guetler. m COD WE TRUST. VOL. II BREVARD, TRANSYLVANIA CO., N. C., THURSDAY, JULY 13, I893J NO. M. Jules Simon declares that tlie Vay to reach old age is to keep the mind actively employed all the time. This, the New York Recorder thinks, is why newspaper men live so long. In a recent work on criminology the learned investigator says that out of ninety-eight young criniinaLs forty- four per cent, did not blush when ex amined. Of 122 female criminals, eighty-one per cent, did not blush. And now it i.s discovered that Cohiin- bus started on Friday on his world- finding voyage and actually sighted land on the same unlucky day, which, in the opinion of the New York Times, should forever rid it of its ban to Americans. The New York Herald states that it was the opinion of many who saw the recent naval review in the North River that some of the luxurious steam yachts of New York’s millionaires were the most beautiful and graceful of all the craft afloat. The business of colonizing Afric.a with white people goes on apace. An expedition left England igome weeks ago for Mozambique as advance party of settlers who are to colonize some .300 square miles of territory between the rivers Zambesi and Sabi. If inventors go on making armor plate more and more invulnerable and guns which throw a projectile wdth greater and greater velocity, the time may come when a cannon ball will have to be made of something about as hard as a diamond to stand the imT)act and will cost nearly as much. Chicago opened her big show with a population, visitors not included, oJ about 1,250,000, or about 600,000 be hind that of New York. Philadelphia’.; _eBtimflted iiopulation is 1,16.0,000; > Brooklyn’s, J,00(^.000; Baltimore's, 611,600: Boston’s, 475,000; Cincin nati’s, 325,000: Cleveland’s, including ft recently annexed suburb, 322,000; Ban Francisco’s, 320,000; Buffalo’s, 300,000; 'Washington’s, 263,000, and Detroit’s 250,000. Most of those are moderate official estimate.s, and they show that the chief cities of the country are growing with even more than their usual rajoidity. so LITTLE, Hereafter, when 1 sleep beneath the grass In yonder churchyard plot, &nd what I was, or might have been, is then that which is not, tf you should come in kindliness to stand there by the spot, And sometimes think ol mo 4.S if I were not better than you thought, but that I were less bad, C know in that dark, dismal grave of mine I should be glad Through all eternity. ' - '-'W. J. Lampton, in New York Sun. Harness marks, physical or mental, come to most men who are busied in doing the world’s work. Even so light ft task as the handling of a pen often leaves its traces upon the fingers. Per haps the commonest result of constant ly writing with a pen is the formation of callous spots on the middle fingev of the right hand just where the pen crosses and on the first joint of the lit tle finger where it is moving in contact with the paper. Sometimes a disease of the nail of the middle finger results from the some cause. Any carefully observant person could easily pick out a penman by examining his right hand. It is a enrious fact, notes the Boston Herald, that, while the westward move ment of the population has covered no less than degrees of longitude (9 degrees 21 minutes, 7 seconds), this movement has run almost on a straight line, the extreme northern and south ern variation embracing less than one- third of a degree of latitude (18 min utes, 56 seconds). To put the contrast more distinctly, we may say that, while the western movement for the century aggregates 506 miles, the extreme northern and southern variation is a little under tv/enty-two miles, and the finishing point of the line is only some six miles south of the starting point. 'SUMAJH.” BY STANLEY 1 Herr Krupp’s gift of his great 124- ton gum to Chicago is generous, maintains the San Francisco Examiner, since he cannot expect it to lead to anything in the way of orders from this country, and guns are good cash assets in Europe just now. We have adopted the policy of making our own munitions of war, and Krupp has no market here. Herr Krupp has com bined patriotic prudence with liber ality. If he had presented his gua to our Government it would have been mounted at New York, and might possibly at some time have been di rected against a German war-ship. At Chicago it can never encounter any Bnemy hut England, and Krupp is probably willing to take the chances of ihat. GiBsorr, ENDEESON, “what’s the meaning of ‘Sumajh,’ eh? Early this morning I was wandering about a mile out on the Kistapore road, just on the edge of the jungle, yon know, and ran across some ten or a dozen natives in a ring around a poor wretch of a leper. Ugh! he’s the first I’ve seen and he made me feel had, I can tell you; I don’t want to see any more. ” “Hah!” broke in Henderson; “and how do you know the man was a leper, if you had never seen one before, eh?” ‘ ‘Oh, ho was a leper right enough— there was a horrible grayish scaley look upon him, and he was bloated and his arms were only stump)s and—” “That’s enough—I pass,” said Henderson quickly, with a shudder. “Well, this leper seemed to be ask ing a great favor of the other fellows —imploring them to do something, you know—and they didn’t want to; and the poor chappie turned from one to the other and moaned and cried; and well, upon my word, Henderson, what with his pitiful appearance, I felt—• well—I couldn’t see quite straight for a little while. And look here; I thought lepers weren’t allowed to come near anybody?” . “Hm,” Henderson’s • face assum-ed a puzzling expression, half-p)itying,half- storn, as he rose from the camp> chair in which he was lolling. Placing his hands on my shoulders and looking into my eyes, he went on : ‘ ‘So you want to know the meaning of that word, do you ? Let’s see; how long have you been grilling in this devil’s kitchen, eh?” “Nearly five weeks,” replied I, sur prised at the peculiar hardness of his voice; for Henderson, I had already seen for myself, was big brother to all the children of the cantonment; “So; five weeks.” His voice as sumed a satirical tone. “Five weeks —and you don’t know the language yet I You’re very slow for a competition wal lah. And what did you understand of the conversation between your leper and his friends, eh?” “Why, ” said I, bridling up some what, “I learned a good hit of the lan guage before I came out, and I know as much of it now, I’ll guarantee, as the average man does after he’s been here a coupje of years.” “Alodest,” dryly ejaculated Hender son, waiting for an answer to his ques tion. “Oh, I understood it all right enough except that blessed word ‘sumajh.’ It was wrapped up in very figurative lan guage—calling the earth his mother and the sun his father, and all that sort of stuff, you know. He wanted them to do ‘sumajh’ for him; hut it seemed as if they were half afraid to do what ever it means. In the .end, though, they gave way, and the poor chap was wonderfully pleased, for h® held his wasted arms to the sky and invoked blessings on them, hnd then crouched down and kissed the earth | and finally burst out into a sort of song that didn’t go very far before it faded away into a dismal croak that was painful to listen to. I couldn’t stand it any longer, and came away. ” “So; that’s all you know about it, is it? Well, youngster, take my advice and it’s good, too—don’t poke your nose into the natives’ business. Let them alone as much as you can. Culti vate a convenient memory when you’re reading the regulations about them. Bemember, that the men who make most of those rules don’t have to keep them; and between you and me, their knowledge of the theory pf govern ment is only excelled by their ignor ance of the practice of it. As for that word you’re so curious about, forget it, and don’t hear it again—under stand?” With that he went out abruptly. I was greatly peiqjlexed. Half the night I iDondered over Henderson’s strange conduct, and wondered why on earth he should re'fuse to tell me the meaning of a simple word. I did not care to ask any one else, for fear of its getting to Henderson’s ears. -Although I was on pretty familiar terms with him, he was my chief, and in addition I had already become much attached to him. The next morning, I tackled him again. “Henderson—that "word?” He turned and gazed at me with half- closed eyes and said deliberately anil coldly: “The keenness of your cnri- osily would do infinite credit ta a corporal’s wife. ” He cleared his throat and said testily: “Picnio, picnic; that’s what the word means; he wanted them to treat him to a picnic in the jungle; and you say they consented. And”—he turned on me quite fiercely --“why shouldn’t they? And look here, my boy, if you say one word about it to any one else in the canton ment, I’ll make it warm for you. ” I was hurt and angry and gave Hen derson a wide berth for the rest of the day. In the evening I strolled down the Kistapore road. It was against the regulations, for the jungle ran right tip to the road and at night there was a certain amount of danger to be feared from the wild beasts that occasionally explored the road, almost up to the cantonment. But in my brief experi ence I had seen the spirit, if not the letter of one or two of the regulations, ignored and I wanted to be alone, to think out the meaning of Henderson’s strange words and manner. It was almost the last of the few brief moments of twilight, when,being still some cpuple of miles from home, I quickened my pace. The night was falling as only those can understand who have witnessed a nightfall on the edge of the jungle. No need to tell them how the darkness drops like a heavy blanket nor of the startling transformation of the tangled under wood and the gigantic grasses, which suddenly become strange monsters en dowed with life, moving to and fro, now' smoothly, now jerkily, pointing with strange fingers; now uttering husky cries of hate, now jibbering idiot-like. And the wild animals in the thickness of the interior, how they howl and shriek and cry and moan—• roars of defiance, screams of pain, trumpetings of victory! All made more intense by being subdued, as if the vegetation W'ere unwilling to let the outside world know of the scenes en acted in that fearsome place. I confess I started to run, holding my revolver at the full cook. But my steps were suddenly arrested by the magical appearance, directly in my path, of several lights. I pulled up sharply, and stood stock-still. The lights advanced, keeping time with the thumping of my heart. At last I could dimly descry a body of twenty orythir-. ty natives, several' of whom carried torches, which they must have just lighted. I awaited their coming not without trepidation, for I could not imagine what they were about. Just before reaching me, however, they turned quickly into the jungle. They were not five paces distant from me when they left the road, and I felt some surprise at their not having seen me. By a sudden overpowering im pulse of curiosity I started to follow them, in order to learn the meaning of their strange journey. With as little noise as possible I swung round, step ping almost in their footsteps, I had little difficulty in doing so, for they followed what seemed to be a beaten track. For some hundreds of yards the strange procession went slowly on. Suddenly I heard a strange noise that thrilled me through and through. There was something about it, too, that seemed familiar; but my brain was excited and refused to recall the sound. It was a kind of moan, half human, half animal. As the natives and I drew nearer it took the character of a chant; and then it flashed on me that I had heard the sound before; it was the leper’s voice! The poor wretch was crooning a dismal hymn or invocation, just as he had done when soliciting his relatives to do what I was to my great satisfaction, about to find out. His low, weak voice rang out stangely clear. “Ohei, Ohei, Mother, my mother. Thpu only art merciful. Thou only. Ohei, Ohei, Brethren, my brethren, lead me to my mother; she oply will welcome, she only will give peace. Ohei, Ohei. The voice died away in a moan that mingled with and seemed to rise again in the soft whistling pf the long grasses, as they quivered with 4he breath of the wind that presaged the coming rains. I shivered, The ]party having now arrived at a space which had been cleared of the tangle-wood and grass, abruptly stopped and formed into a ring. I pressed for ward as near as I dared. Then I saw, in the centre of the ring, a large cav ity, perhaps fSur feet deep, with the earth hanked up on either side. The torch-bearers ranged themselves at the head and foot of the hole, which, now that it was in the light, I saw to he of oblong shape, shelving somewhat at the end nearer to me. The pther na,- tives stood at the sides, four with tom toms and two with little pots of burn ing incense. The the leper limxDed out, from the jungle seemingly, and crouched at the shelving end pf the hole, I had exiieoted him to appear on the scene, yet when he did so, I could not helj) giving a bit of a start. Not one of the natives looked at the leper, nor did he to Thee. He comes to Thee. ” Their voices and the noise of the tom-tome died clown; and as they faded away the leper, who had been beating time by nodding his head, crawled down the slope and squatted dov;n at the deep end of the hole. In a shrill, quavering voice that sounded strangely piercing on the electrically charged air he took up the refrain. “Ohei, Ohei. Fire of the Light nings, I come. Cloudless brightness of the sky, I come. Winged Messenger of the Mountains, I come. Ohei. I come 1” Then, amid more chanting and tom tom beating, two of the natives handed the leper some liquid in a small bowl and some food. After drinking a little of the liquid and eating a little of the food, he cast the remainder into the hole in front of him, accompanying the action with subduecl but intense cries. -'But now several of the natives re tired for a moment, returning with large flat pieces of wood. With these they started throwing earth into the hole. The leper did not move. They were going to bury the poor wretch alive! The thought in all its hideous ness flashed through my brain. For the instant I went as cold as ice and was unable to raise a finger. Only for a moment thoug-h; and then, acting for the second time that night on the im pulse of the moment, I dashed forward, my revolver still in my hand, to do— what, I could not tell. But before 1 had gone two steps I found myseli seized, disarmed, gagged and x)inioned. r struggled, or, rather, attempted to struggle, for I could neither move noi utter the slightest sound. I gave my self up for lost. I ex^ieoted nothing but death, and I remember doing whaf I had not done for years: I offered up a prayer—incoherent and vague; bul never was prayer more fervent. Con trary to my exp)ectation I was only dragged back several jpaces and tied hand and foot to what I suppose was a small tree. My captors had bound me with my back towards the leper, appa rently determined that I should see nothing more of what was going on. However, by screwing my neck round I could just catch sight of the wretched creature in the pit that I now felt cer tain was to be his grave. The horrible sight fascinated me. I had no thought for anything else. yX^n my own perilous situation caused e.^ anxiety. fear or The ie TIG" mru o natives, still singing that sad, monoto nous refrain, were now quickly throw ing the earth round the leper. Quicker and quicker they shovelled, louder and louder they sang: ‘ ‘Ohei, Ohei, thy wish is thine—is thine.” The four- heating the tom-toms threw them down and joined in. The earth mounted higher and higher round the doomed man. It reached his breast; he waved his poor stumprs of arms towards the sky; he jratted the earth with them, as if he were fondling a loved one, It reached his shoulders—he bent and kissed it passionately. Oh, that scene !—the natives casting in the earth with frenzied energy; the torch-bearers standing like bi-onze statues, their torches throwing a red glare on the leper’s head, now fast dis appearing as if sinking in a irool of bl«pd. Then the earth orepat up to his mouth, his nostrils. « * « "With a convulsive effort I shut my eyes. In another moment the noise of the shoveling and singing ceased. My eyes involuntarily opened, just in time to see fhe torch-bearers thrusting their torches ip the earth heaped npr over the grave; they gave an angry splutter and then went out. For an instant there was utter darkness and silence. Then came the crowning horror. A vivid flash of lightning lit up the scene. It seemed to hang over the spot. And whjle the natives were thus en veloped with the ghastly hue of death, I heard—I vow I heard—muffled and faint as the shriek of a gagged man, the ery of the leper-—the echo of a ■Voice—rthe Echo of a Life! Louder and'louder grew that terrible voice; it roared like a cataract, like a thousand pjealk of thunder; it beoame a thing—• tangpale, pralpable—filling the uni verse, pressing on my brain—crushing it—till at last something snapiped and I knew no more. ^ ♦ Three weeks, afterward I woke up. I was lying on a bed in my quarters. Henderson was. bending over me;, he raised his hand to prevent my spreak- ing, saying, with a queer little smile: “Yes, yes—keep) quiet; a touch of jungle fever, my boy, that’s all—a trifle heady; you’ll he all right again in a jiffy,’’ That * ‘jiffy’’ was nearly three months. —Ohftmb.ers’s Journal, seem to see them. As soon, however, as he approached, the whole of the na tives set up a cry—subdued and dismal beyond description. The burden of it was something like this: “To Thee who art all knowledge, all power, all love, all hate. To Thee, known only of Thy self. To Thee who art Life and Death. To Thee wg bring our brother, He seeks Thee where Thou art. He comes Keal Chinese Names Not Known. “Chinese names are peculiar,” said P, J, Allen, of San Francisco. “One would think they were very simple from reading the Ling Lungs, Sam Leeg>»nd Wong Chings on the windows of Chinese laundries. But these are not Chinese names at all. They are noma des affaires—business names, merely. Their owners have other names, their real, their family names, by -whioh, and by which only, are they known to their friends in private. It doesn’t make any difference to a China man what name you call him, so that you give him your shirts to Wash and do not designate him by that, to' him, contemptuous phenomenon, ‘ ‘John. ”' —St. Louis Globe-Democrat, WORDS OF WISDOM, Life is a continued story. Self-love is incurably blind. No flower is jealous of another. Sorrow finds a rainbow in tears. Poetry is an hereditary disease. Poetry is not prose cut to measure. Don’t talk your good deeds to death. Thoughtfulness is the core of char- ity. The harvest is nature smiling at thrift. Only the eyes can say unutterable things. The fool has no fear; the brave man conquers it. After seventy a man isn’t anxious to look forward. Action is the fruit of sentiment. It has no flower. A man’s words are not the index of his character. A hypocrite is one-third thief and two-thirds liar. A man's great deeds are always greater than himself. ■When a woman is weak she is sweet; when she is strong she is bitter. The bigger crowd a man is in, the harder he finda it to fight-himself. There are twenty-six letters in the alphabet, the largest of which is I. A man is either a fool or a knave who buys without the means to pjay. A wise man knows much; a wiser man tells much; the wisest man keeprs his mouth shut. Some people are born good; some achieve goodness and some have good ness thrust upon them. A dictionary comes about as near de fining what love is as a grain of sand comes to filling the ocean. The world is becoming more modest as it becomes more civilized; time was when the naked truth did not shock people. Money May be Too Safe. “I have no doubt that many a fam ily now struggling along under the belief that the father died and left nothing would be well off could they go to the safe deposit vault where the head of the house kept his valuables, open the door of his particular com partment and carry away its con tents. ” The speaker was a man who is con nected with an establishment of the kind mentioned. He evidently knew what he was talking about. The safe deposit vaults are a mod ern institution. In them a man, by the payment of ?5 or upward annu ally, can keep his mouey, jewelry and papers safe from fire and burglary. Armed guards further protect his prop erty, but even without their presence no gang of burglars could work quick ly enough to despDoil the vaults, built, as they are, of steel and granite into the very backbones of immense build ings. “But the very care of the tenant is the doom of his nearest kin, ” said the interested gentleman; “he doesn’t ex pect to die suddenly, but that mode seems the most general nowadays. No man should have his affairs so secret that his loved ones suft'er the rest of their lives by what he considered his forethought. “A recent case occurs to me. A young man with apparently many years before him, suddenly went in sane. He was fond of jewelry, but one night a would-be thief snatched a very valuable scarf-pin the young man wore. After that, though he foiled the high way robber, he would not wear his dia monds, but put them in his safe, under the care of the deposit vaults. “Had he not told me of the incident nobody would ever have known what became of the diamonds. No man puts his name and address in his safe, and the company only knows him person ally and no-fc his relatives.” Even savings banks have been able to build handsome edifices with the uncalled-for money deposited by men or women who have disappeared. Take many thousand accounts, and a cer tain percentage of them will never be called for. They are advertised, hut very little results from the advertise ments, and the bank is the winner. The amounts thus lost to sight ag gregate ‘tnany hundreds of thousands of dollars. Thera is a grim fatality about the “safety” of a vault.—New York Journal. An Artist in Paper. It is remarkable how many wonder ful childreh there are in the world in latter days. ' Mrs. George Dunlap, who is the head and centre of the children’s dep^tment of the World’s Fair, re ceives .almost daily letters giving an aoc'ount of some infant prodigy in that especial region. One of the most unique Is a youth who produces most interesting results with paper and scissors. His mother reads him a story, which he illustrates with figures, trees, houses and animals, all made of tissue paper, cut with scissors. It is said that somewhere in the Eleventh Century there was a young prince who excelled in this art, whioh has been lost to the world ever since.— Detroit Free Press. In portions of Africa sugar of a re markable degree of sweetness is now made of cotton seed. ON LIFE’S BANQUET STAIRS, We pass each other on life’s banquet stairs t New guests ai-q^ mounting to the lesta light, ■While wo descend together to the night. Close muffled 'gainst the outside wintry airs They tread upon our shadows as they climb With quick strong steps to join the crowd and crush. We see in sp.arkling eyes and speaking blush, How expectation gilds tSie coming time, j Young forms go by us tossing rosy sprays In brave apparel, tints o’ flower and bird, Of blossom patches by the summer stirred. With sheen of silk, and gems that scatter rays. Knew we such zest„true he.art! when mount* ing up? Such haste to lift the chalice to our lips, To learn if plea.5ure sweeter is in sips, Or, when, with manhood’s thirst we draii the cup? Shall we stand by and carp at these, and say— “Go, giddy ones, and moth-like Are your wings— Pleasure is pain," and laughter sorrow brings.” Shall we speak thus, who once were young as they? Farewell! AVe’ve supp’d. Life's wine was keen and bright.; Old friends move by and gain the outer door; The wind blows buffets with a northern roar, And past the shadows gleams the distant light! —W. W. Hasten, PITH AND POINT. •An ability to say neigh. Horse-sense- —Truth. ’Tis only when they shadow us ‘ ‘Com parisons are odious.’’—Judge. Truth travels straight ahead, but a lie will stop at every corner and beat it.—Elmira Gazette. The cynic is very frequently a m^n who couldn’t make a dollar at any other job.—Somerville Journal. Wheel—“You make me tired.” Blacksmith — “Eun Urouud again, please.”—Detroit Free Press. Book-borrowers are reminded that the print of their nails doesn’t improve the typography of a work.—Truth. As a rule it is difficult to persuade an individual who rides a hobby that he hacf better take a walk.—Blizzard. It’s nice to have the girl you love present ■you with a present, But when you can’t make out it’s use it isn’t quite so pleasant. —Puck. A business left to run itself, as a rule, doesn’t run very long. The man who stops it is the Sheriff.—Troy Press. When two peopole get mad at each other, each begins to think how much he has done for the other.—Atohisoa Globe. ’Tis here—their confldenoe so fine. And each man, full of mirth, Feels certain that the local nine Is fit tQ beat the earth. —Washington Star. If haste is the mark of a 'weak mind, there is reason to believe that the av erage errand boy is profoundly intel lectual.—Washington News. Aigh— ‘ ‘Bingley’s wife doesn’t prove to be all that he fancied she was.” Bee ■—“Very likely; he got her at a bar* gain counter.”—Boston Transcript, With all the modern notions Our great world’s fair is blest— Mr. Cleveland pressed the button And Chicago did the rest. —Washington Star. “Is Newlywed a man that heeds the dictates of his conscience?” “Some what, but not to the extent he heeds those of his wife. ”—Eoohester Chron icle. It is easier for a man to find his own name in a newspjaper when it is there than it is for him to locate a double- leaded article with a scai’e-head.-- Puck. On willful waste the maiden frowns, In saving she believes ; So she constructs of last year’s gowns' This year’s enormous sleeves. —Puck. ' Nodding Off to Sleep. The loss of voluntary power in a per son sinking quietly into sleep is very gradual. - An object is grasped by the hand while yet awake; it is seen to be held less and less firmly as sleep comes on, till at last all power is gone and it falls away. The head of a person in a sitting posture gradually loses the sup port of the muscles which sustain it upright, it droopos by degrees and in the end falls upon the chest. The head falls by the withdrawal of power from particular muscles, the slight shock thence ensuing partially awakens and restores this power, which again raises the head, and this falling and raising, or, in other words, the nodding, con tinues as long as the dozing off to sleep while in a sitting posture continues. At the precise moment when the mind loses its consciousness there results a general relaxation of all the muscles. If the body be at rest in a lying posture there is no marked result, but, if the body be in an uneasy posture, such as sitting, then the relaxation of the mus cles causes the falling; of the head and nodding described.—Brooklyn Eagle.,