a i ; J-l!. i-i.rf.fvrt,: - J'4 i" l "gW'-.ft-' - ...... ".r. Us ! :r 7 1 R. H. COWAN, Editor and Proprietor. "We Proudly caU ours a Government by the Peoples-Cleveland. TERMS' 82.00 Per Year. VOL. II. WAiJESBORO, N.C, THURSDAY, APRIL 8, 1886. NO. 27. IT tif i-L JJL TermstCflBh AdVanoe One Year gii Months Three Month $2.00 tl00 50 ADVERTISING KATES. One sqealre, nVet rasertion - - 11.00 teach subservient insertion ' . g twal advertisements, per ttfle iO ' "Special rates given on applfcatio ' for vpger time. Advertisers aire requested to bring in their advertisement on Monday evening of each week, to Insure insertion in next issue. PROFESSIONAL CARDS. John t'emberton. ATTORNEY At LAW, WADE8BORO, N. C. IZT Practice in the State and Felera Courts. JAMES 1 LOCKHABT. Attorney and Counsellor at law, WADESBORO. N. C. 23T Practice at fj the Courts of the States B. LlTfllw W. L. PARSON LITTLE & PARSONS, ATTORNEYS .AvT DL.A.W, WADESBORO, N. C. olU'clioDs Promptly Attended to. 11.11. DeIJ :d e x tj s t, WADESBORO. N. C. UrbYc over (J. W. Huntley's Stoic. All Work Warranted. May 14, 'so, tf. DR. D. B. FRONTIS, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Offers his Professional Serv ices to the citizens or n u.leslx.m and surrounding country Of fice (.pixjhite Bank. J' A B. Himttey, M. D. J. T. J. Battle, M. D Drs. Hunt ley & Battle, PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS Wadcsljoro, X C Office next to Bunk 3iav 7 tf I. II. HORTON, JEWELER, WADESBORO, N. C. ltealear in Wntchw, Clocks, Jewelry, Musical Instruments Breech and Muzzle Loading Nhot Gurus ristoks Sre, Anson Institute, WADESBORO, N. C. d. 1 McGregor; principal J. J. Burnett, A. B. J. W. Kn.uo, A. B.' Assistants Mrs M. L. McCokkle, ) ' The Tpring Term begins Monday, Jan uary tlth, 1SS0. TriTiox In Literary Department, $2, $3 aud 4 jer mouth. Instrumental Music, 4 per month. WaJ Music, $4 per month. Use uf piano for practice 50 cents per month. Boanl. $10 per month. Contingent fee, $1 ir year. For Catalogue apply to the Principal. Moi-ven High Scliool, 1 OBVEJf, TV.' C JAMES W. KILGO, A. B Principal. 'if The Fall Session logins on the 3d of August 1nn5, and runs through five months. TUITION, PER MONTH. Primary, - ... . . . $2.00 Intermediate, - 2.50 Advanced - ; . . - . 3 qq Board from $8 TO $10 per montli For further particulars address the Prin cipal. WliMDRB, MUNUFACTURER AND DEALER IN I Tin ware, SM-Iri AND HOLLOW WARE. WADESBORO, N. C. HOTELS. When you go to Charlotte be sure to call on S. M. TIMMO'NS, FOR Fine Mountain Whiskies IK THE Orfd Charlotte Hotel CHARLOTTE, N. C. YARBROUGH HOUSE,' RALBIGIl, Jfr. c. . ' . PRICES REDUCED TO SUIT THE TIES ' CALL AND SEE US. A Little girl Who Knew How U. Raise Money, . A good story l told by the Portland (Maine) Presi, of a little girl, whose mother is a member of the Bosworth Re lief corps, which goes to show that even at her tender age she is smart enough to fan a fair. The little miss is only nine Voars old. She is very pretty and lady like When the Relief corps decided to hold a fair, the ladies, as is customary, asked the friends to contribute articles to their various tables. Now, our little miss thought she would do business on her own hook. - So she called on many ladies he knew, interested them in the fair, and, when it was time to open the fair, 'this little miss had secured so much and of such variety, that a cart had to be sent to collect the contributions. This little miss was very active during the fair. I One evening Mayor Deering came into the halL The young lady waltzed tip to him and said her bright face and sparkling eyes attracting the at tention of listeners "Mayor Deering, I am collecting some money for the fair, won't you contribute?" The mayor put his hand in his pocket, took out some money, and, without look ing at it handed it to the little miss. She thanked him and went off, but in a few moments she was back again and said : "Mayor Deering, I forgot to tell you that we proposed to print the names of those contributing the money I am col lecting, and when you gave me some money you didn't stop to look at it, and I thought you ought to know you gave me seven cents, because I didn't believe you would want it printed that the may or of Portland, gave seven cents to the fair." A broad smile overspread the mayor's face, and, drawing out his pocketbook, he handed the little miss a crisp $5 bill. "Now," says our little miss, "I hear Governor Robie is here, Mr. Mayor, and I -would like ever so much to be intro duced. Won't you introduce me?" "Certainly, replied his honor, always gallant, "come with me." So the couple walked up to where the governor was, and the mayor addressing him said: "Governor, heie is a little girl who is very anxious to know the chief magis trate of the State." The governor turned, shook hands with our little miss, asked her name, patted her head and asked her what he could do for her. "Why, Goyernor Robie," she replied, "I am collecting some money for the fair. -Won't you contribute?" "Of course, I will,1' replied the gov ernor; "what shall I give you?" "Well, you see," fcaid our little miss, "Mayor Deering has given me $5, and, of course, the governor of a State would wish to give more than the mayor of a city." The governor was quick to see the joke, and laughing drew his wallet and handed our little miss a bill to add to the other contributions for the relief fund. Willing to be Her Sister.f A singular story comes from the prov ince of Litnburg, on the Dutch frontier. The owner of a large manufactory, who had married young, and was ' left a widower, hadvan only daughter, to whom all the most desirable young men in the neighborhood were paying attention. Her father noticed that she treated them all with indifference, and showed a marked preference for a young clerk of his, an orphan, with no means but his salary. As he had always given the greatest satisfaction in the perform ance of his duties, and was exceed ingly well conducted, the father, per suaded that he would never venture to raise his eyes to his daughter, who evi dently was sincerely, attached to him, made up his mind to broach the matter to him. Wrhit was his surprise when the young clerk, after much hesitation, told him h? would be only too happy tc regard the young lady as a sister, but he could not marry her, because he was not a man, but a young woman in disguise a disguise she had adopted when left an orphan, in order to get a more lucrative situition.' The conclusion of the story is that, instead of marrying the daughter, she is now the wife of the father. Len t!n Globe. Things Worth the Doing. To 'learn to think and act for your self. To respect- gray hair3, especially our own. To waste nothing, neither money, time aor talent. If you have a place of business, to be found there when wanted. To spare when you are young that you may spend when you are old. To bear little trials patiently that you may learn how to bear great ones. To be self-reliant and not take too imch advice, but rather depend on your- elf. . i ' . To keep alive in your breast that little ipark of celestial fire called conscience. . To learn to say no; it will be of more lervice to you than to be able to read Latin. To do all the good you can in the world and make as little noise about it as possible. ' To stick to your own opinion- if you tare one, allowing others, of course, the lame liberty to stick to theirs. There are probably, more - theatres painted white in Philadelphia than it any other city in the world; the idea wat started by 'Haverly, who . thought thai white was a lucky color. It is also said that actors prefer to -play in a tlieatn painted white. - ' SEALED ORDERS. Oat she swung from her moorings, And over the harbor bar, - As the moon was slowly rising, She faded from sight afar And we traced her gleaming canvas By the twinkling evening star. Kone knew the port . he sailed for, Kor whither her cruise would bef Her future course was shrouded In silence and mystery; x She was sailing beneath "sealed ordersw To be opened out at sea. Borne souls, cut off from mooring, Go drifting into the night, -Darkness before and around them, With scarce a glimmer of light; They are acting beneath . "sealed orders And sailing by faith, not sight. Keeping the line of duty, Through evil and good report, They shall ride the storm out safely, Be the voyage long or short, For the Bhipthat carries God's orders Shall anchor at last in'port. "Helen Chauncey, in Sailors'1 Magazine. "FE0M THE HOSPITAL. "Yes," said the Rev. Mr. Dibble, "1 knew 1 could depend upon the hospitality of myfiock to entertain this excellent young-divine seeing that my own house hold is in so disorganized a condition, owing to the exigencies of cleaning house. It Will be only for a night or two, and we all know what is prom ised to those who receive the angel un awares !" And Mr. Dibble rubbed his hands and looked smilinglyaround upon the member of the Young Ladies' Aid Association, while a very perceptible murmur of as sent rose up from this aggregate collection of curls, bangs, frizzed hair and crimped laces. Not a damsel in the number but would gladly have extended her gracious hos pitality to the Rev. Felix Amory, who was to preach a sermon in aid oi 'illome Helps and Missions," at the vil age cnurch upon the evening. coming Sunday "I'm sure," said Miss Lydia Larkspur, promptly anticipating the crisis, "papr would be most happy to receive the een tleman !" WThile all the other ladies looked in uignantiy first at Miss Lydia, each other, and whispered then at "Bold iningr' "Most kind of you to propose it, I am re," said Mr. Dibble, and so the matter sure. was settled, not at all to the general sat isfaction. And Lydia Larkspur went home and issued orders that the parlor curtains should be washed and ironed, and a pound cake of the richest nnture con cocted. While Kate Duer, the doctor's sister, who was as fond of young clergyman as Lydia herself, and would in no wise have objected to varying the monotony of her home-life with a spice of ecclesiastical novelty, returned to her crochet work with. a yawn and a general impression that life was a bore. "We are to have a. young lecturer from the city in the church on Sunday even ing," she said to her brother, when h . bustled into dinner. "Eh?" said Mr. Duer, swallowing his scalding soup; "are we? By the wav Kate, there's a new case of smallpox rt, ported among those hands on the railway embankment.." "Dear, me!" said Kate, who was com pounding a refreshing salad in a carved wooden bowl; "I hope you keep well vaccinated, Hugh." "Oh, there's no trouble about that!" said the doctor; "only the other patients in the hospital object to such a case." . "I should think it very likely," said Kate, with a little moue. "I must try to isolate him somewhere,'' said Dr. Duer, thoughtfully. "Iu" one of those stone houses by the rive perhaps. Old Mrs. Viggers has had the disease, i know." And then Dr. Duer tasted the salad and. pronounced it first rate. Pitcherville was all on the qui vive that day when the double-shotted piece of tid ings flew, on the tongue of popular ru mor, through the town. An actual L smallpox case in their midst, and a young minister coming all the way from New York to appeal to their sympathies on be half of home missions. "I wonder if it is contagious!" said old Mr3. McAdams, looking very round' eyed through her spectacles. "Contagious!" said Mrs. Emmons; "it ought to find its way into every house in our village." "What!" cried Mrs. smallpox?" Mc Adams; "the "No; certainly not," said Mrs. Em mons; "the sympathetic movement in fa vor of home missions. " And then everyone laughed. Mrs.Mc Adams looked puzzled, and Mrs. Em mons drew herself up and remarked that "it was very irreverent to laugh at sacred iLings.'? But Miss Lydia Larkspur, whose father did not believe in vaccination, and who tad a mortal horror of the disease against which the famous Jenner waged so suc cessful a warfare, was much troubled in Lher mind. "I've always had a sort of premonition that I should fall a victim to the small pox, sighed she. - "I only wish pa would let me be vaccinated!" It was on a sultry August evening, - the sky full of lurid clouds, the. air charged with glittering arrows of , electricity, and the big drops beginning to patter on the maple leaves, when there sounded a knock at Miss Lydia's door a most mysterioui tap, as she afterward declared. " - "Who's there t" said Miss Lydia, open ing it just sufficiently to obtain a glimpse of a tall, pale man with pocket handker- chief folded tuibanwise around his head. ! ''Excuse me," said this apparition, "but I believe I have - lost my; way. Might I ask shelter from the shower! I am the young man from the hospitaLn . i "Certainly not," said Miss Lydia, clos ing the door abruptly in his face, with a little shriek. "Good gracious! hare 1 stood faoe to face with the small-pox case?" : And then she rang for the servant and the camphor bottle, and went into hys terics. Jlrs. Printemps lived in the house a picturesque cottage, overhung with Vir ginia creepers, witK a little plaster cast of Cupid in the garden, and a great many -bluebells and carnations a young widow who read all the newest books and some times wrote gushing poems for the second-rate monthlies. - '!V -;. .' . Mrs. Printemps. imagined herself like the gifted and unfortunate Mary Queen of Scots, and dressed up to the part, at far as nineteenth century prejudices al lowed her and she was seated by th casement, trying to find a rhyme to suil a most unaccommodating line of poetry, when the tall pale stranger appeared under her window "for all the world,' as.Mrs. Printc;nps subsequently expressed it, "like a troabadour or David Rizzit himself." "fcxcuse me, madam," he began,,5ui t urn from the hospital, and " "My goodness me!" ejaculated Mrs Printemps, jumping to her feet; "how dare you come here and tell mt that to my face? Why don't they iso late you?" "Madam " said the surprised stranger. 9 "Go away!" said Mrs. Printemps, banging down her window and bolting it noisily. "Betsy" to her girl "run across the meadow to Mrs. Udderlay's, and tell her that the smallpox case is rampaging all over the country, trying to get people to let him in, and she isn't to open the door on any account. And stop at Dr. Duer's and ask him what sort ol sanitary regulation he calls this kind of thing?" "I'm afraid I'll meet him, mem!" said Betsy, getting behind the sideboard "and I ain't been vaccinated for seven years, and-. " "Nonsense?" said Mrs. Printemps. "Ii you go across the pasture fields you'll get there fully five minutes before he does. Make haste now." Kate Duer was standing in her door way watching the storm roll grandly over the mountain tops, when the weary and bewildered traveler opened the gate and came hesitatingly in. "I beg your pardon," said he, meekly "but I think there "must be some thing singular in my appearance. People seem to shut their doors against me, and shun me as if I had the pestilence. And I cannot find the resi dence of Mr. Dibble, the clergyman. Would it be asking too much if I were to request permission to rest in your porch until the storm is over? I came from the hospital, and " "Oh, I understand" said Kate, quick ly, "you are the smallpox patient. Bui I have been vaccinated, and am not afraid of the disease. There is a very comfort able chamber in the second story of the barn, and you shall be carefully nursed and taken care of there, of "But you are mistaken," cried the young man ; I am not " "Hush!" ssid Kate, gently. "Do not be afraid to confide in me. I am Dr. Duer's sister, and know the whole story. Sit here and rest a little, and I will bring you some bread and milk until my brother j comes. " ; "I am a thousand times obliged to you, said the stranger, "and the bread and milk will taste delicious after my long walk. But I do not know what leads you to think that I am a victim to vario loid. I have lost my hat in the wind, to be sure, and am compelled to wear this Syrian-looking drapery on my head, but I never had smallpox, and hope never to encounter its horrors." Kate Duer turned red first, then pale. "Then," said she, "if you are not the smallpox case, who are you ?" "I am Felix Aory," said the young stranger, "the chaplain of St. Lucetta's hospital in New York. I am to preach in aid of the home and mission on Sun day next." Kate Duer burst out laughing. 'And everyone has been mistaking you for the smallpox case!" said she. "Oh, Mr.. Amory, do come in. "How could we all have been so stupid ? But you see, the minute you began to speak of the hospital " "I dare say it was very awkward of me, ", said Mr. Amory. "But it's the way I have always mentioned myself to stran gers. St. Lucetta's, you know " "Yes I know," said Kate; "But to the good folks here, there is only one hospital in the world, and that is Pitcher ville Institute." Mr. Amory enjoyed his tea, sliced peaches, and delicate "angel cake" very much, as he sat tete-a-Ute with Kate Duer, by the soft light of the shaded lamp, while the rain pattered without. And when the doctor came in it was cosier yet. "'The smallpox caseF' said he. "Oh, that is safely isolated at : Hope's quarry since this morning. And doing very well, too, I am happy to say. Upon my word, Mr. Amory, I am sorry that you have had such a disastrous experience. "All's well that ends .well,' said the young clergyman,' leaning back in hif snug corner with an expression of inef fable content on his face ,' ? Miss Lydia Larkspur was quite indig nant when she-heard that Mr. Amory was staying at Dr. Duer's residence. . ; r "Just like Kate Duer," said she. Te manoeuvre to get that poor young mac into hef hands, after all. But if a mac rushes around the country, telling every body that he comes from a hospital, what can he expect?" j The most awkward thing I ever heard of in my life,' said Mrs. Primtexnps, vin dictirely. ! .But this was not Mr. Felix Amory'i last visit to Pitcherville. ; He came ir autumn when the leaves were red and then in the frozen beauty of winter. And . the last time, he nsked Kate Duer ' Hi she was willing to encounter the trials oi a minister's wife?" And Kate, after e little hesitation,, said she was willing tt try. :- : ;""- ; And Miss Lydia Larkspur declared thai "anyone could get married if they were as bold about it as Kate Duer.n v Homesickness t once knew a lonely young bride con Jemned to live alone. - She had married the man of her choice and loved him to adoration, but she told me that in the first year Of her marriage she was almost miserable. She had left a house full of bright, devoted sisters, where a stream of friends and cousins came and went all day, where talk and laughter made the week one long sunbeam; and after a short honeymoon was over she was trans planted to a lonely country village, in the suburbs of a large town, in which her husband spent the day at his office. She had scarcely any friends with whom to interchange a word, a churchyard bounded her garden, and the passing bell, s it tolled dismally out, was the snly sound which broke the long, terrible stillness; and the contrast of the full, gay life, which had made her twenty summers so happy, with the mis erable, lonely hours she spent now, used to come upon her with such force of homt 3ickness that she lay helplessly crying day attcr day, and when the young hus band returned in the evening, expecting Lo find the liveliest and brightest of wives and thinking, as most men in their convenient .consideration do, that a woman must be perfectly happy in a home of her own instead he found a iimp and doleful creature, worn out from many tears and ready to throw herself into his arms and shed a few more from heer weakness. It is is not the gently nurtured or the weakly temperaments alone to whom this subtile disease .comes. Strong men, of herculean frame, have been shaken by it; peasants with little refinement, and seemingly less feeling, have trembled in its grasp; adventurers, men whose lives have proved a failure, those black sheep found ender every clime, reckless, careless, '.ardened, have "sickened of this vague disease," and longed, and agonized, and prayed for one glimpse of the old coun try to greet their dying eyes, one breatL rom some breezy upland, one waft frorr some flowing river to cool their feverer" brow. Some, aye many headstones there are in every continent and colony in this wide world with only rudely carved initials to mark their identity ; some little mounds without any headstone at all; ;ut if the green grass or stately palm growing over them could speak they rould tell sad tales of the pining away of many a brave young life, and nobody knew but God and themselves that the breath which had blasted them was the deadly one of nostalgia (homesickness). 'All the Tear Hound. In the "Hornets' Nest" at Shiloh. From Colonel Lockett's article accom panying General Buell's account of Shiloh in the Century we take the following: , I witnessed the various bloody- and un successful attacks on the "hornets' nest. " During one of the dreadful repulses oi our forces, General Bragg directed me to ride forward to the central regiment of a brigade of troops that was recoiling across-n open field, to-take its colors and carry them forward." " The flag must not go again," he said. Obeying the order, I dashed through the line of battle, seized the- colors from the color-bearer, and said to him : General Bragg says these colors musi not go to the rear. " While talking to him the color-sergeant was shot down. A moment or two afterward I was almost alone on horse back in the open field between the two lines of battle. An officer came up to me with a bullet-hole in each cheek, the blood streaming from his mouth, and asked : "What are you doing with my colors, sir?" "I am obeying General Bragg's orders, sir, to -hold them where they are," was my reply. "Let me have them," he said. "If any man but my color-bearer carries these colors, I am the man. Tell General Bragg I will see that these colors are in the right place. But he must attack this position in flank ; we can never carry it alone from the front." It was Colonel Allen, afterward Gov- ernor Allen, of Louisiana. I returned, miraculously preserved, to General Bragg, and reported Colonel Allen's words. I then carried an order to the same troops, giving the .order, I think, to General Gibson, to fall back to the fence in the rear and reorganize. This was done, and then General Bragg dispatched me to the right and Colonel Frank Gardner (afterward major-general) to the left to inform ; the . brigade andx division com manders on- either side that a combined movement would be made on the front and flank of that position..'' The move ments were made and Prentiss was cap tured.' ;' ' -During 1885 Maine manufactories pro duced 9,548 tons of starch, using 2,340, 000 bushels of potatoes.. A Famoss Mare. A Goshen (N; ,Y.) correspondent writes : In the deatH of the mare known as the "Big-Kneed jfare, her owner loses one of the most unprepossessing pieces of horseflesh that ever lived but one that raised him from penury to' the enjoyment of a competence. She was1 the property of .Her. Mr. Scutt, of RidgeJ bury. In 1872 he was pastor of ths Methodist church of that place. He was great lover and excellent judge of horses, but was too poor to indulge his likings in that line. He owned a . black mare which, beside a general uncouth appearance, was disfigured by a knee which was swollen to three times its natural size. Dominie Scutt could not be shaken in his opinion and belief that the ungainly mare came from the best kind of stock, ne went so far as to claim her as a lineal descendant of the Mulbee bdrse, out of a . dand sire'd by Abdallah. It was his ambition to have a colt out of her by some good horse. He bred her in 1873 to J.' H. Wood's cele brated horse Knickerbocker, but about the time the colt was foaled the dominie was prostrated by. paralysis, and he was unable to pay Wood for the service of his horse. Wood canceled the debt and gave Scutt flOO for the colt. He sold the colt to a Georgian for a big price, as a one-year-old, and it turned out a fast one. Its traits and points went far to prove the correctness of the pedigree Scutt claimed for his big-kneed mare. Since then the mare has been bred six times to Knickerbocker. The second colt has yielded Scutt about $8,000 in two yearsirvthe stud. The third colt he traded for a farm near Binghamton, part of which he has since sold for $3,500, and the remainder he refused $12,000 for. He owns the third, fourth, and fifth colt. He values them at $1,000 each. The sixth is one year old, and promises to be a valuable animal. The big-kneed mare was twenty-one years old. How Fashion Plates are Made. Did it ever occur to you when looking at a fashion plate of men's deess, asks an exchange, who it is that establishes these fashions? Each year we are obliged to wear larger or smaller trousers, shorter or longer frock coats, close-fitting or loosely flowing overcoats, wide or narrow col Iars;in short, there are more or less modi fications which, if we wish to be in fash ion, oblige us to consult the tailor. A French paper has just revealed to the world how all these changes in men's dress are made law, and why it is that all the tailors are agreed upon the new styles. In Paris all the lcadingt tailors belong to a society which has for its ob ject the relief of its members who are ill or unfortunate. This society has mem bers not only in Faance, but in all the capitals of the world where the European styles of dress is worn. " Its resources come from the sale of its fashion plates to its members. Here is how this plate is made : Each year the society names a committee pi eleven members, which prepares provis ional sketches. When the president of the committee has collected a dozen de signs representing the different parts of the masculine dress, he submits the re sult of his researches to his colleagues. They discuss the proposed models, and suggest changes, if need be. These changes are immediately made by a de signer, who is present at the discussion, and then the modified models are put to vote, adopted, and the engraving is made and sent out over the world. The Paris tailors enter into competition with the English tailors, for there are many Frenchmen who think it is the correct thing to be dressed a l'Anglaise. For a long time the English cloths, by the originality of the designs, superiority ol make and cheapness, have done much harm to French fabrics, but latterly the manufacturers have been making strong efforts to oust their competors from th. market, and have in part succeeded. A Curious Custom. The coast of Portugal is defended from invasion by forts of castellated form set along the shores wherever a landing might seem convenient, or where an important point had to be protected. Most of these strong places date from before the intro duction of gunpowder, and were after ward restored and receive 1 their present extremely picturesque form long before guns and gunnery practice had obtained modern perfection. One of the largest and strongest is the Castle of Foz, at tl entrance of the River j Douro. It is w 3uch an important position that at one time it mounted at least fifty .guns though probably little more than toys, if we judge by the size of embrasures. A curious old custom is still kept up of firing at vessels which try to pass the bar without a pilot or when the red flag is not flying at the fort. Luckily blank cartridges are used in modern times. The first gun is fired when the vessel is out side the bar, and if it at once turns and gives up its attempt to get in, it is fined only a small sum. However, if it con tinues its efforts the gun is loaded and fired again and again as quickly as possi ble during its passage,, and for every dis charge another fine is imposed on the ship. A skillfully handled ship escapes without heavy fines, but a badly managed vessel has to pay dearly; or, in other words, the greater danger they have risked the greater the fine demanded in punishment. Art Journal. Tie invention of the type-writer dates as far ba,k as 1714, when one Henry Mill obtained in England a patent for a device that, "writes in printed characters, one at a time and one after another," but it is was not until 1867 that it was im proved so as to work satisfactorily. lie Leads Us On He leads us on By paths we did not know. . Upward He leads us, though Our steps M slow, Though oft we faint and falter on the way, Though storms and darkness oft obscure the da,!. Yet when thw clouds are gone We know He leads us 0. He leads us on Through all the unquiet yean; . . Fast au our dreamland hopes and doubts and fears ' He guides our steps. Through all the tangled maze Of sin, of sorrow, and o'erclouded days We know His will is done; And still He leads us on. And He, at last,. After the weary strife. After the restless fever we call life, After the dreariness, the aching pain. The wayward struggles which have proved in vain. After our toils are past, Will give us rest at last Golden Hours. RELIGIOUS READING. There is no Use in putting up the motto, "God bless our home," if the father is a rough old bear, and the spirit of discourtesy and rudeness is taught -by the parents to the children, and by the older to the youngef . There is no us'e in putting up a motto, "The Lord will pro vide," while the father is shiftless, the mother is shiftless, the boys refuse to work, and the girls busy themselves over gewgaws and finery. There is no use in putting up the motto, "The greatest of these is charity," while the tongue of the backbiter wags in that family, and silly gossip is dispensed at the tea-table. There is no use in placing up conspicuously the motto, "The liberal man deviseth liberal things," while the money chinks in the pockets of "the hca'"! of the household," groaning to get out to see the light of day, and there are dollars and dimes for wines and tobacco and other luxuries, but positively not one cent for the church. In how many homes are these mottoes standing let us say hanging sarcasms, which serve only to point a jest and adorn a satire? The beauty of quiet lives, of trustful, hope ful, free-handed, free-hearted, charitable lives is one of surpassing loveliness, and those lives shed their own incomparable fragrance, and the world knows where to find them. And they shall remain fresh and fadeless when the colors of pigment and the worsted and the floss have faded, and the frames have rotted away in their joints. "Iff RiMma, are Ton a Chrlfttlant'' While holding meetings in an opera house in a Western city, I asked all the children who believed that they were Christians, and who had the evidence of it (I showed them what that evidence was), to hold up their hands. With many others a beautiful little girl sitting by her mother with a smile upon her face, held up her hand. I then asked this question I think the Holy Spirit led me do do it "How many of your parents are alive to the love of Jesus? Were they and you to die today would you meet them in Heaven ?" That little girl quietly turned to her mother, and said, "Shall I hold up my hand mama? Are you a Christian?" "No, I am not a Christian. Do not hold up your hand!" The child burst into tears saying: "Mamma, I do not want to go to heaven if you are not to be there!" The weeping mother said to me in the inquiry-meeting : ' 'My child's words have broken my heart ! O what '.shall I do to be saved? My darling child is on the way to heaven, and I am notl" I told her how she, too, could be '.node "alive untCv God ;" how he who raised Lazarus to life, and who died on the cross for us, could save her if she would only trust Him. We prayed together, and I could but hope that she was led to see how God, for Christ's sake, who suffered so much for us, could forgive her all her sins, and make her a living, happy Chris tian, like her beautiful little daughter. E. P. Hammond, in tioanQelist. Live an Vbu Teach. The Rev. J. F. Sergeant, writes an ar ticle to the Loudon Sabbath School Teach er upon the importance of following up the teachings of the lips by the teach ings of the life. He says : "I do not say to you that you should study appearances and carefully guard against being accounted as a hypocrite. I say rather that you should study reali ties, and seek to be everywhere and at all times a real and attractive disciple. If you arc addicted to the pleasures of the table, or irritable and cantankerous at your home, or if you are vain in dress or person, or hard or unfair in your money dealings, or vindictive and fierce in your behaviour to your friends, it will all come out, and every scholar connected with you will quietly apply to you the proverb, "Physician, heal thyself.' "I knew a teacher, wealthy and tal ented. His fault was that he was too eager for money, and it was the less ex cusable as he had no family for whom he needed to lay by. A blight seemed to rest upon his work, and when at last he invested a considerable sum in purchas ing a public house, property which was of a very low character morally, but which yielded a good return for his money, his influence sank down to an utter cipher. I shall never forget the contempt with which one of his scholars spoke to me about him. Had he been an avowed man of the world there would have been nothing in him to be despised. But his professed aims and hopes were higher than those of the worldling, and it was humbling to him to be looking for an increase to his gains in the gutters of excess and vice. 'Perhaps he meant to improve the public houses by introducing better tenants, and checking all bad lan guage and bad habits.' Thank you dear reader for that kindly surmise. Perhaps ! he did ; but perhaps he didn't. I dare say, however, he meant it. The devil will not in the least object to a man meaning well if he will stop there. "I know this much, that the respect of a circle of intelligent lads who gather around us to listen to what we can tell them of God and righteousness, is worth more than interest at ten per cent, upon money investments. Pity that this good man did not know it to. I If however, evil example tells, so does good. ine iragrance 01 we ointment will make itself known. All upright, loving, generous men speak in his very actions." ' Sands that have been accumulating for centuries from the surrounding desert are being removed from the base of the Sphinx, and when the work is completed a high wall will be erected to keep out future encroachments, r - life Studies, fcy Ugf Brows. The violin that is kept constantly ia tune will lose in tone. There is not much difference between careless extravagance and a hole in the pocket. "Heaven Revealed" is the title of ft Work recently issued. Another cook book, most likely. It ii better for the generaf health of community to hare one good-nt tared man in a neighborhood than four doc tors. ' The parent who never tells a child that he loves it except when about to give it good licking makes a terrible mistake. Some people go on the principle that the best discipline for a boy is to find out what he doesn't like, and then give him oceans of thst very thing. In every life there comes a time when hope is crushed, but the man with a healthy liver and a shirt that doesn't pitch in the neck, seldom gets discour aged. The average man goes about some things with as much awe as an old maid would handle a razor. Coming in from the lodge at 2 a. m., for instance. A stove manufacturer has come to the conclusion, after trying several methods, that the best way to create draught is to go into the back yard and sift ashes. It may be that one reason why woman gentle being with Beraphic eyes and-quick-moving chin is so frequently . pointed in her remarks, is because she is so generally given to carrying pins in her mouth. ' Love is said to be the motive power of the world, and yet fifty-six women out of every ninety-two will , stick to it that a well-seasoned broom-handle is more reli able than general suasion for immediate results. A shrub has been discovered in Colum bia which exudes a juice that will stop the flow of blood almost instantly, no matter how severe the wound. A bottle of it. ought to be carried in the- coat-tail pocket of every man who has a fashion of poking his nose into other people's -business. Some folks claim that there is no evil that is not followed by an overplus com pensating good. At Pueblo, Col., a cat and dog, which had been playing with some clothing belonging to a child that had been taken with scarlet fever, both took the disease and died. Discouraged people who have lost faith in boot-jacks should paste this in their hats. Chicago Ledger. 1 State Laws and Marriage Licensee. Wc have taken the pains to look ujp the laws on marriage licenses in all thf States of the Union and give the whole subject, as learned from the latest acces sible authorities, in brief summary. The States which require licenses arq: Ala bama, Connecticut, Florida, Georgia. Illinois. Iowh, Louisiana, Maryland, Mas sachutts, Michigan, Missouri, Mississip pi, North Carolina, Nebraska, ' South Carolina, Tennessee, Texa, Virginia, and West Virginia. In the following Statef no license is. required, but the ministei or magistrate who , performs the cere mony is obliged to see that the marriagt certificate is duly entered on the town 01 county records: Arkansia, California. Colorado, Indiana, Kansas, New Jersey. New York, Nevada, Oregon, Pcnnsylva nia, and Rhode Island. In Minnesota and Wisconsin, when application is made for marriage without a license, the person solemnizing it must examine one or both parties on oath before the ceremony as to whether the proposed union is legal. In Delaware, Maine and Ohio, choice is permitted betweel a license and thof Yuca'wl,V of the bans in church. Is Veimont one publication in town meet ing or church will serve as a substitute for a license; in Kentucky a publication filed" in the county clerk's office wil suffice; while in New Hampshire the in . tention to marry must be published ai . three town meetings or religious gather ings, and the certificate of the towi clerk of such publication is the license The laws of the States differ somewhal" as to the officer issuing the license. It. Alabama and Nebraska it is issued. by the judge of probate; in Ohio by th county clerk or clerk of probate ir Texas by the last named officer; a Georgia by the county ordinary; ir Louisiana by the parish judge; in Mary land by the clerk, and in Mississippi b; the registrar of the orphans court; ii North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennes see, Virginia, and West Virginia by as officer of the county court, 'judge 01 . clerk, and in all the other States -by the town or county clerk, In all the Statef it is necessary to have the certificate re turned to the proper county official, the recorder, clerk, or officf of the court, U be duly entered on the county records. In Kentucky and New York there is registrar of births, marriages, and deaths, who perform this duty. Chicago Inter Ocean. . Dying of Starvation A leading physician says that a patient who is lying dying of exhaustion is gen erally dying of starvation." We "give him beef-tea, calTs-foot jelly, seltzer and milk that is, a small quantity of the sugar of milk and some fat ; but the jelly is the poorest sort of food and the beef tea is a mere stimulant. The popular belief that beef -tea contains "the very strength of the meat" is a terrible erroi it has no food value. What an enigma is man! What strange, chaotic and contradictory being I Judge of all things, feeble earth-worm, depository of the truth, mass of.uncer-. ainty, glory and butt of the universe, in comprehenaMe monster! .