The Kershaw gazette. (Camden, Kershaw Co., S.C.) 1873-1887, March 24, 1887, Image 5

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FACTS A$ TO FEVlSRS. . mm* Iti'iiulv.' to TyphoM and lt<i ' '.-.if - ! Treatment1. * uw*;; | r the body^%oni!>rl[#htn - VL^br jmjpold actually modl(y ... .oil- o? ' oxtout tKftt o jilaco. 'XIio it air may >ws and vwrinklos come .?j*. i *7 own foot tliat nearly cdicino, in. his onrly \ trtcdioal lor*. will In jarkod syiftptoms of ? diqpa$e h$jf reads about. Tho?o o aro tfe^accuitoinod to daHy contact with disease'^ ,ah<j aro oaslly- Impress^, shouUl not road d^fleriulions of human ills, and should aVoid jtncdical bookfk ;. CAi)ftOiftMJ|ho i?^u4ov soiviuitl^ ^lodioal, booki'AW^wWSl il,poi>nliir,,!>ysii<rfi> na i ??KvortKdfnWkn?mww, "w i . Bo-anifioi Horn* 'ireutinenk.'C* wul their lfc# ,X ' tAiJlom* . jwotfy. aid down others who go ItTttflffH! -none atever. These aro. the, extremes of i evil, ana both are bad. There jire ,ny who take so muoh medicine that arises for them to rocoivc somo nt then the usual dpses aro with ?^oir oft - v? On tho othor hand, Mi mJnd^o . against romody whatevor aro frequently cceutly lost his life by rofusing troat oont . ' . it thing is to know just when H>ioe4 M. >a|lng art There are pooplo by the sctyrt ho, if they want iWiftplivioii when health is at stnko, a mutton Worthy of ,a foamed opiniou, instead of tying t6' tljio doetorhf Wlfom thoy i oonHdeho^go rathev4;o a charlatan . or soek relief; ih somo of tho many nos ?| trnmd^nsthdlty; rtpon tho shelves of t,fItl??ISijnflbtl. hot'o to' (loftfccla W tho shnplo lomwllo-s of household ustj which have lioifn found tJnio and tiiuo again the, approach ofsonlo diseases uro mo insid ious that the rtfllrlw,ia.l<n^t.,nt onco rc-, cogni/cd, amtsolkadnnnUlored rcuiodlotr frequently*db.hiffw* This Wofttfii tho oaso ^)WrM pu^g(Ulvoa are^fcrn ut >ho boglunmg of typuoidfoVor. Fovau anwesfHbla-liy. typhoid, aro ' aetiay,to rocoguizo at tho out &o cailo thtit tho *' )AH 11. ? l^liui'il -f - ?m1 " " "tvtwn iir ' tho patient lifts iWilMMd"' It' la Wily'? ypu 4ir'UldtU uhd ?wW, !>ugh to onnblo tho thod rolops enough to?ona p'twdyipco ofiflj&o, phy^loUm is not to typhohMoyoiVboctuirfo this oun , bo rtono? but; Ho* Wrttoh tbo etiHC, > tbo symptoms. ami guhlo nml insist iro In hot* oudonvbtfl tb copo with if It turivoa nt ft ^ijccy^s iQ>i * 1 of tho dieimtte- Aro o, loss of appetite, pvin?riiv, tho. ami back, ami increase of WtfiUly1 whioli ia most mni kotl in tho ovo iYcuuqntly tho patient will bo ami ausiloas in thd evening and rtofcthf, night, Init nfioi* tho turn ht fall into a swoet nml ro liset>, whloh. If ttdt dUtnrboil, tttO tho taOfttirtg. '.Aflor tho inya tho labo got? very lionvj swlonlow, tho evening tompora Irtr rod ipaco nt pro^ur^ott., . 6i fovor, bfit tho triiiy bo inriloatlvfc dfcoiwe*. Will oh eo noarly ir thnt tortny Are rooui by both mirsos and visitors. ? "Hope springs otornal in tlio human broast, ' but one lugubrious old woman. ror head-shaking, loug-fticoil mnn, will . knock more hopo out of a sick norsou iu a minuto than can bo inspiroa thcro ' iring tho subsoquont wook. 4fiood nursing, especially iu typhoid feyor, will do moro toward, curing tbo patfept, providod always that thero aro rious complications, than half a 1 of tho best doctors iu town.? lltburg Dispatch. California's l'roriucte. ^ (S^Nows from the agricultural districts i of California is far nioro satisfactory I ^ldfyicotirnglng than that which comos ! $fonl tho San Francisco stock markets, 1 ?Shero spooulators in mining shares and : JUfcouest brokers are taking tho savings jTtho deluded poor. Varying estimates ' of the sizo ot the year's vintage aro i mQjdt), but it is admitted by all that the ; wliio crop of 1880 exoeods that of any ] 'previous yonr. Tho Call asserts tbet j tho icrop is 16,000,000 gallons; prom* iuttut w?e merchants say it is 19,600,- ! 000 gallons; and Mr. Do Young of tho JjhlQiiiQle proinisos 26,000,000 gallons. Xast< year's crop was only 7,600,000 gal lons; 'Tho quality of this V oar's vintazo is said to bo exoollent. The raisin orop is a1?o very large. The Cull's estimate ?fro(j0^000 boxes of twenty pounds euoh, iii upiin.st 260,000 boxes In 1886. Other osuiuites aro larger. The grape orop Is enormous. Out of 866.000,000 pounds 40,000.000 h*ve bf>en shipped eastward' d? bq used as table fruir,. 20,000,000 Mfave boon consumed in the same form at iiomo, 20,000,000 have been used In milking brandy, 80,000,000 appear In ,the|oriu of raisins, and tho remainder has been consumod in making wine. Tho Eastward shipments of lemons, llmos, and oranges will be iwloe as largo .as they were last yoar, it is'said, owing to the reduction of tho freight ^charges. As tho crops incroaso* producers in CaHfpruia aro learniug n?w ways of selling thorn. Heretofore the wine makers havo boon at tho moroy of tho wine' inorohants in San Francisco. *Ihese niorchants unito in fixing a prico to bojpaid to tho produoor, and tho pro ducer has boon forced to aooept it The owuors of sovoral largo vinoyards have rcoonftly established agencies in Enstoru cities for tho salo of their wines, and, [by escaping tho Pacific coast middle man, have boon able to raiso tho prico whioji they receive by nearly 100 per 1 feent.i Tho adoption of this system by ajlfCalifornia producers who mak'o Targa quantities of wino would work to thciriadvantage and to tho advantage p( .Eastern consumers. Many persons in tlio East who would liko to servo >t|)h)nBolvos and oncourogo tho Cali fornia producer by buying California ^vlh'cs aro restrained because ihoy aro unable to procure tlio wiuos under con ditions that insure its purity. If such poisons could trade directly with tho Eastern agent of well-known vineyards tho consumption of puro California wirte* as a substitute for tho odultoratod wlnos of Franco would bo greatly in creased. California wlnos aro counter feited in tho East, as tho rocont con demnation of 6,000 gallons of tho counterfoil product by oUlcers of tho honlth department in Now York city ql^arly shows. A Human Hail^cr. ' It was once my fortnno to run aoross a human being who would havo beou a jfrrizq for Darwin, as ho was a fair ?atbolo of tho gonitis homo on the way backward; in fact, dogonorating,-ana, Ks far ns I could ju'lgo, in advanco of Jho crorllla Inasmuch as tho man could build a flro. I was riding across coun try in Maryland, about twenty miles from Washington, when I camo upon what nppoaAju to bo a muskrut's nost, only vat tho top there was a holo, black ened around tho odgos. A further In vestigation showed a side opening about largo onough to allow a man to oraWl in. I knocked by tossing a corn Itall^ down tho chimney, and in a fow moments there appeared from tho door ft negro so hideous, so bostial in evory foaturo, that my very horse bftokod off It wins the missing link, if thoro ever was o#o, and tho jargon of sounds that the droaturo uttored only addod co tho straijigonoss of his apponranoc. 1 could not, undor-stand iv wonl, and fode over tho fields to a houso wlioro tho owner not only gavo mo tho history of the s Iran go being, but induoed mo to erawl into tho don aftef him. The man conld only talk in a gibboriah understood by his' qmployer. Ho Was not an Idiot, as 'wo might, havo supposed, but was Simp ly, OS ipy acquaintance pat it, a tvpo of thiiowest kind, Ho had owned him befole tho war, and ho wn? valued ns & laborer,'preferring. to work In ditches, wrfton up to his waWt in water, where ho '^- ^1 Wftllow like a hog. His ox e told mo that tlio mM olalmod to bo?n a prlnoe in his natlvd coun * at he was sold a* a stave and t to Florida, and flhalty again horo.jAt that tlmo ho wan being i ft uomlnal sum, which he gave to *cd relj\tlvo, rdsorvlng only :o supply Idmsolf with food and pSftpEf of t ho ground, with room (or ' four persons to sit; hut not stand. In ono oorner was ft fire llOlo, but tho fildes of tho hovol wore bakod and blackened b# tho InioUe that must have filled the room. [ Two or three tin dishfis, a pile of cornstalks M a bed, completed tho outfit of this human be Jrtg, who lived here ttloter and summer. was a number of years ago, and if this spoclmon has gono on rof0i(ting I and degenerating ho nifty (time being no object.) have' roAohod a mofjp forts bio stago, and now be found Ooveir od with a coating of hair or fur, have forgotten how to build a flro, and be on Alio Oiiufines of that bald ami toothless ilmol that Is prediolod for tho fat iro hu msn rnco so ohoorfully by a (u rman Scion tist.?Ban Fran disco CaU. (iieonlftwn oemetory, in Indianapolis, Ihas iv vault in whioh aro yovoral oofllns #6Hy Voars old. In examining ono of thtaie last wock tho soxton camo to tho body of n woman named Mnry A. Mills, who died in 1846. Tho body petrified, nnd after forty yours tho hytw of - the corpse worn blue. Old residents remember her as a comely French girl. Hard to Hoax. Prof. 1 laird's gravo. foal uvea relaxed into a smile when ttu? dispatch from Paduoali, Ky.. announcing tl?e discov ery of a diamond-liold near that place wua shown lo him, writes u Wnsliiog* ton correspondent of tho N^v York Herald. "I should sav, without knowing any thing about it,*' ho said, "that tho story 1 was a' hoax. " Nona of tho specimens re ported to have beon sent to the Smith sonian havo been, rocclvcd," nor d0| be liovo they will bo. Prof. Proctor, an cmiuont geologist, is now making a tour of Kentucky, but bo has not boon hoard from upon the subject If the story possesses any foundation in fact, tho probability is that tho mino is 'salt ed.' Such tricks do occur occasionally. 1 romombor about ten years ago a won derful discovery of diamonds was re ported from Colorado. The nowspnpors teemed with descriptions of tho mlno and its dazzling productions. A party of gentlomcn went froih San Francisco and oxumined tho mino in person. In ^Soir judgmont it was a bona-tido dis covery. They returuod to California and organized a stock company, with a capital running up into tuo millions. Mr. Clarence King, ono of tho geologists attachod to the Smlthsonlau, had just roturnod from Colorado when the ex citement was at its height Nothing of tho kind had come uudor hi* observa tion, and naturally enough be regarded the discovery as a roileiaion upon him eolfc -Ho returned to Colorado,'tfftd saw ut once that tho initios wore jsaltcd.' Tho projectors of the affair offered htm a large sum of monoy not to expose them, but lie refusedbo bribed, and so tho fraud bcoamo public "Whonovor an alleged Important dig covory liko this Kontueky tnlne. for In stance, gets into tho papers we of the Smithsonian havo to suffer tho conso quenoos. I am qulto sure tliat, before tho expiration of a weok wo shall ro ceivo a hundred letters about'lt Peo plo wrilo to us upon evory conceivable subjoot Wo rceoived n lottor tho other day from a man iiM*enusylvania Who claimed to havo found' a petrified par rot, which ho offered to soil for $1,000. it is impossible to potrlfy tho soft tissues ol a bird, but 1 told him to send it along ani wo would oxamino it for him. It moved to bo nothing but a water-worn fragment of a limestone rock, with some thing of tho appearance of u petrltiod parrot might hayo if suoh a thing wore possible. "Speaking about ourious uooplo, 1 have just wnttou a lottor to Mr. 4<>hn Hampden, of London, who sonds us each month for distribution a magazine devoted to proving that the earth Is tlat Somo years ago Mr. Hnmpdon wagered I Arthur R. Wallaco, tho celobrated scien tist, ?1,000 that Wallace could not prove tho earth to bo round. ' Tlioro woro three umpires, two of whom dcold od in Wallaco s favor, and the monoy was paid to him." "Do you auswor or,auk lottots?" "Wo havo ono ulork who doos noth. inff else. Occasionally thoy write us a second timo, ntid oxpross their rogrot that an institution so famous should not possess ono man of > good common sense." The Thinnest Man. The Birmingham (Ala.) Chronicle says: Near Trussvlilo is'ono of the most romarkablo on sua of helplessness known to the mod leal f rotor nity Of tho atato. It is,that of a mnu who weighs fotty six pounds and has not movod tv por tion of his body, oxqont his mouth and tho two Ui'st fingers of his right hand in twenty-threo years, HI* name is John Kovis and ho iq .46 years of age and a man of culture. Ho contracted rheumati&m boforo the war, and after throo years of suG'orlng his limbs bo onmo druwniipin frbnt of hlSbody, in which posittyn thov aro now. Ho has boon bontinod to 'Ills bed twenty-threo roars motionless, oxcopt the parts of tho body pameij. llo is a skeloton, and forty-six pounds ?ro all his bones and skin woigh. Ho was formerly a school* toaoher, and is now a line conversation alist, and is quite food of oompany. Ho does not consider his prodloamontt and spoaks of, himsoif ja,s Veing wejl, Ills faco lookb hoalthy,' and lift Is lUwaysTn good spirits. 'J'lio case has bnfUpd medical skill, and why lie does not (lie has pvi/,/,lod bis frionds and relative^ many of whom livo in tho city. Mtf. Itovls has not moved or turned over In bed in tho long time of hls'oorifine mout, but is movod aboutnud fod. >; ?} . ? ! V. .V ' ? Tlici H1111* 11 r h r (VimiMoinvfiiOl li. Tho lillipntlan prluoipalitloa of Lioh tonstein, San Marino, and Monaoo, hitherto considered to be tho smallest commonwoalthH in KurbpO, aro rolativo ly well-sl^od territories as compared with anothor?the viilagoof Kueokors dorf. For while the aforo-ihon^loned states oount their territories ;?py .squaro miles and their population by thousands, or 'hundred* at least, Hueckersdorf com prises only a few sqijaro ifcelors, and Its Inhabitants at the prcsdnt time do not ?xoeed fourteen, It Is situatod in the easforn part of tho duchy of Altbhborg, ftbgnf&n hour'* * '"'I^Wri^watieritti " "? " ovm?^sL?WbToh ______ height of ft68 motors abovo tbo lovol of the Baltlo, and from tho summit of which one overlooks an extent of couu try of noarly sixteen square miles, sub ject to the sway of oight rulers. The commotio of Hueckersdorf, twelve farnls, witli tho land boionglng thoroto, constitutes an enclave of the kingdom of Saxooy, six of which farms, hi alter* nato ordor, buloqg to Saxony, and tho other six to Altotoburg, tfWitis f$r It to not cleared tip Which of 4wse two states Iprtflt ..llj^r; . M% % 9 % $?#.< ;j For years a loon bus had Its home on tho Schuylkill, near I'hlladolphin, but tho other day it flew Into the Zoo logical Gardens and was captured. Around its nock was a little silver collar oh Whfoh was eifgrii'V/id'* "Norno, tho hermit, 1804." The hoad kcopor of the Sarden says that lie has no doubt aboiit ( to bird's great ago. ' Over HH.O'jO tons of rock wore <juar I rled from tho phosphate bods near J Charleston, S. last, yoar, all but 11,? 000 tons of Which woro shlppod to foreign points. The stato receives a I royally of #I a ton .removed* ? IT^MAN (JOUJBTSH IF. ... Liii ? ' . Under the Mopt ?l ^Xov? WIU Tho question 1% How does tho Italian mnnngo to get minted* or even to fall in love? Among tho lower classes, whero every momber of tho housohold is obliged to do something towards earn ing a livelihood, the girls'must of course bo allowod to go abroad at timos, and Iho rloh havo their halls and the opera where tho young of both sexos way meet llut the seclusion in whloh tho Iouug iadics of tho middle olass are out is alnujst complete. They are al lowod to sit on the balcony and to go to church in tho company of a duenna, three or four times a year thoy are tnken out for a drivo, and this Is almost tho only contact with the outsido world that isporiuiuod them. Nor is it oosv for thorn to attain by stealth the forbid don froedoiu. When the parents go out thoy either set an old woman to look after thom, or socreto their hats and boots nnd thon look them safoly in. Jonlous h\i8b:\uds treat , their wives in tho samo way, thodgh this Is considered rcprohonslblo after tho first few years ol wedlock. In a word, everything is done to exclude both temptation and ro maim . In tho larger towns tho influenoe of foreign manners and the presence of Northern visitors are beginning to make thomsclvofj folt In Florence the young ladles enjoy! a liberty which would have .seemedJ.oului^n iifdi?Mb tn tMr grandmotheva; ^ana.rivon in Naples parontal rigor is slowly relaxing, tyl* Tn Sicily and the less frequented parts of Souther^ IUly that the old system is still In luUL,force, though, strangely enough even there there are single towns and distriots in ,whloh from time im memorial the oustoms have been far freer. To these we do not rofer, nor to suoh marrlagos as are simply arranged by tho parents of the young people for worldly reasons. Tho number of the latter is smnllor in Italy than Is usually supposed. Under the most difficult circumstances love, as the old song says, will find a wav, and In ire, too, lie steals into the maiden's chamber, however carefully it may bo guarded. One right she possesses whloh is sometimes denied to young wives?tho perfect freedom of the balcony* Thoro sM may lit whenever a shadow falls upon it, or theooolness of tho ovoning has come, and the youths who pads along the street cast eager glances upwards to oatoh a glimpse of tho protty faoes above, 'lhen, as we have soon, she may go to church under proper guardianship, and it la oxtraordU nary what u love for religious exercises some young women will display at this period of lue. This is all or nearly aU alio oau do, but it is enough. It Booms that most Italians of this olass fall in love at first sight, or at least by sight alono. Sudden passions like that of Romco and Juliet are the njie rathor than" the exception in the South, though they rarely have s6 tragical M ending. A young inan catches a gHmpse of a girl, and afc 'Onco resolvos to make her his tftfo; if it i? at,church, ho follows her hopae;if on a balpony, he notes the hous* and begins to haunt the street If h*,}*. aooeptablo, perhaps ono day a. <lowfr wlU ^l ?t MMM. though the glrl knows. that suoh on menso advai^t^go. He sings snatchos of ; g$sr & mCa!:: be may still have to onoounter, ah aversion on the part of the objeot of his affootions will not be oh$ of them. Very protty flirtations are carried on in this way, the young lady at times mock ; ing and toasldg her admirer with frag ments of satlncftl verso, and at times falling Into' sotnothing vory like senti ment, but thw aro moro frequent after than before the betrothal. Eveu the most favored lovor h^f>, in the meantime, been seeking for some means of establishing a moro diroot intercourse with tho objeot of his choice. He has made inquiries of the neighbors is to the oh a r no tor of the famllx and its intimates, and endeavors to obtain an introduction to one of the elderly ladies who frequent the house. To her ho cx Slains his wishes and his position In fe, and ho then begs her to plead li s cause, i If hei is *0 eligible suitor, sholi almost certain to oonaont, as tho rn s slon Is an interesting one, and the position Is considered highly honorable. She knows nothing of any signs of favor the lovor mky have received, so hor first visit Is to th<J young lady, who feigns shyness and a roluotance which it sometimes takes weeks to overoome. At least the. env^Jf^sMposod to act thus} in faot, there is generally a, pM* Mot understanding between her and tho patents, thoMh lhey protend to know ^nothing of WCJkt la going op^ cAftor the jonfcf^ are discussed, ^nd the betrothal h tho South hn? a mom dlfflctil _>?deavor? to wcure the good c , Ot Homo female dopendeht Of tho faflfily, of ih old hurrfe-purflesplav afar ?rost er part ill the family llfo ot Italy than of England?or oven, If no othov opportu nity offers, of tho washerwoman. Bijoh negotiations airo generally kept strictly secret, and if the young lady show# a marked aversion to tho proposed rtiatv r? th<jy ^nre dropped at onjio. If sho mts t<> it, tlife lovev sends 6?io Of ttha Jtlonfc U4 *Hln0*, who In as often a* n 61 a man, t<) *>nk with the father* on tho matter, ^o nuMlon whatever 1m made of tho faot that ?e young jioople havo oomo to an unifm n&nding with each other, ana tlio father, of" course, asks tlnio to consider/ lto oonadfts his wifo and iliwighiorj if tliolr opinion I* favorahlo, iiinf Ids innulrion ?X to tlio position ami raarauter of thoyoung mat* lend to HiitMufltofty rosnlis, lie signifies his wIlHngnew* to tfeat* and the ho trothnl tnkoH piano in tiuoeourso. Lon don Saturday Scvlcw. mm t ?'t > fott'.V :?' ;^l Tho Knglisii government ha? pur ohnscd a largo number of Moxiean sad dles forme in the Kiighsh oaralry ??r rioe. Concernl;in Onrpcta'. \ ; In regard to the color of carpets the foHowi^rulem^'b?4*4d'<W?*m- ?o+-. ourselves a liberal spruskHng of crim son, dead gold; russet* brown ami alt the beautiful tlhtfc t hat uatwo (HstribflU* respond with. our oUrpalnth*8 gilded frames, our mlmR, anfr'onr ohiua, ok wh&toter of aftyppQ*k? ?w 1 *Wta$ wealth q! color, wo ohanoe.lo possqps. In our bedrooms w? sVlrtit'bright tilts to preserve ch^ulnosa.and, to avoUi^toa glaring a,contrast with our wluto oOun? tcrpaues and nhislin-drapedi toilet tablet and windows. I# fche .llpffir.yv, aobet hues roust be chdseniT^ndttrnonlae with walnut booJ}?oaaesJ J oaks *$d tables, and the soboc dress wherotwllh publishers olothe bookd that aro ^Mand colors should appeal The pattern of a carpet should always depend tipOri thrfWaJ'dt m mh.^dm !rP. addo^o?,e7.'?ps most oeautiful designs MniUh&& bfr our manufacture;*, aro found among .'tu*" Axminsto'r oaf^ets.'^riud ?.Utese, tfiouj worked areadwlrabl, display w i' dellcftto 'ai tern. The. varied gr??|^j^44i^U| mosses can bo made to, appear, an? etery detail (of leaf efid *toft$w#Hted" out. Forthoao who coiwidor. Armload ter oarpets beyond tli^iraits ? wei? purse the reive! tiilo < ia defltrible,* and makes a perfectly satisfactory cover ing for a parlor' flooiV ^4Au exc^U?ttl modorato, ri.velvot caritot for tho parlor, sppipfii house being modostly rostrlotad Vfr'tur grains or iuatftng, |^^^H_M|^ There Is one essei tory iloottcbVoityg. omitted; That is, the epotigo or co This can alwavs be prfr6^ittril5o lust at lealt.half as Jong agah? Wtfunn try people used froquontly to. put ttraW under the carpets, but th? 1ST60 haMh, and refealfcltsell to6Hivfl%lki^.imoi meut the foot; pr?wiWfitau./A* JfttfcJ* ?5 ?? and persuades tho vlaitcA'thftt hdJ'hasfc S&SS5S3585* S@S$98SBB nocoasam so that ivord/pfttOM ritepfco Shango(Uf^^-- ~ ^ oare I attem Ing W m>l of tllg.- ? will' kdtp oOoflooi* j^tintfhrlght wpd.^ife StMshnoisoi as irritating M tta? &4* fafcoftUe boit^noM ftn&jpf* kswC?. ? turn I# nmny familibs; tho selHahnc . another, Will gltq to thdse dfc# in toason and ou|*ofjjdi m _ I 10 V?Uf failing to, reftd _ ppsriM conuiftny. tfy ii Vitry nrora l?<* to f&came a goo<l actor. Tho )4V<? a cttftAtirt ot w? m fog two walohea, hccaitAe if "ono roakoe "Ar" l,v"" A S1N(JING OlIOST. V."\J5f v\' ? V v.. , - . ! to. . ? m ? ? Story ** * hn M bbarloston, tjj* Cincinnati . ? pie, mntnf <ot ?jjb^u>|n>^oi??dlo in bit, ^*t*ngo *^Mn**dMid>. strsnj, bitaJions uiny >b*<found lor theI Iro tho "sfrvr-diggers,!' -*r oatr*> , ? dw'eMera thrive iu #Udlnm?Un<?; here. lli^ftBrotheihooil of Prayer" and Church Trfcod ?<*ts; ?**?*>?? <$#?<*? itttes. ol tUmiJity and pen anoe recall the history "' duddioftl worship. Ob the toothers Ihf'tfcduhtairi' elkWt five raiiee . ??.d "tho Bottlement'V-as these p^mVtivq rtiRnttet%<l bcople still Mi th<r lamfe Hre m Wh HI ihj shrieked bimd W< h'eri>....|l mqdnpss; and' UPI from hltnneyoc to ?0iu.o. the ?r round, but to inclose box, to he deposited oh ?tir. near the itouse^. For *ant?w .'she foil ill of rheumatism moaea***#.? 'tent. { E^Bmlth *? ,^^witam^ight of fire thv^igkwaflr-V i. Ml 11 aifl WMVMfit.w the'stump^thstv "?* Oiga h'Ad i|(u^etf, tfcef*fttda toQk box '' tpontaij)ing ^as placed. " The'' i puoplo brought him 1a> bury the re rnam?.,blithe sMFiie ff&tfst' not brtnk */;? frift word, for shriller promised to haunt him fpr this, and always kept her wortf. Th6n they iuiomifewpaftrto tbS rlfier Nhftt thepJ*igMt iseUme awful speotu *Wh'hderod to th^^atotta^^^his weird. Xj ?^lon Wt^qMlbi^j |?<lW{>U>'t?was said. and tjifeyffiw t||Wfa 'to put tno Cdflfttf ' where : i1 the'dfceld were > t board ill Uio tul^lgh^ hour, it was told,: EuTSb songs wentr'dn m of old*?and i awful orlca in.the gloaming, till thoj lod- itvthe bao<wr^ett^8i*ougb loh belatod triirotertt hurried to lie ifft htfbltatiofc. *1% was found thut EjSmith had cartfed*tfee box toa v ' 'ofa, almost at tbeiMJjinUln top, on iq othbtveldoite^Hoif ?ha auooeeded in md ing tho plape without assistance \v#h tnora than anyouo oould under- - ' |pi ,?but no one.questioned about*#!*, , rful matter. There, on a ledge ot k in the eavo may yet ba,?Mp?i th? - :en box, ovor which the mosBes grow, and tho auclont forni; ati*SS|? W dotcromo ni^ht-hlwkt wrcam a Mourn* ' fill threnody. Xlierattlosnake* T" about the plnco, arid a fantastic flno drapes the mQnth pf tho tomb with soalr M blQMOm* The . tale Is told that Dnnooh fihrnlth had never peace lb Dm mm a