Person Co. Courier. ..i,i;lil in the centre of A ung section, making .ii one f the best Pablislred Every Thursday -jrtisinar mediums ior varehouaemen iu ths adjoining counUes. Circulated largely 4n Person, Granville and T,-i,nm-HT,tiAS In North Carolina, and HACKNEY; &; N0ELL, Eoxbobo, N; G. ; -4 TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION! Halifax countyTyirginia. 'job work all description neatly executed on short aotice and at -reasonable prices. When m need of work give the Coueieb a trial. HACKNEY & NOELL Editors and Froprie(or&l HOME FIRST: 7 ABROAD NEXT. $1:50 "Per Year Ih'AdTarice. - $1 50 One Copy Six -Months - . - ; 75 1 Jlemitancemu-t be made by Registered" VOL. 4. JROXBORO, NORTH, CAROLINA; THURSDAY, OCTOBER, 13, 1887. N0.8. J-etterost Ofilce Older or Postal Note, r THE COURIER; - -rfr r hv:V" fine-tobacco II. II - II i I II -all L 1 n " l 1 - . M fl - t M . I . I I f fl 1 - . 1 -fl II I fil - II 11 i 1 II- 11 - J - m i .vi mm- .mm - .- - m m -. i ; v. wm i mm ' - mm ,r si ., - m mm x-- . . m - 1 : .-.i - :i r w - -. ri ri m m - r. .v' t - m u. . n - i i : r . v-.- .. i- - j - , auu II llll-ll v - II . If II I . II - ' . ll: "ttl . IJ. li, II I: n Jift v mmm- -.-mm mm i ... - J-1 . w. m w b . . '-.4 m m w m . j', k . m m . . . "... .1 m a.. v . 1 - . - mm . n m .- r.. m. m .1 . a a . b v m. an, a- . m m i-tr mm mm - a -a - m. ' ' - II 1 1 I I 1 1 - 1 1 l V VI U . I f tt,ll H II i I I II IS . H - I If - II I llt-Il II I I 1 J I 1 ' I 1 . 1 - - , " , X " " &j- -' ' " ..... ? . -. - -V " - V j. ; ; ' - ' ' ' -" ' .---;- - . - . -. - ; v ; - T- ' - v--v -7, r. J. -'-- ; - - ' W ::! WT.'St??- ARDS Ji-CStrudwick. U. P. Boone STRUDWICK-& BOONE, ATTORNEYS AX UW. oTTiTur nnAN6I AND PBBS0N COUNTIES. W. GRAHAM, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Hillsboro.N C. Practices in the Counties el Caswell, Durfiam G oillord, Oranga and Person. C. S. WlNSTKADv ff. F. TBBBY VTCT INSTEAD & TEBBY, ATTORNEYS AT LAW. KoxberQ, N. C. Prompt attention given to all business entrust ed to mem, - - - -- - - N, T.UNSFOBD, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Eoxboro.N. C. J. W, Graham, " Thos, Euffin, GRAHAM &RUFF1N, Attorney's at law, Hillsboro, N. C. Practices in the counties of Alamance, Casw Dartaam , Guilford, Orange and Person. . J. S. MKKKITT ATTORNEY AT LAW.1 floiboro, N. C. Prompt attention given to the collection of Claims. D K.J T.rULl.I, PRACTICING PHYSICIAN. Boxhoro, N. C. DR. C. BRADSHER DENTIST, Ofiers his services to the public. Calls promptly .attended to in Person and adjoining counties. Any one wishing workinhis line, bv writing him at JJushy Tori, N. C, will be attended at once. D R. J. A GEOGHEGAN Offers his PSOFESSI05TAL, SERVICES To Roxboro and the Snrrounaing Community. Can be found at my residence recently occu yiel by ltev. J- J. Lansdell. THE FALL TJSItifl OF ROXBORO ACADEIV3Y Open to Both sexes. o-o-o Opens Aaffust 1st, 1887. JAMES W. TILLETT, Principal, Miss Fannie W. Mangum, Assistant. Tuition for 20 weeks, in Primary Depart anent $10.00. Comnmn English Branches $15.00. Higher English and Languages, $20.00. Music oil Piano cr Organ $15.00. ADVERTISEMENTS Geo. D. Thaxton. A. Judson Watkins. THAXTON fie WATKINS, JOBBERS 0TI0HS, WHITE GOODS, PANT GOODS, OVERALLS, LADIES' DRESS GOODS, &C, 14 S. Fourteenth St., Richmond, Va. can live at nome, ana make mre money at work I lor us, man at anytntng else in thi world. Capi tal not needed ; younre started free. Both sexes ; Quaeres. Any one can do the work. Larpe ear- llinfS Sni,JrOBl Jlvot nun. mt,iy muiiiii ai-vj terms free. Better not delay. Costs you noth ing to send ns your address and find out; if you are wise you will do so at once. II. Hallett & Co Portland, Maine. 5 12 ly. Raleigh, N. C. FIANOS & ORGANb, Sewing Machines. Very Lowest Prices, Most Reasonable Terms. PIANOS STEIN WAY, KRANICH & BACH, BEHR BROS., CHECKERING, EMERSON BWICK. - -o : o GREAT WESTERN, KIMBALL, ESTY, - ' MILLER. WHITNEY, T5RIGEP0RT. Wrhe,for pricee and terms. 3. L. Stone, Raliegh. N Wffl purify th BLOOD resnlata LIVED and IfinMFVA nni tf flTrtS IF ftia T-I A T TTT 1 If 1 - OH of yOTTH. Dy8pepaia,WDt . c. T:' anaigosiion.ijocK oi """s"" mua. -irea f eeling ao- uiuWU ; corea: ones. mas. Ciea snt nerves receive new xorca. Juuivens the mind Ana fmnnUn. Rral. Pwa iTTiiriMr? onfferinB from complaints peen LADIES ferws Mtm, Kft&rmrm. "Htbb a elnar. healthy complexion. Ailatteospfe tcotmterfeldng only adds to ltapopn- wwfi.lwaH erpeviTnent-et URiarMii, and bkbv Bfr HARTSR'8 LIVER FILLS OoaaMnatton.Uver Comojain at and siez I .one. era tie Don and Bream Bnnk TKlDg. HA2TE8 HED1CIHS C0.,ST. LOUIS.'mO. j-'ROFESSIONAI UPS 1 I J? 1 rr l," l ONLY TOO TRUE. John Vanoe Cheney to The InglealdeJ No blushing daughter of the morn -. Can vie with her of woman born; No face at windows of the 8pring Is like a virgin blossoming. Betwixt the blue lids of the sky " " Na orb there mates a maiden's eye ; c v . Not mighty Mar' unfailinsc lance n . Can match the mischief of its glance. , Nature, how weak art thou to harm As does a dear unsleeved arml Thy rocks would trickle into sand With tingles from a dimpled hand. . What swaying shapes of sun or shads , Approach the motions of a maid? 'What snowy curve by winter traced -Caa take the taper of her watstf And that soft darkness of her hair, Thy twilight shades ah, tboir despair! Not all the striving stars beguile As may one memory of her smiln- That foolish lips should speak so wise. Make merriment from earth to skies; Nay, Nature, drop a dewy tear For solemn knowledge bought so dear. RELIGIOUS OPINION. The Examiner says: "A very intelligent friend of ours says that Mr. Joseph Cook has now given in bis adhesion to the general plan an which "God is conducting the affairs of the universe" The British house of lords passed a resolu tion Jafit week to the effect that "the time has come when in the interests of religion and education all national collections should be open to the public on Sundays as on other days." The Boston Herald says: "A very sensible and practical contest for a prize was that lately held ir Philadelphia between theologi cal students of the Protestant Episcopal theo logical seminaries. It was for the best read ing of selected passages of the praye" book, the Scripture3 and the hymnaL A prize of $300 was offered by a gentleman of Philadel phia. The committee of Judges consisted of the bishop of Pennsylvania, the vice-chancellor of the University of the South, the donor of the prize and nine o there. The winner was Edmund S. Rausraanier, of the Cam bridge Divinity school. Considering the dreadful manner in which much of the read ing in church is performed, it is a wonder that more attention is not given to training for it In the Episcopal church, especially, the accomplishment of reading well is even more valuable than the art of speaking well And for scholars in the public schools who may never have professional use for skill in reading aloud, batter instruction aad more practice than they now get would bo of the highest value." The Independentsays: ""Whether the Bible is of divine authority, and hence binding upon the faith and conscience of men, is a question of fact, to be answered affirmatively or negatively in the light of the evidence. All must admit the possibility of its divine authority. Every candid person will also concede that there is at least some presump tion in favor of the divine authority of the Bible. What, then, is the rule of prudence and sound discretion in the light of this pre sumption? Our answer . to this question is that such a presumption is, for all purposes relating to our practice, as good as the most absolute demonstration. The Bible being a revelation from God, we are then in this world probationers for immortality, hero forming a character that will determine whether we shall spend that immortality in heaven or in hell" The Living Church gays: 'An Isolated Church womanr protests against the rubris propos-3d in the Book Annexed which forbid the a'iniinistration of the Lord's Supper, 'ex cept three (or two at least) communicate wivh the priest.' This, taken in con nection with the rubric, which directs tuftt none shall be admitted to tfca Holy Communioa "except those who are lorifirmod or those who are ready and desir ous to lie confirmed , would debar all who are situated as she is froni receiving" this holy sacrament, even at the hour of death. She may not bo aware that the hindrance already exists, a rubric in the office of the Com munion of the Sick requiring that 'two at L-ast' shall receive with the priest. Wherein is the 'flexibility' of the proposed rubric? Or has the 'Isolated Churchwoman' no rights on her death bed which rubrics are bound to respect?" "We ought not to wrong these men, even II we ara suffering from their presence all the evils that anti-Chiuoss agitators so glowingly depict. -The world never yet, in theor5' at least, was willing to sanction the docfoin that we are only to do right when it pays. Obligation does not cease when loss or suffer ing begins. On the contrary, we are assured in the Bible that it is better to suffer evil than to commit a wrong. History teaches conclusively that nations are inevitably punished for their misdeeds. Let us lay up no heritage of woe for ourselves or our children by any high-handed mjustfca to these strangers in our midst. To the law and to the testimony I say, and not to the passions and the prejudices of the hour." Hev. Wilktt on the Chinesa Whore the Crowd i Oo. Chicago Herald. People wonder at the crowds which Bar aura draws, forgetting that through all time the showman ha3been.kinz.laorg9 III suspend"! a coancil of his ministers to rush to an open -window aad stara at Lu nardi's balloon, aud Jenny Lind freely for gave the littlo boy for whom his fond father had bought a tick st for one Of her concerts, and who went i . stead to see the fat hog in a side show. "Wai it," asked with the liveliest interest the illustrious ar tiste, "a very fat hog?" The hippopotamus, when he first cams to London, was certainly the most popular personage in the metropo lis, and Sir E lwin Landseer hastened to tbe Zoological gardens to make for royalty a pen-and-ink sketch of tho interesting stranger. Then came the reign of King Jumbo, just dead. . ' .. a TIcksbur'a Timid Newsboy. The Vicksburg newsboy, it is said, moves along the street with a timid air, and almost whispere his requst that you should invest in the morning . paper. He step ofl slowly as though he has plenty of time in which to cover his territory. . Water-Proof Boots and Khosa. A writer In Hygiene Practique states that boots an 1 shoe may be rendered water proof by soaking th?m for soma - boars is thick soap water. The compound forms fatty acid within the leather and makes it impervious to water. The common thistle plant is found to eon- tain an averagu of ttt,00O seodt and the bur dock 88,000. Mobbd r tho' Boys. Chicago Tines. , Ex-Senator Sharon, of California, who r. Cnt!y entertaind th Engli.h 8lr Thomas and Lvly Heskth, bis daughter, rceiv4 .from hii lordship a buadle containing sata Pi servant bvry, He seat : them to hi residence at JUenlo park, and when oh of the servants vestured out in the coksr and ftocklora of Europe he was mobbed iagrafri atjJe Ljr tfe of to naigaborhoei. : 8TYLE3 IN ARTIFICIAL: LIM S3. Thm Old Styles Are Awkward and. Cheap. But the New Ones Are Wonders. New York Sun.' " " Two signs in the show window of a dealer in surgical appliances read as follows : "Old Style Log" and "New Style. Leg." They, show that there is a fashion in artificial legs. The old-style leg consisted of a short wooden stump and socket, which was to bo fastened to the remaining portion of the missing member by a stout broad strap. It was of the same style usually exhibited in' picture books and on the comic opera stage, The new-style leg was a fleib -colored o py of a human leg and foot, light and ap parently as comfortable as a cripple would require. ' "The-old style leg," said the proprietor, -is a clumsy affair, and is chiefly worn by those who are not proud-of their personal appear ance and by poor men .who are unable to pay, tha price demanded Xor . finer t work. We still have large orders for them, - and always expect to have. They cost from $5 to $23, ' according to workmanship. The aew style cf leg costs from $75 to $2J(J. The former price is for a leg from the knee downward, whila the latter takes in a whole leg, from the hip joint to the big toe. Taese legs are very light. They are. hollow, and are made of a great 'many layers of wood, as thin as wall paper, cemented together. They are almost as tough as iron. They are comfortable to the stump, and the springs in them give their owner an almost natural gait. There is a spring joint at the toes, one at the ankle, which enable the foot to band up and down, and also a lateral joint at the tame place, that allows the foot to turn from side to side. "It is in arnu, howsver, that this business has made the most rapid advancement," continued the dealer. "The man who in vented the artificial arm and hand was a practical philanthropist. When I was a boy a man who lost his arm was obliged to wear a wooden stump with a screw socket at the end. Into this be could screw a knife, spoon, or fork to help him while eat- ine. and a hook for use at other times. Now we can give him a wrist, hand, and fingers. which work with springs, and almost com pletely take the place of the missing mem' bers. He can put a knife, spoov. and fork between his fingers, which will hold them with the grip of steel, and thus ha may eat- without discomfort. Ha can also put a pen between his fingers, and write almost as well as h9 could with his natural hand. Ten years ago this would have been regarded a a miracle. This style of arm sells for $100, lbey make artilicial portions or a man's body now almost as serviceable as the real ones." Bishop Coxe on Cremation. Bishop Coxe, of Buffalo, writing in The Forum on cremation, says: "But under the name of progress we must revert to barbar ism. The appetite which the age exhibits for such retrograde manners and devices ought to shock us, merely as men. of feeling and taste. But it is the symptom of - something muen worse than coarse and mure fined sent went. The natures which so readily adopt this Plutonism, even with a sort of greedi- nesa aruifiCQrnthe graves of jheut&thers and mothers without any sense of their sanctity, would thrust a gentle wife or charming child remorselessly into thev oven te shrivel and crackle and roast, within reaca of eye and ear. Such characters are already less sensitive than Pagans; they less appreci ate Virgil's line: 'Sunt lacrimae rerum et mentem mortalia tangunt;' ' - and they are breeding a ferocity of manners and of thought among us which, in another generation, will be ready to erect tho guillo tine or to re-enact the lragonnades. Philos ophers might prompt them to the one or fa natics to the other. A people perversely fond of change and experiment may be destined to punish themselves, as nations have done be fore, by their own devices." The Christian Advocate, of Nashville, thinks that "if ever it comes to be thought thai a chief function of the church is to fur nish entertainment for the people, young or old, it will not be long ef ore its function act soul saving agency will e gone." The Pet Yonur Man. Cincinnati Enquirer. -The young man who was raised a pat fo becoming a nuisance. He Is seldom of anj" g(5od. What is wanted nowadays is a practi cal man who can do something slio beside) smoke cigarettes and twist a cane." The time to learn to work and to learn business habits is in one's youth. Ha who leads the life of a butterfly until he is 25 or 30 years oi' age and then recogrizesthe fact that he hast made an ass of himself, has precious little to recommend him when he applies for a job. This may be a chestnut, but it fits not a lew young men of every city in the Union. The boy3 at the reform farm ara better off if they only kna w it, than thousan Is of the . boys who are at large. There is nothing like being practical, and there is but one way to be so, and that is to be so. Acquire business habits and train yourself to good, hone3t hard work. D n't waste yoarjima learning tp te a cravat You can bay cravats already tied. An Jtdea In Stair. ' ' - ' Mechanical News.T' ' " Set It down that winding stairs are an ex.jeusiva. inconvenient, dangerous and. in artistic arrangement. Straight flght3 "are equally ' dangerous and .more inartistic. Flights with right angled turns at landing ways give a fine effect, and do not trip one up, and child ren.eannot fall far when -they start from the -top. - Wherj there . .are very little children or very old people, "halved steps" are good things; that is, the staircase is compo-ed of two separate stairways, each half the width, each having fall height of ri3er, but tha treads arranged so as to alternate or.break joints. A child or very old person, instead , of having to t ke seven-inch steps, can walk up the ceu ter of tho flight with the right foot on the right band set and take only three-inch steps; or two persons can past each other, each taking the regulation stepa. r.rhis is not theoretical, but it is a'good thing which is in actual use in some old English houses. - i - ' ... y , . .yr.; ' A Fh Domenal Brother ; A; J .vC? " Chicago Tribune. - I suppose it is something of ; phenome non, but I know a man here who takes hit sifter to all the - first night at the theatre, and who actually gave her a monopoly ol the opera season. I was praising him and saying all sorts of things complimentary over hii dutiful conduct. -Ha said. "No. There's nothing wonderful or extra ordinary about it She is the -only woman I know in whom I cave the. most thorough confidence. She is always --t he same,' al ways pleasant and aff.ntionate,. and -to tall you the candid truth, I am afraid she'll gd and marry same of thosa : imitation raja around here and be unhappy all her Ufa She has nob ly elsa to look to, and .I'll take care she d ias not have to ; Io ik'tu aaybody slss. ; I suppr se some day a .genuine man will come along. . If ha'j a genuine man I won't object Until he doe's come, oil boy, -she's gojj enougu-ior me, and if I ever nod good a riUsw $n z -, MASTODONS CAUGHT WITH A GRAPPLE, ON THS BOTTOMS OF SOUTHERN RIVERS, For . Fertilization, ""Sot Sclenoe Blj . Chunks Fished Up and Ground Into . " '' Bits An Insight Into the ; Phosphate Business. , : - r ' INew York-Sun T " : "It's hot,? said a cheerful gentleman in a down-town office, "but it isn't as bad as it was to' South Carolina last Sunday. I was down there three day last week for masto dons in the bottom of the Ashley river. What do you "think of thattiHckingup a gigantic molar that .weighed about eight pounds, and was grayish blafe In color and half tetrifiad.. . ..f -j; -" - - - "How ; would you like to own a tooth like that and have it -ache? If they did ache when they belonged to the mastodons, there must have been a fine bowling down there .In the swamps, lor I've seen whole bushels of jnst such teeth taken out of the rivers, and there are tons of them there still- And it isn't mastodons alone that you find, but chunks of titauoth eriums, dinocerases, teliostw, z?uglodons, hipparions, megalomeryxes whenever you get enough, say when chseropotamnsids, poebrotheriums " "When?" "Why, in the tertiary period. And i yon dig a little deeper, I think you would find pterodactyl, megalosaurs, glyptodons " "When! When! "On!" "Are many persons engaged in those mines?" "I should say so. There are four or five big companies, and eyer so many little nes." "All digging up mastodons!" "Yes, sir; not for the sake o the masto dons but for the phospbata that the masto dons are mixed up in. Bless you, they don't stop to pick out mastodons and piece them together. They throw the whole product into crushers and smash it up, and when it is ground it sells for from $6 to $15 a ton for fertilization. Many a farmer 'is spreading desiccated mastodons and archssopteryxes aromnd his cornfield ana potato patch- mastodons and archaB.ipteryxes that were ah! sleeping the st -ny sleep of centuries. "This phosphate business is a new tb but it's a big one. Why, sir, there are let mo see," and he pointed his nose at the mid dle of the cjirin and shut his eyes until he remembered that "there are 53J.000 tons of those South Carolina phosphates dag up every year. Tha supply seems to be inex haustible. At least they can go on at the present rate for twenty -five years more. Do you see that photagraphl . That's the gun that is used in catching mastodons." Tho puotograih showed something that looked like a wilted iron tulip dangling from tho eud of a stem of rods and ebain A man stool beside the tulip toBhow that it:- six iron petals were as lng as he, and that before it Was full blown he could easily have sat in ide. the bud had there been an; .way xu-staiAina. in, -- -"- . "That's a drop grappla. These phosphate beds stretch alonz the coat of North and f South Uaroima, onl Ro.na or tntu are found in Alabama and Florida. Tuoy cover mile3 of low country, and ara technically divide L into la,nd and river rock.' The land rock' is found on shore, anl ii minxi by colored men with picks and wheelbar rows, as iited by dipper dredges. The 'rivei rock' is a crust of phosphate, six to twelve inches thick, that forms the bottom of a number of stream V It is especial j rich in the R'auf ort, Stono, and Ashl rivera Sometimes there are two strata of phosphate, with a thick layer of mud oi clay between. Tais phosphate, you nnder stand, is almost wholly compotedof organic remains the bones flash and waste of no body knows how many animals. Whethei this was a big. feeling grouul of theirs. whether they were mirad in swamps there, whether well, the fact K nobody knows ; how they came there. Tha phosphate, when u comes out oi me river, is a gray, porous. water-worn rock, and looks like rottousand stcna Tho smell cf it is vile, but the worse it smells the richer it is. "That drop grapple has pointed Wada s. It weig'. s fourteen toils; anl when it is dropped on the river bottom it knocks hole in tha layer of phosphate. Then a 150- horse power engine puckers it up so that it takes a globular sbaps, the tlades folding up together and holding the phosphata that it has loosened, it i3 raised, swung over a boat, and emptied into tho boat There the phosphate is washed, to take out the sand, and it is sometiznas leaded aboard ship, chiefly for export to England, but it is more commonly turned into a crusher that take: a rock as larga as your body and bites it up into pieces not much bigger than your fist If is washed again and dried, and then ft i ready for shipping. It is sold chiefly as a fartiliz r, but it is also sold to chemists, who extract phosphoi'ic acid from . it fcrdye vtnfifs and things like that The phosphate miners pay to the .state of South Carolina a royalty of $1 a ton net for every ton dug, hut for every one shipped but they are n".t getting poor for all that; and as to -South Carolina, there's a nice little plum $ jUO.OOj a year- falling, into her month without raiaia s "tm-gnr-tcrpictlfe , The only machinery that will pull that stuff out of: the watr is made in this country. One company "spent $95.- 000 for a Clyde-made dredge, but wnea was down - there a crew -Of Scotch swiloiv were packing it into the hoW of an Eaglist steamer to take back. Amarican machinery does tny boy, every taroe." , ". THE PARTING; iH rV,; - -. lErlo a Bobertson.l Hare have I laid me by my Love tbst'j - dead: - ' - - - ' An hour ago she shuddered, "Sweet be brave 1" - - Then sighed and died in the last kiss she gave; And all the music of the life we led Sinks like the anthem sinking overhead - Upon the car ven sleepers on a grave,- - Cleaving in stone tozathsr as they clave In the life endad where they once -were wed. . "Be brave?" .What then's the bravest way todi - ' , V - : ,. .. Nay, 'twei tha noblest dyin for her sake To spend my heart-blood slowly, . through longyeaw, . . -And wile my in-atiate mier-soul doth make Its. dark, dear heard of her sweat memory, Smil for the world, and serve it keep my roars. " : Kesurreeted '49-ers. - " .Chicago Thne3.J " ... TThiB soma workmen were rdrsdging at the foot of a wharf in. Sau Francisco the ether day they " brought up from under twelve feat of mud a number o ; glass jare "with lead coveTk -whioh whea. opaned were found to contain eg?v - As;: it was In this m inner, thit eatrn , egs 'ware shipped try California- in '49 and. .'53, ' there is no doubt of -, thee specimens having- formed car b of one of the old-time shipments. r- Th -yolk and white has pbriveled up into a small bud ball, waicu rattles about in the shell in a manner not suggestive y epicuroaa at- THE STAMP CLERK: GOVERNMENT EMPLOYE r TO PITIED, NOT ENVIED. . He Must Be a Mathematician.' Athleta Aeoouatant, .Encyclopedia and Mittd . Header And Needs Patience and - an Iron Conatltation. 1 Chicago Tribune. Tke employment of the clarks in the ra. tail stamp department of the jfo-stomc,'' said one of them he other day,- "is generally, regarded as exceedingly easy, indolent and mechanical, bat it is exa ctly the reverse. 1 In my opinion it U the toughast and" most Intellectual 300 under the-roof of the 'trov ernment budding. The. bare fact that they .wait on so many custoxari shows it .The work of one clerk; In the money-order de partment is regarded by some as the harde-tt place, because he ha3 to conduct 1,009 money transactions a day. B ut the retail stamp cieik deals in dollars, cents and mills, has to do all bis ciphering in hi3 head, like the lightning calculator' on the street, and has from to 4,000 of them a day. That number may Feem large to you, but we often wait on as many as a dozan people a minute, and will average from saven to ten a minute during the seven or eight hours that we are on duty." MISTAKES MADE. "What are the chances for making mis takes!" "iney are unrivaled. We have seven kinds of stamps two kinds of postal cards, and about twenty kinds of envelopes and wrappers to sell. These are dispose i around the clerk, not all of them within reach, and when he begins to serve customers he look-i like a champion bell-ringer playing 'Fisher's Hornpipey with variations. The valua of each envelope and wrapper is so many cflnts and decimal fraction, and when ever he eils nve or seven or. them he must estimate the price within a hundredth of a cent; and if the amount is so many cents and a fraction he must charge the next higher number of cents. This is extremely interesting. S iuw of the envelopes are 2.24 cents apia.ee; and, if a cnstoiBer wants tan of them, it is com paratively easy to tell what to charge hiai, but when be asks for 20 cants worth of them the clerk feals lika resigning hi3 posi. Hon. Of course, when very busy, he ie liable to make a mistake about It "Then the sale of stamps is very danjsr oui Some people want ten stamps and others 10 cents; worth of stamps, and the clerk constantly confuses these two trans actions, and gives ten 2-cent stamps for 10 cents, or fifty for 60 cents. Under favor able circuni3tance3 these calculations would not mislead him, but he has to make them with twenty people at his window watching him and waiting impatiently for their turn, and ho-has to make them after having made 2,000 other' calculations and when his facul ties are completely jaded. Sometimes whan I have gone through this hrirly-burly for four hour-J on a stretch, suddenly jjll my senses leave me, and I couldn't take a nickol out of a dime to Fave my life. I . Just have to hold my head .with, my hands for a minute until reason returns, and then pitch in again." CARELESS CUSTOMERS.- Do the customers always state their wishes clearly i" "O, my no. A man will slap down 2 cents, and then give the clerk a contemptu ous glance,' as much to say, 'Can't you un derstand, you dolt, that I want two 1-cent stamper But the clerk does not know whether he wants that or a 2-cent stamp, cr a postal-card, or two postal-carls, or a newspaper wrapper. Another man will elan down a nickel, and crv rsnt 'fiTa.'. H.- may mean a 5-cent stamp, or five l-oent-H510?' stamps, or five postal-cards, and it take? a parley to find out Sometimes i will take a foreigner a whole mi a ate to ex plain what he wants for his quarter. ' You would hardly believe it, but very frequently a well-dressed person, generally a woman, will "come to the window and say com posedly, 'Give me foma stamps, plaasa,' and then leaning on her elbow gaza out into the streets dreamily until the clerk asks har what sort of stamm and how manv sue ftfant A large number of customers asi for 'letter-stamps,' as if that was putting o very fine point on it" "Are these all your duties?" "No, these are only a small part of thera The retail stamp clerk is a weighmatar. H& weighs hundreds of letters and parcels & day, the weight of which must be detarminjd within half .an . ounce. Then, the contents being learned, he must estimate tha postage according to the nature of the contents and according to the destination and maka up the amount in stamps. This h very trying to the patience and, 1 may add, to tha eyes. So, likewise, is the counting of postal-cards, which stick together so tightly that mis takes are veryeasy. WhUe the clerk is tending to all these duties he .is acting as a general intelligence office. People ply him with questions concerning the other depart ments of the postGfSce, coaearnia the ar rival and departure of mail -trains and mail steamers, and even concerning tha location of the streets and ths express ofiloos. - - '. HARDEST OF ALL. "Theliardest work is yet to be spoken of, and begins when the clerk shuts his window, and . when the public supposes that he is en joying , a , season ot well-earned - repose. Either then or at some time before he opens, his -window the next day,' he has to eount his cash and take a full inventory of all his stock, estimating the value of every stamp, card; envelope and wrapper in his posses sion in dollars, cents and mills, and aiding it all together , make it come out $610 or $900 according fo the amount of stock he -is carrying.: This he never can do. Though he makes 10 or 15 onts a day by odd mills charged on envelopes, h always loses 'enough in maciug change to make his account somewhat, sh .tL and ,he has to go dovfn into his .pocket for the short age. The best of clerks wdl have an average loss of $1 a week, - and inexperienced- clerk have been known to lose from $30 to, $40 a month. Very often some' "mistake in 'his figuring, especially when done after a day of exhaustinworfc. will bring out aa ap parent shortage of $15 r ?20. and then the work of taking stock has all to be clone ove again; to fiud out where the mijtaka is." .: 5 "But then the salary must be -good :C "There is rijht where yon are lame. The pay of the different clerks employed in the retail stamp departmaut is diif jrsnt in each case, and ranges from , 18 - to $21 a week, too 1 o-se3 reducing- tt at least il a week. Hqw any young man -with life bafore hisa can think of seexing such emp'.oymaat I can not understand." " -. - ' ' . .. --. i i -. . i i . i T . ii - .... n - ..Touched w'-th Wty. - London Truth. . Flocks of Americans are to be met every where, and the hurried mannar' in whics they rush through JBSurcpe strikes one wlfci wonder and pity.- " r - 1 '. , EauOy Explained. " ' - (Pittsbur? Chronicla. "Mr. Notes and. Comments," writes Kva, J whv ia dvine called 'kickmg ih; bucketf 1 Don't know, 4arjinkss'daLA is tho pail J THE MUSCOVITE. A TRAVELER'S CLOSE 6TUDIE3 or a VERY PECULIAR PEOPLE. eapergtltlon and Subserviency Em.i "pation of the Serfs A Copious and i Grotesque Mythology Dishonesty . of the People Cleanliness. . XReview.of Hare's "Studies In Ru3sla."J . . In extraordinary contrast to the stories so generally told of the dangers from which the CEar shrinks, and which wa- kuowto have-. basis of fact is Mr. Hare's assertion of the stupefaction with whioh the people as a whole consider his person.' - "It ; is certain that no position of temptation can-possibly be more terrible than that of the czar, who nourished in sejtMolatry.conslantly h'ea his lnfalKbility reclaimed; by 82f,000,003 of ais suDjects. And it is extraordinary, that m spite or such temptation, all the sover eigns since the time of Peter the Great and the empire have lived in various degrees ac cording to thj light for the goooiof tkair pegple.- They, have not, howeverT always continued the liberal policy of Peter, and under several 01 the sovereigns wno suc ceeded Catherine II genius was always con sidered a sure passport for Siberia. It did not create : surprise when - one day at the council of censure a high official declared that every writer is a bear who ought to be kept in chains' . Under the Emperor Nicholas none, even of the books published under his predecesrors, could be brought out again- unless submitted to changes, so vigilant was the censorship of the press. ;. ,. Men of letters were somewhat freer under Alexander IL The conservative Russia the government which administered the country without the participation of the peoples-seemed to be passing away. The in fluence given by freedom to literature was speedily felt and one of its direct conse quences was the emancipation of the serf a But it was dua still more to the impulses of tne emperor himself, ana it was not appar ently due at all to the serfs. They scarcely hailed it with enthusi asm. When they found that, although they had free land, they had also to pay government taxes, they were not dis posed to look upon emancipation as an un mixed boon. Mr. Hare affirms that a con; siderable proportion of the serfs still regret their freedom. In serfage they ware pro vided for in old age, thair doctor's bills were paid when sick, they had an hereditary in terest in their proprietor and bis belongings and he in, them and if their lord was too cruel they had a remedy. They assassinated him. There is something very grand in the name of liberty,", said the philanthro pist "But can it feed one?" asked the serf. The supersTitions of the people are largely paganish. The mythology is copious and grotesque, and the homage paid old heathen kh deities is transferred, it is said, to the saints of the Russian church. So absurd is the belief in the supernatural' that, for ex ample, in one part of the country it is for biddenHo break up the smoldering ruins of fagots with a poker; whoso -commits "such an act runs the risk of causing bis nearest deceased relations to fall into hell. Their image worship- has- undergone no change during c?nturie3. Every, house has its shrines ad its statues, and whenever the Russian enters a new dweling for the first time he salutes first the statues-, then the ' company. . . ' . " ' The spirit of obedience to all in authority appears to be carried to excess. On one oc casion, when a boat was upset en the Neva, the order was given to rescue especially the officers of the guards. "Are -you officers of the guard cried out the rescuing party to individuals etrugeling in the river. Their were too full of ' water to answer, and the poor fellows went down. On another occasion a detachment was sent to water the parade ground. A heavy shower sud denly fell, "but the watering proceeded ; "it was so ordered." , " " Whether the fright:nl punishments in flicted on disobedience have aught to do with this blind docility llr. Hare does not pretend to ascertain. But he is certain that these punishments are not so appalling to the Russian who suffers them as they ap pear, to us, from whose discipline barbarity is so rapidly disappearing. Flogging, which is still used in Russia and which used to be Inflicted for religious as well as civil offences, is said to be esteemed "only a little stronger than good brandy and pepper." The Tartar punishment for. debt seem? somewhat worse than even northern Siberia .can be. The unfortunate debtor is beaten in public daily by the public executioner upon the shin bone for an hour at the time. Why that particular bone was selected ij not explained. - Perhaps the locality of the torture was meant to stimulate the sufferer to greater zeal in finding the wherewith Jx cancel his obligation. But the frequent ap- derny effort impossible, and it is pleasing for once to learn that a Russian official can be bribed. The shin bone can escape . some thing of. the agony if the debtor pay the exe cutioner for deftly insartinj an" iron plate where it will receive tho wor.t of the blow. 6o nniversal is the dishonesty of the peo ple, according to the conviction of Mr, Hare and numerous others whom he quotes, that it is said popularly of the peasants by them selvas: "The peasant may be t-tupid but he wouldjmake only one-mouthful f God him self." Their superstitiousness is called on to detect crime, although it does not appar ently 1 repress stealings When a house is robbs-I the mistress summons the suspected persons and a witch. The witch, or Babushka, takes a piece of bread and kneads it in ta as many little balls as there are persons present, then she places a vessel.of water in front f, her and ; makes all present stand around in a semi-circle. . Taking one of tha balls she looks fixedly at the first person and says: "Ivan Ivanovitch," if -you are guilty your soul, will fall into hell as this ball falls to the bottoni" Ivan Ivanovitch, if guilty knows that the Tiall will fall to the bottom; and rather than risk the implied conse quences he generally owns irp. ; ;--5 1 - . It is likely that the flood was the last gen eral bath in Russia. 2 Personal cleanliness is all but unknown... The food -of the peasants comprises many things rejected as unclean or offensive to the resttof the 'world and their sanitary' cOndiMon 13, one of - hopeless ness, whose effects in any climate hnt their own would be appallmg.' ;:The .-temper-of te' people is very sad.:- They . sing melan. choly songs, drink much, talk little, and feel small concern about life. .' -t. "' r -; Old AS9 in Florida. . .. . - " " . " IChicafi Herald. v For a single county, in Florida (Jefferson oounty) the census ? enumerator reportsi Leah Rouse, 100 years; Nellie - Ell pa trick, JCQ years; Prince Washmgton, ,100 ., years; ireit AlsftOn. J04 years: . Prince Ash, 101 years; Joe HilL 109 years; ' Silva, Zeigler. ye ara ' At tho Tomb of Dickens. "-- - . Chicago Tribnna. Joaquin Miller tells - how he and - 2re Harte stood at the tomb- of Dickens,- His left hand, sought : mine :in ' silenee," mj MillerV in describing the ' momentous "occav sioo; "his eye3 fiiled with - tears, We -had never been friends before." . - r 1 - Trie First Sigri , aOf failing health, whether in the form of ; , Night .Sweats and Nervousness; :or In-' .-. sense of . General Weariness and Loss ot , r Appetite, should suggest the use of Ayerir Saraaparilla. This preparation Is most"', .effective forgiving -tone and' strength- 4o the enfeebled system promoting tho : ;; digestion and assimilation of food, restor-" : ingj the nervous forces to their normal ; condition," and for purifying, enriching', - . and vitalizing the blood. , s 'I Failing: Health. V. ' w - Ten years ago "my health began to fail. t Twas troubled with a distressing Cough, . : Night Sweats, "Weakness, and Nervous ness. I tried various remediea Drescribed-. r by 1 different physicians, but became so 1 7 -weak that I could not go ap stairs with- out stopping to rest. My friends recom-: mended me' to try yer'a SarsaparUla. wmcni aia, anaL am now, as neaithy and.. S-ong as ever. sJars. is. Lt. Wuuama, exanaria.Jllnn.i; - 1 ; . : - . ' I have used AVer's Sarsaparflla. in my family, for Scrofula, and know, if it 6 taken faithfully, that it will thoroughly eradicate this terrible disease.-- IliaYe also L prescribed it as a tonic, as well as an alter-', ative, and must say that I honestly, believe it to be theA best blood medlcfne. ever coinpounded. W. F. Fawiert-.D. JT .S,t M. D., Greenville, Tenn.- ;; Q Dyspepsia Cured; -s-' It would be impossible for me to de- !. jcribe what I suffered from Indigestion " and Headache up to-the time I began"' taking Ayer's Saraaparilla. I was nnder the care of various physicians and tried a great many kinds of medicines, but Bever. obtained more than temporary re- - lief. After taking Ayer's Sarsaparilla for a short time, my headache disappeared, ' and my stomach performed its duties more perfectly. To-day my r health ia - com pletely restored. Mary Harley, Spring field, Mass. 1 v :' ' , : I have been greatly benefited by the prompt use of Ayer's Sarsaparilla. It tones andlnvigorates the system, regulates the action of the digestive and assimilative -organs, and vitalizes the blood- It is, without doubt, the most . reliable- blood -parifier yet discovered. H. D. Johnson, 333 Atlantic ave.)j Brooklyn, N.Y. Ayers Sarsaparilla, Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mau. Price 81? six bottles, S5. E. CI HACKNEY, DUKEM, N, c JOHN A. NOELL, E OXCOK0, N. Support Your THE COURIER, EUBLISBED BY HACfiKEY & ffOELL, -THE- Only Taper Published In . PERS6N GirUNTY, ITIS FRESH AND NE WS Y -AND ALWAYS GIVES THE L-ATEST LOCAL MD STATE SUBSCRIPTION PRICE? OTJK KAB Alwaysiln Advance' Ypd crninot possibty reR Tttthe email. 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