University of South Carolina Libraries
TIE H ERALD IS PUBLISRZD DoubNae - A Dublecolumn advertisements ten per et. v on above. e vgRY THURSDAY MORNNG, - Ntices of ntno mresdte t - of respect, same rtes per-senare as ordinat At ;woerj~ ~ . - ~.- advertisements,. AtNewberry, S. C. ISpecial Notices in Loenicolumn 15seent - --ert isetin T H ~ . anoc eli e d ;Aftor and Proprietor. Spda raZflCt maewi, - A Family Companion, Devoted to Literature, Miscellany News, Agrieuture, Markets, &c nvjari*bly in Advanct r i --DtoO WatTtheHeNEAti41 ISATC ~Te 4-mark denotes epr.tion of. V 0 Xv NEW BEIRRY, S. C., THURSDAY, DECEMBER 7, 188. ATERMS CA B Vo i .. o.4. oRn.AS I Aau TeH You fow to Be Your Own Doctor! If yht bie a bad taste in your mouth, iaWBonniss or yellow color of skin, feel de _ondent. stapi and drowsy. apoetite un headache or dizziness, you able Nothing will arouse your Ltrjiro act on and strengthen up your sys - veI aDd Kidne re VEMOyE CONSTIPATION. L$S3.w RE AD ACHE, -A& BILOUSNESS& WIRZigBLOOD PON ING. TU&6TE 4 TIE X1TOMACH - ,. :REGUL.ATE THELVER 5F_tWREULATE THE BOWET kep4i *. .bealta any cli -dose-of N 1POUND, UyER AND -IDNEY MEDICINE. DOWIE & MOISE, WHOLESALE DRUCCISTS CHARLESTON, S. C. ZFOR SALE EVERYWHERE. AW .. Adin:NewbeiTy by Dr. S.F. FANT. NEWIBERRY (AT CME1ES OLD STANDs) At.my,Bakey the z-?eople of Newberry nd surrounding coma.ury can always find LW--READ"Wea y and Graham. UkM PIES, CNDIES, &e.' I make my Bread from the best quality - ieor. My Candies I manufacture myself, and varrant that they are pure. Cakes for weddings or parties.made to order on short'notice and neatly iced and -ornamented. Thankful for past patronage, I ask a con tinance of the same. Fw W. HILKER. Oct. 26,43,-1Ot . THEM UN& INEW YORK, 188 . Xwe people have read TErE Svc during th year justnow passingthan ever before since-it.was irst printed. No other news er published on this'side o: the earth asbeen bought and read in any year by so many men and women. We.are credibly informed that people buy, read; and like TaE Sux for the following esons. among others: Because Its news columns present in at tractive form and wih the greatest possible uracy whatever has interest for human ind; the events, the -deeds and misdeeds, the .wisdom, the philosophy, the notable ly, the solid sense, the improving non ses-l the news of the busiest world at rammka cnceringpersons adaar TiEE SUN~ makes a practice of' telling them the exact, truth to the best of its ability three hundred and sixtyAve days In the year. before election as w tl as after, about the-whales as well as about the small fish, in .the face of dissent as plainly and fear )easly as wheni supporrtedi by general appro -al. Tns SUN has absolutely no purposes to serve, save the intormation of its readers and the turtherance of the common good. Because it Is everybody's newspaper. No annis so humble that iaE .SUN is indiffer ent to his welfare and his rights. No man a so rich that it can allow. in3ostice to be \onb him.' No 'man, no-atssoc'intion of merr, apwerful enough to be exempt Iroma the. ~ect application of r.ts principles of right bd wroug. eLcause~ in plitics it has fought for a 4 n years. without intermission a--d som~- mxes almost alon,e among newspa pers,~h fEght that has resu.lted in the _re cent' erwheiing populir verdict agains' Sb.nismi and for honest government. 30mLter whataty is in power. THE SUN - stanal nd wll -ontinue to stand like a * rock zcdr the interests of the people against the aumbition of bsss the encroachmuents of moijopolists, and the dishonest schemes of pub te robbers. All taz:s is what we are tol l almost daily by ouit frien,ds. One man holds that 'IME * Ui is the- best religious newspaper ever pblish'ed, because its Christianity is udi uedwIth cant. Another holds that it is the best Republican newspaper printed, be e ause,it has already whippedl half of the ras eals :out ot that ip.rt,y, anud is proceeding AgainAst the other half with undiminished4 -vigor. A third believes It to be the best mayazine of general literature in existence. because its readers miss nothing worthy or notice that is current in the world of * thought. do every friend of THE SUN dis covers one of its many sides that appeals 1with particular force to his individual lk you arayknow THE SUN, you will -observe that in83 it Is a little better than ever before. If you do not already know' Tm'Sus, you-will find it to be a mirror of slL human activity, a storehouse of the .enoest products of comm<,n sense and imn agnaton, a mainstav tor the cause 0? hon est gvrnment, a sentinel for genuine Jef esaa Democracy, aseonrg~ for wicked n bfevery- species, and an uncommonly investment for the coming year. vRMe8 To XAIL SUBSCRIBERS. The several'editions of TE SUN are sent by ra2l, postpaid, as follows: "-DAILY-65 cents aimonth,$6.50 ayear; with Sund-.y.edition, $7.70. SUND)AY-Eight pages, $1.20 a year. WEEKLY-$i a year. Eight pages of the best matter of the daily issues: an Agri cultural Department of unequalled merit, niaarket reports, and literary. scientiflc, and domestic intelligence make THE sWnxz-Y SUNc the newspaper for the far mer's household. To clubs of ten with $10, an extra.copy free Address L. W. EN.GLAND, Publisher, Nov. 23, 47-6t THE SUN, .N. Y. City. 'EiiA week made at home by the indus the public. Capital not needed. We will start you. Men, women, boys and girls wanted everywhere to work for -s.Now is the time. You can work in spare. time,.or give your whole 'line to the business. No other business will pay you nearly as well. No one can fail to make en ormous pay, by en zig~ at once. Costly puttfit and terms re. Money made fast. -easily, and honorably. Address TRUE & Co., Augusta, Maine. 47-ly IRON. Pure Hammered Swede's Iron. Best Refined Tire Iron, 1 to 2 inches. Band. Hoop, Round, Square and Oval Irons, in full srtock, at lowest market prices, at.Mr30- 3-y BOOZER'S HARD WARE STORE. So. 2 Mower's New Block. 'a MELANGE. o Right .is right, and wrong is wrong, Yet thev mix in deed and song; Men can hardly set spart p Either Guidance-of the heart. h Half a thonstnd loved may die, 1o Like blue violets round us lie; 0 Earcest Hope may rise and set: Right and wrong are pingled yet. Reel them up together, friend, Knots and tavgles to the end; Yiu nor I may hope tofind Purer erthlinevi to wind. b Right is right, and wrong is wrong, P BvtI canno:.find a song -F Filled with eitber wrong or right, Constant to the ending qtite." ___ ft VV A DFSCUSION OF WOMANLY BEAUTY. n New York Sun. it The appearance here of a reign- I( ing professional beauty from Lon- IC don is very naturally provoking 1 just now much discussion of the ol lotelines of' Ari eriein women as.j, compared with tat displayed 0 by our fair visit6r. Both the 1 0er8 and --the,,.wownn. who at- P tend her -theatfical representa- I t9n4 examine M-s4ngtry crit-, r4 ically to see it sAd pbssesses a t sort of besqty wperior to wbat we are accustomed to at home, b and .w.brein iKrs..rothe . native type in which we reasons-a bly take so much pride and- find 1 so much delight. They do not have any novelty. , revealed to them. The delieate ig complexion, the soft. and clear 1a ayes, the silky hair with its mel low tints, the willo'wy figeta4.tbe' h rounded contoo l4-isel familiar t to.-u.from frequent observation of P auoAm yalng and beautiful wo- D men. With tiost people, with h most pretty women especially, the fee!ing is very likeAy one of Jisappoiintment ikriielf-sitisfaction A after the first critical o xamtiPation. %bey ;t:e tot afraid that our fem. inine love!iness ould suiffer from r 101m1-palrisnil with the b-CaYu ty( which has dazzled London society 3id: won the admiratioaof L,mn- it Jon artists. Writing ofMrs Langtry's first f( performaance, the theatrical critic t >f the. ivew York. Times said that b women equa3liy beautiful and of e' very much the same style of beauty it onuld be eneountered aniy day in it ~be streats of-this town. And that g :ritic, we believe, is bcth a young a md impressiot.able man twudt a. 5 )Oet.: Yet,: iti aipears, hie as not izzred,; and was esen~ unwiliing 2 ~o grant exceptidual ioveliness 'to y hbe actress. .Nor is it unlikely ba't bi opinion is fefr1 $reen h. ative. Women would probably LCree with him, and' comparative . y few men wouhi dispuLe his as ertioti that Mrs. Langtry a bedutg I ~ould be agily jnatcIe,d her and aerhapitplt into ?Le sade It must be remembered that she s not an? .English 19"6. He- , >lootd is Breto- :en the flalher's , ide, and site was borun in Jersey, :eered tor,thei .eal.-of its women-a, . beau-ty tdry unlike I ,hat whc we reeognize.asdis ,inetively English. She is lithe,e :omuparatively sleuder, and deli ~ately tinted, and her features, as m whole, are of the sort fatr more frequently seen in our well.favored Women than in those of England. o Still, Mrs. Langrtry has some hbarms whieb are not commonI , dere, despite the prevalence of eminine beauty and its increasin gI ustre in our older comnmunitiesi specially. Sne is more graceful hban the run of handsome En ;ish women, but not more so ban our own. In one respect c her proportions, viewed in corn-t parison witb the highest typos j bodily development, are morer symmetrical than those we ofteny encounter at home. In the rela- L tion of her bands and feet to herd tature, Mrs. Langtry far more cosely approaches the type ex emplfied by the Yen us of Medici than do many of our most beau- a tiful Amerieans. But the classic a proportion of feet to bodil; '-size 1 since the extraordinary evor~~ eion of small feet among our country women, has given way to another. o <disproportionately small foot n Pngrer is -tbouzht a blemisb o erfect beauty. in other point t yimmetry. t.lso, Mrs. Langtrl 'ould contrast unfavorably witl iany of our women. Her com lete and barmonious physici ealtb is very obvious. and that F course, is an essential elemen r the best type of beauty. Bui sr as that goe, ihe hi'n ivantage over large number beautiful American women o is generation, when feininin -altb is better cared .for am reserved Lhan formerly As Mi airmart Rogert- said the othei y, : izoealth is zooanger it sbion. Fashionable women ari nulaung their biothers in tho -6tematic development of bodilj gor. Yet Mrs. Langtry has one thins )t common here amfoug women hetber beauLiful or plain. Tha a sweet, melodious voice, i vely intonatiot,- and a speec w and solt, but clear as crystal .er manner of utterance has fem be peculiarities whigoi Our im ators of English form think i cssary to' affect. It is easy usical, and natural, and bej 7onunciation is dulightful. 11 niot -be- possible fk usa,~ i gret to say, to assert the sam bings with' truth oftbe vbice ant )eecb of the gieater'number o -antiful American- women. An! "t therein consists one of th ost delightfal and most winnins feminine charms-a charm s< reat, so essential even, taat otber ise perfect womanly loveliness inexpressibly marred by the ek of it. We do not fear to say that on iudsome women need not hesi te to put their features-in com irison with those of any examph foreign feminine beauty whict is yet appearbd on our shores [New York Sun. PAYIG PENETENTAARY CoLU-BIA, November ..-At i gu!ar monthly meeting of Ih rectors of the .Penitentiary t< ight Col. T. J. Lipscomb, Super tendent-,-.4ubnitted: a statemeni the reeeipts aid disbufse.renti bte t kffeal yearbdih' Octobe sL, 1882. including th'e casb or and at the close of t be fiscal yeal idinsg October 31, 1881, amount, g to $21,199.99, the receipts -dur' g the past year amoutunted Li ),574.41. The disburse ments dur gt he year aniounted to $60, 4.14, feaving a cash balance 01 nid October 31-, 1882, of331,040. . The bankable notes on baud 1UIValent to cash, amount t< 2,311.45, and the amounts du< r convict hire to date foot nj 1.541.21, making the total1 avail >ue asets of Lhe institutiOn on uid Oct ober 31, 1882, $54,902.94 Saddition it should be statel ata mainy improvements have se - made during the~ year, ai iat tbe institution has not only' :enw self sustaining, but 'at "the id of Col. Lijscomb's 'fourti ar. as Superiutendent he is abli r tun, into the'State Treasury al asi, $40,000 in cash. .During bh hnministration $150,000 has beet pended in permaznent, i mprove ent of the Penitentiary. Si uch for Democratic rale. Thj nual rieport of the Spperinten nta was read and approved.'A -der was passed by the boari ithorizing Major A. J. T wiggs t ansfer his convicts from the tvan nah Valley Road to thi eorgetown and Lanes Railroad [Ex. THE LONE GREENBAKER.--It i x often that an entire partyi >ncent.rated in one man, as ii ie ease of Mr. Weller, of Iowa bat individual -is the solitar qrpr~es.Lative of the Greenb.aci arty-- he our reslt -,f all it fim and expenuse and gratuitu Lsribution of camipargi Ii tera ire. One advantage Mr. Welle ill have, however-his part; icus will always be peaceful od its action will be united, bar onious and general.-Greenville ew. Clergymen consider this worl ly as a diligence in which the, an Lavel to anotber. o GIVE THE GIRLS A CHANCE, S Editors Chronicle and Consti tutionalist: A eorrespondent'of'the b Atlanta Constitution, asserts that a number' of influential citizens ol Augusta have interested them: selves in widening the field ol woman's lubor, by providing for them other and more-remunera tive Occupalione thall that of seamstress or teacher, and by offering to them some chance to j dpvelop their iudividuahty. This is a move in the right di rection, and should have the r Learty co.operation of every no bfe Christian man aid woman ;a the city of Auguta ; and UL only here, but as the ripple in the water widens the circle until it touches the banks, so this move went should* widen, and .iden until it embraces Georgia and then the entire South. Mordists, who sigh over wo BAn's incapacity and frivolity, would find one half of their ocen. pation gone, if they would devote a portion of their - leisure to de rising and putting into practice nisthods whereby the young girlk of. our cities and towns might work out their own independence. There .are characteristies com mon to womanly natures; gentle. ness, timidity perhaps, a shrink f ing from the eye of the world, these among the best, and again less noble, yet still pardonable, a love of admiration, a desire to gain the approva' of those around, and a passion for the beautiful in form and color, these predomi nate in every feminine character. 3ut f6lly, vanity and selfishness are faults of education and circum stance8; no more to be reckoned universal characteristics 1 of wo. man, 'ttan are ambition, covetous ness and deceit to be count.ed the distinguishing traits of men in geperal. Idleness brings .a host .J evils in its train, and the srtw (-f de pendence and the constant firet ting aguinst restrictions oi. every baud, b.ave cariied mnore misery into the lives A multitudes -f ocr Southern women than th-s- -:ame moralists, with their ready sneer, couid ever suppose. What. then, is the rvw- ? Give t wor-,!v Uill. Lu the youn. girl who looks with eager eye, into the dim vista of the fui tui-e Po'int on n p- ihby '.*hieb she can, oh ii onwior anid credit, -make herself inidepe ndent, at losst, in a measure. (Give her i-ome hope, other than that of an early -marriage; give her the p)leasure of earning her own money, and learning to lay It out to the best s dvantage; anid, better than all. give ber the digity of kn,w ing herself to be of' some activ.e use in the world. In the North and WVest there Iare scores.of .vomeu, int,elligent, weil ored, respected, who earn Itbeir own living. Why may not the girls ol our own bonny Sonth :land do the same ? Will they make loes noble wives. and mo thers because .hey know- that all ot life does not lie in a silk dress or in a new Aonnet. Fathers spend tinie and money in opening a path for their boys, ,that&they may make their way in tehe world, vet their daughters, mhany of them at least, ago throQgh~ life wasting their time in indolence Iand frivolity ; burdened with the necessity for economizing, yet ig' norant how- either to save or to ,make, with no prospect for them in the ~over-crowded ranks of teachera And needle women. There is, therefore, but the one a way. Widen' 'the field wherein s they may 'labor, without being Swounded by the sneering laugh 01 the carping criticisms with 'which Iour Sontdierai societ'y is so ready c to assail any girl wbo is brave a enougrh to take her future int.- her e own hands. .-If, indu,ed, we muust give ac. r count otf idle words and idle hours, Swhere .will the mighty Judge lay tbe fruitless lhves of so many o. . our Southern wiomen ? In theii e names 1 beg of you-give the girls a chance. A Youse Wombs. Man and not his circaunstances, hals ihe secret of his destiny. THE CHEERFUL GOAT. The town goat has the run of the town. He is not domestic in his habits. He is seldom ever seen asleep. The goat is composed mainly of horns, hair and diges. tive orgons. When not engaged in butting the breath Out of some member of his own famiiy, or peeling -the bark off the neigh bors' fruit trees, he may be found standing on an empty beer keg, iu fronL ot the corner grocery, gleefully cbewing wrapping paper and empty sardine boxes. The 1 towc goat is respected and feared by all who are acquainted with bis eccentrieities of character. He is a very reliable animal. He can be relied on to eat a week's wash ing, break several windows, and pursue tbirty-seven dogs in the ad. joining yard all in one day, and not work halt the time. Police men shoot at him, boys try to dis courage him with stones, and housekeepers empty kettles of hot water ~on him. As a result of these assaults, he usually bas chips and splinters broken off him at every curve and angle of his anat,. omy, yet withal he is heeriul and froliusome*. His jaunty tail gives him a delouair aad i2Lll4l" "ap pearance, that Causes some people to surmise that te isn't all that he should be, but they judge him too hastily, as people of strong prejudices are prone to do. These remarks about the goat are suggested-by a 'incider3 that happeied last week to an old party . named MuWbirter,. who lives in Wiseonstn, and who ow-na a-goat. Old man McWhirter lives on an ot'mial diet and th in terst of his money. On Monday evening of last, weAk, Mr. Mc. Whirter was out in the yard feed ing the cow. He had taken off his coat and laid it Ou the ence. In the pocket of. his coat was a morocco pocket book containing governimelt bonds Lu thieamto)unt of $2,000. W1hy.. Mr. MeWiAirter carried tile bonds in ii-- 1weket instead of piacing tbel; inl the safe, we wer' not ita- When he had attemt-u to i hu'waLts of the cow and turied Lio.i,eL bli- cuL, be found that gannet LAying in t,he mud. The goat had ptlled it off the fencee, and niow stood balanucin.g himself on the roof of the chicken coop. As he came within the range of Mc Whirter's vision, andl a rock that the old mn.z propeiled in his di .rection, he w n in the act, of mnas ticating what was evidently tbe remnant of a red morocco pocket book. As the awful and disastrous character of the misfortune dawn ed on -MuWhirter, and he realized that big two thousand dollars in bonds were Jied away in the di gestivye machinery of a four dol lar- goat, he gave vent, to his feel. ings in a yell that soundled like tbv wail of a b'agpip)e leading a funeral procession ; anda with dis may in every feature and a three tinted hay-fork in his hand, he went for that goat. *The goat de cided not to wait for him. He did not tarry but proceeded with a celerity and buoyancy that was miraculous in a four legged animal-to put a large area of the landscape between himself and his owner. The goat went streaking down the street, the irrascible old man, coatless and hat.less, in full cry in his wake. Xs the pageant camne tearing along, the goat blea,ting a derisive defiance and old Mc Whirter waving the hay fork in the ambient gloaming and calling on the populace to 'head off that $2,000 bond,' pedestrians crawled up on the fences, hack-drivers drove into alleys, unt,il the pro. cession passed. MeWhirter fell over two baby buggies, entangled his hay fork in, an alderman's ear, and was s.ev'eral times tripped up by po'uce.ne". whoe thought he was a crazy uman, for they couldn't understand why' any one could take so much absorbing interest in an ordinary goat thate could be bought any day at $30 a dozen. McWbirter stopped not, neither did he stay his footsteps, but after each delay increased his speed, aad renewed his imnortunate peti-1 thief!' etc., etc. Over sbrubberq in front gardens, and out througl back-yard gates, they keit o their mad career, until at last th4 goat was corralled in a stable. A butcher was sent for, and, undei instructions from MRr. McWhirter cut the goat's throat and thez pried him open with an-axe. In side him was found an assortt;eu of clothes-pins, manilla paper hay, undeilothing, a child's sboe and a piece of a broken mirror but their was no trace of the U S. bond-i. McWhirter tried t( swear, but emotion choked -hit utterance. He directed the 4atch er togive-the remains to the poor and went bore in-a back, to finc his pocket-book and the bondt it the pocket of coat where be had left tbem.-Texas Sijtirgs. CONTESTED SEAT5 IN CON. GRES. Several Democratic candidatei for the House of Representativei who were defeated by small ra jorities on , the 7th of Noiember have announced an jutntion.tC contest. the elecions of their op ponents in tbe-Forty-eightb Con: gress. In all cases' of frand, ol bribery, of falo regi.:ratioacer tifiCates, and of ballot stuffing there should be hvrough and im parijal investigation. This is a proceeding whieh ii favored by everybody who desiret to preserve the purity of electione But candidates who were fai,rl beaten at the ballot box, how pver small the majority may be, should be emphatically discourag ed from making contests. in th hope of being seated fbr part5 reasons and by a party vote. The people at the recent elec tions rebuked the Republican ma jority in' the present House for s gross abuse of power in,turnin out members fairly elected. Se cor Robeson,K, Keifer, Reed,. His cock, an,d Page wanted. to strengthen their hands and to,en large the margin for absenteeism, They adopted.the desperate.expe. dient of anseatin r Representativei witb titles as perfect as their own To make it effective, theyinvented a new rule, whereby debate wa cut off and a strict party yote de termined the merit of every con. tested case. .The gross injustice, the vulgas tyranny, .and the violation of par liamentary practice in these con. tests,.drew public attention to the outrages, and the people gave their opinion of them very freel~ at the polls. The ~Democrats in the nexi House have great responsibilitiei to meet, and important duties tc discharge. They canpnot afford te redr-ess per-sonal griefs or to stoop~ to personal revenge. The time has come when contested electionm should be frowned down. The expenses of such contests should be borne by tbe interested par ties. Chronic contestants, likc Bisbee of Florida-wh ose place ot business is said to be j aNhew Yorli -havre driven a profinable trade by claiming seats and getting large allowances for alleged expenses. Both parties have countenanced this abuse too long. The .Demo crats will soon have an oppor tunity to, begin the reform. In stead of following the bad exam pie of the Republicans in this Congress, let them ..proceed in every contested case on the prin ciple that a Rep ublican's right t occupy the seat to which he has been elec:,ed is as good as.a Dem crat's-New York ,Sun. ON TEm.-Whoever believeu that the Democratic party in this State. was made safe by the lasi election is woefully mistaken. WE were only given a respite. Whez the negroes learn the new eighi box arrangement 'and the power of the, Federal government aidi them and their white allies, the party must show a brigh't record free from ciass legislation or n popular laws to hold the State. [Greenville ..iews. A cheerful face is nearly as ~good for an invalid as healthy weather. 'Dispatch is the soul of business and miethod the soul of disarh. WHAT P6HALL YOUVNG W4)-. MEN DO? Augusta Chronicle. A young lady, in today's Chroni- i icre, pleads to her sex in a way that i should - have -a sympathetic response. I WHile it is tiue that some women in I I the South .are winning their briad i industriiusly, .it is -also- true- that i many others either have no chance to 4 d6 s6 or,csnnot find escape from'a a destiny that seeLus to them as inex- a orable as -it is unsatisfactory. France a appears to- have solved.this problem 9 better than any. Vther country. ' Re: 8 turned travellers, like our own Wm. I F. -Herring, .areloud in praise of the i French .women :and their isdulness. a Thiy even go so - far -as to saythit a they are, as a class, siperior to the c men. But does it not. speak well for the men, thati tey have. given the q girls a chance ?' Te saie. questions asked by our ' fair;correspondest are asked also at the.INorthr,:4here women are.'-pe s sumed tWlh'ave a better field for their o talents and independence' than in this 8 section'.- And yet.complaints are:fre quent therb. . A young lady teacher says that 'year. after year, even people I who count their income by the tbou- t snda are less willing to pay. for ed ucation, and an accomplished lady is.' unblushingly. offered compensation t which they would-not dare to suggest to a cook or laundress.' At the commercial centres, where ibh- struggle for- life hseardest ad9 most .merciless,everything is regn lated- by supply and demand. Jt'is : so, to a -degree, everywhere. Unfor- I tunately, when wom.en epter into 3 competition with men, the are sub ject to. the same. material impedi ments,- without the same hardihood. 7 For females of superior accomplish. meats there may. be a chaice, but the. most - accomplished woman we ever- kn,ew. failed at schoot :teach ing,because,:as:she said, her rich patrona did not-. pay her, and she. 'Piaally :found- refuge in a Department at Washington, whera.her wonderful C linguistic acquirements were useful a and appreciated. .. The. trouble with a a rest many. Americaoewomen is that i they are too proud to become subject I to those who are- more fortunate than. themselves, and,- in the South, there.. is. arace condition-that makes this an almost. impassable -barrier. A New 4 York contemporary, who has been g confronted- with this dilemma, as we are, advises a elever young woman to keep her:accomplishments weli out of sight, and- eqra aa good a salarykas though she were ignorant;.giving the familiar illustration of .the dancing0 master in Gil Blas who wgs. incensed that he was offered only four times thed pay given. :toe the. philosopher. If. I says. the c ritie. the philosopher had had this wits about him he wouldn have turned, dancing master. Taoo many women are taught to be teachers,. and the :market, to fuse aa comm on -phrase, becomes overdone. What the girls, we dare say, is such practical training as may fit them for just such oceupaions as French meno.fill. It' would probably.- b? a blessing ifTsome philanthropist with a long -purse should -eudow a university where young women could be taughte useful arts. rather than ornamnental. God knowys we wish all the girls who aspire to earn their living had a bet ter chance than now-exists! Seventy-nige of the one hundred and twenty-four members of the last House of -Representatives of this State have been left at home. Could a people repudiate the action of a body inore violently -than by failing to retaire; three-fifths of the men com posing iti" The result isgiven more significance by the fact that. of the twenty-niina three are Republicans,, the fate of all the others being do. btrie .not by the people generally,t btby the active members of the ' Democratic party.-Greenville News. The Baltimore and Ohio Railway Company has its own hotels, its in dependent telegraph and express sys Coems an d sleeping and parlor ear or ganizations, and will soon -have its owo cabTe and. ocean steamship con nections. --The employes of the comn. pany have a relief association, wrhich has paid out isince 1880, in benefits to its members, $3d8,839.84. He who sagsall he likes wili often o hear whathdbesnot like. - CURIOUS0B? - A miost resis. een - ne of thesiT !5N1ilide war M gae"-iat o7a tvTeof most imirtapt questionJuPAng4U. 4' ourse of the trial the learned Judge iad to retire for half antour, prom , ingto be back oth&expiratiof hat time. The Judge th ad so did the jurors., In sometime fter, one of the jurers veturnedi O4 .a i pen eouTt, to anaonE udie:ice, that he had beei-toa ll enin'g;"draok the caild's bealti poody upisewditw iothiir ndeth t er-sotPi'bighe hs ainuhekt a han its papa. ThisM sb b e h arprise tha hose vhbEr tr Mianed silfenk. ese lin DUnsel to OiVe Mi*" nest the iearMed gendenad%hood6 ead.Thejuror hni, ron't, wou't yod? ThalbyR doi lyselff, ind w- -he dIid4.Ilt el1e, "sadno tideleidAi1iinesi f i-rowded e(*t -e4tggali irnin, %d e4iddai itd rith equal eredia-ned wsZdsierps applauded.? tHe- *2 bt the Judg shAi, diat Iwa ad this dmind norbeiiaeaVUW by the drier, be stoed up aSd il he learned Ju4g W-e 6i ifferest times, andin the uanas le-thened hould' g IVa*kl t ti. Jr o hour he reiA 6e 4"0g. 4n debe Wde10dl mn escef-sgigByg grg rhieb tie sspe&'imehaiy4eon esuming hie semnodghiiriellisi rho appesd* W*_,,s#*Ls i r r Ie; lithe,..eeeniog eW3gb*1wl - ry (seeskathhi0 um a #6g; e 4Al tild" old,do.thie KlwtbiAAd 6 t C~to amrtaTa;10l oncluded a spleadid0 1 udge- made hira *ah eroVfthe Un*lj stening.t in mate~ her mesie ofathe ras equaUllpado9ade-d l & he-ery-o 'ats siifBe eep-A;: leoce VIn n imtehing was atoti we -- the fuuter heiig ntitthe follow gabeen ~und out where the term '-dumm riginated. It is .from.rttlu ord. 'rummerdar. $hdsea ary. is. the ship of the dee:kQ ~ ing trips .that ntingu isomsl*t mild stahd4 and in faessagelinji ne:ground i. a givenspace ffis ian npiher-anmak thaat 6o f'ashington Noalh hai,o kitga rie. :-The .ouly #ifeapoe'ie 41($ihe rmedary drieka .beatd oinghla ist him the-whole tripWegbare nnd jthe origia of the 4oiend we ant a tho . EKvaa2Ie:Alu# M8 .Like. sakes.,of snow be eathl, the seemingly;alp se vents of life succeed one .anohr a , the isnow g thers; Qgetb solr or habits formed.. N..si#gle p hat. is added to.the pile.preds. ansible .ehange; o pil esuedi reates, however, it. may exhiti . aan's character., Kind words and brgto of - arthly existene;- use t~ean4e ecially around h re *./' s 'hey areithejewesbj owerful to. bbs ie wot adeka nd make the ~ged - w Every day a little look into the ~ible. One chaplter a:L4y 1~ Ne fessure of Bible knowlMne 6ne y oquire in ten years: Bery'day' a erse committed to mefa4ry What voluime in 25 yeara! No way has been found -for misking4 eroism easyr even for 'the. seGear. abor-iron 'aaor, is for hiew heb rorld was created as an audieuf-i im, and the -atoms of which itis 3ade are-opportu.ze. - - The enviou toriWWnot ely byr aRft Mi~tlia seiilhim elf, bttyal -lese 1isin eui s ~aaoth.rer. ---- n-y ;is 4Idlou