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I ' 7'1oM1,; J." -C kC' :.'' ci .It_ SY8'C "2. .. . , r . ,4_.rt y, a'xY a - - .' A Family Companion, Devoted to Literature, Miscellany, News, Agriculture, Markets, &c, Vol.: XIX. INEWBERRY, S. C., THURSDAY, APRIL 12, .1883.No15 YM.Y THUBSDAY MORNING, it Newerry, S. C. Editor and Proprictor. 3ms$g.O per .afsuim favarablyhi Advan. Sat at the expiration of bThe 4 mark denotes expiration of .ieelanseolrs. portant Notice I ying and selling for CASH ONLY nbled to offer to the public " : OTD AD RC8ICL ines, Liquor eadis , AND TOBACCO, the Inest and best French randes, the celebrated >KAKER RTE -= fr #.nily use, at prices which defy COMPETITION. RT'ER'8 TIVOI BEER -. yuse, one dozen Pint Bottles orders will receive prompt atten = With thanks for former patron $tothis house; I respectfully solicit tinuance of the same. f,,, SL ,TTNER, nder Newberry Opera House. ATTENITION ! r .. e ti $ers : 9 low Brand," DIAIrrD O BLE IOE, Rpan " &! lancy's Preium GUA N O. --:0: MY STOCK OF &IROCERIES SFull and Complete. tl...aict a call from my friends and tgUaratee satisfaction. JB. Wheeler. ABNOW I& TIE TIME TI) PRE PARE 141E TREA. ~ '~R~STVARiETY OF TROPICAL FRUIT liN ~&-Ps~kranges Erry Week, ~' ~COAN TS, ORANCES, MALACA CRAPES, Northern Fruits. Apples, Figs, Peanuts, Raisins, Nuts, Citrona, - 0 * rders filled uith dispatch. OE NOV~ELS For the Seaside, 'Chimnney Side, Sunny Side, Shady Side, Right Side, Left Side, or any other side. A arge loust reevedat thE . Feb. 5, 6-4Z giflRifON HE II0I8 AND HIS DISEASES. Containing an "Index of Diseases," which gives the syrmptoms, c-use, and the best treatment of cacti; a table giving all the principal drugs used for the horse, with the ~> ordinary doe, eifects, and a:ntidote when a poison; a table with an en.graviag of the horse's teeth at different ages, with rules ~-for telling the age of the horse; and other s alable information Call and get a copy. DERALD) B0OE STORE. Aug. 18, 14-tf. not, nife is swepngby, go and dare bef ore yo die, somnething mTmighty and sublime leave behind to conquer t.ime. $66 a week in werown town, $5 outfitt free. No risk. 2~eyhneW. Capitalnot required. We wifuns you everything. Many are making fortunes. Ladies make as much as men, and boys and girls make great pay. Reader, if you want business at which you ean make great pay all the time, write for toH TA.rr Co., Portland, 47-ly ALiTONe DiNER ilOuSE. Passen.ers on both the up and down trins have the usual time for DI NER at iston, the junction of the G. & C. R. R., -and theS.U& C.R. R. Fare well prepared, and the charge tea -sonable. V R.M A. FJINS. Oo. ,,41 -tf DR. E. E. JACKSON, DRNGST AND MliRIST, COLUMBIA, S. C. Eemoved to store two. doors-next to Wheeler House. Ordeae prompdly attended to. A? U -5~.. Misceflaneous. Young men and maidens contem plating marriage, or who are about to enter into con nubial bliss in the near future, - or Young men who correspond with maidens in reference to church going are cordially and af fectionately invited to examine a very handsome 4 lot of Wedding and Invitation PAPER, CARDS AND ENVELOPES, AT THE HERALD STORE. A SPECIALTY Is made by SWAUMED In Gentlemens'. Suits, Which are CUT AND MADE BY FIRST CLASS HANDS Fits gasranteed. A fine stock of Gents Furnishing Goods, Always on hand. Write or when in city call on SWAFFIELD, Feb12 tf COLMMBIA. I Can Tel You Bow to Be Your Own Dector I If you have a bad taste in your mouth, sallowness or yellow color or skin, feel de spondent. stupid and drowsy, appetite un steady, frequent headache or dizziness, you are -bilious." Nothing will arodse your 'Liver to act on and strengthen up your sys tem equal to SIMMONS' HEPATIC COMPOUND Or Liver and Kidney Cure. REMOVES CONSTIPATION. RELIEVES DIZZINESS. DISPELS SICK HEADACHE. ABOLISHES BILIOUSNESS. CURES JAUNDICE. CURES LIVERCOMPLAINT. OVECOE ALAIAL BLOOD POISOING. REGULATES THE STOMACH. WILL REGULATE THE LIVER. WILL REGULATE THE BOWELS. THE LIVER AND KIDNEYS Can be kept perfectly hcalthv in any cli mate by taking an occasional dose of SIMMONS' HEPATIC COMPOUND, THE GREAT VEGET&BLE LIER AND KIDNEY MEDICINE. DOWIE & MOISE, PROPRIETORS, WHOLESALE DRUCCISTS CHA RLESTON, S. C. Mr FOR SALE EVERYWHERE. ..t .And in Newberry by Dr. S. F. FANT. Nov. 2, 44-ly. Books and Stationery. ONC MORE, AGAIN keep it BIfor the Pubilc, The largest and best stock of 41 BOOKS, STATIONERY L AND FANCY ARTICLES I Ever shown in Newberry, at the UNIDNOK STONE, Comprising in part Books School BBoks, Pictre Books,e ehsmnos, S c Boos,Bibles. cellaneous Boks, and other Photo. and Auto. Albms, Visting Cards, Plinrdsristamas arods,Rear A B C Blocks. WriCga psh as NoeLetter, Cp, Envelopes, all sizes, Le ad, Slate Pencils, Card Cases. noes Checks,Games, Toy' Pits,.Slates, toy and plain, Rubber, Emngs, Era sers, Chalk Crayons. Fancy Papetere, Colored Paper, 'rIlssne Paper, God and Silve Paper, Wriig Pons, Tags, McGill's Fasteners. Cand any eethe articles not enumerated CREAP FOR CASH. Thos. F. GRENEKER, PROPRIETOR HERALD BOOK STORE, Nov. 30, 48-tf. SUBSCRIBE FOR THE WEEKLY PALMETTO YEOMAN, COLUMB[A, S. C. It is an S page paper, designed for the peo ple, iled with Iateresting miatter-Farnily Reading, News, Markets, &c. Subscription: One Year, $1 50; Seven Months, $1.00: Three Months, 50 Cents-payable in ad tance. For Six Names and Nine Dollars an noon paper, is34 a year. C. V. McJUNKIN, 0-if tclirn Paa. *eef. LITTLE AH SID. Little Ab Sid Was a Christian Kid A Cute little cuss, you'd declare With eyes full of fun And a nose that begun Right up at the roots of his hair. Jolly and fat Was this frolicsome brat, As he played through the long summer day, And braided his cue As his father used to, In Chinaland, far away. Once o'er a lawn That Ah Sid played upon, A bumblebee flew in the spring. "Melican butterfly!" Said he, with winking eye, "Me catchee and pull off um wing." Then with his cs.p He struck it a rap, This innocent bumblebee And put its remains In the seat of his jeans, For a pocket there had the Chinee. Down on the green. Sat the little sardine, In a style that was strangely demure, And said with a grin, That was brimful of sin, "Me mashee um butterfly, sore," Little Ah Sid Was only a kid Nor could you expect him to guess What kind of a bug. He was holding so snug In the folds of his loose-fitting dress. '-Ki-ya! KI-ylp-ye!" Al,Sid cried, as he Rose hurriedly up from that spot, "Ka-yi! Yuk-a-kanI Dam um Mellican man! Um butterfly belly much hot?" -San Francisco Wasp. THAT BAD BOY, -0 REFORMING THE OLD MAN. --O "I guess I've fixed pa this time time so he will never touch liquor again," said the bad boy. "I seared him so his bald head turned gray in a single night." "What under heavens have you done to him now?" asked the gro cer man, in astonishment. "I hope you ha'ven't dore anything you will regret in after years." "Regret nothing," said the boy, as he turned the lid .of the cheese box back and took the knife and sliced off a piece of cheese and took a few crackers out of a barrel, and sat down on a soap box by the stove. "You see 'ma was annoyed to death with pa. He would come home full, when she had company, and lay down .on the sofa and snore, and he would smell like a distillery. It hurt me to see ma cry, and I told her I would break pa of drink ing if she would let me, and she said if I would promise not to hurt pa to go ahead, and I promised not to. Then I got my chum and another boy, quite a big boy, to help and pa is all right. We went down to the place were they sell arms and legs to folks who have served in the army, or saw mill, or a threshing machine, and lost their limbs, and we borrowed some arms and legs, and fixed up a dissecting room. We fixed a long table in the basement, big enough to lay pa out on, you know, and then we got false -whiskers and mustaches, and when pa came in the house drunk and laid down on the sofa, and got to sleep, we took him and laid him out on the table, and took some trunk straps and a sircingle, and strapped him down to the table. He slept right along all through it, and we had another table with the false arms and legs on, and we rolled up our sleeves and smoked pipes, just like I read that medical students do when they cut up a dead man. Well, you'd a dide to see pa look at us when he woke up. I saw him open his eyes, and then we began to talk about cutting up dead men. We put hickory nuts in our mouths so our voices would sound different, so he wouldn't know us, and I was telling the other boys about what a time we had cutting up -the last man we bought. I said he was awful tough, and when we had got his legs off and had taken out his brain, his friend come to the dissecting room and claimed the body, and we had to give it up, but I saved the legs. I ooked at pa onthe table, and he began to turn pale, and he squirm. ed around to get up, but found he was fast. I had pulled his shirt up under his arms, while he was asleep, and as he began to move I took an icicle, and in the dim light of the candles, that were sitting on the table in beer bottles, I drew the icicle across pa's stummick and I said to my chum, 'Doc, I guess we better cut open this old duffer and see if he died from inflammation of the stummick, from hard drinking, as the Coroner said he did." Pa shuddered all over when he felt the icicle going over his bare stummick, and he said, "For God's sake, gen tlemen, what does this mean? I am not dead." The other boys looked at pa in astonishment, and I said, "Well, we bought you for dead, and the Coroner's jury said you were dead, and by the eternal we ain't goin to be fooled out of a corpse when we buy one, are we, Doe?" My chum said not if he i knowed hisself, and the other students said, "Of course he is dead. He thinks he is alive, but he died day before yesterday, fell dead on the street, and his folks said he had been a nuisance, and they wouldn't claim the corpse, and we bought it at the morgue." Then I drew the icicle across him again, and I said, "I don't know about this, doctor. I find that blood follows the scalpel as I cut through the cuticle. Hand me the blood sponge, please." Pa began to wiggle around, and'we looked at him, and my chum raised his eye-lid, and looked solemn. and pa said, "Hold on, gentlemen. Don't cut into me any more, and I can explain this matter. It's all a mistake. It's all a mistake. I was only drunk." We went in a corner and whispered, and pa kept talking all the time. He said if we would postpone the hog killing he could send and get witnesses to prove that he was not dead, but I that he was a respectable citizen I and had a family. After we had I held a consultation I went to pa < and told him that what he had said about being alive might possibly be true, though we had our doubt. We 4 had found su;h cases before in our practice East, where men seemed to be alive, Lut it was only tempo- 1 rary. Before we had got them cut I up they were dead enough for all practical purposes. Then I laid the icicle across pa's abdomen, and went on to tdll him that even if he was alive it would be better for him to play that he was dead, be cause he was such a nuisance to his< family that they did not want him, I and I was telling him that in his lifetime he was very cruel to his I boy, a bright little fellow who was at the head of his class in Sunday school, and a pet wherever he was( known, when pa interrupted me and said, "Doctor, please take that I carving knife off my stomach, for it makes me nervous. As for that boy of mine, he is the condemndest little whelp in this town, and he is no pet anywhere. Now you let up on this dissectin' business, and I I will make it all right with you." We held ancther consultation and t then I told pa that we did not feel that it was doing justice to society ' to give up the body of a notorious drunkard, aft:r we had paid twenty I dollars for the corpse. If there I was any hope that he would reform i and try and lead a different life, it I would be different, and I said to< the boys, "G entlemen, we must do I our duty." Then I took my icicle t and began fumbling around the i abdomen portion of pa's remains, < and my churn took a rough piecc < of ice and began to saw his leg off, while the other boy took hold of the j leg and said h~e would catch it when i it dropped off. Well, pa kickeg4 like a steer. He said he wanted t~o make one more appeal to us, and we acted sort of impatient, but we let up to hea.r what he had to say. He said if we would turn him loosei he would give us ten dollars morei than we paid for his body, and thati he would never drink another drop 1 as long as hie lived. Then wei whispered some more and then toldi him that we thought favorably of his last proposition, but he must swear, withhs hand on the leg of a corpse we were then dissecting, that he would never drink again, and then he must be blindfolded and be conducted several blocks away from the dissecting room. be fore we could in oMm1an He said that was all right, and so we blind folded him and made him take a bloody oath, with his hand on a piece of ice that we told him was a piece of another corpse, and walked him around the block four times, and left him on a corner, after he had promised to send the money to an address that I gave him. We told him to stand still five minutes after we left him, then remove the blindfold and go home. We watched him from behind a board fence, and: he took off the handkerchief, looked ,t the name on a street lamp, and round he was not far from home. He started off saying : "That's a aretty narrow escape, old man. No more whiskey for you." I did not ee him again until this morning, mnd when I asked him where he ras' last night he shuddered and said, "None of your darn business. But I never drink any more; you -emember that." Ma was tickled mnd she told me I was worth my weight in gold. Well, good day. rhat cheese is musty." And the )oy went and caught on a passing ;leigh.-Peck's Sua. JMr_tJ1m O . RILL ARP ON THE PHILOSO PHY OF STEALING. PLUNDER AND PISTOL-POLE AND VINCENTISM-COUNTRY LIFE CON TRASTED-SPENDING TOO MUCH AND WORKING TOO LITTLE-BRAIN AND HEART TBOUBLES, AND SOME APPROPRIATE POETRY THEREON. VrittenfortbeCultivator and DixieFarmer. I wonder what is the matter with Ur folks-what makes stealing md suicide so popular of late. with ur people. No,- I don't wonder rery much either, for I think I mnow. Every time I take up a iewspaper now a days. I find a resh case; somebody gone to his leath by his own hand. These eem to be two favorite modes of etting out of trouble-to steal out )r die out. I don't allude to small >ilfering by willing thieves, but tealing by respectable, well-raised )eople-stealing with "good inten ions," the kind that the old preach r said "hell is paved with." Steal ng by degrees to get money to peculate upon and make more noney to pay it back with, and iave enough left to splurge on and ive high and keep up with society ~r a little ahead. It is an easy hing to spend other people's noney, and it is still easier when he money belongs to the public or corporation with a great many nembers. If Mr. Polk or Mr. Vin. ent had been the treasurer of one ich .man, they would have never hought about stealing two or three iundred thousand dollars from him. .t is a kind of consoling idea that tealing from the State, don't hurt ~nybody much, even if the speecu ation fails and the money can't be laid back, The loss is only about 0 or 75 cents a piece all around to he people and nobody will be kurt very much after all. It won't ciake anybody so dreadful mad. And that is a fact. It don't ciake anybody very mad; they ciake a good deal of noise about t, but I saw in one paper, that Mr. yolk had the sympathy of a large ircle of friends. Plundering the ublic has got to be so common, hat it don't surprise anybody very nuch and is looked upon as a sort ~f privilege that belongs to the fice of treasurer, or cashier, or ciember of Congress. The exam le is set at Washington by those ai high places, and it has spread all ver the country. When it suc eeds it is smart and sharp and hifty; when it fails or is discovered Sbig fuss is made and sometimes a nock trial and that is the end of t. Georgia, Alabama, and Ten. esse, have had trouble with their reasurers-the same sort of trou >le-all growing out of using he State's money, and I see hat the treasurer of the city of savannah has been doing the same hing. Cashiers and other bank >fficers, are subject to similar temp. ~ations, and every now-and-then et caught and go up. That is worse than plundering a State, for phe circle of injured persons is smaller and their individual loss much arreater A man's c ondem nation of the crime is proportioned to his loss. Two years ago a bank broke that had two thousand dol-' lars of mine and my children's money and we never got a cent of it. The State stepped in and took all the assets; well, we have been two thousands dollars mad ever since, for an officer of the bank lost the money on cotton. We would rather he would have plun dered the State out a million, for this was all we had and was hard earned money. It is the easiest thing in the world to forgive a man for defrauding some, other man, but when he defrauds us its the hardest. I'm not mad at all with Polk or Vincent, on the contrary, they sorter have my sympathy, but that two thousand dollars has knocked charity cold and it's cold yet. But there is one atonement that always brings sympathy, and that is death. There is a iind of heroism, a desperation about suicide that commands sympathy; and not un frequently admiration and respect. We say it takes a brave man to fight in battle or fight a duel, ebut it takes a braver one to put the pistol to his own head and fire. It is the remedy of despair and of repen tence and of unutterable woe. But why should our people, our well raised sensible people, steal or kill themselves? Carlyle said that England had a population of thirty. ty-eight millions 'mostly fools," but these men, generally speaking, are not of that class; they are smart - devilish smart - perhaps too smart, too brainy, too esthe tic; they think too much and work too little; they want too much and are ambitious; they are not content with their lot, but long for the lux uries of life and want them without labor or toil; they want a $2,000 salary to pay $5,000 of expenses, they work nothing but their brains and their desires. A sound mind in a sound body, makes a perfect man, and no man can have a sound body withont exercise; he must labor in some way and get tired and rest, and that gives rest to his brain, for the brain is at rest while the body is at work-this is the law of our being. A man who lives in town or city and takes but little or no exercise, and keeps his brain always excited and at work planning for more money, will get off his balance after awhile, and if a sudden reverse of fortune comes he give up and takes to drink; or opium, or kills himself. It is not the farmers who steal or commit suicide; it is the fast young men of the towns and the cities; they get crossed in love or have a bad run of luck at cards or in cotton futures, or have stolen money from their employers to keep up with society, or got into some other devilment, and so the mind gets tottering and the misery is ended with death. It is not the death of one or two in a town, that is of so much conse quence, but it is the misery of the living, for where.one man kills him self there ai-e many who don't, but who are just as miserable. Many a one thinks about it but has not the courage to do it, and it comes from spending too much and work ing too little. Farmer boys don't do it; they have no occasion to spend, and if his girl wont have him, he makes the best of it and tries another. His mind is well balanced and labor does it; city people live in too much of a hurry, too much excitement; even Sunday don't bring 'em rest, and while the preacher is talking gospel, they are thinking about to-morrow's trade; they can't help it. I never knew but one business man who didn't read his Sunday's mail. Women don't kill themselves often, and when they do its for something a man has done-some disappointed about love-not a brain trouble, but a heart trouble. Something like Hood wrote about "One more unfortunate Gone to her death." Or like Goldsmith wrote about: When lovely woman stoops to folly, And learns too lite that men betray, What art can soothe her melancholy, What charm can drive her grief away. The only art her grief can smother And stiSe every burning sigh, And bring repentance to her lover And wring his bobom-ie to diel BILL AR. OUR NEW YORK LETTER. From our own Correspondent. OUR DAILY MURDERS-FENCEH FLATS AND FIE-FIE--THE BBOOELYN BRIDGE AND BLUNDERING BLOCK BEADS-GIN, GINGER AND GRACE LESS GREE. NEW YoRK, April 10th. The removal of obnoxious per sons by knife and pistol has been progressing with due diligence. Most of the murders were by Ital ians who are very fond of cards, stale beer, lust and assassination. A late arrival was a notorions bri gand, who committed 21 murders in Sicily, and for whom detectives were waiting here, having been noti fled by the authorities on the other e side. He managed to slip away, however, here as skillfully from the steamer that brought him as he boarded her. One of the judges before whom two of these stiletto shovellers were brought was accos ted by a friend who; with myste- C rious nods and winks, remarked, ' 'Me no got lawyer. Me no dam < fool. Me know American fashion. v How much do you want?" Out n came a roll of bills, and a much- I yanked organ grinder was "run in" C in a very demoralized condition. A little shooting in "high life" high enough; gamey so to speak has created quite a little breeze. a Two mining brokers in partner ship were great friends. One was t married with a wife a victim to i opium habit. Introduces friend as companion, brotherly friendship,, springs up, friend cures opium hab it, but wife prefers friend to hus-, band. Husband leaves her to her- r self-and friend-for four weeks hoping she'd mend her ways; finds the prescription no cure for the complaint. Fires friend out of the I house; wife sulks-takes.walks and i won't say where; quarrel; separa tion; cross divorce suits, suits for. damages, alimony, possession of n children, etc. Husband and ex friend still very friendly in busi ness matters. Wife's mother in far West hears of scandal. Horri- c fied. Sends brother to reclaim sis. 3 ter. Repentant sinner agrees to go,- not that morning, some other morning. When brother goes to rescue, ex-friend objects, fires stat nette of Venus at brother. Brother f drew his "old gun," kills ex-friend. Shrieks; police; autopsy; reporters;P reporters; reporters; open mouths; ' reporters, etc., etc. All very dra matic. The Brooklyn bridge will, it is.to be hoped, be open about the middle of May for pedestrian traffic, at any rate. Of course the bone-hun-1 ters are on the wing for spoils, like turkey buzzards, and rings are formed to grab all the patronage,* and put up jobs in the interest of one or more railway schemes. Then the proposed opening has set the idiots to work with plausible prop ositions, while a good many people who either don't know better or don't take time to think aboit, en- e dorse. For instance, one set of fools wants a grand double proces- r sion of trades, with bands of music countermarching between Brook lyn and New York at the opening,. f and another convention of donkeys c want the Grand Army to parade in i mid-air on Decoration Day. There a wouldn't be much of a bridge left if either of these sapient sugges tions were carried out, and I fancy < the wiseacres will be reminded that I when one comes to a bridge it is i always in order, in order to avoid the dangers of vibration, which the tap of even a single drum may ( cause, to "walk your horses." 3 The temperance fanatics and a high-license liquor men are both waging war on the beer saloons, which really are the least harmful I of any refreshment places where al- C coholic stimulants are sold. In r the German quarters of the city especially the beer gardens and beer tunnels are really poor men's a clubs, very orderly and unobjec- e tionable. The way some pious men beat the devil round the siwmp is funny though. They go to drug stores and very unnecessarily ex plain that they never drink liquor,, but want some special extra qual ityr of gin for medical use. They manage to sample it pretty freely. and then say they must trust to the judgment of the clerk, as really are not ceteto Then ivrapped In a ADVfIRNSIR IL? Adveragsun asr at1 ,afr: 10 re (es fsd1) for fi and 75 com a: iwhemw er oublce la Nodoes Of' I~Wgu. ofrnapect, sam e --a parIui adve ss,. ]re I s oia f t Adv?rtl ibs ieot and chargedsaeorag. - Specialomiret and ikt Users.wit berad.eun TERifS AE - On goes to the deaon 'de Wpy these good men" - gith toothaches or a a lown, is r n a drug store wi:.aa rj y and handsove art, begging for nediCiG. lerk makes up a dose wk ramenti chiely, whieh he patient has no idea is ad secures a. faithM ne )ne clerk who was eitert cientious or too full o ged to drive away fsteady customers ai ralking papers for ollowing dobe for -d$s ot-drops, gum 4ui .a une pepper.. The vaia;"" eo tried to miD e . reat mistake was en - A GmL WHo Sm * AcKwAn.-In 't&IQ'.: )akland, Aroo.tnaoou4 3 a girl who pe f spelling diRu ug rard without hestao. _" a Hattie M. reia' . e ast her twelfth bfirtday es with her pareas t a spelling oateh a the school which elia ut any warning, she e b udience some ten mintes. rords selected at random,.aeo heir difficulty of . Pithout any previous keowWge4 rhat they *ere to be, K h orrectly, except-one orstwo he could not sel1-n he ray, and when prompte4in listely reveid it., rords which she ndivisible, e All of pelled as rapidils.theiu ollow without a siingle oent of a letter. A woman in Oosknah early half of a skirt trek lothes wringer before hat her babfywas in the sidkt. ras anawfu sr ainrj~ A boy will go in ool around the fster o h~ ace hewill haveams b~ hobic dread of iI a pintre r. a basin. ats with :east-Iron crowni1 e fashionable thislalL. Th esigned especially for thios who ike part in torehllght proehneuis kely tobe interrupted by aso. f bricks. - A woman havng read in a oN bout a simoon that "sweptIo lainn,'.' is urging her- hnsadt et one of them new fangled thig - or her to use in the kitchen. i Curran was once aske&dby udge on the jnch, '-Doye e nything ridiculous in tiiei? Nothing but the head," was th sply. The individual who sawaumoude ghting with a piece of linmbeEw heese readily realized that U e attle was not always to th Irong._ The mosquito has six, legs a~ nly one mouth. Let us therefore e thankfnl that if it does bite~ Plant your neighbor's eans early )ne under each fruit tree will help our crop and do your neighet. ood turn besides. Many people wish they inli ve their lives over again; in nine ' sass out of ten they would only epeat them. There is frequently more love. ii frown than there could be na mile.. "As many as I ove, re uke and chasten." Froma.the manner in aid blame are dealt rorld, sen honest ias - ~ ;p