I ) R h. COWAN, Editor and Proprietor. "Wo froudly call ours a Govemment by tho People. Cleveland. TERMS: S2.00 Por Year. VOL. II. NO. 47J WAt)EfeBOftO, N. C, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 188(5. Anson Tiaoag. Terms:"Caih in Ad-vaxxoe One Tear - $3.00 Six Months ..... fLOO .' Three Months - 50 ADTEETISING BATES. One squaw, first Insertion $1.00 Each subsequent Insertion -60 Local advertisements, per Una - - 10 gy-Special rates giTen on applicatlo for i uSr time. Advertisers are requested to bring In their advertisements on Monday evening of each v?k, to insure insertion in next issue. PROFESSIONAL CARDS. John D. Pemberton. ATTORNEY AT LAW, WADESBORO, N. C. Practice in tho State and Federa Courts. JAMES i LOCKHART. Attorney and Counsellor at Law, "WADESBORO. N. C. f3T Practice at all the Courts of the States l:. LITTLE. W. L. PARSONS LITTLE & PARSONS, ATTORNEYS A.T LjkW, WADESBORO, N. C. Collections Promptly Attended to. II. H. DePew ID E NT I S T, WADESBORO, N. C. Office over G. W. Huntley's Store. All Work Warranted. May 14, 3 tf. ' . BR. D. B. FRONTIS, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON i iflVrs his Professional Services to the citizens t W :i' It-;-! ro aiiil surrounding country. Of- V B. Huntley, M. D. J. T. J. Battle, M. D Drs. Hunt ley A. Battle, PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS Wadesboro, N C ' ." next to Rank May 7 tf I. II. II OR TON, JEWELER, WADF.KBOIIO, N. C. I ' .tUnr m Watches. Clocks, Jewelry, Musical Instrument?. Breech and' Muzzle Loading H:.'f Huns, Bistols, &c. s Anson Institute, WADESBORO, N. C. D. A. MCGREGOR, PRINCIPAL J. Bl KNETT, A. B. .!. W. Kilgo, A. B. Assistants. Mis3I. L. McCorkle, ) ': The Tpring Term begins Monday, Jan i.,iy 11th, 18S6. Tcition In Literary Department, $2, $3 itid 1 per month. Instrumental Music, f4 per month. Vocal Music, $4 per month. Use of piano for practice 50 cents per month. -Board, 10 per month. Contingent fee, $1 per year. For Catalogue apply to the Principal Morven Iligli School, 3IORVEX, TV. C. JAMES VY. KILGO, A. B., Principal. The Fall Session begins on the 3d of A unjust 1SS5, and runs through five months. TUITION, PER MONTH. I'rimary, intermediate, Advanced $2.00 2.50 a 00 Board from $8 TO $10 per montli For further particulars address the Prin- ' ipal. WI i MUER, MCXrFACTURER AND DEALER HT Stira- Tin-ware, Sheet-Iron AND HOLLOW WARE. VJ ADESBORO, N. C. HOTELS. When you go to Charlotte be sure to call on S. M. TIM HONS, FOR Fine Mountain Whiskies IN THE Old Charlotte Hotel CHARLOTTE, N. C. YARBROUGH HOUSE, , RALEIGH, N. C. fRES REDUCED TO SUIT THE TIMES CALL AND SEE U& tKt Winds. The North wind' howling; legions Swept down from boreal regions, From the pallid zone where winter's throne Was wrought in the wide wa w, wan a-d lone, Uunutnbred years ago; They come 'on wings whose fluttering Bestrew the world with snow, And their icy breath is I itter death. Their footfall only woe. Th East wind comes with sadness. And pain, and midnight maices?, From a solitude where curses brood And poisoned dews on the dales are strewed. And sorrow throttles gladne s; It comes like a gho;t from spe.tral coast Where cypress branches ware, And out of its plumes fall ghastly glooms Like those that encircle the grave. The South wind comes a-sighing, To buds and blooms replying, Ho comes in quest of lore and rest, And presently, on a rose's breast. In rapture lies a-d ing; He comes like dreams, and only seems, His cradle is his tomb; His life is a song to murmuring streants. His death a rich perfume. The zephyr, fragrance laden, Brings balm to man and maiden Brings dove-eyed rest to the troubled breast Prom the mystical regions of the. West From love's enchanted Aiden; It comes with news as fresh as the dews , That gather in starry hours, With wonderful store of tender lore. From the sweet book of the flowers. -George K. Camjt. ATTACKED BY PIRATES. James Torrence was a foremost hand on the Eritish bark Huntress, and oue morning in the seventies we left Singa pore, bound to the South by way of the Straits of Sunda. "We had sixteen hands on the bark, and for armament we had a nine-pounder mounted on a carriage and a good supply of muskets and pikes. All of the seas to the north of Australia are suspicious waters for an hone. t ship. Pirates have abounded th.ere ever since ships began to sail, and I'm t hink'ng it will be long before the business is wiped out. 1 here are hundreds of islands in the Java and Banda Seas, and cae'.i one of them offers a secure headquarters for a gang ' of native pirates. They are not as bold as before the government cruisers got or ders to patrol those waters, and sink every craft which could not show honest papers; but they are there still, and the temptations are too great to expect they can ever be entirely suppressed. On our way up, when off the Red Islands, on the northwestern coast of Sumatra, we over hauled an Italian brig called the Cam pello. She was stripped of sails, cordage and most of her cargo, and had been set fire to and scuttled. For some reason the flames died out, and the water came in so slowly that she was floated six hours after, the pirates abandoned h?r. Our mate was sent off to board her, and he found a shocking slate of affairs. She had been laid aboard without resistance by two native boats, armed only with muskets and pistol The crew had at once been made prisoners, ad set to work to strip the ship and hoist out such cargo as the pirates coveted. She was run in behind one of the is'ands and anchored, and for three days and nicrhts the pirates were ! hard at work on he". Fach man of the i " j crew worked under a guard durinjr the j day. an i at night Captain and all were j secured in the forecastle. Te crew ' numbered fourteen. ; Toward even'n of the third day the j pirates had secured all their plunder. Scv ! evcral native crafts had been loaded ani i sailed up the cast to some rendezvous, j and only one remained to take on the last i of the plunder. As no actual violence had been oTered Captain or crew during the three days, there was hope thnt the pirates v o Id go away and leave them in possession of the robbed and dismantled brig. Just vvhat shift they wou'd have made in this case I cannot say, for the craft was left without sail, rope, block or provisions." About 4 o'clock in ihe aft moon the crew were ordered forward, while the natives collected aft, and at a given signal f re was opened on the .de fenceless men. To their credit let it be recorded that they seized whatever woap- i ons they cou'.d lay hands on and dashed at the pira'cs, but it was simply to die like brave u'en. Iu ten micu'es the last one was shot down. The pirates then raised the anchor and got it into their boat, bored holes in the ship's bottom, and started a fire in the hold amidships. The information I have given you came from a little chap on board who was making his first voyage as an apprentice. He was. if I'remcmbcr right, only thirteen years old. On the morning of the third day he managed to hide among the cargo, and the pirate? completed their work and sent the hulk drifting out to sea without having missed him. He was on deck to catch the painter of the mate's boat when she drew alongside, and to one of our crew who could speak Italian he gave thq story as straight as the Captain could have talked. We reported the affair, at Singapore, and a British gunboat, was sent off to in vestigate. She returned before we had completed our loading, and reported that she had made no discoveries It was a warning for our Captain, and he wisely determined to heed it. We took on shell and grape for our cannon, a dozen revolvers. were purchased for the crew, and on the very 'day wc left, Ihe Captain brought ob: ard two very heavy rifles5 which he had picked up somewhere at a bargain. . I call them rifles, but they were young cannon, carrying a three ounce ball, with powder enough behind it to kick the marksman half way across tie ship. -We left Singaporeas well pre pared as a m reliant vessel could be, and it eems that the Captain was advised to bear well up toward Uorri30, and givf t!. Red Island) n wide berth. W ciossel the equator at least a hundred miles to the east of t ie. islands, at I over heard the Captain s.y. md then niterec our cour. to the soutlnist, ca'c dating to pa83 'to the east, of Uiliton Island be 'ore bnuling away for Sunda Strait. The bark male good weather of it, a d ne hal crossed tee juator and run own on the new cojrsc until Eiliton iniht hive been sighted from the mast head, when the c cams a calm. Tht w'nd had died away about midforenoon, and the drift of the bark was 'to tht norlh. We looked for a change at sun vet, but nothing came, and the night passed without wind enough to move a feather. My watch was below when day light c ame, and v c got the word to turn ip lively. To the Northeast, off the coast of Borneo, two or three green Islands were in eight, and between us and the islands were two native craft bearing down upon us. These craft were about the size of pilot boats, half decked over, and rigged like a catboat. They had been sighted when six or 6even miles away, and as my watch came on deck the mate descended from the perch aloft, where he had bsen using the glass, and reported to the captain that the craft were approaching us by the use of sweeps. The calm still held, but it was clear enough to a sailor's eye that we should have a breeze as soon as the sun began to climb up. No man asked himself the errand of those boats making out for the Huntress. At that time and locality there could be but one answer. The Captain presently called us aft and said : "Men, the craft which you see pulling out for us are pirates. We shall have a breeze within an hour, but they will be here fi 1 t If we cannot beat them off, we are dead men. They take no prisoners. I look to see every man do his duty." We gave him a cheer, and began our preparations. The cook was ordered to Ell his coppers fujl of water and start a rousing tire, and the arms w re brought up and served out. There were three or four men who had served at a heavy gun, and these took charge of the cannon, and the piece was loaded with a shell. When the Captain called for some one to use the rifles, the only man who answered was an American. He took them aft, loaded them with his own hands, and by the time the pirates wero within, a mile we were as ready as we could be. The bark was lying with her head to the east, and the fellows were approaching us from the north, on our broadside. The mate kept his glass going and announced that both craft were crowded with men, but that he could see no cannon. They made slow progress, and we were impatient to open the fight. By and by, when they might have been three-quarters of a mile away, the Captain passed word for the gunners to send them a shot. In a few seconds the big gun roared, and we all saw that the shell flew over the pirates and burst in the air. It was a good line shot and something to encourage, but .before the 1 cannon sent another shot the American ! had a try with one of the rifles. The 1 mate was watching his shot from the 1 rigging, and the report had scarcely died awav before he shouted : "Good for the Yankee! He hit at least a couple of them." The second shell from the cannon burst over one of the boats and took effect on some of the men, as reported by the mate. The American then fired again, and again his bullet told. We were doing bravely and were full of enthusiasm, but the struggle was yet to come. The fel lows bent their energies to creeping closer, and pretty soon they opened on us with musketry, and the balls began to sing through the rigging in a lively man ner. . We had our musdets ready, but the Captain ordered us to hold our fire and keep sheltered behind the rail. One of the piratical craft was a quarter of a piratical craft was a quarter mile in advance of the other, and the third shell from the cannon burst aboard of her, and must have killed and wounded a dozen or more men. There was great confusion aboard, and she re mained stationary until the other craft came up. During this interval the Ameri can got in two more shots, which found victims. We now looked upon the vic tory as assured, and there was . cheering from one end of the ship to the other. We were a little ahead of time. The third shot from our big gun burst it, and al though no one was hurt, we were thus deprived of a great advantage. As soon as the Captain knew what had J happened, be called upon all the crow to shelter themselves and wait to fire at close quarters. One man was detailed to assist the, cook with the hot water, and powder and bullets were placed handy for reloading the muskets. I was sta tioned near the gun carriage, and I no ticed several shells lying about under foot. The American kept firing away with the rifles, knocking orer a pirate at every shot, and pretty soon the two craft were near enough for us to open fire with the muskets. I presume we wasted a good many shots, for we were green hands and greatly excited, butJL j am likewise certain that we also did j great execution. We had a plunging j fire down upon a mass of half-naked fel- j lows, and we must have weeded out a j full third of them. There was no air stirring, and the smoke soon grew thick about us. . By and by the shouts and veils of the pirates sounded close at hand, and their craft were laid alongside and they began climbing the rail. We now flung down the muskets and used the re volvers and pikes. When the revolvers . were empty we used capstan bars, clubbed -muskets, or whatever we could lay hands upon. Our rail was clear in half a minute, and then I picked up a shell and a burning wad and ran forward. A dozen natives had gained the bow and were pushing our men back. I lighted the fuse and gave the shell a roll along the deck into the crowd, and I give you my word that not one of them was left alive after the explosion.- One of our men on the quarter threw a second shell, and I brought the third one and threw it from the bow. The fight was ended. A bit of wind blew the smoke away, and we looked down upon a terrible sight. The boats seemed full of dead and wounded, the living sought shelter under the half decks. Why, there were bodies without heads, heads without bodies, and arms and legs and pieces of bloody meat enough to make the bravest turn pale. Aa we j cut their lashings they drifted off, and j the Ameiican with his big rifles, and two j or three of the men with muskets, kept ( up a fire on every thing that moved. Prcs- j cntly the breeze came up, and as we made j ?ail and cot tho bark where we could handle her we ran down for the dhows. : 1 They were light built, and it needed only a fair blow to crush them. The first j ono'wc struck on her starboard quarter, and, although the bark glanced off, we ; crushed-in her t'mbers, and she filled and , went down inside of five minutes. There were about twenty living men on the other, and ai we bore down for her at j a good pace they uttered shouts of terror and made Bigns of surrender. Our Cap tain Lad no'mcrcy for them. Wc put the ship right at the dhow's broadside, and we cut her square in two and rolled the bow one way and the stern the other, vhile the living, wounded, and dead went into the sea together. New York Sun - A Rich Editor's Stables. The stables belonging to George W. Childs,' proprietor of the Philadelphia Ledger, arc described by the Philadelphi? Vcw as folow3 : "A merciful man is merciful to h'v. beast." Mr. Childs is a merciful man. That goes without saying, but I will sa it nevertheless. His stable is larg-, f.n: and fitted with every comfort for horse and convenience for attendants. It ha! none of the brass mounted frippery 01 nonsense that mr.d; me think, when I visited Frank Work's equine palace ir New York, that there cught to be a lavs lo prevent men wasting money in such a manner. Mr. Childs's stable is not onlj comfortable and convenient, but it is also architectually beautiful and in harmony w-ith the house of which it is so neces sary an adjunct. The stable for his Jcrs?3 cows is plain, but fitted with every com fort desirable for the. beautiful animals. What a blessing it would be if all dairy men were to have their kine as clean and as well kept as his are. There is plcntj of running water at Wootton. "A little creek is being trained at present to run with multifarious waterfalls. Its water is utilized in many ways and cools the milk j jn tne ffi03t perfect spring-house I evei 5aw The trough in which the watei runs around the milk vessels is of whit glazed tile, and the water flows through ,it as clear as crystal. The interior ol the building itself is of white flint, ami I never saw anything cleaner or sweetci locking. The Bee's Sting. The hive and its inmates afford, per- : haps, a more interesting field for micro- j scopic research than anything else in the j whole insect kingdom. Take the bee's j sting; why, that alone might occupy all j the rest of this paper. The sheath makes the first wound, and, inside it, so man aged that they inclo3e a tube-like space down which the poison runs, are two darts, all built in such a strictly mechan ical way that Mr. Cheshire says they remind him of the guide rods of a steam engine. The poison is gummy, but it is prevented from clogging the machine by a gland which secretes a lubricating ! oil. Th3 queen's sting is bigger than the workers7 drones nave none duui is pract cally barb!ess, and can therefore be easilv brouerht awav instead of tfeing left in the wound md thereby causing the death of its precious owner. It is a formidable weaDon. the sheath so hard that it turns the finest razor-edge ; but a queen never stings except in contest with another queen ; she may be handled with impunity. Of the worker it is a mis take to say that it always leaves its sting in the wound, and dies from the loss. If it generally does so, the fault often lies iu your impatience; bear it like a hero, and the bee will work its sting round and round till it is able to with draw it without impediment. Of course you get pierced deeper and deeper, but then, consider, the creature's life is saved by your suffering. A 11 the Tear Bonn I . History of Caffes. It was somewhat singular to trace the ; manner in which arose the now common manner in which arose tne now commuu , beverage of coffee, without which few! f : i.ir fiw .iiirfd ! persons, iu any iumi ui iuuj coun try in the world, make breakfast, be time Columbus discovered Amer- At the time Columbus ica it had never been known or used. It grew only in Arabia and Upper Ethiop'a. The discovery of its use as a. beverage is ascribed to the superior of a monastery in Arabia, who, desirous of preventing the monks from sleeping at their noc turnal services, made them driuk the in fusion of coffee upon the reports of shep herds, who observed that their flocks were more lively after browsing on the fruit of that p'.ant. Its reputation spread through the adjacent countries, and in 200 years it reached Paris. A single plant, brought there in 1814, became the parent stock of French coffee plantations in the West Indies. The Dutch intro duced it into Java and the East Indies. The extent of the consumption now can hardly be rcalizccL, BENNETT AND GREELEY. The Two Great XewYork editors In a Rage. From an interesting article on New York journalism of a past era, written by Hugh Fnrrnr McDermott for the World, wj make the following extracts: Tied Wilkms dil the drama ana opera inthosadays for the (I.rad. Alboni was singing at th Academy of Music. Before going to ! the Acidemy Ned thought he would take in Pfaffs on the way. He did, and he took in hot whis kies with Halleck and the gay company. Before losing his senses he called for a newspaper and looked over the cast oi the opera. Then he dashed off a criti cism of many pages, cailed a waiter, gave him a dollar and told him to hurry at once to the He a7d office with the critique. There were no messenger boys then Nxxt day all the morning papers save the Herald had a couple of lines each stating that there was no perfor mance at the Acad ?my owing to a sud den indisposition of Alboni. Old Mr. Bennett did not seethe statement. Bat he did see, on the following day, very funny articles in the Times and Tribune on the HernWa blunder. They main tained that that was on a par with the Herald's claimed correspondence from Thebes, Damascus, Bagdad and Jerusa- lenr. Bennett was will. Tho joke went ovWthe country. Nearly every paper had a slap at Eeonett. As he read them day after day he would jump from his chair and tear through the office, shout ing in his broad Scotch accent: "Oh, the dom fool? Where is he? Where is he'f" But Fred Hudson gave Ned the hint that Old Sandy was in a towjiing passion, : and, like a discreet young man, he did not put in an appearance, except to draw , his alary of $35 a week, for two ; weeks. Just as old Sandy's wrath had cooled and Ned was once more in favor a bad error occurred in one of Mr. Ben nett's editorials. In those days many of the regular hands in the composing-room i put on substitutes on Sunday. Those substitutes were- and are now called : "subs" for short. Mr. Bennettv had ' written for Monday's paper an editorial about "the Spanish Government, and ; he abridged the word government "govt," believing, of course, that the j printer had sense enough to spell it out. j But a "sub" got hold of the copy, and 1 the proofreader that night was in a I maudlin state. The "sub" set it up the : '-Spanish goat" in every instance, and so ' it appear to Old Sandy's astonished gaze the following morning. Then there was 1 music in the Herald office. Bennett could eat no breakfast. He came with ' the sbeed of a crazed and ruined man a from Mount Washington to the office. i He glared at Hudson. He asked for j Bill Smythe, the foreman of the composing-room. He wanted to know if every - ' body in the building and about the building was a "dom fool!" i "It's a 'sub's' blunder," said Fred ; Hudson. "It's a 'sub's' error," said Bill Smythe. "What's a 'sob?; shouted Mr. Bciyutt.- "Dom the 'sob!' Is it a mule or a luna: j tic?" "Sob" was explained to him. and as 1 he was leaving in despair he met a young man on the stairway smoking a cigar." "Don't you know," thundered Bcn ; nett,"that it's against the rules to smbke ! in this building?" i "No,-sir, I do not," answered the I smoker with fear and trembling. "Then who are you, and what dc ou want here?" asked Bennett, ready to pitch the smoker downstairs. "I'm only a 'sub,'" was the imploring answer. "Ho! ha? You're the dom 'sob' that's been making all the dom blonders! Go upstairs and get your pay and never come into this building again." Before reaching the foot of the stairs ! Mr. Bennett met Ned Wilkms going up j and whistling a lively air from the latest , opera. "Whistling, is it? for the misery you This is your sorrow have caused me! j You'll live on kale, Ned, two weeks j moie. Not a cent will you draw," and : the jrreat old man passed Ned all broke rsut r reel nuusuu salary all the same. ' i t-.i rr...i n.iH Nmi ina No more tender-hearted man than the elder Bennett ever lived. His fury was always over in a couple of hours and 'he had a fatherly liking for every employe of the Herald. Speaking of Bennett's anger by times, 1 may refer here to tnat oi norace vjiee- , ley. Greeley was a Donnybrook Fair Irishman through and through. He ripped and swore and tore like a mad bull when angry. His manuscript was execrable, and a "sub"' occasionally got hold of it. Greeley had written an ar ticle entitled "William H. Seward." A J'aiiV" nam hi Peter Hacker, fresh from - iT:Q tfco Third " Shgo, set tt up ."Richard he Third, and dashed away with great confii en ce, , - - - uii tauicauw. .v.-.. - from Shakespeare-" 'Tis true, 'tb pity; nitv "tift 'tis true." 1 He HgO genneman rushed ovei" to the philosopher, copy in hand, and triumphantly read "Its five ifs forty, it's forty it's five, and what the devil's that?" Then and th-re Greeley offered to pay Mr. Hackett's passage back to Ireland. On another occasion a "sub" 4t hold of Greeley's chirog raphv. H set up wagon with wo g's. Greeley marked one out. The."Kub" thought he knew more about spelling than the philosopher, an let Dotn g , a iCfiK" ttin go in. ureeiey ragcu. ' following day. The "sulf repnea tnat v,n he Went to school there were two g's in wagon. "Well," fad Greeley, in his piping! voice, "wagons were bigger then than they are now. H was k constant victim of indolent printers, wno Dorrowed f5 and 10 01 , him on all sorts of representations, but j t'n K Riwnfc in the Pewter Mur 01 ' Cobweb Hall. A few years before his ' . ..." .1 J death a sentimental lady wrote him, a-k-; ing him where she could get an auto- j graph of Edgar Allan Poe. The philoso- pher replied that she could procure that autograph for 30, as he held Poe's note for thit amount. Thoreau.ho was a weak imitation of Ralph Wald Emcr Sun, was also one of Greeley's mendi cants. . At a Fair in Savsy. CIcsj to the gendarmerie there stands a caravan, the portal of which is deco rated with a picture calculated to strik terror into the doughtiest heart. It 1 ep ic -ents a French sailor being leisurely ca'en up by a band of sivagc:-. Al though the luck'ess maiiuct is almost dismembered, the expression of his facj betokens an intense interest in the ulti mate fate of his own left leg, which is, to all appe irances literally a bone of cun tention between two of the bon vivant-s. A r.fl-tufftd cap and a striped jersey, lying nea''. would lead one to suppose that a belorci comrade is by this timo undergoing th? process of digestion. And abo-e all this is a richlv-emblazoned tcroll, which states . with pnrdon-vde tautology that for two sons a head the public can see the man-eating cannibal ; from Patngohia. The door ;s opened the clock strikes twelve and the booth is opened. In an iron cage is the savage, clad in little mere than a string of shells and an elaborate headdress. He is but small and, despite his du-,ky ?kin, is by no means so terrible as one m ght have expected. The proprietor of t'.i.; show is a voluble little Gascon, wi.o rapidly.' relates the history of the cannibal and the thrilling incidents of his capture. ! The story finished, the keeper cuts with . . T A f. I a snort swora some raw mcai i.mu .i joir.t and, unbolting the cage -door, flings it to the savage. The ktter'seizes it and tears :t it ravenously. The keeper Jurns away for a moment to relight his cigar e'.tc, when a wild shriek is heard and a n-encral stamncde commences. The Gas- o con, it seems, has omitted to bolt the j door, and the cannibal, h iving seized a : rigor of the upper motor muscles. 1 lie club which 'had hitherto been lying in I affection begins with a peculiar stiffness the corner of his case, has dashed out in the back part of the neck, rendering among the audience. Well might the j every sideward motion of the head pain women clasp their children and cry for j ful or even impossible; before long the aid. The proprietor, however, is equal ! cramp-like sensation extends to the spine ; to the cmcro-enev. Throwing hunsell before the savasre. h rlrivos him back, inch bv inch, to the i dim recesses of his lair. - The door is once morcbolted.and the keeper is ovcr- whelmed with gratitude and caporal ! the teeth led set as nrmiy as inosc oi a cigars. His heroism is the talk of the j powerful steel trap. The patient leans fair, and the beoth is. crammed all day j his head on his clutched fist, while long. The other " showmen, however, spasms of the neck inus- 1-s often beget a laugh incredulously. Every fair com-j sensation as if the hinge; of the jaw menees, they say, with a similarly tragic j bones were mechanically riveted, and occurrence, and they hint that Cheuzcl, j could bo moved only by a breaking force the "man eating cannible," is a verj I if not b; a miracle: Vet a steam bath, harmless native of the South Pacific or even a wet pack in sheets drenched Tnds with an unrequited attachment with warm water, is generally sufficient f:r the nitr faced ladv.and a pretty taste in the matter of .cntre -London iilotte. Human Interest in Animals. The interest which yearly increases in horses and other domesticated animals will be as much manifested as ever at the summer resorts. Although attended with much difficulty and annoyance, . people with ho.ses of th.ir own, used either for the saddle or driving, try in many in stances to have them removed to the sea- side or suburban places -where th-y make j tiie;r ionorest suburban ttay, in order that they may have the enjoyment of them. To a greater extent thi3 is the case with pet dogs, though many of the best summer hotels and boarding-houses ob iect to receiving them, and there is j hardly a hotel man who has not had to i meet and settle the difficult dog prob- lem; for while guests, as a rule, object to having miserable litue w nipper trotting and snarling around the passrges and seeing them, as sometimes happens, brought into the dining-room, there are many persons who th:nk so much of their pet bow-wows j that they will not go themselves where their canine darlings are refused. It is mainly in order to gratuy tnc i Cnn.nc. m Mm on'miii W'.'irin mat . uuiuau lutncoi. ah , i at so many places of summer resort special accommodations for horses other animals are being provided and fa cilities increased for having them con tribute to the amusement of the great crowds that congregate at these places. Philadelphia Timis. ' Queer Tavern. George Wickham, the brother of cx Mavor Wickham, who has just returned from Europe and dazzled the other dia mond merchants with the splendor of his importations, describes an eccentric establishment in Shoreditch, London, icnown as "Dirty Dick's." The original proprietor would not have the spiders disturbed nor the floor swept, and was I U1SLU . by ft chop : ( i Xew York. ! house m 1 names But he had other pe . , - . , cuuariues wmvu v. - ; successors. No person could be served r . - t vig tar Gn tnc same ua) . " i who triea to deceive the landlord by i,1k:n out and then coming back , " o . 1 through another door, with their coat collars turned up and their hats tipped over their eyes, discovered that the bar keeper was keen enough to detect them, and that the rule was inflexible. All j drinks were the same price. 1 or three- j pence you might, take a g.ass of ale, oi j in Gf brandy or of champagne. The a ; qUeer tavern in a street of London, which i a TVuvprv was the first i correspond i- j i place in wnicn cnampague wa j the glass. As patent corks were not yet invented, the cranky proprietor preferred to spoil a whole pint of the wine rather than viblate his own regulation about prices. New Tori Star. words of Wisdom. Jealousy is te apprehension rf su 'm Priority. t r t A l 1 ns love or an inings spnn-s iron. m love of ore. Who overcome by force hath oor- come but half his foe The flnest fruit cnrtn Q Id u to its Maker is a finished man. Good thoughts are no better tnan good j dreams, uules;.they are execute!. No rules can make ara'ability; our minds and apprehension; make that. All history is only the precepts of moral philosophy reduce 1 into examples. The innocence of the intention abates nothing of the mischief of tho examp'e. Malice and hatted are very fre'tting, and apt to make our minds sore and un easv. Mere beauty ever wao, and ever is, a'ld ever will be, but a secondary thkig, ex cept to fooK Though mcns"person ought n't to be hate l, yit w.fh 'Ut all rcrad entur their practice jiis'ly ma;. -A man's nature runs cither to herbs O' weeds : theref( re let hioi seasonably wet r the one and destroy the other! It was the policy of the good eld -gentleman to mai-cc his chil Iren - "feci that home, was the happiest place in th" world ; and I value this delicious home tecling as one of th3 choicest gifts a paient ca i bestow. 'Tii pitiful, says Emerson, the thing by which we are rich or poor a matter of coins, coats and carpets, a li'.t'c more or less stone, or wood, or paint, the fashion of a cloak or ha'.; like the luck of naked Indians, f whom one is proud in the possession of a glass bead or a red ft ather, and Vant of it. the rest miserable in tho j Moisture and Lockjaw. Dr. Felix I... Oswald says iu Ifame and Farm: Moisture, in the form of a vapor bath is an excellent remedy for tetanus, ! or lockjaw. The immobility of the jaw is only the culminatiye symptom of a complaint which might be defined as a the patient iceis lnipeueu to ncnu iur ward to lelieve the strain on the snoui- der muscles headaehes acd a feeling of i general numbness beget a disposition to sleep, and on awakening from a fitful nop j to accomplish that anin el The ( om ' bined influence of warmth and moisture seems to.relax the rigor of the muscles; first the spine, and by-and-by the ne'ek and jaws fed the relief, and by continual friction the danger of a relapse an be obviated for a quarter of an hour, after which the abnormal symptoms will be re duccd to a tin rering numbness, as after a Stunning fall. Vashinqlon's Private Secretary. There is in (lie western part of the city an old warehou-e, built-in the last een tury, in which the archives of Govern ment were stored when brought here by water until houses conld be prepared for their rec -pti.n. This warehouse belonged to Col. i.ear. a native of Portsmouth, N. H., who was fitted for college at Dum mer Academy at Byfield, Mass graduated at Ilnrvard University in 178 ?, and two years later became Private Secretary to Gen. Washin .t n. In 102 he became Consul-General at San Domingo, and in IfO 1 he tilled the same position at Al giers. The i.e t year (l0') he went as Commissioner to negotiate a pcece with Tripoli. On- leturning to the United States he br me an accountant in the War Dcpa tm:n . One morning in Octo ber, 1H1C, af er Col. Lear had finished breakfast l.e took-the morning paper -i. x .v.. i.o hi ana waiKea vj iud Bummuuuov vard Soon ahcr the sounds of a pistol , werchea:d, which alarmed the family, and proceeding to the summerhouse they! a r-..i t in - ca.P,l on a bench with ! l.ir.wn nut and the fatal dMoi ii io uiU'H' . - - . . : H his death grip. When Washington gave Col. Lear his war corresponde.ico to classify; he directed him to burn the letters of Mrs Washington as he tame across them. She was not an accom plished schola-. and her noted closeness in money matters ' doubtless led her to make occasional remarks in badly spelled sentences, whi-h Washington wished to have destroyed. Ben: Perlei) Poore. Ticeistio i.e over the famous Xa varro fl its w-'.icw York, th3 model and 'aiammoth a;.:rtment buildings th.lt were to revoiutio: ize methods of living, min fmizc the in onveniences and annoyances ir.d a ro d th : maxima of comfort, lux ury and convenience for housekeepers. The plan do sn't appear to have proved ivhol'y successful, and the insurance ;onr):;r.y which holds a mortgage of $1, KO 0)) on t!i2 buildings is to foreclose t s c'.aim, wldlc sura? Aggregating $40, 0J fire duo for taxes, watcrrent and thc:- incident .1 -. The condition of af- fairs fcjnisio i :uitaie haul iuucw n ap Ttment-honsc" build ng which it isn't sr.fe to pa s. Tenons, who can af ford to pay f r such accommodations as ihe JCavano plan promised not unnatu rally prefer in most cases to own their wn houses. FUW. "By their works shall ye know them. Watches. Merchant Traveler. The more you cheque a spendthrift the faster he goes. National Wtelly. Why is a successful poultry-manlike a carriage-builders? Because he makes a coop-pay. The barber can be relied upon for data in the making up of "crop" report. Vvnkert Gaiette. v A way to get even with the Canadians on the dshery question: Make them eat shad. BtHiton Pott. . A theatrical manager in London says that 150,000 persons in that city lire by playing. Free Prest. A young man who dives on a rich mother-in-law is not necessarily a Canni bal, but approaches that tribe for lazi ness. National TTVity. Australia his had a ball game, but as the Australians have not learned to kick at the umpire's decisions, it was not very exciting. L-nicell Citizen. "1 know what the nights'of labor are," said the mother of sis boys as she sat down to repair the pile of trousers and jackets. Untrft Courier. Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes used to be an amateur photographer. When he pre sented a picture to a friend, he wrote on the back of it: 'Taken by O. W. Holmes A ; Sun." Detroit Free Pre. Bornsternc Bornson, the Norwegian poet, wants to come to America for v;s'r- lj j j j j j j J-1 Thos0 f belong in the name somewhere, and the reader can distribute them to suit his taste.- N-riri h HuVetin. What every married man In this coun- try wants is a trained, fierce-looking lit- tie mouse- that will appear whenovcr called. It will stampede a family quarrel in less time than it takes to provoke one. Mton IVIeijrajih. ' "Have you heard Miss Simpson sing sim c she returned from Europe?" "Sev eral times. v "Do you think-she ha? im prowed?" "Very much." "In what particular :" "She doesn't sing as much as she used to."- - Manic d Journil. ' "Horace, why don't you sit down ? You've been standing there for over an hour.". "Cawn't sit down, Fwcddic. doing to the reception, you know." "Wcl what of that i It's early yet." "Ju-t had my twowscrs cweased, "Fwcd dic. Do you think I've got.s-s-8-soften-cf the bwain ?" Life. How to Punish Children. "How to punish children," said Prof. Adler.in a lecture recently, "is one of tho , burning questions of the day. Upon it depends in a greater degree than people imagine the welfaro of the state, tin family, society a .d the ethical develop ment of humanity itself. Wc 'would b the physicians our enemies; wc would -.rofit)by their hostility and lead them tc .i better mind by gentleness and firmnesi combined, and even chastise themwhen their own good and social advancement icquire it. How many parents know how to punish children .' . "A child will grow tip, in nine casci out of ten, the 'embodiment of the in- '; iluencest hat sui round him. Never chastist n child in auger. Socrates, Jhc great Pagan hilo opher, refrained from pun ishing a slave until his passion had cooled. An angry father sets a perilous, example to his offspring. He exhibits his weakness when he should be firm and contained.. The child drinks in the les son, anil ids moral nature is lacerated and warjyjd. - "How many children arc spoiled by discouragement '. Parents grumble and chide the livelong day, and never praise. It js wrong. Nothing will so'-effectually crush a child's ambition toljp good and nobl". The sweet approbationof a good mother is enough to make a young man face tire and death iu a worthy cause." " Humors of the Pulpit. At a reccpt on to the Rev. Dr. Seward, in New Britain. Conn., recently, remin iscences were in order. It was said that Dr. Seward insisted, when, appointed pastor, in 183"). that he should not be cailed upon for more than two public ervK-es each Sunday; mat one mcmoer ------- - , , of -the Church shortly afterward prayed that the pastor would receive grace to preach in the morning and afternoon and, "if his strength held out, he might continue in the evening. Dr. Seward told of receivinga bushel of turhip3 once for marrying a couple, and some years later the bridegroom appeared and passed out a 10 bill, .'ayiug that "hU wife had turned out so well that he felt justified in the expenditure." A man once camo into church late, and started, with squeaky boots, to walk the whole length of a side gallery, when an exchange pai tor stopped suddenly in his prayer, !cpen:d his eyes, and pointing a long finger at the disturber, said, 'You sit right down where you are." He then resumed his prayers Here is another argument- for oatmeal and milk- There are living in West River Settlement, Nova Scotia, , four brothers MeLeod whose united ages I jot up 324 years. They are as follows : Hugh, eighty-four yen; .William, eighty-two years; Daniel, eighty years, and Anthony, seventy-c:ght .yea's. Th"y p.re all hale and hearty and able for their porridge and milk every morning. A Pittsburg builder-of cheap" houses asei matched flooring instead of lath and plaster. On this cotton cloth i glued, ' md on the cloth wall paper is pasted. Thii he ch ims is better and cheaper than 'olaMcr. an3 thus houses can be built: ! -- . v V.---- in co'd weather. 1 '1 (1