The Easley messenger. (Easley, S.C.) 1883-1891, June 20, 1884, Image 1

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- V.-- * <w ASLEY, -It -NDE 18N EASLEY SOUTy'CAROLINA FRIDAY, JUlNE 20, 1884.NO3 Q'e g4ihigJiseger. Ente4ed at the Postofice at Easley S. C., o & 1coz' Clas8 1Matter. 4. R RAO "), EditOr and Prop' r, One year, strictly in advance ......1.00 Six months " " .... 65 4ZATW'1.81F .ADV15RTiA NO. One square (1 inch) 1 insertion......75c Each sobsequent insertion............40c Liberat discount on contracts or by the colunnw; Ialf or 'tarter colunn. Marriaf ndeef re land solicite d. ObituariN ayer 1plhies charged for. CorrespQndetints, to 'j Sure atten1tion, must give thel fliddress. We are not respousible for the opi n !ons of our correspondents. All commfleiuictions for the Imper must be addre'ssed to the Editors; business letters-to the Publisher of the MSEN6,. E asley, S. C. MY LITTLE WIF. BY HENRY AUSTIN. She Isn't. very pr ,etty, So sayIler lady friends; She's neither wise nor witty With verbal odds and end..; - No fleeting freaks of- f hiou 1 Across her fancy run ; She's never in a passion Except a telder one. 1I4r1 voice is low and clooingr;n She listens more than speak-. ; While othri talk of doingu, ''hie (luty vear she seeks. It may be hut to burnish The side-bomi d's setauty plaite, Or but with bread to fur'ni.h The beggar at. the gate. So I, who see vhat. gr1e - s She sheds 1on lowly life, To( falshion's fatirest meeos Prefer my little wife. And though at her with pity le cty hiies may sile, IVho deei her hardly prett I y And sadly out, of style. To me she seems a cre:i:ure So musicilly sweet, I would not'eh ge one feat tuir One curve from Crown to feet. And if I couldibe never Her lover and her mate, I think I'd be forever iMoney is a right goodthn andc no sensible man wvill turn up his nose at'it. Money be'ings comn for't and leisure and Solomon says ini leisure there is wisdom. A man who has to be digging away everyj day for a livinig don't have much time to read and reflect andl 11 rui nate. It don't matter whether he' is a merchant or mechanic or a farmer or a professionlal man, if he~ works hard all dlay he wants to . reQst at night. Monov nrnmatoe iometic tenn.. quility and thAt is the -best- and biggest thing Iknowo. But inon ey.ought to be hard t get, so that its real value may be appreciated --money has to be rnd to be priked, If it ,ik inhrtedi drawn a lttery or w6ol at ,menf cbanceo ound round in the road or obtAined by lutky speculations in stocks or bondA or cotton fu Lures, it goes at a discount. It is undervalued and don't stick to a man long. A fortune gained in a year rarely sticks to anybody. Luck is a right good thing when it follows along with labor and ho'nesty, but luck by itself is a de ceiver. "Trust to luck" is the dev il's maxim. I know a hard work ing man who was so anxious to ge t ahead that he stinted his fain ily and invested part of his earn ings in the Louisana lottery for five years and never drew but ten dollars. Ile told ien he had lost. five hundred dollars that way, and every time 1W sah the list publish- 1 C(I of the lucky numbers and read i about the lucky men who drew , theoprizes it fired him up and he I tried jt "ggAinf. SomUtim'es .1 wi81' Uncle Julbal ant General Beaure-I gard wouhl tote fair and publish u list of them fellows who didn'tI draw anything, But I reckon ihat woild he so long :11 occ(lpy so many colinins in the newspapers; they coulhin't aford it. It is just human I know to want! m1or1e mfloney tl.in we have got, e8 pecially if we are hard run and il(il on strain. I want llor umyNself, and if I was to fin]i a hun (Ired (ldolltrs il the road I coidIn't! help Iloping that the ()ler woilti never' fhMiss it, and never (-ll Ifor it. J*ust like a Ioy who findis a pock- i et knife anmd feels like it is his, but1 that sort, of money is not as solid and satisfactorv as3 mnwey we work for. I know an old preach-i er who ha(1 ten0 dollars anl his son had ten (ollars and the yoting man went down to Atlanta and took aill the money to 1uy some thiings and he came aeross-4 a wheel of for tune afnl saw ai Iellow win ten dol l ars ju~st as easy, and so he wasA persuaded t;o try his luck, and1 shore enioughm he won eni (dollars, and~ it hope ,him uip mightily andl le tried it again andl won some) more, and he kept on until he had fifty dlollars and become a fool, fort right then his luck changed and he lost it all and( his tenm (olljars and his diaddy's teni besides, and lhe had1( to b)orrlow a (dollr and a' half' to get home on, and like to have per1ishedl to (death in the bar gaini. Well, he belong~ed to thme chur'ch and they had him up andi tried him andl he madle a cleant breast and told how he was over taken and tempted andmo how lhe' went on and on until he had nmade fif'tv dloilars ean. "Anmi Wg-ht bhere." said the old man, "is whar John's sin begun. If he' had stopped right there it woild hfave been. all right., but likeafool ha went on and on,.to o g Wpl,ol1n wasi'n c a dread fllhnuer after all for he wanted bhethoiefy to buy something to please the old folks. But money :on't come that easy vory often. [ know a man who has beenI kept >n a strain for five years working >ut of his losses on cotton futures. nometimes luck runs along with a man frc en years and mori and Ahat mna., him vain and lie thinks EIis judgement is infallible and 3uiddenly lie collapses like Seney Ind Eno Keene. No mioney is afe except that made by honest Men. The rewards of labor are mighty Yoo(d and sure. Ifere I set in my Liazza: and look over my farm and see the wheat and the oats all in i strut and waving so beautiful in hle breeze and I feel proudI an(i ser'ene for I sowed that wheat my elf an I helped to prepare the and an( it is my wheat and my )ats and come honestly And wasn't ide out of someho ly else. aid it 1003 me good to Cut A fIew choice icads and bunch 'em and take 'em o town and show the 1olks what can 0do. It beats mon miade y luck all to piece4, aind so does valking in lily gadei nl (ig )iug the potatoes I planted anld vorkiglv them ever -Fo iice adi( iing0110 th Iem1 inl the house18 to how to my wife au 1 hear her say, 'they ale very fine." She never avs much1011 on that line, she don't, )ut a little goes a1 great way witl no. She never inuilges in rapt .1re, 0h 1 nee0 uses aijectives to liy excess-, such as lovely, eXq u i .ite, splen-lid and the like, but I <now what she thinks about any -hing just s1 well as if she li(d. ['m- going to get her a mess of easphcrries to-dafy, the first of the 41ao8011, ild I'll Surprise har with em at linier time. She likes that. Women like these little thiouight rul attentims-. They are like oi1 en the axeltree, and umakes the ma :hiniery r'un smnoothi. But then there oug0ht to be a little money to mix up with such'l things. Mon yis a good 1 omestic lubricator itsel . A man feels more like a gentleman withI somnie change in] htis p)ocket, and he oiugh; tto always have a (lollar' or so just to feel of. It stiffens him upl and1( keeps him fr'om feeling like ai vagabondl. Amud women wanits somec too. W"hen a pedilamr comes along with tinuware or a wagon load of' jugs or the (ypsies come along with laice or the book agent comles along with p~ictures, anid besides it is such a (dignified comtifort to have a little hid away for thme childireni when they are just ol ig-ed to h ave 501me thing to wear and don4 want to ask papa for the money, fori he is so hard nn and talks so all the time TiOis thekind of money that goesfor all it is worth0. Money that comee hayl, money that ijs earned. Even wornen dea npt prize money when she has oodles of it and has every want sulpplied. Folks must be cramped to be hap py. They must have something to stimulate them. Somethiig to pro voke economy aid industry, and I'm thankful we've always had these stimulants at my llouse. BAsME BALL AS SEEN BY A GnRL. A girl's notion of the national game is called off pretty accurately by the letter of a young city lady to her girl chum in the country. 'You must visit me,' she wrote, 'whem the base ball season opens. There is so much skill and grace display ed. The pitcher, I think-but, my! you never saw a game,J will ex Wlain it to you. The pithe,-a (lear little thing'-statuds in the middle and throws a ball at anoth or who stan(ds in front-- umn a long stick in his hand. The thrower tries to hit his stick, and the other young inan, who is called the knoCker, tries to swing the club that it will be impossilble for the thrower to hit the stick with the ball. Somn of the knockers be Cole very goo(d at this, an( some of the darlilngs could stand there and never have their clubs hit, once. The catcher stands behind the k inocker, and is jist too brave for anything. We girls think lie is the nicest one m every club. f think the catchers are very cuto anld heoic.--Merchant-Traveller. -Fhe New York Ileral( insists that the )rolose(l repeal of tite brandy excise tax is a delusion and a snare. It attempts to reason witi the farm'er - thus: It is not only )1ol)OS(l to free from tIx )ran(ly that is made from pcachies, plums anld such fruits, but also that which is made from gruales the chief source of this liquor ; so that for every farmer wvho might be relieved of six or seven dollars of tax there would be a nine-ma keor who woud b( e saved h is thou s ands. That is to say, the rep~eal of' the tax wvouldI build upJ a few very large e~stalhishIfemts and cre ate mnoopol ies, bult give no0 real b~enefi t 1(o the farmer himself. - There woul 1(be offered ma~Iny 01p portunI)it ies for fraudulent practi - ces, andl tis rs Uon alone oughut to be sufilincut to condemern the propo sition. *--Rlepub1hIlia leader~s Say thev will matke a strong fight for Blaine in Virginia, West Virginia, North Caroli na, Florida and Tennesse.