- ? - - .. . - . . - 5". ' ; J t " w X ' ' -Tain) nm ' mi' ' in i ' '1 , - -OA f I A TbM Maxton TDnion. ! I A DEHOCBATIC JGUBNAL THE PEOPLE AND THEIR iXTEBEST. VOL. IV. NO. 51. MAXTON, N. C TUESDAY, JULY 8, 1890. $1.00 A YEAR TOWN DIRECTORY. B. F. MeLEAN Mayor. H XV McNATT .). iL BLOCKER, W. S. BYRNES, W. J. CURRIE, I Commis ioners. A .! Bt'RCK, Town Marshal. LODGES. KNIGHTS OT HONOR, No. l,720jmeets n -r.-cr.nd and fourth Wednesday's at 'V.:iOP. M. J. B. WEATHERLY, Dic- H, F. McLEAN, Reporter. Y. M. C. A., meets every Sunday at 7.30 P. M. WM. BLACK, President. MAXTON GUARDS, WM. BLACK. Captain, meets first Thursday nights of each month at 8 P. 31. rJUOSEN FRIENDS meet cn second 'ip'i fourth Monday in each month, Vnrus Shaw, Chief Counselor; S. W. Parbam, Srcretarj- and Treasurer. -MAXTON LODGE, KNIGHTS OF J'V'nJfYS. meets every Friday night, -cpt first in ea?h month, at 8 o'clock. i.'OHKSON COUNTY BIBLE SOCIETY' i:. v J A Smith, President: E K Proctor, I . - . Nt -ec Pres. . Dr J D Croom, 2nd V A f) Brown. Secy , Wm Black, Tree, .n l i poHtary; Ex-Com. Key H G Hill, I' J, L S lownsend, JJ P McEocRern, J O "'"ut;h. H McEocbfrn: Auditing Com., K ' McRae.O II Blocker and B D Caldwell. nXFXUTIVE COMMITTEE. -' Jrph Evans, Rev H G Hiii, D D, R-v J S Black, Rev U P Meeks, ll-v -I P Finlaysou, Jos McColluni, -' P Smith, Duncan McKay, Sr. N B Brown, Dr J L McMillan. A L'DITINCi COMMITTEE. .) P Smith, D II Meill, J A Humphrey Place of riext meeting Lurnberton, N. C' Tim') of next meeting Thursday, May :-"th, lsvj, atll::jf o'clock a. m. Bfhlt'siKi 7'estaments can be purchased ; U'ni.. lilaok, Derxisitory, Maxton, N. C, 'r '-i,t. Ail churches and Bible Societies in the i r.t.y in vited to semi delegates. F'nuvnnl all collection-? to Win Black, Vr'-HunT, Maxton. N C. (HIUCHES. i'RKSP.YTERIAN, REV. DR. II. G IJIJ, P;c-tor. Services each Sabbath t 4 P. M. Sunday School at 10 A. M. l'rayer meeting every Wednesday it't'Tiioon at ) o'clock . METHODIST, REV. J. W. JONES I'astor. Services each Sunday at 11 A. .M. Sun-ov School at 9 30 A. M. MASONIC. WANTON LODGE A. F. & A. M. meets 1st Friday night in each oioJth at S p. m. r.ENERAL DIRECTORY OF Rop.f.son County. Senator. .1. F. Payne. ViMi-f-Ttat ives, T. M. Watsou. s D. C. Regan. ) E. F. McRae. j W. P. 2Hoore, k nj ( i.mniisioneis, B. Stancil, j T. McBryde. ! J. S. Oliver, i S. ('.. ( ' . B. Townend. Klu'iiiT. II. .McEachen. Rcur Decd.-.-.L II. Morrison, Ticii-urcr, W. XV. McDairmid. .1 J. A. McALlisteT p.i:u-d ut K. I nation f ,; J. S. Black, J. S. McQueen. Sujii. Pab. Iustr'n, J. A. McAlister. C .ron.-rA Sunt, of Health, Dr. F Lis R Stanley says that if he could get o000 tTvo-gallon jusr' into the heait of Africa they would buy him 10,000,. 000 ::cre? .i land and 500 wives. It is predicted that by means of elec tric motois a few years hence passengers may step aboard a train in New York at 30 o'clock in the morning, and eat a live o'clock diuner in Chicago on the same Uav. The Chicasro Etrald allege tfcat a new . ilLsh in Paris, the invention of a famous rook, is horse curry. It wa suggested rr.erhaps by the well-known udsge that a fchjrt is sooa curried. ITcry Yl. Stanley has an article in ' ; ' ueaiing with some of the most ...ving and exciting incidents of the 'M-fJition for the relief of Emin Pasha Mr Stanley expresses admiration of Emin, - .viiig that before his final deposition Lrain acquired great power, which he put to good purposes. He had increased his -'re of knowledge and was a model of tv t and civility, but he developed senti. i . :u to a degree which made him incom I tent t ... live up to his support. Refer i.t.g to tli.- treatment of the natives, M.r. .-.uley says the habit of regarding the i ' oi igines as nothing better than slaves i'. be utterly suppressed before any f- e'ance of civilization can be seea ':g theui. After describing some f-:ive raids, he says: ''There is only one r n.- ly for these wholesale devastations r African aborigines, and that is th K combination of England, Ger u:y, France, Portugal, South and East A-'i a and the Congo State against thl -i tro iU( ti,,n of gunpowder into any pari continent, except for the use o ! : v-ients, soldiers and employes, 7--z upon every tusk pf ivorj it there is not a single pieci u has been gained lawfully. " I'Gun.i weight has cost theliftf a NEWS SUMMARY. FEOH ALL 0YEE:tHE 80UTHLAJTD; i Aooidesta O&lamltiee Pleasast ffewi anr1 Fotea cf Indmtiy, ! VIBGIHIA. Judge Henry W. Thomas died at Fair fai Court H(use, in the seventy eighth year of his age. .Before the j war, as a whig, and since as a democrat, he served several terms in the legislature. He was a member of the commission thai visited President Lincoln in 161, with a view to averting hostilities. During the war he was sec ond auditor cjf the tte. After the war he was a member of the court of concilia tion, Alexandria circuit, and still later lieutenant governor. For half a century he W83 one 6f the Heading lawyers of northern Virginia. A considerable sensation, was created in Richmond: by Richard E Owens, a young man abjout twenty two years of age, who attempted to kill Miss Xannie Snaw and aftetward shot himself. He called on the joung lady, who had pre viously informed him that he must cease to visit her, ai-d proposed to take a walk. She declined, whereupon he drew a pistol and said : "Here is wLere I will end your lifer' Miss Shaw jumped aside betore the weapon was discharged and the ball miss ed its mark. She retreated to an adjoin ing room and fastened the door. Owens fired a ball intd his left breast, inflicting a dangerous wbund. He was arrested and placed uncitr bond. About two miles from Tappahannock a dissatihed colored nurse, about four teen years old, saturated the clothing of Mr. George Martin's little fifteen mouth old daughter wjth kerosene oil and fired the same, according to the verdict of the corner's jury held over the body. The child only lived a few minuses after the parents discovered the fact. Surveyors are at work for the tremen dous steel plant to be put in operation at Radford. Six i one-hundred ton furn aces, it is said,- will be needed to run this plant. TENNESSEE. Meagre reports of a killing at Buffalo, Perry county, have been received. Wil liam Lugen, Robert Arnold and a man named Owen, left Dock Stewart's to at tend a debating! society at Bone's Spring All were under the influence of whiskey, and were shooting along the road. Al ter leaving the society they renewed the shooting, but no attention was paid to them. About 11 o'clocK five shots in rapid succession were heard, and next morning "William Lugen was found on the roadside with a 32-calibre bullet in his neck, and a 38-calibre bullet in his breast, and Robert Arnold with two 38 calibre bullets in his breast. A piscol was tightly grasped in his right hand. Four chambers were empty. Owen stat ed that he left them before the killing. He is not to be found now. Parker Harris, I E. D. Carr and Hardy : Ballard, colored, and Frank Brenisb, white, were hanged at Memphis. The people of Humboldt are very much elated at the prospect of the Missouri. Tennessee & Georgia Railroad being completed in the inear future. Property is advancing rapidly. The population of the town is growiug steadily. A large number of ney buildings are being erect ed and the city presents anair ot" thnf : andprosperity. The supervisor at Nashville gives in official figures of the population of Nash ville at 72,000. NORTH 0AK0LINA, John W Walker, of Raleigh proprietor of the Oak City clothirjg manufactory, which sold its products in all the south eTn states, has assigned for the beneat of his . creditors. 1 The firm's business had, in the paat Itwo years, fallen off greatly. The liabilities are in excess of $20,000, mainly! to northern firms. There are f 10,000 of preferred debts, all to home creditors. The assets are nominally $14,000 but hardly more thau half that amount Will be realized. Thos. R. Duncan has been appointed postmaster at Clotho, Henry H. Falkner at Macon. Wm. R. Reed at Fairmount, and Izzariah Nobl at Repose. The lightning Las been doing some disastrous work in this State. A house was struck near people burned, an Winston and ihree d in Rowan county a barn was strueld bv s lightning and burned, a large q'uauiitv of bay being distroyed. While J. C. Gann, an aged farmer, was returning ffom Winston to hiij home, at Prestoniille, Stokes county, a few days ago, his team i ran away and threw him between the hounds of the wagon, in which position he was dragg ed a quarter of a mile. He was dead when found. The knitting mill plant ,at Oxford since the enlargement will give employ ment to 100 or 125 worm and girls. Durham county, it is said, will harvest the biggtit crop of corn that it has fince the war. The price is estimated to be only two dollars per barrel next fall. T,iphtnin struck a tree on the rjlanta- tion of J. J- Crump, in Chatham county, and a lot of negroes have dug great J holes about the place trying to find the j thunder-bolt that tore up the ground. J A band of highway robbers have j been operating in the country . near ! WilmiBgton. SOUTH CAROLINA. ; Carpenters in '.Greenville have strock for ten hours with the same pay thej have been receiving for eleven and a quarter hours- rumor has it that the Acsmsta Railroad Company has only bought tie paanngtr franchise at Columbia of th old road, for which $40,000 was paid. The unknown and missing Ashle? J unction murderer it is said has turned up at Boardman, in Southern Georgia. Hs has been doing some promiscuous shoot ing. A posse which went out to arrest him were forced to retire after several of the party had ' been wounded. As usually described he had hU Winchester rifle and belt of cartridges along with him. Napoleon Levelle, of Charleston, whe killed bis wife and nearly murdered his uncle on February l?th," has been con victed to be hanged September 5th. Mr. Fishbeck, who has charge of thaV part of the census which has reference tc the indebtedness and mortgages of the I State, expects ta complete the work bv The abstractors have completed their work in ail the counties. The most tedious and difficult part of the work is to commence. The abstractors wiil be gin their work in what are designated as the "inquiry counties." In these counties an effort is to be made to ascei tain the causes which lead to the giving of mortgages The!iuformation received will, of course, be confidential, and only for the use of the census. Mr. Fishbeck said that the records show that South Carolina has remarkably few mortgages. There are only two counties iii the State in which 3,009 mortgages have been recorded in the past ten years. In all the other counties' the numbers haveTeenNveTy"much less. The enumeration made by theYab3tract ors includes all mortgages matle in ten years, including those cancelled. Alexander Noisette, a colored boy, was sent to -jail at Charleston on the charge of murder. The testimony be fore the coroner shows that Noisette and another negio boy named John Worthy were quarreling in the suburbs. During the quarrel Noisette got the head ot Worthy between his knees and then drove an iron pin into his skull. The other negro boys witnessed the affray Plato Worthy and Thomas Reddy. None of the parties were over eighteen years of age. A most heartrending accident occur red at Columbia. Messrs John Stork, W. H. Casson and Olin Barre were pre paring to fire a salute with one of the old guns on the Fair ground, when the picCi was prematurely discharged, taking oI the right hand of Mr. Cas3on and horribly mangling the other two men. Mr Barre was horribly burnt and woun ded ail the way from his waist up. His clothes wert alt blown off him, his face and head crushed into a jelly by the fore of the blow, and both his arms were literally blown to shreds. GEORGIA Two freight train conductors, after bringing in their trains to Thomasvilie. struck, and causeH a bad blockade ot watermelon trains. The strike was caus ed by the conductors having been kept constantly on the road for nearly a week without rest. Congressman "Grimes, has had 5,000, 000 shad planted in the streams of his dis trict, Twenty-eight thousand acres of wild lands are to be sold for taxes at Blark ville, TJnion county, the fir3t Tuesday in September next. Contracts have been let for building the Albany and Cordele railroad. Fine specimens of iron ore have been found on Mr. W. G. Park's land in Banks county. The people of Brunswick are indig nant over tne false report recently circu lated, that a case of yellow lever existed la that city. There was a serious cutting affray about six miles south of Carrolfton. J R. Hilly and Dunlap Music were under ths influence of mountain dew, and got into a fight in which Music was badly carved up with a knife by Hilly. Dr. W. L. Fitts, was called in and dressed the wounds. He reported a dangerous cut acros; the throat, and several places cn the body. Music will recover. OTHER BTATES. Huntsvilie has secured a gigantic cotton mill, the capital stock c f which is one million dollar?. It will manu facture cotton and woolen goods, and fabrics of all descriptions from raw material. About eight hundred hand? will be employed, wnich will require, it is estimated, eight hundred new resi dences, and add from three to five thous and population to Euntsville. Work begins very soon on the buildings for the factory. Selma, A collision occurred at Caler, caused by an engine backing into a uasseneer train. A colored woman was killed, several children were slightly injured, and a ladv passenger was badly hurt. A severe wind storm swept over the country. One man was killed by lightning and considerable damage was done to crops. The Hon North Dickerson has bttn chosen by the usutl majority to succeed John G. Carlisle as Representative in Congress of the Cth Kentucky district. Birmingham, Charles Cato, whit, shot and killed Mrs. Lizzie Mitchell, a megress, and then blew out his own brains. Four hours later William Tatum shot and mortally wounded Mary Barnet his mistress, and blew out hU own brains. Jealousy coii'.el beth crims. The wife and daughter of Rev Mr Brannan, at Dadeviile, were thrown from a buggy. The daughter was killed and the wife fatally injured. Milwaukee, Wis. 160,000. has a population oi The THE EXECUTIVE MANSION. DOtfSSTIO - ' THE ABSA2TOE22XNTS WHITE KOTJSE. A7 Tie Chin ana Table Cutlery Tne Cooks and the Kitchen A Com plete Laundjry Table Linen. After breakfast, which always occurs exactly at 8 :30, Mrs. Harrison sees the steward, McELim, and gives him the or ders for the day, says iCss Grundy in the New York World. This means that she tells him whether there are to be guests and whether she wishes any changes made in the decorations of the private dining-room. He arranges the entire men.u for the day, does the marketing and oversees the servants. Unless it is the housecleaning season that is all the time Mrs. Harrison gives to her kitchen, but you may be sure she has just as much interest in everything going well as a young matron when giving her first din ner, and she says that the only difference between her cares now and when she waa a private citizen is that she does not need to worry over the preparations for enter taining. She has introduced numberless changes which give a home-like air to the private dining-room. One of these is to have the table for breakfast and luncheon spread with napkins instead of with one large cloth. It gives the table, which is a large round affair of very light oak, a dainty effect. Every dish has a pretty doily and in the centre there is always a bowl of flowers. I wonder if this country has any idea where its china is kept. There isn't a gentleman's house in the land that has not better accommodations. There it is all the elegant ware which the former mistress of the White House gathered with so much pride and in the face of so many growls from the Congressional Appropriation Committees which sup plied, the money tucked, crammed and jammed into an unfinished closet which would hardly kennel two mastiffs. No wonder that so much of it is broken and nicked, that each succeeding mistress of the White House almost sheds tears over the ruin of the thing most dear to a wo man's heart, rare china. Until President Arthur's day there was not even this closet, all the valuable china being stored in the basement; but he had this closet cut from the little hallway by the ele vator. There are two rows of shelves about three feet deep, and there the three sets which belong to the service are kept, one-third of them being on the floor. Mrs. Harrison says that of the 1000 pieces, made at so great an expense in the Hayes Administration, there are not more than four hundred left. Wo men all over the land know how it is not to have enough silver knives and forks to go round, and they have all felt the ancuish of seems the most distin- guished guest get the plated one by mis- take. But who would uream that the White House would not have enough knives and forks to go around, and- yet r it Is true. Every time fifty people set down to a state dinner there two of them take their bouillon from plated spoons, their terrapin from plated forks and cut the fillet of beef with plated knives. It i3 a horrible thought, but there are only four dozen genuine silver knives, forks and spoons in the butler's pantry, and by the most skilful ingenuity .they cannot be made to do duty for fifty people. There is one set of knives and forks in the sideboard which ha3 a history, for it cost a President his re-election. These are the gold knives and forks which Van Buren added. and when the people learned that the public moneys were being taken to put gold spoons in Presidents' mouths they promptly defeated him. Now, the truth of the matter is that they are not gold at all, and the people were hasty in their judgment. They are solid silver washed with gold, and it was only a few years ago in President Arthur's day that they began to wear off, and disclose the hoax. He had them re washed, and they are still used on state occasions. They are small, fine-bladed and much more delicate than those commonly in use in this day. Many of the larger pieces of silver date back to Madison's day, al though no memoranda have been kept, and it is hard to tell when things wero purchased. The busiest place in the whole Execu tive Mansion is in the basement, over which Dolly Johnson, the colored cook, presides. Dolly i a tall, fine-looking woman, light of color and probably not much over thirty. President Harrison secured her a short time ago from Ken tucky, and, from all accounts, Dolly knows how to suit a Presidential appetite much better than the former cook, Mme. Pelouard, whose fanciful French cooking was not at all to the plain American taste. Mary Robinson makes the pies, bakes the bread and fries the crullers, and is the assistant of Mistress Dolly Johnson, who confines her ambitions to brewing soups and basting meats. The two can get up a dinner that wouldput Phillipini, Nicolini and all the other $10,000 chefs to the test. Delmonico has no more juicy meats than Dolly draws from her oven, and Vanderbih's own chef cannot put up a better pitstry than Mary. They both wear tidy dresses of Dutch-blue calico and big white aprons that cover them from head to foot, but neither of them wear caps, as the hut suggestion of livery is unallowable at the White House There are two kitchens in which Dolly Tn.nnn ran csjtv oat her dream of f cookery, one under the private dining room and of, the same size and the other under the serving-room and butler pan- try. The first is used when a state, fila cer is under way, and in the tecond th preparations for each day are made. Tbi kitchens are as neat as a pair of pint, but they haven't the appointments of the kitchens that axe now added to fiv thou sand dollar houses, and one cannot help wishing that the people who do so adore the quaint, historic White House would get a peep into these dark, iUy furnished rooms. The upper floors of the quaint, historic White House are bad enough, but the basement would be condemned by even a modern building inspector. Across the hall from the kitchen is the steward's room, a large apartment under the state dining-room. It is tastefully furnished with carpet and chairs sent from the upper rooms, and contains a large desk, rhcre Mr. McHim enters the marketing in books as large as it takes to enter the deposits at the Treasury. He. comes in about 11 from the Centre Mar ket, where everything in the way of meats and vegetables are bought for the White House, enters these purchases and each month draws up a summary of the month's expenditures, which I have h'eard are of a size to make an ordinary man whistle "Razzle Dazzle," with all the mournful intonations of that pathetic song. The wails of the steward s room arc lined with closets which can be put under lock and key for he has charge of every valuable in the White House and has to give a pretty sum as bail for their safekeeping. Beyond the steward's room are tne sleeping rooms and on the opposite side the big furnace room, while at the extreme end of the hall is a billiard room v.-here a President and his opponent frequently chalk the cue. But the laundry that is worth seeing, for a cleaner room cannot be imagined. It is large and light and off one corner is z little carpeted ironing room. There is au old-fashioned New England fireplace there which was built in tne vrail as ur back as the time when Abigail Adams came down from Boston and -nrcte back such gruesome accounts of the ''barn like" East Room, which she could put to no better use than to dry her clothes. This fireplace is still used for heating the boiler for the Monday's wash, which oc curs as regularly here as in th? farniiy cf any orderly citizen. It is formed of hard baked piaster and looks as though it would easily stand another century. A large laundry stove stands in the middle of the zoom covered by two terrac, of "flats7' which the three white '.vrnie Johanna, Mary and Miss Grass kesp changing the live-long day. Tney are tidy, pleasant-faced women, and can out do Ah Sing in the polishing business. There are thirteen reguiar house servants, although eight or nine more are em ployed about the grounds and conserva tories. There i3 still another room where one can cet an idea of Mrs. Harrison's house--keepine. It is the iinen closet onlhe second floor. The linen Was-.formerly I k t in the daEap cloS3 in -the 'steward's I b t 3Ijs. Harrison noticed one day that there could be a closet amply large made behind the elevator and she had the space walled in, shelves buiit. and now the White House has a catchiess linen closet. It is under the care of Josephine. Mrs. Harrison's maid, and a whiff of it is like a breath from a meadow in May, for it is kept so clean and sweet. Everything is initialled with 'U. S." in white iinen, although one set of napkins has the initials in white, with a faint line of red. The napkins are all a yard square and of the finest damask. Mrs. Harrison has added to the stock since she has been in the White House, and there is one set of dinner iinti that was used at the first state dinner that is as fine and soft as silk. Gradual Extermination of ttirdf. It is not necessary to tell any one who has any observation of the matter that the past six or eight years has witnessed so complete a destruction of bird life in this section as to amount almost to exter ruination. Let any one who remembers how our fields and forests ten or fifteen years ago teemed with the American and French mocking birds, thrushes, wrens, jay and catbirds, woodpeckers, yellow hammers, sparrows and the several gaxnt birds, take note of how few may be seen nowadays in the longest ride he may taki along our roads, or longest stroll amid our woods. One cannot fail to tee thai there are no birds compared to the num ber that existed a dozen years ago. Truly, the roads are lifeless, and the woodi are silent so far as the absence of birds can make it so. A few years ago the mania for making egg collections pre vailed among the boys from one end of tbi country to the other ; simultaneously witl this, fashion decreed that the thing U. do was to decorate the ladies1 hats; anl between the two, what is the result f Louisiana Farm. A Creamatory for Paupers. Philadelphia Las spread out and sur rounded the Municipal Hospital for contagious die&jse, where also there is & j -otter held fur the burial of paupers, and it i evident that the hospital will koon h:vf ro be removed. As a prelim inary to euch removal the city has erttted a crematory on the grounds, where Ui the bodies buried there will be (onumed. The cretnatbry was tested tuid will be kept running continuously until all the bodies now buried in pot ut'i ctid hve been consumed by fire, i: i; the-T-roiotd to sell the site fos buiidirg purposes. Huihiufte Sbxr. - - - - . ... . ttOMts farmers are ictiuirsr that raQroad property in that State be zst far taxation at its actual value. a uovoiENT AQAnrar benoe;dia& A Great Uprising in Bereral of the Stv.a tdOrcrthttw the'PreriientJ Sas Astoxio, Tex., Reports j which are absolutely reliable, have re ached San Antonio of a seditious revolutions!? movement going on in the states of Hex! co, bordering on the Rio Grande. Papers however incndiy to Mexico sn? the Diaz administration can no longer suppress the news. The movement is not conthed to any one locality, but it is undoubtedly wide-spread. jit i claimed an evidence of Diaz's intentions very shortly cf declaring himself dictator af Mexico. General Reyse, governor of Nuevo Leon, heretofore a not very tkroi) supporter of Diaz, has been offered thu portfolio of minister of war, aud hs had tLe effect of quieting his discontent, and Governor Gerza G&lan, of CoanUa, who has always been an avowed enemy ef President Diaz, has been in the City cf Mexico for the past several months, where it is claimed that he is being re strained by foice, amounting almcst to imprisonment. All telegraph lines in Mexico are under rigid control. of the Federal government, and it is practical to get any direct information pertaining to thu uprising now in progress in Nuevo Leon. Tho cause of the trouble is the strong centralizing tendencies of j the Diaz government which, as far as the order states are concerned. j Constable .Martinez, of the state of Nuevo Leon, with an escaped Mexican arreited and convicted here a few days , ago, returned and describes the threat ening of governmental affairs observed all along his route from the Rrio Grande to Saltillo. He says that at nearly every station and side track along the Mexican National railroad he saw crowds of men con ere stated and excitedly discussing the advisability of joining in rebel) ion against their federal government. WISE TT0BDS. To bear is to conquer our faith. All powerful souls have kindred with each other. A man never forgives a woman foi making him feel silly. j The more honesty a man has, the j less lie affects the air of a -saint. No man but a blind man ever passes a mirror without looking in it. j A model wife is one who thinks her tnsband knows more that her kin. ! 7- i Eveiy man is a hero to some woman ; every woman is a heroine. .to some man. The birthdays of his children are a man's landmarks pn the road to old age. When a man finally succeeds in making liimself famous his wife gets the credit of ! Nothing pleases a man so much as tcj bo told, that an old flame, since married, ia still admiring him. j A woman can be. paid no higher com pliment than to have her husband spend all his time with her. No woman was ever so homely that a man does not defend her looks after he has heard that she admires him. I When a man gets famous it would seem that every man. in the country used j to play marbles with him at school. j It'is with flowers as with moral quali tiesthe bright are sometimes poison ous; but, I believe, never the sweet. i He who gives pleasure meets with it; kindness is the bond of friendship, and the hook of love; he who sows not, reap not. ' I The trouble with the men is that it in easier for them to die for a girl before they are married than it i to get up and light the fire for their wives after they ajra married. Transpertinr Crops In Palestine. , The plains of Sharon grow very fins wheat. If Palestine and Syria were under a proper government, and furnished with good means of transportation, the) might export a great deal of grain. As it is, the cost of bringing the crops tc the seaboard from the interior is im mense. Everything has to be carried upon camels, which are big eaters. Three bushels make a toad, and, for a dUtancs of a few hundred miles, the camel will eat one bushel and it will take another bushel to pay his driver, so that t&i shipper has only a third of his profits, ic , say nothing of the cost of raising the three. There is now a splendid roai from Jaffa, the seaport of Palestine, U Jerusalem, and there is talk of building railroad between these two points. Thi distance is only forty miles, and thi twenty miles across the plains of Hharoi are almost level. Anuruan Agricviturfy An Old Confederate Shoe. The editor of the Greensboro (Ga.y HeraU-Jourual has an old Confederated ihoe, maaufactnred for the Government in 1862, just before the war ended. The sole is fully three-quarters of on inch thick and is made of poplar wood, evi dently shaped with a hatchet or drawing with s strip of rawhide, running entirely around the shoe, the leather being held to the sole with large carpet tacks. The upper is of rough cowhide, dressed only on the inside. Atlanta Constitution. ' Term 5n C was the first State to join the original 13. Flat foot tny ? remedied by a rurgi eal oneratier. '4 i