1 t 7v 1 1 ' i t v i & "V 5 l t - ,v . i. ' - . . .if -'t : ' ''" : V;. ' ' ' " ; ' .jirfi; WAU; Editor and f f oprietor. ?1.50 per Tear in Advance. Hi 1 i: 0L; III; NO. 14; ROCKINGHAM RICHMOND 00 CTHURSD APML 1885. WHOLE NO, 616. 11"' I: '.1 i .5 ' J i -r-.,, , :: :v'j-t.,.7-n -,,-J . "V. f'; 7 7- F.f, JJ mtm? 'vJl -r- 'y'?- '' ,.t; BURGESS ' ' VBounuiJi Ajn bstJox. Furniture Mm OHARXJOTTE, N. O. fc. TOLL Cheap Bedsteads, Lounges, Parlor and Chamber Suits. COFFINS OP ALL KINDS ALWAYS ON HAND. . EOKLENBURG IRON WORKS, . CHARLOTTE, 1ST- O. MANUFACTUBE3 AND KEEPS IN STOCK ' ' " '"V : -!i ' . - ,. " -" i " Steam Engines and Boilers, i Traction Engines. Saw Mills with Variable Friotion Feed. - AVueat Mill Outfits. Cora Milla Portable. Separators, Threshers and Hone Powers Reapers, Mowers and Hakes Steam and Water PipesBrass Fittings RBPAR3 PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO. ; Address, XTTOKfiETS. FRANKLIN MoNEIL, 1 ATTpRNEY AT LAV, ROCKINCHAM, N.C. , J . - i - Win pniotic in KtoboMnd. ITotswoM. Anaoa ud WALTKR'H. NEAL,, ? A WJ t: j LAURINBURC, N. C. '" "Will vprmctfon in Riohnmid and djaost oooatm. IflAMLET TEKIVES TH PEOPLE ARE HAPPY. v"- Mlik Pi? Coods, Qrocrisv Shoes, eta.. SO LOW th! ib notiva or wtonithovt. jiafore buying. cU Ad m SHJr SHOCK ux , . : 1 HATS, - ' i . GOODS , CEOCEKIM BOtbTS, SHOES. CUTLKB HOWS,' MOLASSES, ' BACON. SHIP STUFF. 4 I- , - . And almwrt ererrthiiig nesddb7 tbpaapl. -:: ' Bmra(aol and te mu beior. bnyins. It will bs ,tfoorsftraa;a. . , J. W. PAKKS, IE BARNES v OCSmGHAMl N.vC.i TbeUltl will slwais bs stpplbd with tba Uw ; KATES . Jsa s &uur&Wt wmK, frM 3 fO to ilMto .... Kuard omt. tran.... a XHTBA'EsTKpVriitcr. Cen. Grant's Jlefusal of Aid.! Bearding Oeneral Grant's refosal to accept ' the land being raised for his benefit by Cyrus W. Field and others, Hi, Fkild said 1 that he as much asj any person was surprised at General Grant's declination. , r;- v-; , 'v;. ", I ,; : : "'jJat vhat eoald I do after receiving that letter from the General ?" said Mr. Field, i "I had only:' to accept it as meaning exactly what it said, for I have i i hot 'seen, General Grant yet, and know nothing more- than the pablio, though I -may Imagine a thousand things." I i ?;And what do you imagine?" was i'teked Air. Field.' - ; j! A s ' 4it MAnirt imacrinfl that ina uenerai de- " r' 'Vi 1 4, !i i anil J I might imagine that some friend ? v haA'posBlWy come forward and taken v?'i op Mt' Yandeibafi claim agatoslihirc. i1 I :cannot imagine that the General pff;'mtMi ' part with' all : his': relics' and things in i tha line that I would not part with lor anything." ' ; -h P'-fz::. ;V.v 'Will yoa retain the subscriptions made niil you have, seen Ganeral Grant?' was asked. ' ' JC''P 'C ' "Oh, no,M he replied, , "not a dollar, I haye already returned every cent sub scribed, for I had no right to it alter General Grant had said he would hot re- oeiviti,t : ' ;- --: . 'Hbw xnnoh had been subscribed ?'V -will say nothing about that ; Gen eral Grant did not. himself know.rbut there wpnld have been no difilculty in MUintf thrnm. . Mr. Vanderbilt told 5. ; ,' .; Va .! Wwnfli.ft1Tw - worth ' 160.000 to V; $t7Q,000. tZ'i&iiiK'iLhn. '.b n mndinn eirl of sn Amor- i Wt&M u utn whbm shd had steered down i . J-ti'Z&mW "r! ?T vr7i.;-Zfv 1 ;Ihe aide doon, .they are 4-Ti3 mmJ wooJdn-txiayeraiEBeqiifuu i Abd the PomI Code t:Wtif:WtlW Ahrtakone 4"'-V f s 'V "XlOf-W MWisais- f;jj.vjLi pojiMHUuri m J NICHOLS, skaxxk n all koss o Mattresses Chairs, Etc. STOCK Ok froaptUtaaUoaffroato JOHN WILKES, Manager, Sew York's Tons? Men. . Says a New i York correspondent: After . the opera I wandered into the corridor or a prominent hotel and there I met the cashier of a down town bank. "Hello 1" .says I. "We newspaper men may stay up all night and sleep all day, but how do-yon business men man age to keep awake all the time ? Ton iiagh 1 1 hb lioaia. I a bed. " '. .'. "but I am going to-night to Mf!rX8 - party; and am waiting for the time for it I to begin. It's got to be impolite to turn np at such an entertainment before mid night. I shall drop around in half an hour, dance until after four, get to bed bf five, sleep until half-past seven, and rush down town : in time to be at my desk at nine. Of course I shall be en tirely unfit for work all. day long, but you know that a young,, fellow cannot afford to miss Mrs. B.'a party. A man's business success bo largely depends nowadaysupon his social acquaintances that the social - part has to be looked after sharply. ' I have been to the opera to kill time. All the people whom I shall' meet at the baU were scattered ttn-ough the opera house, and most of the women and all thoxaen were in their ball attire. They" simply drove from the opera house to Mrs.B.'s, and go on with the night's enjoyment.' It's hard enough on a business man who has to be down town early, especially if he ia out five nights in the week, as I have baen for a month; but then I sleep ail day and all nigbt on Sundays, and get to bed by midnight on Saturday nights, so I contrive to make up some of my lost sleep. ." I sometimes go to bed right after dinner and sleep from eight o'clock until midnight, and then have James call me, and I can then turn up at the party feeling quite bright, you know; but it is rather awkward, don't you understand, to have missed the opera or the theater and to be mixed up on the day of the week, as a fellow is sure to be who sleeps at odd times so and gets , up bewildered between two days." . Yet this young man was . only one of 10,000, probably, who are compelled : to pay equal attention to social require ments and business. . Education in the East rjnole Jamea, just arrived from the West for a visit, to, bis httle niece": "Well, Emily,' and how are you coming ofx at school ?" Emily (little eight year old; Boston girl):;" " Nicely, uncle." r ' tJucle James: i V I suppose you can read 'ahd' write and spell with the best of 'enf Emily: " Oh, my, yes. I study mental philosophy and the science of languages, and on Tuesday I'm to pre pare a treatise on Psychology and another one on Fr day on Methods of Thought,; and twice a week we thave a lesson jn Ethics of Sex! and here is an article which -I am to read to-morrow; cillel : The Brazen Period, and" :- i,; Mamma (entering the room): "There, Emily, dear, little ohildren should be seen not heard, i and besides your uncle James must be very tired after his long journey." . ' r : ' - TJdole James looked tired, Drake's Traveller. . i.- - .,- The Police Song. A picked lot of New York policemen sing in the "Pirates of Penzance" for a charity They bring down the house with the following metrical observations on th9 Exowe question: ., ' I Oh, the liquor stores hare closed their front doors Sunday, , And t e good and . pious chaps have got the - k b'aesj. ' " They are waitlnir'for thecomiag on of Monday, When they can get ntus quiet boose. -V very hard to smother. is having all the fan- oonsideration with another. .;v r aoi awonfc , DBEAM CHILHREK. - "' t ' v$-"J ' ' i V'1'' ", 'r.7'.-!,:.' ItnxBtlnthe dearLOTTawis&ffln, ; ' I do sot caestibn His will, : ; Bat oft as I sit In my chamber,, y j In the twilight, aim and still, I long for the children's Toicea, ; . I long for the dinging stint, As unto my ear thry whisper, ' Their ttoy griefs and slarms, -ffUK-And my silent room is peopled . 1 v With forms I can almost see," i - ( The forma of the dear dream children i ' Who cluster about my knee. . j' I can hear their merry prattle ; ; I feel their breath on my choek, ' ' And my fanoy again makes real The dear ones my heart would seek. And eo I sport with my children, - . , And watch their sw et, quaint way" ; Till my heart grows heayy with longing And my eyes are dim as I gaze. For alas I they are bat ohadows , That out of the d&i kness grow; , Only the fraO dream children " That the heart alone can know. " ' A TERRIBLE ADVENTURE. 1 have had such an adventure," ex claimed Mrs. Badger as she flounced into the sitting room, sank into an easy chair and gasped for breath. 1. . 'What is the matter, ray dear?" in quired Mr. Badger as he laid down his -newspaper to listen. - . "That ia a nice way to speak to a woman after she has just seen a sight that curdled her blood. Oh, ray I" exJ claimed the worthy lady as she covered her pink face with her terra cotta gloves, totally oblivious for the moment of the fact that the two colors formed a very inharmonious contrast. "I can see it before me now. I don't believe I will ever forget it, ever." , "Compose yourself, my dear, and tell me all about it." "That is the way with you men," re sponded Mrs. Badger as she removed her hands from her face and began un buttoning her gloves. "You have no feeling. Yon don't know what sentiment is. , If you had passed through what I have to-day the first intimation I would have of it would be an unusual odor about your breath. You would go into a saloon just as if nothing had happened and talk the matter over with a friend, and by the time you got home you would forget all about it ' Compose my self, indeed, I know I sha'n't recover from the shock for six weeks, if ever I will" Here the excited matron paused to allow her husband an opportunity to in terrupt 'her in, but tbt individnl Of'tt Y;. . " ' - "When I got through my work this noon you know we had company for lunch ? Mrs. Simpson and her daughter were here.. . How I detest that woman I I know she came here on purpose to make mean remarks about our new sil verware. By the way, Isaac, that sil verware is" wearing very badly. The plating has been rubbed off in three places on our coffee-pot already. That comes of buying your table ware at a tea store. I always knew you were no judge of such things. The next time perhaps you will let mo buy stuff for my own house, But you always think you know so much about some things. No one can teach you anything. If you ' would take your, wife's advice once or twice a year, instead of that miserable Jim Wilson's, it would be better for you nand me, too. I suppose now you will go and te 1 that odious man just what I have said. That is the way you always do. ,You kt.ow you do. The last time I told you tie. truth about him you went right ofl and repeated it to him like a little, leaky school boy." You needn't try and deny it, for Mrs. Wilson came over here the next day and made the rnot scandalous statements about you I ever heard, and I know, she only did it to get even. Oh, if I wasxmly a man I'd show you tome things that yon ought to know.",. f 9 ' Hera Mrs. Badger ; stopped for breath and glared across thefireplaoe at her unfortunate husband in a way that would have chilled the marrow in the bones of a less experienced Benedict "Well, my dear," suggested Mr. Bad ger, with a faint sigh, -"as you were about to say, Mrs. Simpson called." "That's right," snapped Mrs. Badger viciously. "That's right , Since you wnre down town and saw the terrible sight, suppose , you; finiaK the story.. That's right Go ahead and 'tell me all about it-' I'm impatient to hear." . '1 didn't intend to interrupt you. my dear," responded Mr. Badger, wearily, v 'Don't 1 my - dear J me, sir. Please don't. Well, since you don't know any thing about It and are willing to listen to me relate it I will continue. - Mrs. Simpson and her freckle-faced - Miss Simpson came to lunch, We had pickled salmon, hot ' biscuitsyou know what delicious biscuits Mary Vmakea ? It is the only good thing about the baggage. She does everything else terribly. She broke three saucers this morning while -she was faying to listen to what I was saying to you about Jennie -Parsons while we were in the pantry. 1 I think 1 shall discharge her. She is too careless for1 any use, but then she is cheap and knows our ways, and Heaven knows what I should do with a new girl, but I 'suppose yon would be slad to,, have . a change you don't have any of the work to do. You men are so selfish. . I wish I waa a man." . , j "So do I, my dear," observed Mr. Badger. "Then I might possibly hear the end of this Btory some -time this year.".' r ' "That's right, Mr. Badger; when you cant trea't me cruelly and neglect ma, abuse, me. That's the way with yon -men. I have a good mind not to tell the story not at all now, just for spite." f v'At-; this"' moment Mr. Badgejr picked UP Ins.newspaper and resumed bis iead- a . re' - "As I was Baymg,"fcontihuedMrs, Badger after five rninntes of ' silence, j which seemed to her like ft month, "when Mrs.' Simpson and Miss Simpson left the house I put oh my oloak and hat and started down to buy some groceries that I asked you to order several days ago, but which you forgot as usual. Ton always orget snc sit down to .the table to eat and then you storm and raise a row. because you don't find the articles all looked , and ready for you iu silver covered dishes. I got. in' a red oar and started down town. The oar didn't , atop for ment first I had to walk over to the other side of the street and walk through i pool of water, but I! don't anppose it would make any differenoaHtocyou J ; had drowned. After wading nearly up to my boot tops I nally glinto Che car and there Wasn t any seat for me. The car was crowded with men and wo men. , There wasn't a gentleman there. It's a pity the street car companies don't run cattle cars for those brutes who sit down and pretend to read newspapers while ladies stand up. There was one putty-faced dude, who wasn't reading. He didn't dare look me in the face. He fumbled I around in his pockets and pulled' out a newspaper, and -;when I looked at him he began reading it up side down. Borne men would do anv- tning ratner tnan stana up ana let a lady sit down. Then the brute of conductor asked me it I didn't have small change when I gave him a five dollar bill. ; Of course I had, but I wouldn't give it to him after he had in suited me before the car full of people, not that I cared for them, though. Then he looked at the bill suspiciously, and carried it out on the platform and asked the driver if it was good. He then went through ; the car and asked every man if he had change. None had any, of course, and he had to give it back to me. I hope he had to pay my fare himself, just because he was such a selfish brute. But he was like all you men. " ' . ; " -j . - "At Twenty-third street a woman got in the oar with that lovely dress pattern I saw on Broadway last fall and wanted you to buy for me, but you said it was too expensive. She had it made over, and it was perfectly beautiful. I knew it didn't cost her over $50, and it was worth twice that much. You will see how much it costs when I get my new dress next months ' Dress goods are twice as high nowj but you always think von know so much about snob things. 1 - '" "I got out at Fourteenth street and wn walking past that new building on Sixth, tycuie They are plate class and reach clear across tho store, and are filled with the greatest bargains I 'ever saw. I know some of the lace that they have marked down to 62 Cents didn't cost one cent less than 60 cents. Well, right over the top of the buildingj there is a scaffold and there were some! men working on it They had a pile of bricks and a whole dry goods box full of mortar. I met Mr. Jones there that. . pleasant-faced gentleman who comes here and talks so beautifully about Paris and the latest fashions.. He had his .charming little pug dog with him, and . the moment he saw me he bowed and that dear little doggie barked. , Ton know the last time he came here I gave, him your slippers to play with. He is such a cute little fellow. ' He nearly choked to death, you remember, on the heel of one of the slip pers. But yott can buy a new pair for $2, and you know I never liked that pair anyway. You bought them without consulting me. He saidhe was coming up to see us to-night" r "Who?" interrupted Mr. Bfldgsr, jy he started from ma chair. "Jones or his dog?". "Mr. Jones, of course; yon don't suppose I would talk to a pug dog, do you?" j "Well, my dear," continued Mr. Badger, as he buttoned up his coat, "I shall have to be out this evening. I have a business meeting to attend to, I am sorry I can't stay at home to enjoy the society cf Mr. Jones and the Jones pug, but I can't neglect business, you . . - . know. I must go right off. I haven't a minute to' spare." "You needn't run away to avoid meet ing Mr. Jones. He won't be here." "But you just said he was coming." "So I did, but he won't ' While we were talking a whole bucketful of bricks fell off the scaffolding and struck him on the head before my eyes and flat tened him but like a pancake." . "Oh I" shuddered j Mr. Badger, "that waa horrible. No wonder you i were shocked. I wonder whether he leaves a widow and a family. He really wasn't such a bad fellow after alt," lJeave a widow? What do you mean? How could he marry?", v "I don't see any reason why Mr. Jones .shouldn't marry." V "Mr.i Jones? He "wasn't hurt It was the dog that was crushed." "Oh,"- replied Mr. Badger, as he seated himself again and picked up the newspaper. "Is that the terrible adven ture you had?" - '., '..'! .; ; "Well, isn't that adventure enough ? I was so weak I had to order a carriage to take me home, and ' that cost $4; and you will have to go without meat for your breakfast to-morrow morning Ton less you order It yourself to-night, and, Mr. Badger, let me say that the next time I tell you a' story you will under stand it at once." - , "IdouU it,".replied Mr. Badger as his wife flounced out of the room to change her dress for dinner. Grapfiic. , . " - Pbbsonaii. Mrs. Mackey'a daughter, who is to marry the Prince. Colonna, is not the daughter of Mr. Iackey, bnt pf her first husband. Dr. Bryant, a young cousin, or connection of William Cullen Bryant,;who went : west with the gold- Hjver ana. was pracucing metuou-o at Virginia Oily at the time of bia death,jj THJ? AlaWi.IETIN PABTY BBMNOtNO .19 ..SUUIiui vunn . ; . k-( ttesemls Three Persons Aure, un i ' Wlwa hmi twi Rnrfexl IB H.ir-TSMi SiMrglMwty WUek SO ftmu. war :--MMe4. , '.' - ''fi HTi :'l " .: v:K:t ffcM'ff.sfti;:,'.l'. - ''S,-hSk' -" v A ditch from Salt Lake pity aayi: The relief party Bent to Alta to rescue the liiiilg and bring back the dead who werb killed inv.the recent jnowi slide which- overwhelmed lhat town, has re turned, ''The relieving party had a very trying experience.- Coming down the d&ep defiles of the mountain side, daag gng; the sleds on which the bodies were placed ewh up j in bUnketi, they were bfispteep ' dnf tstW :thhirling partIes of snow driven before the howl tog blaeta pricked like 'so many needled Fortunately, however, all the brave men returned without having received serious harm. Twelve bodies were brought down the canon in mournful procession, single file, . and lashed upon the sleds. On the first sled was the body of Mattie Hickey, the next bore the bodies of Tim othy Madden, Jeremiah Began, David 1$ Evans, James Watson, Barney Gil San and Mrs: Ford, with her. baby lashed to her breast The last sled carried the four children of Edward Ballon. The following persons reported dead were rescued alive: Andrew White, .after being under : the snow twelve heurs; Frederick Culinan, after being buried sixteen hours, and, Mr Keist, in the drift six hours. Besides thjse, Mr. Ford, though not covered by , the ava lanche, was badly hurt The body of ono of the Chinamen was not found.' j Mrs. Ford had a premonition of dan ger, and begged her husband to take her and their child to a place of aafety on that fatal night, saying she felt sure an avalanoe was coming. Mrs, Ballon, Mrs. Keist, Mrs.' Hewitt, Mrs. Johnson and her four ohildren, and Hans Olsen and four children are still in Alta in con stant danger. A rescue party went out the following morning organized to bring them in. Snow slides in that neighborhood are of daily occurrence. One occurred on Saturday last in Superior Gulch, which the survivors at Alta feel sure resulted in the death of Samuel Prescott B. Angere, and John White, all of whom were working there. Two men going there to see if they were safe got in sight of their cabin and turned when they saw a snow slide start, and in an instant almost the cabin was obliterated in a sea of snow. The concussion oj the slide threw the two men violently to the ground, d tbey hurried away for f-MT cf another tlido. It if t;'.rtt'3 tiuu. ik iM.ui i, 1 1 1 1 i a?Blftinoia, iivana south of Alta, was killed by the slide of Friday night, as nothing has been seen or heard of him since. In three slides in Alta, ail of which occurred on Fri day, thirty persons have been killed. Changes la the Solar System. The phenomena attending earthquakes give oontinnanoe to the theory of the origin of our solar system known as the Nebular Hypothesis. According to this theory, the solar system was once avast fire mist,- which gradually condensed and finally evolved the sun, the planets, and their satellites. Originally incan descent, as these bodies parted with their headwater and dry land appeared, Bull finally organic 'life, vegetable and animal made its appearance. . Oar earth, Mars, and possibly Venus, are the only planets, it is believed, capable of sus taining the various forms' of life such as "we . are . acquainted with. . Jupiter, and Saturn are known to be huge globes,. fire and mist, small eunsin themselves. without life on their surfaces; but per haps sustaining life on the satellites by which they are surrounded. One other fact has been established by scientific demonstration; that is, the identity of the materials that compose the univecse. We now know that suns, stars, planets, and moons are composed of carbon, hydrogen, sodium, iron, and other chemical substances such as we are fa miliar with on this earth. The universe we live in ia 'full of mystery, and it is good for all of us occasionally to lift our thoughts 'to tha marvels suggested by astronomy and the study of physics. It IS well said by Kant, the philosopher: "There are , two things that are to me perennial sources of awe and wonder, the starry heavens above us and the moral law within." Demoresfa Monthly, A Woman with Brittle Boacs. A curious case which is now puzzling CMcago physicians was reported to the Chicago Medical Society. : ; The patient is a young woman whose bones are so brittle that they break at the slightest jar. She has been under treatment for sixteeH years, having been afflicted ever since her birth. Over 170 fractures hare occurred in her life, and her ribs, Iges and arms have been affected She weighs about forty-five pounds. Merely stepping from the sofa to. the floor or btumbliner on the carpet is sufficient to cause the breaking of a bone. ' These fractures heal slowly. . Her doctor has had splints bound about her lee for two years at a time. The doctors think that har bones consist principally of hollow shells. ; The .broken bones have knit together in uncouth shapes and sheas badly deformed. Her muscles are well developed, with the exception of those IwMch have been ' atrophied through disuse. Da, Blanehard has made casta of her limbs, and intends to 1 preserve them in. some ueoicai uuuw lion. - A DriAL.-ome time ago It was re ported that the Ice crop of the Penobecot B'tver in Maine was ruined, becaue an oil faotorv on : its banks was burned a few weeks ago, and eome of the oil ran intq the river. . The Induicriai Vur wil ioi Bangor pronouncds this ' report laJse. and siiows that been; true, J. T O :4 If It ATOfflSDOffl. A uah is never so fortunate or unfor tunate as he -thinkvff;,: 'rM , --f'.'::i-t;. Mxstebx always magnifies danger as the fog magnifies the sun. I - v.. Coksolatios consoles only those wb are willing to be consoled. SuiPLtcmr: of character is the natural result of profound thought Satibists gain the applause of others through fear, not through love. i Au honest men will bear watching It is the rascals who cannot stand it ; Som men will never learn anything. A tramp tried to rob an editor the other day. A wotHAH in some. States cannot- sue aod be sued, but she can complain and be courted.;' .. ' ; . . i . : -1 ' Snow 7 balls : are lashibaable. Xou don't require te attend them. They eome to you. Tan man who has rooms to let In a business building is about the only party that welcomes office seekers. .; A Caiofobsia damsel was highly ot fended because her mother presented her a cook book as a wedding present As ordinary train of passenger coaches is said to ba worth '. $93, 000. This .does not include the porter of the sleeping-car. "' . . , "J- Gskbbaii LiOGAS believes the ofBoe should seek the man, but the man Bhould be around when the office starts out on the seeking business. "Kobbtb," said the visitor kindly, "have you any little brothers and sis ters?" "No," replied wee Bobbie, solemnly, "I'm all the ohildren we've got."- ... :.;,'' "Yott may speak," said a fond mother, 'about people having strength of mind, but whan it comes to .strength of don't mind, my son William eurpasss every body I ever knewj - . One who spake United States only -"Did the deceased die under suspicious circumstances?" asked a coroner of a t rural witness. "Naw, he didn't: he died in the water, under the ice." A Kansas cowbow stopped a stage full of passengers and made them wait while he read a poem of thirty-two verses dedicated to his Maryt-Jane. There are some things as bad. as shooting. TorcHnro extract from a novel "Casting herself between her brothei and bis intended victim, the fair Inez exclaimed in a voice that vibrated1 with agony : 'Bodelpho, do not kill him, for if you did, he would surely die.'" Misteess Jane, I read in the news- .r-ide is deciilly b.vi t?t Ut?:V--v. You must do very careioi uiat a ear nine FidodoS not Set hold of any of L tho children's candy. Philo Irogreaa. A sheewd old lady cautioned her mar ried daughter against worrying her hus band too much,and concluded by say ing: "My child, a man is like an egg. Kept in hot water a little while, he may Lo 1 soft; but keep him in there too long and he hardens." Tine loving wife of a dealer in citj milk was looking for a present for hex husband. She remarked to a friend: I want to get something new novel to him." "In that case," said the friend, who was buyer of the husband, 'I would give him a eow. l "Yotmtripto Italy must have been very pleasant," said a young ladv to Simpson, who had just returned from a foreign strand. "Very interesting, in deed," Baid he. "Now, tell me," said she, f'dsea Italy really look like a boot? You knowjthat's the way it looks on the Bzx the merry skaters glide Bamp, bump I Freely, fairly they slide , Bump I ' ' Airy mazes they are treading 1 Is it flying, swimming, threading? . Bump, bump 1 ' It is very, very spreading Bump! 4 San Francisco Wasp. IT hat Constitutes Happiness. In what consists this much songht-fox blessing? In nothing has opinion so wide a range. Demand an answer from any number of persons and not two among them will return the same. Even your ehoscn companion and bosom friend will differ from you. And how the ideas as to what: canstitute happi ness change with succeeding years. The youth er maiden would soorn that which to the child appeared the very summit of enjoyment-' A few mere years, and sober middle-age looks baekward with a calm pity to the maiden's love dream, or the young man's eager and adventurous pursuits. And as years advance, so do tastes and inclinations vary; until, per haps, life has stretched to that saddest period of all, when poor humanity re turns to childhood's joys. Some who have studied this problem maintain that the most exquisite degree of happiness is attained only by the contrast of some past sorrow for the landscape that has no shadows can never reveal the glori ous brilliancy of sunshine. The rays of happiness, lrke those of light, are color less when unbroken. Sometimes it is all gladness and sunshine and heaven it self is not fax off, and then it changes suddenly and clouds shut out the sky. A Southibh poet died, and several ladies interested themselves in making up money to buy a monument, a local exchange says, to put at the head of his grave. It would be well for the inen to do like Work and pus one at the grave of the poet's wife, who was one of the most patient won?fflio sum's tyranny. The poet would often say on leaving the house: Charlotte, I shall probably be absent two hours. I shall, on . my re turn, be drunk, and if I find you! in the house on my return I shall flog you like thunder." h Charlotte 4 waa wise enough .it could not nave i w swiimin ao0xioaM.wiMMi-..sMw.? r 'aw : a jg? w : gx ii:: - -uxunaeniora Yetumed. i4 4;ajr'A '-. t t,w,.,ri; ' ,y .r;i:i v1 4Xc;;"tr tHH.i- Hi SEVER, SHED A TEAR. til BetWi a KMa Dlsjnoa4 Drew Bis ' On a Bubarban theatre train the other night, a little party were talking of pa thetio soenee upon the ' stage, and how they were variously aff acted .'by them, . "For my part," said a dapper young man, "I never yet saw anything on the stage : that could moisten my eye. I leave the crying to little boys and wo men." - - ., :"Oh,7ou do, do you?" said a blufl old gentleman, an officer of tine of the railroads; "every time I hear a young man talk as you do I feel like telling a little incid3nt that onoe came under mv notice in'New York city.' 'A party bf us sat in a box; 'Hazel Kirke' ' was the pkyApnwTof ns had ever seen it . " I shed a tear quietly and unobserved, but rough old General McRae cried like boy, . He was president of a Georgia railroad then, and was in New York on business.- He was a regular martinet in his profession, ' stern and unrelenting. He was an old bachelor, too, and so fax as is known never, had tender feelings toward woman or kin. He had lived a life solitary- and absolutely unsehti meniai. we were au surprisea to see such emotional suon a man, but none of us said anything except young George r , of Atlanta. He laughed at the old General s weakness. '"Can you witness such' a scene as that with dry eyes ?' inquired, the Gen eral, with all his old sternness of manner and speech. ; ; ' ; ' ' 'Why, of course I can. I could laugh at it even as I laugh at you. ; J : 'See here, George 7-, said Gen eral MoBae, with great 'earnestness, you are cashier of a bank in Atlanta. In that bank ray company has many thousands of dollars deposited. Imme diately on my return home every dollar of our deposits shall be withdrawn. You may be an honest man, but I do not feel safe with our money in an institution where one of the responsible officers is a person who talks as you talk to-night.' r "Upon bis return to Atlanta the Gen eral did aa he promised. And luckily, tod, for in less than six months that bank was nearly ruined by a heavy em bezzlement by its cashier. "--Cliicago Herald. r , . Designs - for Spring Dresses. Cashmere of the finest twills will be ased for both house and street dresses in the early spring months, and for cool days in summer, say3 Harper's Bazar. All the light shades of reseda, fti.-L-.-e-.? ros?s.' oMrf, jnd Vowr Re v- jsnri'Vd, ,ke3 : .a oj -i- ployed for the entire dress when it is made in tailor fashion, but there are velvets of similar shades to be com-, bined with it for more elaborate eos tames. Gilt braiding, not merely in parallel lines, but in embroidery designs of vines for borders, or separate figures, stars, blocks, or crescents, will be the trimmings when only cashmere is used. When velvet is employed there will be fine cords and piping folds edging vari ous parts of the corsage, while folds or bands of velvet will trim the skirt. Those who object to velvet as heavy for summer dresses will have the accessories of watered silk or of gross faille of the same shade. - Black cashmere with close silk embroidery upon it iu interlinked rings, leaves, daisies, or other small flow ers will form the over-dress for skirts of gros grain or moire silks, and for qaitcu-l young ladies the gilt or silver w cashmere will be employe ; ? model for these has all iV part of the skirt cow due' flounces of.,' cat out on -t1- ' ?,v''-"' that curve ; v ' falls 'two it '. - ' with interlAiaCTi . -i. il - a i over it; tcB-urapery , v . !. curves much-deeper ti . "k - right, and eachis cai. ' . j .-, waist on the sides to meet a u -' . of cashmere that covers the t .' ; " ' ; 7 i of the skirt The baok may hang ia full pleats quite straight from belt tor foot, but for those who need a more bouffant tournure ft is caught up in a single bunch of pleats on each side and in the middle quite near the top, and thence falls plainly. Shirring will be used ou the front of the basque of such a dress, and may be dono in the cash mere itself, or, which is a better plan, in two smala scarfs set on down the f ront, and made of the silk used in the' skirt Otherwise the basque is very plainly fashioned, and may have a slight postilion pleating, or else be smooth over. the tournure; it is necessary, how ever, that it be quite short on the sides and behind in order to be in good style. Bad to Stand It i Count Vasfli tells the following anec dote in illustration of the Austrian Em-, peror's courtesy and simplicity : Having ugent business to dispatch, the Kaiser had his dinner placed on his writiDg table. His akte:de-campdined at the same time in the adjoining room. After the meal the Emperor opened the door and said: "You can go; I shall work alone. What do you think of this food ?" "It seems to me, your Majesty, that the dinner was not first-rate," replied the aide3e-camp. The Emperor thetf ext claimed: "What difference does' that make to you ? You can maLe up for it at a hotel, while I am obliged to content myself with this trash. I am no! al lowed to go where others go." . Dn. " Hklmbou .Rsleaskd, -Dr. Henry Helmbold, the great "Bacha'i man. was released from the Nomvf Insane Asylum, in Pennsylvaniajp? had been oonfined there amoeEv;- 188f Th-Imiaey..CorAmis4sA 'VifcMtf! him to be of sound mind y$UZtf$iM .with of ioy.Pi THE JOKER'S CORNER; BTKAY BITS OV H.njlOK FOUND . THK BUA1UROUS COJbUaiNH. The Jadxe was There-Ths Goad - aaal Bad UIUm It Cured Illm Mot mt uU SeultlT-TWe Beiuitllal Hmw. Kia. ! HOT VESI SENSITIVE, f - Some Northern people imagine that the Southern African is as fall ot per sonal pride as one of PenimoreiCooper's Indians. . Uncle 3ose, of Austin, is not one of that kind. 3 . "1'se gwinter quit- I has to look np anodder place," he said to his employer, John Ingle, a wealthy merchant ' " What's . the matter with you, Uncle Moao?" - ' ...j : "Do bizness manager, Mr. White, has not kicked me in de las' two mumfs. Not onoe has he lifted his foot ag'in me." y ' ; "I ordered him not to kick you again,; I don't allow anything of that kind in this establishment I intend! that no body shall hurt your feelings, Uncle Mose." ' 1 1 "Ef I don't get no kicks Tee gwinter quit" I ' Are you crazy ? Do you yrsnt to be kicked and cuffed about ?" "Yes, sah, I does. Ebery time de bizhess manager kicked or puffed my ears when he was mad, he got; ashamed of bisself afterward, and gub me a quar ter. I'se done lct enough money at ready, wid dis heah foolishness about hurtin my feeling3"--rsxaV Stftlngt. CONMJCT. ;i What shall I do to gam eternal life?" u Discharge aright j The simple dues with which each day is rife. Tea, with thy might. A" Etejperf ect schema of action thou devise . -T-.t Will life be fled; ;i . While he who ever acts as conscience cries, Shall live, though dead. ' ' ECHILLEB. . - PIT EDI TOP; . An anecdote is told of the early days and the time when court was first held in this county in a log tavern. An, ad joining log stable was used as a jail, the stalls answering as cells for the prisoners. Judge T. was on the bench, and in the exercise of his judicial functions severely reprimanded two young lawyers who had got into a personal dispute. ' A herculean backwoodsman, attired in a red flannel Bhirt, stood among the' auditors in the apartment. He was1 much pleased at the judge's leoture having himself boon practicing ,; at "another bar" and hallooed outtohia' worship (who happened to be cross eyed): i 4 ' " , "Give it to 'em, old gimletieyes 1" "Who is that ?" cTemandea the judge. fie t3a-.,:: .; -' r-'i crvcr the rest, nd, drawing himself up to hia full height, vociferated: ' . "It's this here old hoss 1" p ; The judge called out in apecnliarlj UVUUOU dry, nasal tone: "Sheriff, take that old hoss,' put him in 'the stable, and sea that he is 'not stolen' before! morning,'. J-PilUbura XHsiMtch-; ' . ' ' BIACTOtm SHOW. Ij'v.... - 4i ; W Oh, the Bnow, the beautiful snow. 'L-i- (bhnt that Uoor, FillinK the sky and the earth below; (Yen, you can shovel it off for a quarter.) & 'Over the house-topaTover the street; : ' (tlO an hour for a sleigh? G(jod heavens I;4? Over the heads of. the peeplo-you meoti f-fjf ; Arrest that boy for inow-balliiig I) Mf, Dancing, J- ' . . ,."' Farting. :' k, ... ;' 8' Eit the p ' i'J. ': iV if: '--';.- ''C; '. .v' '"Jr-v,'':.::- ' ' ? . . I , ;.. . t : 'VJ':.!-' coat. ! - ; ti,.; fice f'.'.IVv v-t; with' iiijr : : . nhnnA Hnnitl.. 1 1 h want you to dine wnai j and I will notify Mrs. Bro .. you. (Speaking through theV . s a :ik. this evening. Now listen how dV'V ; .i'-;i'f her reply will come back: -.;; : f"i0 Mrs. Brown's reply (om!nff '? - with startling dtmotnesAs- v.-'f taryA Rmith if hA trilllEsl ','-.i-) 'lOteh HO USE. A citizen of Brooklyn was m door of his ofBoe the ether m; ; ' A a young man who had a bill i "F5r shoeing at horse two o, shoeing a horse V exclaim man, as he glanced at ty . I haven't owned a horse,; s,:Uv. years r ' '.:'':: ,sy'-) "I don't know anything "ah. replied the young man; '"but Vj 'fftX the bill to collect" t ... ; h'-v "Oh, well, I'll p ing down to the g$ . bill, for three menV '. shut up, bnt I bp. to pay for Bhot Bho-r,f'v;5i4p might as i : . -. uy s ga P;t' 'l&fs:a':X:''. ti ','Vi 'v?; at-'. f tr U '"L 1 , 4 M,' 3 t f1" i ' t t Vii-l''' 5 'i. 1