University of South Carolina Libraries
&Lit- ^ •: .•h % . •' . : w ‘ , *. -•. ir ; „/ ...;.; •■ • ■ v/ ' . 4^ ^ ,r5 *; n.'-' -. *■ • . ■ »*■ .. ■Z.-ec-.f f . - T. • . - % In writing to thb ofiwjon bnaine« ry «lw*y« glre your came and Poet offict «ddma ■* 2. Bu^iums letters and commnnict- tions ;© be published should be written on separate sheets, and the object of each 'clearly indicated by neoeasary note when required. 8. Articles for publication should be ■written in a clear, legible hand, and on ■only one side of the page. 4, All changes in sdyeitisements must ca ch us on Friady. '■ . w -- i '^5* * . VOL VI. NO. 32. lARNWELL, 0. H., 8. C., THURSDAY,.APRIL 12, 1883. 13 s Year. OR. h H. r. MIIMOUS, DENTAL SDftaEOOU BLACKVII.LE, 8. u. Office near bin reeidence on R R. Ayenue. P»tientR will find it more comfortable to have their work done at the office, aa he ha* a Rood Dental Chair, Rood iirht and tbs yiost improved anpliance*. He *honld be irformed several dars prerious to theiroom- ine to prevent any diMprointment-thouch will senerally he found at his office on Bat- unlays. He yn’.l R t;n continue to atfend calla tnroaRjout Rarnwtll and adjoininR conn- , [«ur18 ly THE PLUMB Elf. ticy D?. B. J. QUATTLE3AUW, BURGEON DENTIST, WILLIS TON, 8. C. Office over Cant. W. H. Kennedy’s store. Cad', attended throuRhout Fr rwe *'"• sdjscent counties. Palients will dn it to ineir r. lvantatagea to have < ne a , hii rffi "fplt/, DR. J. RYERSON SMITE, Opiratjpf! and Mechanical Deoti>t, WILI I8TON, s. c. ^ V II attend e*;;, Urrvmgtinnt this an 1 a.’. j -Cl ut c iunties; *'periHiini Oiih Tip more satis'actorily per- rmed at his Ptrlors, which are su| plied w ith al the Irttort R)>proved appliances, than af the residences o! patients. In prevent disappointments, patients in- t^ndniR to visit him at Williston are re quested to corresjxind by mail before leav. ''iif home. [sei , tlf I, U.'tS Klnir Street, Aeademy of Music, CHARLESTON, S. C. I! 'oms to let at .'rO rents a n'jrht. Met is ai '“il liijurs—tlvitefsm everv srvte. Ales, Wines, Liquors, Segars, &c.[m«r301v CHARLES O. LESLIE \YhriI« .:i!e aud Retail Dealer in TMi. (uiiiic, Lobsttrs, Turtles, Term pins, ( >voters, Ktc. Ktc. >tR , !', ( Nop. H and 20 Fish Market charles'Ton, 8. a AH t -.'ers p-omptly attended to. Tornu Caffi or City Acceptance. mcSOly 1 l agitated that every poppy ut within his homo and luxury. tfho storm go bowl! nr br, jklm full of rIoo. the window panoa. - it fen, ^ the land, the rooeo, perent’a side. *1 her dad: why do you smite, irfnl nlRbt? •Pay, pephi On such a fearful The storm It abates the windows 8», _ na paralyzed with friRhtl “ Think of the poor within their homee, No coat to keep them warm I How nan yon smile, my pap* dear, , While others foci alarm ' The plumber stroked her fold n curia, And took heron hts lap; H h«-n to his little child be said: < — ‘•Now listen to your pap. “The Ice and snow, the frost and hall, IlrlnR Riadnes* onto m-; With Joy I hear the wintry bleat Which howls so dismally. “This princely bom* wherein wo dwell. Those brontea r ch and rare. Those pictures brouirbt from forelRii I untie, Our c*ypets. silverware, “ My bank-stocks and my real estate, Your imother's d umonds, too, All < ame from winter's Icy breath, So dreaded, love, by you. “ I’ll toll you how these blessing* rouv— To others, thorns and stripes— The story’a told In these four word*. l‘>om busted wrttr pipe*." RECOLLECTIONS OF A SHADE HAT. sf. A. S urgeon PATTER SON, lAentisi. Office at the Barnwell Court House. Patients waited on at residecce iFrif- i-ired. Will attend calls In any p< rtion of Barnwell and Hampton counties. Sitlsiaction guaranteed. Terms casb. s'lLol lyj ROBT. O. WH%TE ° M JV H B T, 11; —AND- CRANITE WORKS MEETING STREET, ('Tomer Horlbeck’s Alley,) CHARLES.ON, : ‘ : 8. C iundllyj OTIO TIEOEMAN & SONS, -WHOLESALE— Grocers and Provision Dealeis 102 snd \01 East B*y Street, augSlly CHARLESTON, 8. C. “Sec, Nellie, here is ju>t what sou want; it will .aha le your eyes nicely, and bo becoming, too "’ A pleasant voice spoke close beside the counter, where 1 lay piled up with a multit da of the “latest out.” The next instant I was picked up by a firm hand, which belonged to an at tractive-looking young woman, who gave my brim a dip one way and abend the other, held me up- in several attb tudes, w alked with me to the mirror, set me back on her head, pulled me down over her eyes, and then tried a. medium course, moved away, took a view from over her shoulder, took me ofl again, and at last replied retlect- ivcly: “Ves, I think I could make it do.” So she bought me, and at her order 1 was trimmed with some scarlet pop pies, and lovely creamy musLn, and sent home. r 1 was very observant and attenti'.e. ynd soon loamod that Nellie had rel'u-ed to go with some of her triends'to a fashionable watering-place where, as she said, "you dress, and go to dinner; dress, and walk out; dress, aud sit on the pia za: dress, and go to the hop. No, she preferred to g i to the truly country, have no one to bother her, and stay out-of-doors from morning till night. “ You’ll get t red o' that. Miss Nell,” saui a young lady', who came to see her the day we lei L “You’ll get tired o( that, and \ou’ll wish you had gone with us.” “Well, 1 have yotw address, and I can tind my way to the station,” laughed Nellie. “ Wonld you have me in case I repented, and wanted to comeP’ r “ Yes, indee 1, and if you promise to come as soon as you want to,-it will not be verv long before we see you.” •• I’ll give you time to unpack before jM-send the carriage for roc.” ' Then she put me on, bade her friends good-by. and we were oft. 1 think the young lady must have got tired waiting for her, because we n l grow weary of it at all. Nellie’s little brother was with us. but he soon found more boys, who look up his en tire attention, and bxn-oldom went with us in our walks among the hills and valleys. We had a lovely ( me. Nellie told Mrs. Grant, in whose hall I hung when at leisure, when she w sited there was more there to Interest her, be would bke to have da; orty-cight hours long, so th»t might have more room to put the ioyment she lound epotof Rail (in; M i ,i i’* e •$).:>} K ut B ly Sash, Bunds, Doors, Glass, Etc. Devereux & Co., .DKLLERS IN. Hair, Lime, Oraent, Laths Flatser, Slates and Marblo Mantles. *ep7ly] CHARLESTON, 8. C. THOS. McG. CARR, FASHION JYBLTC Shaving and flair Dressing Salotn, 114 Market Street, (One Doo* East of King Street,) maiSftly] CHARLESTON, 8- C. CAROLINA W TONIC THE GREAT REMEDY FOR — PULMONARY DISEASES, / COUGHS, COLDS, BRONCHITIS, Ac., AND GENERAL DEBILITY. SURE CURE FOR ' ' Malaria and Dyspepsia her. I i an not tell how long W£ had been there, when, coming in rom’a walk ue afternoon, we found a broad-brimmed, bla k-banded panama hat hanging on my own particular peg. 1 was so angry at the intrusion that 1 fell down three times.while Nellie was trying O liaflg mo. and at last was put i( another p ace by shoo • force. The n erloper was a tenvard wom by a gentleman, who ca led Mrs. Grant auntie, and whom Nellie addressed M Dr. Wentworth. - I thought him a very fne young-nuuk •mt Nell o did not ap, ear ; articuludy •np’eased, and sc erdl times I thou hi h ■ wott’d like to have jo ned us when we went out in the luomin > but she. ijave liim in encouragement lo do sa One day, however, wo tot into d ffi- (u’ty. \Ve were sauntering along -through somecha: mSi. woodland; Nel lie swun mo fro u ot\o hand, while the other 1 eld her sachel containing boif no e'. eket h-1 ook and worsted work. W e were en oyin ourselves verv mu h, when wh-r-rt bur'.! and the whole air seemed lull of wings! Somethin ; Te1F~ sga'nst Nellie with sudden force, tlie next thing 1 knew I was Ivirig the ground, and she was in full ref in the opposite direction. I’do not know how she felt, but IWM scared. Would she never come back? Was 1 to lie there always till sun. wiftd -aud vain had done their worst? A had almost despaired of ever teeing any one again, when a big dog rusBed up and seized me, and wita a few bounds laid me—yea, would yon believe it?—right at Nellie's feet. I wae eo glal. And there was Dr. Wentworth with game-bag and gun ready to pick me up. 1 came up just in time to teli how he was frightened the once when be.waai t email boy. he knew the waya of partridges. i was so trembled. “I can not rea<l the stovieibnyfelf,” thou ht 1, but isit pesjibla that lan to witness a genuine love affair?” Sui h seem-d to be the ind'ea'ions; but as time pass d on 1 found I did not have all the opportunities for observa tion that I might have wished, for Dr. Wentworth very often declared that I wAs in the War,'and would quietly rc- tnovo, and set mo quite aside, where I could not see what was voing on, nor yet quite get the full Impo t of their e nversstion. Hut once I heard a soft rustle I used to hear in the wheat field, long before 1 was a hat. We were all very happy together for some tinSft,* I oven <rrew to tolcrateThe hr«.ad br'mmed,-blwk banded I’anama, we were thrown aside together so often. Hut, aTer a tim •, there came a serious chpngrv I never knew what it Was about, or how it hat pened. and proba bly I nevershaP,to long as there is one straw of my ana'omv left upon another. My wo irer and the doctor stopped goby out together, met very seldom. nnff%! on they did see each < ther tiro c Idness of the atm isnhere about them made me feel out ofsiMon. 1 -laid in the Mil more than u-ual. Mr. Wen'worth < ame in the door one morn iff', just as Miss Nellie came down stairs wiih s, shawl over her arm, and took me from my peg. 'Ih y reeled each other s« y jiolitelv, and he, sup posing she was <.oiq' o«t, ^Rtd thvrduor open a moment, but stanwwhed and went urfstairs again, takvng mo with her. I suppose she wa* (Ti-iap- po nted because she did not go out for she ust threw herself down, and cried as if her poor heart would break. We were going home in a few days, and she did not leave her room very oft en whlo we sta d. Once, a note was 1 ro 'ttht up, but when i-he saw the writ ing on tne outside she sent it away w iliout looking at it. The last day we wure there I was in the ha,U once more, and when no ope else was near Dr. We ilworfh" ciimc in. and put a note between mv 1 ning ; n<l the straw, and ho said softly all to h m- self: '*She certainly wilkppe this. If she .would only et me explain’ ’ Nellie’s brother came tlyjng through the hall a few minutes after, knocked me down, and, of course, the note fell out.* “What a queer place for Nell to keep her letters,” he said; “well, I’ll fix it so it won’t drop out aga n.” And he.pushed it in out of sight, so securely, indeed, that nobody* was like ly to seV It but the one whopiit it there. Nellie did not wear me back to t!ip city, but put me bn< k in her trunk. I was tsken no notice of for a long time, when I was found oue day by. a very k nd young -lady who surveyed mo critically, and said; “That has oeen a pretty hat.” “That old thing: yes, I wore it last summer. 1 think I will ftWo it to our washwoman.” replied ^jollie. 1 felt injured. O. course. I did not expect >0 stay .with her always-wiai* ne ver f< el the san e a'ter on e season anyway—bull jusnttd want to know how that story canid out,- and how could I know if I was given to the wash woman? I eou d not see what wa* the matter with me; I was a trillc faded to. te sure, but Nellie herself was not nearly so bright and pretty as she uKSd to be. I was forthwith * presented to Mrs. Muldooney, who. when asked if i would S ot jbe of any use to her, answered id promptly: “Bless tne, it q|ll help to cheer up the dear child amasta'ly. -She’s been 4-aiuk in her bed this two mouths so she can’t move nor stir, and the do tor tend- in, her all the while, though he takes nothin' for his trouble, but just- lets me do him a little washin’ now and then.” • She. took me home, and, though not accustomed to <-Uch surrouu-l- as I found myself among, I was ap, 'once more. Nellie never cn- od m ‘ half so much a* did the pate le girl, who clapped her tiny, thin ' slwme. of anything In the world you would rather have than this hat?” “Why, doctor!' “ Think hard before you answer, and don’t be afraid of saving anything too great” “ What could be nicer than those, ex cept real flowers that grow in the ground? You know there isn’t anythin* nicer than flowers except the hand-or- £ n man; he only comes once in a while :>ugh.” “Did you ever see the bouquets in the florist’s window, when you wc.re well and could go out in the street?” “Oh, yea Don’t \ou think the man in the flower shop on'ht to be very happy?” “ Ami did you ever hear of little box es that had mus e inside of them, and you had only to wind them up as yot r mother doc* iicr clock, ami they play the most beauti ul music?” “Oh, they don't have th mo here, do they? Did you really ever see one?” “If the florist's boy brought you a splend d bouquet every day, and the expressman brought a music box, and Miss Elea- her. around the corner, sent in the prett est little hut in her wind >w lor you, do you tliiuk you could give me this hat. and let n e take it away with me?” “Why, l r. Wentworth, are you a fairy go*lmother? Are these my three wishes? And are you going to vanish?” “ NwA tdl you sny this hat is mine, then.I will vanish to the florist’s to tit* music store, and to Miss Bleacher’s.” '1 he child did not apeak, but only he’d me out to h m, and when he took me away 1 was sorry to leave her. she looked so happy. The doctor and 1 got into the buggy and drove oT. One does not get the meest kind of ft ride under the seat of a buggy. When we got o the doctor's office I felt confused and dizzy. He laid me down on the table, and went out. When-ho came in again a boy was there, dusting and setting things in order. Shall I sling this old hat awa\ ?” said the ) oy. seizing mo and going to ward the window. • Here, 30a young vflla : n, bring that back.” And Dr. Wentworth scowled at the boy, ami took me away. Ho cxrried mo to another room, and pu^ me away in a trunk with some bo ks and qm-or- looking things, quite unlike anything I had ever seen in Nellie’s trunks. I spent the time thinking*bout what I had seen, and in speculating about the future; 1 was anxious to seethe end of the storv. 1 wa ted a long, .long time for fi rther dcvelopements, and at last grew tired of waiting. Still time went on, and nobody eamc to take me out I grew stiff’ and yellow. 1 felt in every straw and thread that 1 was unde niably an old hat. I must have parsed into a dormant state in which I remained I know not bow long. L'ut suddenly I found myself in broad daylight again, and when I had col- Tected myself sufficiently to know what was about me, I was astonished to find nivself being held oil at arm’s length by mv own Nellie, in a pretty pink do mestic apron, a prettier p nk dn-t ng cap. and the prettiest pink in her cheeks I ox er saw. * - “John Wentworth, what isthis? ’ she asked. “A shade hat, l th nk yon used to <all it, my dear.!’ “1 shot! d th : nk so It is the very hat I wore two yearn &g° in the coun try.” she said. “As 1 distinctly remember, Mia W<nt worth;” “Where did you ge 1 it, and what U it doing here?” Nollii “I get it from Mrs. Twt Brave Girls. Miss Rebecca W. Bates, of Sdtuate Harbor, one of the heroines of 1812, has just celebrated her 87th anniver- sexy at the old homestead. Two sisters, Rebecca and Abigail, daughters of the lighthouse-keeper at Scrtuato, played a part in tha Revolutionary period as noteworthy as Barbara Freit* die. The lighthouse at tha abova period was made the scene of a flfa-and* dram victory over an English blockade in Sdtuate harbor. Two American ves sels were coming into the harbor laden with flour. At it was shallow, the man- of-war was afraid to venturau and manned two Itonts'to pursue them. They fast gaining on them when a loeccii and Abide Bates, when to pick up chips to boil the for the evening meal. The under the protection df “ Home glmfds, who, not apprehending any danger, *were on a forage in a huckleberry patch. The girls had become familiar with am munition and military muaic. Peroeiv- ing the danger, one of the aieters pro posed to face the enemy with guns, but quickly taking in the fearful odd*, had recourse to a stratagem. They tied to a side of the lighthouse, so' ss to be con cealed from the enemy, and one of them in stentorian tones called the roll. In an instant after Keliecea struck a martial air on the life, and Ahbio hammered on rcftchod by Rs- woiTH mowing. as ■MMw Jnjr.UM Wtsto hsMtes«wl<a May All Ifmai Bstyafli Bsmr.J is the powdered leaf of a harmless flower A sis in i_ _ ones it has been used to rid tires of famseta. With a finely-, dust made from these flowers, can be purchased of almost say relia ble druggist at about 70 cents a pound, '.he house fly, the wicked flea and tha mosquito may be put to flight or to mat. In order to enjoy this delickms riddance, it ie-ooly necessary to heap up with a little eons one tesspoonful of the drug pyre thrum, tench it with alighted match and watch the thin bine tme of smoke as it rises to the ceiling and is wafted through tbs air. changing tha busy drone of insect life into a 1 wail of insect woe. Pretty soon down they come plump on to the table and over your paper spin on their tiny backs and tMb sheathe their lancets, curl up their hair-like legs, and interest one no more. Up stairs the little ones sleep unmolested, though there ere thousands of mosquitoes are sick unto the walls, too ping the rich, warm Mood that glows in ruddy little limbs mougn mere are inonaanoa is in the room : the pests 1 death, and cling sadly to o feeble to thins of tap- . N 1 ' t > My&t; ■- w ■MMtviftM* - M Yo««M*kj —At is Mr. Drum. is wm find burfk IHtgnpk. Mi he will not pMl* * ; JfwW IVm* iv* the drum Itudily. The xaus'.c the Britiah, n flag waa haUtcd. jfld.lto.L 1™ 1 m—u wheeled alioiit- mw to tto. ~-t ^ to ^ . Ml werboud, Ml«» | ue untolltocCwtoM entry, though the windows are raised neck and heels, and hauled in. The muaic also alarmed the absent guards, who returned in time to raise tumultu ous cheers as the enemy were departing, the ladies playing “Yankee Doodle.’’ These two sisters never married, al though they had several proposals. They were very indnstrions and could ply the needle and thread on any kind of garment, for male or female. The family is remarkable for their longevity. Their father died when very aged, and their mother at 87, and their internal j grandfather at more than 100. One sis ter, Mrs. Jane Curtis, is in her 9Qth j year, and another, Mrs. Hawthorne, Is in her 79th. The house occupied by these two celebrities was built by their grandfather 140 years ago, and is in a wonderful state of preservation.—.Bos ton Traveller. resdffy 'buff color; be light, readily burned, give s pleasant, tea-like fragrance; pinch should kill • dozen flies, ooofl s-Mpdoo ireTecuusc uuuy « vBWlo lagasine. hands when she “Ars,there really flowers like these in the country, mother?” she as\ed, ton hlng tha poppies lightly. “Yes. indeed, dearie,” answered the woman, in such a d ffersnt voibe from what she had usedbeford, “yes. dariini, and you shall see for yourself when the 1 to -ui-e- summer comes again; well go where 1 to enher we can have plenty of them. Only hurry and get well’ T ch’ld lay i erfectly quiet* and wittfniy at the bit o £ bhro sky, c from h r window, and I was •'raid she would never see the fresh country, ifce looked so like the lilioi just before the petals fall off.ffflfl leave only the withered stem. LUm* ft tbara name a Step upon ► the sod whLl6Htttafkc6 bright- ened up wonderfu%, then the door almost ready to send me oflF’ “lg t* Fmiettor, but /d-n twant you to go away; and ^mly ito what mother broogUt me from where she works- isu’t it lovulyf Wi jou ever iye any flowuta q«Ra sti nkw as them?” ^yn**** words Jto Wd meu^ ncy’s lit tle gill, and it is thereTecause it is one of my treasures.” Then he told her a 1 about his finding me. that dav, with the little sick girl, ami how when he saw the note there he knew she had-never . cun it, and how ho had got her address and heard about her from Mrs. Mu.doonev. “So you eee, if it had not been lor. this hat 1 might never have foundjrou aga n. and thi* day instead of having the best wife in the w'orld 1 should have been a conffamed old bachelor.” 4 slipped down behind the table, and nobody pa d any attention to mo. They must have beeivnsmtee each other than , them, because I eould hardly oatcli a word they said. But 1 heard again the samp sjyeet sound that puzzled me once before, while we were spending the aununer iu the coun try,—Susie 2L ' ' Ml Steadman, in Ballou't A Romance of British High Life. Many years ago a young man made his qqiearance in Htratford, and passed' a 'ew weeks at the tavern which then txiated to afford shelter to stage-coach ravelers. Whence he came, and what was his business, none could guess. Directly opposite the ^vem stood the miall cottage auvTTorge of a hlackamith lamed FfflscJm. He had a daughter a ho waa the tieaMte^of the village, and t was her fortune‘towoptivate the heart >f the young stranger He told his love, laid he was traveling inoog.; but, in con- Idenoe, gave her his real name, saying :hat he wus heir to a large fortune. Bhe returned hia love, and they were married i few weeks after. The stranger told his wife that he must visit New -Orleans. He did so, and the gossips of ths town made the young wife unhappy by dia- igrueable hints and jeers.* In a few months the husband returned; but before s week had elapsed he received a large budget of letters, and told his wife that he must at once return to England, and must go alone. He took his departure, uid the gossips bad another glonout op portunity to make a confiding woman wretched. To all but herself it was a rieor case of deyertion. The wife be- :amc a mother, and foe two years lived yn iu silence and hope. By the end ol that time a letter was received by the Stratford beauty from -her husband, directing her to go at onee to New York with her child, taking nothing with her but the clothes she wore, and embark in S ship tor home in England. On her ar rival in New York shs found a vessel splendidly furnished with evwn acm- venieuce and Inxury ter two servants ready to obey every w Chat die might express. The ship duly arrived in England, sod the Stratfqgd gill became mistress of a mansion, and, ■s the wife of a baronet, %as sainted by the aristocracy as Lady Samnel Stirling. f)n the death of her husband, man; rears ago, the Stratford boy a to the title and wealth of his father; and in the- last edition of “Pbarage and Baronetage,” he is spoken of as the issue of “Mke Folsom,, of Stratford, North (Oat) (jflobe. Gauze ban an hot. stnffV things at beat, and one moat be sadly driven to attempt to deep undersuen a cover; then, as we all xnow, the mosquito al ways finds his way through, no matter how carefully one may tuck up its fold* about the couch. Smoke from the Pentes camomile or its dusty powder we hfttt found most efficacious, rod your readta will bless me when onee titeT try it. The parity of the drag must be assured. This can be tested. It most have a bright “ ‘and one pinch should kill a dozen flies, confined in a bottle, at onee. When it fails of these properties it has been adulterated. In common us^di large or breezy rooms, where, from dilution, it faila to kill, it nevertneless produces on insect life, through its volatilized essential oil or resin, undoubted nausea, vertigo, res piratory spasms, and paralysis. It sets upon them through the minute spiracles, the breathing tubes, that stud the sur face of their Uttle bodies, and from ths delicate network of veins in their tiny wings. To human beings it is, so far as I can ascertain, entirely innoxious, snd not disagreeable. "'That we—a family of eight persons, infante and adults—have lived for several weeks in an atmosphere of pyrethram dust and smoke com bined, during this present summer, is sufficient proof of my statement. -To the skeptic I recommend an interesting ex periment :, JJuff the pyrethram into a close, warm room, where flies most love to swarm, just after dark, abut the door, ‘ ' thirty * >ni of (load and nomleal: sake don’t down the i out down.) Now, yeu’U i Chicago —Ml open for r* i the office to ths 1 It 1 ; iKon^liP.- •*53*^ ■tain* and vaaisnt for yu, was so ' ’•JSftZfw. jsSteJ^diml quarter In ths t —Youog “ aaahttaaot 1 SUdttteti himself is they she What was kis brake man e car lamps bate Podgers says ti blank hoCbug, i op the better! The-Idee squandering millions on fraud as that!—Bestow A rhea yen huvs a m to you tight* iow~ biassed it m to Ninety-alas botes eat and only a kick will meet the i willMt up and | lady enters. Blestings i upon her head! worn bort friend of men. But horridtl how in Heaven’s name u a it rid of tim woman* If tike —(—and sometimes she !e-- scionably worse bore then the i she unseated?—JT.T. Orafkit. and make another visit in thirty minutes. The sight of seeing millions i squirming vermin on the floor will do hw heart good—that is, if he it human and not an angel. Having drafted our plan of against these little foes, it becomes er to speak of the cere flyhe worn o core mosquito sting^Pwnow- noth ing butte rthan a 20-per-Cent. solution in either oil or water of pmfc carbolic acid. This is to be nibbed well on the-painful spot To bathe one’e tingling hands and smarting limbs with this solution gives a cooling, grateful sensation that is herd to describe. OarboKo soap will do al- most os well, or an ointment ed of oatiffiL camphor and- aafl Orderi df tikd'MMib. If wa ctim amt «g«e la on a dear warwlms oWhd, myriads of twinkling tiMs In the The: k<M4 Hefher. A Bomoutle Incident. One of the most striking incident* that ever occurred in my experieno* here was et one time that I had prepared boxes of fancy paper with a. fancy i®tiaL or_P«t name embossed m it, and put tnmusret h dollar a box.and advertised tt One day I had aa order from 0a from a Miss Susie —. ' The box wee doini up, addressed to her and lay about-haw, wnau a young ~ “ came in and wanted to I gave him tike materials Englishman write a letter wad a place, when hie eye dress on the thsn l erer was be ore in gill .wr ^“^Irwntlfr. W.nt- trbo was not b ee - M»® { . box. *Have you the order that cam that box of pepei?” he asked. •‘Yea," I ^q?lied, “it is about for Md; he& hhft- r same way* t I^dJso.and ■■■■ a few nutfi tras in his own hsnds von mind sending it up to my Iflt is what I ti&ak, 1 shall for Ohlifornia ound il and heard no more about one day •a nay on hisem, Vtikedin. Honor the nVd mother, scattered the snowy flakes on owed deep fnrraws on her el ■he not .beautiful now? The Bps ora tMn and shrunkeo. but these ore the lips that have kissed mauy a hot tear from the childish cheeks, end they are the sweetest cbeelm and tha sweets* world. The eye Is dim, yet the soft radiance of holy She Is dear eM nJSZ ^ aSds 7 * Ufs are neerty ran out, bm feeble ss she Is, shrwillgo further^ond roaeh dimn lower, for you thoa any one else mpam earth. You earn net walk into n add- oau not see you; rleoa whose burs lipstnthowoi tigtoteTwlthi One of the richest lions of this dty tiic present date looks as if, were he Fans at the proper moment, he wm wear a bonnet rouge and carry a lease. Farther up in the mocutefas tha air of this lion would set the fsahkos not only of a.0anq> but many also. Ths brigand style is taadneting to tit* eyas * impracticable young woman, end also to with half-grown mustaches. I sow a young lady at Georgetown whose eyes and heart hod become entangled wifh the nan who wae too fenriHsu with sharp knives, and I do not refer to the town butcher. This lassie secured a flne hrou- eho with a sosrtet her handsome dark-green, gold-! habit she wore s gold-mounted belt, to which was attached a knife with a guarded hilt In! of ha Derby cep she wan a knife that ghstensd, both of ■tight be useful in her hands if shd attacked by a Otdondo _ city terms aba oMnhr tti miration for the town digperado. could end would reoteet a k M25 r .to , "^Wfc»7(sa utoy kissaod bless ymi esetklnss tows, wli L ths dear old ssotheawm gather reaeh, tl you in evidence whim the world to my wife/ leave this country re eould not we fed thanked. that is: “Tee, a^dl his way teHMr Ml Smm ^ bar wiU Thai iryUswi ii4-.»Aks WMflxMBO' '•Vi^ewa'S. IN ALL ITS STAGES. “They nr •aid. “but tie ones, like 4 > snoatik. sflSreira ran hap] \ I^.For Sale bv all ' db »T.<**V ...tus any sUoipei box, b^. GROCERS sad V •V4 - ' ■*s. 'v*r - AMkfei h •%. ry * >#• ■