r RAT Cent MM v Times. G. K. GBATHAM, .Arm-, tt " THE WOR'-D. He world is well lost when the world Is wrqns. . o matter how inen deride vou For If you ere patient and flrru and strong cuwili nni in time though the time be long) That the world wheels 'round beside you. If you dare to sail first o'er a new thousht track. For awhile it will scourge amd scora you; Then, coming abreast with a skilful tnoV ' It will clasp your hand and slap your bac, ' Auu vow it was there before you. Aye, many an error the old world makes And many a sleepy blunder; Hut ever and always at last it wakes With pitiless scorn for another's mistakes, And the fools who have followed go under. The world, means well, though it wander and stray From the straight, short cut to duty; So go ahead in that path, I say. For alter awhile it will come your way, Kriuging its pleasure and beauty. Fl'a Whealer Wilcox, in Once-A-Week UNDER THE PINES. BY MANDA I,. CROCKER. UT of the mellow; sunshine of the' clearing, where he birds chirped and the long blackberry, vines waved in the! odorous winds, into1 the deep shadows' ot the gloomiest of all gloomy places above ground, the ikn?e pine forest, Bernice "Winters turned "old Ceil" -with a quick deft motion of the firm hand holding the bridle-rein. That, cold, lonesome feeling, .which seeWingly belongs .to "the by-road," came over Her,, and she shuddered, iii tj-ite of her 7esolution3 to not mind it this is riding alone along the "forest road." She had told herself many times that the ehadpws of the tall shafted pine3 held no more evil than the sun- ' shine of the fields she had just left be hind her and that the weird music away up there in the green crowns only seemed di.-mal to her because of the deep soli tude reigning beneath, but it was of little use. The growing dread of this 'cut across'' amounted literally to a strange presentiment that ' this same forest road would bring her face to face with well, she was unable to further define her emotions, but it would come one of these days. - Her father had laughed at 'her and called her superstitious, but in vain ; she was the more determined -in her belief that something dreadful, would one day come tD her vision in the solitude 'under the pines. Bernice bad not always lived away up here in the denseness of the" Michigan woods, for close to her heart to-day lie3 the p'cture of a little home overlooking the.b'ue waters of the broad old Con necticut, tho dear little cottage which her father left to strangers in his eager ness to possess a tract of the far famed ' cheap lands of the peninsula. To be sure it was pleasant enough,, but it wa3 just woods; woods,' woods, with nothing but the never ending buzz, whirr, crash, slang and bang of the huge lumber mills all through the country. There1 didn't Mem io be any Sabbaths worth mention ing outside of their little "up and down" dwelling, and the society hero was not to lie thought of. It was October now and the long, dull winter would soon be upon them; then even these lonely rides would come abruptly to an end for the eldest daugh ter of the house and some one else would go-Saturdays, for the mail if the drifts were not too deep !n the "openings," .and if they were, why then it would be y duller than ever. " , But "old Ceil" jogged on at a quiet pace, with his ears forward, little know ing what a- heavy heart, his youthful ri-ier Tarried - or that the hand which dropped the. rein weut up to the sad face to brush away the 'tears. Tears Would come, in spite" of every effort to hinder them. They" seemed so appropriate to 1 the gloom to-day.; 'Old Ceil" could not know; he had never been iu- Connecti cut, had never been anywhere but in the .-'.'North Woods," pulling his faithful life out getting the great piue logs down to . the restless current of thn-Miiskegou for railing to the city below, until the aris tocratic" Winters get hold of him, and since then he had positively no cau30 to grumble, v ; "Hark I Whoa, Cell!" and the hthe form of his rider trembled like an aspen in the wind. . "What att . awful sound that Mas," she' whispered, with ashen "not so loud, no, distress. I kaew it was but: so full of coming. " But sbe tried 'to be' brave "and patted the torse on the neck; as if to' reassure him of her safety? . . - l"p in th "dark tops the. winds moaned and sobbed inr loremh requiem and the shadows gathered darker and denser as if determined to shut out even, the dim, ' stray, silvery gleams struggling here and there through the billowy canopy above and seeking to ki9s into fuller crimson the. "squawberries" clustering 'mong their green vines oa -,th&. yellow carpet. Tutrc! came that sound again, plainer than before, and Bernice peered among the trees atdier left, -for the sound, as of some one in-v deep pain, came from that Porter, while- all the stories of murders and adventures that she had ever read or heard rushed across her mind. Old Cell, too,; had caught the sound anu turned half way .'round, as if bent oa investigation also ''I don't, know what to do;'I wish father were here; it would be wrong, to foone and leave any one to die out here in this awful place." Bernice sobbed out these disconnected sentences in a strange, smothered voice and slipped down from the saddle, holding on to the bridle-with a grip born of terror. There was a lull in the requiem over head, and once more came the sound, this time seeming to resolve itself into ords, and Bernice thought she heard we cry of "HelDjI injthepitilnilaiaeat.. Editor Old Ceil sniffed the air and gave a low whinny as if he understood the wholo matter. His seeming interest gave cour age to Bernice, and she stepped out among the trees, leaving hirrvto wait' or follow as he chose.! On she went, in the direction . from which came the moan at little interval, rousing all her sympathies with its plain, tiveness. "Where are you?" she shouted, presently,' unable'to kep silent" longer, and feeling that she must scream if she did not speak. r "Here!" came in answer close at hand, and a step further brought her to the foot of a huge pine, at whoso baie lay the outstretched forrn of a young man. His face, turned toward her, wa3 white and drawn frohr suffering, and the-Jblood was trickling .from an ugly wound just above the right temple. "Don't be 'afraid of me, but help me if you can," he said with aneilort, hold ing out his hand. - - Bernice had paused, struck dumb at the sight of the blood dropping from the white, suffering face, .but the tones roused her to action. She stepped for ward and knelt down by the unfortunate man, forgetting all her terror in the great sympathy taking possession of her whole beinir. 'How did you get hurt?" she asked, at the same time taking off her white cambric apron and tearing it in two for a bandage for the wounded head. "If I remember right," he answered, "some one struck me, for T mind of fall ing in the path. Isn't there a path here somewhere?" he questioned in a faint voice, as if in doubt concerning his own statement. "Yes, a few steps to cur right is the forest road leading out to. the high way," answered Bernice, adjusting the bandage with skillful touch. "Well, I remember of falling, and that is all. When I came to myself again Lwas lying here with a terrible pain in; my head and my watch and purse are missing. I guess I've been robbed and left for dead by some 'scoundrel." "Most likely; but you are not dead," ohe returned, "for which I am htartily glad." Are yOu?" he asked, in a low, earn est tone, which sent the hot blood to her white face, and made the hand tremble which folded the cambric over the, ugly wound. - 'Yes, most certainly I am. glad; no one wants the ghost of a murdered man wandering in these woods. They're gloomy enough now' 'To be sure 'they are," he assented ""I wonder if I could stand up for a mo ment?" He reached out his hands to Bernice; who had risen, ,and was debating what to do next, saying: "Please assist ae a little and I will get up:" She gave him her hand, but it was of no use, for with a moan he reeled toward her. She caught him and he slipped to the earth from her arms in a half faint ing condition. "You will have to have help; you are hurt worse than you think for," sho said, kneeling down by him again and folding her wraps in pillow form and placing them under his head. "Yes," lie murmured, "and I'll de pend on you. If I'm not alive when you return," he added, as she turned .away, "tell them that Bernard Hope was mur-: dered here for his money. My mother lives in Gene3see, N. Y. "Oh! you must not die; it must not be," she' replied impulsively. "I have a horse and will bring help speedily ; I don't live far from here." Whether he heard or not Bernice could not tell; he only moaned a little and closed his eyes. "He has fainted 1" she wailed, the old terror taking possession of her. "Poor fellow. Oh, I must hurry. Here, Ceil," and she whistled softly to the old creature who wa3 waiting near the path and wondering what had become of his mistress. In a moment Bernice was in the sad dle and was urging the dumfounded animal forward at a swifter pace than he remembered of since he came among the Winters. She did not mind the gloom, nor the surging of the winds in the dark tops now; there was a life hangiug on her efforts, perhaps. Over the pine roots flew the feet of "old Ceil," until Bernice drew rein at the edge of the forest where her father and his "help" were felling timber. To them she told her story as well as her excitement per mitted, adding, in a short, wretched aside, "I knew it would come some time, this awful thing." In a short time they were following her flying footsteps as she retraced the. gloomy by road. One of the men had been dis patched to the house for a heavy blanket, from which to improvise a stretcher, and now brought up the rear on "old Ceil," who imagined that the whole "Winters relationship, had go. mad. "Here he is." cried Bernice, running forward to v.here the prostrate but r viving victim lay. "You have come," he said as she bent ever him and again the surging of the rich color went over her fair face.' Tiiere was a magnatism in his tones,not withstanding the pain in the accents, that made her heart throb and pulse quicken strangely. "Yes," she an swered, and their eyes met. He reached up his hands to her as the color mount ed to her temples, with an eloquent ap peal in look and manner. "Well, my young fellow, you've been in rather a hard row lately, I should say," said Mr. Winter?. . "Yes, they came near finishing me, I think." " , , , "Well, wellsee what can be.done for you,'' and in a short time they had placed him on the blanket and taking hold o the four corners bore him away from the gloomy spot where he came near stepping from this land Into the unknown. ; The physician said that he must have been struck with an iron, bolt, but none could tell much about it and no trace ot the murderer could be found. But under the kind care of competent curses Bernard Hope gained rapidly and Kender Unto Caesar DUNN, was soon able to be able to be about. One bright afternoon ' he walked out leaning on the arm of Bernice, who ac companied; him in his little "outing" during his convalescence. . 'You will write a letter for me to day, will you not?" he asked, pausing to get a rtch cluster of bitter-sweet berries from a swinging vine, "my head isn't just right, now, somehow, and mother will be anxious to know where I am. Mother is all I have now and I love her dearly." He sighed and lcoked away towards the pines, but Bernice was lis tening attentively and noticed the sad ness creep into his closing words. "Yes, certainly, I will do anything for you," she answered in herimpulslve way. "Will yon?" he asked, turning quickly and looking wistfully into her face. Again the hot flush suffused cheek and brow. Bernice had a way of blushing when the frank, clear eye of Bernard Hope rested on her and to-day it vexed her exceedingly. "Let us go in," she said abruptly, pretending ndjt to hear his last question, "and I will write your letter at once." "Thank you, you are so kind," wa3 all he said, as they - turned toward the bouse, but there was a caress in every word as it fell from his lips, and she felt that this stranger loved her. "Tell her," he said, dictating the letter, over which Bernice held the pen, "tell her to seud me a check lor a couple of thousand dollars, as the rascal has every cent I had. I can get it cashed at at Muskegon, of course?" he said ab sently, as if thinking of something else. "Ah I yes, the 'Sawdust City' never fails in an accommodation; even sends pickpockets after one'through the 'for est road,' " replied Bernice, mischiev ously. ne looked across the writing-table at her a moment and then said, "may be it was the luckiest tap I ever had." Bernice met his earnest glance and the "Why?" which trembled on her lips was forgotten, or perhaps answered be fore asked, and she bowed hastily over the unfinished letter. "I was thinking," he said presently, i'of that day in the forest. Do you krow, I almost forgot that I was hurt when you came back to me? Your eyes held such a magnetism for me that I held up my hands to you involuntarily i a great desire to always be near you 3 over me. Perhaps I ought not to ou this just yet, but I cannot keep .the secret from you any longer. 1 al most love the spot where I lay. because it was there that I met Bernice." She did not answer. He expected her to. speak,' but a great lump came in her throat and she sat silent and speech less. ; He intended to say more, but her seeming indifference checked him and he got up and went over to the open win dow and sat down wearily. He was so weak, too, and some way his temple pained him yet. So he bowed his head to the window ledge. The dark red of the ugly scar showed plainly on the white brow turned next to .her, and Bernice felt as if she ought to go to him and apologize or say some thing, at least. She watched the silent figure nervously, thinking ot how this this one honest heart had drifted into her life and back -from the gates of death. , "Shall I mail your letter to-day?" she asked finally, not daring to risk anything else in words, but her voice was tear derer than usual and there was some thing, in the tones which made hira loo!c up suddenly, with a wild hope at his beating heart. Her ,rfac3 was turned away, however, and as yet he could not not be certain of anything. "If you please." He answered her so long after she had asked the question that she had thought he did not hear. "If I please," she said softly, turning .to meet that wistful, entreating look she was sure was there. Ah I the truth and love shining in the depths of the dark eyes and all for her. She went over to him and stood still, looking down on the dark rings of brown hair just touching the ugly scar. "If 1 please," she repeated. "Certainly, I will do anything for you." "Do you feel that way I" he asked joyfully, raising his head. "You have said that twice to me to-day and I well, if you feel that way, kiss me, Bernice, please I" She hesitated a moment, then im printed a little frightened kiss on the broad forehead, close to the dreadful scar. "Oh I Bernice, you do love me; what can I ask more?" and he held up his hands much the same as once before that gloomy hour under the pineJ. "I might have kissed you from pity," she said, looking down and taking his willing hands in her own pinkxpalrus. "No I others might have done that, but not you, Bernice, ngtyou." "You aie weak and tired," she said, ignoring his words; "pow head, you had better lie down and rest." Then, with a gentle carress of the white, scarred brow, she turned to adjust the cushions on the couch nearby. "Come," she said,, "you are all wearied out, Ber nard," and the look on her face satisfied him that henceforth their paths would never need diverge. , "I am very happy,1 he said, closing his eyes, "too happy to be tired, and the pain in my heart is gone." Bernice had not been so happy either for many months perhaps never so hap-, py, but she wondered quietly to herseU if that little kiss on the wounded head had brought it all about. "I am going, now," she 8id, coming toward him. - "Wait a moment. Come closer." He reached out his hand to W as she came to his side. "I want toalways be near you; I have given myself to you; will you take me, Bernice?" The questioning magnetism of the earnest ejes added their power to the interrogative she hardly expected not just yet. . But, after all, why was it needful tc hesitate? Bending over the upturned face, as she had once before, only tin the Things that aw Caesar's, HART CO., THURSDAY, JANUARY 5, 1893. other time savored of the gloom oi death, while this time well, this time, was the "silver lining," and while their eyes met she answered him in her low, weet voice. 'I will take you, Ber nard." That youngster ha3 been over to the city to-day and purchased that whole tract of land lying over there, alongsids of ours, mother." Abraham Winters said to his wife one afternoon late in .November, "and hes going to bring one of the slashingest mills in here this win ter that this neck o! woods ever saw, I reckon." "You always hated that strip o' pine lumber." he continued, turning to his daughter, "but the carse resolved itself a n .... into a aouoie oiessing But she was lookin V Tic m t ra f rr nti f t r 4-ha nri m dow, down the oath Ibading out under the pme3, and Bernard Hope was com ing out of their shadows, whistling softly and thinking of her. She was sure of it, and hen ne looked up he answered both with a smile New York Mercury. ' " Trire. We have been challenged to pronounce an opinion on the dietetic virtues of tripe, an article of food which is largely consumed in certain parts of the country, especially during the winter months. Tripe consists of the soft muscular walls and mucous membrane of the stomach of ruminant animals, with a small propor tion of delicate omental fat adhering, from which, however, all fibrous portions of the serous covering, or peritoneum, have been removed. From frequent ex periments it has been proved that tripe stands high in the list of albuminous substances that are quickly acted on by the gastric juice and reduced to a state ot solution, and.has, therefore, acquired a reputation for digestibility. But plain boiled tripe in itself is a very insipid article of food, and in order to make 'it palatable the art of the cook has to be invoked, which, while making it more "savory," causes it often, when so served, to be an offense to the stomach. The usual mode of serving tripe iu this country is to boil it with milk and onions, and there can belittle doubt that sucha combination is not particularly digestible. Tripe is also sometimes fried in batter, but unless very carefully cook ed t is apt to become leathery.- If only plainly boiled in water it requires a. con siderable amount of condiments in the shape of salt, pepper and mustard: to make it acceptable to the palate. There fore, tripe as usually cooked, though an excellent dish foiy strong stomachs, is, owing to the ingredients added to it, not always so suitable for persons of weak digestion as has been supposed. London Lancet. A Girl's Ileftdaclie-Cnriug Hands. There is a girl in San Francisco who can cure headaches cure them without a bit of medicine. She just lays her' hand on the aching head and that settles the whole matter. There's something peculiar about the girl's hands. They are white and shapely and very nice to look at, but to touch ugh 1 they're a3 cold as ice. More than that,, they are always dripping wet, these strange hands. It's an eerie thing to see a handsome, healthy girl lift her hands and let an icy dew fall from the ends of her fingers. Sho can do that any time she wants to, and never feels the least annoyed at the awe of the beholders. She is a tall, handsome young woman, who has never been ill in her life. She is rosy-cheeked and bright-eyed, and she isn't the slightest particle like the typi cal healer. She works in a big, hot fac tory down town, and she can cure any girl in the place of headache or any kind of pain. . She doesn't go through strange evolutions or weird incantations. She just pushes back her sleeves and lay3 'her cold, wet hand3 on the aching bead. The patient feels a queer, creepy shivery sensation crawling down her back. The cold hands move slowly across the hot forehead of the sufferer, the throbbing pain stops, the twitching of the eyelids ceasep, and the, headache is gone. San Francisco Examiner. The Best Roadway. ' "The people aie having lots of road way conventions throughout the South &ud West now days," observed J. C. McCandliss, of New Hartford, Conn., at the Lindell as he had finished, reading a treatise on that very important question in a' popular magazine. "The best roadway is a raised one," macadam ized. Drainage, of course, mu9t be maintained, for it is an essential feature to good roads. The goo i roadway should be seeded to gras3, evened up and the weeds kept down. Shade trees should be planted in order that the sun light be kept out. The overseer method, particularly now in practice in the South, should be abolished and comrais; sioners of not less than three elected from each county, who should be in structed to personally supervise all im provements. Local highway improve ment societies should be formed iu tverj precinct and road improvements dis cussed." St. Lou's Republic.! Weather rrl actions byCoffee. A Spanish journal tells of ah inter esting experiment to be tried with a cup of clear coffee and a lump of sugar. The sugar should be dropped into the coffee without stirring; in a moment the air contained in the sugar will rise to the surface in the shape of bubbles, and these bubbles are excellent weather in dications. If they collect in the middle of the cup a fair day follows; if, adversely,' they adhere to the sides, forming a ring of bubbles wil h a clear space in the cen-' tre, take your umbrella, for rain is at hand; while, if they do neither ne thing nor the other, but scatter irregu larly, variable weather is indicated. Just what is the scientific explanation of the action of the atmosphere on the bubbles is not stated, but that their in dications curiously agree with those of a barometer has'been tested. New (York Times, Unto God, God's. TESTING HER GUNS. The United States Cruise r Vesuvius at Port Eoyal. y J Port Rotal, S. C The dynamite cruiser Vesuvius is in the harbor for the purpose of testing her high explosive guns. j Lieutenant Seaton Sohroeder is in com mand, and the tests were under the iu pervision of a committee j appointed by Secretary Tracy, consisting of Capt. Mont gomery Sicard of the IMiantonomoh, Capt. A. S. Barker of the ths Philadel phia, and Commander W. H. Brownson of the Dolphin. The trial was unusually thorough. The cruiser carried 75 blank projectiles and 25 loaded with 200 pounds of gun cotton and. about 80 blank; p'ojectiles used in ranging the guns, and five loaded with a small charge of powder to test the new fuses. Eighteen of the loaded projectiles were fired at hulks. The cruiser carries three high-exploiivs gujie, each 55 feet long, 6et at an ang e of 18 degrees. Their length precludes the fixing of the range by a change of elevation, as is done with powder can non. The range is therefore regulated by the amount of air in the firing reser voir. The pressure in the firing reser voir is always 750 peunds per square inch. This storage reservoir cau supply enough air for .thirty shots or more. 1 he ervice projectile carries a charge of 200 pounds of gun cotton and will travel about 2,400 yards. The full calibre pro jectile, with 500 pounds of gun cotton, weighs 1,000 pounds and is too heavy to carry far at the angle of the guns. Tho new fuses exploded the projectile about 75 yards after contact with the water, al though an arrangement is made for in stant explosion on an impact with a solid substance. , The Vesuvius is able to fire one gun a minute. It takes five seconds to charge the guns with air, and about two min utes and a half to load the guns. On her trial trip the Vesuvius fired fifteen shots in 16 minutes 10 seconds. There will be no more delay from the pitching of the vessel in a rough sa in firing the pneumatic guns than with ordinary cannon. This depends largely on the ability of the gunner to have his sights ready and fire his shot the moment the vsssel is steady on the erest of a sea. The tests were satisfactory in every way. ' Jerry Simpson a Candidate. . Topeka, Kan. Congressman Jerry Simpson arrivedjhere and .he put all doubts to rest concerning his candidacy for the United States Senate by announcing that he was a candidate. . He said, how ever, that his presence was due more to a desire to help the Populists endeavor to organize the House than in his own interest. The organization" of the House, he further said, depended upon the Su preme Court, before which the j House contest cases, recently mentioned in these despatches, had been filed. Of. course the court could not finally settle the con test. But what the court could do was to prevent a man from working a wrong which was all the Populists asked. A Precious Rascal. Riciimoxd, Va.. A special from Tas ley, Va., says that Thomas Nelson, may or of .Cape Charles City, ha3 absconded after squandering about $3,000 church and trust funds placed in his hands for safekeeping. lie was a master mechan ic; clerk oi the New York, Phil adelphia and Norfolk Railroad; a ves tryman of the Episcopal church und may or of .the town. Ho also belonged to all the secret orders. Nelson is a native of Virginia, though he came to Cape Charles City from New Jersey. Owing to his expensive style of liviDg, his wife left him. Then he sold his furniture and after receiving the money left for parts uuknown. A re ward is offered for his arrest. Burns His Ship. Wilmington, N. C. The schooner Eleanor, Captain McCoy, which sailed from Georgetown, S. C, for New York, December 24, with a cargo of rosin, spir its of turpentine and cotton, was 6truck December 25 by a gale. that lasted three days, causing the ship to spring a leak. The vessel on December 28 becoming water-logged, was abandoned 35 miles off Topsail Inlet. The crew of 6eveh men reached shore here after being in a small boat 38 hours, suffering' intensely. Captain McCoy, realizing the danger of the floating wreck te passing vessels, set hre to his water-logged ship before leav ing her. Julian Can and the Cabinet. " Wa-hisgton. D. Julian S. Can was interviewed hers- as to the Postmas ter Generalship and says : . "While the posi ion is one of highhon or for any man and I would feel com plimented by Mr Cleveland's choice, if it fell On ine, I must say in response to your enqu ry for a word on the subject that I could not even consider aDy place in the Presid nt's gift except that of P.ostmaster General A man ought not to seek cr lightly decline position of hich honor or res onfeibilitv, such as that of a cabinet portfolio."' "The Grottoes" of Virginia. S.- II. Ncwinll, curator of the geologi cal department of the Smithsonian Jn--t:tute of Wii-hington, has been in Shen d u, Va., getting t gether a collection of s .-d.ictite. s al gmites and other won lcr3 from W oyer's cave for an exhibit at Chicago. Mr.,Newhall says that sp ci : ens fr id the caves in this locality ex- erd .all oth -rs m beauty, and that- this id be tiie.l irgest aJid most comrytehen ive display of "any' cave knownT After ! imr displayed at Chicago,the specimens a c to be brough- back to Washington 1 1 l jrive i t the Smit soni.m Institute. . Governor Tillman Signs the Bill. Columbia. S. C Governor Tillman signed the Wih-un ntihoad bill, w. ich passed th i. Logilatur !.ist w-tk, giving to the railroad -"'ni-sion tl.e power to fix pnssenrr smd frcigh rates Jnd other- wise n a. cunir"! t'i- r ij'f'trids of South Caro- I $1.00 Per EDITORS CALL ON GR0VER. He Receives Them Graciously and Enquires About Vance and Oelquitt. As has been announced, ton Southern editors called on Mr. Cleveland last Sat urday In New York and the Herald tays: Mr. Cleveland was glad to see the Southern editors. He knew nearly all of them personally, but each in turn was presented to him by Captain Howell. "Mr. President," said Capt. Howell, when the handshaking was over, "we are not here to talk about offices. We don't want any offices, tor do, we come in any. particular interest. But . the legislation of the last twenty-five years ha been in favor of the hawks. Now we 'want the chickens. to have a show." Mr. Cleveland laughed heartily at this. 'There is much in that barnyard simile of yours, Mr. Howell," he eaid. "You may also possibly recall, Mr. President," went on Capt Howell," ''that some of us were not in favor of your nomination at Chicago" (with a sweep of his hand toward Editors Walsh and Stockton), 'but after you were nominated we were all for' you." "It makes no difference," said the President-elect, "who wa3 opposed to my nomination; I want the assistance of everybody. I want the assistance of all you gentlemen to carry . out the princi ples on which I was elected. Relief is expected 6f the p- ople and I earuestly desire your co-operation to secure what they have asked for" "The South, Mr. Cleveland, will do all in its power to assist jou," said Editor Hemphill. "I.do not think this country ever had an election which caused such sincere rejoicing throughout the. South." Mr. Cleveland looked pleased. "I feel very much flattered," he observed, "at wh-it happened as a result of the carn- pngn, and the expres-ions of good will which have come from the South and from oth r parts of the country have been especidly gratifying." Thj President-elect inquired . particu latly about Senators Coiquett, of Georgia, and Vance, of North Carolina. He also asked Mr.'. Howell t: remember him to his son, Clark Howell, and spoke in an appreciative way of young Mr Howell's letters on the progress of the campaign, printed from week to week in the Her ald. At one ti;nc during the visit Mr. Cleve land said he hoped none of the editors had brought iuterviewers with -them. This allusion to the fear of the President elect that he might b3 quoted caused a laugh all around, and one of the editors said thty did uot thing such enterprise had been attempted sinca Colenel Shep urd interviewed General Alger- with a shorthand man behind the screen. -.- "I do not like getting into the news papers day after day," said Mr. Cle've aud, "but I do take the position that wheu t'aere is anything with which I am connected which affects the welfare of the people or in which the people are interested, it is my duty to make it pub lic." - ' - Touching on personal matters- Mr. Cleveland said, that he was sorry' the edi t jrs had not called on him earlier. "I know," said he, "that you have been h2ie a week. I rather expected you to cill on me earlier. I shall always be glad to se you. " -'We did not ca'l on you before be cause we did not care to' intrude upon your time. We knew you were having t m iny callers." "I am not so-busy as the public gener ally believes," said Mr. Cleveland. ' The editors now took their leave. They liad been with Mr Cleaveland nearly a half hour. Mr. Cleveland shook hands with them heartily and said he hoped to see them whenever they came North. During the visit not a word did Mr. Cleveland drop about an extra "session, the speakership or the formation of his cabinet. The Sfiim of Toac-t. V A curious scientist, who has been giv ing careful attention to the matter, says that man's sense of touch, or feeling,, resides almost wholly in the ski a and in those parts of the body, as the lips and the tongue, that are most exposed, while some of our most important organ, the heart, for instance, and the -brain,,, are quite insensible to touch, thus showing that not only are nerve necessary for the sensation, but also the special eu I organs. The curious fact was noticed with the greatest astonishment by Har vey, wbc, while treating a patient for an abscess that caused a large cavity in his side, found that, when, he put his fingers into this cavity, he could actually take hold gf the heart without the pa tieat being in the least aware o what he was doing. - This 60 interested Harvey that he brought King Cuarle3 I. to the man's bedside that "he might himseli , behold and touch so' extraordiaarf a thing." In certain operations a piece ot ekin Is removed from the forehead to the nose, and it is stated that the patient, oddly enough, feeis as if the new nasal part were still in his forehead and may have a headache in his nore. New Or leans Picayune. Killed for Not Working the Road. AeimviLLK, N. C. Saturday afternoon O. R. Joues was shot and iistantly kil led and his son Jesse . Jon.s perhaps fa tally shot at th'-ir home near Leicester, twelve miles wt st f Asheville. Young Jones refu-ed to oby. the suStmons to work upon the public roacU.and the fath er sustained hi i and dofi d the officer3. Cons' able Steve s sc iircil a posse" and attempted t make the unes'i In a fight which followed fifteen or twenty shots were exchanged The killing is regard ed as justifiable. .Irse ..'ones has since di'd. ' m In Lyochburg, .Va., the tobacco ware houses are unsualW busy, "and high prices are b.i g secured at nearly all sales. Some shipping Vrades recently brought $ 13.75 per huntjfred and dark grades com mand a co- respond fngly satisfactory price. Very little bright tobacoo is being offer- 1, but the figures which it realizes ' are highly gratifying, Farmers are bringing i heir tobacco in steadily, and as a cons; quence merchants state that the volume of business is particularly good, and the holiday trade promises to be unusually hf'vy. Annum, in Advanc NO. 46 raE OCEAN'S GRAVEYARD.1 t,HE SA.RCASSO SEA. THE ClTER In Immense Area'ol Vter Which H Covered. With Floating Wrecks and -Other Strange Objects. OR several years past the Hydro graphic Bureau at Washington has been trying to- acquire a more intimate knowledge of the movements of the waters of the ocean ni a great number of bottles, contain, ing messages and securely corked, have been dropped overboard by vessels. Many of these have floated thousands of miles before they were picked upy .and, . while some were washed upon native and foreign shores, others have found their way into the great Sargasso Sea. FronS the courses taKen by these different bot tles it has been ' found that the ocean currents move around in a vast circle. Tnose which were dropped overboard on the American, coast took a northerly course,-while those on the European side floated toward the south. ' Bottles dropped overboard iq the North Atlan tic started toward the northeast,'' and those from the African and' Spanish coast floated almost directly west until they reached the West India Islands. . The general directions of the currents were thus ascertained, showing that the wacers acted upon by winds and cur rents circulated round and round like a pool. In all pools floating objects are quickly cast outside of the revolving currents, or they are carried with them in their circular route'for some time, until, they are washed nearer the .centre or side of the pool. The bottics that were forced oufside of the currents of the ocean were cast upon the shores of .some coun try, but those which were worked toward the centre eventually found their way in the calm waters of the Sargasso Sea. Here they femain peacefully until picked up by some vessel, or until some sform cists them back into the great pool. , . Vesselliry rarely visit the great sea in the middle of the ocean, but occasicn ally they are driven there by 'storms or adverse winds. Strange sights meet the gaze of . the sailors at such times. Won derful stories partly .true and partly false have been told by sailors return ing from, a forced .trip o the vast Sar- ' gasso Sea. The surface of the soa! is covered with floating wrecks, spars, sea weed boxes, fruits, and a thousand other - innumerable articles. It is the great re pository or storehouse of tho ocean, and all things which do not sink tp the bot tom or are not washed upon the shores are carried to this centre of the sea. . When one considers the vast number of wrecks on the ocean, and the quantity : . of floating material that is thrown over board, a. faint idea of the wreckage io the Sargasso Sea may be conceived. Derelicts, or abandoned vessels, fre quently disappear in myeterious ways, and no accounts are given of theui for' years by passing vessels. Then suddenly, .years later, they appear again in somo well-traveled route to the astonishment -of all. Che wrecks are covered with mould and green slime, showiDg the long, lonesome voyage whica they have passed through. .It is generally sup posed that such derelicts have been swept into the centre of the pool and remained in the Sargasso Sea until finally cast out by some unusually violent storm. The life in this sea is interesting. Sol itary and alone the acres of waters, cov ered with the debris, stretch out as th vast graveyard of the ' ocaan, seldom being visited by vessels or human beings." Far lrom all trading routes of vessels, the sight of a sail or eveam vtSbel is something Unusual. The fishes of the 6ea form the chief life of these watery soli tudes. I Attracted by the vast quantities of wreckage floating' in the sea, and also by the gulf weed on wnica many of them live, tney swarm around in great num bers. . The smaller 'fishes "live in the in tricate avenues iormed by the seaweed, and the more ferocious denizens of the dcp:ome hither to'feed upon the quan- ; titles of 6inall fish. In this way the tub marine life of the Sargasso Sea is made interesting and lively. - . " The onJy life overhead is that made by a few Bea birds, which ocdwionally reach the solitudes of this m d-ocean cemetery. ' A Jew of the long flyers of the air penetrate to the very mi Idle of the ocean, but-it is very rarely that thia occurs.. Some have been known to follow vessels across the ocean, keeping ''at a respectful distaccJ from the stern. Other birds have . been swept out to sea' by storms, and have finally sought ret uge in the Sar gasso Sea. Still others, taking refuge on some derelict, have been' gradually car ried to' the same midocean scene. There is sufficient food floating on the surface, or to be obtained from the fishes which live amou'g the forests of seaweed, to support a large 'colony of ' bird?. It i . surmised that many of those found in the sea have mhab.itedJ.bose regions for years, partly from, choice, and partly from necessity. " Birds swept out there by storms would not care to venture the long return trip to land, and finding an abundance of food 'm 1 wr'T cs on which, to rest and rear t'. ju.,they might easily become conteut with u..:ir strange lot. Just how far the strong-winge 1 ' . sea birds can fly without resting is all conjectural, but it is doubtful" if many of them would undertake such a long journey seaward with no better prospect ahead than dreary wastes of .waters Detroit Free Press. A'Fluatinr Hotil. A strange craft repenjly iainched at Bith', Me.,, for use in Florida, and whic i -will shortly be iqf New York, is the floating hotel, J. S, Danforth. It is in- -tended lor service on Florida fivers. It has threo keels, is 125 feet lon aud ' thirty feet rx am, and draws twenty-five inches of water. It will accommodate p seventy-five persons and will be th; floating home or hunters ana ri;irmM. who visit ; Florida.-rNew Orleans Picavune. . ' si - . - - F 1 1 -! s Is It 1 1 ;2 r ! f t'