E CHBOHICLE. ni X WILKESBOftO. H; O. 01dEnglish names are . frequent enough in Winthropi"Ma.pj3o'thatron three stores side by side appear Ing ham, Oldham and 'l5illingaam. The neighbors craok jokes because tnere isn't a ham in either store. One man in Chester, England, has been before the police jastioes 130 times for drunkenness or assault; his father was up thirty-five times, one Bister sixty-seven and another twenty nine. --The cost of - prosecuting the family and keeping " in prison has been over $10,000- Cuba's sugar crop and her tobacco crop are failures this year, more's the pity, exclaims the New York Herald, She sella us $10,000,000 worth. It doesn't look as though Spain could get any taxes out of her for some time to come. There ' isn't any blood in a stone, and there isn't any money in Cuba. " The Japan Gazette says that the Kissa Emigration Company contem plate?" sending 20,000 emigrants to Brazil, who will be chiefly employed in the coffee districts. It is estimated that if the project" proves successful this first draft of Japanese emigrants to Brazil will be followed by many others, and that the authorities of Japan look with favor on the move ment because it is calculate!! to relieve the pressure of population in the Mikako's empire. According to a Copenhagen paper the largest encyclopedia in the world is the Buddhistic work "Tangym," which has been "from ancient times preserved in several of the larger Buddhistic cloisters. In comparison to this book of refere nee the Encyclo paedia Britannica itself sinks into in significance, at least as regards size. It consists of 225 volumes, each of whish is two .feet high and six inches thick. The 225 volumes weigh 3000 pounds, br twelve pounds a volume rather heavy reading evenV for a Buddhist priest. The original edition seems to have been limited and com paratively few copies still exist. One of these is owned by the British Gov ernment and another by the Russian. The latest price noted is 7000 francs. Here is ' something to alarm "scorchers." In two or three cases that recently occurred in Philadel phia, the Ledger says, the doctors di agnosed a derangement of the intes tines, caused by bicycling, setting up appendicitis, from which death result ed. - It appears that the victims were. young men who used their bicycles to an excessive extent and took a wrong position in riding them, bringing tho abdomen down against the saddle, as done in "scorching, " with the results that the contents of that sensitive part of the body were pus' ied out of posi tion, complicated together and pound ed into inflammation. Bat if riders will sit upright, on their wheels and keep their bodies in a normal position it is believed that they will be in no danger of appendicitis. -i We have had, in the past five yearsj a recrudescence of Columbus, of Na-V. poleon and things Napoleonic ; now, it appears, .there may be an infliction of Robinson Crusoe. A learned so ciety of London, England, has come to the conclusion that readers of De Foe's charming fiction have all along been misled as to the island on which their hero was landed when he experi enced shipwreck, says the New York Post. It has been hitherto assumed, much to De Fe's discredit, that he stole (or "appropriated") the story of , one Alexander Selkirk, who passed several years on the island of Juan Fernandez, in the Pacific Ocean. But -members of this society declare they have discovered that the novelist did nothr- steal his narrative at all ; and, .moreover- that . ,i .a.: . TtucAO UUC original Robinson was wrecked lies jiot in the Pacific Ocean but in the . Atlantic , They are going to send out : 7. an expedition next winter, as soon a . iue Bio.j doocuu cioses, to ascertain -'- I. n 3 ... . ' Deyonu mi. perau venture just where r his island is located. In the interest of all true narratives (of fiction), and for the benefit of all lovers of Crusoe it is to be hoped that their mission will be a success. : " The true island, they say, is situated somewhere on the north coast of South America, not far distant from the mouth of the Ori noco ; for Crusoe . himself says in his journal that the last, recorded obser vation, taken just 'before his ship-' wreck, "was in; latitude eleven dlgreef riorth between the islands of Barba dos and Trinidad. , :, . - : Over $5,000,000 ifspenH yearly b; Londoners on "row : , NAY ASK NO VOW. Kay,, a; dear hear!. Too lightly no vow, t 1 The Word "forever" iruiu -rWe pledge eternlty-who In one day, . Forg$teii, silence, mingle clay witn clayl -How dV you know your eyes will always i : sttlne I With that glad welcome when they meet with mine? ; How Oare I say this heart for. aye will swell To answeryoursknowlnglts frailty well? To-day I sees plighted troth and clasping hands; r - 1 To-morrow, shattered faith and broken binds. " - v : Oh," pitiful for mortal llp to sw ear! ', lore fitting this: unceasing fervent prayer , ; That ur love's flower, escaping frost and blight, , - May bloom immortal, as we hope to-night! Catharine Young Glen, in Century. ANGELINE,S,t8RQUEATU., ANNIE HAMIXiTON DOSNBIiL. IN'T it good? Take the north side of our well, ' an I guess you won't beat it for coldness an relish any wheres in this country. No, this ain't the poor house that is to say, not exactly, though it's kind of a blood relation to it. Jotham an' I take" the town paupers to board. We've done it so constant now that it's give us the name of fcein' the poor house, an' it's a real cross to me. won s you lase another glass?" She J was tall and plnmp and com fortable looking. Her calico sleeves, rolled nigh, revealed a distinct divid ing line between the fairness of the upper arm and the tanned skin below. Evidei tly she had many a time dug the po atoes for her pot with her own stout l ands. She nodded toward the shady doorsteps. 'be down," she urged cordially, ook real tuckered oat. Ain't You it hard work turning them sranks up hill an' down a hot day like this?" The stranger laughed with easy good Lumor. He looked up the long dusty road, peering from under his hand. It stretched away blank and lonesome-looking, and he turned back to war $ the pleasant, vine protected steps relieved. "I will sit down and rest a bit," he said. "The other fellows are not in Eight. I took a spurt on ahead and left thpm loafing under a tree. You don't mind my resting my wheel here across kour poppies? It won't touch .... ' em. RVAoa wrtrt nr t Tint T mAca if Ml be a new' experience to the poppies. Bisickjes are scarce around here, about as scarce as paupers are.'' They sat down : together, and Mrs. Jotham took bp "her berry-pan again. The stranger, with his hands clasped around one knee, tilted back and forth gentlyj? i 3carce, are they, round here ?" he said. That's a good sign." "Nt t for me an Jotham, it ain't Yes, they're dreadful scarce this sea son. Since old Uncle Elnathan died an' Mis' Parkman got married, an' Hester Ann fell heir to her uncle's place an live stock, we've run real low of paupers only her,' an she don't know phe's a pauper." . Mrs. Jotham's berry-reddened finger pointed out a slender neat, little old nay sailing m me ironi vara m a nign- backed rocking-chair and knitting something white and soft. She held her stately little white-capped head high and there were indefinable tokens of gentle refinement about her every where in her slender fingers,' her laces at throat and wrists and the poise of her little shapely head. She nodded drowsily over her knitting. "She don't know it,n Mrs. Jotham said witn a little laugn tnat naa an echo of good-hearted compassion in it. The implied tenderness - of the laught and the odd contrast of it with tne i Diun, unsennmeniai general as pect of Mrs. Jotham, made the stranger on the lower step glance up surprised. ."Sne doesn't know it?" he queried. "No. Bless, you, she ain't so much as a suspicion. , You see, she's only been here a short spell, since the other paupers went away all except Uncle Elnathan, an she thought he was hand to help J otham do the chores. Jotham an' me's kind of hired hands too, only a remove or- two higher up tnan iioor uncle Jiiinatnan. sne thinks." . The stranger drew in bis breath in a subdued whistle. He shifted his T ositibn a little to tret a better view of the little old gentlewoman through the whitewashed pickets of" the front- yard pence. She had let the knitting slip out of her fingers, and her head lav over on one shoulder. tT,ell me the rest of it," the stranger Jotham dropped the last berry into her yellow nappy and got up clumBily. "You wait till I get these berries set away down Bullar."she said. "Mis' 1 IAnKeflme,fl real particular to have me set am down in the cool an in the dark!" - . r,Mis' Angeline?" 9 v.'Her." Mrs. Jotham nodded across the jfence r. pickets. "Mis Angeline Fair brothers. She was a f Peterson from- over Bickford wav. i Married SimionFairbrothers's oldest son. She's "j:eaaiui particular with i me t some nays." r ' v v . JY. - Jotham sighed. , The sigh echoed back fronf her retreating form sook tne berries into the house x recently sbe came "back. She had vow i oi salt anrl n. Ilffla o,;... uf! wants 1 ebld always eift the : !aH rx said 9xplanatorily. ' 'She won't I eat a mite of 5 salt; that. aint sifted. - It takes quite a good deal of time to sift it." ' r . 4 ? A pauper 2 Did you say she was a pauper ?' - : - ' V: f'Bless you, yesl She ain't got a red cent in the world, but she don't know it." - - Do you always sift salt for your paupers?" The stranger's hands un clasped and his leg fell limply.' He looked up at Mrs. J otham in un feigned amazement. - "Bless you, no ! But I humor her. Jotham sort of scolds me for it, but his scoldin's ain't only skin-deep. He humors her, too. He stan's a dread ful lot of orderin' an' geein'. round to humor her, an Jotham's a real inde pendent man, too. He's dreadful proud of ownin' this place an' keepin' it up so nice an' neat. Mis Angeline tries him a good deal. Her notions of farmin dont just match Jotham's, an' she makes it real kind of embarras sin' sometimes. . ' - "Generally Jotham can get along all right without lettin Mis Angeline know about everything. But I've known Jotham to swaller some dread ful big farmin' pills for Miss Angeline. He planted the medder-patch to corn this year, when he was all planned to sow it to oats an' lay it down next season, jest to humor her. An' he fenced in the new pasture with rails when he wanted to make a barb-wire fence. He done that to humor Mis Angeline. Jo tham's bark's a good deal worse'n his bite. Mrs. Jotham plunged the sifter into the bowl and held it over the blue-edged platter on her knee. The stranger watched the fine snow gather in a little drift under the sifter. He waited impatiently for the rest of the story. "rihe was brought here to board he town brought heran it pretty - i at 1 near broKe ner nearc. one s reai proud feehn'. She thought 'twould kill her to go to the poor house, an' it almost did. She took on so an' grieved so it sent .her into a fever an' she most died of it. When she come out at last shewarn'i just herself." Mrs. Jotham 'laid down the wire strainer to touoh her own forehead with explanatory significance. The stranger bowed silently his recogni tion of the explanation. 'She come to thmkm she owned this place, every stick an' stoue on it, an me an domain was runnin it ior her hired out to her, you know. She's thought bo ever since. We ain't had the heert to undeceive her, poor soul ! We'd ruther stan' a little or derin an' geein'. She's real happy an' contented, an she don't mean to be too particular with us. It s only special particular days she has to day's one when it's kind of embar lassin' for me an' for Jotham." The bees bnzzed round the salt bowl in evident anticipation of finding it sugar. The stranger watched a growing dust cloud down the road materialize into a farm wagon, clat tering past. He turned back to Mrs. Jotham in undisguised relief. "Tell me the rest of it," he said again. Up aoross the field toward the house Jotham was walking wearily. He came out and sat down on the lower step, too, nodding sociably to the stranger. Mrs, Jotham glanced up froxn hei sift ing. "Tuckered out, Jotham? she said. "Yes, I be; all creation tuckered!" You got the dreen laid yet?" Jotham shook his head dejectedly. He followed his wife's glances aoross the fence to Mis' Angelme s, involun tarily. She was still dozing, and a beam of sunlight had crept through the syringa leaves and played over her cheek. It cast little quivering shadows of the leaves. Jotham looked back, up at his wife, and their eyes met. 'Well, that dreen's a good thing, Hannah, he said reflectively. "It s a good thing. Mis' Angeline done us a good turn that time, orderin." Another dnst cloud rose at the road's vanishing point, and the stran ger eyed it with increasing suspicion. It took on greater proportions and shot suddenly into a reality of two men pedaling something along on their.wheels. The stranger got up. I'm much obliged," he said. "I've been a good deal interested in your boarder over there. Is there , any more to the story ?" "There am t any more to it, Mrs, Jo than said simply. With a f aw more polite words the stranger mounted his maobme and went to meet nis friends. He lifted his straw hat to Mis' Ange line as he passed by her, though she did not look up to notice the salute. "Now, warn't that nice in him, Jo tham,' Mrs. Jotham murmured ap preciatively, "takin' all that pains to please her? Home folks has plenty ol the mice of human kindness m em. and some is all dried up. That young. man's one of the juicy kind." i They watched the bicycles glide away out of i sight, and then -Mrs. JothaL. went in to get Mis Angeline's tea. - - It. was two summers - afterward that the same stranger asked for a drink of water again at Mrs. Jotham's door. He had noticed that there was no lit-J tie, prim old lady setting beside the syringas in the front yard. The whole story came back to him at sight of the housed and he was wondering where she was. . t- ,. -xs uuis ngeiine sick ne in quired, the minute the door opened and Mrs. Jotham stood in it. ;: She looked at him in blank surprise. Then her eyes caught the sun's glint on his wneel, and she remembered.. . . - "O, -' it's youJ" - she . said, re lievedr xou : : ain't , forgot the water out o' the - north side "of our welU have you? It ain't the kind of water to forget ! " I tell Jotham "Is Mis. Angeline sick?' the Strang er persisted, interrupting her gently . "Mis Angdine's dead." Mrs. Jo tham's rugged face suddenly softened. Its lines melted imperceptibly and the network of laughing wrinkles round- her eyes melted, too. : -7 -. -1 "Mis' Angeline's dead," 1 she re-, peated quietly. "Won't you set down? "Tell me the rest of it," the Strang-; er said, dropping at her feet, on the lower step. . . "She s dead, tnavs about ail tnere " ri t - fiiilin' i.Vit olnhrr laAt fall an' winter, an come Marcn, tnere warn't nothih' left,of her sparcely but her" shadder. -She died the thir-1 teenth." . ' ' .. - , Mrs. Jotham looked over tne Strang- r'fl head, away idto the -field wher d 'two or three new pauper recruits were helping Jotham staoK up nay. rauej did not speak for a while; then she said: . "At a quarter to five in the mornin She went real easy an' happy. Along about the middle or last of Feb'uiry she was dreadful upset over mam her will." "derwill?" r "res, it seemed to upset her a sight. She didn't breathe real easy till 'twas all over with. She kep' at Jotham till he hitched up an' fetched over Lawyer Higginbotham from Forks Village, an' he fixed it up for her, est to suit. He put in all the 'whereases an' 'aforesaide, too. Mis' Angeline was dreattful pleased. You see, Law yer Higtjinbotham understood how 'twas. Mrs. Jotham toucned ner lore head in unconscious' explanation of how it was with Mis Angeline. "After the will was made she failed up fast, and breathed her last the loth of March, at a quarter to hve. During the pause ensuing the beer buzzed insistently among the syr ingas, and the voices of Jotham and the paupers drifted over to them soft ened and mellow. The stranger un til ted his machine from its resting place against the house and stood leaning on its saddle. "It must be a relief to yen, he said, "not being ordered around in your own house." Mrs. Jotham s plump figure straight ened and she spoke with unconscious dignity. - "vve miss Mis Angeline a slight, Jotham an' me," she answered. "- guess she liked us; we laid out to uso her well. We humored her some." A mist of sunshine, driting through the 'mesh of thick-laced leaves over head, alighted gently on Mrs. Joth am's tight, faded hair. Somehow it did not look out of place to Ithe stranger, crowning, thoag'a it did, hsr sallow, unbeautiful face, and contrasting with it oddly. "Mis Angelina left a bequeath. she went on soberly. "rfhe left Jotham an' me the place the farm an' live stock an all. She made Jotham her (administer." American Agri-t cultnrist. India's Hoard of Sp?cie. For a long period of years India has been characterized as a "sink hole2 of the precious metals, or, in other word?, there has been for many years a continuous flow of the precious metals gold ind silver into India, where they have to a large extent dis appeared, undoubtedly by burial un der ground fo tbe purpose of hoard ing and concealment. The motive for this under the Mogul and native rulers was unquestionably to escape direct plunder or confiscation ; but under British rule these hoards, amounting unquestionably to many hundreds of millions, are not taxed, mainly by reason of their inaccessi bility, and partly by the recognized policy of the Government to avoid di rect taxation of active capital, and en courage, by making safe its employ ment, the tendency of these buried treasures to come to light and enter into the channels of trade. And that this policy has been a wise one is shown by the fact that within recent rears there has been an increasing dis position on the part of the Indian owners of concealed treasures espe cially the Indian princes or rajahs to withdraw them from their hoarding places and invest them in Government bonds or other desirable interest bearing securities ; and in this way a very great addition to the world's ac tive stock, the money metals, may be anticipated in the perhaps not distant future. Appleton's Popular Science Monthly. Preserfiiig Flowers. A florist of many years' experience gives the following receipt for pre serving bouquets : When you receive a bouquet sprinkle it lightly with fresh water ; then put it into a vessel con taining Some soap sods, which nourish the roots and keep the flowers as bright as new. Take the bouquet out of the suds every morning, and lay it side- wavs in fresh water, the stock enter ing first into the water; keep it there a minute or two, then take it out and sprinkle the flowers lightly by the hand with pure water! Beplace t be bouquet in'the soapsuds, and the flow ers will doom as fresn as when nrst gathered. The soapsuds need to bo changed every third day. By observ ing these rules, a bouquet can be kept bright and beautiful for at least; one month, and will last still longer in a very passable state, but the attention to the fair and frail creatures, as directed above, must be strictly ob served. Horsrs That Take Freqneut Baths.. . - The horses which are used on the Kennebec ice fields are so accustomed to dropping through the ice that they don't seem to . mind it. They are yanked out a little roughly, to be sure, but they take their medicine like tho chickens belonging to the family, that was constantly moving which, every time they saw a covered cart stop ia front o tneir nouse, would turn on their backs and stick their legs, into the air to be tied together, ready for transportation;- Portland (&Ie.) Press. ; HOUSEHOLD AFFAIBS; . ' XiAtnTPBT CONVENIENCES. . . Desirable conveniences to incorpor ate in a laundry, particularly , where one is building a new? house, is the providing of a chute from the second floor " down - to - the .lawndry, so that soiled clothes can be dropped down whenever a change of clothing or of bedding is made. Such a chute may well start from the bathroom bn the second floor, if the situation is right. Such a chute should open out of the wall in the bathroom or other room on the second floor. Where the laundry is in the basement and the china closet is in a position to make this possible, a small chute may also extend from the interior of the closet to the laun dry for the. easv disposition of all soiled table linen and other soiled ar ticles on the first floor. Another laun dry convenience is a rack to be placed against the wall, with lon hooks for hanging up pails and mop cloths. The bottom of the rack should have a zinc or galvanized iron pan the length of the rack and shallow, tocatch all drip from 'mops or pails. The laundry should also have a small closet where soap, washing powders, etc., maybe kept. As. to the floor of this room, it is eafe to say that unless care can be exercised to keep water from being constantly spilled upon it, a hard wood floor would better give place to one of soft wood with joints kept constantly full of paint. If it is to be hard wood, then use a wood "filler' to fill the grain, and keep the wood full of oil, oiling it occasionally with raw linseed oil and washing it when necessary with kerosene. New England Home stead. HOW TO MEND KITCHEN UTENSILS. It sometimes happens that a granite saucepan or chafing dish gets a fall, and in this fall a bit of the granite enamel is loosened and finally peels off. The dish is of little value, for a hole will soon ensue. Granite is sup posed to.be unmendable, but we have proved that it can be mended. If the granite is not weakened all around the hole, a copper rivet, such as is Used by harness makers, may be used to fill up the break. There are dif ferent sizes of the rivets they come with a small head, something like car pet tacks. The rivet proper is slipped tbrougu the hole in the granite, and then over the end that passes through i slipped a copper washer (which comes with the rivet), then with a few taps of a tack hammer the rivet is flattened down on the washer. This effectually mends the break in the granite, and makes it practically as good as new. If only a very small hole is found a bit of copper wire is used to mend it. The wire is slipped through the hole, after being cut the right length, and then with-a taok hammer it is flattened on both sides of the granite vessel which is being operated upon. The process is so simple that oven a woman is doing "light housekeeping" need not fear to undertake it, provid ing she can strike a straight blow with a hammer, which women are not sup posed capable of doing, though it may be among the new women there may be found a few who can do this. The only thing to be avoided is striking promiscuously upon the. granite sur face, and so scaling more of the en amel off. The mending is almost as simple as the old method of putting a rag into a hole to mend it. It once happened that a high wind played havoc with a paper tub, and, after rolling it around promiscuously, it threw it against a stone and virtu ally wreoked it iorever. It also hap pened that the tub belonged to a wo man who had some original ideas, acd she straightway went to work to dem onstrate that, although ventilated, it was not wholly beyond repair. First she secured some putty and put this over the hole and? smoothed it down carefully until it was about the same thickness as the papier mac he itself of which the tub was made, etc. In case of an article needed for such use it might be well to paint it all over, and then it might be decorated if desired. I have seen this paperware decorated with nasturtiums, and it really looked pretty. An occasional ooat of paint would be a good deal toward making such utensils lasting. Chicago Inter-Ocean. EKCIPES. Broiled Chops Put the chops in a double broiler and broil over or be fore the tire for eight or teu minutes. Serve in a hot dish with one-quarter teaspoonful of butter and a small -pinch of salt for each chop after they are cooked. The fire for chops should not be as hot as for steak, i Turn sev eral times while cooking. Cream of Beet Soup Four bunches of blood beets ; pare, then grate and strain through a cloth. .Put on the fire and let soald. Let one pint of milk come to a boil and add it to tho hot juice ; one saltspoon of salt ; cream two - tablespoons of sifted flour with two "of butter and stir them slowly into the soup and continue stirring un? til the mixture is thick as a rich cream. Add a sprinkle of black Of red pepper as preferred. - Peas Peas should be cooked in boil ing, fresh water, enough to coyer them well, and not be dished until perfectly tender. It is .impossible to give an exact time for cooking, as the younger 'and more freshly: gathered the more -quickly theywill cook; from ,forty minutes to an hour and a half will be needed, according to 6ize and fresh ness. , When tender drain off all the . water, add one-half teaspoenful of salt' and a tablespoonful of melted butter to a pint of. peas and serve tin a hot covered dish. , - ? - A bust of Victor Hugo; was recently seized .at Prague, Austria, by. the custom house officials. Inside -N the were found a number of- anarch 4 ist writings. v w .y r - '7 i Drug Store, Wilkesboro, N. C. Keep on hand a full line of Fresh Drug, Medicines, Oils, Paints Varniihee and Everything kpt in a First-Olasa Drug Store. Carefnlly Store in the Old Steve Johnson Building, just opposite the Court House. Be Sure to Call ai ges Them. R. H. STALEY & CO., DEALER IN- DRUGS, PATENT MEDICENES, TOBACCO, CIGARS, Cigarettes, Fancy and Toilet Soaps, etc., etc. Prescriptions promptly .ad acour filled. Situated in the Brick Hotel Building. LIVERY & FEED STABLES, ft. C. WELLBORN. PROP- Situated on Main 8tret, eait of tht Court House. Good horses aBd new ve hicles of all kinds riidv for the accom modation of the traveling public. Horse carefully fed and attended to. Gira us a trial and see how we feed. A .C. WELLBOliN, Wilkesboro, - North Carolina. R, N. HACKETT, Attorneys at Law. WILKESBORO, N. 0. Will practice in the State and Federal Oonrta. : - - : v .--. " ' , IOAAC C. WELLBORN, Attorney - at - Law, Will practice in all the court. Dealer la real estate, frompt attention paid to collection of claims. T. B. FnoBT. H. L. Gbxxxs. r milk. i a unLuiL, Attorney - at- - Law, WILKESBORO, N. 0. Will practice in all the courts. Col lections a specialty. , Seal estate told on MsnxniMion. Why a Cat Falls on his eet ; An experimenter . recently ..undertook' to discover why a "cat invariably 1VII on its feet. lie finds that a cat always falls on its feet, providing it has a dis tance of a yard to fall in and enable it to make a half turn in the air, so as to get' its ; feet undsrmost. It holds It. paw4 vertically and manages to riv serve this position during thej rest o ir Ito -foil in cnin if -tYtd IniHfil mnvomprf of rotation taken . by its body. TIi mechanical ekplaation is simplj7 tha t the animal, by thrusting, forward its left4jmb, shifts the center of gravity o'Z the whole lody so as to malice it revolv;' upon the axis Of the piue until the feet reach the ground. Moreover, a cat doo v not hurt itself by a fall .from 'a-height, not only because it invariably falls on Its feet, but because tne structure o a cats back -and iapine Is extremely flex ible. 'The. muscles of its legs also arc extraordinarily strong and numerous and, further, it has elastic rads ; cushions consisting of : a mass of fibrous tissue and fat on all its feet, seven in each f orepaw and fiveTrTeach hindpaw. ;. : 7 ' . . ' Worth't Predecessor, j The first man who made a name as a woman's dressmaker was Rhomberg, the son of a Bavarian peasant from the neighborhood of Munich. One day in 1730 a beautiful carriage appeared on the boulevards of Paris with an es cutcheon In the shape of a pair of cor sets and an open pair of scissors paint d on the pahel of each door. This was Rhomberg's coat of arms. He owed his jing 'and remedying : defects of "figure. :He left an annual income of $1,000 a year to Ids heirs." : IkjduiiOb in procrastination, and in time you will come to this that, be cause a thing ought to be done, there BerryBros., Prescriptions Pompounflefl fore you can't do it