University of South Carolina Libraries
T E R M S; Published ?V?iy TliuiH?uy morning. For subscription, $1.80 per annum, strictly; jp advance; fer ?ix months, *io conts; for four mpiiths, 50 Cents. Advortiuuments inserted at. ono-dollar per squaru of ono inoh or 'OKS for tho Hist iusortlon and fifty couts for wach sub sequent insortlou, Obituary Notices exceeding llvo Unos, TributflB of Hospoct, Communications of a poreonal charuotor, whoa ndmlssablo. and Anuonnoomonte of Candidato? will bo charged for as advortlsomonts. Job Printing neatly and cheaply oxoon Nocossity"compels us to adhoro striotiy to tho roquiromonts of Cash Pay monts. nr+ *MS? OTT= i?tiZ- 3?8w 1W? ...?? ?t t?tu?i u-ouow aa th? NI?at in? ?ny, Then Caa?'? Nat TkoiH? PM I M (? Aa y Bia M. HY THOMPSON, SMITH & JTAYNKS. W AI JI ? A ? J TJ A, SOUTH OAKO?iINA, OOTOBKR ?, 18?M). VOLUME XLI.~^-~NO 00. . ? ? Irnm ttl ?.-MM Ly Mp Sixteen Pounds ? > Whole Rice j= z 3 ? FOR Sa? One Dollar. O ? SE co O ? O O O The Gem el the rafa THE CRESCENT MINERAL miIK highest town East of tho Rockoy _W?TElfc^ X Mountains, is IIuim.ANns, N. C.; rn>\\ et rr ? ^ altitude Main Stroot, 0,817 foot. Finest WI I>llVR YOllT llVKIlfi]],\ fl ail-round climate: summor boat r^^^^ "Ul ?U1D 1UUI WjopOpIU. ahovoSO^; ico-cohi springs; grandest wa- ODK OP ??)ftI)Y G&SES OP tor-falls and mountain scenery; ilnost 0 T T,TT,ri JLYYTS VTTAYMTO timborand almost all known minorais. lllVhJt\ Hl/l) AlDI/tll Groat summor and winter resort. The lYf?ftft$Hi ?ZTT'R'Rn IIluMandaStar,*: por year; ?o. por copy; L. , ^ ^ UI , W.UA^^' full of information. COK PROS., Pub- MR- J N* ^i"1^' for n,Wontji X*?T ,ft.n Ushers.. Highlands, Macon county, N. C. fP*jjjeer on tno Greenville and Columbia In the Land Of the Sky. Crescent Minorai Water ls curing ? mo of a long standing Kidnoy Trouble, -=----? and I am botter to-day than I havo boon for ten years, all through tho uso of this -WK-r- water, and my wifo, who for many years ri ; has boon obliged to tako modlofno for Il hi?l'lllPl'Q PVIPTiflQ hor livor, has had no occasion for any t? 1 aL mui 0 1 1 modioino since using tho Crescent Water, 1J --, , - ,..An, and now fools Uko a now person. " THE WORLD, Loading oitlecns of Grconvillo add tho ?) following: J" .,r "Tho testimony of John N. Smith, rc P D? H.Y, EIOUT PAOKS, $7 A i KAU carding tho wonderful curativo offects of A 'imv u?iviktv miltown "l0 Crescent Minorai Water will bo of \J J II r. ni) n DAV in J II ur. i, groat vi uo. for no man's word is stronger P TWKI.VK PAOKS. ?8 A YKAU. "jjgy^^R^^ ???&? " . ! j (Uv MAU. ONLY.) Judson. Presidont purnim. W:\ \l THE WETO WORM), Seej^?i?'^* Superintendent Cotton S TWKI.VK PAOKS, $1 a YKAU. " Frank Hammond, Presidont Pooplo's Tho Largest, Nowsiost, Bright- Rft"k>, vr .. n . . . est, Host and ONLY Fearless ?. C. Markloy, Carriage Manufacturer. P . Paper In Sou th Carol I :? a. V ?. ?Tor' Proprietor Stroot Railway. ? A _ John H. Maxwell, M. D. A SAMPLE COPIES FREE. is WiJewell, $??JV? p _ G. T. Swandale,' M. D. V -ADDRESS- J- w< Eftrlr, M. I). K John Forguson, Grocor. D WORLD BUDGET CO. ?. B. Allon A Bro., Grocers. Iv, J. P. Milter, Grocer. b CHARLESTON, S. C. gf M? Snidop* Co., Jowolors. ' G. 1). Barr, Stove Doalor. --. John Hart, Contractor and Builder. GREENVILLE MUSIC HOUSE! W???^??? 18 AN INSTRUMENT FOR THE PREVEN NT ION ANO OURt CF DISEASE. IT 18 NOT OW is your chanco to got a good A PATTERY, NOT DYNAMIC OR 8TATI0 pi ?co for your old Plano, Organ or Sow ELEOTRIOITY; NOR IO IT GALVANISM. lng Machine in exchange for ft now ono. TMSRK.18 NO OUHHSNT ANO N08HOOK. Wo havo lust received a now lot of ,Ta W0RK 19 ??NB ??l-?NTLY AND IN wo navo pim. locoivcu a now io* o? 8?N8?0LY, yrr MOST EFFECTIVELY. PinnOs in all tho latest fancy woods, ( nt-: EVILS RE8ULTINQ FROM THE USE Organs, Sowing Machines, Violins, Gul- OF ELEOTRIOITY IN THE TREATMENT tars, Banjos, Autohnrps, Accordians and OF DISEASES, AS HERETOFORE PRAC? Musical Instruments of \ all kinds for tho gggNP1 ?HT*?-* AVOIDED RY THIS fall trade, and will soil you cheaper than WR TAKB PLEASURE IN OIVINQ INFOR any other houso in tho State. Wo also MATION TO ALL INTERESTED. WE ASK keep all tho latest Shoot-music, Music- you TO TAKE NOTHINO ON FAITH, BUT paper Wrappers, Ac. Coll and soo us at PROV* OUR OLAIMA. WE HAVE TESTi 'Vm? i llFimVIITE MtTftTO nOIVSK MONIAL8 FROM PEOPLE YOU KNOW. Noxt door to E*,,,T ornoo. jfoUTHSBU' EUOTMMBIE Oo. Alexa?aer Bros. & Co. ?li?S?fi ? Historical Account of Sunday SCIIOOIH, Delivered at Hope?. |, 'i well Church? Cnlldreu'H Day, July, 1800. HY J. ?. SANDKUS, KHQ. 1 /ADIles ANO GlIN?I.BMKN ! MotllO d?em is historically connected with both ibo initiation sud progress of the inodora Sunday Sohool move ment. As early as 1700, thirtoon years before Mr. Raikos had organ ized his school in Glouoostor, Eng land, "a young Methodist, Hannah Ball, established a Sunday Sohool at Wycombo, and was instrumental in training many children in the knowl edge bf tho Holy Scriptures." In 1781 another Methodist woman, afterward Mrs. Bradburn, the wifo of a celebrated Wesleyan preacher, was conversing with Robt. Raikos in Gloucester on thc subject of educat ing the young, when ho pointed to tho groups of neglooted ohildron in tho street, and Baid, "What can wo do for thom?'- Sho replied, "Lot us teach them to read, and take thom to ohuroh." Mr. Raikes was pleased with tho suggestion, and tho two shortly afterward led a company of Sunday School scholars to church. Theso ohildron wore poor and noglected street waifs, and at that day such was the indifference of the Christian community in Gloucester to tho moral and roligious condition of tho lower classes, especially tho ohildron, that this boncvolont net of theso two Christian philanthropists Vas met with public derision, and t my were laughed at an impracticable fanatics. In 1784 Mr. Raikos published an account of his plan and work for tho religious training of tho neglected children of his town, which immedi ately attracted tho attention of Mr. Wesley, and ho inserted Mr. Raikos' article in the Aiimnian Magazine for January, 1785, and exhorted his people to adopt the new institution. The Methodists, with their charac teristic /eal and enterprise, instantly "began to instruct their neighbors' children, and to go with them to tho house of God on tho Lord's day." Tho same year Mr. Flotchor began his work in Sunday Schools, and continued a faithful teacher to tho day of his death. He had three hundred children under instruction, and was deoply interested in their religious training. Mr. Wesley says in 1784 : "I find Sunday Schools springing up whorovor I go; perhaps God may have a deeper end thorein than mon ure aware of; who knows br ?orno of these schools may bo nurseries for Christi ans ?" Another Methodist, Rev. Row land Hill, oi'gnnized Sunday Schools in London in 1786. In 1786 Bishop Asbury introduced Sunday Schools in America, and they have continued to ho a marked feature in American Methodism to this day. In 1787 Mr. Wesley wrote to one of his preacbors : "I am glad you have taken in hand that blessed work of setting up Sunday Sohools. It seems these will he ono great means of reviving religion through out tho nations. I wondor Satan has not yot Bent out some able cham pion against thom." Wo havo thus traced, as far as is necessary for our presont purpose, tho historical connection of Metho dism with tho institution of Sunday Sohools in England and America. Under tho impulso of its zeal Sun day Sohools_woro almost univorsnlly established in all the Wesleyan Societies, and have nineo boon car ried by thc samo activo agoncy into all tho world, so that Methodist Sun day Schools aro ns universal an Methodism. A similar interest in tho estab lishment of these nurseries of tho church provnilod among nil ovangoh cal denominations of Protestant Christendom, and in thrco years af tor Mr. Raikos published his account of tho schools at Gloucostor, moro than three hundred thousand ohil dron wore receiving instruction from thousands of teachers in different parts of Europe and America. But wo will only particularizo on tho church and Sunday Schools and thoir influence for tho last fifty years of our lifo. Tho first influence I over folt in a Methodist sorvico was when ton yoars old I attended a olass mooting; when Hopewell Church worshipped in a small log house about. In sight of thc new building. I, through some strange and fearful ouriosity, wont there. Tho mooting wns conducted hy Wm. Livoly (now Rev. Livoly, of Atlanta). Tho ft ??M ?WHM? ' ' venoratod Joseph Liles, long sinco gonn to Honvcn, ',vas th oro present at that class mooting; Although uncle Joo has boon dead twenty , years, he yet spoaketh. Ho came to < this section many years ago, (1888) and ho alorf o stood up for tho.Motho- j dist ohurch and its doctrines. Tho Methodist preachers, before tho old log house spoken of above was built, < preached in hi? hon>:os and after it 1 was built it was called Liles' Moot- j lng Houso iirthe record of 1885. j Had it ?ot been for Unolo Liles no Hopowell would havo boon hore for ? these children to havo thoir day of j instruction and walk in a religious ; lifo. But through his in Hue ncc tho . good, gentle and loving and boloved , Sister Jenkins and tho faithful and j cnorgotiaand influential Bro. Jonkins, j Thomas and Mary Jenkins carno in ] the steps of Bro. Liles, imbibing tho \ Christian chnraotor of Methodism, \ religious and right living. Although ( Bro. and Sister Jonkins both aro < gone to tho homo of the faithful, yon soo around Hopowell that samo spirit . of Christian zeal and religious inter? i est that was imbibed by those gono < to heaven before' thom, Eternity i alone will show forth tho knowledge l of the good that Brother and Sister \ Jenkins diffused in their sphere whilo t living; and now their children and ] children's children and neighbors and r thoir children rise up and call them i blessed. Bros. Liles and Jenkins { kept up Sunday-School during tho | pleasant weather at Hopewell, using tho Holy Bible, a few question" books, E now and thou a catechism and frc- { quontly tho bluo-back spelling book. ] Much good was, no doubt, dono 1 through tifoso Sunday School days. < Now in theso days, when tho opera- < tion of tho Sunday Sohool is tho 1 church "at work, yoa when tho Sun- t day Sohool is made one of tho prin- ( cipnl qnestion? at our Quarterly Con- < ferences, and when the superintend- [ outs aro appointed by Quarterly Con- l fcroncC at fourth session, to take t charge of tho schools, and when the J Sunday School libraries aro fur- t nished cheap, and thc magazines, ? quarterlies, losson papors and tho lit- ( tlc people are tho helps of our Sun- i day Schools, wo all ought to rush in t to tho work and every man, woman i and child nttond Sunday Sohool and < receive thc blessed results therefrom. ( Must Pay Ibo Printer. i [Abbeville Press and Dunner.] < "Why do we charge for publishing 1 obituary notices? Mainly for tho < protection of our readers. It is not < right to impose matter upon eight or I ton thousand readers that ia of no 1 special interest to moro than ono in 1 every two hundred. Says the St. i I .DU is Presbyterian : "When tho notico does not exceed i ten lines wc insert it without, charge. I Whon it is longer, we demand pay < for each additional lino. This wo do, t for two reasons : first, we have to i pay thc printer for putting the obitu- ; ary in typo; and second, if those who send such notices know thoy i must pay for publishing thom, obitu- \ aries will be moro carefully prepared, i and kept within bounds as to length j and laudation." i Wo tako tho above from the As sociate Reform Presbyterian, and ] copy it for tho idea which it suggests, namely : that it eosts money to set ' typo. i Tho religious newspapers are ob- j liged to restrict thc habit or disposi- i tion of people to write long obituary notices. Tho secular press, ns a rule, aro not besot in this way, but they labor un der disadvantages fully as perplexing as tho obituary fiend. Politicians or i other ambitious peoplo who may bo : seeking fame or notoriety, aro over I roady to ask or suggost tho publica tion of articles winch aro exceedingly i '".foresting or valuable to thom per- ! sonally, but in fact, thoy aro often of little or no general interest, and if tho editor suggests that somebody is I bound to pay the type-setters, the ' chanel's aro, nine times out of ] ten, that tho politician or fame- 1 socking individual, will think i thc editor is the proper person to 11 pay all bills for typo-sotting, no mat- i tor whether tho articlo is of gonoral i Interest or not. They seem to think that tho paper has to bo filled up anyhow, and that of course tho edi tor is running a kind of freo show, and needn't mind expenso. There aro many articles of a por sonal nature which are not without nomo public interest. In such oases, it Rooms that the cost of type-sot ting should bo paid by tho porson moBt interested-bo he od ?tor or contributor, Void Ional Count j Polities. Tho strong lino of demarcation that has koon drawn in many of tho i' om i tic s 1)0 tween tho ad here nt H And tho opponents t.* Captain Tillman in their oandidaoy for county offices is unwise, uncalled for and whplly without justification. No matter v/hc has boen ?nest instrumental -iii bringing about this division, it has already hoon productive of incalcu lable harm. In many counties it is Impossible for any ono who is not an adherent of. Captain Tillman to ob tain an office, no matter how insig nificant and unimportant it may be. To obtain even tho office of coroner me must have been from tho bo ginning and still bo a member of tho present dominent faction of tho Democratic party in this Stato. The .ondenoy is to plaoe more stress on .his one HO-called qualification than m real, gonuino morit and fitnetv, for >ffico. A second class man who has been t noisy supporter of Captain Ti li lian would, in many counties, bo ?looted to offico over tho best Anti vho could bo brought out against tim. This criticism will apply vith equal force to those Saw ooun ,ica where tho Straightens arc argoly in the majority. There a Tillman ito would probably bo as nsignificnnt and powerless as a Straight out in tko birthplace of Till? nnnism. There is no logie nor souse in any itieh condition of affairs in this State. Both factions claim to bo Democrats and both olaim to ho tonest, patriotio and loyal citizens >f the State. Both olaim that tho 'greatest good to tho groatest num >or" is their supremest aim. Yet, ?ko two mon and pit thom against foch othor in a primary oleotion, mc an inferior character but a mom KM- of tho faction which happons to )o tho strongest in his county, and ho othor ono of tho leading men of tis county, hut a representative of ho minority. Tho man on tho 'big side" will win nine times out >f ten, not because he is the better nan for the place, but because in hose times mon arc inclined to vote or their "side" without much re? ?ard for the merits of the individual candidatos. Boing a Tillmanite or Anti-Till nanito does not ontitlc a man to my more consideration than his in lividual personal worth can procure tor him. Yet there are scores of jnndidntcs in this State who will ho ?lectod to office on no other issue Jinn that of Tillmanism, when if that issue could IKS blotted out they would bo forever buried beneath a mountain of ballots. No one will admit that ho would support an inferior man on "his ?do" in preference to & better one >n tho "othor side." The trouble is ?ho words "good" and "bad," whon used in speaking of candida'os, aro relativo terms. We use tho adject ive "good" always to desoribo the candidatos who think, or pretend Lo think, just as wo do, whilo "bad" is used to describe all who dare to entertain opinions different from tho sues wo hold. The logitimato inference is that in politics people are all either fools or knaves, tho first, if they think all thc brains and honor and virtue aro Arrayed on their sido, and tho last, if thoy do not believe that, but vote for men simply bccauBO they belong to tho same political faction. What reason is there in carrying tins factional fight hito tko scramble for tho small county offices? Is it ilcsirod to divido the people ulti mately and forovor into two separato and distinct factions? That will surely bo the cud if tho majority porsist in disqualifying a man for offico for no other reason than that ho diffors from them as to who wotdd bo the best man for Governor. It' is just as right and sensible to say that Captain Tillman should not bc Govornor of South Carolina if ho prefers David B. Hill to Grovor ?loveland for President, ns it is to iay that Dill .Iones shall not bo coro ner in some little county away off in ano corner in South Carolina he Bauflo he prefers Colonel Karlo to Captain Tillman for Governor. The Lwo oases are vory nearly parallel [iud there is just ns much reason and sonso in ono ns in tko other. If tho specific object \?, however, Lo divide thc white people and keep Lkem divided, tkon tko continuance rd this practioo will bo wise, for undor inch treatment tho minority aro not likely to devolop tho spirit of slav ish and subservient submission. Suoh treatment is not oalonlatcd to pro mote a spirit of friendliness on' tko part of thoBo wnp receive it. In sumo counties tho minority could not bo moro oomplotoly shut out from all public Office if they be longed to tho Radical party. In a choice betweou them and the Repub licana they might ho preferred as the leant of two evils, but until it be cernee necessary to ohuuuu hui ween the two both will bo dooli ned with eqUal thanks. In many places the lines between the Till inanit?s and Straightout* aro as closely drawn as thoy wore formerly bot Arcen Dem?crata ,fin.d Republican a, or between thc white? man and tho negro. Wherever ono faction is largely in the majority it rules with hil tho despotism and ar rogance of an Eastern monarch; it rules by the law of might and not of right and heedlossly and unwisoly nooks either to crush or drivo away it? opponents rather than to concili ate and attraot thom. This has dono moro to estrange tho two fac tions than nny other factor that has entered into tho politic* of this Stato, and if continued oan soarcoly result in anything but tho absoluto and permanent division of tho Demo crats of tho Stato.-Marion Indeto. An I nee n dla ry H ar rani-ne. Piiu.ADKi.miiA, Septomber 28. Tho Stato Loaguo of Republican Clubs dosed its annual mooting to day by holding a mass mooting, at which Speaker Recd mado tho prin cipal address. Ho spoke substanti ally as follows : My Friends : I thank you for your very cordial 'grooting and it makes mo fool sorry not to bc ablo to say something worthy of it. Un til very rocently I foared that 1 would not be ablo to bo with you to night. Tho wicked havo boen very rampant for tho last few days and I did not know but what it would bc necessary to stay with them, or with out thom. [Laughter.] Rut all that is happily ovor and I fool moro responsivo to your gre eli uga to-night than I would have this morning. [Laughter.] Rut tho Republican party was born fighting. Its very best history was mado on tho battle field-civic as well as military. It is tho very essence of its existence that it should do battlo, for the Re publican party moans the forward movement of tho people of tho United StatCB. [Applause.] It hos never boen necessary for tho Demo crats to do anything. [Laughter.] Wo have just como from a socno which reminded men who wore in Washington in tho eariy days o? the Republican party of scones which took placo there at the beginning of tho war. On tho Democratic side of the House during the past week wo have be&u treated to empty benches. The Democrats have not boon visi ble. [Laughter.] I want you to understand thc oc casion which thoy thought demanded this magnificent uprising. Tho Re publican party, BO far as tho Houso of RoproBontatives is conccrnod, has dono what wc regard as groat doods. Tho Democrats have pro claimed thom vory wicked, deeds. Wo have passed a tariff bill which secures tho American market to the American people. [Applause.] That bill has been thc subject of denuncia tion on tho part of tho Democrats almost too bitter to bo put on record. According to thorn, tho bill and the principio it roproBonts has carried desolation into evory farm-house in tho country. It has covered farms in the West throe deep with mort gages, and yot Domooratio members, while that bill was being passed, sat at their seats and wero countctL Wo passed another bill. This was a hill which they said was to ruin tho principles of liborty. They said it meant ruin to the pcacoablo nrtd to tho lovely South. [Laughter.] It meant minto their homes. It moant despotism, and yet thoy sat thoro as sweot as summer. No hegira, no de parture, or to use a word moro fa milliar to thom, no secession. [Croat laughter.] Rut when it came to seating a ne gro, simply because he had boon elected, tho Democratic sido of tho House arose as ono man aha da parted. [Laughter.] Rut thoy havo como haok. [Rcnewod laughtor.] Resembling tho prodigal .urn, how ever, only in exloriml appearance, [Laughter.] My friends, it is r.uoh a int ie inci dent as this which provonts Demo crats from pointing with pride to tho history of their party. Jt is that which makes thom desolate in onvy, vooiforous in expression, of feeling KEOWEE COURIER, [WKKltnY,] -KBTAlVMSUtfu Al'--< Old Pickens in 1840? -r-MOVKD. TO-- ' y Walhalla in 1868. Dostroyeci l>y Firer Jui# 2lfct,1887. Re-Established August ii ^ ?es?. when wo speak of tho history of tho United States for tho past twenty five years. For whouovor wo do it, they havo the conciousness that wo oro pointing with pride to tho record of tho Hop ubi ioaii party. [Applause and laughton] But, friends. Mic great thing in this world is the pooplo. They make and. unmake parties, they create his tory, they govern and move, and tho people of tho United Skates aro alono responsible for this govern ment, and it ?B their business to know and aot up to their responsibility. This fall, very Boon,' there will bo van expression of opinion by tho peo ple, not a . fuji, froe and frank expression, beoauso in v thirty Con gressional Diatriots of this Uni?n ~~ tho opinion? ?u* ibo poopio will bo suppressed. It is necessary for you to bo on tho Lord's side moro heavily on that account. [Laughter,J Wo havo not only got to beat consor^^ vatism in its worst form, but wo havo got to boat fraud besides. Now, when tho column forms, ia Pennsylvania going to bo distanced because of absenteeism? Is that great State going to bo found any where except in tho first rank? Not1 if you moan progress, not if you ; pica;; to Wt'o the United States by a Congress, present and acting. Your duty becomes all tho moro tremen dous when you consider what will follow laok of onorgy on your part. Wo look to you and hitherto havo not lookod in vain. Republicanism is good enough for ovory* d,ay in tho year, and ovory year on tho oalendar. Do you want an honest legislator f ' Do you want a Houso which intends to transact business ? It lies in your power. This nation has grown to ono of sixty-fivo million people. [Applause.] Do you boliovo that overy man in tho country who is entitled to par ticipate in this govornment shall cast his voto and have that Voto counted as.caBt? Can you do it? If you do, it is your business to BOO that such a I louse is, chosen as will sustain and baok up tho prosont House ; of Representatives. [Ap plause.] It is very discouraging in this world to seo how small tho percent age of actual results como from tho most splendid Viotorica. Home great general has said that there is only ono tiling worso than viotory and that is defeat. Wo fought a groat struggle for liborty of manhood. W o culminated it by a constitutional an lend incut putting in the law of tbo-" country the doctrine that every one should bo entitled to participate in thc government, and yet thoro hna boon to-day in Mississippi a conven tion where ovory orator proclaims his determination, and tho dotorrni nation of ovory whito man belong ing to his party, to invent somo method to disfranchise tho negro, to destroy the franohise of a largo por tion of tho voting population of this country who aro entitled to vote. Thu is a spectacle for you. [Ap plause.] Theao gentlemen openly declare that they intend to disfran chise thc voters of this country. Thoro has novor boon any denial of their purpose, and thia Mississippi Convention is proof. Do you mean, my friends, to allow tho Southern white man, beoauso ho votes in tho South to count, moro than you do in tho government of this country? Do you mean that ho shall havo increased representation in this gov ernment, so that ho shall carry more weight that*, you? [Applause.] Now it remains for mo hut to re peat tho Exhortation of the previous speakers h<s"e to-night. Everything depends upon you doing your duty. Tho only condition on which self government is possible is constant attention to solf-govomment by tho people of this country. I know yon moan to do your duty, and that when we got now mon from Pennsylvania you will show to the country that you havo dono it. -1--? No better text for thoso trying days of mid-summer than tho Psalm ist's word : "Frot not thyself." It mt?y bo quito impossiblo to koop cool physically, bul he will como noarest to doing so who is freo from frot. Tho hoot is twice as oppressive, tho humidity twico as humid, to them who arc in a potpotual fumo beoauso it is so hot or so muggy- Th ?it ic*"' ish horse in your team which pran whon tho trace hits him, chomps tho bit ho would gVidly eject, shies ?a nervous fear at ovory roadside stone, is soo? whito with '"foam,, whilo hits staid and sensible moto who has learned botter than to fret in -harnea? arrives at tho l?urnoy's omi ns cool and fresh as when he started,