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ITES, T H E H ERA LD Advertisements inserted at th. r.te oL 18 PBLIS3I) nd 75 cents for each subsequent insertion. 16 PNBLISB!D Dul ounavrieet e eet EVERY WEDNESDAY MOR NING - Notices of meetings, obituaries and tributes -y ''7' frset nsame rates per square an ordinazy At Newberry, S. C. Spil Notices in Local column 15 cents BYI Advertisements not marked with the num and charged accordingly. Editor and Proprietor.contracts ad ith large adver ~Edior ad Prprieor. ___tisers, with liberal deductions on above rates Terna,se.ooper annun&' A Family Companion, Devoted to Literature, Miscellany, News, Agriculture, Markets, &c invariably in Advance. fr thc paper is stopped at the expiration of time for which it is paid. 0V . XIV. WEDNESDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 27, 1878. No. 48. TERMS CASH. 7P Th*e > mark denotes expiration of sub"DNESDAY .Clothing. KINAIR & WILEY, COLUMBIA, S. C. HEADQUARTERS FOR FINE CLOTHING. AND CENT'S FHINISKIN &OOD9 FOR Men, Youths and Boys. LARGEST AND THE CHEAPEST CLOTHING HOUSE IN THE STATE. CASH DOWN. Oct. 23,~43-15t. GRAT BAR'UAIIS AT CLOSING OUJT SALE OF B.& W, Ce SWAFFIED. New Goods constant ly added, bought for Cash, and will be sold at a Reduction of 20 per cent. on Regular Prices, but for CASH ON DELIVERY. The undersignied continues the IMJTOM DEPARTMENT, Making to order the Finest Custom Clothing In the State. FINE DRESS SHIRTS. FINE COTTON and WOOLEN UNDER GARMENTS. All kinds of MILITARY and T AILORS' TRIMMINGS constantly on band. W. C. SWAFFIELD. Oct. 23, 43-10t. NEW STOCK! NEW PRICES! WVRIGiT & J.WV. 00OPP90K Respectfully call attention to their splen 4id stock of FALL AND WINTER CLOTHING. THE CHEAPEST AND MOST C0MPLETE Ever Offered to the Public. * BSINESS AND DRESS SUITS AT RIOCK BED PICES! Which Defy Competition. Hats, Shoes, Umbrellas, Trunks, Valises. SH iRTS, LOWER THAN EVER. And al other kinds of GENTLEMEN' and No. 4, Mollohon ROW. CALL AND BE CONVINCED. R. H. WRICHT. J. W. COPPOCK. Sep. 25, 39-tf. NO6TICE. The unlersigneCi respectfully inforns the *D'RUGS AND FANCY ARTICLES, S has are ually kept in a Drug Store, tc Prscipios c xrfull compoundhd atn on PraSr ee2,fnear Pulic Square. Gadian Notice. I will apply for final discharge as Guar dian of John F. Schumpert, to the Court o day of November, 187.L8 ,Garin notaober 28, 18'18- 45 Dry Goods and Xotions[ THlE FIORITE DRY GOODS RESORT. FURCHGOTT, BENEDICT & co., CHARLESTON, S. C. OFFER THEIR NEW FALL STOCK WHOLE SALE AND RETAIL At Lower Prices Than are paid by customers for inferior old auction goods. $250,000 Worth of the finest and best selected stock of CARPETS,9 Lace Curtains, Oil Cloths, Window Shades, Dress Goods, SILKS, CLOAKS, Shawls, Blanukets, Flannels, Alpacas, Cashmeres, First and Second Mourning Goods, Kid Gkves, Notions, Hosiery, Rib bons, Silk Ties, La dies' and Gen tlemen's U n de r w ear, Linens, Table and Piano Covers, Towels. Table Damask, Napkins and Domestic Goods, and thousands of other goods too numerous to men tion are now placed before our old. customers of the State of South Carolina, and we guarantee to the public and the people of this State es pecially, that through our IMMENSE PAILlTIES And long established reputation with buyers and sellers where MVILLIONS Of dollars have been exchanged through our house, that we will give better satisfac tion as regards Quality and Prices In goods purchased from us than any other house South. [7 SAMPLES SENT ON APPLICATION. n. a.-Charge pepaid onall goodst ofe fice Order. Dr Please name this paper mi. ordering goods. Furchgott, Benedict & Co., ?75 k1N6 STREET, CHARL.ESTON, S. O, Oct. 30, 1878. 44-17 Where can I get the best and the most for the least money, in FANCY AND STAPLE DRY GOODS! AND THE Latest Novelties, Necessities andl Notions OF THE SEASON I SLV2ID SATiSFACTORILY ! trns in h werry Laurens, dgeficlanda Lexingtor. . F JACKON The ORIGINAt .TEADR OFLOW PRICE aleaure tha a h ;s now innstore AHAND 1 E, LARGE an IELEG T A STO inal public, and whi' h WILL BE SOLD! IF YOU WAN vaRIEY COME IF YOU WAT LOT PRICES IF YOU WAT 8ATSFA0TION jSENTD TO JAOKSON, OF COLUMBIA. th oSamples sent by mail to any16,artf ALTQN INNElR IIL'SE, Pasengers on both the up and down trains have the usual time for DINNER at SAlston, the junction of the G. & C. R. R., and the S. U5. & C. R. R. re ewell prepared, and the charge ra oj Oc.9 41-tf oViscellaneous. "VEGETIll" 3ays a Boston physician, "has no equal as a blood purifier. He aring of its many won Jerfo1 cures after all other remedies had railed, I visited the Laboratory, and con 1inced myself of its genuine merit. It is prepared from barks, roots, and herbs, each :)f which is highly effective, and they are 3ompounded in such a manner as to produce istonishing results." VEGETINE s the great Blood Purifier. VEGETINE Will cure the worst case of Scrofula. VEGETINE [s recommended by physicians and apothe caries. VEGETINE 'fas effected some marvelous cures in cases of Cancer. VEGETINE ures the worst case of Canker. VEGETINE Ieets with wonderful success in Mercurial diseases. VEGETINE Vill eradicate Salt Rheum from the system. VEGETINE Xemoves Pimples and 'H1unfors from the face. VEGETINE 4ures Constipation and regulates the Bow els. VEGETINE s a valuable remedy for Headache. VEGETINE Vill cure Dyspepsia. VEGETINE testores the entire system to a healthy con dition. VEGETINE temoves the cause of Dizziness. VEGETINE elieves Faintness at the Stomach. VEGETINE ,ures Pains in the Back. VEGETINE Effectually cures Kidney Complaint. VEGETINE s effective in its cure of Female Weakness. VEGETlIN E s the great Remedy for General Debility. VEGETINE s acnowledge by alcasses of ppleto fier in the world. VECETINE Prepared by 1. R. STEVENS, Boston, Mass. VEETINE IS SOLD BY ALL DRUSGISTS, Nov. 6, 45-4t. SEW RIIIilA TOR! With Revolving Top. STOES AND TIN1ARE. I have added to my business a complete md well selected stock of COOKING AND HEATING STOVES, Ld would ask especial attention to my SEW REGULATOR COOKING STOVE, with PATENT REVOLVING TOP, n entirely new arrangement, which for onvenince and comfort has no equal in yther stoves. Also, a LARGE AND CBEAP stock of IN WARE, both stampe-d and plain. 'he above goods are direct from the largest manufactory in the United States, ad are offered to our friends at prices that :annot fail to please. The ladies are cordially invited to call md examine our stock. At S. P. BOOZER'S Hardware Store. Nov. 13, 46-4t. TO 1UR PATRONS. Parties indebted tQ the Herald either for Subscription or Adver tising, are requested to settle at once. We have waited long and patiently and now ex pect all promises to be fulfilled. Those in ar rears on the first of January next will be stricken fr o m o u r books and their ac counts placed in the hands of a Collector. acttry. Foa THE HERALD. NEWS AND LOGIC. Why, hello, Pompy, how's yer health, I'se glad ter see yer boy, Dey tell me dat de Dimercracks Am bout der bust wid joy. Dey wars deir red shirts inside out, Deir britches in doir boots, An when dey tires ob talkin, Dey whoops an yells an shoots. What dat I say? now brudder Pomp I'se tellin you de truff, Kase ef I aint yer bound ter git Some udder kine ob proof. In ridin fur de gubernment, Marse Hamptun rid er mule, He mite a knode de animil Was born a natal fool. He trot before an rack behind, An den he sling aroun; He hump up under Hamptun An flung him on de groan. De white folks is all mity mad, Dey gwine ter kill dat mule, Fur tryin ob "my policy" An playin de cussed fool. Dey make him kno what he's erbout, When Hamptun's on his back; Dey teach him bow ter canter, Dey larn him how ter rack. Dey put a shot-gun in his hay, An red shirts in his corn, Dey make him wish he nebber saw De day dat he was born. Dey'll grine him in de outrage mill, An pack him in a keg, An shoot him frum er kannun, Fur brakin Hamptun's leg. An when dey raise dar war-whoop, De Radicals will slope, To hunt up Yankee bayonet Ter keep em frum de rope. Dars dat male an forty akers, Dat nebber cam dis way; An de men as sed we'd git em Has leff twix dark an day. An I tell you what 'tis, Pompey-, Ef yer want ter make yer board, You'd better go ter pullin grass, An quit walkin ob de road. NESTOR. Dutch Fork, Nov. 10th, 1878. FOR THE HERALD. BROADBRI'S PARIS LET TER. NO. 28. How Paris Looks--Communists and Imperial ists-The Exposition a Success-Looking Toward the Close, etc., etc. Paris is in it.s glory ; the great fashionable world that returned to us'with the opening of October, have now become comfortably es tablished in their homes ; once more the busy note of preparation for fetes, ball routes, and receptions, is heard all along the line, and the Gilforys, the Malaprops and the Squilles are anxiously awaiting the invittions which will bring joy to their own little souls, and carry dismay into the camps of their dis appointed neighbors. Large ap propriations have been made by the Government to enable the different ministers to sustain the character of the Republic; hospital iy is a business as well as a pleasure, for they seem understand that no one man or a dozen men shouid be called upon to become the hosts of a nationa, and that generosity is one of the sublimest of human virtues, if you do not have to foot the bills. One hundred thousand francs was the sum appropriated to each minister to enable him to do the decent thing, and as one minister had the misfortune to lose his wife in the early part of the season, and being in mourning could not be expected to entertain,-his hun dred thcusand francs was returned to the national treasury, to be divided pro rata among his brother ministers, and dispensed in a sort of average hospitality. In no one thing has there been greater heart scalds and disappointments than in the matter of ministerial invitations Everybody, who was nobody in particular at home, seemed to think that they were somebody in gen eral when abroad ; and, as a matter of course, on the occasion of a ministerial blow-out every legation in Paris was besieged with appli cants for invitations. As a general thing, in less civilized countries, well-bred people wait till they are asked ; but in le beau Paris it's the polite thing to ask for an invitation, and stick to the fellow till you get it First yo go to some inflnen tial person and beg him to inter- b cede for you, which he promises to h do, and then forgets all about it; I as the day approaches you begin to h grow nervous. Everybody else is a going and you are about to be left tJ out in the cold. You fly down to the legation, but all the invitations have vanished days before, and s twice as many were promised as a were received. As tLe time draws b near, despair may be seen depicted t1 on hundreds of countenances. One t, woman looks as though she had Iti just lost her uncle; and another as y though her house had been overrun v, with poor relations. Money is freely ai offered, bribes are openly promised, ft and on a recent important recep- ei tion a very fine lady who figures r( largely in fashionable society, hav- at ing failed to procure her invitation t( through legitimate channels, paid t< one hundred francs to a footman to tl smuggle her through a back door, b and the secret was never found out b till a couple of honest servants be- al gan quarreling over the spoils. h It is now high time to sum up d the merits and demerits of this a Great Exposition which these wan- fi ing October days warn me is rapid- b ly drawing to a close. Those who t1 have followed me in these letteri it will doubtless recollect that on my a: arrival in Paris in April, it was ex- fi ceedingly doubtful even then if the h Exhibition would really take place. it Two mighty factions -the Com- n munists and Imperialists - were w sternly arrayed against the Repub- v lic; threats bitter and deep were b openly made that no Republican fi Exhibition should ever take place si in Paris. Only a few days before si the opening a band of rioters were m arrested by the gendarmes shouting t< for Napoleon and the Empire. It tl was evident that another coup d'etat t] was anxiously expected and hoped for; the result was eagerly can- b vassed in the little Imperialist b clubs which are scattered all over ti Paris, and in the dim prospective M they could see once more revived s the faded glories of the Empire. n All these expectations have been si doomed to a cruel disappointment, a: The Exposition has taken place. s1 Instead of a comparative failure, it ca has been a remarkable success. p Hundreds of millions have been ii added to the material wealth of ti France, and the Republic, after a p struggle with the man who above ix all others was suspected and feared, p has come out scathless from the si ordeal, and to-day it stands on as w firm a foundation as any govern- ti ment in Europe. It is worth while n noting that while murmurs of dis- o: content and open attempts at as- h sassination have shaken Germany ti to its very center, and while riot and bloodshed have been rife in the tI most stable governments of Europe, g notwithstanding the opposition from si without and the discordant ele- is ments within, France has reached a n degree of national prosperity un- a equaled by any other country on ti the face of the earth. This pros- d perity is not entirely owing to the li Exposition. She was prosperous ti before the Exposition commenced, c: and she was emerging from her ti disaster when the Empire to which tl she paid nearly ten thousand mil- o: lions of francs was experiencing a such financial ruin as she had never II known before. For every Exposi- E tion which France has given she n has some trophy to show. A me- a: mento of the first is the Grand e Palais d'Industrie, on the Champs si Elysee.. The improvements inaug- vw urated for the second are seen all ei along the beautiful avenues and L boulevards which are now the chief si glory of Paris, and when the Ex- p position of 1878 shall have closed, n for ages to come the splendid a: palace of the Trocadero will look ti down upon the Seine, a glorious mon- h ument to the Congress which gath- I ered about its banks in this year of a grace, breathing peace on earth and p good will to men. a As nhere is no condition without a its draw-backs, and as there is no o evil without its compensation, so 0 this Paris Exposition has had its s' griefs and its disappointments, and sa much bad blood and bad language a have resulted therefrom. I don't a: know that the average French land- a lord is worse than any other land- n lrd, and yet, I think, for good, soid squar lying, I would back b im for money against any other 6ndlord in the world. Before the ii xposition opened the principal I otel-keepers met in council, and, b 3 reports had been circulated si iat they were preparing for ex- t] )rtion, they solemnly pledged si iemselves that under no circum- ti ,ances would they raise their rates A franc. The Exposition had not n een open a week when they raised g ieir prices twenty per cent. In r( Yo weeks after they made a fur- ai ier rise of thirty, and after that p >ur bill was filled with all sorts of ti nxatious little charges for towels d id soap and candles and napkins, r( r attendance,j and even the gov- T nment stamp attached to your w ceipted bill was included in the ti count. If you ordered a cup of s] a, they charged you a franc for the p a and two francs for the loan of ai to teapot. Extortion and robbery .came a regular and respectable asiness; and the Frenchman who lowed a foreigner to escape from s clutches without squeezing him ry was regarded by his fellows as madman or a fool. One night a iend of mine stopped on the >ulevard and inquired his way to ie opera; the person of whom he w quired directed him all right, but c ) he turned to leave demanded a b anc; my friend promptly knocked le im down; the gendarmes rushed tt t and arrested him, but when the aE ztter was explained the foreigner a( as released, and the Frenchman b as taken in. In France, lying has f M en brought to the perfection of a i1 ae art,and the man who persistently e, icks to the truth is regarded as a i )rt of immoral renegade-a fellow s hose position it would be difficult nt locate in the -heavens above or b ie earth beneath or the waters tt iat are under the earth. ot While the Peace Congress has 2en shouting hosannah, and has 0 :en prophesying of the blessed M me when the lion shall lie down e: ith the lamb, France has been ei .eadily drilling her battalions, the emory of the little Corsican still irvives, and the possibities of iother Austerlitz and Wagram aree ill beacon lights to the young re- ft uits who fill thelranks of the re- ti ablican army, and notwithstand g the peace-offerings of 1878, iere are low rumblings in the s litical volcano portentous of evil ti ithe coming time, and the child d erhaps is now born who, before the ~ ver shall have blanched his locks, ~ ill see the whole map of Europe m. ansformed, and new names and tJ aw dynasties occupying the places a Ethose whose line of succession al is been unbroken for over a v iosand years. t As a dislay of industry and art si le Exposition at Paris has been a rand success, its benefit have been iared by all classes, and it is a sat- fi faction to know that the poor have d >t been neglected ; provision was ade for the humblest classes and or :e great manufacturers in the id [ifferent departments of the repub- a~ sent their employees to Paris by ~ iosands the government and the t pitalists seeming to be determined fi, iat nothing should be lost upon iw ie people. In awarding the palm ' excellence the task is surrounded ti ith very little difficulty. In this el nperial Exhibition-the exhibit of i ngland stands out with a regal d tagnificence, which has distanced S I competition, and which silences ren the voice of envy, and this ge preacy was so manifest that it n as deemed no small honor to sc ual her in any department. The 1 nited States has come out of the s ruggle, not only with honor, but it ofit ; and the orders which her bi anufacturers have already received, q :e more them compensation for all a i trouble and expense of the Ex- b hition. There is one feeling which a find general among both English ti ad Americans, and that is the most rfect and unqualified satisfaction the prospect of returning home ; e ter comparing their own system ly government and the comforts bl their own happy homes, they e nothing that will. compen te for them abroad. Here p ad there I have occasionally met et English man, or an American, b~ ho had become completely de- t tionalized, but their absence 'ould be no loss to any country,y at n thcntrary, a positive gain. b The weather is getting exceed igly cool, and on several days it squ as been so cold that people have iag een talking of ovrcoats and der Loves. The rush is still at flood, of ie anxiety to see the great Expo- em I tion seeming to increase as the sha me draws near for it to close. The Po belh mer' colony is sensibly thin- Th ing out, the October steamers all two oing back loaded. The English in v .presentaTion is still undiminished, line ad the number of titled personages ga, intc erfectly amazing. Every afternoon iD ie Champs Elysees and the Bois con a Boulogne, are crowded with the the .presentatives of every nation. frol th he grand closing fete in November th*i ilf be one of the marked celebra- is a ons of -the century, eclipsing the dall >lendid ovation of June, and sur- con ssing anything that has yet been go1k tempted by the Republic. side Yours tr,.ly, be i BROADBRIM. first FOR THE HERALD. NEW YORK FASHIONS. A Bonneta-New Designs-Society Toilettes. -- cas, BONNETS. hea Piquant little felts are in garnet or blis ine shades, trimmed with satin of edil rresponding color and completed at 7 garnet or wine colored flowers and aves. These are worn with walking ear >stumes of garnet or wine color, and he ie tout ensemble is pretty enough, I mit sure you. Birds have come up hirx ain, and perched on both hats and for( onets bear witness to the fact that tou male perversity is more than a tO atch for a vast amount of sermoniz- the g. We say "scissors" to the last, me4 pecially as there is no fear of drown- 9 g for it. But what is of more con- tow quence than a bird upon your bon t, is a pair or perhaps two pairs of edi rings tied under your chin. Per- lipE ps you may compromise by tying had e bow on one side, but somehow or mie her, the bow you must have, for a >net is not a bonnet without a pair strings. We find quite a run made e i felts, and the favorite mode of trim- the ing is to lay the ribbon on plainly bre cept at the top where a somewhat list travagant bow gives finish. The cha any colored ribbons of the day show ~ettily on the dark felts. NEW DESIGNS. one The Princess and Mathilda walking slo' stumes are both quite new and taste- '~ ; either one combining well with edii e Octava sacque, in case an outside wit ~rment be added. The Zoline visiteth another street garment of recent th troduction, but this is cut in circle ' ape. The Panier polonaise, showing hot ec new bouffant back, is a handsome pro ~sign for house or carriage wear. Forga e benefit of ladies who make their ga van garments, I will mention that J. . P. Coats have received the gold itor edal at the Paris Exposition, for sha eir spool cotton. This however is 'He confirmnation of the awards of all sca' xpositions where t.hey have invari >1y obtained the highest prizes. The "my illimantic Linen Company have a ( ken only a second class prize-the on Iver medal. cat< SOCIETY TOILETTES- are I have written of the handsomec hav >wered ribbons, called the Pompa- goc >ur. Well, then, should you hearti lone speak of Pompadour silks, ol >u will know that they are exponents l 1 a more extended scale, of the same dar ea. I could not possibly give you you idea of how handsome they are, wes t even they do not come up to the say nd embroidered silks wrought en rely over with the delicate and re 3ed traceries of the skilled work ~ oman's needle. Satin is the favorite gra aterial employed in combination with der: ese beautiful fabrics; and in general has e satin falls in the continuous sweep -h aracteristic of the court train, while w e embroidered or Pampadour silk is Ma: ~sposed in front or elsewhere as may of em appropriate. Brocaded silks are ing, so brought largely into requisition. bea he greater number of toilettes, even fd r evening, are made high or square fd ck with elbow or long sleeves, but dur metimes for evening, the neck is cut -a w, and in this case, the sleeves are ree extremely short as to seem no eeves at all. Many toilettes are cuthu one, but an equal number show ahu isque and trimmed skirt. The bas- isbr e is often pointed back and front nest d finished by a heavy cord; some- che' mes there is no point in front, a soft va alt from the sides giving finish, or rain we see the soft belt even where ing e point in front is retained, eve: Flowers are almost ignored. If they mer pear at all, it is only a's a looping no r which nothing else will answer, and ~ ren bridal toilettes are very sparing adorned by the traditional orange pag ossom. An evening dress made by age orth for Mrs. Russell, the beautiful Ear Lughter of ex-Judge Hilton, who as married last winter, is of pale B nk satin and brocade silk. The to o irsage of satin is a basque pointed ck and front, with square neck fit- - d in with rare Mechin lace. The eves are long. The front of the doei :irt is composed of the brocade, in ttern of peacock plumes, and at the mik *a tran of satin falls. evil L word as to trains. Some are are, the others rounded. A charm evening toilette devised by a liste of this city for W. H. Van bilt's only unmarried daughter is pale blue satin united with baud )roidered silk of a corresponding le. This is wade with basque ited at the back, finished with sott at the frotit, and elbow sleeves. skirt is a rounded train, and the materils are united through ou most artistic manner The ganto. as called from the French word t, mlcaning glove, is coming rapidly favor. This is not wonderful e it is exceedingly pretty and also veuient. A hook is passed through button hole of the dress on the t of the corsage, and pendant efrom on the outside is a short n to which any imaginable devise tached, such as a boat, fan, me iO, cross, etc. Ladies who study icierce select-a devise in which a I pencil is concealed. The hook in is of such a shape as to form a e buttoner, or upon ocasion, may ised to fasten a shoe or boot. Only quality gold is used. LUCY CARTER. DEMORALIZED EDITOR. .n editor was sitting in his F chair, buoyant in mind and rt, with the calm serenity and sful tranquility that none but ors know. A shuffling sound the door brought him back to b, and facing nervously- about, bebeld a man of deep, deter ed look, closing the door behind With a sickly feeling of 2 boding, the editor motioned ard a chair, and gazed upon intruder, helpless, resigned to ,t the worst. 'he band of the man wandered ard his breast pocket. The ,or's cheeks blanched and his turned blue. Alas! alas! he guessed aright the dread sion of the stranger. 'he man pulled out a bundle of era and papers. The head of editor fell forward upon his ist; and the hands dropped essly from the arms of his ir. .y errand is not a pleasant ,' said the visitor, speaking ly. ['hank heaven!' exclaimed the or, plucking up courage. 'Out b it-suspense is much worse n fate.' have an execution on' your ie,' continued the man with fessional sadness. The mort e has been foreclosed.' loora ! ha! ha!l' roared the ed , springing up and nearly king, the man's arm off; aven be praised ! but what a 'e you did give me! Blister corns if I didn't think you had hunk of spring poetry. Drive -sell the old shanty-its a rat mn barracks anyway, and rents taken off my mind! Let's e your name, and down it s f'or two years free subscrip-. .You're an angel in breeches, fellow, but don't look it, aed if you do. Ha! hta! Cut r hair, man ; cut your hair and .r a stand-up collar. It will a your children sorrow.' e kind to your parents, or ad-parents; care for them ten. y, lovingly, watchfully. Age taken from them vitality chi gives buoyancy t o youth. rhap they have drank deeply ife's cup of sorrow-with ach heavy, and well nigh broken rLs, may see hopes and joys Saway before their eyes-en 3d much for the sake of others id now that life is fading, they I care and support far more i the younger ones. Let us ior their whims, their child Less, their seeming peevish i. Let kind words and acts ir theml and make life's path Smore pleasant for the totter feet. Make a warm corner in 'y heart for the aged. Re a ber that a death bed scene is fair distant, and' you should e no dark spot on memory's e. Thbe parting blessing of old is like the very dew of heaven. a it by kind actions. e rigid to yourself and gentle Lhers. il that God does for man He by man. e make more than haWl e a we feel.