University of South Carolina Libraries
?0L. XLIV. ~ ~ , WINNSBORO, S. G, 21, 1888, ;' ^ NO. 48, " lit f in?? I ' "I do lor* II0EFS im OF LGYE MD DOT ' "Houseke | - said Gurley j it x1s* sa2ss0bli ca^sswood, adzsob or "craqee o' dooj?.', "stepses "Oh," rec j guthsss,'*- tk5kk lo-vb max's Impressions cusxm^'jjbd other stosies. "Yes. be ? ?? -couseKeepu ' ICOjWrig&UstjUBJ, by the A. N. Kellogg Keisspa- "I wonde: ? . ^ fper Company. ] . ley. ! *?. chIPSBL - ? :0j?iS% ! rttf UKJuEY" stepp?5 out working fox I ^ February dusk and saving after spending a dull (iTbat be i ' Sunday at home. His young man, 'ffl^rfTOriFIifLr ^ouse 1036 between capitalist" I |Bm tim and the western "Oh, no,' sky, and he paused a cerity. "B QpjyPjSp^* did, to look at it with At this n L ) Vid building, abun- no halls in I dantly large, with comer was many after-thousht* soon as the _ of wings and porches, tertained s I* Jesse Stone could be seen, milking in the temporary barn-2ot? and the voiceojf Jesse's wife could been unwel be heard crooning a psa&n tone as a fare- come, thouj well to the Sabbath, while she placed the Ml Hon Mc-A tabs ready for next day's washing. Mrs. that $eAr Stone kept holy uay with Scotch Presby- college, ba1 terian rifitor from five o'clock on Saturday loathed He evening until five o'clock on Sunday even- general rea ing; and if she attended night service th2*r pimply bio: nu a free-will offering to Heaven. 1 himself in t 5 The homes of Gurley'a various neighbors ination and Aruna&woil on/1 fSarA and ilnwn for the mm 1 hills still sparkled the college town's steeples, ported by tl Below, culture was life's law. Up hill, their cases amidst farms and scattered school-bouses, means for i quite another class of people made another cunning an< law unto themselves. As refinement and oouid be go coarseness stay dwell side by side in a city, ^certain if 3l so had Greensbarg and the hills elbowed ing on an e: each other several generations without per- ther, he wo deptibly acting on each other. However just the saz solidly excellent these hill farmers might desire to fi be, the college town despised their plane of him as he d living; while, on the opposite side, all hill : He was ? farmers voted against appropriations for -slight hand the improvement of the town. i "How do Gurley took a short cut across the upward . Ardle, unT slope of his meadow to spend an hour wf'h. while he h n an old chum whose homestead lay 011 the girl's hand. H border of the hill region. He reached the "So her k muddy road, and a few turns brought him .ley. " Ther H to the gate which opened on Tom Holmes' iarity for y lawn. Poplars staked out with their stiff ..< "Oh, are pillars the path to the house. It was a ing." He B staunch homestead, covered with knotty warmed hi elbows of the trumpet vine. The sitting- as if he had room windows were flickering with firelight, "You an and he ascended the wooden steps at that quired Pha side and confidently knocked. "Yes," si But two or three knocks brought no re- "But coll' r spouse, ana, alter waiting, uuriey openea saia siaar the door and went in. incholy ke; The familiar room was in a receptive at- will widely 1 titude toward chance coiners; chairs stood to a theolc grouped for conversation; a platter of ap- tionformy ft pies and a pile of plates and silver knives friends an | were on the round table. The fire-place thing you p was piled high with Mazing sticks. The ' "Not qui B whole room so suggested invisible presences ently, feeli Bl that Gurleyfelt convinced he Should find long as he < HK the family at nome. Me tarewtne ena 01 "AUtne R his cigar in the fire, and?having the free- divinity sti BP d(Hc of the house at ail times?opened "Yes," s V} soother door into the kitchen. It was still .gone to ch | warm with suggestions of the past supper; the house.'' | a kettle breathed in the dark. Kiedoor ,aj?pr& }? SlSST^, wken aro3. of'light op^ . softly slipp ?% posite and some subterranean voice calling "And th R made him venture ahead and lift a latch ; thought & K which gave entrance to the cellar. mate's leai "It's Randy, of course," said Gurley. "Is j "Miss Wl Br that you, Bandy? Where are all the folks?" readings to P At the foot of the stairs was a girl looking ! "You co up. She held Tom Holmes' toddling child j suggested < by one hand, and with the other lifted a "Oh, yes candle over her head. She was very young, i "Certainly, and had black hair curling away from an , quisition.", eager face. Her throat showed white above Fhcebe ? her blacks dress, even in shadow, and her part of th< sleeves were tucked above elbows soft and ; unwilling H round. A large calioo apron almost covered nursery. H her. ' The two ] m The two looked steadily at each, other a with little i moment, he at the top, she at the foot of the dropped ii stairs. Being a stranger, Gurley detected voice. Fir st once the sorrowful curve of m?uth ; Toddles: ' which she would have concealed from eyes "O, my ti f V familiar. such a mi "Beg pardon," said he, hat in hand. think she h |5j? "Aren't Tom and Mrs. Holmes ia?" real bossy ''They've gone to church," ^aid the girl- mamma wa W "I heard you and thought it was Mr. Mc- clean this v Ardle." never has s "Gurley, of the Mounds farm. I hope I on, and doe haven't startled you?" So,.above "Oh, no; if vou wait a little while they dies, she will be home. Toddles and I are keeping breath. Tea house. I promised to take care-of him and in due time strain the milk." ' Gurley Jo Toddles, recognizing a play-fellow at the she swung top of the stairs, shook a tin mug and ut- of her th] jL tered remarks in a dialect peculiar to him-^ 'pressed cr *-. ___, ? abdhtdoms "May I comedown and help you?" in- his years v, ? quired Gurley. "An offejft-' hs thought, But all this H "which she may resent." "Sw& "If you would please lift the.pails it would sung Phcet be a help;" she replied. "Toddles keeps - , stepping on my dress." ecnoec. ^ Gurley descended the stairs and they went > " P back to the miilr cellar. The crocks and j were already in line, and along this i lMTl!WHi> ? fJnrlpv r^mrin? the I m,-n _ - J o-?- ' Y1 fflliSlins ??rvimw f ffrj^ y I WMlo ray va 'I ^ W) *"Father v. BHHKHSHsO&HSBm f 7 r- ) Sleep mj Be* /?/ v- * SP?nSaS fif of the flowing liquid, bat she attended to SCcArdle, ii B this most pastoral employment in pastoral choice. quiet. The candle was set on a swinging By the tin '"* - "* *-?? a otomr^mo shell above, jars, ooiues ana diqs - r?o stretched their long shadows away from family's ret the light. The smell of apples and a. spicy moved softl of cider-t&ps came through a half-shut Randy Tho HBfakioor. Just over the candle flame a fpider picked up a H^^xiuddied, as if hiding his head in the gray ing. Lastj y blanket of his-web. " stimulating i Nothing was said during the milk-strain- eaimate thi Iing. Gurley wondered who this girl could "How do be. Tom Holmes had said nothing to hhn Milton? & recently of having a.g&est.inthe family, overcoat. ' and eha -wag oertainlv not a successor to at: the Horn *aady Thompson. She had-the uncon- yourself st< tocos dignity of a lady, and there ivas ' ''All goir awr.c thing about her which nuula him So- young sndd that she^t least came of stock living on her over ffcheir own land, and, in the finest sense, ag- you to so* f ricuttcroL ^groomed. | ?ie psils warn rinsed and pat away, and horses for 1 jthls young lady carried the light upstairs, wAh, psh f )Wh2e Guriey assisted Toddles and his mug. me you yaj | "I like cellars," she iraifT^ and ought to hi looking hack. "Though I met my 2rstdis- could put y laooointment is one. There was a jar fall oi < >. "You'll s iscxaethmg which, ousrht to have been woen you .^sun; but it waa tar; and I'm so cred- "Slight lire ?1_ jTJOCA I feflpt ^oVjr>|r my qru3 it and full Of 'over and <y\r?r before I would be convinced. ''Old, ar ^Credaloua people do get so much tar in their bound." iiaouflt?.'? "Just thj ' Gurley laughed, and said he hoped she "There v , would k&ve no farther experiences in tar. & ?*?" sen They went into the sitting-room, and she Thompson, ? jftjfated the, lamp. Qruriey toes an apple from prized, doa . "With a housewifely air this ujg Toddles asleop?" asked selected his knife and plate and -warming her graceful hinds. 1 a fruit napkin. "Yes, and snug in his crib,1 i to handle things about a house," uj thank you so much-for r< rtially to herself. anc> me >? eping is- your forte, perhaps?" i.j tbiEk of relieving Rand 41 Ti tV/v said Phcebe, with a laugh. Lij' ia?;, uiCi-u JLUC<K;U tuc change WOrk. ict, you know," she explained. uj -wouldn't bo a school narked Gurley, to show that his money? remarked Randy, bh i were corrected. er jn ^;s deestrick nor anv 01 it when Thorney and I begin our She was a boouy woman w lg, I shall help to farm.*' blue eye; the other had been who Thorney is?" thought Gur v& 4 is my brother," she continued. \U/ y :/years older than I am. fieia '1) ' a farmer across Black Hollow, 'ft'/ [)r I all his money." \\j-\ f\fi] \ iner the case." observed the , ',?] J "/!%/Y\ smiling, "he will some day be a W / :,[ / \iAJ77l-1 \ Wi/ ' She replied, with pleased sin- j \/ "li/Jj \ ut it is nice to be really working W JL ^ _=_ V iM, L >bject." *" \ 1 ~ F ioment a rap resounded oil the 1T/j F ' >f the sitting-room. There were / i j, y | . the Holmes house, 'so the new- vr- j |{ If distinctly visible to Gurlfey as * T^ir H i door opened to admit him. En- j <"*" J A I If is her felt himself to be by hi". +?. I I |1 i hostess, any body would have ^ f jT\ ! come tohim; but thrice unwei- ^*"f.in /l_| !{f p ? (ii u amsiuau. ux uic uuuaC] 111 " n IfJ II .idle. Gurley could not assert s^Sfc&l \| UPutM. die was the meanest fellow iD ^ 1 > that was his conviction. He <?*?* *r lArdle's lady-like languors, his A parting grip over t diness to be taken care of, his adeness. McArdle had placed sandy hair was knobbed tight ;he of Hig religious denom- ber head, and as to her was allowing it to educate hfrr greatly slandered a kind natu istry. Other students were sup When Gurley started home tie church; but what seemed in turning sharp and clear. > a generous stooping to uu Tom Holmes, continuing 1 i public good, seemed in him & the horse, walked to the lawn i contemptible grasping of what chum. t for nothing. Yet Gurley felt "Good sugar weather," fa iu a ^ causing there. uMy men in t ICAmo UOU UViUV fcV V tephant and having a nabob fa I -re going to stir off a couple old have been a greedy sneat morrcr evening. Come over, ne, inspiring . Gnrley with th< a paddle-full. Ride tbat na y unon and kick and maltreal 1??^ at her." esarved. ? "Perhaps I -will," said Gurl i long and nervous youth, with "You know the place-on t s and drooping under lip. near Black Hollow. We'll you do, Mtes Phoebe?" said there." raiding a scarf from his neck count on me,'' said ( tigered in releasing the young "You wouldn't expect to modern improvements. I h; name is Phoebe," thought Gur- maples to make it pay. A< e's McArdle's patronizing famil- boil the old way, o* the s ou. Good evening, McArdle." urhe ground has turned s you here, Gurley? Good even- ^ey- shall have a bracii undulated toward the fire anc this young teacher mself by the roaring logs*quit* into the house, Tom!" I come into his own. "I don't know," replied H< j classmates, aren't you?" in- ently. "She's some nice lit yinnf>io?a T>w? HnftSl | uvnuviu. lid Gurley. to employ a man." sge toils are nearly over now," "McArdle seems to admire die, in a high and rather mel- - "Mav be he does. McArdlc j, "and then 1 suppose our paths sop. x guess, though, he diverge. I shall betake myself mires him.: Living directly gical school to continue prepara house as we do we're alwa humble calling. But with youi board the teacher. Drusie d advantages you can do anj willing to take this one into t ilease, Gurley." she does seem comfortable e te," responded Gurley, indiffer- about." ag he should never do that as "You don't know her peopl sould not batter McArdle. "No. Barker ? the old : family are at church?" said the vouches for her. She has ident, helping himself to apples idiotic brother, I believe, ar iaii Phoebe. "Even Randy has out to work near her. Nic apeL I promised to take c*e oi too. Pity she's cumbered i ' You've seen Psyche since her b^rujod- thnt t jstiliUA!, iwUoilihg ia apple anc more like swansdown than e ing a knife under the rind. " You can't compiain of ill-! at's why he intruded himself,' said Tom Holmes, as they urley. He watched his class parting grip over the gate, i jaws working. [to be continue lite and I have begun a series ol gether," explained MoArdle. THE MOTHER OF A) uldn't take me into the class?'1 StSTley. Four Very Curioua Speclmei J," responded McArdle^ stiffly. Humanity. tiXyouvri3hit You'dbeanao (rr0aitl?lm<!rlcus,ea., Trite, who appeared to rest in nc Mrs. Harriett Sperlin, < i room, carried off Mrs. Holmes' home in this city ab young son into his adjoining ago, of paralysis. Harri* what distinguished by beir foung men, after talking awhile, of four genuine albino d hterest in each other's remarks, and her husband, Jerry { ito silence and listened to hei entirely black?that is, 1 st it was remonstrating with \phite blood in them. The nhiWren were as black as tl ny son! How can Phoebe jocfc then then the next four, i ilky-faced boy to sleep? She'll SeS as wlSe as it is Dossil as-a calfie from the barn-yard; s V - aswnite as n ispossii ?,ri r ,, -vt ? * man bainsr to be with blue calf that never will let its ^ j i? a - ,7 ish its face and rub it nice and danced about in tie socket ray. And the cow's little child wtuc" linked like thai inch pretty white clothes to put negro. Then the last sn't get wrapped up and rocked." of their children were as > counter-remonstrances of Tod- first. Of the four albino began to sing half under hei girls anu one a boy, and al nyson's cradle song, and Toddles man and womanhood, sinct ?began drowsily to echo her. two of the girls have die( oked into the fire, fancying how Tom Sperlin, left here a si in a rocker, and how the curve for Florida. The father of roat swelled wii-h the sweet, re ^ still living, and says tl I tfcej ***> five jWs otoift, havag passed most oJ | vae ^ bf> hM ritbhis larmer ana. nouseKeeper. ? . made him feel quite soft-hearted sums of money for these eland low, sweet and low," showmen, who wished to e. as cariosities. Some ofTeri "Sreet and ro," interest in the net proceeds * ? a safe return of the childre positively declined all sncl low, breathe and blow," ^8 that his conscience wot "Breave and bro," him to speculate in his o^ Tind of tbe western sea,** blood. "Res'm aea. ^ r???f?WaterS g0'n Silk Hats ? Rainy i rozn the dying moon and blow," Have you ever noticed, y Moony bro," - delphia merchant in the Hi 'Blowbim again to me: rier, that if you put TOUT S little^ one, wbUejny pretty one," the morning and forget "Sleeps'" * umbrella with you it i3 jui . . , , , before you get back? I cs en and rest, sleep and rest," whioh will "j?esy x ler will come to thee soon," conclusively?at least it d "SoooonJ* miDd. A Lumber of yea: st, rest on mother's breast, living in Ti?n raster Countj ierscon. yfl d*7' lUcometotustobetotbemst.- of the cotmtey churches th "Babe'awes'," to hold services every day er sails aij out of the west," rain. Several weeks, pass "Siiv* sail," and still no rain. fLver moon; ? My uncle, with whom I '\Ptttv&one^l-?retty one' was a devout Christian, an< "Sleep!"-" in the efficacy of prayer t ; was repeat^T until Toddles' rd> Supreme Ruler to open t ew far >e?ween and ceased &I of heaven and moisten the] IRrera silence followed. He attended the services oppy aiKht," said McArdle. poured forth many an es suppose Tom will drive slowlj I have no doubt but the fa -1.1. aDOUI eiglliy ttureo u: wx hend that he will," responded being conoletely dried up i the stilted English of his the more earnest, but, at a _ . , , , many had given np all he 26 ?ame however, fining again, and the more on the steps proclaimed the myMdeamongthem, had ^ ?0% ^ f mmds that the end of the ? y m, followed by her handmaid, ^ ?v mpson, who hi been left and at ^ arrangements wer .gain at the school-house meet- ^ Eervic?* wf8 ippeared Tom Holmes, rosy and ded, and my uncle tuat da ', ready to stir the fire and all time since his marriage, ngsas welL before, got out his high ail1 you do, Jack? How do you do, it. I shall never forget how >mebody give me a lift with this for, of course, it was very rhanks, Drusie. How are things style, and resembled an an ids, Jack! You've been'keeping Well, would you believe ' * 1 >? -r iadily at home." got nome Dig uaua.? ui uu. ig right I've bought a pretty and I never saw it rain hard h 6 ^ a? my uncie ^ not taken tof show you, out I wanted > , *. - - , 3 her first"when she's fresh with to tot morrnng, h Jesse Stone has spoiled the old ^a3 . The other pt the saddle." buted the rain to the man; aw! .Jack. Why didn't you tell that were offered np that d ited such an. animal? A Gurley iilvpays had another theor tow the points of a horse, but I brought it on. I think i 1 on up to a thing or two." my uncle wore his silk ha; ay you couldn't have done better ,m m see her." said Gurley, warmly. Alluding to the democrat ibs, head well up, good shoulders, ujg Un&6 Thurman's ha jT^eak in ?he knees I'll be Springfield.Republican saj w m vbe knees' 1 u 1)3 letters are dangerous in p< ree years, and aa quick aa a cat." raan't noth'n1 about horae deaiin' tbej^expect to make noa to-nieht," remarked Randy ber- ^ -tAlltor wa" with the freedom of a long- remark, go to, go to! quo t estic. Don't two n's meet in baa -* S1 Mrs. Holmes, DR. TALMAGE ON THE PJ " said Phoebe. ilieving Randy IF the SUNDAY paper CAN' _ SUPPRESSED, CONVERT IT j altogether," "\Ve wall exHe Advises the People to Give tl miss for no porters Ea*ychalrs?Don't Condeu intly. "Neith- Editors Because of One?His Idea Cher." - Newspaper of the Distant Day. '?t out SH-r ,riie Rev-T*DeWittTalmage pre *" avi Cnrt/^OTT ^ ^ H very int^rcbiui^ Bcimuu Kjuuuaj , ~ . ing upon the subject: "The Pulpi Printing Pre^s as Allies." It wa TljTi' -Z I last Tegater serm-i that the pc J || jjj z. = di^he will preach.until after the I 1 % "T mer vaca^on* was M"S H* to more than usually crowd the I Eh l'|"W Tabernacle Jwilding. Every in< L Tf~~ sp?06 was taken tip and hundreds i f ft turned away. Services will be - lie J -J'f u- thtf church for some weeks yet, tl I ^ I'- sistant pastoVoSkaatiiig^. I iff: W'- I>r- Tahnage took his text from L ,/f nTT?" xvi, 8: "The children of this worl ppT3 l\m< in their generation wiser than the if- \^5$L area of light." He said: - "Sacred stupidity and solemn ij Cpetency and sanctified laziness are rebuked'by Christ. He says worl< be oate. are wider awake for opportunities ily at the back ar6 Christians Men of the world features thev occasions, while Christian people 1 ,re. ' most valuable occasions drift by the night was proved. "A marked illustration of the tin lis talk about that maxim is in the slowness c gate with his Christian religion to take possessii the secular printing press. The o 10 commented, tunity is open and lias for some be sugar camp- been open, bnt the eoclesiastical ( t l ett <^3 and the churches and the minist* acK.ana.try religion sire for the most part all g and let me 7, 6 r, r .r? / 6 the golden opportunity to pass ey. proved. That the opportunity is woods road ^ declare from the fact that all the . all be over lax newspapers are glad of any reL facts or statistics that you present 5urjpy. ' Any, animated and stirring artic. see any of the lating to religious themes they 1 aven't enough gladly print. They thank you fo: lam and Mose information in regard to churches, shares." wrong has been done to any Chi tiff," said Gur- Ohurch or Christian institution. i? walk borne. couj j g0 into newspaper of tin you've taken h?e tbe reJ D )lmes indiffer- t*on services, ministerial ordinatior tie tbing from P&storal installations, cornerstone ] a't pay enough ?f a church, anniversary of a char bUCietJ Will UQTD u^mvv ? her.'! secular journal, if it have previous i >'s a fcindofa given. If I had some great ioj thinks she ad- done me, there is not an editorial by the school- reportorial room in the United I ys pestered to into which I oould not go and gel was entirely self set right, and that is true o -he family, and well-known Christian man. Alrea< nough to have foiiy secular press during the com each week publishes as much rel . . information as does the weekly rel ?*?? J ?- Wbj, then, does not pi gl. id she put him Chnstiamty embrace these magm e enough girl, opportunities? I have before me i yith the idiot' ject of first and last importance: return*" shall we secure the sscular press ""giitier reinforcement to religion ver." the pulpit?"" ' luck, my lad," "The first thing toward this res exchanged a cessation of indiscriminate ho , against newspaperdom. You mig well denounce the legil professio cause of the shysters, or the m lbinos. profession because of the quact ' * - f aL. mercnanoise Decause 01 iue swu 18 of Distorted bargain makers, as to slam-bang -papers because there are recreant e Recorder.) and unfair reporters and -ui colored, died columns. out two weeks "If instead of fighting newspap< it was some- spend the same length of time am ig the mother same vehemence in marshalling tiildren. She help in religious directions, we wo' Sperlin, were as much wiser as the man who get iey had no sent of the railroad superintende iir three first fasten a car to the end of a rail hey were, and shows better sense than he who ru n succession, wheelbarrow up the track to mee ble for a hu- drive back the Chicago limited ex eyes, which The silliest thing that a man ever s, and white is to fight a newspaper, for you t of the genu- have the floor for utterance perhaj two or three' day in the week, while the news black as the has the floor every day of the s three were Napoleon, though a mighty man 1 grew up to many weaknesses, and one of the a which time est things he ever did was to thi 3. The boy, that if the English newspapers di< lort time ago stop their adverse criticism of hi : these albinos he would with 400,000 bayonets lat from the the Channel for their chastisement old till they "Don't fight newspapers. A offered large provokes attack. Better wait ti children by excitement blows over and then j exhibit them and get justice, for get it you will i 2d him a half have patience and common sens* and promised equipoise of disposition. It ought n, but Jerry a mighty sedative that there is an i offers, say- mous amount of common sense i; ild not allow world, and you will eventually be yn flesh and for what you are really worth, anc cannot be puffed up and you cann written down, and if you are the e leather. of good society that fact will com* writes a Phila- ?* ? ??n1^ * itter and Fur- that fact will be established. ilk hat on in * know what I am talking about, to take your 'can draw on own experience. 3t sure to rain respectable newspapers as far n oivftvon an 1 know are my fnenas now. But ? o ^ . re my theory I 01 Jon remember tne time ween . id so to my the most continuously and n: rs ago I was ! attacked man in this country. Goc and it wa? grace not to answer back and ] iiafc at many silence for ten years, and much gi ey had begun required. "What I said was per to pray for ^ twisted into jnst the oppoa ed, however, what I did say. My person wa ligned and I was represented as 1 was stopping, 8OD> and -t was maliciously descril 1 also believed persons who had never seen ri., o induce the mon8trosity in mind, body and he floodgates -^ere were millions of people wh parched earth. Sieved that there was a large sofa: regularly, and p^pit, although we never had an] irnest appeal. ^uta chair, and that during the si " " ? 7 waa rt/?An o ct that he had Wiigregauvu J. TTOO CK'UUO n which was down on that sofa and dang made him all over end. Lying New ny rate, when correspondents for ten years miw >pe of it ever ssated our church services, be i superstitious, w&ited and people from every neif made np their ?f Christendom came here t rorld was close magnitude of the falsehood co: e made to hold *D8 the church and concerning nr largely atten- , tt fr>r Via fimt TALJIAGE S DEBT TO THE PRESS , forty years "A reaction set in and now we that and wore justice, full jostles, more than ji odd it looked, and as much over-praise as once w much out of under-appreciation, and no mai ttique relic. ever lived was so much indebted 1 > it, before he newspaper press for opportuni >uds came up, preach the Gospel ae I am. Youn er. Of course, in the ministry, youn? men in al . an umbrella fessions and occupations, wait, is antique hat can afford to wait. Take rough n jople all attri- resentalion as a Turkish towel tc j supplications up your languid circulation, or a ? lay, but I have of massage or Swedish movement, 7" as to what pokes and pulls and twists and 1 ; was because are salutary treatment. There Lc L one person you need to managt that Is yourself, iveep your cusp< ic way of spell- sweet by communion with the nkercher, the who answered not again, the soci '8: "Too many genial people, and walk out in th< )litics, and the shine with your hat ofE^ and yo iug of them if come out all right.- And don't jo: leet in Novem, crowd of people in our day who erson would much of their time^amningnewsj haands'death! "Again: In this effort to seen danna? secular press as a mightier re-h * \ \ y * B??BBS?Qfc?????? aESS. ment of religion and tlie pulpit, let ns make it the avenue of religious information. Ifyouput the facts of churches x be denominations of Christians only into th?-column of religious papers, which dojnot in' this country have an average of more than 10,000 subscribers, ie He- y0n (?one ag compared wiih in ^ll what v&p. do if you put .these 'facts 1 ? through:v^ie daily "papers^hicll -ts4?ehundreds of thousands of riders. ached little denomination must "have 'its" nKe morn- urgau, ou.|J?/ui beta at gxcat njuou t and one"^a^ the'outlay a cotnaam or half a column of room might be rented & the jn some pemi-omnipotent secular publirpular cation, and so the religious information enm- "would fcs sent round And round the ,8nn\ world. T j acient ??The "sorld moves so swiftly to-dey great ihat newa"5vweek old is state. Give- us 0f all the gtf^t church facts and all the revival tiiSirgs the. next morning'or the ; same evenu?g. My edvieSf'often given, sld in to friends who propose, to.' start a new ae as- panares: 'Don'tKdoo^ ;EmtJloy the -papers^alrsady startedT^'Ytferb^gest j , fingn<pi3 hole ever dug in this*American f1" 6 continent i| the hole in' which good peopie throw tiheir money when thoy sterfca i ctul" newspaper. It is almost as good and as quick a way of getting rid of money As acorn- buying stock in a gold mine in Colorado. | here moro^rinting presses, but the right j 114:6 ?* *^8e already established.' All tt3~ their cylinders, all their steam power, all I their pens, all their types, all their e_P editorial .Chairs and reportorial rooms j mum-. are ayaiiajjie if yOU WOuld engage tiiem j ith of ^ civilisation and Christianity. >f the GIVE rep0rters ^st chaiks. on of "Again: If you would secure the ppor- secular press as a mightier reinforcetime meat of jeligion and the pulpit, extend lourts the widest and highest Christian couriers of sies to the represenatives of journalisii. owing Give them easy chairs and plenty of unim- room when they come to report occasions, open -For the moBt party they are gentlemen secu- of education and refinement, graduates igious of colleges, with families to support by them, .their literary craft, many of them weary, le re- 'with the push of a business that is pre 1 1 AQn'nni QTl^ flnofnatinor AftPfl rmfl ftf tllPJYl ft'OUlU r any the avenue of jmformation to thousands If a of reader^ their impression of the seriatian' vices tdjfe the impression adopted by ( you . multitude. They are connecting links 2 land between a sormon or a song or a prayer 6dica- and this great population that tramp up is and al*d down the streets day by day and ygar aying by year, with their sorrows uncomforted itable aud their ains unpardoned. More than n any eight hundred thousand people in Brooknotice lyn and less than seven'ty^five thonsand Qstice churches; so that our cities are not so or a much preached to by ministers of religion States as by reporters. ^ ; . b my- "Put ail journalists into our prayerj f aDy and sermons. Of all the hundred thou3v the sand sermons preached to-day, there will of not be three preached to journalists, and igious probably not one. Of ail the prayers igious offered for classes of men innumerable.. >ri ous the prayers offered for this most poteutia. ficent class wiJU^e so few and rare that they a sub- a preachers' idiosj ncracy. How never be brought to as a GjW Htarfgjb revival of religion sweeps x pnd Sand takes into the kingdom "of God SSiorsand reporters, compositors, ult is pressmen and newsboys. And if you have sfcjiity {not faith encagh to pray for that and toil v?* *o If or that vou had better sret out of ourl n be- ranks an<? join the other side, for you edical are unbelievers who make the wheels of a, or the Lord's chariot drag heavily. idliBg "The great final battle between trnth news- and error, the Armageddon, Lthink, will ditors n?t be fought with swords and^hells and lcleah gnns, but with pens?quill pens, steel pens, gold pens, fountain pens?and, be tViaf thft rvAnn mnfih h? . firmverfcfid. 3TH Wt5 ?w i the The most divinely honored- weapon of their the past has been thcpen, ana the most aid be divinely honored weapon, of the future soon- will be the pen; prophet's pen and evannt to gelist'a pen and apostle's pen, followed train, by editor's pen and reporters' pen and ns his anther's pen. God save the pen! The t and wing of the apocalyptic angel will be the press, printed page. The printing press will does foil ahead of Christ's chariot to clear the may way. )S One THE SUNDAY NEWSPAPER. paper "But some one might ask, would you week, make the Sunday newspapers also a re, had enforcement? Yes, I would. Ihaveiearnweak ed to take things as they are. I would eaten like to see the much scoffed at old Puritan i not Sabbaths come back sgain. I do not tmself think the modern Sunday will turn out cross any better men and women than were your grandfathers and grandmothers Lttack under the old-fashioned Sunday. To 11 the say nothicg of other results, Sunday go in newspapers are killing editors, reporters, if you compositors and pressmen. Every maD, 9 and woman and child is entitled to twentyto be four hours of northing to do. If the en or- newspapers put on another set of hands, q the that does not relieve the editorial and taken reportorial room of its esres and respon1 you sibilities. Our literary men die fast ot be enough without killing them with Sunday memy workT But the Sunday newspaper has 2 out, come to stay. It will stay a good deal Jciety longer than any of us stay. What, then, shall we do? Implore all those who have for I anything to do with issuring it to fill it All with moral and religious information, live as I sermons and facts elevating. Urge them many that all divorce cases be dropped and in-! [ was stead thereof have good advice as to how i le&nly husbands and wive ought to live lovingly i gave together. Put in small type the behavier [ kept of the swindling church member and in ace it large type the contribution of some rerted Christian man toward an asylum for ite of feeble-minded chiLiren or a seaside sanis ma- tariutn. 1 fvf" "Urge all managing editors to put >ad by meanness and impurity in type pearl or 23 a agate and and charity and fidelity and soul. christian consistency in brevier or bour0 geois. If we cannot drive out the Sunday .a tbis newspaper let us hive the Sunday news?thing papers converted. The fact is that the modern Sunday newspaper is a great imtomed pr0vement on the old Sunday newspaper. Le my what a beastly thing was the Sunday ior^ newspaper thirty years ago! It was repre- enough to destroy a man's respectability .. we to leave the end of it stricking out of his ^n??r' coat pocket. What editorials! What 10 "nd advertisements! What pictures! The ace * modem Sunday newspaper is as much pseli. an improvement on the old-time Sunday newspaper as one hundred is more than twenty-five; in other words, above 75 per have cent, improvement. Who knows but istice, that by prayeTand kindly consultation *? 1 :i e had with our literary irienas we may aave it 1 that lifted into a positively religious sheet :o the printed on Saturday uight and only disty to tributed, like the American Messenger, g men or the Missionary Journal, or the Snn1 pro- day-School Advocate, on Sabbath mornYon tLjJS. lisrep- "All things are possible with God, and > start my faith is up until nothing in the way system of religious victory would surprise me. whose All the newspaper printing presses of the ihrus's earth are going to be the Lord's and tele! only graph and telephone and type will yet and announce nations born in a day. The jsition first book ever printed was the Bible, by Christ Faust and his Eon-in-law, Schoeffer, in ety of 1460, and that consecration of type to the a sun- Holy Scriptures was a prophecy of the n will nrroot miOQinn nf DTTntlTIGr for thft eV&nffe in the lization of all the nations. spend "Again: "We shall secure the secnliar >apers. press as a mightier re-enforcement of re tLs religion and the pulpit by making our lforce- religious utterances more interesting and spirited, andthen the press -wi]l reproduce >'c them. On the way to church, some fifteen years ago, a journalist said a thing that Messrs. has kept me ever since thinking. 'Are some tin fa you going to give us any points to-day? sprint fc 'What do you mean?'I asked. He said: . " , 'I mean by that anything that will be c?'t0lK striking enough to be remembered.' niffhls did 'Then 1 said to myself, what right have but it did we in our pulpits and Sunday school an(j ^ c,{ &ke the time of people if we have nothing to Say ttetfi^fe-memorable? umbJj,!= "The tendency of criticism in the about this theological seminaries is to tile off from other wdj r\<n<w rt oil fhfi cVlOT-rt TV^fnffl O nr? t '.J uuVure ? rr- ~""" iasnion ru make them too smooth for any kind of execution. What we want, all of ns tnii)o* more point, less humdrum. If we say I think the right thing in the right way the press nights are will be glad to echo and re-echo it. hot and n Sabbath school teaches, reformes., young are going men and old men in the ministry, what 'ike magic we all want if we are to make the printing getting bl i press an ally in Christian work is that cotton ere '"which the reporter spoken of suggested There is n ?points, sharp points, memorable any other points. Bat if th? thing be dead when neglect col uttered by living voicfe, it will be a nearly if Vi hundredfold more dead when it is laid and mean, out in cold rype. have a littl "Now, as you all have sometliing to tlie outcon do with the newspaper press, either in Cotton ma :issning a paper or in reading it, either date look 1 as produces or patrons, either as sellers by anyfhi i or -nnrchasers of the printed sheet, i anything propose on this Sabbath morning, Jnne ualil July. 17,18SS, a treaty to be signed between good stand the church and the printing press, a seasons fr treaty to be ratified by millions of good make a g people if we rightly fashion it; a treaty portant tir promising that we we will help each other time of ma in our work of trying Lo illumine and have a go felicitate the world, we by voico, you by early cottc pen; we by speaking only that which is have seer worth printing, you by printing only just as go that wllich is fit to epeak. You help us Early and and we will help yon. Side by side be good crop* thfese two potent agencies until the This yea judgment day, when we must both be from the 1 scrutinized for our work, healthful or good. JBu blasting. The two worst ofi* men in that receives p day will be the minister of religion afid for a good the editor if the editor if they wasted'' No "one their opportunity. Both of us are engi- present, e neers pf long express trains of influence, crop will and we will run them into a depot of ground cai light or tumble them on tneembaniunets. is not pre CO"7EIlTLNG A SCOFFING BEPOKTER. fault. Tl) "Abopt thirteen years ago a represen- bottom coi ative of an important newspaper took his lowlands a seat in this chtfrch one Sabbath night out. ' Old about five pews from the front of this much, as i pulpit. He took out pencil and reporter's by the ir pad, resolved to oaricature the whole farmer wil scene. \Vhen the music began he began, rain tails i and with his pencil he derided that, and no donbt a then he derided the prayer, and then de- if the pric< rided tlie reading 01 tee scriptures,, ana. pet pound then began to deride the sermon. Bat, he says, for some'reason his hand began to tremble, and he, rallying himself, the sharpened his pencil and started again, but broke down again, and then pat Messrs. pencil and paper in his pocket arid his yev some r head down on the front of the pew and crjen p0V( began to pray. At the close of the , . service he came np and asked for the t)laaie cal: prayers of others and gave his heart to and go to God, and though still engaged in news- wen it coo paper work, he is an evangelist, and hires a hall at his own expense and every Sab- ' . ' bath afternoon preaches Jesus Christ to wlllte raac the people. ' - in a cool ^ "And the men of that profession are ni^er <*o ?:--j. 1?3 gumg LU uurnc iu a UUUJ luiuugauuu itic ,iAr) ,nmp country. I know hundreds of them, and a more genial or highly educated class of il!1= ron? men it would be hard to find, and, though hot now, : the tendency of their profession may be himself hi toward skepticism, an organized, com- comjno. 0l mon-sense Gospel invitation would fetch . c . them to the front of all Christian endeav- ni=oer m or. Men of the pencil and pen, in all ebry day departments, you need the help of de whit< Christian religion. In the day when niwer in . people want to get" their newspapers at three cents, and are hoping for the time ni?oer w0] when they can get any of them at one less de wh cent, and, as a conseqaence, the attaches rnerchi of the printing press are by the thou- w sand ground under the cylinders, you .. ... , I want God to take care of yon and jour tnree-tmra [ families. Some of yonr best work is as shade an' e much unappreciated as was 'Milton's eten too ? Paradise Lost,' for which the author re- blame de n | eeived $25; and the immortal poem, One thin i 'Hohenlinden,' of Thomas Campbell, irot to gine ! when he first offered it for publication, don't gib ii and in the column called 'Notices to out behirn | Correspondents' appeared the words: some time 'To T. C.?The lines commencing, "On Linden when the snn was low," are not item up to our standard. Poetry is not T. C.'s forte.' The com "Oh, men of the pencil and pen, amid gjacKSf0(,j. your unappreciated work yon need encouragement and you can have it. L. >V. Die Printers of all Christendom, editors, re- Durham, c porters, compositors, pressmen, pub- }aS?. uie lishers and readers of that whi'.h is ,, printed, resolve that you will not write, f 1 set up, edit, issue or read anything that themselves debases body, mind or soul. In the We as us name of God, by the laying on of the ne0ple of1 hands of faith and prayer, ordain the , . f printing press for righteousness and e * 1 liberty and salvation. .111 of us have Chester h some influence that will help in the right them three direction. Let us put our hands to the ^ a me, w^rk, imploring God to hasten the con- tees held a summation." Dick was i m ? cipal. It A Confederate Home. ham does Baltimore. June 20.?A special meeting eu>ilin? Af of the Society of the Army and Navy of rit , the Confederate States in the State of Mary- ^at( lorir? onr? Assnr-Atinn of the JIarvland from Ham Line was held last night to make arraDge- been teach ments for the opening of the Home for Willie Brokendown and Indigent Soldiers of the frotn Fori Confederate Army at Pikesvilleon the 27th attending instant. Banks. Captain G. W. -Booth presided and in Qur tow calling tbe mef ting to order said he wished ance since to give emphatic denial to some current ex jjjss ga pressions that the movement of the ex Con- visitino- M federates in Maryland in establishing .a Ourlow home was inimical to and a standing men- a r T)c ace to the government of our country. 'In a some sense," he said, "'the cause of the f n? Confederacy may be called a'lost cause,' r<jnrbut there are some things that its adherents P^a^e did not part with in their surrender, notably among which was their manhood, Lis. their honor and their citizenship. "The memoiies of the past are ours and Farmers doubly precious, because they are among grain crop the few things left to us of that strife in wnprq; ? U,*rrtvx o ro/^r\rrl thof Will CTA rlnWTI & wuiuix r> c uiauc iuw?v4 .?*** . _ to all time and be of interest to coming rains? oat generations as a display of courage and stand. C< self-sacrifice seldom witnessed in the world's wee]cs jat( history. As brave men we fought for our convictions; as honest men we have loyally growing I abided the issue of the contest, but as true five days men we propose to keep bright the memo- ^veather? ries of our fallen and to preserve and pro- ' . tect our helpless living." More ierti neighborh M?thodi?t Sum. Farm labc Methodist nuns are to be a novelty in Pastures a feminine experience. They were created ?f:nn < by the Methodist General Conference, after se-no a careful consideration of the subject by were wor the committee on missions. The co mmit- fine. Mai tpp. rr-norted favorablv. and the Conference ? fnn. inserted in the discipline of tlie Church a u section regulating them. They are to be should b< called deaconesses, and they will be veiy begins to similar to the nuns of the Koman Catholic Church, except that they are not to take * vows of life service or of celibacy. No- rT thing more definite than that was done by riarrison, the Conference, but the impression is that closed foi the Methodist nuns will wear distinctive opened a? costumes, and live in houses by themselves. Also, the They will minister to the poor and the sick. Wade in care for orphans, and do other work of last "Wedi charity.?N. Y. Sun. tioais go< ? > USE TO.G RUMBLE. A LADY E Editors-. There has been How a Smart a vorable weather during the (Fromth >r the crops, particularly Noting sine The hard rains and cold principal hotels Hot seem to hurt the grass, means. It is s retard the growth of cotton ive ground to do a -little p'air,'and m which is always iu order Jeemes would < time iu the season, or in 01* society. Th is fashionable, and her closely, les" the world almost in any- >she b^d_wasga3 paying bills. SI the tune will change, the ber hotel bill, s now warm and the days are the maintenan o doubt the plow and hoe produced?the at full speed, which will act ample?were pi on crops. There'is no use others she incu leorout of heart about a could^by any p .so early in the season. I am told tha lore outcome in cottontthan a first class store plant, I know. Yon i may J *i?wauK.uretan tfon and let it. getgrajfev for be sett to he reek and it may loo'le smalt would call juxsa , but give it good work and for them. The e dry and hot weather and and that tb le wiJl astonish any man. sent again, but y in three weeks from this altogether. Sh ike it had never been stunted the plac ng. You can't count on to be a wealth as to what cotton will do standing in soci Itii important to have a she was not suec and give it good work. Good ' 3?r ^Py weal om the first of July may flightJbeoffend* ood crop. The most im- storekeepers'" re ne for making cotton is the 83 wel1 as t! iking the fruit, and we mav She would ne - ' *:? ?* -t u? anv of say .a do ull 11iajvj >cl. a liavc j5ccu - . hi make a fijie crop, and L collection agenl i late plauteci cotton make. od and Frequently better. ,^.e [ late planting mav make 0 a?,m0Iif 5 the sa^e season. ' ?"* = ir it may be said, all is late m ? ate sDrinsr, but tbe stand is profitableidlen< t if Lhs land is good aud i, roper work you may look gi,k lo be bine, as at iverytliinsr looks like the L00,n_ hf Stato?t? J -/' " L , " chant warned h tty good it is somebody's ? butthecoI ere 'S good reason why ^e'attempfc j rn should look badly, bat on t { tt< ma neh land corn can com# .. upland will not .come out Then he set 1 t ought to be well forward ,iddle of June If every ^gteT,PC II work hard and plenty ot 53^^ ,1 July and August, there is Then h ibout a. fair cotton crop, and s should ge up to ten cents ,{h t ^ money will be plentiful. to 1AGAN" against the use rca use of poverty. hotel clerks, thi could read. Editors: I'megwine ter gib "Pay the bill eson whi the pepal is alwa lector, "and 1*1 c - u- with the receipl - De farmer is biggest He got $200 se he put his big traw hat The balance cai de field soon in de mornin The merchan laud de nigger will holer the50percent, ' " ? SmSSL* I go back to de house an' set f0Und a bill ags >lace well satisfied. Den de it as cheap as h to hunt water and stay long bought _ jLLt) LLaVl SUlilG bac work a Utile den some- an these bad < wid his foot, de sun duugot always fell bai and de nigger go and cool -squeezer, and e know de white man not in an. i am it in de hot sun an' so de transacts de field sees a good time ?2,000. I kno^ ness, and thong i man trust too much to de Jan^^T* 1886> to-day he le field by himself when, de agency and two a't work for himself much ite man de farmei sa it is i-p kxoi;ks di mt an' de iaryer an' de " , , , Emmensite Bt; make de time so hard when plate ai s of de white men set up in (From ti :fe rations 011 a iea;i an gooa in an old hot id'-conies out behind an cheater county, nerchent ? timps, resides I g certain de white man is the inventor of de feald his tention if lie 12-ounce charg. t his laber 01* he will come serted into two 1 eber time gib mi name rock notfar froi in the usual waj into thousagds < s from blackstock. displacement fr ly estimated at raencement exercises of the engineers who" : High School under Prof, reprssenatives . . i u it- m Prance and Jar L- "jooictofi hi; Miss Mannn . f ~ some iron pi ilosed on Thursday evening one-quaater of exercise's were very inter- pendedbythre the stude nts doing honor to which was plao and half ounce giving a slight < illy have some of the young cartridge of dy tVinnsboro at our entertain- produced a sai noticed none at this, though while the Em: ad severalprese.it, among Sibling ^ i candidates. ^^3 placed on i eting of the board of trus- "spud" in the < few days since, Pref. L. W. of the projects inanimously re-elected prin- being charged is reported that Miss X>ur- discharge thre\ not expect to teach the further than an :ar. used. The de n L. Douglass and his sister, made a well-lil a in>T7P ran*?ntlv rptnrnpd somewhereneai pton, S. C., where they have Target practd ing- for the past year. using seventy j Hicklin has also returned a bnllet throng ; Mill, where he has been inches tines, wj school .under Prof. A. E. terror under di elation bullet t rn has rather a quiet apoeur- no one knows 1 the closing of the school. . have gone thro ndifer, of York count;', is plate had not i rs. Daniel H. Stevenson. power. n is still building- up. Mr. A novelty in inglass is erecting another when some oft house which he expects to with a match ai o or three others contem- where it contin 3ing soon. x. water babble a: 1 i. 1 <tI are UH*> uuu utre ks from lo>'gto wx. modern produc _ plosive is a jel ; are busy harvesting their and is harmless s. Corn planted on lowland powerful deton I!y damaged by recent hard tkecartn ^es> we still have a fair average toeing \ - II i... ^ n JLlOIl It* SIUM11 auu a?;uui l>\u JtSALTIilOKlS, ? ?, but. looks healthy and is transplanting a ast. We have had four or ^dt^day! 3 of fine cotton growing Eye and Ear Ch hot days and warm nights, a success. At t lizers have been used in this to the light, ood this season than last, cornea was com ir is scarce and in demand, eye and had gro ire better than usual in this Thfctopi:' Sardens^refgood where they process of unith ked. The sorghum crop is ready, however, qv farmers contend that it is 11131 - , , , he has not done 1 for horses and mules, and eyes were (jestn 2 fed as soon as the seed tion of transpla - flafiafflntAW fKn 1 turn. Stock is in good con- ^ ? olm made a sim eye. hobl, taught by Mrs. E!i . in upper Longtown, has In Death Ya r the summer, and will be thousands of a< jam about the 1st October, of borax two f< school taught by Miss Jane it, almost equa lower Longtown closed on and soda, 'lln lesday. Health of our sec- sea level, and i >d at present. J. dried-up ocean :KOUGHT TO TIME. gent Collected an Old Bill i Society Woman. e Pittsburg Herald) e there lived at one of the 3 in this city a lady of* aid that in round numbers . more than $100 <.00. She ndsomely, kept a damage oved in what Thaekorav's ?all "the uppah suckles" . ere is no need to identity peculiarity?the only on* | deep rooted aversion to '* ie always settled promptly md the other bills which ? ? ce of her establishment livery stable's bill, for exlQotnally paicL- But all rrtd she nevej^idil she leans avoid doirb? so. ,t she used to drive ap to voider & sealskin dolman, ?, diamonds, or what not, >r hotel, saying- that etae. nd in a fet? days and pay goods .w?e alvecye sent e end of it. Bills were my lady ignored fcnem ie had obtained the goods e because she was know a y woman and of .good ety. For the same reason 1 when hhe refused to nav. thy and honest friends Eid if she were sned, was the aspn, and they bora tho iey could.* iWr have paid a cent on zen large billa-if a smart s had not applied a novel cketbook. * n auranf in nnoctinn Vicar/3 ble deadbeat'a performs was drumming his beds e on Giant street in ansa at the time, be thought to risk bis time?he bad risk?in experimenting tie called upon one of ber torn sbe owed a bill of d the merchant tj allow jllect thabill. The merim that it would be labor lector was willing to make ie got a promise of 50 3 entire bill if he could o work. He wrote the >te asking her to call at was not answered. He tarper note. No answer e stated his claim in very 3 figures on a postal card. If came in great agitation e card. She protested of postal card^, which the b bellboys and everybody , madam," said the col1 wait upon yon myself to" on account at that session. me-the next day. t was delighted and paid commission gladly. Then Ml ent to every store of any Lue city, and w Wever ke dnst this lady he bought e could. Most of them he ere song. little difficulty in turning iebts uito caab, bat ne jk on the postal card it always did its work KJtually. told that his profit on n amounted to more than v it started him in busi:h this all occurred since when he was penniless, a profitable collection ? brick houses of his own. -NAMttfE AIX HOLLOW. Tia TTnrier Water and Bolda mor in Contempt. le ffew York Star.) tse near Harrison Westbnilt in Revolutionary >r. Stephen E. Emmens, a new explosive. JFour is of Emmonsite were inborings in an immense m the house and exploded r, breaking the hard stone )f fragments. The whole f the explosive was roughthirty-six tons by expert were present, there being of the United States, >an. ates six inches square and an inch thick were susads from each corner, on ed and exploded a one charge of nitro gelatine, lent ; one and a half ounce namite on another plato acer-shaped indentation, Da.nsite knocked a hole he plate. A conical shell -six and a half pounds i steel platform, having a sentre to fit the interior 3, on which jk is put after with the explosive; the. v the shell twenty feet j of the othfer explosives seen ding lump of iron :e grave for itself down r China. - , ' ce with a Springfield rifia grams 01 guupowuer ueuii h three deal boards If tiile fifteen grains of the scussion drove the reghrough five boards and low many more it would ugh if an inch thick iron stopped its wild motive experiments was reached his material was lighted nd thrown nnder water uedto burn making the ad boil. Certainly Greek n cremated as this terrible st plainly shows. The exlow candy-looking stufii !, and nust be fired by ating caps inserted within Vltli a Rabbit'* Eye. Jute 18.?The operation of clear piece of a rabbit's tiind eye of a patient, peri ago at the Presbyterian TT Za.- 1 L- - i LS.niy iiospiuu, uas proveu he end of a week the banned and the eye exposed The piece of the rabbit's pletely united to the human wn to the ed^e of the hole ad eye opposite the pupiL has become cloudy in the ag t<> ..I h -man eye. Al, it h ?*' t aenced to clear l is beginning to see. This for three years, -when "the >yed by lime. The operanting in the left eye was so t two days since Dr. Chis- . ilar operation on the right Hey, Arizona, there are -' I ures covered with a deposit set thick, and, adjoining 1 qaanities of salt, lime 5 place is nenety feet below s evidently the bed of ft i*