The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, January 20, 1887, Image 1

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r ; , V VOLUME 1. QUICK DEATH IN THE DYNAMO. TIIK li AN<iM AN AN 1> I. IS < J A liLOWS KI;LKS <>T A I s, - HAKHAHOI'S PAST. Tlit? Deadly Hlectric (hair of j a Hulfnlo Physician, Who lias Itcch Searching lor a More Humane I inI>I?*t; 1 >?t for f he InIHrtion of ('apilal Punishment. IU'fkai.o, N. Y., .January 1 ! )r. A. 1\ Southwick. of this city, who is a member of the commission to ascertain the most humane and practical method known to modern science for ram ili?r the death sentence into "effect in capital cases, is an enthusiastic investigator, and since the coinmission was created hy the last Legislature he has spent considerable time in mukino researches. Circulars have boon sent bv the commissioners to many doctors, scientists, judges, lawyers and public men, with a view to learning their opinions on the subject. Anions the questions asked is the following: The follov/ing substitutes for hanging have been suggested to the commission. What are your views to (VH'ii 1 iMiwlrwil f I it*i i ctti i acid or other [miaou; d, tlio guillotine; I. the tra rote. ul wish you would send one of the circulars to the A7<y/'," said I )r. South wick to the correspondent this afternoon, "for I want the views of the newspaper men as well as those of other people.1' ' Do you helieve in capital punishment, doctor?" was asked. "I helieve the death penalty is necessary," ho replied, ufor there is ;; class of people,a low order of heiims, to whom it is positively necessary. 1 refer to people who come from a line of murderers, that is, men who have descended directly from families of criminal oroelivities. The man I who walks around ready to commit a wilful, premeditated murder should die. J le belongs to a race that we want to wipe from tho face' of the earth. The laws are liberal enouodi, with the various decrees of homicide and manslaughter, to protect individuals who do it in the, heat of passion or under intense provocation." "And about women?" "If the law is chant/cd from lianoino to death bv (dectricitv then it should and would be made to include women as well as men. Any discrimination between the sexes would make the laws unconstitutional." "Have you studied Mrs. Druse's ease?" "I have not paid much attention to it except to know that Governor Hill has granted her a reprieve. I presume that his idea may have been to oive the I.eidslature enhance to abolish lianoin^. \t the time Gov* . ernor Hill may have thought that our, ?oiiimission would recommend some eiihstitute for hanoin<r which would not excite sentamentalists so iniich as this /larharoiis rtdie of oust aires." "Would there ho liny objection to executing women with electricity ?" V "No, sir; there would not. I think there would be the name prejudice a that there is now, because hanging is ~ a poor way of inflicting the death penalty." "How would you use electricity?" ".lust see here," said Dr. Southwick, jumping up and seating himself in an armchair. "The condemned man can sit naturally in a chair like this, place iiis hands on the metal arms and converse with those around him. The metal plates would |y? e< innnel #"wl w iti I i? tmworfn I (lvi.n. I mo and at the proper moment hoiiioin at other room would press a button, close the currant and the fatal shock would pass through the body of the subject. The cliargo would go straight through the heart ? and lungs and penetrate the system . death instantly resulting. The exC j T\ pense of the apparatus with which \ to execute by electricity in this city would be about #150. Connections fy could be made with the electric light / station, and tli<*. expense of an oxe t* 4'Jition thereafter would hoof little | ? consequence. It would not cost any 1% more than a cigar to kill a condemnafc od man after that. It would not be ** necessary to maintain extensive and * powerful machinery in all the prisons, and it would be vastly cheaper than hanging." "Von believe, then, in electricity?" "Electricity iathe coming power. Heath is instantaneous and the body is r.ot defaced. There is not the morbidness of a hanging, which is a V& relic of barbarism, .fust see a recent , execution hero -IIonian's I think it % wiik when the hanged man breathed o.'iv'n minutes ofter the drop fell. SunLit is instantaneous death, then sqjp'/uld rather have a lingering i i * yoti considered i>oison as a rv, ?> . *, *t .?* > a I] "BE TZBXJ'i: means of executing criminals?" ' I'russic aciil lias been suggested,1 l>ut neither that nor garroting has met with any favor. A few have advocated the guillotine, lint 1 think it is a barbarous mode of causing death Hardly any one favors hanging in preference to electricity, the very system being barbarous, as is the method and paraphernalia used. tvl)o you expect that your plan will be adopted?" ul stneeroly hope it will. If it is adopted by the coining Legislature other States will undoubtedly adopt it, and I think within two years that it will be all over the world. It would certainly lie better than obliterating the death penalty, ami in the case of a woman there would be much less objection to its operation than there is to hanging." I )r. Southwick added that in Kuc-1 land the same question had arisen, but no satisfactory substitute for hanging had been suggested. ()ne ^ . nn of the commissioners suggested that o o various means he adopted and the! condemned culprit be given his choice of deaths. Slate Senator Daniel II. McMillan has written a letter to the commission, in which lie says: "The principal objection to the present method is that it is primitive in its origin and barbarous in its effects. It lacks everv (Moment <>F exactness and precision. It is absolutely impossible J to arrange a formula as to the size of the rope, the length of the drop or the heft of the we ie-ht and the dis- ; tanee of its fall, as these several elements must not only depend upon the size and weieht, but tie; mmerul build and make up of the convict. The want of exactness in these several elements sometimes leads to the mutilation of the body bv severing the head: to unnecessary and severe suffering by the reason of the breaking of the rope, and also death by suffocation where there has been an improper adjustment. All these thinos combined to make hanirinoby the neck most brutal. "I am heartily in favor of the application of electricity for the purposes in uuestion, for the reason that it is simple, sure and painless. 1 think that if the places of execution were limited to two in this State, sav one at Auburn and one at Sine- Sine, the two State prisons, and that all convicts, as soon as condemned to: suffer tho death penalty, should he i confined in one of those two prisons I (depending somewhat upon the Jo- , eality of the trial), it would he a, vast improvement upon the present method of having the criminal eonfined in the county jail till the day of execution. * * * This, I think, would he sufficient to maintain all the I terrors of the present method. It is , two often the case that where the condemned is imprisoned in the; county jail in the vicinity ?f his fam- j ilv or friends he is huoyed up with ' tic hope that the 'saw or file' may I aid iu his escape, or that something will he done by his friends, who aro continually about him, thus keeping I up his spirits to the last moment, in | the expectation that in the end lie will not he executed. This will in : great measure he removed the moment the ^condemned is taken from his! home surroundings and placed in one of the great State prisons at the places indicated. It is tin* certainty ( if 1 if I 111 I t i?i??11 iiini'ii t liuti u tL' f t i \ r terrible punishment, that will prevent crime. Regarding the mnehinery to l?e used, Senator McMillan says: ' These executions could take place in the jail proper, in at room set apart for that purpose, with no appliances save that of at chair, with the hand-rest of each arm properly connected with an electric machine, in which the condemned might he seated and the ! connection made lay strapping a hand to the hand-rest on each chair. There cam he no difficulty whatever in procurring at currant of electricity of suffistiottf btrorwrf It ruirtili"/n flif* vniK. n*" i yv cles of tho heart by this method, hi- j deed, the current that is used in this city for electric lighting purposes is of sufficient strength to absolutely dismember the body of any human being, bait a current of electricity of sufficient strength to cause instain- ; tnneous death by passing from hand to hand through the heart, will not mark the body in the least.1'?JWw York Star. Practical, Sure KiioiirIi. Toi.kdo, O., Jaunarv 0. -About a year ago a romantic story was pblishcd of an Irish emigrant girl, named Annie ()' Connor, who was working at a hotel here, receiving a letter from England, stating she was an heiress to vast estates. The story turned out afterward ?o have been a practical joke on the girl, but she was deluged with letters of marriage from all over country. Among the letters was one from James O'Koefo. a wealthy resident of Pittsburg, which resulted in a-correspondence, and about ten days ago in a meeting. To-day infonntion is received from Pittsburg that the oounle were married there yesterday. - 3 TO TOUK WOKI CONWAY, s. shoutsivi;t< m:sof puomIN 10NT FUOIII liiTIOX Tin* W orkers in llu' 'IVtuponim't ('ausc Who llla/.o (lie Way I'orl lioir Followers, The growth of the Prohibition par tv lias been so rapiil (lurinj; the lasi ton years that instead of beiny, formerly, the insiynificant yhost of ; theory, it now claims public interest as a factor in State and National pol itics. The St. John vote of I oil 128, anil the more recent "dry" victories throughout the country yivi a decided interest to the party and it leaders. Amony the more prominent <>l these is t.xen. ('linton II. h'isk, of New York, who is prophesied by his friends *o be the next Presidential candidate of the party. He is in ,h< prime of his maturity, beiny fifty. ! seven years of aye. I lis army record was a brilliant one, and he lias lone been a devoted advocate of education and temperance, lie is the fonndei of Fisk 1 Diversity, of Nashville. John P. St. lolin, ex-t inventor o| Kansas, and the last Presidential candidate of the Prohibition jiarty, was a 11 nosier by birth. lie was born at Hroekville, franklin county, Ind., February 2<?, I Sd'k \!l the schooliny he received was in a country loy school-house. In IslVJ he moved to Olatlie, Kas., and soon had aciptired a lucrative practice throuyh out the State. In l^oi lie was electei| to the State Senate,.ami in 18)8 became (ioverner. lie was 1 < fea t?'?1 for re-election and a few years afterward left the licpuhlicau j?art\ and became one of the most prominent workers in the Prohibit ion party. The prohibitory law of Kansas was passed largely through his elTorts. in I I he became the nominee of the party for president, with William II. Danit? I, of Maryland as his running--mate. (ten. Neal I low, of .Maine, is i.erhaps the best known of all the prohibition advocates. lie is a man of great individuality, and. although the son of a (Quaker, is full of light. lie i- justly regarded the Nestor of prohibition legislation, and is the father and framer of the Maine prohibitory law. Away back in the ' I'ls he was writing and making speeches for the prohibition cause, and at each recurring session of the Legislature he appeared with petitions for prohibitory legislation, and used his best efforts toward securing it. Mis uAet for the Snppre sion of Drinking Houses and Tippling Shops'' was passed by the Maine Legislature in I So 1, and sign ...i i,.. . I... i ' i ? r . i . ?-w ??> uir muhtiiim, ?i iiiir m (r w 11 year. Although ncarl\ c i?.? 111\- years old he is still a \ iporous innii, and was his party's candidate for the I 'residency in I SSO. The Kov. Dr. A. .1. Jut. ins, Corresponding Secretary of the National Committee, is a resident of and wellknown character in Chicago. He was horn in Washington county, New Vork, in 182th Ilo was a fanner's bov and attended school only in winter. Ho joined the Troy Methodist Conference in 1851 and continued preaching in New Vork State until 18d7, when he moved to Illinois. Afterward ho prearhed several years in this State, where he is well known, hut returned to ('hicatro, which ho has ever since made his home. James Black, of I'ennsylvania, enjoys the honor of heim* the first candidate of the I'rohihition party for President of the United States. lie was nominated in 1872 at ('olumhus, < >., and had J. 15. Kussell, of Michigan, as an associate on the ticket. So quickly after that campaign did lie drop from public notice that it is doubtful if one in fifty con hi now remember that ho was ever a Presidential candidate. Thouoh never having the ?rreat ability and reputation of Jeremiah Black, Pennsylvania's renowned jurist, James Black has i i...i i.;. Q " ' rv*' ' * " of no mean attainments. Ho wa.1 horn on a farm at l.ewislnir?r, September 28, 1828. Miss Francis 10. Willard enjoys the distinction of heinir not only the most noted female temperance work^ ? I ... A A I... t A I. . - - - - I . ur, IHIl lllf DfMt KNOWN WOII)JIM [Milllie, speaker this country produced, Her ideas are strong and advanced, her command of language and nicety of phraseology striking, her h?gi< convincing, and her manner as ii speaker and her elorpienco such as t< forcibly impress an audience. Sh< has been identified since its organization with the Woman's Christiai Temperance Union, and is its chiel olheer. She is a member of the K.v ecutive Committee f?f the Nationa Prohibidon Committee, and her conn sel has much to do in shaping its ac i tion. In lu r speaking, lecturing am i work of organizing unions she has visited every P'tate and Territory ii the Union. George ' f ..vutuey, ii one of the . , i . 4-i nt teinperanci orators now in ilct country. Main believe him the equal of John 1^ Gough. He is a strong advocate o prohibition, but him not yet beronn widely known politically, for his ap pea ranee on the stump for the Prohi I ration party has been limited. Vfi mi) > ^1^33 TOTJE "WCIF C., THURSDAY, JAN1 Bain was horn in L< xini^ton, Kv., September V!l. 1810. In voutli li?* was a carpenter. lit* coiiios of Methodist antecedents, and lias Keen prom' inent in 11i3it cliurcli, boino for years Superintendent of Sunday-school and steward. lie ji^itied the (Jood Templars in 1808, and shortly afterward made his first public speech at WinI chestcr, taking the place of .1. .1. < Hickman, the Ciraml Worthy Chief i 'Teuiphir of the Suite, who was proyen.ed from Ii 11 i11j_r the appoiiitmont. 11 is speech was so able that it jraye him popularity at once, and he has been iii demand as a temperance or. ator ovor since. 1 In has hold tho i hi^r)a>st ollices in tho (rood Templar order in Kentucky and delivered ' thousands of addresses and organized hundreds of lodges in various parts of the eountry. Dr. A. It. Leonard, tho recent Pro. hihition candidate for (Jovornor of < )hio, is a ineinher of the ('incinnati | Methodist ( 'onferenee. and lives at Piqua, <). lie has been a strong temperance man for many years. As a public speaker he has throat renown, which fact, p tssibly, may have had something to do in influencing (Jov. I' oraker to decline his challenge to i , series of joint debates in the late . campaign in ()hio. At the time both : were runnine* for the (iovernorship. Dr. I .eonard was pastor of the church to which (Jov. I' oraker belonj/s. Mrs. Mary l.a>hrop, n<< Torrance, is Michigan's most noted prohibition advocate. She was born on a farm twelve miles from .laekson, April \J~>, I VJS, and was educated at Marshall. She tauirht school in* Detroit from 1 SI ri to I Sbo, in which year she married ('. ('. Lathrop, Assistant Sure-con i f the Ninth Michigan ca\alrv. She is a public speaker of threat power, and has been dul\ licensed to preach in the Methodist church. She is President of the Woman's ( hristian Temperance I nion of Mich, ijran, and led tlie movement which se| cured an appropriation of $d(),0t)0 1 from the Legislature for a oirls' re| form school. .1 udfro Fontaine 'I'. Fox has come to the front in (he last few yours as Olu- of the boldest, most aoarressiVO ami uncompromisinir of the Prohibition leaders. lie is a lawyer of dis , tiuction, iiiul cimimnnds m lucrative ; practice, both in the State and bed! eral ('ourts. A life-loner Democrat, hi' lias absolved himself from allnlle<riaiico to that j>artv, and devotes his ,, steam-power political activity to the | advancement of the temperance cause. At the last State election Judjre box i received nearly -10,000 votes as the I 'rnhibition canddate for State Treasurer of K 'iitueky. Waste in the Kitchen. Waste in the kitchen is very often trreat from apparently trivial sources. In cookihit men's, tin; water is thrown out without removing the grease, or the "reuse from the dripping pan is thrown away. Scraps of meat are thrown away. Cold potatoes are left to sour and spoil. Dry lruity are not looked after and become wormy. Vinegar and sauce are left standing in it. Apples are left to decay for want of "sorting over.1' The tea canister is left open. Victuals are left exposed to be < Lv ntion Pones of meat and tlio carcass of turkey arc thrown away, when they couid ho us<'d in making good soups. Sugar, tea, coffee and rice are carelessly sjiilled in the handling, i Soap is left to dissolve and waste in the water. Dish towels are used for dish cloths. Napkins are used for itish towels. Towels are used for holders. ; I It rooms and mops are not hung > I lilt I ij More coal is burned than necessary by not arranging dampers when not usino the fire. \\ Lights are left burn ng when not j used. Tin dishes are not properly oleans. ed and dried. Good new brooms are used in , scrubbing the kitchen floors. Silver snoops are used in scraping kettles. i j ('ream is left to mold and spoil. Mustard is loft to spoil in the i cruse, etc. i Vinegar is allowed to stand until i the tin vessel becomes corroded and f spoiled. Pickles become spoiled by the I leaking out or evaporation of the vinegar. Pork spoils for want of salt, and 1 beef because the brine wants scald ing. i llama become tainted or filled with I vermin for want of care. ^ t ( 'liT OUI* ltwtl'li: mi/1 ic nnfon Lr ?<? n-o ? ????? "j ^ | or vermin. /1 Tea and eoffeo pots are injnred on 1.1 the stove. f. Woodenwnre is on scalded and left u to warp and crack. When things go to 1) K how (J I) . thev become. % v nil ? ?-? I'IZL TOUR OCT l/ARY 20. 1887. two i5i:i:i-s'ii:aks. L l" How Inni I \ ('ooked t lie I 'lesl, mid s (lio Sti'iiirirloH of Iter Mis- t tress Willi llic ScciukI. . ( 10*??i 1 y could roast joints ami fowls, boil l)ti.on ami fry liatu ami chicken s passably woII when tin* full powers t of her intellect wore jbven to the , * * task. Kvoii John looked ora\e over j i the lirst heelsteak she cooked for us, ' one of two iny father had sent np < from Richmond. I ? M ordered lie uttered liirnimr i t y""1 \ p | over tlio leathery cinder with his I fork. "Killed three times! first, i hy the butcher; secondly, with the < hot fat; thirdly, by lone cookine. A n fried beefsteak is a culinary solecism, c j Hut," rallying angelically, "tti1 can i intake a eood breakfast without it, I land you can "ive your c/iej' a hint i how to cook the other to-morrow." j Mv heart sank as it would not now I if I were notified that I must prepare a royal banquet at twenty-four hours' \ notice. Like most younjj twirls, I a had thought raw llesh rather diseust- s inu to siuht and touch. I <Ii<I not s know veal from mutton in a market basket, and supposed that a round of r pork and one of beef were ?11 from r the same part of different animals. j. The weather was cold, and theii steak had been put ill the store room I instead of the ice-house. After j ! bronkfast I went to this apartment, ? ! shut the door, removed the napkin j from the steak, and Ac?/v</at it. , < It was rich red, with edo'me and I 1 splashes of clear white fat. Uncooked meat was such an uncompromising i entity! ('ombinations of eirjrs, sucur, i i and milk; of oj><rS butter, su?rar and i W . . . ^ Hour; of soaked isinglass, wine, suearjs and lemon, ellloreseed into products as unlike the constituent elements as i the tulip differs from the bulb. A ? steak would remain a steak, manipu- \ late it as I mioht. yet must be made l palatable. I knew how it oueht to > taste. I also knew what the calcined i wreck on the breakfast table had not j i j been. j I , .MMII1 I III' I onilUCO Jl INCH heelsteaU ( \ ' as a "culinary solecism." Yet, closely following the ilireetions for broiling i beefsteaks on page 7(> of "Miss I .es- ( I lie's Complete ( 'ooking*' (hound in i whole calf and a wedding ?_?'if<) was a <i I recipe, ii7'o /'Vi/ /fcc/!v?eoA'.v." In "licefsteaks for frying should lie I cut thinner than for broiling." I i lint John liked a thick steak such | as the ddlieult study in red and white before me. Further down I read: jl "Steaks w hen fried should be thor oughly done." John's penchant for rare beef was pronounced. I turned my undivided attention to the foregoing recipe,1 which was a page long, and commit-, t ted it to memory. After the manner e ! of ignorant cooks, Kmily despised a '"book receipts." I consulted ilium v privately, and had a I read \ learned to i c entrench myself behind "my way" of v doing this <?r that. i a Our nominal breakfast hour in i winter was 8 o'clock. At 7 A. M. I n appeared in the kitchen, the dish of I a raw steak in hand. Outside the dav I I was raw and lowering. The earth ' \ looked glum, the clouds drooped a wearily. Within, the roaring fire I ruddier! smoky walls and rafters, ic shoots of steady flames vailed the j i chimney back, threw into strong re- j r lief two corpulent pots, and a tea-1 c kettle swung from the crano. I?m'ly t deposited the sleeping child in the at t my entrar.ee. | t "I was jes' gwine to call you. You . '| don' koer fur a soon breakfuss, 1 a reckon? Takes bettcr'n 'n hour fur ( to cook beefsteak, you knaw." j i "A quarter of an hour is general- I i_ ly sufficient time to boil a beefsteak, j L<'or those who like them underdone!t j or rare, ten or twelve minutes will be ; j [sufficient," quoted I, I'ci'batim <t lit- \ I eratim from Miss Leslie. \\ here is ^ the gridiron?" before sheeouhl oasp % j her surprise. i r ".Ma am!" | s I 'ni. i :~i. r i? i i - :? , , ...... .... j c when the "castings" weie unpacked, | was empty. Km'ly had never seen it, nor, as presently appeared, any1 | other oridiron. I described it min- i utcly. Her memory refused refresh- j c ) ment. 1 4'Ain' neber saw nothin' 't all like | j | it, now liar I 'elar' 'for' gracious!" Let me interpolate*. When the j ^ ash heap behind the kitchen was cart- }| ed away in the spring, the gridiron, rusted into usefulness, was found t in it. L I 4,ls flat what you was a talkin' , j'bout?" said the imperturbable. u'Fo' jj do f.ord, I 'elar I thought flat was a ( I pan whar' done got split all t?? '( pieces!" To return. Half an hour's search i i i revealed rubbish and dirt enough to ; ! turn the stoutest stomach, but no , i/ridiron. The frvinir-oan ii nunrlur ?> , J r< i " 'I ' | ii 11 of lard hzzee at the corner of the ; j hearth. I ordered KmMy to empty | and wash it; then J set. it on the eonla , and rubhed it with a bit of suetehip- , i ped from the steak. An idea, born of desperation had seized me. I would achieve a ubroil' in the teeth of adverse Kate. I have done the sumCf more then once since, when a gridiron was non tot. Unfortunately in^ next step was to wash the steak | in cold water and transfer it, still } lb. rilST'TIE^r." Irii?i>in<r, to tin* hut pan. It hissod I him spluttorod furiously, n clou<l of vhito strum arising and floiitiuo u|> ho ehimnoy. I j "Sprinklo a litth* salt ovor tho oals," said Miss l.oslio. I'lio otuiorous 11a11< 1 f111 I throw on ' ( oomou to dull tho livo idow, hut < hat was not my affair. ) r "Tiivii friwnmnllv " I..... I irder implicitly obeyed. I had no 'steak tones," I>iit a knife and fork ; lid as well. I stooped to tin1 low a evel of the noisv pan every two 11 iiinutcs l>\ the watch laid <>n th<? ta ' tie, and reversed tln> meat. It did 11 lot brown. The rich rod changed I piiekly to a snddmi white, and leal v aid hissing did not rostoro the florid ^ oniplexion. At tho end of fifteen , f ninutes, I laid it on a hot dish, rub- 1 tod with raw onion, as Miss Leslie v ndiea'ed, "sprinkled it with salt and ' topper and put on it a piece of fresh <" tutter." i * kdf it is liked, season tlieni with a 11 'Orv litte raw shalot, minced as lino r is ^possible, and moistened with a v poonful of water, and stir a lea | ' poonfill of catsup into the oravv." I marked the odious pallor of iu\ luj' </' i itrri with more than a little h aw onion, added the catsup to the I oo/.ino from the steak, covered " t to keep it warm and drew a lone' ' treat h. ' "I )one (lone a'readvKni'ly ^ I in- ' ed around from the biscuits she wis v uttino into the oven. "Look at I' lat, now! folks houtchar (about 11 iere) mId a' had dat 'ar' steak on ' f*/ dav, dis inornin !" "I low savory'" said John, as lie a meovered itat breakfast time. " There t s nothing more, appcti/ino than beef- I teak smothered in onions!" J v I le cut through the "siiiotherine" I nto the palhl victim beneath. lied v lisli juiee ran out freely to ininele ' i vith the catsup and juravy. The) lioce detached by tin- oasli was jrray- ^ vliito for perhaps a sixteenth of an i u 11<-)i on ouch sidi', then of a Moody j ' oil, shudinw abrupt I \ to a purplish i icnrt, w11i? 11 last was handy luko- ! ? , J \ arm! > Tlic Tartars cook meat h\ putting t t hetween the saddle and tlie horse's a tack, lie fori sot ti i??r <>IT on a lone- t l rallop. 1 could think of nothing else I is I on zed in morti licat ion unspeak- a iltle, charoin too deep for tears, upon I he half raw mess to which lire hud mparted a ipiiver horribly like the * talpitation of linjrorino life! < 'I his is "my way" (and Miss Los- 1 ie's of cookino a befsteak. < M \ KI o N | | a It I.A \ I). --?> ? ? . t "Cheek." . I ( No, my son, cheek is not better han wisdom; it is not better than lion- ' st modesty; it is not better than t nythino. Iton't listen to the siren j ' vho tells you to blow your own horn ' >r it will never be tooted upon. The ' vorlil is not to be deceived by cheek, nil it does search for merit, and when i L finds it merit is rewarded. < 'heek ' lever deceives the world, my son. It * ippeari: to do so to the cheeky man. nit he is the one who is deceived. I to I 'Oil know one cheeky man in all your M icquaintanco who is not reviled for 1 i lischeek the moment his back is turn- i ^ <17 Is the worldjnot continually draw-1 - ncr distinction lictwcn chock audi n??rit ? Almost everybody hates the hooky man, my son. Society tires of I ' ho brassy fr laro of his face, the hollow | ' inklinir of his cymbullinu tongue. ' ho noisy assumption of his forwardness 1 I'lie triumphs of chock arc only ' pparent. 1 to bores. his way alono ' hron^h the world, and freoncnlv bo tor 1 >eople jrive way for him. But sc? thoy ' jive way, iny boy, for a man with a ' mint pot in each hand. Not because 1 hoy respect the man with the paint f >ots, particularly, but because they ' vent to take care of their clothes. ' \yoid cheek, my son. You sell ooods vithout it; and your customers won't , ' mi and hide in the cellar when they j' eo you coinino Ilurlimjtnn //<nrk ' !fr" ' I j < 'oiiioidences II* t raordinar> . 1 _____ < "It has deon remarked as a curious 'liain of coincidenes, that within the ' ast nine months the (''united States ius been visited by a phenomenally ' old winter, an unusual number of ' itorms, and unprecedented drought. , , i ?i -- ? "" 1 i i.ji imir ami an eann<|UaKC. I IH* lunuarv frosts reached farther South , linn ever before in the course of this 1 mntury. ('velone pits were needed i!! the way from Oregon to Ohio, in ourteen counties in Western Texas .he drought has thus far lasted for Mghtoon months, and is so far from ihowing signs of subsidence that Hundreds of families are moving Kast, n the hoj?e of regaining a country where it rain*, once a year'' Two months ago 1 >akota was visited by a hot air blast wich raised tin? mercury t from eight \ live to one hundred and | ninety- two, Fahrenheit, then the I 'harlestoii earthquake." I 's Far Im-it??r than th?? treatment of medicines which horribly grip.) the patient and destroy the coating of the stomach. Dr. .1. II. McLeans Chill and Fever cure. Hold at 50 cents a bottle, Subscribe to Thk IIk.kai.d. - ' %' - * "X ~ i II10 MOW KNOiilsli <' \ I;i n iot . If Lord ^ftli-dmrv i* ft man who >?*:ir. enmity in nis I 'art lie will nrely never forgive Lord Randolph I I ; 11 r . I < iimhiiiii ior i iip trouble lie litis aused. Kxnctly wliat induced tli? esiirnatiou of the eccentric ami arisoeratie dema?fo?fue has never lurn atisfactonU explained, hut the chareter of the man is such that it seems iimeeessar\ to search for any special oasons for any of his actions. Tho hi I v wonder is that ho remained as ono as ho did in a t'ahinet which i'us not composed solely of himself. A lien the (.'aliiiiet was originally lined, it was almost impossible not o oivo ('lihrehill a place, and vet it rasas plain then, as it has been since hat in so doino an element of disord was introduced. So much about 'Imrchill is apropos in discussing the ew cabinet, because it is remarkable ather for what it lias not than for rhat it has, and ( htuvhill is one of he most remarkable things that it ias not. Salisbury's original ' 'abinet was loinoirnneoMH, but not harnonioiis. n reconslructino' it lie sought harlonv at the exjiense of lioinooeneitv le thought, that by form in a coaliion of ('onservatives and Liberal nionists he would secure overwhelming' -trenoth in the IloiisO of 'ominous, and would be able to bid leliance to the t rladstouians and 'arnellites. Men of different paries, yet having a coniinon object nd a common ioe, lie thought work ooether more cordially and effieienty than men of the same part v, one of ;.| i i i i * > ih.mii in i'-.isi ii'[(iinici| ins nun am iition above al! else, ;i11?I others ??f vhoin hud not tlu? capacity to real/.>' the exigencies of tli<> situation. The coalition idea, however, wa ;i uilure, for the reason that there mist ho two parties to it coalition, ml tint party of tint second part, laini'lv, tin' Libcrul-l nionists, dclincd, ;t> it partv, to ho represented n tIk* ministry. The new Cabinet, lterefore, reimiins a Tory* Cabinet, .ml without special feature, except its o Mr. (ioschen, who is not only a iiberal, but deeideilly a man of mark lid of lon<r experience in public ntTairs. le was in the ltussell-( thulstone ninistrv, twenty years ajyo, and has inee icen varied and extensive ofli itil service both at homo and abroad, le is a man of ideas and purpose, mil, as lie has joined the ministry at Salisbury's earnest solicitation, it is o he presumed that the latter will >erinit him to shape the course of the ovorniiient in certain directions, in r.hieh lie is more particularly inter sted. I f so, it is not impossible that lie (lovornmcnt will j*ain as much jv the aecossion of Mr. tioscheu as ?y the resignation of Lord Kandolpli 'hurchill. The rosi?rnation of Lord Iddesleioli s regarded by all except his persouil friends as an advantage to the Government; and of tbu now Tory numbers of the Cabinet is sufficient o say that they were taken up be ause Liberal* 1'nionists could not be n duced to accept the positions to -vhich they hive been assigned. Xnr.f utu/ 1 'ourit /' I it January, I SC> |, while (confederate rooj?s were in winter ouarters at l)al.011, (ja,, there came a bio- snowstorm, md tit),000 soldiers eimao-cd in a roc' o r> ilarly organized snow-hailing. The ieomia ami South Carolina troops :ook one side of a small stream and :he Tennesseeans formed a line of Hittlc, their drums beating. bugles dowini/, colors llyinir ami otliccrs nounted. Kvery soldier had a knapick full of snowballs. Tho Georgians formed and prepared to make tho alack l>v crossing the braqj/h. There were 10,000 men on each side, and [I -, scene was ver\ imposing. As soon is the (ieoroians crossed the branch O thev met a terrible fu-illade from the ! oiiiiGp.'" ' iilio, V? Tir) Wv r?y lie iIOiiiC in the snow. Tho commander of the Tennessucaiis was captured, hut a bold lash was made by the l'ennesseeans uid he was rescued. The Georgians uid South Garolinaians, oeine unused to snow, were at a urea disadvantage, uid were forced hack across the branch, As the 'l'ennesseeans crossed the branch they wet their snowball, and the next volley iired at the George uid South ('arolina bo\ s was terrible in its effect. I'assino on, the Tennesseeans captured the quarters and i.,.i ... i ... .1.^ ..1...1 [M I H IT' I'-MI HI HJin nil" >Y IIUIU carrying <?1T rations, tobacco, pipes,and everything else that did not belong to the (loverninent. < To make cubbaoo pudding, one cup of white suipir, one coo, l>utter the si/o of an emr, one cup of milk, two cups of sifted flour ami two teaspoonfuls of baking powder. Sauce one tablespoonfuls of flour, one-fourth cup of suoar, make into a smooth paste with milk, and pour on hot water till thick enoui'li and let it come toaboil, o. stirrino corlMantly. Flavor to taste. There sre iminy accidents and diseases wheh afTict Stock and cause serious in on venienee and loss tiv the fanner and in his work, which may be quickly remidicd by the "*o ?f I>r. ' If. McLeans Volcanic Oil Liniment. -i mO-'i