The Gastonia __ to th® Frvtaotlon ot Romo and tlia la Vol. XVIII. {MTuJ’iffJXi&r} Gastonia, N. 0H July 1, 1897. —■p““5,a!a=:=ar'"^=!—' 1 — _ BILL ARrS WEEKLY LMTKR. BABTOW'B PHU080PHEB BATS BETTER TIMES ABE OOMIBO. r»U»M N « Co«l SSraicla*—TIM* •|MM>U Ikuton w PallltlllMa ■■ Bringing *11 Tklap AmiMl SttgtiS SMa Cp. UUi Arp In Atlanta Ouuotltutlou. "Watchmen tell ub of the night." It hM been often said that "old father time Is a good doctor." 1 be lieve that be U about to our* the coun try of hard timet. Certain It la that neither politic tan nor legislation has done any good. The disease wai not evun diagnosed, bat the patient ie get ting well. Neither Cleveland nor an ti-Cleveland ttor McKinley nor the tariff nor Populism has had auytbing to do with It. Time is tho medicine, and when lime cures n patient be stays cured a good, loog period. I bad rheumatism enteral years, and the doctor* worked on me until they got tired aod quit, bot old Doctor Tlrao come along, and after a while the rheumatism just qolt me and went away of lie own aoeord. tor six years we have all been cusaln’ and fuatlt,' aad dUcuaalo' about the dis ease ttiet afflicted the country. Every politician bad a remedy, but somehow the people have tost oouQdecoe In our so-called statesmen and their medioioe wont stay ou the stomach. A flret claaa politician cau argue tlio leg oil au iron pot or the spots off a leopard. I heard Aleck Stephens make a great speech away back In (Its 40'* nnd he proved that the Democratic parly was responsible (or all the oalamltlce Uiat had bofallrn the country for twenty years, even to tho high prioe of ooffee and tie low price of oottoo and tbe yellow (aver lu Savannah. I was ruminating about this be cause 1 have been traveling around a good deal or late, aod If the times are not better then all algos deceive me. Karaaing la claimed to he tlie founda tion of all prosperity—the mudsills of Mis building—aod It eo, then I know the limes are Improving, for Uto dlll jpwit farmer la prospering everywhere In the sunny south oulsldo of Hoods and cyclones. Tbe crops lu South Carolina are weil advanced and prom ising. Harvest le at hand In north Georgia end Tennessee, end was never better. Everything tbe AMhlr grow* commends a fair price, afiffwTerjUiing be has to buy I* cheap. The price of wheat and corn ami bay la bitter I ban It waa from 1880 to 1690—wheat at II per bushel, hey at |1 a hundred, corn at 50 cents, sweet potatoes at 75 oeuta, Irish potatoes at 60, cbickeus (torn 15 to DO oenla, and wood at $ 1 JO a cord. What la the matter with the farmer V Suppose hie cotton la down to 7 cents, lie cau make mouey on it at that. A man at Galon, 8. O., told me he made year ouu wue* on auu acres, ana cleared $8,000, How is that ? When 1 was a yooog morchant cotton aver aged aleut 8 oeula a pound; oorn 40 cent* a bushel; wheat 75 cents; pota toes 23, wood $1 a cord. Shirting and calico war* 13; cents a yard, sugar and ooffee 12) cents a pound. Iron was 6 cents, and atccl 76 cents aod nails 8 cents. Now all these thing* except cofToo sro half price, and all that tbs farmer grows for sale Is 25 pet cent higher, except cotton. But still he la not happy.. Up north, of coarse, it Is different, for it takes all they make In six months’ summer to support them the six winter months. 1 am sorry Cot those people, that is for all the clever ones and wish they could sell out to the fanatics *ud fools and come hown here to this blessed land. Their laboring class who have no land and work shout tor wages say they are not coming, for they can get $25 a month up there snd ws pay our negroes only $10. *niat*s no. That's lho wsy it Is put down in the last ceusus. But the oensns don’t tall bow the farm laborer op there I* only wanted three mouths and the other nine he Jobe It around for little or notblug, aod It takes his last nickel to keep from freezing to death. And the oensos don't tell how our negro laborers on the farms get their wages all the year round aod gets comforts uic oauia rcnv ireo noa rtfiYO 1)0 art*- | wood to buy and every family lias a garden and tboy raise ofalckena aod egg* aod a pig or two aud have scrape enough from their table to support two bound dog* and a Soe. Besides all this, tliey bait hoist In Uie croak ami catch •ackers by night and hunt rabbits on HBoday. Talk about oar obeap labor. There lso’t a resectable negro man to Bartow county who Isn’t better off and happier than the average farm laborer at tho north, rhnt Is on* good thing the negro baa done for the loath. Be ha* 1 allm(da ted the northern icurf aod the foreign •ourf end kept them away. I taw in the columns of The Constitution not lung ago a statement In figures that waa taken front a Boston paper (bow ing that linos lfWO the foreign popu lation, Inclusive of their children born •loce their arrival, has increased 78 per cent in New England, while the nativia have increased but 0 per eent la all thst Ume. The exact figures weregiyso. Isn't that awfol 7 Kiw England bad Just aa well give up their time-honored end historic oountry ro 1 igloo stid stl to these foreigners. When I was In Nashville the oilier day I looked with pride at the exhibits of our southern Industry that greeted ate everywhere. In a former letter I made special mention of the magnlfl eeet display of Uio Nash villa and Chat tanooga railroad, that Ineladee tiie Western aod Atlaotlo railroad of our Mate. But our oilier southern rands ere emulating Major Thomas's exam ple especially the Georgia railroad, whose exhibit makes every Georgian feel proud nr .Idea the beautiful show of grain fresh from the harvest fields, there are minerals of a 1 moot every kind from tits granite of Mtoue Moan lain lo the gold aod precious stoeee of Ball coasts. Just Imagine a leltd granite obelisk split oat lo Um rough and unhewn that la forty feel high and Qv* feet square at tb« base and that weigh! 70,000 pound a Thee there is tbs LoaUvtlls and Nashville, and lbs Plant system, sad the beaboard Air Line that tbe wondering visitor will not fall to ass. Wall, now, of eoarsa, everybody knows that every mao and corporation and state will show up the very beet they have got, for that is jutl human. An good old country woman will put the cleanest eggs and lb* floest applts on lop of tho basket when sbe goes to town. But M tbe average products of our laduslry and rtson roes are nearly as good aa those exhibits there we have a wonderful oonntry. !ai MutU ba Pnia -Tk* Aawual laUawM At rm> Tlwawad DaUuvs. Or. tVitmlnfioM MMIcncvr, Ualkiob. June23.—Tbe euperlnten dewt of public Instruction to-day sub roll ted to the attorney geoeral the question whether tbe expenses of the •lection in \ugntt on tlia question of local aid to tbe public schools are to ge paid out of tbe school fund or tbe county ruod. The chief clerk to Lbe state superintendent expressed the opinion that eu it la to be an election for schools the cost mutt be borne by tho school fund, and be added tbat It will ba a costly election, the same as a general election, In fact. It is ble that tlKi oost will exceed 900,000, as a report from Davidson county a*ft lh* 00,1 thare will be over 91,000. BewOi «T tke W«» Fran win. Mute Ik* Weed “Bwjrcwu" Orlaln.lMl. London Dispatch. 2lit Captain Boycott Is dead. Me was about O0 yean of age and became famous through being the Brst mau subject*] to the ‘‘boycott" lo Ireland, He sms a land agent In 1881 In the Connemara section of oounty Mayo, where he collected rente for a number of landlords, notably tbe Bari of Erne. In 1880 Mr. Parnell made a speech in the course of which be urged the peo ple of Ireland to abetato from agrarian erimea and to adopt Instead a policy of •ending harsh landlords, agents and betllfte "to Coventry," the old term for boycotting. Events so shaped them selves that Captain Boycott waa the first men the Irish experimented upon Ik this connection, and lienct tbs now familiar word of “boycott." Tilt to OtI*|hi«i«. nHL«4«lp4!rv Kmorrl. Mr. Greeley once Held: “The fewest words that will ooorey the advertiser's Ideas sre the right ones.” And not only the fewest words, but Uie shortest words. Ad rer User a hare to bo oriapei then they were In Greeley's day, though Greeley himself coyer doalt In olroamloentioo: and aiooe Uia tendon ay In not peculiar to advertising, but pervades all literature, It may be sat down net aa s fad but aa an evolution which omiaot go backward. Tbs ■ m■ M#awwtl * W. M. lleptne, editor Tlakllwa, III., “Chief.”aeya: "we won't keep house without Dr. King's new Dlecoyery far Consumption, Coughs and Cckb Experimented with many others, bat never got the true remedy until we used Dr. King’s Kew Discovery. No other remedy aen lake IU place In oar borne, as la It we have a certain and sore cure for Oougbs, Colds, Whooping Cough, etc.” Ills idle to experiment with other remedies, even If they are urged on you as Just es wood aa Dr. King's Kew Dlsoowry. Tliey ere net as good, because this remedy has a raoord of earn sod besides la guaran teed. It never falls to satisfy. Trial bottles free at J. K. Curry A Oo*s Drug Htore This Paper Offers Advantages To Its Advertising Patrons. In Gaston and adjoining counties Tint Gazrttr hoe a circulation which reaches the people you want to rcnch. Our subscribers pny for their paper. People who pay for their paper sre likely to pay for the goods they buy. They make desirable customers in any store or bnsiuess. Our subscriber* pny for llieir paper because they arc specially interested in it. We reckon thut’» it; we can’t think of any other reason. Some praise It, some swear at it, but they all read it. And the paper the people read is the paper to put your nd iu. It U bound to cam money for live advertisers. If this were YOUR advertisement, people would be reading about YOU and your business instead of us and ours. Advertise in THE GAZETTE. It earns money for others; Why pot for you? ■ tlMlim AMP HIM MIPIVCI.K. ■•OMiMaMiitm*) iip Pom. A report got la circulation to tfae effect that Bob Burdette wee dead. Tbe Burling too Hawkeys, with which the humorist was formerly associated, denied the rumor, and Bob eooBrmi the denial in the fallowing latter to the editor: BnYN Ifrvx, Pa., June 14, 1U97.— My Dear Waite: Lika tho true frlaud and loyal comrade yon eyer were, you do right to protest against my burial prior to lbs autopsy. I am lodeed very much alive. Not only so, I haven’t been dead even a little hit. Not ouee. Gould bare been, had I wanted to he. Gould he yet. But I don't want. Maybe I ought to be. eveu now. Bat, as wa make weekly confession—"we have left undent those thing* which w« ought to have dona." Possibly tbe rumor that 1 have gone dead grew out of tbe fact that I have learned. Not “am learning.’’ Learn ed In one leason. All by myself. Went out In the moonlight last Fri day night to learn, hayiog Oral locked my family in the bouse and forbade thaca to look out of the windows. Led my bicycle out oo turnpike—tbe Bryn Mawr pikes are broader than tba way to destruction, twloe as smooth and much cleaner. Ifa a young bicycle— a colt, foaled in 'VI. Would give the name but for the fact that 1 had to pay for lbs wbael. Will odIt tay, therefore, to accordance with llut uthlca of our profession, that It Ij NOT tba wheel anybody tay* it la 1 held him by the withers right Id the middle of the rood, and mounted without assistance. 1 dlimounted In tbe SAIM indepen dent manner. Uot on again and prooeedad to break him to saddle. Dkl I ride the flrst time V Well, say! rcopie rum tow mo- -liar* ol all age* and both saxea—that X couldn't fall If, when I felt that I ws* Calling, I would Stick out my foot. I stuok out both feet and both band* and fall ou my bead. I fell on one aide of Unit diabolical wheel ond then on the other; I fell on both sides at otioe; I fell on top of It and underneath It, and mads “dog falls” with it. I fell between tbe wheels I felt behind the htud wheel and before the front one at tbe same time and don’t know yet how I did It I fell and throat both my legs throogh the epokas of one wheel. I met a terri fied man to a buggy and drove him clear off Uie pike through Wheeler's hedge, and I don't think he has come back yet. Kaery time I fell I skipped the palm* of my raw, swollen, throb bing bands on the hard “Inelastic” pike, exoept the tins* I fell on my head. I fall harder and with greater variety of landing than aay man could fall un less be dropped out of a balloon aod lit In a load of furniture. 1 lost my ennQdcneo, my patience, my temper, myolaaape, lamp, bell, aod reputation. I broke ons pedal, (ho saddle, and tbs ordinance against loud, boisterous and ebuHlve language at night. X ran Into everything In sight except the middle of (ho road. I eat down on everythlog In the towneblp exoept the saddle. I soorched la a circuit not 15 feet In circumference until yon could swell brimstone. I mad* more revolutions than it Sooth American ropuhllo, and didn't get 10 feet away from where 1 started. 1 haven't been so hauled and •beaded, so thumped sad beaten, so trampled upon and pouuded. so bruised and soratobed slnee T left tho army. Dut I ess ride. I don’t say that 1 "do.’a Dot I can” Da I consider “biking” good ror the hMlth t for the health of some people, f do. I don't an* bow s physician esc bring op bis femilp noises bis children have something to Ml. But lu my own ease, 1 rsnervo my decision. I will watt until X know whether I so going to dla or got well. And do yoa tell Brother Davie to keep his obituary on the standing gallery nnttl be Iwars from “Slug Nine.” I doa'tbailava I’ve gwt “M” yet. Al though friend* wl>o have called to me me break down when they aay * good bva" sod wntk out at tba room on tlptoa. Hut I wouldn’t ml nil that tr I knew what became of rey shouldsr blades Ilia Urns I ran under tire hay wagon. Cheerfully your*. Reinsure- i. Bi iiuwtt* KKW •ITlkl.PlITCNAM SUL. Butler Me» the master IS, «■ Uul-Nt B*» IM MmihUI m Mmu Affate. Charlouu ntwcrror. The news Of the last WMk that Sen •tors Duller and Pritchard have made friends is quit# Interesting. Tha story is that Mr. llutler went to Mr. Pritch ard with an overture of peaos, told him that the rooltshosss had gone far enough, and that friendly relations should he restored, and that Mr. 1 rite hard assented to the proposition. We believe every word of the story. It Is exactly like both of them. But ler makes no bnrgain of which he is not the chief beecflclary, nor enters Into any oompaul exetspt for gain or vengeance. Last winter he fought Prllcbeid to the death; fought bis re election to the Senate with every re source at, his command, but failed to defeat him. The contest over, tbs next tblDg to be looked forward to U his owu re-elootioo, and In due time bo seeks terms of peace with bis ooi lesgne, whom: be sought by every means at his codimand to defeat, and acoordlng to tha current story, gels them. Wa hava sab! that this is like both of them, U is like Butter, beosuse be makes no deal that does not give btm the loug end of tlie rope. It is like Pritchard because it betrays the weak ness which has marked him ever siuce be becaote conspicuous iu polities. A man of high personal courage, exhibit ing a nerve in personal controls which baa made him the admiration of the mountains, lie baa been seen before now to weaken In puli tics before weak ling* like Bailer. It dues not astonish as to hear that be turn weakened again. Recapitulation: Butler and Prltcb ard eater Into a deal to divide Uie eeoetorshlps, Butler to have the long term, Pritchard the short term, Pritchard to be re-elected at the end of the term which lie is to atrvr. But lerafterward denies Use contract and exercises all the luilusnee at his com mand to beat rritchard when be comes up fur re-election; falls, and wheo tbe expiration of bla own term is la sight, makes up to Pritchard, and says, *‘We ought to Stand together.’’ Pritchard forgives nod forgets and makee ready to help tbs reflection of the man who did all lie could to beat him. Hmk are tbe things that nrmkx us tired of the North Carolina ltepubB cana—even those that we want to thluk well of. ~r4 i£kf&£2 nU7 mo" Mr. Better ApUwt Amee,,U*n. «uliln(hn DUpatck. . “IfninuM Hawaii we will start on a policy which, II carried oat, will lead to monarchy,” salt) Senator Ma rlon Butler, of North Carolina. "The annexation of Hawaii would neoaeal tata the building op of an lmmenaa navy to hold It, That would mean a tremendous outlay—more than the island* are worth. The next thing would bo the grab of everything In the shape of territory Vbat we are able Vo take. Wa would, In abort, start on a career of conquest end the history of the world from the Phoenicians down shows that the Inevitable result ot such a career ie monarchy." Ciav*nMMF*a lark wT Ossrlmy. Parana »m« Olwsrrcr. The President enjoyed what l* no doubts onlqa* experience In th* his tory of our prveldeuU, the receipt of e message of weloomn signed by oer Governor’s privaU secretary In behalf nf th* Governor, himself. As the President le not tit* Governor’* official Inferior—to eay nothing of Ui* faot that aa a guest lie was entitled, uodei onr American iwacllo*, to precedence —Kile breach of etfcnsetle la sbeolutety unperdonsUe. Abd none the lee* so, because it* notice seems to have been taken of Itlo aoy quarter. ■ ■•uiae's A rate* Salts. Tit* Hiit Uauvb |n the world fo« Cuta, Urn la**, Sere*. Uloere, iUlt Ubeum. Purer 8or*a Tetter, Chapped Uiuidt, Chilblain*, Corns, nod all Skin Eruptions, and pmdllvel* outea Pile*, or no |t*y required. It U guaranteed to give perfect set Infection, er nsotiej refunded. Price B rente per Imi. Pot ml* hr J. It. (Jarre A On M»U MB 1U WOMBS, ■>»*■ Mwll-a Bpr»M» mt Ik. in»Ui». PrifUl * lb* ■MtfkOnMIlttWMMWto VwkTMNtanNMbM. n»6 Ik HIM Mm mid Obwrror. It «u Mid MOMof lb* great ocaao •teamen waa going oat of lu doek— •Id by *q old Irtoti womb a bo bad tba merrleet face ImaglaaUe mad that awaat voloe that aaeiaa a ipeeial Ueea leg given to tba daughter* of Brin— •od aba a.Id it with aUbar eoul thrown into bar worda aod with a tear or two of abaolnU delight ia bar eyM. it waa bar good-bye to a wealthier Mead going orar rot tba war j “Yob’U be after aaaia' ber Udyablp the Queao. God Ucm ber I I waa bom ou tba aana day that ebe waa, and whenever I bad a trouble, dartin’, aura I thought that ou foetar-eletar bad ’am, too, and kaew bow to tympetfalza with wo«Me. bo wban her groat ear rian pataca yea, and you’re all hur rahin' aad wavin’ your flags, say a •pedal *God blase the Queen T’ for ate, ’oaoro ebe* been each a good woman.” It started see to this king. Here was one woman wbo bad Improarod her personality upon another woman ia the lower nuke of life, a woman who had never seen ber and «bo had proba bly lived half of ber life iaadieUat country, aad yet ahe waa loyal to liar as women aod aa Quean. Why ? She told it herself whan iba ended Mr little speech end said “ 'eaiue aba* baaa each a good woauen.” Sometimes it ■came M U we women, who ooght must highly to appreciate tier, do not realtae what a wonderful Qumo Eng land hea bad Umm sixty long roan. minx oi n l wo took Mr position aa ruler over ooa of the greatest king dom* of Che world, a mare girt, Just •uofa a girl m that ooa of your* to whom you would never dream of sub mitting any groat question ot impor tance, bbe bad that moat borrlbio at all things to do—horrible, I mean, to a delloate-minded woman—chooee her husband, and yet aha did It with ao much wiedoeo that when the wedding ring waa put upon ber Sager all Bag land rejoiced rot only because of tbe Qumo's bnpptoam. bat because It realized that aha had chorea e good men, a loving naan, and a man whose influence over ber would always be for tbe welfare of the nettop. Then (he became the mother of many children, . but aa eoeh little ooa came lata the world it wee the joy end the pride of the F-ngUeb people, because tbs Queen bad that wonderful wisdom which taught ber to le* ber child ran go among the people, know them, realize that they were like them, end Dod out for themselves wliat It meant to be rich or to be poor, to be on a throne or in a garret. This gentle woman baa lived, to my way of think ing, a beautiful life. Whet mom can be said of ner thee that ebe was e good wife, e loving mother, and a great Qaaen. Ben who are prone to underrate Queens as rulers any of Queen Victoria that she baa bad wonderful men la ber Cabinet, men with great braiae, to advise bar; but, manlike, they forget that it rested with the Queen to say whether these men should DO Id power. At Quern there seems to lieve been In her deolaloos none of tbe email wask nesses that are attributed to women, while aa woman ebe lies done that brat of all things—set a good example to ber nation, and sot only to a nation, but to women all oyer tbe world. 8be be* beett quick to encourage ell that meant advancement, 3b# bee given meek thought end quick discourage ment to all that meant extremes. And 1 do believe all good women aro Koud ot her, beoeeee ber sympathy, r love, end ber approbation have bean given to good woman. And whet Use happened lu the sixty years since she was mads Qaaen r When Queen Victoria was eruimed, who thought that on tbe sixtieth an niversary of ber reign an electric wire would be fastened to the throne Itself, over which would go to every nation that acknowledged her as Its ruler a word of blaming end good aheer f Who dreamed sixty years ago that on tbe sixtieth anniversary of ber rolgu there could go under tbe waters of the greet oceau a message of congratula tion from America to Keglsod, nod that the time taken for sending that message would be lest than one hour 1 The whole world bee chsnged, ths knowledge of tbe power of efeetriolty bee come to as. end when the Queen Dashes n irsessga ever tbe tetegniph. talks through the telephone orfisteni to a message spoken by the xrapbo phone she aud tbe rest of the English nation say, and say gladly: “Look el ttie won Jars that this yoenger nalios has wroueht 1" When the dies through the beautiful couutrtai, this great Queen knows that the luxurious oars aod tbs quick eugiaa were made hi that yoonger land where Ufa la so much newer, where all tho people are younger, tad where brains work quicker. In the sixty years that have peaaed America baa ntocli to ha proud of, hot America sen always do Its owa orowlng. and It has ■ever been known to fall la this m epnet. Personalty, though, It to good to feel that eo many of the laxurtssof Ufa are due to tbis quick-witted eon of old England. That'S what wa are, after all, simply tba eldest too, who declared hta Indepeudsncs aod made a Ufa aod hem for himself. 9txty yean ago life waa banter, bat sixty years ago people wars health tar, aod, not ret iring wliat they might have bad, Uwy did not raise It Nowadays they any everybody baa a chance. Has be? There's a email hoy that anils newspaper* on a wcll bnowo corner la this gnat elty. aod * ■ui i wvi ioonin|. I eawbes, ewesn, sod eune* with greet flecsey. There It no wlekcdoess about wbtah lie dove not know. Aikcd about bta father, be esid, with an oath. U»at be waa serving cut hU lima, loan)red <>f es to hie mother, he eanawnoira that site was oa a Jag. Give* Um ouaor. tunlty to live lu the oouatry, to hr—tto If ft—b aft; to a— tha grace field i, ba laagted, and. with another oath—M: “Mobody hla work a— out aa to any torn far—, when there alat aotaaten aadefcflar aaat am git a etganet, aa* ton to got* tad aarlyI" What abaa-hMtor Within a bloat of ay own baa—I —a alaaoet avary —oratag agM afcild. SSke^KyST iSSVLT&fti edegeuentoofthe wont typo. Tto of aaUrano—. aha drag* around with tor a Mg. fat baby. qaTta — dirty aa •tola, bah than’*ao tooattftd aaott mmt^rttaehad ^to^h—^eartag fier^tt. £ toUtTie^fimto'tha gS! Iliufi to* oa tto aar thrown la aa a warala* to barry book from wtaca aha la aaat. dto rataras with M Mad with ha— and Into tha m la—able ataft-tfa cheap. XojganTtheu tfaoltow^ndrJdily An off— wai made to tar far a holi day, a day in tha aoantry. protffed tto would anb—it to a hath and to having bar hair combed. A autt of decoct a—to— woald ha aim tor. and b—Id— the plaaaaat trip toe aaold —t — many etonlae — aba wiatod. She would ha— two good —la, with aa later lada of lea —a aod cake. Bat aha daoUnad tto tarttattoo. Bto aald: “I ain’t aroln’ to bo ooruboad for no old day in the counter. Anyhow, whet'a the counter Ilka? Wa aaa’t gat be— there, ana tto— ain’t no fun In lookin’ at Irt—." What la bar chance for tto future f BUH, tto child of the poor to day—I ■Mae of tha wicked poor, for the— people are not alwaya abeolutehr poor la —ooey—do— not differ from tto ahlld that Hogarth draw — that child which toa nonedown tram oaetary to century, tto produet of Ignoreooe and rtoc. „ Sixty jnwi ego wbeo Qaeen Victor!* •rat went on the throw, the India Wbeo they west to the iheeler rat op •Ulr* is the dreee drole, the lower port of the houao being gives over to a different dew, aod well-hfed women were sot suppoood to look at them. Sixty years age wo did aot bare straw berries ta January or orasgee aaOlag (or law than a peony apiece. The basutlfal fruits from the United Mates were aot takes over la them days to gladden the English appetite, aod a pineapple noat sometimes I guineas, sometimes l raises, while we eeaat thorn costly If sa enormous big one should he a dollar, aad U cents is the average paid fora good pise, la those days there wee great tot sconce shown to old people. Things btve changed a little in that respect, even, fa England. We can scarcely understand just how mech defenses was shown to the old unless we read, as 1 did the other day, la aa autobiography a sentence Ilka this: “My father and mother demanded soeh respect from their child res that we sever diseased of sltttsg down is their premaor. aod my mother sms so particular tut when we on tend the room In which stood bar special arm chair, whether she occupied it or aot, we bossed and stood.” It la possible that to-day mothers and fathers sod ooas and daughters era soon eongsotal aad that greater sympathy exists hetsraen these. It it does, some of it Is due to Queen Victo ria, for she made her daughters her rtoasat friends, end srbeo bar daugh ters were mothers every doubt they bad vm •abmltttd to All tbt world lift* gmtood by tbit good Queen. Therefore I do think that Urn women of America should, more Umo any others, appreciate the moorage rant by the old Irish womas, and that oach of os oa the *dii1 Ternary day should esy, with all respect be cause of her goodoaaa aa a Queen eed with all love because of her sweetness as a woman, “God blew the Qssss.” Aad some of as way be giad to know that the music of that wonderful song was written by a worn so, aa Irish lady, whom work will loot as loog as the world, but whom asms, also, is forgotten, it mots be bard to do •o me tiling Bus aad then have area peer own little world forget you. But wliet difference does It make, after aUT We thiok that see will grieve at being forgotten. My Mend, sre will not know. L BH ■ nun, mu? girl, who sold: '"Tomorrow to my birthday, and I am going to moke a lot or good resolutions.” I smiled aa I Mt bar, aed I thought, "Thera goes oua more little craft Bailing to the Leod of Goad loteutlona." Who b isn't Marled for that land? ▲ad bow many people wet then T It to the laud where yea never eey a oroee word. It to tbe leod where yoe never forgot n wood rmelettoe. It to Urn leod where yon take good aero of year health. it la the toad where yon believe the beet ot etery body. It to the fend where yoe oarer llatea to moan goaelp. a is the lead where yoe never rma (OlO It to tbe lead where yoo go to bed early end get op with the eon. It to the lukl wbeee yee never wear nai eoeeetouaUe gown. It to the lead where everybody does t. many ships get lo this toad T A very, very tow. And whea they reaeh It they ora so bettered and broken from tight ingegel net the rough waves In the Sea of Doubt that they eco of little eon However, 11 la nog bed to make no rtf ort to get to this Loud of Good loloatloao. Vou aed l ead everybody alee to htonol a uule Mt trying to do right. We tumble, but wo Net oeraelvee up ageln. awd eoob Umo wo are more itolarmlail cot to temldo. We dod Juntovea straight er aed toko drmer stop*. rat rumi Bum *lV>^"Tn?rT i “•j ^ Mnrnmpm saarar^as^! i as»«Asr&» ■*'*:■. i.i*>ili »Stt8^ttSMS?4ri pareri of tbe tJUts to know and trodor Mul Anona otters aia aacUons AS sad 68 sttte now tax Uw wfaioh BMkosrts mladaneasor to fall to lln mn*nTTtLL*L Palow watfra tbs 55 wsdsntaad item sad aotaeoord U«Jt: eecttoa w—That It mail be and it to tetaby mad* tbe duty of the theri* of •neb county la the State to make dilli K!K3»3»2SSXa M the ewnty following the time whew the license tax sad tun provided tor to eehedele A B and C of tMa act ehould hare beeo paid, aa to taxes bare bMO paid by ell j*° eorporattoaa liable for the_ to santeeutalWt of all ddfetuanta. And it etelt be made tte dely of tbo Judge to aebmit the Uat of tte defia quanta to the eolleltor to tte ead that neh daiinquanU may to proeecutcd tor eueb defalcation la tbe oiannor provided la tte next eeetlea of this set. "fleeUoe »—That inch penooa of corporations wbo are liable to pay tte Itomna tax or taxe* ptovuled tor ia schedules A BandC af tbii aet and tte machinery aet, ate ah all toil to CVoUyT. teidSSSfor^ ££ )£«*»*» tea not exceeding due Son dred dollarsor Implimiii! lilt ssnnil lag afar months, nod tte ebarlB ehall ba allowed by the Judge seek compen sation for making eeeh report as ba 5»*«i Jest and proper, to ba paid by the county.” >■*!» Sail wamil Mate meetoe tt aabevtUtCMam. Tbs rvraae sot of 1*7 (papa 8, •eelI on aa provide* that— ^ “The board of eouaty oammlaeioo marteU bate power to require the merchant or dealer mekieg 14a rtirtt mot to aabmtt bu books for axamtaa Uoa to them, and tte beard may atoo reqelre nay or all penoae wbo ehall teve knowledge or latormelioo upon ^tomji* hlc ittateamotor Uhlhtt hu books far examination toy Item. Every taerohaot or dealer feif tog to Nodar each list, oe refusing oa demand to lubmlt bla books tor each exam!nation, shall be gmifty of a ate demaner, ate epoo eonvlciloa aball be teed oot more (baa fifty dollars or ,IB4£“ml not mere than thirty daw.” . ™**»«tetewoftte tart Lwlria mra la favor offfiling the Jails, lctagtae owe of ourmr ehaau tebtodtna ban or la the chela TnprhMimm ahoola rmned y towtokmotferarlaM. or to detain an «m,on UU Me trial eaa be had. Tte law reekwi of the tatategteetaw evtoeetly tteugbt l« a mrS. ' — “ I ""ssrssr— TeaVtOewUie, The treatment of en attack of noaH Wmd cansiKe In »heel«t. rru ste cool ■ppIlmtloM to Um bead. Tte n s's’vsrs «*»££ aa eidteary attaek sz&jf&sF** '*«■ ^ptedeetoyxogtUti prompt modi