. ' ; .1! m VOL. Ii. X(). . Too much jhousew 01k -w reck men's nerves. Ami the con care of children, day am! night, is often too Irving' fur oven a sU-onr woman. A haire'ard face tell I story of ih!; overworked housewife and mother. Deranged menses, loucorrhu-a and falling of the womb result from overwork. Every housewife needs a remedv to regulate' her menses and to keep her sensitive female organs in perfect condition. 'ill"T tills ful tlioimnntl; rf v.tj . AO VUJ.VU B Mrs. Jones and that is wliv she writes this frank letter: Glcndeane, Ky., Feb. 10, 1901. I am so glad that your Wine of Cardui 1 helping me. 1 mn f jeliiijf letter than ii..i.- iru, lur vca-3. 1 pLlli aoiiiij mv ov.-n v.erlr v.irtont any help, and I v. a: jcil last wc.: and was act c:ie bit iu.iiic jiiu t,u,iu. 1 r.v.l orticif lieshier thau I ever was bsfoic, and s!';p7 ir.m.i amUat hearty. Before I began t'ikin.' ft Wine of Cardui, 1 u-ed to have to lay d dcv.i, tl-0 or six- times every da-.-, but S iov. Idonotth:nIicf Ivin-r v.a ti-Vou h the day. Mas. Richard Jo.xes. S; Kor ad?:f. pr,j l;cra:i:r a,:,! tm:. I r.- .ri-., j;ving fyTlip- t hit: Notice By virtue of the powe;- eontai'ied in a a mortgage ceed excented by P. H. Mor gan and wife. ElraV.eili "Jlorgan, to J. D. Morrison Xovember the Kith, l.sfl, the undersigned mortgagee, will sell at publii- outer;.-, for cash, at the coart house .uoorin Itutherfordton, X. C. on Mcinhiy, Marvh the '3rd, HJ02, t!ie following described pieee or parcel of land, lying and being in the counrv f Kutht rford. on the waters of C-atliev's en el: and kiiowt: .us a part of t he Piirker hind. .jii:ii!ig the the hinds of E. B. Mor gan. J. II. Adair. J. D. Moms and oth ers and bounded as follows, to wit : Be ginning at a white oak stump and run-, uorth 4 we-t ( v deg. ) 8 pol s to a sour wood : thence north (S ast ( v. 2 :3-4 deg.) l.'O pol. s to a red oak; thence north (v. S'.j o.'g. ) IS poles to a dog wood; thence li-uth ::) east (v. 2 1- ! deg. ) 21 S-4 poles t a gam by th kranch ; thence north 07. oast (v. 2, deg.) 12 poles to a stake; thence south 72 ea.r 71 poles to a black oak on Adairs' line (uo.v down: them-e j-outh 1 7 east 10 :5-4 poles to a black gum. his corui-r; tk.euce south i:j east 22 poles to a stone by small dog wood, corner of J. L Morris' tra r ; thence with it south ti i 1-4 vast 14") poh-s to a stone near the head or a diteli; thence with the ditch soalli 70 wesr 44 poles to the rtok tiienee up crossmg the creek about 15 poles to pointers: thence west oO'., poles to a stake; Whence uorth -1- west : poles to a black c:ik stump; tlu nce uorth 79 west to the beginning, containing (lj acres, moie or less. For further description, refvri nce is lu-reby made to Eook "H-.T' at page Xo. 70, a ncord of mortgage.-, in the office of Kegister of Deeds for Rutherford coun ty, ihis sjile is mad:; roKitisfv the sum fine on said mortgage. This "Februarv :jrd, 11)02. J. D. MORRIS. Mortgagee. By virtue of the authority conferred me by the power of sale conr.-ioi.-vi it, ., mmtgage oe.,1 Iron Moses Baxter and wit-.Mrra Baxter, to Tiioir.as B. Walk-! o- c:utcd the 10th day of March, lH)r. iiud duly rtu-ordtd in the otht est 1 ldder, on j .Monday, .March Jkil, 1902, I between the hoars of 10 o'clock iu tie' ferenoon and 4 '.'chick in the afternoon. 1 the following ('-.scribed tract of laud in Rutherford r -antv. near Gold Rill .tn,-.l. I ....... . m ... . J' .1 i . 1 m ' ........ AAi.i "". '"'ing pan 01 rne oiq Brarilnv i tract, U-gininii'g at a small black oak ( MlIIC Tl'A-'ni1 'liiwi . jf .. f ..n,.,11 1.1.. .1. . ..!-. . T. i Ma. Oil 1 - ' ".j"" " -mi cum urns souiu OO leg. c ast 41 )oles to a stone in the old field; thence north 52 dear, ene.f ei-rwtO,,- said branch, 2-V, ples to a stone on the -ast bank (flh" branch 011 Justice's line; I thence with it north oodeg. west 14poh s j 10 pointers on Ghas. Brvan'sline; tlienw with it south 52 deg. W('st 2.V., poles to ' the beginning, containing seven acres ! moieoi less. X ins January 2..th, 1902 G. L. MILLER, Admiuisfrator of Thomas B. Walker, deceas.- d S. Gallert, Attorney. P. , f . . 1 Omrt isst ,1 i, t'lT "7be SnP;nw 1 inn l issued in tne special Tiroceediiu' j ' ontitled "Dora Spake mi.iisrndrix of :eorge Spake vs. Richard Spake and ' V I, ' A , 111 w'u ar ('"urt house in Rutherfordton on -Monday, .March 3rd, 1))2. at public aiu-tion the following chribed ! tract ot laud lying i Rutherford county ! adjoining the lands of Joseph Wilkie i James Hvder. Matthew ,,i i '! I S WO- K ! tant B e ( r the iletr.ster of lliwvlw r.r i?,-.n.,.f..,..i i i:i Book "G" of Real Estate mort'a'es i Tuckt'r SJiys to you about the enga at ? 210, l will sell, at public outorv nient some years ago i n vonuer at u:e court house door, in Rutherford- i true. What General Tucker savs tmt "V I"! ti 1." f..,..-!, -l... i 4. .t . .. . .. ..." ' ? m lill. lilSLflllli If i- VH!1 flOnilT l-lvrnr L vonoi. Lei n V llliani Bland lands, lying about 4 miles Lucky the member who catches the car southwest of. Rutherfordton and con- i of the house and of the country in de aiiiing:;(! acres. Said lands will be sold-1 livcring his "hiaiden speech." lie is ?ir'a;(.!.asst?t.ttt Wlt1.1 whk h t( Pay debts not onlv luckv. He is scarce, almost as iigauisi uie esrato ot ( reorire Sivike do 1 e is- d 'iiui n ;h i , n M , ' u ! tsl'to wit : L( h " .r s-:il!- :iinl lln w, i . ', Mliai in ) Ot l. i 3soveinb( r oth, 1902. The dePerr,.,i ,v,,- inent to bear interest from date of salej stant secure hdd on the auricular ap tuid to be secured by not with antmmvl nendasro of the house, which he held seenritv. rn .i . AlUt; Withheld until tl.. fi...,l payment, or the purchase money and in terest. Ibis January 28th, () , BORA SPAKE, Admisistratrix v, p of,! 1l','r-"t P:ke, deceased. McBrayer & JnsUce, A ttorueys. j Carroll W. Downey, IMiysician and Surreon otiigcon. Kutherfordton, X. C Othce in Ilesidenci jPlwnxi Ho. on Main stre' IIP (3 PI MR 1 Reminiscences of ft otecl Fun- makers In the House, j There Have Been Five Real Top Notcbcrs Difference Between 3 Congressional Humorist ar.ci a Hu morist In Congress How John Al len Got There Generate end Pri vatesA Maiden Speech Thai Brought Farr.e. Copyright, 1902, by Champ Clark. Many congressmen use humor as an aid in expressing their ideas to lli? house as a mere incident i f speech. First and hurt there have been live hit uiorists of the lirst class in "t-he more numerous branch of the national legis lature' Tom Corwhi. Abraham 1 .in. coin, Samuil Sullivan Cox, J. Proctor Knott and John M. Allen. Four t,f these were congressional bumorisis- Corwin, Cox, Knott and Allen. It will thus be seen that I differential.; between a congressional humorist and a humorist who is in congress. L"n qiu stionaLly Lincoln divides with Ar teritis Ward and Mark Twain the hon or of being the greatest American hu morist for it is an honor no matter what the dry as dusts may say by wav of dissent, detraction or carping criti cismbut most assuredly and most em phatically Lincoln was net a congres sional lumiori.it. Indeed there is pre cious little trace-the uieist color, as miners would say-of his humor or of any ether of his mauy gnat faculties in his congressional career. The truth seems to be that congress did not suit him and that he did not lit congress. At any rate in his brief ice in the house there is nut even the faintest prophecy of that astounding career which wrote his name hi the scanty list of the immortals. Private John Albn. With the possible exceptions of Me Kinloy, Bryan ami Roosevelt there is perhaps no American statesman of this generation whose name is more famil iar to the ear;; and tongues of Uie American people than that' of Hon. dona m. .Viien 01 r.lississippi, yclept j 'Trivate John" Allen. lie has not 0:1 ' ly immortalized himself, but he has lifted into continental fame Tupelo, the : little town where he resides. After a i long and distinguished career in the : house he voluntarily quit public life : for the practice of law. i How John Got There, j The dry as dusts solemnly asseverate : that hum -r never did any good. They I are cocksure cf that. Now, let's see. . How did John Allen get to congress? He joked himself in. One fe tching bit ; of humor sent him to Washington as a I national lawmaker. : The lirst time John ran for the con i gressional nomination his opponent was the Confederate general Tucker, v'lln had fought gallantly during the i civil war and who had served with dis : tinction two or three terms in con- gross. They met on the t-tunip. Gcn ; eral Tucker closed one cf his speeches as follows: ; fellow citizens, after a hard fought 1 ; battle on yonder hill. 1 bivouacked un- der yonder clump of trees. Those of ; you who remember as I do the times i that tried men's souls will net. I hope, j forget the humble servant when the j primaries shall be held." I oat was a strong anneal in those days, but John raise own -aire in the d the general at Ids following amazing manner: My fellow citizens, what General e- hill is to t.lui,ip of trocg onlia: I1?lt if. truP n Is also true, my fellow citi::ens, that I was vedette picket and stcod guard ovt'r lmn while he slept, "Nov,-, then, fellow citizens, all of you tvlm v.i.vi ir,i,i..,io a,i i,.i,i m.i,-tno tr. tvm ...... .,V,V .ta.VlIL.ltliOm,V--L.t-lT4l'LtUfc.V.-'VV sfnml on..,,.,! v.i. f.i -i.;tr. m, ' " vnt f.l- fli-wiifn-nl Tiir.l.-r.v oiwl nil i f vtm who were privates and stood guard over the generals while they slept vote for 'Private John' Allen." 'i ut l"(d'l? caught on, took John at his word, sent him to congress, where he has staid until he has filled the land with his acclaim. John's Maiden Speech In Congress. Of course every representative must make his "maiden speech" in congress that is, if he intends to try the ora torical cepi r at all. Frequently it is a painful ordeal. Much depends on that effort. The congressional tyro feels cnoi i. i ue congi essioiiai ijiu that the eyes of the house, of his con- . ... Btlt"M5ts - of the whole coun- try il,ld of !strity, are fixed upon him. Generally he is mistaken as to the number of eyes riveted upon him, but nevertheless he feels as he rises to say "Mr. Speaker!" tor tlie first time tL ! 1 ' tal - 't he is a sort of universal optical ind so feeling he is liable to an attack of heart failure or stage fright. I i , , , , scarce as hens teeth. I" due time John delivered his " maid- en speech" in Pti snnerli" in congress. Proved congress, proved to be one of the lucky ones and took an in to the end and which he would nave continued to hold had he remained in j the house till the crack of doom. The j members regarded Allen as a godsend, j as a welcome and grateful relief from i what the late lamented Mr. Mantalini , would have denominated "tire demni- j tlon, horrid grind ' of the congressional ! mill. John arose to begin his "maiaen speech" an obscure member. Next morning he arose to find himself fa mous, as did Lord Byron after the pub- gUTHERFORDTOX, N. ft. THURSDAY me ouciuir i-.-iums ..r . "Childe navold," and the fan;- --f the j Mississippi humorist was as fairly won . and as justly bestowed as was that of 1 uie i-mgiisii poet. Retired to the Cloakroom. The river and harbor bill was up. """ wauieu to oirc:- nn !im.-.,,.,f """vm-iiii ; iiwi-tiL, are not ov my making aa appropriation for the Tom- j worst of the Indian 'robl 4 bi;beo river. ti. ,.i.,.-,.,.,.. i.. I u 1 Ul U1!J ' ant miai!ie uistinet on nroh-li'v- Ciiu. committee Mr. Willis of Kentucky, to the Hhils, who aro tt elx -cS fo'Sn tf9Jr"" Td -iHoLs in the world, bh LV ho lis tried to help luin Ket it. but some! T ' r. at- oiio r,l)i,,.tn,i t o... .. .... """ ""'nuiwii .luiiu, wun in nis voice and lookin- doleful as a hired mourner at a funeral, said with lugubrious accent, '"Well, 1 would at least like to 1 avc permission to prmt some remarks in The lleeord and insert 'laughter and applause' in appro priate places." That was his astonish-in- exordium. The palpable hit at one of the most common abuses of "the privilege to print" tickled the house greatly, and he secured the unanimous consent which he desired. He closr-d I t!iat sl)ecoa vrith an ama::ing exhibition Kail, which added to his fame more imm uie speech itself. He wound 110 by saying, "Nov,-, Mr. Speaker, having fully answered all the arguments of my opponents, I will retire to the cioak- room a few moments to receive the ; congratulations of admiring friend.?." I v. hieh set the house and galleries wild juuu uengnt. He did retire to t! ,ie j C'oaKroom, did receive the congratula- tions of admiring friends, a perform I ance which has been going on at fre i quent intervals ever since, j John Jokes Wiih Governor Dinqiov. In many respects the late Governor Xelson liingley tf Maine was a most admirable character. He was a learn ed and able man, dying in the great po sition of chairman of the committee on ways and means. It in 110 way detracts from his just fame tj say that he was ' almost totally destitute of of humor. He was so matter cf fact that it approximaud crieltv to joke with him, but nevertheless Allen did it. When business was r.t it iv(.;--.-i iinrf.,,, j the panic which began in 180:;. one j morning. John and the governor met on ! a street car. "Governor," remarked j John, solemn as a billygcat. "I hear a j vast deal of talk about trouble in mak ing paying investments, but I fhul. no diiiiciilty whatever in the matter. In fact, less than ten minutes since I made an investment which paid me "0 per cent. I consider that a rattling good speculation." "So do I." rerlied j Governor Dlngley. pricking up his cars, j "How did you manage it';" "Oh." said j John, with a straight face, "I bought j six street car tickets for a quarter," I which convulsed everybody with';, I hearing except the chairman of U;o j ways and means committee, who 1 . ed as though he thought the ms.,ss-o- pian wa.5 trifling with m-me ;:i....t:. m.t to say sacred tilings. V, i.t :! tn tale icacnco 1110 capuoi, m:?' John's teuieritr. re John Astonishes Gsr:-.ra! Grosvsnor. As is well known, en ihe Sth day of March. 1JSUS, the house cf ro!iv:-ei.fa- fives. Democrat?. Republicans, Popu- lists aud Free Siivcritcs, without a i man missing, performed the most stu f pendout: act of ccntidence recorded in I the entire annals ( f the human race by j voting to place ?j0.K;0J.;0) wivhovt re j strietions and without strings in the minds ct the president to be paid out on his order. As a Democrat I am l ae,. : py to state that in my judgment wfl- Haiu McKinley never violated the conl':- deuce thus bestowed. As an American, j proud of my country, I delight to think ; that no man ever has been or ever will ; be president capable of betraying such : a colossai trust. i The vote declaring war against Spain vas also practically unanimous. r;o j were the votes on appropriations to j cany it on, but such umriiniity was too I beautiful to last. So when the bond bill . came up we separated and took differ ;' cut paths. During the debate there . was considerable crossilring as to who ; were the more patriotic, the Democrats or the Republicans. General Charles : Henry Grosvenor of Ohio threw out certain insinuations which roiled the I Democrats generally and Allen in par i ticular. John rose to the occasion, made a fiery speech, winding up by proposing that there and then General Grosvenor should open up a recruiting station to enlist a company of con gressmen of which Grosvenor should be captain to serve during the Spanish war without pay. John dared the gen- ., . ' v.. i ..vf uu u. .i.-.sci LiiiLT null iiiaucn THO Republicans had a larp maioritv m the house there would be more Demo cratic congressmen who would enlist than there would be Republicans. The proposition took General Grosveuor's breath away and set the house and gal leries in a roar. The venerable and doughty general did not set . up his standard, but John was the hero of the hour. My firm belief is that had Gros venor accepted John's proposition ev ery Democrat in the house would have volunteered, perhaps every Republican. If the Spaniards had seen 300 con gressmen advancing on them headed by General Grosvenor, they might have surrendered at discretion to avoid be ing talked to death. Quien sahe? More Than Humorist. . While Mr. Allen's fame is entirely that of humorist, he is much more than tht. No man that I ever heard in con gress oi out of it .'an use invective to better effect than the Mississippian. At ! times he is absolutely merciless. The two excoriations which he gave Colonel Josiah Patterson of Tennessee, one in the debate on the bill to repeal the pur chasing clause of the Sherman law, the other when Josiah was trying to unseat Carmaek, were terrible to listen to. Patterson was John's bete noire and tho Mississippian flayed him alive aud then poured aqua Jertis on his quiver ing body. Cir a wr Clark. The Tribune is all-home print, aud the only paper published i.i En therford i county. A HUMAN FOREST. now Indina Tribtsa-ea Succeed la EseariuB the Police. Some of the India 1 tribes over which we rule give us a great deal of trouble, notably the Mahsuds. The Mahsuds' , i,. . . means the tribes, the i '"wl,u "l SK111 m 1 puterin ami opemy licas.t of t. One . .1 1 . of them oi:ce told a British oliJcer that he could steal the blanket from under h:m and. was promptly challenged to show hii ability. That night when the ollieer was fast asleep the Bliil robber cut a hole in bis tent, crept noiselesslv in and gently tickled the hands and feet of the sleeping lkui. The otiicer stirred uneasily and turned ovir. In this wry the Bhi! was able to pull tho blanket out a little way. liy repeating his performance he finally succeeded in "coaxing" the blanket completely from under the sleeper. When engaged in his nefarious little games, the Bail wears hardly any clothing, and his lithe body is rubbed with oil to facilitate escape fr.m anv would be cstj.tors. When hotly pursued by the British troops, tho robbers make use of a very clever device. Thev con- : ceal their scant clotiiin-r n,w .,;,. small round shields and scatter them about to resemble stones or bowlders; then, picking up a few twigs if there are any to be had they assume ail sorts of grotesque attitudes, their al- most flefchless I'.mbs silhouetted against , U!0 tuu'u "i-rt sky closely resembling 1 the charred limbs of a tree. Abs lute- ! ly motionless, they hold their positions till the enemy has passed them. In this way a British subaltern in I charge of a party sent to capture some Bhiks was considerably r.!a,-i!:--d n--n evening. The pursuit had completely lost sight ot the robbers. :,uil fir.-nu. the party drew rein by a clump of gnarled and bent tree trunks, tired aud hot from their hard exertions. The of ficer in charge took off his hat and placed it on the end of a bivken limb, when instantly there wa.s a wild scream of laughter, and the tree trunks sud denly came to life and vanished in the darkness. London Express. HARD TO GET STARTED. Tilings Wh'e'i Cveren::ie n Writer V. ben Beslnnii nil Arliele, There is a feeling of timidity that oftentimes overcomes a writer when beginning an article. As in writing a letter, it is getting started that pu::zles. It is the custom to begin with slow moving piston and work gradually into full speed until the flow of words is free, and then the diliiculty with some of us is to lind the brake valve. Again, a writer sometimes discovers that his beginning is a more fitting ending, and vice versa. The newspaper style is to throw general conclusions up strong under the headlines, while tho sermon izer reserves them until his final cli max. Thackeray remarked once that he could never tell exactly what he was going to say until bis pen was in hand and under motion and then did not fully realize just what he was saying until it was written. There is a subconscious ness that shapes writing as it does speaking. This. I know, dirdmbs smie well known theories of speaking and writing as to weighing everything and then measuring it out as a druggist compounds a prescription but my -observations are that the preparation is more in getting full of a subject and then letting the mind work free under the impulse of the dominating idea. There are as many ways and meth ods in writing and speaking as there are individuals, and yet the fundamen tal law in the transmission of thought and speech runs largely in the same groove, whether it be the jargon of the Ilottonlot or the polished periods of the scholar. Human nature has its own primitive impulses that defy all rules of rhetoric and the power of ex pression tiiat is, the power, mind yen is deeper seated than any artificial formula of stylists. National Maga zine. CheEp nt t!ie Price. A certain pompous and officious judge in a western town had just fined a young lawyer $10 for contempt of II II.IU .1 M1U ( it I L Oil! attorney walked up to the bench and laid down a ten dollar goldpicce. I "What is that for?" asked the judge. "For contempt, your honor," was the reply. "But I didn't fine you for contempt." answered the judge. "There must be some mistake." "Oh, no, there isn't," replied the old man. "I have cherished a secret con tempt for this court for a long time, and I'm willing to pay for it." Chica go News. Equal. Some years ago at a Mardi Gras ball at the Hopkins Institute of Art a man, masked, approached a woman, masked, and asked her for a dance, as is con sidered right and proper at Mardi Gras. "But I don't know you. sir," said the lady in her most icy tone. "Well. I'm taking as big a risk as you are," retorted the man. An Interloper's Explanation. "Mow. then," cried the deep voiced woman, "what has made female suf frage possible?" "Male sufferance," replied the rude man who had no business to be there at all. Philadelphia Press. Wealth does not make a home. It takes thoughtful, sympathetic com rades to make a home. Ladies' Home Journal. I huesiTioe tor ihe Ikibxtuxe. I I ublised every Thursday evening. It FEU!UARY27. 11)02. SHAM DIAMONDS. ""lore Common Tljnm Is A point 3: favor of the ili.ininn.l is 1 1 us iimuuion is more or less e.--y of detection. A real diamond cannot 1 ne touched with a file, and a false one. j though it can be mrde to scratch fc'lass. will not cut quartz. Its bril'Jan oy also fades, while the real diamond ; is absolutely permanent.- It reiiects ! all the light falling on its posterior s;:r 1 face at an angle of incidence greater ; than 21 degrees L5 mi miles, but Its ! counterfeit only reiiects half this light 1 iJ.ii me imitation of the diamond may Incd. bo more common than is imair- There is a good storv cf on of ; the famous M. Bourguignon's custom I ers. A h-dy went into the well known I i'aris Rtelier of shim gems and asked ; the price of a parure in exact imitation of the one she produced. "Was M. Bourguignon sure that the imitation W0l-,1 l;t rfect? Had he observed tL peculiar beauty and purity of the stones':" The icolv c.-nno- "iio .0,, . madame. The same workman shall I ! have the job. You may rely upon an j ( exact counterpart cf his former work." ; I Pulverized quartz is used for these ! stones, and it is supplied in the sand j frorn the forests of Fontaineblcau. ' Hundreds of men and numbers of wo men and girls are employed in the j Bourguignon business, ami. they make '-, not only diamonds, but pearls. e::;r- aids, rubies and sapphires. The girls j line the false pear!-; with fish scales. ! and wax. polish and color with mineral ! tne other "stoi.es."-Geutleman's Mag fzine. His Eiccllf-t Memorv. "John," she said, looking at him pe- ' vcrely. "did you know that yesterday I was the anni vcrsary of ov.r wedding V" ! "Certainly, my darling, certainly." he ; replied, pretending that ho wasn't at all surprised. "Didn't they send that ! uuie tmng out from the jeweler's that ? a.1... e . 1 wim-ieu 101- jou: 1 s;:ia!l go around today and see. .imv..., 11. v.u.i.uiiiiu peop.e, anyway! They promised they'd send it yesterday without fail. If lucres, anyinnrg mat ma:;es me mad, it's to have people lie to me al 01 a thing of that kind I'd have ;:one so::. e- a, line eise u they bad said thev couiun i nave it rtaay in tim ueii. ! i ii make such a kick when I get into ! town today that they won't forget next j time. I'll bet. Yes. I remembered it. i my dear. 1 thought of von nil dm- n-i of tll:it other happy day. What a glo rious why, my darling, what are von , crying for?" ! "Oh, you M-liar!" she Fobbed. "It isn't till next month, and you're de ceiving me! Go away! Don't you dare to t-t-louch me:" "Confound women anyhow!" he said as he went down the front steps. "They're never happy unless they're making trouble for themselves:" Chi cago Herald. The Ori?-Iii of Speech. The dog can emit four or live differ ent tones, c'ach indicative of a special mental condition and each fully under stood by Its companions. The barn door fowl is credited with from nine to twelve distinct vocal sounds, each ca pable of a special interpretation by ita fellows. The gestures of the I wor an imals are either facial, like the grim aces of the monkey, or changes of bod ily attitude, like those of a dc. After Citing the above mentioned tacts the president of the anthropological s( c tion of the British association in a re cent address went on to say that he thought it might not unreasonably be inferred that the remote progenitors of man relied upon equally lowly means of communication and that fr- m such humble beginnings speech has been slowly evolved. Even yet we find gestures, facial expressions and cer tain vocal sounds often more eloquent than words. Youth's Companion. Prepared For All Eraergenetea. It is proverbial, of course, that the French shopman always hopes to make twice as much as be should out of the Englishman and twice as much again out of the American. An English tour ist who knew the French cl..,.,mn,. though he did not know his language, adopted a siinp'e expedient for trans acting his business abroad. He carried a card into every shop he enters;! on one side of which was written. "Com bien?" (How much?) and on the other. "Je vous donnerai la moitie" (I will give you half). It is said that he never found further conversation necessary. Kept Her Eye Open. The first appearance on the stage of Mrs. Kendal was at the early age of five years. She played the part of a blind child and frankly confessed that it was not a success. Unwisely sh had been given a pair of new shoes for the performance;, and so great was the child's delight in these that nothing could induce her to keep her eyes shut, i as she should have done, and refrain I from taking stray peeps at her beau tiful, shiny footgear. ! Whnt He Saw. j An Irish teamster went to his parish priest in a great fright and told him that he had seen a ghost on the church : wall as he passed it in the night. ! "And what was it like?" asked the priest. ! "It was like nothing so much as a big ass," said Patrick, wild eyed, j "Go home. Pat. and be easy." replied j the priest soothingly. "You've onlj ! seen your own shadow." Salt LaLo City Witter. There is flowing water in all th streets of Salt Lake City, and little creeks and rivulets run through many of the yards of private houses. At nearly every street corner there is a flowing fountain. The city's water sup ply tumbles down from the snow cap ped mountains into streams of crystal whits, shining and cold as ice. Pile-'ne Cures Piles. Money refunded f it ever fails, GREWSOME RELICS. Pathetic Memorials of tlie III Fated City of Pompeii. j In the museum r.t Pompeii are pre- i served the most horrid and pathetic I nlies ( f ihe last days of the ill fated ! cityA Early in 1N;; tho workmen who ! were helping to unearth an immense I palace struck into a cavity 1:1 the lava, j the nature of which, of course, was a j mystery. With ut breaking further j into it they poarod piastir of paris j down the crevices that were already j opened, and as soon as the plas.er hail j hardened the crust of lava was care- j fully remcved, and, 1 ., the form uf a I human being in his last strmrgl.'s wa i revealed! The outlines and form f the person were i;crfec:!v iw-i,! I showing plainly that he had been, bur- j j ied in boiling hive., which had hard- i ; ened about hiai. The iuUrvMiing ! j years and the heat of the lava besides : j ll:ul reduced the body to a handful of j I dKt. but the l.iva had left a cast ua-l- i j ural as life. I 1 .Since thai time several bodies have j I been reproduced, one cf them with the : j features so perfectly preserved as t. i i show the expression of the face. In ! j some of the plaster casts parts of the j J skeleton are Imbedded. Two femal. j casts which are clasped in each otlnr'.-; ! . arms have been called "The Mother j j and Daughter." Persons who have! I seen this group say that there is noth- : j ing in ail Pompeii more t uching tha-.i ! j the utt'. r t'.cspair depicted upon the ! ! face of the "mother." i OriKiti of ti:e Word "Ca?a." j Cuba is the name by which tha Is-1 land was originally known to the Lu- ' cayan Indians, who were with C ,!um- bus when he discovered it. One of its I Villages or cities was called by them Cui.ar.aean, and it is reported that from the similarity of sounds Colum-, 1.,,., :n . ' hoi'posiug niniseii 10 Ire 0:1 tne coast ot Asia, imamiud that this 1 must be ' a 'ity of Kuitlai Khan. .,. ! ; Tartar sovereign celebrated by Marco 'on I in ,-. 1 r t r.t.. .1 Polo. The sm-viv.-il rO' !,, ..,.;.,:.. 1 name for Cuba is a remarkab'e i i j etanee of persistence, as the island has 1 .v. .'11, 4. ,;i iiii .ii'riii: : been bamizo.l n,i ,-,-! .,;;-.,i ., . . times since its Luro.oeau rise.ivii-v MI,'.-'l .1111 1 ill I'.l'.l VI Hi' , t'oliinii.ru ivt n.i ,- i , :". i of Pi hi.-.-. .1-1, 1 1. r i- i . o.y.j vi I I1UI l.il (I ; ana Isabella. After Ferdinand's dentl. It was called in his memory 1-Vruan-dina. Subsequently this name was changed to Santiago, after St. James, the patron saint of fpain. Slill later it was named Ave Maria, in honor of the Virgin Mary. But none of tbe-e names held, and tho Indian name is still preserved. Literary Era. He Cornered Tlltlen. Samuel J. Tilden had a touch cf hu mor, at times querulous in its tone, and at other limes he cju'.d be funnv with out meaning to be. He was an expert jimgi.- ui lilies, sum ms cellar was choicely stocked. When dining out. however, he had a little way of meas uring by the taste of his. guest aud or dering ace. rdi ugly . Colonel John II. Fellows noted this trait and once wh.cn dining with Mr. Tilden saw that, as usual, the Sage of Groystone had ordered a smail bottle of an ordinary brand for his plate and a very choice vintage for himself. Mr. Tilden was called away from the table for a mo ment, and the colonel deftly shifted the bottles. When Tilden lifted bis pint to pour out the wine, his eye quickly noted the diaerenco. but lie;. got out of the dilnculty nicely. "Here, waiter." he said, "you have made a mistake in my wine. I want the same kind Colonel Fellows has." New York World. Mnsle In n nnr?er Sliop. If we iro from the irenllemaii's tnr. lor to the barber's slip of the :ix - teenth century, we ti.id unmistakable evidi-iict s of the popularity of music, Ieople would seem to have had more iii:- in lunar u.ijs man now ana co not appear to have minded waiting as uii.cii .ii oi-isi.cr moucrns. ami sd the barber provided means to amuse those v.-ho were waiting their turn. For thi purpose he had the virginals in one! corner, tlia v;i-!ni1 1r.!:,r ?.;., I llictriifiioiif ', r,.....,..- ..t : - ...... vi:i ii .-II ICCIl in which by pressing keys like our pi- .ano keys the strings were struck not by a hammer, as in our piano, but by a quid or elastic piece of w.:od. of loath- er or of mrt.nl A t ii (r. ii r t.-n ... jr of metal. A virginal of Eliza- i's time Is stili preserved in the th Kensington museum in Eng. lUpplncoirs. beth South land. CwcrEnicat CIcekn. ! Scattered throughout the various! VVdliTwt,i-1 fli.t..i ,.t,.. , ...... 7 1. I i ....... ...i w .,i, iuu-iji.1 .lit- uulll.iCOS ' nf .!..l-t, o ...1 l, . i - , j the government annually thousands of .dollars. The chronometers are the most i expensive clocks in existewe. and they Jare to be found on board every war ! ship of the United States. These time - I Dieces cost S400 each. The ones m,.st consulted are those in the marble room of the senate and in the sneaker's lo!.v i of the nouse. Hundreds of people daily correct their watches by them. ; j C.nerrilla Warfare. ' The word guerrilla is Sonnisli and iiit came into comnion use in tins . - A . ... country during the time f the penin sular war; but Spain throughout hi r long history has always bec-n recogniz ed as the country most ideally suited for guerrilla tactics. There is no re gion in Europe in which it is more dilii cult to wage successful war. "If the army of invasion is small, it is defeat ed; If it is large, it starves." IVot Worth .lloi.dnnlnj. Kotlcal Financier-Putting through that rail- j Davit"? qeah.i. d as a-w..,i. road deal netted me 2'I0.(.)C0. : Phuip Robbie, ilfcea-cd. hi'.r "i V.'ife Your friend lost by ii. didn't ' 'I'd f r,'-ty. 2-7. VT, ,i.i. Ist . be? Pi r. y: hi ving cii,o-.- .i:i-r ti "All he had. But. then, he only naJ 'f?jM "5 !'-- t' -'-h-'t th : f25.0tiO.,,-niXK)klvn Life. midt. -signed . or b;-- th.- I3t r-i iairy. cr mis oti . , . pleaded in i . r of tl.cr re - ba .ages. so uir as known, are es- ,v rwvisn.de'.-- d to esr-tt-N .. empt from cancer. make irtif:iat pav.-ne-.t. 1.. Subscribe for Tii: Tutbuxe and get the news whmi it is news. 81.00 A YEAR, j 1 ' ' j ! I ' i ; j ' i ! that's all. No energy, no vim, no vigor, no ambition. The head aches, thoughts are confused, memory tails. Life becomes a round of work but half accom plished, of earino; that doer, not nourish, cf sleep that fails to refresh and of resting that never rests. That's the beinnnins of nervous prostration. "I was very nervous snd tired and exlit'istcd th.; I could mttboiy vo:k. Cue d :-e of Dr. Mi!' ;.'. r i:ictfd my i:ervci and drove away ti. luSMtjdu. ievea botrlej mi wouajrs in res t-a ing m health." Mki I I L. Lai v, Fortvillc, InJ. strengthens the worn-out nerves, refreshes the tire ? brain and restores healtl Sold by driTgists on guariatet. Dr. Hiks Medical Co., Elkhari, lad. By virtue (.f the pow r coof."- fi d of trnsf. nvcii by W. T. : ,i ; L011 r . ,.1 :l ill t 1 rii I fli ! Ijflts'Ti, iei I itiil- .t i-im.j -,.f . . 1 ! undersigned trnsf ee. appoint! d in t ' 1'1' to I1fc" i-ot I id 'e . V1"'1' ;u V 1 1 "ur- -;,(r :n , ioroioll, In . t. . ., t;il I J? . 1. - r cr- Alonda v. Ann Till. lVi' certain ti-.u is of bn.,1 1,-;.,,. .... t i Jt. UU I l" ' ' U"1IT l-r.ti Prtord. T-. -;i-tli C lina. ana doscribrd as foil adjoining lands f B. vs: Ju.-McMai- tract and ovgmiiu'g on a st:i!-:e io il.e : i . Ford road, tbenee north 7:., ca.-t 1 h- . chains to :t stone ;:.( :; ijoith 7 ' v 74 links to a i.me-i.n.: ; thenr (; 'nor "' lA east 1 ;!:-l( C ( hairs to r:r.e-Ln.. thence south 77: a-1 i Kl-jno 'v.ns t .-tore; thence sou;!; 40 v(st i! 8.V chains to the mid l! if islam. IVr ljoa. th; nee with said read north Jl v. -:i (JO-KM chaias to to' In-ginning, c mining 1 J acres nore or J( sd. Second ti-acl :Jy;!Jr i tlw tovr Forest C'itv and ioii-in-' hnt'hi " ! Martin and otl.oj s ; U giiifiiiig l.ong s c:r:i( r in M. J. Hau l llicnee ut-rth KJ west "00 let t to :. .:. in C M. Martin's line; tii .v e i n-: JO' (ast 77"., fr t to a ; !h r e -. Ki east 100 feet; thence south 17,'.' 77 feet to the tt-gi lining, con;-:. acre. Said s,;!. v :U 1 road" to isfy the sum nifiKeevd in said cm-: tins, now dec and unlabel. 1 or i'm ii.forma'.h n r frr-mv is Im k-1 y ma . I o k "K" of de"ds at page 7l Fol ruair 2oth, l!(r M. H. MORROW, Eaves & Rt.tker, Attorneys. Py virtue of the pnwr com ". deed cf trust, mad - l Jl. v. p .j. ;, and wile, M. S. Tissem- r, to ' Itu ker, in trust for '. S. J 's. ti 'h rsigned trustee, naiaet" i,i tl; . Or irust, will sel' at Ihe (onrt hoc.: iu Rutherfordton, for cash to the Lo est bidder on Moinl.iv, April Ttli, iiwv, j . rmm tmr-ts ot land, lyi-g aud l ' r V1 vhw v'"' of Kn.-r j V,f & ilTrt t TV : the partition proceedings, emita d W, - ny vs. iessi liccr t : "c ilPl1; reil- ir acres. For f.di d.-v. i'lpl Ki ' uwik pi su-i sja-cj;.. rK-ec... in therejKirt ii'de by Lee ,V. I. : ai.it otlicis, fitiminvvinHf r;. . V. 7' . ''m 2" : 4 , I . V ,,, . , . . ' -' '"""-!1, lllll 1 '-".-'O- IT. :U(i SjK Clal 1 t I .. ! Titled -Tour v TfLV f-r' ! reirt of co'mmis.-io-i. .. proceedings, contain a frll dc :f the last Rained hit of K a'n. ! lieii-bv referiod t, s-i-;,i -,i '. '''-by refcrr.l to. Said .--x1-. ' ; i,,:u!e " satisfy the amount r ,:f f r;1 :7 V'"?-'-'' :l' , W. F. Rt.CKBl Laves fjRo.-xer. t rorn: ,. By virtue of the r.ov.-c- mortgage deed givc-i '.y W. ! nncl('rVi--ct'KV4- ' ivv'-i' conn lu door in Ruthorl.irot .public outcry for cash, ou ; M,i1(l;,v An il 71 Ii ?''' ' ; ' . ' , ' ' ' !J'0 '""V''."'" fvl,ru -tr:: ' '" ".'V -V5.- I1 lir,, r;' f"; R..!..,lT..V'!... o..: ..'!'.'!'?-'" Glegh cn reek : i,d bon-y-. (! ;.. f;,:' Beginning at a i x k. Lvid-r " and rnus t-a.-t with old line l'iif': thence north !2 poles t'. a . 1 u ,ak ' inenco ( ast -,2 pol. s to a thene c wes t Md Ian ti-j' : luc:iee noi i.i i ixl . red oak ; th nee v. est ?A poles i0 , Bridge's corner: rl.ei; -. v-jtij ; iioi til 3(H) p.;: ,.-) fu,. l f ..:- taiu:cig 4: a -r mor or h vrll l m;ol t sat'fy the x .on said mortgage Book V-.-Lagc cle.-ii ; st page 12 is fiirtl.tr n f( r ;ce This i b "iie A-.id i - Vf r L II. WILKIE, Moir; Eaves & linck-. r. Attorneys. (Li-. if F.nurv. P'?. P. B. LANCASTER. Adam. F-iVi ez Hiu-ii'i-, Att.a . f