person Co. Courier. Published Every Thursday, m NOELL BROS., EoxboroN. C. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION: Oue Copy One Year - - - $1 50 .One Copy Six Months - - 75 Remittance rou-t be made by Registered letter. Post Office Order or Postal Note. r nrr- - r" : TTHE .COURIER v .'...' is published ia the centreof a fine tobacco growing section, making it one- of the best' advertising .. mediums-for .merchants an4 warehousemen in the. adjoining counties j " CSrcnlaied largely, hi PersoH, Granville and -Durham counties , in . North. Carolina and Halifax' county .Virginia. X- - v NOELL BROS. Proprietors. HOME FIRST: ABROAD NEXT. $1.50.Per Tcarln Advance. JOB WORK VOL. 5. BOXBORO, NORTH CAROLINA, THURSDAY, JULY. 18, 1889. NO 48' qf all description neatly executed on short ' notice and at reasouable' prices: When in need of work give the Coubieb a trial.' Jff 1 A ft tl . The Chief Benson for the great suc cess oi Hood's Sarsaparilla Is lound in the Article Itself. It Is merit tliat wins, and the fact that Hood's Sarsaparilla actually ac complishes what is claimed for it, is what has given to this medicine a popularity txA pale greater than that of any other sarsapar lVJI,:-t- Aie rUla or Dlood lYieriL YYIIlOier before the public. food's Sarsaparilla cures Scrofula, Salt JUicura and all Humors, Dyspepsia, Sick Headache, Biliousness, overcomes That 'Cired Feeling, creates an Appetite, strength uis the Nerves, builds up the Whole System. llood'a Sorsaparilln is sold by all drug gists. $1 ; six for S. Prepared by C. I. Hood , Co., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass. P PROFESSIONAL C. S. W1NSTEAD, BANKER, BOXBOKO IV. WILL DO A BASKING BUSINESS'" WITH W. E. WEBB, Cashier. NEW MANAGEMENT. ARLINGTON HOTEL MAIN STREET, Danville, Virginia. YATES & UUniAKDSON, Proprietors. J. T. Stiayhorn. .. liosboro, N. C. M. Warlick. Milton, Ji. C OTUAYII011N WARLICK, ATTORNEYS AT LAW. Practice in all the comts of the State and in phe Federal courts. Management of estates strictly attended to. . Special attention given to cases in Person and Casw ell counties. ATwTGrahamT- 5- VT. WW -ton RA.1IA.M. & WINSTON, ATTORNEYS .T LAW, Oxford, N. C. Practices in all the courts of the Stale. Ilan- 11c monev anil invest me w . pa-e tceal Estate Security. Settle estates And investigate titles. LUN'SFORD, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Boxboro, N. C. S. MEltUlTT, ATTORNEY AT l.AV Eoxboro, N. C. . 11 nt'i An of . Pre u pt .jlaiins. attention given to me ouncw. ,Yy W. K1TC111X, ATTORNEY AT LAW, KoxBono, N. C. practices wherever his services are requited. D R.J T. FULLER, PRACTICING PHYSICIAN. Roxboro, N. C. Residence, place, formerly occupied bv p. E. Uradsher. Office over (J. G. Mitche.l s drug store E J. TUCKER, , , Dentist hffin ni. Winstead Hotel. Roxooro, N. 6 .Calls in the c.mntry attended .Patronage, solicited. promptly. spVX T. T F-.ttAZIEU, is PRACTICING DENTISTRY chn il riauters' Bank Kuihlntg. 103 mil It. C. G. NICUOLS Offers TTis f ROFKSSTOXAL SERV.ICKS'to qi ,EOL of toxlwi o and surrounding country. Practices in all the branches of Medicine. OR. C. W. BRADSHER IENTIST, nflers his services to the public. Calls prontpllv atiendcii to in Teraon ami ailjoininj; connucs. .... ..,,a,inr wnrk in his line, .bv vritint bim at llushy Forg, N. C. will fee .attended a once. D Tl. K. A, UQuaCO Ji, Practicing PHystc.ian. Offers his nrofessional services to the people- dt Uoxuot'o and'snrronndingiJounUy. lr rac.lccf in all the branches of medicine. 1 10-4-1 y Winstead House, ROXBORO , N. W. H. Williams, PROPRIETOR. . This house is open to the PUBLIC GENERALLY and for v Drummers Partiplarly. Good robins, table faro tb ver JLeet the market wi.l MfF.rd.' : - CHARGES MODERATE Call and see mo win-never an oppor tunitv Hfford. -I am alo .ijreDarta: u take care of horses, : - ' . E D'AMOUR. 'Together they stand at the garden gate, While the robin chirps to his broodlDg mate, And tho fragrance of blossoming apple trees Is wafted sweet on the evening brtfjeo. The shadows grow long on the orcharg grass, A bevy of white winged swallows pass, And Btill thay linger while minutes fly Postponing ever the last "good-by." For lovers are lovers the wide world o'er, And having each other, want nothing more, .. And time flies by on its whirring whig, While tho apple trees bloom and the robins sing; And careless they ramble band In hand, Like innocent beings of fairy land. Ah I lovo is a charm whose bewitching spell Gilds every spot where its votaries dwell. But summer stripped of its bloom will be, And birds be gone from the apple tree; The snow will cover the orchard grass. To a summer sky will swallows pass; .Tho winter will come with its ico and snow, - The years will come and tho y ears will go- Through all tho chances and ehango they bring' Will love seem ever so sweet a thingf - Will the lovers then to their vows be true, When from life is worn its rosy hue? When the bitter is mingled in every cup, And the duties wait to bo taken up? J?ill-.the love prove strong as the need will be. And a pilot sure o'er each stormy sea? Though waves roll high and flerco tempests rise,. Will they sec the sun in each other's eyes? -Flora N. Can dee In Once a Week. A GREAT TREASURE. Beforo tho occupation of India by the British it was the richest country in gold, precious tones, rare jewels, fin cloth and cutlery of any on earth. While the poor were miserably poor, the rich were immensely rjch. Tliis was so even up tc the breaking out of the great mutiny. When the British troops were fairly ia line to strike at the rebellion, the watch word was "Revenge and loot." It was understood all through tho service that wnatever a soicuer couki lay Hands on should become his plunder. They didn't fight any the worse for that, but they struck a double blow at the Indians They crippled them financially as welj as in a military sense, and the people have never recovered, and never can. Tho amount of loot taken out of India during the rebellion and directly afterward has been estimated at $200,000,000. As much moro was contributed to the rebel cause by these who could give. Twice or three times as much was lost by fire and sword. England reasoned that an impoverished people could not rebel, and loot was a part of her war policy. Ten years after tho mutiny I was talk ing with a maharajah in the district of Punjab about tho financial change in the condition of tho people, and ho said : . 'At the outbreak of the war cur peo ple buried or hid away at least a hundred million dollars. I, do net believe that tho tenth part of this great sum has yet been recovered. Those who secreted it were dead before tho close cf the war, and this vast treasuro is lost to us." I did not tell him that I had put in a year in India, and spent upward of $2,000 looking for some of that treasure. Such was the fact, however. A couple of Englishmen and myself, forming an acquaintance in Bombay and having a spirit of adventure, pooled our cash and followed up several pointers looking to buried treasure. We had thus far failed to make any discoveries, and our part nership had been dissolved and the men lad returned to Bombay. I was m the Punjab on business connected with an American house, and had given up the treasure business in disgust. The words of the maharajah recalled all my enthu siasm, however, and within an hour after left him I was determined to have one more pull for fertuno and to go it alone. This determination was hastened and solidified by another incident. I was talkies: with a captain of a native in fantrv regiment regarding some ruins I had encountered, and he said; "You piay have left a dozen fortunes behind vou. At tho outbreak of the war these, people concealed a great deal of their wealth in caves anQ .temples arid a big share of it is there yet. When you stumble on a pile of ruins again give the place a good looicing over for loot. ' 'Cut the natives have dono so a hun dred times over, I shoulcj say." 'You are wrong. Where they knew of treasure they may have unearthed it, but they Cght shy of rambling about hap hazard. They believo all ruins to bo haunted, and even if they aro not, you will be certain to find hyenas and serpents about' "Have you ever heard of any treasure being recovered?"' I asked. "Half a dozen instances, sir. The former captain of this company went home with 50, 000 after doing two hours' work m the rums of a temple near Bhaul pul." Hie next day I started for Delhi, and there a bit of good f ortuao awaited me, I fell ia with a German naturalist who was making a collection for a national museum, and when ho learned that I had had considerable experience in that line lie engaged me as assistant. Ho had two young men with him, thus making a party of four, and when we struck to the southwest of Delhi, intending to take in the plains and jungles between that city and Jodpur, we had six native serv ants to carry the baggage. Our progress was slow and easy, as it was his mten tion to make a verv full collection. The country over which 'wo passed had no lines of railway then, and wa3 miknowij to white men except as they had hunted through it, There were tigers and other wild game in plenty, and it seemed to be the nursery of all India for serpents. There werip days when we could not march except as the ground was I)eaten by the natives in our front. . There wjs a thin population, with the villages far apart, but as an offset the natives wero glad to render any aid, especially as soon as they learned that we did. , not belong to the lading race. The hate they felt for the English wa3 something terribla. This district has been almost depopulated and quite impoverished -. by tho war. Petty rulers had been deposed, taxes-lev ied witljn heavy hand, and the natives worked" .themselves - up to the ' highest pitch pf indignation as they -talked about it ' My pno object was buried- treasure. While doing my duty by tho professor I had opportunity for extensive rambles off tho lino cf march, and I never - failed to mako inquiries of natives, Tliis,; as I ifterward learned, wria tho worst policy I could have " adopted. , Every nun was sacred to them, -and every white maa jvas g :-defiler.tN? Opo might as well Iiav asked them -to forgive oast as to hav .expected them to locate the ruins of - a religious temple for a white man. We Had been out about twenty - days, and at this .time were in a permanent camp in a grove of mango frees car' the bank of a creek, when a ryot, or oommoa laborer, passed through our camp on Ida way to his village, about five miles away. He had had a narrow escape from a tiger; and was greatly excited. "When I asked hira to locate the beast he placed h?m among the ruins of an old temple to the west of "us and not more than two miles away. .The ruins were in a heavy jungle, but he told m how to strike a path which, led near them. But for his excitement he would not have betrayed the location. -, In about three, hours lie returned to tell meibat ho had been mistaken in the location, which was to the south instead of the west, and if -fee had eaid rmna be meant rocks. I was not deceived by his second statement. He wanted to keep me away from the ruins, and of course I was do- terminod to visit them If I went, I must go alone. Neither the professor nor his young man had ever a j,. M urea at anytnmg more ierocious tnan a jackal, and they had no idea of risking themselves wi tli a tiger. I had killed two or three during my jaunts about the country, and was quite certain of my nerve m case of another meeting. The native had described this tiger as an old jnan eater, who had carried off many vil lagers, and, as I must visit the ruins by day, ne would certainly be at home. .ungut ana early next morning . l was ready to start. My excuse to tho profes sor was that I intended to look for a cer tain bird which he had been very anxious to secure,- and ho never noticed that I took my heavy rifle instead of a shotgun. I also had a revolver and knife, and it was not more than an hour after sun rise when I set out. I followed tho creek down to where it branched, and there.I 6truck tho path which the native had de scribed. As near as I could determine it naa oeen maae by wua animals coming and going between the jungle and the creek, and at the first soft spot I found tho imprints of the tiger's paws They were fresh, too, and there was no doubt of his being at home. As I proceeded the path wound about in the most eccen trie manner, wmio tno lungio grew thicker. One .could not sec five feet in any direction and the an- was shut joEE, The first hint that I had reached tho rums came m the shape of a block of dressed stone lying right across my path. As I stepped upon it a great cobra wrig gled slowly away from ray feet, and saw half a dozen columns and lengths of wall arising among the bushes. Fifteen years before hero had been a clearing of ijerhaps. 100 acres, with a village of several thousand people and a temple covering half an acrcoi ground.. A man eating tiger now held solo possession while the clearing had grown up to jungle, and fire or explosion had laid the great temple m reins. Ten feet ahead of me was a second block. I passed to that, and then tho path turned to the right and ran over a fallen wall. As I reached this latter place and looked around, the tjger was stretched out on the earth before me in a little open space. His legs were drawn up and ho was gasp ing, and, though I was greatly startled for a moment, I soon realized that lie was dving. Indeed, hadid not live above two minutes after I set eyes on him. As afterward learned, the natives had poisoned the body of a man lie had killed and only half devoured, and in finishing ins repast he had met his fate. He had doubtless just returned from satisfying his thirst at the creek. It was well for me that I did not come a few minutes earlier. I examined the body closelv and found the tiger to be old and mangy, with many of his teeth decayed. -These were sure evidences that he was a "solitary,"" nd had no mate. I need, therefore, have no fear that any other animal more savage than a hyena was concealed in the vicinity. - The templo seemed to have been blown up witn gunpowder. Tno walls were torn and rent and knocked down ia every direction, and column and block and carved work lay - heaped together" in strange confusion. I was bewildered to see tho vegetation growing up through tho rains so profuselv, and it stood me in hand to move carefully in. such a 6nake infested spot. I picked my way carefully to the center of the rains and here I got a pretty fair idea of what the building had been. Hero were the re mains of a shrine or altar which had once been the cleanest cf marble. It was now stained and moss grown and covered with creepers. To look for buried treasure in such A jungle was like looking for a needle in a haystack; but I had conio for that purpose and felt that I must make a beginning. Fling ing several stones into , the ; bushes to frighten any lurking serpents away, I put down my gun and began, at tho creepers. In a little while I uncovered what I said "was an altar or shrine. It may not have been., . From Ike stone floor there was a Eolid wall , about four feet high, inplosing a space about six feet square. - The stone which." rested on these four walls was a foot tblck, and carved around tho edges. , I could not tell whether the walls inclosed a space or the whole cube was solid as; a support for a pillar, but after a close inspection . I discovered a spot where, the end of a lever might "be inserted. -I had : brought a hatchet to help mo through the jungle With this I cut -d trimmed a .small tree, and after much effort I loosened the capstone until I could eeo that the walls Inclosed a space. On the surface of this capstone I clearly rnadp out where the footrof a pillar, which had probably helped to eupport tho roof, had rested,' It lay near by, but was broken, by its fall. V It was more than 8 o'clock " in the morning, when I reached the ruins, but it wo3 2 o'clock in the ftcrnoon beforo 1 had the heavy etone Slewed around - far enough 6 meet Its equilibaium and force it to fall off. I was in a tremble of ex citement from the first, end as I; slewed the pfone further and further around "I felt more- and . moro sanguine cf a large cavity boneath. I - would" net lcokia howeyer, until - the "stone. was. clear off. When I did bend over the. wall and Jock down it wa3 to find a wooden jcbest oc cupy in cr nearly. all tho space."; I soundod it with the polo, and it cave back such a solid echo that! eaw Iiiuct pull the: wall down to cet at it. . ' Tins took me en h'nv,r nr iiinw.'fls tho roaster was as hard iS stono, hut; at length ' I was atthe chest. It was closed, buV not locked, and as I threw up the lid my eyes beheld cucha eight as will seldom come to man. That chest held a good solid ton of loot, how many tens of thousands of dollars worth 1 cannot say. . There wpro; brace lets nd rings and earrings and charms and bars of gold. There were dlamondB and. pearls and rubies and other precious stones. ; Some were in leather , bags, some in parsels, some tied together, and on tho lid of the trunk was a dist of ar-- ticles with the names of owners. ; - -1 lmng.oveif the chest for perhaps half an hour, hardly danng to breathe for fear it would fly away. I was rich rich beyond the wildest , dream a. poor man ever had. This was loot," It was aU mine if I could keep the find, from tho government officials. I -could net re move it without helpr, I was a 6tout man, but I could not have lifted one end of the chest clear of the ground. I took a paper containing four diamonds, a package of gold coin which counted up about $1,250, and a couple of bars of the metal, and j started back to camp on a run. I had been so taken up with my work that had given no attention to anything else. . I now discovered that the heavens" were rapidly darkeninsr, and I had only j just reached camp when a terrible storm set in, and never let up for a moment until after midnight. The story of my discovery, told only to the white men of the party, created intense excitement, but the storm and tho darkness prevented any move. As soon as daybcrht came, how ever, we wero off, but a terrible disap pointment was in store for us. Tho chest was there as I had left it, but everything in the, shape of contents "liad been re moved. Without a doubt some native had been spying on me the day beforo as I worked, and ho had given the alarm and brought a party to the spot during. the night. I got $25,000 out of it as it was, but it only served to annoy me. At 5 o'clock in the afternoon I had the wealth of' two or three kings in my hands. At eunrise the next morning all had vauished all but tho trifio I had carried away to prove the fact of my dis covery. Ic was my first and last find in India, aitd I never think $f it without being inconsistent enough to hope that every dollar of the spoil caused the death of a native, New York Sun. Secrets of Confectionery Elalclua. Tho "penny banana" to a confection dear to tho heart of childhood. It is made on tho marelunallow plan, but without gum arabic. Whito of egg to used in its manufacture, and tho sugar cream. Pc-riny -bananas were piled sev eral feet deep on the marble slabs. Rolled out hi "sheets," after lacing kneaded lilzo great batches of bread dough, tho mass was stvetched and shaped into the form of byjianas by machinery. Imitation cigars are made of tho same material and finished with a coating of chocolate. Into many different shapes, embracing half the animal .kingdom, and taking on tho semblance cf fib wens, of chips and of geometrical figures, to tlito fluffy post-a transformed. Great round hoppers or pans are used for polishing and sugaring hard candies. They revolve and revolve unceasingly. Fifty or ' a hundred pounds of candy i3 thrown into each and some confectioners' sugar, itound ana rouna tney go, ana the sugar polishes the surface of the con fection until it becomes as smooth as glass. Then that which is to bo colored is put into the dye. All coloring matter comes from Holland except that derived from the cocliineal bug. The dyes aro pure veg etablo matter, and the thrifty Dutch" alone know how to prepare them. A good sum,, too, does the world pay these self same Dutch. A most wonderful people are these Dutch to keep secrets. Chicago Herald. Amid the Alpine Heights. . We talked low, we even wluspered our thoughts, as we slowly proceeded. For we all knew that we were, so to speak, on the threshold of a world in the process of formation and over which countless cen turies must pass before it will be ready to receive the first germ3 of life, animal or vegetable. Yes, what we were contem plating was once the aspect of tliis entire globe, a vast frozen solitude, waiting the sun's warm caresses to awaken it from a long, cold slumber. VvTe crossed abysses by bridges that were almost as trans parent as glass, jumped crevasses, wan dered among great blocks that looked like the fallen fragments of some, enor mous ice palace. We searched for plants and insects. Wherever a littlo spot had been laid bare by the heat of tho sun a sort of vegetation showed itself. In the midst of glacial snow, we plucked flowers that were almost colorless, and which, the better to resist cold j blasts, were growing in tufts close; together. The ruerfred flanks of all the rocsy tables wero adorned with velvet like.lichens and; mosses. Deheato arborescent plants over- hung icy gulfs; "we found spiders, and a couple pf butterflies 'with r. cm-mine' wmgs flattered about in a abuo of eternal snow. Cor. Now York Times. :' ' Aa Eyo to BusinoM -First. I confess, sir, " said tho ; widow, with come shyness, "that I might in time learn to love you, but, er you are quite poor, aro you not?'? "Well, yes; my incorpo is not large, but with you, dear Mrs. Tompkins, to cheer and encomago me, it would soon"- '-''-'".:.: .. ".:- . -- X-r-r'---V - Ahy.' mterruijted : the widow, yrith a Bighbat would Ixr giving hostages to fortune, I am .drawing "$15 a month pension, and I wouldn't like to givo up a dead sure thing for a' iank.unccrtainty.'L Tho Epoch..' ' rr:''X I ' ' '!.-. . . Ahicka and. Civiliaation. ; - Alaska, with 'its fishing and hunting, is well adapted to a tavage population., Unless through "its "hfinesitj' to dhUcult to eeo how it can support -any consider-, abla numberlct civilized people.: The natives are frdrly teachable, but the most flifiiculfc nroblem -i3 tal find cccurKiiion: which will support uicm m a civuiiieu vvaj.rJetroitireePreEi - Tho Itfiuccce of Eisbt. '. Dr. Schultee, - of - Vienna, advises . stronfrlv tlio' drinking, .of. beeroufe of. Vmug3 instead of glasses. ueeruetenosjca , very quickly undec the influence of. hght,;? and mugs, particularly- covered mugs, are much ' preferable to transparent glasses,-r-2ewyork Suiu . - DISCOVERY -OF SACCHARINE. An Interview with Dr. Fahlberg A Very Fai l naa, tj Accident. Ia a .recent inter viaw with Dr. .Oorr Btanfclne frahlberg, too discoverer of- the now sugar extracted- t torn coal tar, he Baid concerning hte relation to thfe new product: "I bad worked a long - time upon the compound radicals and sobstl--tution products of coal tar, and- bad made a-aumber of scientific .discoveries that are, eo far as I know, of no commer cial value. One evening I was so inter ested. in my laboratory that I forgot about supper until quite late, and then rushed off for a meal without stopping to wash my hands. . I eat down, broke a "piece of bread and put it to my Hps. It tasted unspeakably" sweet. T" did not ask why it was so, probably; because I thought it was some cake or ; iweetmeat. I rinsed my mouth with water and dried my mustache with my napkin, when, to my surprise, . .the napkin tasted sweeter than the bread. Then I was puzzled. I again raised my goblet, and, as fortune would have it, applied my mouth where my fingers had touched it before. The water' seemed syrup. It flashed upon me that I was the cause of the singular universal sweet ness, and I accordingly tasted thopnd of my thumb, and found that it surpassed any confectionery I had over eaten. I saw the wliole thing at a glance. I had discovered or made some coal tar sub stance which out sugared sugar. I dropped my dinner and ran back to the laboratory. There in my excitement, I tasted the contents of eveiy beaker and evaporating dish on the tabo. Luckily for me, none contained any corrosive or poisonous liquid. "One of them contained an impure solution of saccharine. On thtojl worked jthen for. weeks and months until I had determined its chemical composition, its characteristics and "reaotions, and the best modes of making it scientifically and commercially. "When I first published my researches, some people laughed as if it were a scien tific joke; others, of a more skeptical turn, doubted the discovery and thsdiscoverer, and still others proclaimed the work a3 being of no practical valuo, "When the public first saw saccha rine, however, everything changed. The entire press, European and American, described me'ond my sugar in a way that may have been edifying, but was simply amu8ing.to me. And then came letters. My mail ran as high as sixty a day. People wanting samples of saccharine, my autograph or my opinion on chemi cal problems, desiring to become my partner, to buy my discovery, t3 be my cgent, to enter my labratory, and the like." Hall's Journal of Health. v I How to ExtiDjjnlali Fir. An intelligent physician said to me a lew clays ago, "l ttunii 1 can give you a vravs on the lookout for useful informa Jiaa. He tlien said that he had studied the subject very carefully aud was con vinced that it would bo well for every house to keep its own fire extinguisher, and it could bo easily done. It would certainly be invaluable to persons .living in the country and far removed even from neighbors. The doctor then told me that he would give me the exact recipe of the eolation now used iu tho fire extinguishers now being offered for sale: Take twenty pounds of common salt and ton pounds of sal ammomao, (muriate of ammonia, to be had of any druggist) and dissolve in seven gallons of water. When dissolved it can be bot tled and kept hi each room in the house, to be used in an emergency. In case of a firo occurring, one or two bottles should bo immediately thrown with force ito the burning place so as to break them, and the fire will certainly bo extinguished. This is an exceeding simple process, and certainly worth a ti-iaL W e givo it, hop ing it may prove successful to any who may take the trouble to try it,- Atlanta Constitution. On Via bio of Malta. The people must be' very frugal in dustrious; no doubt they are both ingeni ous and persevering as well, for it is said that out of every steamer load of pas sengers that stops at Malta on its way to or from India or Constantinople they make not less than 200, even though tho ship-remains in port but six or eight hours. ' They certainly seem to-have the happy faculty of casting cprrodingcaro to. the winds, as they aro always ready for a siesta after their frugal lunch on a crust cf blaek bread, or an onion, or a, garliCj whenever tho noontide overtakes them. We found them asleep on the steps of public buildings, in shaded doorways, even on the crowded sidewalk:happily 6a unconscious of the passing throng, as are the dogs of Constantinople. How clum ber thu3 indulged in can. refresh one-is. a i mystery, but they soon awo&e end cneer- fully resumed their toiL Cor. San Fran cisco Chromcle. getting Sometliins for Sfothias. A short, .time ago . in counting up the -coin in one 'of the boxes at the exposition in which you drop a nickel and tako out a packago of gum, ho less than 120 'obo cent pieces wero fbund. . Now; the im mutable law cf these devices . to that nothing goes except a genuine nickel of tho realm, the inside arrangements being such that coins of all other denominoy tions elip through into the money box and no gum responds. .Consequently all these one cent pieces' were pure gain and the GUEn box proprietor can count himself just" so much ahead of tho game. . This shows quite eloquently, the umversai ce siro of tho human race to get something for hothihg,and it also exemphhes the old adage that Jcheatera never prosper, Pioneer Press 'Listener.4 . -. '.. . ' - jr AI3octor8 Delicate Charity.--' As delicate a charity as I remember was the act of. a gnlff, taciturn old phy- ' in a ' Colorado mininrr town ' A poort aged parson was carefully attended i by tlio irritable doctor. ' ncn iu nrrar.lior' lad sufiiciontlv recovered 'to dispense-with further ; medical attention he asked for his K1L nYcrav bill? - Here it is, Veaid the doctor, opening his pockot book and handing- the ministers wito 10 pill. America. Tlio createst events of . an ago aro its bottJhoaghfaL ..ThpaghtvCndsitsway Uiio uction.Ecice, t :-t. - - Russell Sag' ami His Wealth.'' A clew as to what dispotlon Mr. Sage proposes tomake-of his wealth was furnished- at the - funeral of ; his brother, William G. Sagw,' last December In Troy, i Ho met. Bamnel Cuftpin here, who-mar- ried his .sister Ftiany, and who Uvea" in 1 Oneida, Mr; Cnnpin, - is independently rich," and therefor f tela ia aposition to say pretty much what he pleases. ,As he is also quite deaf, any conversation iii which hai, engages is : necessarily carried on in rather .aloud tone of voice. The conversation,- therefore, which he earried oa . with Mr. Sago at thetime of the funeral washboard by a' ged many peo 'pie, and the details of it have been very industriously distributed. Mr. Chapin spoke point blank : . . -- .. . ; "Brother EusselL, your are accounted a very rich maar,,Why doa't jou retire as I did and ik comfort .in yourold age? - What ia the use of - slaving along from day to day? What wilJL you, do with all your money?" Mr. Sage said in reply to this that very few men had achieved marked success in life such as he had. He was the only one of his name who had done so: and his great success was his glory.: He was happier in harness than he would be out of it, and was not at .all ready as yet tor relinquish the pleasure of accumulating. As to what he was going to do with his money he said that the present genera tion of the Sages .would be well pro vided for, and he proposed that his name should be a monument that would en dure for all time. What he meant by this ho did not explain, but obviously it shadows forth some interesting scheme which perhaps now to Bcarcelyformu lated in his mind. New York World Interview. Ijaales of the Sab-Treasury. Passing the sub-treasury recently I no ticed near the entrance a number of young women whose appearance was so peculiar tbat it immediately arrested my attention. If the reader should ask me what that peculiarity was I could hardly explain it. Perhaps it might be termed a nonchalance or free manner "that indi cated disregard for observation. They had a cool audacity ,which, though not brazen, was bold enough to face any op position, and though I could see at a glance tliat they were not stage players, yet ic was evident tnat tney were in public life, and could be at home even before a crowd. In a-few moments 1 saw them step up to the cashier's win dow, where each presented a check and drew the money, and then I learned that they were the custom house lnspectresses, who wero collecting their month's pay. No wonder they had such nonchalant, resolute- faces : .-These' are the women that coolly orders passenger into a pri vate room and strip her sufficiently to reveal fraud. These are tho women who find laces packed in bustle? and diamonds concealed in. tresses- of hair, and I "need a passenger - wearmg j a; petticoatxtnat weighed twenty-five.pounds, being made double bo as to carry smuggled goods. These inspec tresses are among the-most useful ; public servants, and tliey have almost broken up the once extensive sys tem of woman's smuggling, which men could not do, for Shakespeare 6ays,: to make a sweet lady sad to'a sour offense.' ' New York Cor. Tfoy Times. Xlercaants and the Agencies. ' As the business of the mercantile agen cies to becoming better understood, the attitude of the merchants toward them has undergone a very great change. It used to be that the agencies were re garded as pernicious spies in the com mercial world, and the polite interroga tories cf oar agents, . asking for state ments of business tanding, wero looked upon as impertinent, orery otten mo business man, when so questioned, would flatly refuse to answer. Of course this fact we communicated, as in duty bound, to the creditors, who had made, through us, the inquiries, and the effect was not to quiet any alai'nr that might have been felt about the debtor's condition, bat of tenan uncomfortable squeezing of the merchant resulted. Within the last ten years tho agencies have been recognized as powerful and legitimate aids to the fmercantile trade, and the questions of our agents touching the condition or this cr that firm are met " with answers tliat are straightforward and, in the main. candid and satisfactory. vy henever a business man to known to desire, a con cealment of his affairs, the manifestation of that desire creates moro suspicion than even a lame statement. "W. .A, Stoson in Globe-Democrat. , Veterans of Wall Street. But few gain sufficient experience In Wall street to command -success until they reaeh that period of life in which they have ono-foop in tbo grave. When this time comes these old veterans of the street usually 6pehd longontervaisjof ; .ro pose at their : comf ortableliomes, and in times of panic, winch recur sometimes of tener than "ones a vear, these old fel lows will be seen: 'in Wall street,-hob- blinjr down oh their canes to their brokers'-offices. " : Then they always buy good stocks to the extent of their bank Ixdances. which have been permitted to. accumulate for pust sucn ; an emergency, x uc; panic usuallv raees until; enouguor tnese casu purchases of stock to mads to afford a big "rako in When tho panic -'has spent its'foroo; these old- fellows, who have been resting -judiciously on their oars m ex.-- pectation'of the insvitatSo event, which usually returns with tho regularity of the seasons, quickly realize, deposit ; their profit with their bankcra, or the overplus thereof, after purcliasing moro real estate that to on tho up grado,'for permanent investment, and retire for another season io the ouietnde of : their eolcndicl homes - - -. and families. Henry Uews. .. . - . -. A Student of 4io Bex, " ' fl In tho course of -a discussion about the Holy Writ . recently overheard by The Bazar, a lady remarked that the-Bible was a history cf 'men; that her sex was rarely and but .incidentally mentioncdas comparetl. with thopaco devoted to mcru - ."Lconfess" she"addecL .''fliat it strikes ne as being meet singular. There might have been more said about U3.'r " ;. : - - '-Oh, I don't know,',' replied - lie? friend.- -'iTho' anthers cf-JJio' yarioua hooka had probably studied womankind,' and knew . they'd be- ablo: to speak toe th jve8 .iarpbr's Bazar. v hardlyjsayhafctl Ic smciek' smugglers. In a recent case they found j TheW formidable weapons were given to 1 STOCKHOLM. &roapvof : the- Girdle ; Duellste Becsanf r - Clabs-Otber Curiosities. -Many bronze statues to Sweden's kings' . stand in tho various squares and narkL and there to one bronze group that holds. the attention longer, than "any of these. It to placed in the grounds of the Na tional museum; and is the masterpiece ' Of jthe Swedish sculptor Moleri, the. group . of the Girdle Duelists. According to the " barbarous old custom ' in ScJandinavia," ' when a quarrel arose between two men, they were bound: together by a girdle, '. provided 'with ' knives, !and tallowed to fight out the duel until one"; or 4 botlr had A fallen. This group "is worfhyvof the an-. ' tique for" the splendid physique of the". actors and fearful interest ' of the strife. L Each has seized with liis left hand the right hand of his foe, which graspa the" murderous short knife, and both wrestle - for life with terrible energy.' : It is said that these t combats- were1 so: nlversallv. fatal. tliat women carried Winding sheets J with them to the banquets," wbexethelf Husbands might be slam. - - : . , Jf our bas reliefs on tho pedestal with Eunic ihscripti.Jas show such a scene . two men. drinking together j while the lovely wife of one "of them .stands by. The jealous anger roused by some undue attention on the part of the guest, the - wife on her knees endeavoring to prevent the .quarrel, and lastly,', tho poor: thing : weeping alone by .the gravestone of her husband. "A memorial "such "-as this of ; ancient customs has always as interest independent of its artistic value; and this interest attaches to a great many objects , in the collection of the.Northern Museum, an institution devoted to the preservation, . of Scandinavian-: relics and curiosities. . You see heroa forest of the tall pikes and battle- axes so formidable of old--crueL . - murderous looking instruments ten-- feet long, their blades and heads rusted as if ; with the blood of enemies ; ancient swords and helmets, together-- with innumerable articles of more peaceful household use; rudo looms that might have woven the :, garments of the'-Vikings, and theodl i liand mangles used fprsmoothing linen- ! heavy pieces of wood," polished on the -under side, and elaborately carved above, with handles usually representing horses, j- It seems impossible that , such flat -irons, should have been very efficacious, but' here they are by the hundred. - : : " ' Odder sail are the kubbestols chairs made of. the trunks of trees or kubbes (whence our ''stubs," I suppose), the': edges of the "seats ornamented withjr of all things in the world, human teeth, driven intothe solid wood. These are not relics of battle, as one might sup r poso, but. the teeth lost by' the family of ' the owner" pf the chair, preserved in thto . manner as a charm against future tooth-; ache. Little whito milk teeth mako an : . agreeable variety with huge molars that , evidently ached enough beforo they jpamev liL'iil-f' - ''TT. - J. '-::L. -'mjLtSy fcmtt juu nera,' wo,: is: ambm?r. riuu beggars to enable- them to obtain': relief at , the next house they came tow Whab a comfortable thing it would be if one of us could get rid Of ah importunate tramp by giving him a club to compel our next neighbor to entertain him 1 - Yonder is a ' bundle of Runic staves-canes or: long , . pieces of wood carved with runes, or sen -. tences in " Kunio - clraracterSj usually quoted from ono of the sages.-Whetlier these were considered as charms, or only,' like the Jewish phylacteries, used to keep in mind some sacred text, we could not " .earn. - -"..-' " ' One room is fitted up in compartments,,-. each representing a kitchen or a living room of some primitive dwelling in Kn- and, or Iceland perhaps; with life size figures in . appropriate costumes, ' sur- ounded with tho very furniture and pot tery brought from such houses, all in j i . a some interesting position, a man ceiving an official -message brought by ah envoy in one of the old ' 'bud stikker, or message sticks, wbich he in his turn Is bound to carry for a certain" distance, and If-no -one is "at hand to take it, -Ja stick it in the earth until some ono comes ; along, as if our mail bags should bo laid :. Un a rock at a rtain place and left for" - the next passer to tako charge of 1, An other group .shows a girl receiving pres ents when the bans of her marriage are . proclaimed; a third, h Lapland" family " mourning: over a dead child. --. All the, figures are very Ufelike. But time would fail me to speak of the various museums and their treasures.---Stockholns Cor.- San Francisco Chronicle. Smuggling Precious Stones. Ono of the favorite places wherein to'-' hide precious stones aro in the small tele scopes used in connection with the mas , tor's sextant. The glasses are unscrewed, atones packed securely m, the cylinders ' and everytliing -replaced. But few cus-; tonto officials would venture to trouble a valuable scientific instounent.?!;;;!.' Another method is to have a malacca stick bored out, through the wonderfully . rrSGHTS SEEN IN skilled hands of a Chmese mecliamc. The J 5pace is then filled in with precious stones " - -packed in cotton, the joint -replaced and detection to almost impossible..7. I wiU show ; "you a boot lieel ,made of iron, to ' which to attached an iron clamp. Tho leather heel to removed,,tben tho iron ; ono, filled with - diamonds, is 1 secured to " -the clamp. It to an old . trick; but might have passed muster, except -, that the smuggler's courage failed and his ner- ; " vousness betrayed him. . The governmen t ' was richer by: $9,000 duties in gold coin, New York Star. -- -. - V. ' . Sewing s Cut Finger.- ' - Many e persons are familiar with the, common remedy, for- a cut, of; sewing it : . up. . 2 1 have seen persons- suffer jfreat in--j conveniences from a comparatively small" wound at tho end of a finger and thumb, because they did not know: bow to apply - I the remedy. -Wait till the bleeding lias I n J T 1 f iseasea, ana uieu witu a uie cumuriu; neeaio wnn a elus uireau not more cuan an inclj or two long, or, three inches at most, take up a - small : stitch in tbo skin v and not into, the flesh, draw only toward the cut, right ?uid - left, which tends . to " ii-aw the parts -jogether. and never draw V from the cut, which only opens it. ? Tho. relief tlius afforded to understood only yjf -: those l who . liave tried . io; A hired nan ; had cut ' th end " of hi3 .. thmnb. whQo engaged" in ' ioecliamcal work, and ' C annoyed him excessively." ; I drew tho , parts together , witli a fine thread-and leedle; he was asl Onished at the ..relief, ind had no ; further ; trouble t with . Herald of Healih. ' , . 1 " i .