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‘OpeeiAl R# ~ *• Artlel« fcr N 1 writti* in* onTrone dd«o/tb« pip.. 1* Ktortilrati m» lt rcath a« op y r |*d ft ^ m. j/H. i, mtJn, dental sui^bo: _ SfcACKVILLK, 'tHfioe near hit rerideoee on IndlT nor, . j“ **?• • »«ir eon,. 5- 3L - VOL Vfc m 12.•' BARNWELL, C. H.. S. 0., THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2^ 1882. J \ j ‘ f . ‘ * \d» ■ ’ - ■ *• ’Zr $2 a Year. If A TUBt ABHOR SA YAOUtJUL MtoltttDriNen, >n Fortunel—rm noA —iHon^ I’d Men. UMMeptible spot 8wh a flrure, MMh halr-lf JTt real- Wuoh a r»oe—your whole physical pla *** k ™ < •chooHlrf« complete heau-lde Ana her utter qulnteeaenoe or nan. Out when older and wiser, how and t-uch fo nplctq disillusion to And Itebind such a stotelf fact— Xahare Ihund Just epurtnents And you tore »e-don't say I’m not kind- Find some asalden more easy to please, Unje lndu'r<mt to absenoe of mind, Ajid content with the graohS *e« n \. ' • .thourb you, alali I Itave tortured yAit heart, I n <l.,frnse it man aureiy be said . rbst I ne ver c-mM ones make yon smart, Since 1 could not remodel your hoed. 8o spam your alf sot Ion to tell. An avowal I too well dlilhe. For the nest airl will do ju«t as wed. Ami her heart mar be softer than mine. 4 80, In view of the danger It brings. I h-re's a line where flirt itlon must atop; For the boll,,west, windiest thing* • Are the likeliest always •• to pop." ,‘3 * - —OtnUry. - DU. I. j. QUAmi SURGEON OBTIST, wiLLisroN, Offloeorer Oapt. W. H. Koedy’.rtoi^ Cslls alUwfed Ihrouglflt Barnw< 11 »ud ad|h»Nt counties, atienta will ■ ad It 'a the ir adrantagt|) haea work dw ai hip office. K [ M| u , J. RYEBBO^SlgTg;, •entit. ,.l lekui. Mtot. I WILI I8T0N tC , free* of pelatlonahip buyood tha fam Ir ’ I , fircla of father, mother, brother* and Will attend aallt tan echo thia aad ad. ■* ,u,r » "• ftbiw aome •Vtdehdo jaeeat ceaaUaa. frum Otjr own axnarin«o«. Karar ahaU i|p*ra*i"aa asa he mors mffaatarttf | er> 1 IsfXfli tha aitetapu made hy a party •Hthti, r! , . whit am sapp led f oTnallejf an*, many year* afo. to ex- lk ** P 1 * 1 " lo • •» a cwpparuK the old - ■^■■1 II ^r*—i _ . . , P»»Ala: » TT Pick’s father U John', hno. bdil* t« »s rt —» '»• w.ifll rvlaiion le IHrk ta John*" 6he « UI rmi. hi. et WfcM. .a ^ ln ^ ^ lc< ^ BlU|1y ^ [ee» If ' 9 ***• problem. Much aesigtanoa 1 » *• oi'hnsd .a the shape of a decaaler ad a w lae rlase to rvprsaeat “Utah" and "John.' aad th« la tr'sraiaa might hare been hear\L amid aA lha dm aad rial tar, e%rla<m af m rioaely, and Hi a tona of reasaaa bare " Ih. yoa ateaa lo tell me that that wtaa^tam la the , ^ I frandfatber of that drtiaaler"" Hut 8 | bTIa *a a The afasapt to aoa- the f*** 1 *! la«ly had to ba ahaa- Tar intricate matbaoutiral m- atsoa was bey pad bar powara There are al*> |iarwiafl who ha»e aee wa i hair m ad* ta arwhlea. af thtt aad U> whom aa, thinf cwtasda of .u aerraa oxpartaaie psaeeat* a p:i i—. d. A. I'ATTDfSON, Hurgcon Dotist. <f ® n * •* ‘ka Hera wall part Bourn Port's fe’rst cousin, who may bo much older than the person himself. Indeed, it is quite conceivable that a man should live to see his first cousin five times re moved for he might easily have a first cousm fifty of sixty years olddr tii^d him-alf, and liy«.to ice that eousin’s d®- scendants of the fifth rAtiott.. ‘ And now we may pass bri t'd second cousihs. ‘S'-'Pcand oousiils'’are persons out at full length, and these •~r-: .~ w .. > -r v “ r , “ .rested the> hca f* on their Cl o sed poflons Ar3"Thtstmdmji^ arms, Of Icaiied upon in elbow, or Wefe the oBff are second cous-Trm oa their backa rtie flood of elec tric light from the high ienter polo bathed in a blaxo of light the trew-tops, that w,;ra like sW WaHy HioitHds of ver dure. It tipped the edgu< of the layer, of leaves a* with shining eilyer, and left the nirk beneath IrsJt in twilight and half in dark. Wavieg l«ce-wo k pattern* were seen wherer ir the shad ows of the tw gu aHd branches fell U|>on the Walks , The *t1*vt orodhcBd by the electric li^bt Was slieh tn»t every lodger 1‘aUeuta waited oa at MtH. trill aiimd cull* | nay t Rsywweil aud Ha«p(u#DuaUsu HtUatuctiau fuaraaiMd Tiim« •*OBT. D. WHITE, M A RB j E —AID— GRANITE VORKS MKBriNa rtrsir, iLWwe* H«*lb*«k aA ley ) ORARLCflOH , , nr luiwtly J vw*t kmd - „ ... V. . I lou nearest Common aucesfor -ir strelch’ great-grandparent to each-In Other words, if two j ~ the child rert Of the oBo are second eous ihs to thfl otrildren of the other. I The children of “second cousins" are, of course, “third cous'nv” Likewise, (be child en of two “third <wi»i«s’’ art “fourth ceiisins," and so nn, a fact, using algebraical symbols, we may say that a person’s mth cousin n times removed is one who is lineally de scended from lhe nearefl* ettmmon >.n cesturbyit tnhfC gCne atiohs than the former, the fonder hintsblt bc-bg m~ -1 generations below thal ahdcator. ThOs, fHr Cslmple, your fifth cmwiu.- IWice removed is eighth in descent irom‘ your sixth ancestor (counting your pa rent ms first ancostor rour srnihilner—A- gciir as second, and so pn) “J, TrementltHU consequences hare re sulted ironl eveit distant relationship, and ii ha* been in oOuntlesfl Mstances all important 14 preserve family teoords. by mesas of ^yhich Haims to great wsslih and hitrh rink have been estab- T •Led. 11 i* ad very wrll to *mile at lbo ■ lalui M 4 bfth nMt«iBship several tiro. • rv’taoved; but f ib- h-ir presumt*- five know* that no urarer rou«lns - no rvlati.vw o* *nr kind, remmrd or aot removed *Und between him and the ch efta aship ml hw IsMuiv. who shall blaiu- h m for having fliudied thu intft- r» of rel it oa^b pf It .hat not mu •Inm Rapp, bed that a «rr% di*tanl < <>,uua has thu* •norneded to ' - ihe lilts and e* 'ate*. TV re wa* aa ia«iaaae af ibw ■a the gr* ,t k him of btaaley, abuwl a reulur* aad a half ago When Jam-*. •be «r*i«h kart of fttvwi , d s*f la !7K H waa wsfTMary to gw hark aome two hua- drsdaad I fly ysar* m ufdef ta rstshlJh the c a,m of hi- Hrtv ifl 'aa I II i m •r af proal • a** “Cm « » a.’ Arrt reusta <mc« r#- vnrr email PrehaMy m r*wd tbaea finsa im> fim rani a omm re UkS **m# as a ** mm iini tieohiiii \ mi ••wa. | rssmit ow N| that if « riamMMad** aad MAI U* af nfs I ■Mafly’’ e »l eomii lav* let US hi ■■re carry «a i ter a mlatuh—a is **Am *10*41 r. ■*’ Too*.” thea a eact mawvvsd' O lo die j el them —^1* W- uav We It fifocers and Pm Dealtrs, •M III •'•re* w ■, Of * RI M**. f». c 101 sad 1*4 Eaat R*y fiieet j M> W i I. a ■ A i«0 * aatralo oor rr ms r k i pedigree * bm* M> V J*a»a »•» !**•« M«>uwsli Naso Em *•■ Hlisps, Doom. Qlo*, etc. Devereux & Co., • bel aaa ta 'm-t, Ulb, rUler. lair, ui larM* IuIm. y 7l >1 CHARLEHTOf. H. C. mm Mir. -38 King Street Opposite A cade ni y of Mimic, CHARLE8T0H, 8 f. ..'V.T* 'J. 1 rests a il|kt. Mr*ls B- all born*—Ov-ter* is *v*ry M*l*. Ale*, Wiara, Uqaer*, H*sar*, W>[*tr.VUy CHARLES C. LBSLIE Wholecala aad Retail Dsal*r in Fi*l. fiaae. Ubttm, Tirtlw, Terrain, Oveters. Etc. Etc. SUlle, Nor. 18 aad 20 Pish Market CHARLESTON, 8. C. All orders promptly attended to. Terou Cash of City Acceptance. augJOly] THOS. McG. GARB, FASHION A BlaR Shaviii; and^JLir Irmiig Salm, 11,4 Market Street, (One Door Eut of Kioc Street,) m»i80Iy] CHARLESTON, S’ C CAROLINA WW!!; TflE GREAT REMEDY FOR * PULMONAHY DISEASES, COUGHS, COLDS, BRONCHITIS, Ac., AND GENERAL DEBILITY. SURE CURE POR Malaria and Dyspepsia IN ALL ns ST LOBS. U'4 emu *0 t Umm 1mm Umm : • * — a e.M* Noo bers it may be ne<w«aory *o rx- I p’aia. as wv lea.' many persoo* “don’t I undarel >nd pedigroea’ The urmmal Mr June* is sopy«»ed te have badhwe **>oa Mo—r*. —U4am and Thomas I Jooo* Of them two hoaherx Wilimm I • a- lb# father of Alfred aad John, and Thoma- was the farher of Charins sad Tons Mary i* the daughter of Alfred; I Hear) Is the ooa of John, aad Rtcfcsrd is Ihs *na at t haiiea It will not assd say svlraordiaary aeua—a todeeovsr that Alfred. John. Char is* aad Tom are all crandom* of the original Mr. Jones, aouthat Mary, Hsnrv and Richanl are hi* great-graadrhddren. Those who bars taken in thu* much may. by a furl be* stretch of intellect, com per bend that Alfrod—od John are first cou-m- to Char’s* dhd Tom. the father of ’ the former pair of brothers being brother to the lather of the lat er pair Hut now come • the difficulty- Wnat is the “ re lationship'’ between our old friends Tom ^ and “Msry?” Tom is first cousin to Mary's father. Alfred. What relation is Mary her elf to Tom? Some t rsoa-iay “ second cousin;" but this a mistake, she is the •• first cou in once removed”—a relation-hip which may be defined as that of “ the child of a tir-t cousin." This relationship, existing as it .does tetweentwo persons in (fiil'erent gen- e:ations—i. e. not descended by an equal number of steps from the com mon ancestor - is not a mutual relation ship, like “brother" or “first cousin.’’ In other words, if Allied ifl brother to JnbA. John is brother to Alired; il Al fred is first cousin to Charles, Charies is-first cousin to Alfred; because these are in the same generation;" therefore these relationships—“brother” and “first cous : n”—are “mutual" But “uncle" and “nephew" are not mutual relationships; for. if Alfred is uncle to "Henry, Henry is not “ uncie" to Alfred; and if Richard irnephew to Tom. Tom tis not “nephew" to Richard. And “first consin once removed” is a rela- —— tionshipllke “nephew." If Mary and Henry are “ first cons.ns once removed” Charles, it does not follow that haries. is “ first cousin once removed" them. He is often callad so. but r quite as erronetmsly as an uncle wonld ha called his nephew's “nephew." The curious fact remains that, for the ron verse of the relationship “ first cous in once remove I,” i. r. for a “parent’s first consin." there M no name of uni- iwn that a first cousin's is called a “first coosm once re- On the same principle a first • grandchild to called a “first twica reamved." and bto (or bar) chad wodld ba a “first cousin ■ « ana of M* hrtt. Mr MwaH Man- lay -. and In fart, thi* eleventh Earl an* M*th cotMia lo the tenth. And it la •amaahai reatarkabla that, nlthongh the areeeot Lord l*evh* to the ah*—ith Kan. yet be to not da—wadad ^lineally frem any mt the Bret ua Kart*. •».#, i. ka firA" the (Vn*tahhi af who diad In 1»1 Dnhadam of domer-fl wm caa- la 1147 open lb* PTolerlof. Mr Kdward baipwar. wltb lb— paml—r hreitalUa - Ihei tbe bnr* af h‘« s rend ■nrvweA and. fiihag lit Imptf« by bta fHTwi m It. 1 Um I c?k#«l*afl| fffih- Ul IW L> rnkh . tfwl K ■Mif lui«« hmpom «l to muy m r rwu.totumm «ImI. Mi-fTSn. w\*m tk« •»«. Mill l>u^# 4 ad. there wa* no hr f u> •n i •• t except mm*mg ttm dear»e leni* af tbe Frete* luv‘* fir— Wife Tbe benf of tbat brenrh the.# ore. It(f Cdansd fiei mnorT atvlh Harunet (for tbr hr— Itnhe s gr* A*I •Ail) ht*J bmPS IH8« Ir a Har 11# feWMM •*^Ml I NHm 0t tftMMNIHs' ba ag Rf*h nonet* in e rvntov d to tae Bevratb iKih* Mr Edward Crntre—av was rrsa’-d Carl af D*— la ll%* aad bn great- grand•• 4i T.dward. abt-r —mdry aits a •era, wa* treated Carl o. I>e«ea ta 11U by t/avrn Mary, with remvn tFr to “be.r* mile general''. Now this Earl died la I M4. aevd tb<rty-aine. aud namarTM-ti and a* tbere were eu l V»r- l ns' s lelt who were at alt aearly rv lated to h in. the Karhlom w*s •oppotw-A to be evtinet, anti w*s no} rlanneo More (ban tw» ccnlur—- %»d a ball aftorwarl, however in 18SI. it was proved to (lie katis'art on of the House o'J.ord* that Willism. third Vi«c<>uut C'onrtenav. was enlilleii to tha T—rld -m of Deron, ss heir general O the Karl crealetl hr (Jut-en Man, to wlioni hi* relation-hip waa that of sixth ctui-ir nine t met removedL Tbe oenrctti com mon ancestor. Hugh do t ourtenav, sec ond Earl of Devon, o' a futmtr cre ation, hud died in lSi'7. tuvi’l v l wo hun dred vears before the first Kail of the pnerent creation. Thus it was tleeided that the Karldom. du ing the &'» years of oon-Haim, had been, not ex in.*t, but dormant; and seven of the Cour- tenavs who lived and died in that inter val are reckoned now a* righful heirs of Devon.—London Soat'.r. Lodgers ia the Park. on^f clock list night Madison Square at f Volot ‘ Under the trees ia eleven and one-half there were at inast tliroe hundrfd todg- fers. Unlv’ half 4 uiaeil ftf tnrtrf%er4 ftwake. Tile rithets were slciping in almost ever few wHd cured shares the fountain were .the only-ones aids to suet seemed well dre^pd There was nqt light enough to show a rent, a stain, or wrink e in any of their garmt-nU. Even their shirts shone white. But tha lodwrs looked iinonmfoA of thd setteea and the iron ann-rea’l »e arattng the seats gave each man but eighteen squarr inche* HI be«l—e—i. Onfl >n*tng mat who Wa* nccupria^ p rt o( ths •cite* close to Twenty-sixth »t eft and neat Madison avenue. where Geprf • Iradeil Train ifl tf 4 be fouu : .. x wa* doubU-d up like a h*If closed |»oek ct kui c. A lodger exactly vm** ths way from the main ant ranee t> tha Hfth Avenue Hotel kept almost drop ptnr hto bead on lb# gra— Jiebin I him ■ml catching it In the nick of time. 1 be cxefflfcua mads bimsoota Hbe tbe snarl ing of A tigtr. r.verv htfre aa I tb re gravitation brooght two ■virbbor* to- r tber With one* bead < a th-ulber's • sat aad b s b*—d ca bis aompaaiaa'* sb—Maflt •• Tbev am nai all tramps.'' mM the po| re uan Twenty-sfxth •f than* have bwama. bat —H m use air Ona taung m*a I ha* a are# ham", of the taa *s nr i* rel*e«—I by *k*r* tfimrla ! # at *0.1 crowded that I happen Uka bat be has e>ntr ulmea cb#4 that he brliovm •lr<-pmg oat of dmw*. lee* raat-ovXabte Ml tbe h<— < qaartar* • be-* the* lit* is bare. vTe I ad »e4 aie**t aa make -a d* aad ' aadle bettoasS*-—a. Wfl < wbabare bn—m* k* g- farm ag tbe grant ma**eav. ar vagvaat*. wbe Ires by l«egglag i lag thaagb *a—w o* tbs •orb uare m a wbtle muaay •gsia Oa I e- ev* park a 1 be park yeti a da aot —a* e aigbt. bat aa are eaaaared b IremfM aaav. We let am atn ■MMflb tbey gal aalby TbOy la a wbtie. Imfl am— af ike h- Tv a I m* u a*fb g— ewitbes sad waa ikav inuaa g eeuayn to j a sprae *ad I Nk Ponnd Fishing. —— * •»' Directly across the harbor from my hotel, on the Long Point ^hore, barely two miles away, are two large pounds — C irnapA tub ifioft ef^donV trapji for king fish that the ingenuity of tflari has pver invented. Making friends •Vith their o'vfnefs; Jt was incited oat one afternoon to see Ihodi “ Idke up” the day's c&tctr. ' At the' flsh-hotfse I am furnished with “jumper" and ovora’ls. We embark in tbe dory, and in half an liotfr reach tha pound. This is m ide of strong netting attached t# pdsts firmly fixed in the sand, and -‘dng a fow inches above high water mark. There are three point or divisions. A line of netting extends fatal the shore several hundred feet into tbe bar. At ftl end tbe leader begins, formed of two walls of netting that describe an ellipse, and open by a narrow aperture into tha pound proper—a small, circular space, indloMd by walls of netting, and having ho ouUet hxfcept tile opening from tha leader. Tha fish—mackerel, sfiiip« flounder, ood, blue fish—coasting along ■bora are slopped by the wall of netting, follow it to get around by It, and, bav in? a terd^rtey to go straight ahead When started keep on at he and through the a<>ath of tha leader, follow iu Wall*, and peat through the narrow entrance Into taa pound, wham they are as effect ually Caged aa though in the fisherman's hat. Not ona In a thousand ha* wit An ough to dtooter the door by wtfiab H earn* in. Tha dsharfeea push tftetf boat through tha opening ia tha lander Into tha pound. Within to a sight to stir a land-maa’s blood. Tb# water to alive with fi.h. Us surface lashed to foam by tbeir flna, wSile tbs Dotting that (•Moans H to b—.ding and shaking wttk tbe aad rasbas of Um victim*. it to nat often tbat ona finds biflualf la snob proximity to tbaso rovon of tbo I wtUtia reach at tha baad biufi, i around la wild dashas •NT** l#r than al or duvtbfish. of tko I of a dart wuh a valvu-Uke prafaotlaa la fiea ufl a tall, by amaas af wbtcb they dart Ikraugk lbs waiar Nko a task of fight Tha fiskurwaa —riba* o«w with B^BBflfr n^'l'saa hart IteSa to a baas aaa a aurpaaru li T— A Few Parlor Games. Hie games that tolloW Afe floi sD of them pnrtioularlv new, but tnfiy fife vvtj pie a; ant, ana nre quite worth trying! Oueplaycr sjys: “Have you seen my cat?” The, nest replit t: “ Yes. I’ve supn your cat. ” Do yoM hnnw what my cutis do ing 7" '■ Yes) I know what ymir eat to do ing. ” 4 ‘ Do it. ” And theff if the flayer Klecfs iff purr or scMtcli she pays a fo foil, ut (ufHrat), tbiit game may fte varied considerably UJ* tC.ieeufaig any >thrr unimnl. **' 7'Ac IntnmipUd .JReply. —The com pany a»* sealed IrT’si’BUe, when one whispers Id lifif rtgbfl Itofcd neighbor. Ssy that she asks ; "Of »bal nse to a I a>k ?” The answer would fisinfully lie; “To read." But instead, she snot'er quretioi of her righl Jii nd, and ith-n the questions have cone mound the list flnxwar is given aloud—of cour— producing much laughter among the party. I'uzzb Muoic.—One player leaves the room, and tha net determine on some- Ihing ho mi:*t do on his return."-Say. he has to danre flrnttad tbe rtxxn to dis ccvur a hid leu iiernon, of to toveh'k lived long w j sHTui.ir-m,^k r Wlim> WhiMm VT 1b jt-t m Oratraot W days after fink h. wiss stipalated. No Address, THE PEOPLE, Bsruwtll 0. H., a 0. i l V "WIT A1P WHBKML -The mm wha tells abumt bis seldom has— black eye. —“Grandpa, the son Is brigfrtmr summer than Hi winter, li ft aokl “Yes; and ft’s warmer, and enjoys bet ter health.” “ Why does ft eajwy bet ter health?” “Because it Hat' 1 —"When an we going to get oar Gilt-Edged Toaief" asked a prtoooer he the Austin jail of the la'ler. f “What to yon want it for?” “I read ia tko an* pera thal persons of sedentary habits ought to use it.’*-Texas Sifting . ^ —Never let go of a good thing thfifl yon really have for a better Iking ekaal Which there to some doubt la the fable miNMdftflVIPh meat to anafi nk a shadow want hoq the rest of the day.—A’. T. HtMld * wife wanted her bneband pat bite with Iwr in s feminine but be refused, saying: “P ve I ■ mg or iiiano when be is hi* object; Um singing Beene i- informed hy waij 4>rrr or far fr.nn hi or plsx leg b-roming b.n.ier or •otter as fi'* approueliM «W f. cadre from the sola Non. With little trouble thto may -ba I ina le a mn>t amusing gam-. It IS, in fact, l*ut a BKvWntioa sf tbe old nor wry frolic, “ Hot Bdilud [RBafia'* J ■■ rfl* TVwerfcr.—flm | tbe room, and tbuu thu , mine on thu country he t* | pr. pare aecordinfl.?.' Huy he te to gneee O nnairy, yon hare a studunt with a kxi« m#, a U*-k aad apsAkarlaa ; Turkey a lady in a tartiaa, rerlmtag on a *ofa- eu»nawi; I*aplnn< a tout a ton sunrea ■ ailUog round a fire. Tk*. may ba made i by a frw eha ■ lal.i#<-J<eh —“Asymiare storr," •aid Mrs will save time If yen sfle| I ennd of tea.'' "What saving timeT’ replied < oni. mpinouely. 'T, a I ths time 'bore toes 1 a m i a going lo board np beire to s*ioander.—r —“Grandpa, dees own agger' “Yea, lie/’ “An* do Ike middle ••An* 4 ii u* keep rubbing ..«rr-“gnt»e buy.” “Aa* who mwi ths the yoke in do. Jobaato os a rv • —-Do . U2 Are mf (A* A'—; * 3m piaa to lev one kn gtvu 4 1 tree you Ike buy of tko d*u The aunt me uiwka wMh re eddrt tk# rtrtug i but bnhfc Ike buy «d Kiag’e fisnAuu.' Tbre tbu IbM a “I gwuyre Ikuarere UmS bald* lb* k#y A Um Rto^e r - tk. ^ T. mu. •lissflasl reTtoM kdek-yred. at Ike mad# by haa-l* of y r are i he j**gh thu pu m du ght “ If a du ani maa In nwu of ih-re park* “Writ, be »<mH WuuUa L N« (•ere* rmaRfii ei aigbi 4 Harvesting Potatoes. It ifl advisable to dig potatoes before' the heavy fall rains occur. If the ground is muddy the potatoes can not be taken out of it in a clean condition. The soft dirt will remain on them and^ greatly injure their appearance. Po tatoes that are dirty can not be mar keted to good advantage and are in a bad state to handle at home. Still, it is not a good plan to harvest potatoes till near the time when the fall rains gen erally oocur. While the weather is quite warm they will keep better in the ground, where they grew, than in any pla^e that is available for storing them, rotatoes should be exposed to the ac tion of the son as short a time as pos sible aftea they are du^ The sunlight aflects them unfavorably, and if they are exposed to it for a long time their value for potato purposes u completely destroyed. All have netioed that tuber* from which the dirt has .been washed away are green in color and that tbey hara^a disagreeable tast«. Tbey are poisonbns when eaten. If the soil to dry wbeh potatoes are dug tbey should lie on the ground but a very short time before they are gathered np- The beak place to store thea to n reel and toler ably dry oallar. They may ba kept, however, very well ia beans above the ground If thev are covered judiciously, tbe heap should ka on tolerably high iboadd f*ll a*leep fftftlUJ Ml Ml ■ MM fc 9 * * 1 # h ib# perk tale iUr nfv r X ifle** Of * part*, nod dro,• uu n bon Y“*e-t falls asleep Tk-n iket go throw^k him I k*»* kanwn n man lo b# nrt ei «d bto • atch. money, nog*, coo*, wet, bai sod shoe*, and bavr lo msk- h « wqj b» av la that cooditkia la tkr nowniaf G«a •raUv. thougk. ibe Irani o ar* o<4 *o CTimI Tb#v alien lake a gcntU-maw s otk bat aad Ireve hiia tbeir oua ia cx- ckange ’’ *• Bui.” said tbe pubcemaa. "1 musk K und drive th » e fellow* away irons Imonieo’a Tb# trump* go t » L'ei- monico’* wt>« n they gel (billy, hereo** l be re'* u grating iber* and tm h-n* of the kitch-n oom • up ibnutgii it. There wa* a Dio« young fellow lliero ln*t night He had no coat Hut hi* shirt wu* clean and good. He mid his '*tlv«r turned him out of doors because he played pool, and he pawned his coat for the"price of a meal.’' There were .boat .MX) lodger* ia Union 8qusre,and the plashing fountain, the embowered paths, and tbe aleejM.rs, under the wizard touch of the electric light made the scene reminiTolie of the fury tale of those who slumbered in the eompsnv of the Beauty t n The Wood 'ihe Prince who broke the 8|>ell in the City Hall Park half an hour later was a |>ollceman with a club two f. et lon^. The reporter had been walking ou tho plaza between the gras* and Um City Hall, and had not noticed a lodger. The park wax as qtltcU * £rd v, J- yard. Bnt when thit guardian, who e voice war tike the roar of ^fru trumpet, banged his club and said; "Out with you, or I’ll bag the lot of you ” the E aths suddenly swarmed with fhain- ling, stretching, yawfikig upirux, some at a dog trot and cjmc limping likn rheumatics.—N. Y. i.un. t*re ibeai e^ap aad we Aafl kafl* Um law of Ike gre 4re" A fiffife > "1 grt* yea a bos ks b.44 Ike petret Al# m ukerpre tkn mto- ■am M ret Um akrtug that bold* Ik* knp ni Ik# rewire,“ and re re kfi ree plevev iMle and papa I n* Jksrefl Ikrt r —Aguressi tb# i ~ Ini g rougre i r la * la Um Tkay tbre pan Um boat around tbe **4e mt tbe pored, drugging lb# net uitk tkvm. Tbey allow It u> slip ever Iks euu*d, fieifck, and kasrebrnt wkkab Ba re tke bottom, but drop It as Um loed fi*k, which are furthest pomlble point By and by the akreuit to the fish are e« meshed There * re five barrels of mackerel and n few bieadah In the ask, and the landtag thorn to aa exciting struggle. The fiehermea keel ou the net —uue step* overboard and Idle It bodily ; tbe victim* *tniggle vio lently aa they fan! Um water shoal, fih- Hsw People Die. As a rale, she tells ~ us, in acute cases interest in. their own danger is rarely felt. “Indifference, excepting with re gard to bodily suffering, or to some duty the dying man desires te perform, is the fur more asual state. But pa- tientS Who die Of consumption very In*. if sen quently die in n state of seraphic joy and peace; the countenance almost ex presses rapture. Patients who die of cholera, peritonitis, etc., on tbe con trary, oftea dla In a state approaching despair. Ia dysentery, diorrhrra, or fever; the patient often* die ia a state of indifference. ’ Those who have rare- fullv examined the dead oa a battle- laid. or ia tha streets after aa #**<«'«, are struck w.th tha fart that while the as they I besprinkling their enptora. but tbe net rise* ileadfff, red at Iasi Wltfi a Hast effort lx rolled ialo the bout, live bar rel* of bine beantiex lie there straggling and tarexblng. We row >>aekaoro** tho bay to tb* dock and ll-h-bod*#. Kwlit bronzed and rugged veterans la oiUkius and top boots are swatting our approach. One in tbe dory shovels the fi*b into n bushel basket, which another hoists with pulley and blocks to the dock. 8ix oth ers are stationed near by at three tube filled with dean water. One take* the fish from the basket and deftly slit* It down the back, beginning at tha head; three others clean it; two wash tbe fi*h; a seventh out* a slit on each half, that the inspector may judge of its fatness; an eighth trundles the cleaned fLh into the flshhouse, where two men with a wheelbarrow of salt between them are packing the product In hogsheads. One dock Pachn throws a handful of salt on the opened fish, and bands it to his fellow, who packs it in the hogshead with more salt. Men Ure Bey ef Taa!* Uvea. | Tbe palaces of Ike Bey are splendid and Incoagruure; lb* Barxlo. re bow from tk# capital, to a fine sample of Oriental ar. kiUclur* and decoration, ■polled by Parisian upholstery aad vul gar European carpel*. Dar-el-Bey, bis only town residence, la magnificent and neglected; hie real abode to in a sep arate building, walled and standing la n garden near the Bardo. He goes to the Bardo once n week, to sit in judg ment on his subject* sad receive the Ambassadors and ('onaaTfl of tbe Great Power*; a id then there is a brief stir, and tbe ( ourt presents n stately picture. “ It is, however, only an external brill- ianc., and it cannot deceive the visitor as to tbe misery reigning within ths Moorish Empire." Mahomed Es 8a- —Thi ns at Pacha Bey is an amiable enough Prince, by nil accounts; fond of child ren. but childless, and very simple in his habits. He has only one wife, aad where it remains until sufficiently though he pays her a formal visit of an itn.sxlr IasI 'A *>». a n Sb i a asxs-4/osl ivxfre A lx • .*1 ■« ms 4 i aw« a 4 Lab* s.a _i4 1 a AX’At*«r si a vr “pickled,’*-'Wben it is sorted into three “culls'' and marketed.—Provinoeioicn (Mait.) Oor. N. Y. Post. English Depredations in the Yellow stone Park. The magnificent Yellowstone Park is in danger of being rapidly destroyed and its natural beauties defaced by wantonness and vandalism unless the Government steps in to protect it It is said that the I rst thing the i nglish- Miss Nightingale has pointed out how constantly the mental state of the dying , 'u,.„ i *5£;. stotre Park and necdlessh shoot down seAres of its large game—deer, lufla- loes. bears, antelope juid mountain sheep. Nor are foreigners always the chief sinner* in this respect. Many of the most famous Yellowstone gevwi* "UK1 have already been ruined bv people who amuse themselves by hyr)ing immense tninks of pine trees into them in order to se# tbe water loioe them high in the air. In many case* these logs ha\e stuck in the water apertures and have comp'etely stopped the spouting. In Wioming the people are taking xt-p» lo put a stop to socn randalism and the «hoie-a!« slangbter of bnffaloes aad other gam# ti> > ngtiek tontis j(n*tuctk)a of wkk See* lo be largely partly. Tranted end oompraamd ft eaa be t ad as bard i XtTr? hour’s duration at her cattle every day, he rarely sees her, as the hojnt of his visit is generally one appointed for de votion, and on his arrival he goes to a ■mull room in the palace tq pray. He is supposed to kndkr nothing of tbe management of his possessions; be fore him all is splendor, behind hht back all is desolate ruin. Whichever of h's palaces he shall die in will be dis mantled and left to decay, for a Bey must not live c a palace in which a nedecessor has died. “None of them prec lias had himself street on death fir —Thai trail*, has bw the amount of boikbag additional Moot of the roads i pose of opening up districts. They wiU lo carry tai there wiU ba fifty-six their aggregate length 827 1-2 mure. —Frequently ft to! whether there to les Thto to the method given lion in a leading foreign f nal; A drop «f oona acid is let fall apon the and a drop of a solution i iodide to nddad. If there ia ent there is formed la two or three] ate* a yellowish spot of lead k Kopp moistens the leaf to bo < with sulphuric acid. U the tin to the spot remains white, bat if present there is n black apot. trans into the i approaching; and there are more than n dozen palaces in Tunis to-day which cannot be used by the Beys' A melancholy example of this absurd custom is Mahomed ia, once the magnificent residence of Achmet Bey, who hod it built Ikirty-five yean wr -a port- of K),BOO. 000 fraaea palace, with its secondary buildings and villas for ministers and dignitaries, was situated two miles out of town; and when Aehmet Bey died, the furni ture was moved, the floors, glased tiles, broken oat England with a gas i two pipes, oaeof which s the ordinary way add slightly compressed by f column of' a eap of fine platinum: a few seconds after the < gled gas and air aaa 1 forth n brilliant! that of tha alertria menu have number of I door- add windows were dragged to heavy marble j curbs of the mi hind with the walla, and ha The i* Mmtd wm. thi* light, which, I er than tha ovdia 4*1