hq takes 'Mongst the mountains and lake, lie leads the slight masculins van, And tha girls wh ?ooC down On his catling in town Will sigh for the summer young man . Washington Post. IIAHD WORK TOO. "What are you doing for a living these days, Goslin?" asked Dolley. "I bweathc," replied Goslin with weary sigh. Judge. a DRIVEN FORTH. "So you've rented an office. eh? I thought you did all your work at home?" "Weil, I did; but my wife bought a canary-bird." Judge. YE SUMMER GIRT.. "That damsel over yonder lias quite a millitary air." "Eminently proper. She participated in no less than hfteen engagements last summer." Judge. GETTING EVEN. "He is not n beau o vours, is he? "Yes." "He calls on "me oftener than on you." "Yes; I told him the days you were not at home." Life. ' A SOFT SNAP.' She "Now, my poor fellow, move up to the table and help yourself." He "Move the table over to me, mum. I ain't us'ed to over exertin' my self." Munsey's Weekly. UNSELFISn MAX. She "It's a bull, and he's coming right at us! What shall we do?" He "Well, don't stand there doing nothing! Come and help me to climb this tree!" Munsey's Weekly. A SCIENTIFIC VIEW. "Whv are vou so anxious to have . every one cultivate weeds?" "Because," said the scientific gar dener, "I am convinced that, that is the only way to exterminate them." Puck. CELESTIAL. RFPARTEE "You look rather pale." said the World to the Moon. "Getting old and feeble, eh?" "I can go all around you just the same," replied the moon. Munsey's Weekly. A FAST EOT. wonder that Hunks- your son should be such a spendthrift. Closefist--v'I can't understand it either; send that boy away to spend the summer, and it wouldn't take him over a week." Pvck. i NOT AT HOME. Caller "Is Miss Sweete at homer' Servant "No, sir." Caller "Please tell her I called. Don't forget, will you?" Servant "No, sir; I'll go and tell her this minute." Yankee Blade. TAKING HIM AT HIS WORD. 'What ought I to give you?" asked the diner, as he put his hand in his pocket for a tip. T lonvo it witn vou, sir," said the waiter, politely. 'Thanks; I can make good use of it." And the waiter was tipless1. - THE DIFFERENCE. T3sSiN0 indeed, Belle, I didn't say that your shoe3 were too small for your feet." Bellle "What did you say?" Bess "I said that your feet were too large for ihe shoes." Belle (mollified) " Oh. " Tanlee Blade. ALWAYS GETS TIIE WORST OF IT. Greene "Whom are your children said to take after, Mr. Enpeck?" Enpeck (with a mental reservation) "The younger, with a sweet smile and angelic temper, takes after his mother; the elder, that cross-eyed young viper, takes after me, I'm informed!" Cnct a Week. ODIOUS COMPARISON FOR THE DONKEY. Fenderson "I want to ask your ad vice. Smith called me a donkey. Now what ought I to do?" ' Fogg "You can't apologize to all the donkeys in the world, but you might re lieve your feelings a little by hunting up and apologizing .to at least one." Botton Transcript. A MYSTERY. "What, my angel," exclaimed the young husband, bursting into the kitchen, doing the cooking yourself? What is it?" 'Why, Edgar, how foolish of you! How in the world can you expect me to Jell until I see what it turns outP Fliegende BlaetUr. TWO AGES OF MAX. At the Barber's (Scene First.) Bar ber "Shaving, sir?" Juvenile (at sixteen) "You flatter me! No; only hair cutting." (Scene Second.) Barber "Hair cut ting, sir?" Bald-headed Gentleman "You flatter VN me! Not only shaving." numoriituch BlaeiUr. niGHLY UNNATURAL.' Walker "I had a most unnatural dream last night, Fad man. l dreamt Binks borrowed $5 of me for a week." Fadman "Unnatural! Why, that's Binks all over!" Walker "Yes, but I went on dream--ing, and I dreamt that Binks paid it back to me at the end ot the week." Amcri' car. Grocer. WOULDN T INTRUDE ON TIIE BABY. Wife "What, going off again? I wanted to go out myself, to-night, and thought perhaps you'd stay home and take care of baby." i Husband "I should like to do it, my love, but do you know, I don't think the baby particularly enjoys my company, and I hope I am gentleman enough not to force my company even on a baby.''- : Boston Transcript. SURE TO BRING IT. Quester "I'd like to know, my friend, how you knew it was going to rain to day. The sun set last night in drapery of mazy gore; every meteorological in dication assured a continuance of the drought, and yet you confidently pre dicted the storm that is upon us. What prompted you to the prophecy?" Jester "An infallible forerunner of a storm. I spent two hours and my latent vitality in watering my plants last even ing." Boston Courier. AWFULLY SAD. "How did Charlie Blazer ever happen to propose to Edith Gushley?" asked De Tompkins at the club. . "Haven't you heard? The poor fel low was up there one evening when tbey were talking about some girl they knew, and he said rashlv that she had the true ring." "Yes?" "And Edith said she supposed it was an engagement ring, and that is how it happened." Detroit Free Fress. KINDNESS MISAPPLIED. "What's the matter?" asked the kind hearted old gentleman of the boy who j was weeping bitterly. "I g-got two nice clean blocks, an' them fellers took 'em away from me." -"Well! well!" exclaimed the old gentleman. "Did vou want them very bad?" "Y-yes, sir." "Hasn't your mother any kindling?"' "No, sir, she ai-aint." "Father too poor to buy any?" "N-no, sir." "Does he drink?" ' "S-some." "Humph. Very proper pride. I sec it all," was the' kind-hearted comment. "But vou wanted tne muCKs iot kindling, didn't you?" "N-no, sir." "What did you want them for, then?" "I want 'em t-to hit together and m-make a dickens of a noise with, sir." The kind-hearted gentlemau turned the corner almost in a trot to avoid miss ing an apointment. Washington Post. KNEW WHEREOF SHE SPOKE. There is a charming young widow in South Minneapolis who retain? a five-year-old girl as the only pledge of her dear departed. The little one has be gun to learn her alphabet. A gentlemau called upon the widow the other even ing. Of course the fond mother wanted to show off her child. Taking up a newspaper and pointing to the big letters in an advertisement, the mother said: "What letter is that?" "A," responded the child. "What comes after AT' "B." "And what comes next?" "C," lisped the little one. The inquiry was pursued still fur ther, but along toward the end of the alphabet the little girl lost her bear ings and never answered a question. Finally the gentleman thought he would put a few questions. He began with this one "What comes after T?" The child looked him . straight in the ey2s as she answered: ' "A man to see mamma." . The lesson in English literature was not prolonged. Minneapolis Tribune. DISGRACING HIS NOBILITY. "Go!" 4 No, this is rot the story of a horse race. The monosyllable that heads this chapter was hurled by the Marquis de Billette at the head of his errant son and heir. . "Go!" repeated the proud father. "Let me never see your face again. Never again shall your foot cross this threshold. To think that one of your noble name and lineage should wed an obscure salesgirl ! Get thee hence ! As long as I live these ancestral halls shall never be darkened by your vile presence. Go starve or steal, I care not which. You can bring no more disgrace upon your honored name than you have al ready done." , "Yes, I can, father," said the young man in a hard, metallic voice which harmonized well with the steely glitter in his eye and his brazen front. "Either you forgive me or I go to work. You shall have five minutes in which to de cide." In four minutes the haughty noble man had found his mind and in thirty seconds more had made it up. "You have won," said he. "But little did I dream o( the depths of depravity in your nature that you have to-day re vealed." Indianapolis Journal. General Grant's old log cabin, which was expected would go to the World's Fair, will not be transferred to tht ex hibition. Mr. E. A. Joy, of Old Or chard, Mo., has purchased the relic for f5000, and it is said will not permit it to leave St. Louis. There is no use being sleepless, lettuce before retiring. Eat A UNIVERSAL BEVERAGE, LEGEND AUY AND AUTHENTIC HIS TOSY OP COFFEE. Its Discoverer Noted Its Wakeful Ef fect on Browsing Goats Intro duction Into Europe. While coffee now figures as one of the most considerable economic products, its use as an article of food in civilized countries is of comparatively recent ori gin. In Abyssinia and Ethiopia, where the coffee-plant is indigenous, the people have been accustomed to decoctions f romj its berries from time immemorial. There the Arabs first tasted the fragrant draught; and, highly delighted there with, transported some of the precious beans to their own country about the be ginning of the fifteenth century. In -Arabia tbe new exotic flourished luxu riantly, and, strangely enough, entered into the occasions "of religious contro versy. Legend reports that a deyout Moslem, who had heard ot the wakefut effect produced upon browsing goats by its foliage, resolved to try what influence a brewing from its berries might have upon the somnolent dervishes who non chalantly fell asleep during protracted services. The result was magical. Drowsy laymen followed their example. Coffee became the national beverage of the faith ful. Mohammedan pilgrim to Mecca carried beans to all lands av hence they had come. Egypt soon rejoiced in cof-. fee-houses, and in Constantinople (a. d. 1554) they acquired instant popularity." Mosqiies were overshadowed by them. Quickened wits of drinkers suggested intoxication to the religious, and poli tical insubordination to the civil author ities. The former denounced the dan gerous resorts, and the latter shut them up. But the beverage triumphed. Pro hibition did not prohibit. In Cairo (1523) the Governor gravely listened to all the erudite arguments against coffee, served it out to the ran corous opponents, and left his seat without saying a word. He was- wise. The masterful drink estopped discussion forever. In 1652 coffee entered Eng land from Smyrna, whence it was brought by Edwards, an English mer chant doing business with Turkey. He was wont to regale his friends with the delicious liquid, prepared by the skillful hands of Pasqua Rossie, his Greek ser vant. But visitors increased too num erously. Hospitality became burden some. Peace and pocket cried Out for relief. Edwards established his man in a coffee-house at Newman's Court, Corn hill, London. Twenty-three years after this event coffee-houses were the favor ite haunts of wits and politicians "for discussing, theorizing, and general wag ging of tongue." Coffee and criticism were cronies. Therefore the phosphor escent Charles II. and his . courtiers, wincing under tnc "siaauerous hiuh,m upon persons in h;h stations," would fain have suppressed coffee-houses ay "hot-beds of seditious talk" and public nuisances. They failed to do so. The revolution of 1688 followed. The vic torious ' institution survived the Stuart dynasty, and attained the zenith of ac tivity and splendor in the first half o' the next century. Thevenot, the French traveler, cm his return from the Orient in 1653, treated his guests to after-dinner coffee. To Parisians this was merely an eccentricity, that would not have become fashionable but for a similar example set by Soliman Aga, the gallant Turkish ambassador, in 1669. He enlisted the enthusiasm of court ladies in favor of the black and bitter liquor. Philosophers aud litera teurs gladly gave in their - adhesion. Boileau, La Fontaine, Moliere, Voltaire and the Encyclopedists, together with the chessplayers, found inspiration in the coffee-houses, which- thenceforward as sumed conspicuaus positions in the social life of Gallic cities. "Racine and coffee will pass," is a prediction of Madame de Sevigde as yet most unlikely of fulfill ment. ' Germans began drinking coffee during thcSev'en Years' War (1756-63), stolidly scoffed at opposition to the practice, and hated Napoleon all the more for restrict ing it by his "Continental Blockade." Universal peace was accompanied by universal indulgence in the exhilarating cup. Americans took kindly to its con tents, and by constantly enlarging de mand imparted powerful impetus to coffee commerce and culture. Rise in price3 during the great civil war "di minished the consumption about two hundred thousand tons."' But for that it is asserted that "the world would not have had coffee enough." Demand rose with every Union victory, and fell- with every Union defeat. . Consumption in creased 36.84 per cent, in 1864, 17.5 per cent, in 1865, 23.5 per cent, ia 1866, 27.25 per cent, in 1867. Removal of duties and financial prosperity increased the call for the aromatic beiry, and ad vance in price because of short crops or syndicate operations diminished it. The coffee-cup is a business thermometer in the United States. Harpers Weekly. Interesting History of a Yacht. The steam yacht ' Catcrina, formerly owned by J. Pierpont Morgan, and well known in this port, is now the property of Joseph - Pulitzer, of the New York World. The history of the transaction by which this magnificent jyacht came into the possession of Mr. Pulitzer is de cidedly interesting. The boat formerly flew the English flag, but now she has an .rrerican register. Several months ago she went ashore on Long bland Sound. The underwriters, who consid ered her 'badly damaged, sold her to a Mr. Sullivan, who raised and repaired the boat- The price paid'by Mr. Sulli van was 1 16, 000, and he found that her damage could be repaired for a few thousand more. He at once sold her to. Mr. Pulitzer for $50,000. This bargain was mutually advantageous, for Mr. Sullivan cleared over $25,000 by the deal, and Mr. Pulitzer got a magnificent yacht worth $100,000 for half that sum. Besides that the beaching . in American waters entitled her to an American tc$ i&ter. Phiaicljehia Jlecord. SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL, Blasting is done by electricity. Electric cranes are increasing in use." The brain of man exceeds twine that of any other animal. A man breathes about twenty times a minute, or 1200 times an hour. One dollar a minute is the charge for -using the new 'London-Paris telephone line. . . , ; The great telescope of Lord Rosse, in Ireland, has a speculum six feet diame ter, fifty-five feci focus. Pennsylvania makes fifty-two out of every 100 tons ol rolled iron in the United States, and sixty-nine ' out of every 100 steel rails. It keeps thi ee large Chicago factories busy to manufacture the locomotive headlights and railroad lanterns that arc used in this country.- The factor ies give employment to 1100 men and boys' A number of fine residences in the Back Bay section of Boston ai-e being equipped with elevators operated by electric motors? ' Tho. machinery is very simple and compact, and tthe elevators will carry two or three persons at good speed. An English firm manufactures a com bined oil engine aud dynamo. A largo number of these engines have been built, and sent throughout the various colo- . nies, where they are said to be .oper ated with especial economy for small plants.' " ' .Phosphorus is now made by aid of electricity in England, .the mixture ot phosphoric acid being decomposed by the heat of an electric arc embedded in the mass. This local application of heat issaid to be more economical than heat ing in largo retorts by the ordinary process. AEIectricity has superseded steam power at the royal foundry at Wurtem burg, the dynamo being driven by a large turbine water wheel. The stream furnishing tho water is some distance from the works, the , electricity being conveyed across the town by overhead couductors. The current opera fes gome .tsventy-five lathes and polishing ma chines. - V A -AVarsaw engineer has invented a new harness by which the danger of shy ing horses is averted. It is so arranged that by pulling . a string which is at tached to the driver's seat, the horses are at once unhitched and the vehicle is brought to a standstill. The invention . was tried by the best horsemen in the city and found perfectly successful. A model of it has been sent to St. Peters burg with an application. for a patent. M. Mareelhacy has made some addi tional improvements in diving apparatus whicb have received the approving in dnrsompnt nf thf Wrnrh authorities' In this arrangeracment, instead of the neavy electric hand lamp, cmploycl ordinarily by divers, the plan is to affix powerful glow lamps at the top of the helmet, so that the diver's hands are at all times free for work The lamp is connected 'by a conductor with a battery either on shore or in a vessel above as the case may be. - . The practicability of telegraphing, wfyhout wires has recently been demon-, strated by the success of several experi ments. Not long ago Mr. Preece, the head electrician of the postal telegraph system in England, succeeded in estab lishing communication across the Solent to the Isle of Wight and telegraphed also across the River Severn, without wires, merely using earth-plates at a suf ficient distance apart. It is how proposed to make practical use of this system in communication with lightships. . ' A Canine Hero. J A correspondent of an, English paper writes: "I recently witnessed the fol lowing little incident on the Thames, near Twickenham, when the river was full ot land water, and therefore, very swift and dangerous. Two dogs, one a large animal, the other a little terrier; were enjoying a swim ner the bank, but ' soon the little one was carried out some distance and was unable to get to shore. By -this time tbe big dog had regained the shore, and, seeing what was happen ing to his companion, began running backward and forward in the most ex citing manner, at the same time whim pering and barking, and evidently not . knowing for the moment what to do. The terrier was fast losing strength, and,: although swimming, hard, was, being rapidly carried down stream. The big dog could contain himself no longer. Running some yards ahead of his strug gling friend, he plunged into the water and swam vigorously straight out until he got in a line with the little head just appearing behjnd him. Then he al lowed himself to be carried down, tail first, until he got next to the terrier, this. being accomplished in the cleverest manner, and began to swim hard, gradu ally pushing the little one nearer and nearer to thje shore, whch was gained after a most exciting time. The fact of this canine hero goiDg so far ahead to allow for the strong current and the judgment shown in getting alongside, and then the pushing, certainly seemed to me to betoken instinct of a very high order." J A Solomon Come to lodgment; A famous Chicago lawyer once had a singular case to settle. A .physician came to him ia great distress. Two sisters, living in the same house, had babies of equal age, who so re&e-nbled each other that their own mothers were unable to distinguish them when they were to gether. Now it happened that by the carelessness of the nurses the children had become mixed, and how were the mother to make sure that they received back their own infants? "But perhaps,' said the lawyer, "tbe children weren't changed at all." "Oh, but there's no doubt that they were changed, said the physician. "Are you sure of it!" 'Per fectly." 'Well, if that's the case, why don't you change them back again? I don't see any difficulty in the case." Boston GatctU. " v -