, - - ..-i. ' - - . o V v' - .Proudly call ours a Gpyei.pt 'ife People. CifeYela R. H. COWAN, Editor and Proprietor. TERMS: S2.0O Per Year. VOL. II. WADESBORO, N. G, THtlSmWi NO. 16. r-w- Jfe .; w. .i .. t . . .. -v 1 . j - --- -v '' ' ' ' " "- : . s Tfcrmst-kCash in Advance. OnTear Six Mouths Three Months $2.00 $1.00 50 ADVERTISING RATES. One square, first insertion - $1.00 Each subsequent insertion - 50 Cocal advertisements, per line - - 10 "Special rate given on applicatio pr Dgertune. Advertisers are requested to bring in their advertisements on Monday evening of each' week, to insure insertion in next issue. PROFESSIONAL CARDS. John D. Pemberton. ATTORNEY AT LAW, WADESBORO, N. C. Practnee in the State and Federa Court. JAMES 1 LOCKMT. Attorney and Counsellor at Law, WADESBORO. N. C. Practice at all the Courts of the States R. LITTLE. W. L. PARSON LITTLE & PARSONS, A. TTO nXi:Y8 AT WADESBORO, N. C. Collections Promptly Attended to. H . IT. De Pew D E N T I S T, WADESBORO. N. C. Office over G. W. Huntley's Store. All Work warranted. May 14, '85, tf. Dlt, D. Ji. FKONTIS. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Offers his Professional Services to the citizens f Wadeslxm and surrounding country. Of fice opposite Bank. A. B. H untley, Al. O. J. T. J. Battle, M. D Huntley & Battle, PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS Wadesboro, N C ' Office next to Bank May 7 tf I. H. HORTON, JEWELER, WADESBORO, X. C. Dealear in Watches, Clocks, Jewelry, Musical Instiumente, Breech and Muzzle Loading .Shot Guns, Pistols, &c. Anson Institute. WADESBORO, N. C. a i mcgeegor, principal J. J. BCRXETT, A. B., 1 J. W. Kilgo, A. B. Assistants Mips M. L. McCorkxe, ) The Tpring Term begins Monday, Jan uary 11th, 1886. Tuition In Literary Department, $2, $3 and $4 per month. Instrumental Music, $4 per month. Vocal Music, $4 per month. Use of piano for practice 50 cents per month. Board, 1 10 per month. Contingent fee, 11 per year. For Catalogue apply to the.Principal. Morven High School, MORTEN, ZV. O. JAMES W. KILGO, A. BM Principal. ST" The Fall Seeeion begins on the 8d of August 1885, and runs through five months. TUITION, PER MONTH. Primary, . Intermediate, Advanced r. ?2.00 2.50 3.00 Board from' $8 TO $10 per montL For further particulars address the Prin cipal. M. A HDBB, "; MtnvrrACTCRSR awd dealer i. Tin-ware, Ste-Iron AJVD HOLLOW WARE. WADESBORO. N. C. h P A c a S o 'go is t at A. s t B es s o C O n c Sz; o 5 o K 4- . Si z on C p. O S3 so1- 8- 5? 1 . HOTELS. TARBROUGH HOUSE, - RALEIGH, IT. C. FMCES BEDUCED 10 SUIT THE HME3 CALL AMD BEE TJS, THE SONQ OF THE SEA WIND How It inf-, ings, sings, . ' Blowing sharply from the sea-line, With an edge of salt that stings; . How it laughs aloud, and passes. As it cuts the close, cliff-grasses; Bow it sings again and whistles, How it shakes the stout sea-thistles How it singi I How it shrieks, shrieks, shrieks, In the crannies of the headland, In the gashes of the creeks ; How it shrieks once more, and catches TJp the yellow foam it patches; How it whirls it out and over ' To the corn-field and the clover V - How it shrieks! How it roars, roars, roars, In tbg iron ang under caverns, I the hollow the shores; .. . How It roars net and thunders, As the strong hall spliti and sunders; , And the spenf atup, xempest driven, On the reef lies rent and riven How It roars! How it wails, wails, wails, In the tangle of the wreckage, In the napping of the sails, How it sobs away, subsiding, Like a tired child after chiding; And across the ground swell rolling You can hear the bell-buoy tolling How it wails'. Austin Dobson, in. The Independent. ON THE BATTLEFIELD. A CONFEDERATE GENERAL'S 8ESGCXAR 1 EXPERIENCE. A singular experience of the war was that of Brigadier General Robert D. Lilley, of the Confederate forces at the battle of Rutherford's farm, near Winchester, Vir- ginia. General Lilley. is how living in this city, acting as financial agent for the centennial organization for the endow- ment of the Washington and Lee univer sity of Virginia. A few evenings ago, at the earnest solicitation of friends ho related his story of strange adventures on the battlefield. "On the 19th of July, 1864, he said, "just after General Early had returned from Washington city, a portion of his command was formed across the main road leading from Berry ville to Sniggers gap in the Blue Eidge to meet a demon stration of the Federal ferces from that direction. There was much lively skir mishing, and we expected to be en gaged before night. After we had biv ouacked to the north of BerryviJIo an order came for us to move toward ""Win. Chester, when the troops had finished their supper. We marched all nighty and it was after sunrise heft js- biv ouacked along the railway traisk east of Winchester. In the early afternoon General Ramseur's division was ordered to move promptly down the road leading to Martinsburg, Johnson's brigade first, Lewis' second, and Fegram's (under my command), third in column. About three miles below the town, the head of the co'uran came upontho Federal forces under command of General Averill, al ready in , line of battle, with twelve pieces of artillery massed in the center and supported by infantry, with cavalry on the flanks waiting for us. "When our battery opened fire and while the troops were forming, the con centrated fire of Averill's twelve pieces poured upon the battery- and disabled it entirely. The Federal line then advanced and struck our front before the left wing of Lewis's brigade got in line. In the confusion which followed, Lewis's bri gade was swept back past mine in great disorder. I urged Lewis to halt his brigade on mine, but he said he could do nothing with hie men then. I saw at a glance that the only chance was to hold my brigade in position and check the enemy until Lewis and Johnson could form in the fortifications near "Winchester. In the meantime, a 6hcll grazed my lelt thigh with the same effect as if my body had been hit a terrific blow with a club, and it pairied me so severely that I could scarcely sit on my horse and couid not move my leg. 1 spoke to Colonel Board, the senior present, and instructed him that in case I had to leave thebattlefleld, to take command without further orders. Tie Federal troops pressed, forward, evidently thinking that they Were carry ing everything before them. When within eighty yards, my brigade rose and fired rapidly and effectively, checking their centre. Their line wa. so long, however, that their wings moved forward until they resembled an" arc of a circle . I had ridden to the left of my line, and while returning, my right arm was shat tered near the shoulder by a minie ball. "With the two wounds received I ougrA to have ridden from the field; but it .was my first experiment with wounds and I dismounted, expecting to walk out with the troops. Just as I had done so and while my horse was galloping to the rear, aminie ball went through my already injured thigh, severing a tendon and completely disabling me. 1 looked around at Colonel Board, who was stacd !n a few yards away, to place him in command, when he wa3 shot dead before my eyes. "It was.a very hot afternoon. Weak with the loss of blood, and feeling a deathly faiatness coming on, I lay down in the shade of a tree, exposed, to the enemy's fire. The balls struck the rocks and trees, sinking and ringing ai'ound so that I could not cling closely enough to the ground nor make myself small enough. I remember wondering at the i tune whether there would be a , chance ! for me to recover if I should receive anv more wounds, even if' they should not prove fatal at once. I felt, as large as a man looks who weigh) 300 pounds. I wanted to give orders to have my brigade withdraw, but even from my eolitary position I could see it move away in good order under the cover of smoke caused by rapid liring on both sides. The Federals followed the retreat, moving cautiously at first, for uaej iiau oeen mucn snociteu anu Mir prised by the fire from my men. As he Federal line passed over me, the o c urged their men forward, and' 1 vi obliged to hear them say, We have them started now and must keep them going.' My arm le;tn to pain me Irightfully and looking up I found that one of the Union soldiers was frying to get my field-glass and my shattered arm was through the strap and resUngJ-jon it. ""Wait,' I said, ;'mtil I can lift my rm through.' . "'Be quick, then,' replied the sol dier. ' ' T No doubt he tried to be careful in -1 . : rc tl i ' i. v. i. ; quickly as possible and hurried to his place in the ranks, at the same time placing the prize over his neck. . , . ,, . . "In a few moments all was quiet around me T UvtW . .h,p that less than an hour previously I had been riding at the head of my brigade, mounted on a good horse. Xow my division bad been driven back. Between :f (. T i lt ana me were the enemy. I was riddled i with shot and alone. The heat was op- j I pressive. I looked around for a cooler i i spot. Near at hand was a tree with ; sprouts growing ont around in a ledge I of rocks bedded with leaves. Slowly I : ; crawled around and lay down in a hoi- . low ot tne rock in the shade. Were was 1 : a slight movement of the air, cool and ' refreshing. I thought of snakes when I j got in, but had left my belt, sword and ' : ;is:ol where I lay first. I was just en- ' j joying as much 'as I could the cool breeze j and bed of leaves when I espied a Fed- I i eral straggler coming through the woods, He saw my weapons, stopped, then dis- covered me. " 'Where are you wounded?' he asked. "I told him as well as I could, " 'Have you any greenbacks?' he de manded. ""'None.' : " 'I will seel' "He kneeled down and began to search my pockets. I have since thought jierhaps it was well that my weapons were out of reach. Weak as I was from the loss of blood my indignation made -tne forget pnin. He took ray pocket book, watch, some letters, a knife which had been presented me in 1859, a plain gold ring which I had worn for many years, and my nice new slouch hat, leav ing his old 1 battered hat' behind as he departed: 'A few moments later another Federal soldier came up. He was an Irishman. He did not want to rob me. He in quired all about my injuries, and finding that I was suffering from thirst, went to a spring three quarters of a mile away .for some water. A group of Averiil's cavalry came up. They ranged around me in a semi-circle and inquired about our command, numbers, etc. I avoided giving any information that would be of any service to them. Then they began to see how desperately I was wounded and how much I was suiTering. They looked at my bloody sleeve lying by my s de, saw my bleeding leg, and then began conversing with each other. While they were occupied among them selves, I heard someihing moving in the dead leaves among the rocks above my head. I tried to persuade myself that it was a ground mouse, but noticed that ifl approached with a sliding motion. 1 was a snake. The reptile glided pasti my ears, up my temple and across my forehead,, and stopped in the sprouts, its tail hanging down near my face. " 'Please come ana kill the snake and. not let it bite me !' I called to the soldiers. "They looked aroundnd down at me in amazement and then at each other, evidently-thinking that I was delirious. I called out again and a big young fel- low Dent over me ana saw tne snake s tail hanging from a rock among the' ; leaves, near my face. "'There is a snake, boys, sure enough !' he cried, j "The soldiers gathered around to kil : it. I thought the reptile would turn ! and bite me. I raised myself to a sitting j posture .and begged of a soldier : " 'Please stand over me and hold up my head, so it can't bite me?' "He complied good naturedly and it : was a great relief to have him stand there and hold my head with his brawny hands. When the snake was killedf-'it i was found to be a large moccasin." .; "General," was asked at this point, i-. twrorA irrtii tint ntinnoMrtna rl i-r ri n rr Vi i o jurying ordeal?' , "Only once; that was when the sur j goons had me stretched on a table made i of a door and . under the influence of j chloroform. When I awoke,, they had cHt off my arm close to my shoulder, j not even leaving a stump,, and hadmy ! leg dressed." '. j "How did you manage to live through i it all?" "I think it was nerve; there wasn't ; anything else left." j "Did you ever recover the articles j stolen from you?" i "I told Surgeon Morris about my ex perience and he in turn related it to the i Federal Colonel, who recovered my ; 1 1 t.v.. General Lilley has recovered the use of his leg and only an empty sleeve remains to recall his experience ou the battlefield near Winchester. Nea York Tribune, There are od.ijerma papers puuusnea . Ann 1. 1! .1 J .1 in the tnited States, of which eighty- three are daily, seventy-six Sunday and ' 474 weekly papers The circulation; ranges from 400 to 65, ($6. The Yuma Indians dispose of their dead by cremation. ' - ; . f Origin of Stover Stove is derived from Saxon stofa. 0bc cf these sources of domjstic-'in felicity, howevr r modified Its formVfls merely, a fireplace inclosed on all sides,, the air entering from below and carjied off, as in a common grate, by a vent. The general principle is-r-first, to employ the fuel in the most advantageous mau- , ... x i i'i.,.I ner ior neaiing ine external pan orriuc stove, and, second, to keep, within Jbe room as much of the air so warmed as la consistent with wholesomeness and cleanliness. A fixed stove (stuba) was used in the ages they were generally constructed : tvr tiloa inmelimn nr alafa w afoa. i 'e (soapstone), and used for warming dwellings. They were huge structures, 'sometimes occupying the whole side of a room and in Scandinavia theii i , . , , -. broad. flat surface was the sleepmg-place 1 of the household. The fire was kindled : at the bottom, and the heat and smoke ! passed through various flues before 1 reaching the chimney. The stoves were ' economical of fuel, a matter of much inr- ' .. t i T T - rortance in some parts of Europe. In the homes of the rich they were some times faced with porcelain or highly pol ished tiles. Many will remember, no j .l - is t .(a:. I uuuut, a porceuuu hlovb oi ims uwuup. tion exhibited in the- bweaisn depart ment at tho Centennial exposition in 1S70 They have oven? and flues 101 cooking, and need to be replenished with fuel but once in twenty-four hours. One of the first attempts at making a stove of iron was that of Cardinal Poli nac in France, in the early part of the. eighteenth century. -The Polignac fire places, so-called, were construcCed with hollow backs, hearths and iron jambs to economize the heat. In 1716 Dr. Des augliers, of London, modified these fire places o us them for coal instead oj wood. But neither these nor the Hoi. land stoves ever became popular irv Eng-' land, owing to the strong prejudice in favor of the open fires. The Commodore Ahead, A gentleman was- riding with W H, Vanderbilt on Harlem Jane, New York, while the old commodore "was still alive. A pair of very speedy horses whirled the wheels of the light road wagon so swift ly around that they ate up the distance between themselves and whatever wheels Were ahead of them. At length, how ever, the sound of hoof taps approach ing from behind grow clearer and clearer. "C-l e-c k,"' said Yanderb.lt to his horses, and he smiled 'us he mado the noise, for instantly they started ahead faster than' before, and left the approach ing hoofs sinking lack ward.' But no thump thump, thump thump came tha sounds nearer. The millionaire looked anxious Out came his' whip and down fell its lash with a flick, flick on the neck of each hor?e. What followed was described as being like the sudden lengthening of a closed telescope, so suddenly and far did the startled team leap ahead; but it was of no use. Thurrp thump, thump thump camo the still approaching horses and presently, as Vanderbilt sat frowning and biting his Up, their heads were up to the tails of his steeds and in an in:ant ho was passed. He looked out the side of his eyes to see his rival, and suddenly heaved a sih of relief . "Why," it's father!' 's:dd he. It was the old commodore, humped up behind Mountain Boy and Mountain Girl, and smiling broadly. 'Good road team you've got there, Dili," said he; "but you need anothoi pair if you're going racing.'' Pasteur's method of preventing hydro phobia is by inoculation, not by vaccina tion. The former process produces the genuine malady in a mild and innocuous form; the latter employs oue malady to antagonize and baffle a more serious one. Xhus cow-pox is .employed to ward ofl small pox. In a lecent chat with a cor- respondent M. Pasteur described his ex periments' and their results as follows i "I began my experiments in 1832 in thi9 I way: I took a port;on of the spinal cord of a dog which had died of hydrophobia 1 and with that I inoculated a rabbit in the first membrane of the brain. It went mad in fifteen days. Then with a por tion of the spinal coird of this rabbit I inoculated another rabbit in the same i "way, and it went mad in thirteen days ' and soon. I continued inoculations from i tabbit to ra'.bit, finding the strength of ' he 'virus increase each time until the i ninetieth time produced hydrophybia in ; only seven days. I then took very small portions of tho spinal cord of this nine j tieth rabbit, and which contained the greatest virulence yet obtained, and I suspended these bits of virus in empty j bottles, in which the air was kept very j dry by means of. potash on the bottom of j 1 the bottle. After several days' exposure in a dry, cold temperature the virus loses all its strength. --The time require for this loss depends on tho. size of th piece and the dryness and coldness of j the air. Then of this viru? which has i lost its strength I take a small portion j dissolved in sterile bouillon, and with a i pravaz syringe I innoculate the animal, i Each day I innoculate it again with j virus, just a little stronger each time j until at last the .system' has become so accustomed o.the poison, that I can use the virus, which had not been dried at all and which would produce hydrophobia in seven days If the system had not been" .- " . - BO - Seated to It by degrees. I have freated one hundred dogs ia this way, and.not one has become mad." A brother eduor says a newspaper is not noisy, 'yt it frequently creates 8 hustle. C. .-uiaulQiXn Independent, time of tVe Roman empire for heating in santa Clara ooiknty, Cal., there is a j bought he reached-up'afid piekd off a. baths, anf in Germany ; and. Scandinavja xcat, allied to : the Aground-nest makifi?;v?fl"iUac-Moi for baths and hothouses. In the midd gnecies, whiclJimbs' small tree? ani I rdly-takw ten'stgps 'after fVro-' ' FACTS F0 TH E CU1I0UV Acccd'Ba-TlIgsrrror prevalent lu'yggona: poison' was "supposed to pwelUtfie body. -. Rcentdiscdveriesi prove thst the art of wood engraving originated with the Arabs about the ninth century. v Rosemary was one 'of the evergreens with which dishes wit anciently deco- j fehses imag-aable." This.'American citi rated during the seisdn of Christmas. ' zen was wa king, down the streets-of A lady who received through the post- j Leipsic one day, when h. Hfiticed In ofSce a postal cari . contaihing 1,030 j passing a private garden a great bunch of wordsj-written by a .gentleman, replied ; lilacs hanging over the fence by which;, on a card containing 1,040. he was passing. Without . mudk'oV enV ' jr acompact nest of twies amoctr the branches, something after the man ner of a gray squirrel."" "Dr. Antonin Martin says that ttn flavor of cod-liver oil may be changed t j the delightful one of fresh oysters, if the patient will driuk a large glass o' water poured from a vessel in which nails have been allowed to rust. -The artists of Dresden and Dusseldorf dissatisfied with the inelegant costume for men in our times, have decided to adopt the picturesque garments worn by Rubens and the artists of .the seventeenth century black velyet breeches, marine hlue stockings, velvet'vest trimmed with rfid fiilk and brQad fdt hat In the time of Henrv 1, (loio. A. b!)':' ,v ,tjA . si-V a. j ! i ; L.- u tf -V ! and her "marrm-e rift" find nne.fh'.-- nf ! ,i n . , , ,f , , I the common earnings of herself and hus - i , ,i v i fv.- At band, as well as her clothing and funn- ture. If a wife died without childrc-n If a wife died without childrtt. her relatives divided, her share with her ! -beforeie bar to answer to the charge husband " ' of s'ealuig wo J. The policeman had The Palma Christo plant.- riow bg I !( s;.cii- -the ngth of e'xtensivelv rented in part's ofuL'l'O , which the. flowers hung Carolina as a substitute' for -oftonis as, ..nciW m,itit oo r. particular care in handling ie seed, and'! yields a large profit. The climate bf lower South Carolina is all that' could'de desired, and on the sea islands the plant i i I" - 'it i attains remarkabi e growth without labor or attention The common potato is indigenous to both North and j South America, and is found growing wild at the present day over vast tracts in New Mexico, Arizona, and southward in the cool ele vated regions of Old Mexico. " It again an pears in similar situations, in the Andes of South America, jjut is not-found , in what are called tropical climates, bu always in cool or cold ones. "v?ho firit carried the potato from this country to i Europe is now unknown, but the date i of its introduction; is supposed to be ' 1580, or about three hundred years ago. j Formerly cockfighting entered into i the occupation of old and youngj Schools hud their cockfights. Travelers ' agreed with coachmen, that they were to wait a night if there were a -cockfight -.; in any town through which they passed. , When English country gentlemen had ; sat long at table, and the conversation had turned upon the relative merits of their several birds, a cockfight often re sulted, as the birds in question were brought for the purpose into the dining room. Cockfighting was practiced ou i Shrove Tuesday to a great extent, and ; in the time of Henry VII. of England, seems to have been' practiced within the, precincts of the court. The. earliest icfcii- tion of this "passtime" in England is by Fitzstephen, "in 1191. A Guinea an Error. It is very well known that any person discovering a printer's error in an Oxford Bible will be paid a guinea, if he will take the trouble to point it out to the ' controller of the press provided, of , course, that it has not been discovered before. The editions -of the 6acred scriptures issued by the university are very numerous, and from one or another j of them'errors are now and again picked out, and several times during his term j of office the present controller has been j called upon for the guinea, and has paid . j it. When the revised bibles were about ' to be issued, the question arose as to whether guineas should be paid for , i printers' errors in this enormous issue of j "entirely new print. Every edition, of course, is an independent work of the compositors and proof-readers, and in cn undertaking of such magnitude it could hardly, be doubted that mistakes would in the aggregate be numerous, and pru dence seemed to suggest that no under taking should be entered into unttt-'.'the work had for a time had the bene'fl.t' the gratuitous . criticism of the pjiblic. Up to the moment of our writing, says the Leisure Hour, however, after running the gauntlet of public scrutiny for a good month, only three printers' errors have been discovered in all the editions. In the ! 1 P If : , to xt, owr-ry in Ezekie, ... 2l5 here an 4e i3 left out of righteous. In the paralled 8vo, edition m;.tu i p.,im.'-ii I - .... , 13, "shatfs" appears instead of "shafts;" ! onrt i Art0 01 in th marcrin Wr. ! flowing" should be "everflowing.1' London Printing Times'. A large and substantial vault" has been constructed in the New York assayi of fice for the safe keeping o'fgold and- sil ver bullion The vault j fire, and burg- I lar proof and is fuMv.?fts substantial as any in the sub 'treasury at New- York. Few areaware that $40,000,000 in gold aricT silver bullion is stored in.. the asay f omce, which m in iacx, xnougn not ia 1 urange Pekoe is supplemented by beau name, one of the depositories of the pub- j tifully cut sandwiches, pate de foie grass tic-money. The assay office at Carso a and other tempting delicacies, and every' City, Nev., has been suspended, and j justice is done to them by the illustri nearly $1,000,000 in gold and silver on dus ones without in any way "spoiling", deposit there for assay was transferred the elaborate dinner that is to L follow, to. the office in Nev York. . . later on. V - t ,Sars4ly fne-Consul. i. , The j:ojruTs.ane useful in agreu mnny ways in protecting American c.tizens, abroad from annoyance and imposition, i Consul Dubois, who ' js stationed at ' T-i-en ni..r c2'lr j . m. ing story of bow he saved an American citizen from dishonorable imnrisonmeni k for one of the most pettviid-trivial jof- cions bit of Vandalism when he was ar rested by German policeman, who cou.mancled him to fo 'iow him to the i station house to answer to a charge of stealing. The gentleman understood ' enough Germtn to comprehend the na- ture of the charge, . "But,"" said ho, "I have stolen nothing." "Yes, you have,'' said the officer. "You have stolen goods now in your hand." At this the American ' looked down at the little spray of lilacs. ! He thought. he had betfer defer any ex i pbtnations until the station was reached, F &s offiefcr was evidently too stupid i ff-argument. At the'station . honise he instead -of .being, dis- was locked up chrSeti P'omly, as he had expected. The cons u". w ts summoned, but he could do notbin '. The Ud. authorities insisted beei infringed, and ! tnat the iaV that the -penalty thereof must b en- : 1 t J 1 forced.' The xir,so:ser was taken before . .'1" -'LUU " ',ainu uwu8m ? wirec .m. This fact gave the basis for -tfe eh u-g3 of wood stealing. Ia$pite''6f the protests or the consul, the local judge, after hearing the .case, showed a deeded -inclination against- the prisoner. -' i lie stealing was pio'ved-V he Said, but before sentence could be I decreed the consul said that thorn was ! no intent to stea", arid without the proof ! of the intent v. prisoner .would have to be avquitted." The judge I seemed to recognize .tire force of this and called up the prisoner... iWhal diiyou intend to do -with that spray -ol i lilacs wTien you p'ueke"d'it?" The pris , oner-repiic I thrVugh an interpreter that i -he had intended to send it home to show i. bis ..people the" difference between the (Jerm ;n anii American lilac. The intent to steal vas then proved, as the judge said, by the prisoner's own confession. He sentenced him then to twenty-four hours' imprisonment in the jail at Leip tic. The dishonorable judgment would have been enforced if tho consul had not noted an appeal and said to the judge that he should lay the case before J the king of Saxony to ask for a pardon, j The prisoner was then permitted to give j bail to await the result of this and then i went on continuing his visit through F.u- ' rope. Several weeks afterward he re : turned and found the king's pardon ; awaiting him. If it had not been for ; the consul he would have been imoris- 1 i cned for a day and would have gone on the records of Leipsic as a convicted ; thief. The authorities are inclined tc be more severe with foreigners than with their own people. Op. the day before, 8 i peasant who had stolen an armful of ' flowers was simply fined fifteen marks. ! "Upon the other hand, where the local ! poople attempt to take advantage of for- : eigners, the Leipsic authorities rendei i justice with a ster hand: Xetc Tori World. i Symptoms of Diphtheria. Dr. Nagle, of the New York bureau of vital statistics, was asked by a reporter: ' 'Caa you give a plain description of the ,. 3 . uoptoms of diphtheria soth at an ordin uy person will not mistake it for scar- ! letiiia?"- "Here is a medical work," replied the doctor, "giving information in words that ought to be understood."' Diphtheria-is an acute infectious disease hi which there is a tendency to the formation ! o. fa'.sj me:nbrana 0.3 iuujous and abraded ; surfaces, acsompanied by considerable con- stitutional disturbances. I symptoms After an incubation period :roa twent -four hours to ten days, shiv-er- ; iDg nnd vomiting sat in and, the temperature , i;icrenseB, the throat is sore with some stiff- j kc-s about the heck. The fauces becomes of a : lark red co r, thstoails swollen ani at th and ot two days from the bjinnins o' the ; "dieasa. a quantity of minute white points appear on tho surface of. both sides- ofths ' 'auces.'" ' - - ' - As these spots increase i a numbers they coalesce and form a thick yellowish white membrane. This sometimes consists of a I single piece, but is often scattered over the j surface in separate patchas. The cervical g.'ands become enlarged, the tongue coated with white or brown fur, the pulse tempera- i ture increased and the urine albuminous. ! In the next stages the membrane separ.- ates after leaving unhealthy sioughing ulcers. In this stage recovery may take place, or ' death may result irom exhaustion. J during any period of the illness asphyxia, resulting frjmtbe production of false membrane in the larynx or -bronchial tubes, may be fatal I:l the. course of the disease a roseolas rash may appear over the body, " Convalescence after diphtheria is very slow. .Often paralysis of tho groups of muscles shows itself within six months from the be ginning of the attack. The removal of tha false membrane is'of no avail. ; , The English royal family are blessed , with good appetites... They look upon ! j four substantial meals a day as by no, , means an excessive allowance of fod ... v I Even at their 5 o'clock tea the wafer- . j like bread and butter that customarily ?' accompany the svrupy Souchong or' THE HOME DOCTOR. Drepepoiak ' A most Important part of the treat ment of every cae of nervous dyspepsia is to secure and enforce thorough test. The conditions existing being those of dtrrVous irritation and exhaustion more or less profound, rest becomes one of the necessities of- the case.. To often-ner. vous-djsbepsia' occurs in persons wbi arc carrying heaw load Jn. .'the '.way. of business cares, anxiety V grief, or who. suffecc exhaustion "f.roin some fornror 1 J .vi, v-V , - , f-. mot)(oal dlsIurbaceV.and it is next to impossible to restore sch persons to a WSconditiobeaHhw without re- i - - , . W ttota the causes hichaVe ope to produce lb dtffleurty. WhTle plchty 1 of exercise should be taken regularly each day, the intervals between exercise i should be employed in more or less ab solute rest. Lying out of-doors, in a hammock or ou a cot, for hours at a time, during pleasant weather, is a means for restoring nervous tone and ' vigor. Isiietof Life. Car of tho Fars. "Picking the ears'1 is a most mis chievous practice ; in attempting to do this Vith hard substances an unlucky motion has many a time pierced the drum and made it as useless as a bursted rub ber life preserver; nothing sharper or harder than the end of the little finger, with the nail pared ought ever to be in troduced into the ear, unless by a' phy sician. Persons are often seen endeavor ing to remove the "wax" of the ear with the head of a pin ; this ought never to be done; first, because it not only "en dangers the rupture of the car by being pushed too far in, but if not so far, it may grate against the drum, excite in flammation, produce an ulcer which may finally eat nY the parts away; second, hard substances have often slipped in, and caused the necessity of painful, danerous' and expensive operations: -third, the wax is manufactured by na iture to .'guard the entrance from" dust, -.insects and unmodified cold air, and when it has subserved its purpose it be comes dry, scaly nnd light, and in this condition is easily pushed outside by new formations of wax withiu. Phrenological Jovrnah e Tt-Btlre Children. Mothers often complain that theli children, are wakeful and restless at night. They seem well during the day, but, n.s soon as they go to bed and fall asleep, they moan, cry, grate the teeth, rub the nose, and roll and thrash nearly all night long. As a rule, suchsymptomi are thought to be caused by worms, and the unfortunate victims are. freelj purged with' "worm medicines," with a view of curing their nocturnal "tan trums." Now, in nine cases out of ten, the whojc troub'c is caused by indiges tion and constipation. The child goes tc bed with itst m ich full of indigestibl food. The quality an I quantity of food it has taken 'during the day has been unfit ior its power of digestion, and therefore acts as a constant irritant to ita eutire system. The irritation of Its stomach and bowelsby indigestible food excites the brain and spinal cord, and through these the whole system is kept in a 6tate of excitement. "Hence, then, it is proverbial in early life that thi stomach being' delicate and susceptible to any disturbance, we should be most careful to select a proper diet, to con sider the quality of food that is sup plied, to measure the capabilities of thi digestive system,, and to deal with them accordingly." Grecian Burial Custom. A correspondent at Athens gives ai account of. many curious burial custom: peculiar to Greece, which lately cami to his notice. A piece of linen as wid as the body, and twice as iong, wai doubled, and a hole iarge enough lot the head cut out of it. In this the bod was wrapped and then dressed in he? clothes, and more especially new shoes Beneath the head was placed a pillo- full of lemon leaves. In the mouth wai placed a bunch of violets, and around the temnles achaplet of flowers. ' Thes are used only for the unmarried: and must be white. Both head and fee! were tied with bands made for the pur pose, which were unloosed at the edg of the grave when the coffin was-abou' to be closed. A small co'in (a relic o: the fie to the ferryman; wa3 placed ir the palm of the hand. At Athens a sou is dropped into the cotfln. The greatest attetiiioir i4 given to this point. In re- moving the body the feet always go first. A priest en me on three successive aayi to sprinkle the room, fumigate it, and repcit certain prayers, as for that period nfier death is was supposed to be haunt el. A-fter burial women are hired tt j keep a light burning over the grave unti 1 The body i- supposed to be decomposed. To assist this, tho bottom of moderr (ircck citl ns is of lattice work. Everj Saturday the poor of Athens place. on thi 'raves of the'r frieuds eatables of thi sort they used to like. A Winter Piece. Silently through the woodland I wan-ier on my way , As gray as a pale gray jackass Is the chilly winter day. A gloomy crow sits dreaming . On tho persimmon-tree, And a vagrant snow-flake flutters Along the ashen lea. Out of the holy silence Proceeds a short sharp cry, And frightened from, the persimino The sullen crow doth fly. And deo; in my bosom tender I'm sat isfied in a trice Thit somawhere a little fellow Has sjc right through the ice. YE TWO WISHES. a. An anirttl went a walking ont on day, as I-v heard raid, And, coming; to a - fagot-maker, bggd . crust of bread. The foot -maker gave a crust and something rather queer To wash it down with aL from out abottla that stool near. .' . . -The angel finished eating, but before he hft, saii he: ' "Thou shalt have two wishes granted, for '" that thou hart given me One for that good drinkable? another for the ? V7lx . . v ' j Then be left the fagot -maker all amazed at what he said. v - . : "l the f.got-maker.;aft.r U i had goBe - - jr thrt .tth' m that same " iit"tl songr". So, turning this thing over in his mind, be cast around, 'Till he saw the empty, bottle where it lay npon the grouud. -' I wish," said he, juot as a test, " if what be said is so, Into that einpty bottle, now, that I may straightway go." No sooner said thaa-dono; whisk t into the flask be fell. Where Le found himself ej tightly packed as a chicken in the shell. In vnin he kicked and twisted, and ia vain he bowled Avith pain; 1 For in pSte of. all his effort, ht could not get out again. So, seeing bow the matter stood, he had to wish onto more, When, out he elippod, as "easily as he'd gone in before- If we had had two wishes granted by an an gel thus, t We would not throw away the good so kindly given us. For first we'd ask for wisdom, which, when wo had in store, I'm very doubtful if we'd care to ask for any more. . -Howard Pyle's 'Ttpper and Salt." FUN. Eccentric characters derdvc their pow- era from cranks. Warwick. "A miss is, as good as a mile," and a great deal better. You can't kiss a mile. Philadelphia Call. When a person is in everybody's mouth he naturally has a high appreciation of the popular taste. Ba ton, Transcript. You always feel , surprised when you see a shooting star, do you not? That la because you did not know the sky was loaded. PitUlurg Chronicle. The chief civic ruler of a Western town recently decamped with $5,000 of the municipal funds: Money made the mayor go that time. PceVa Sun. "What are tho 'seven ages of man,' Henry?" ' "Lug-age, garbage, storage, mortgage, postage, shrinkage and dot age." He went right up to the .foot. Burdctte. "If you sit in (he chimney corner all your days . your tue love will find you out" is an eld adage. She will if you happen to be married to her.- Burling' ton Free Pres. " Tho Digger Indians in Rancho Chico have a full brass band. It is no wonder settlers demand they shall be kept on a reservation far from the homes of civ ilized white men. Picayune. "Blown out to sea," read out old Mr. Squaretoes. looking over the paper. Blown out to seal" commented Mrs. Squaretoes, with infinite sarcasm, "well, if the world ain't just full of fools. You want a light in to see." Brooklyn Eagle. "There is companionship in a glow ing grate," says the man who can see poetry and sentiment in a water-plug. Yes, yes perhaps so, to the man who doesn't have to ge up when the mercury is out of sight and start the fire. Chicago ledger. ' AVe learn from a reliable exchange thai a good, healthy hippopotamus is valued at $20,000. Here is an idea for the fash ionable girls who lead a thousand-dollar dog along Chestnut street-. Get a hip popotamus and kill the other girls with envy. This suggestion is thrown out without any crjargc. Philadelphia Call A Missionary Story. one evening1 when Dr. Moffat was topping at the farm of an African boer, lis host, hearing that he was a mission .ry, proposed that a service should be iddl At length the family were icated. " "But where are the servants?" asked doffat. . "Servants 1 'What do you mean?" "I mean the Hottentots, of whom I,, .ce so many on your farm." "Ilttentots! Do you mean that, then Let me-ffo to the mountains and call the )aboorj8j jf you want a congregation of hat sort. Or, stop, I have it ; my, sons, :all the dogs that lie in front of the door -they will do." The missionary quietly dropped an at- ,mpt which threatened a wrathful chd- ng, and commenced the service. The psalm "was sung, prayer was offered, and j he preacher read the story of the 8yro- phenician woman, and ee'ected more es- L ptciallythe words, "Truth, Lord, but ven'the dogs eat of the crumbs that fall from the master's table," He had "not ipokcn many minutes when the voice of the old man was again heard: "Will nynheer sit down and wait a little? He mall have the Hottentots ." The 'summons was given; and the mot .ey crowd trooped io, many who proba- v bly had never been within the door of their master's house before, and many more who never before had heard the roice of a preacher. " When the service was over, and-the istonished Hottentots had dispersed, the . farmer turned to his guest and said, "My friend, you took a hard hammer, and you have broken a hard head." Lives of Robert and Mary Moffat, "