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fAN OLD TIME nHOE DOWN" I A. Country Party In Canada In tlio Days of Long Ago. Did you ever get a "bill" to a danco in the country? I wean a real, home made, fifth concessions, log house, quarter of a - - century back country party. A spree, a 1 Jioo down, a neighborhood shaker of tho ' simple, ready, rough, pioneer days. Did, eh? Then you will remember that on tho I morning of tho day fixed for the party | tho board partition that ran across tho middle of tho house was pulled down, and tho beds wero piled in ono corner, and tho bunk was 6lioved up to tho end of tho house bosido tho stove, and tho stout legged kitchen table was placed against * the wall at theotherendof the room, and n stout logged chair planted on tho table, and to that chair tho fiddler was elevated, and tliero ho rolled his gray old head from side to side, and whiskod lightning from his elbow and fingered in ecstatic irenzy and beat timo with his cowhido boota, and tho throb of his eager musio touched tho very inner keys of life and stirred the young blood and softened tho hardening muscles and loosed tho settled Joints of ago until tho stovo shook and tho dishes rattleu on tho shelves and tho beat of tho feet on tho dancing iloor was liko tho crashing of a score of mallets, deadened as by jpho sweep of a mighty brstftn "bovwetr/. 1 How they danced 1 IIow tho follow i who had a fow steps shono and capered and pounded tho iloor with his cowhides 1 1 And how they swung! Round and round, < and round and round, until tho perspiration rolled down tho faco and the breath 1 gasped for a renewal of the lease. Tamed > and degenerate days. They swing no x more. And they dance no more. Tho r mighty clatter of tho old Scotch reel i where old people unlimbered and 6hook ii off tho steps of youth, and tho young ii ]>eople gasped to keep pace with tho 6 elders; and the opera reel?they called n it tho upper reel?which tho old folks tl nkn inrniln/1 *1 lV (uiu tiii.ii me cutung out si jig, where tho youths one after the ^ other did their finest steps, and tho girls h did the same, and you often got on the si track of a liking or an incipient company keeping by noting tho time and ^ circumstances under which some particular girl selected to take the floor, and tc who thus become tho partner of her choice, and tho same with tho malo end m of the performance, where the cut out a was much rnoro likely to have a significance. lx Do you remember that as a boy you ar felt if you could grow up to call off in dances, or perhaps call off and play the fiddle at tho samo time, as you once knew a man do, and whoso image lived tit in your memory for weeks, that clerking an in a store or oven teaching school would tli bo nowhere; or perhaps you know a clerk gr; who kept store and could call off also, and you ached to grow up and bo as Gi great a man as ho? It is hardly likely you knew a malo teacher who could thi danco much. Somehow tho worry in hit the teacher's head over arithmetical slu problems and the confusion of dates and wi the eccentricities of parsing seemed to at get into tho teacher's feet when ho got ' on the floor, or, as a nativo used to put CO* it in a placo where I once lived, his left . foot was Methodist and mixed him y ' and disgraced him every time hhp aged to get for a partner a strati, J ^ manV hadn't been told how badly ho-' ',? ger who ' ?;nf?vuar now, wlm "danced. IllUl uiu uesu in ioji.I1 wr ,, . , ore woodehoppA 1n<lVr!11 ' *. ??^rs and farmci-s and a ~mA^tfnTo tlio Lost among tho i were Iho daughters of hotel keepers villages merchants, and very often tho -jo teacher was a mighty spry littlo mz on her feet, for tlie reason that eho ^^^^Halmost always 6uch a great favorite HgViiio dancers of tlio other persuasion it she couldn't avoid holding tho lloor, ! .d was a dancer In spito of herself. I no dances were usually kept up until 4 ^ r^scn 5 o'clock in tho morning, and m then closed with a stupendous , Mkfast, followed by an effort to get a / T Section for tho fiddler. And theso ; v I /oneer fiddlers were shockingly underI /-iPri't?? Very often they wero not paid at i If /all. They had the gratitude and iho npl preciation of the time in which they lived, i 1 Put no more. They fiddled through two I generations, hut tho second did for them I littlo better than tho lirst, and they passed I down to tho gravo miserably poor.? Toronto GIoIkj. Tho liieli llfgRars of Thrace. Perhaps the most curious of all guilds | in an Oriental town and one which nourishes exceedingly in Cnvalla is the hog- ' gars' guild. Like other guilds, they have their own laws, their president and their council; this council gives a diploma to those who wish to beg, and without per mission no one durst book alms at the *" cllurches, mosques or street doors; all the legitimate beggars would riso up in arms : against him and Ids life would not be worth much. Friday is tho recognized beggars' day, on which day they go round from door to door and get their 1 wallets tilled with bread and "beans; these are divided by tho community; nothing \ is private property; it is against their | 1 creed. Tito beggars'brotherhood is rich; they 1 possess house property, tho income of which is spent for the benefit of the com- j niunity, and once a year?on tho day of fit. John tho Charitable?they have a feast. They all go to church on this day. It would be difficult to recognize tho tiuily uressed members of this honorable conununit}'in their best clothes; ' rags and tatters are only de riguour for ( them when they are on their rounds. 1 Beggary pays very well. If a beggar's daughter marries she is dowered by the community, tho president sees to tho be- ; trothal, and liis consent is essential. At 1 f'. ioniea Blind Demetrius is tho president; he is easily recognized as lie pari.ties tho streets, singing liis everlasting wail: P; v nr.d night, day and Might, I Jivo in tho dark. \> .\ !cli that I ami I hoar tlio word, hut 1 cuunot I roo it. i /.ti l though you know him to be a si. ', man, that liis wife is well dressed, a... ! that his daughter will receive a ha .homo dower, liis plea for alms is j iii'..iOot irresistible.?Cornlull Magazine. < - < Not :i < lii!?l lit All. j ' was a v.co bit of a girl, wiUi ? ? earnest pair of eves, ami? a very ? t !.:e\ kitten. Questioned as to the name ' i f ! pet, sho answered simply: "Woso- 1 1 ' " Asked further if she was not "a I li'tle child," sho drew herself up i : display of smell hauteur that was * enchanting, and said, severely: eot a child at nil. IVo a person, a 1 i. . ; ' i >n."?TilUhiirg liullelin. i eh .iulia Uayless, of Charleston, lad., j 1 * a wooden wine tray that waa tit" > red hy llarman Illonnerhassett, \ < connected with tho Aaron Durr J ? .. y at the beginning of thoceni .y. i iie light colored wo-.h! is stained v. iih \.v o that was spilled, ns Mrs. Hay1 .les, tim ing the secret c nelavt.s ' of ;i conspirators.?New Ycrk Evening , World. ! WOUNDED UNTO DEATH. Ail Incident at tlio llnttle of Fair Oaks. "Horrible AVar." A battlo is not always a whirl of con- J fusion and uproar,with mon firing at will | or at random At Fair Oaks when wo ; swept down in the gray of morning on Casey'8 division wo found two-thirds of j it unprepared for our reception. I was a sergeant In my company, and as we began firing I noticed a federal sergeant of my own rank displaying tlio utmost energy in rallying the men around him j to check lis. iSoino of our men noticed i liim as well and two or three called out j that ho looked near enough liko me to be a brother. By bis own individual efforts j ho rallied enough men to check us temporarily, but after a few minutes wo j ( drove them again and were in the Federal , camps. Then our lines 1 woke and each man \ fought for himself. I had singled out tlio sergeant and fired twice at him, and it was j a fact that he had also singled mo out ] and fired at me alone. Wo kept advancing slowly, and by and by, as wo < crowded them from their shelters, I got t a fair view of the sergeant. For a mo- < ment I forgot that there was any one t elso in alt that battle. I had raised my j gun when lie wheeled and raised his, and - ^ u-? iw^?i. ? .1? T Him luc.t uiLT. i wont down f like a log, liaving received his bullet in <j the right should :r, and for two hours I liugged the earth beside a log to escape ]; aeing hit again by the missiles of friend v Dr foe. 0 When the fury of battle had passed on v [ was lame and stiff, and as the location j< yas strango to me, and I did not know tl vliether wo were still advancing or in t, ctroat, 1 could not make my way off the ? ield. I could not tell front from rear, tor was there ono chance in ten of find- rj ng a field hospital. After pulling my- n elf up, and holding to a tree for a few jr linutes, I felt better and advanced to XJ lie spot where I had last seen the Federal ,r ergeant. I found him lying on his back. ly bullet had struck him in tho sido and jr o was fatally hit. As I knelt down bo- 0i de him ho recognized me and said: "You havo given mc my death 6t ouiul." 0[ "But you sought to kill me," I pro- c? ;sted, in extenuation. In .H.O, x mtii at you. tsouio of tlio ien said you looked like lue, and I felt jk desire to kill you." to "Ix't us be friends," I said, ns I knelt jji tsido him. "I can use 0110 hand and i,( 111, and perhaps I can stop the bleed- ci, G-" . lif "It 13 too late!" ho whispered. ni) So it was. He had lost a great' quan- co y of blood, and it was still pouring out pj| d sinking awav into the .black soil of },c e forest. As lov hand touched his ho m< asped it and said: . i "\\ e were enemies. L.otus be friejoods? vo 1110 water." .uas. I held my canteen to his lips " Co Irst was satisfied, and the p- ss-v 1,1,111 j113 n and held his ham1, e \n 'f3, 0 ulow of death c, i- " and watcl'?i1 V10 tli his eyes e' i',cudiiiing nearer, lie lay last whi< - 'he ioseil for a long time, and "fell, we s1-i?oro*.l: ? " ,Mary and t'.io children I am ming!" *' My heart smote me ns I thought of the wife and children who would never sec him again?of tlic black pall of sorrow which would settle down over a liappy household. "And tell father and mother!" ho gaspcttr "Have them u'.l at..; o. live ohl iioine to meet me." And there was a father?and a mother ?and brothers and sisters! And my bullet would bring tears and sobs and wails and mourning. And the sunshine of life would go out of many hearts for riii.ntlii niul voirj?r. prayed him over and o\ r i t forgive mo, ! and as death canto nearer I dared not ! look away from lad pale faro for foar j ( that I should meet tlu? accusing glances of widow and orphans through the drift- ! ing smoke of hat lie. As death finally 1 came lie clutched my hand with firmer grip, looked into my eyes with a last j effort and faintly whispered: ' It is war, horriblo war! Lot lis lie friends! God bless Mary and tlio cliil- ; dren!"? "Ex-Rebel" in Detroit Frco Press. I T!?o Value of Vaccination. Zurich, according to Tlio Lancet, is be- i : ginning to sutler from tho effects of 1 neglect of vaccination. Until 1S83 a i compulsory vaccination law was in force, 1 , but in that year it was repealed; tlio succcrsof tho anti-vaccii.ationists depending, it is said, upon the fact that not a single j case of smallpox occurred in 1883. lint in 1883, in every l,OfiO deaths, two were caused Ijv smallpox; in lf'-l there woro three in every 1,000; in 18^">, seventeen, ! and in the first quarter of 18S<> there J woro cighty-fivo deaths. , While Europe is exhibiting folly by showing in some localities opposition to j vaccination, Japan is deriving benefits from the recognition of its value. Nagasaki possesses a governor, named Kusnkn, . who is bout upon ridding the town of the < diseases which formerly infested it. By j means of a system of compulsory vaccination, rigorously enforced by the governor, smallpox, long a familiar scourgo in tho old town, has been practically , itntniml mil f.nrin-mv i.n tho effects < r r< v accinat n, and hitherto Lhofreedoin *>f German towns from small- . pox has contrasted it) a marked degreo -i with a larger prev ah nco <.f this disease -i in ofl>"r European tow ;v.! to lvvaeeinition inot enl'ore d. l'rohahly 11 jo out- ^ jomo of the experit nee of t!te present generation will ho tho entir-uncut of . revaccination in lho majority <>f civilized , countries.- t : siciu . j ( /m Old us (ha Exo&no. . j\ most interesting experiment culmi- f -.' h-.1 tho other day in theraisingof some { wheat grown from seeds as old as tho ( Exodus. 'J'lio experimenter is David t Drew, who last year received from a i friend in Alexandria, Egypt, some grains u i wheat taken from a mummy exhumed i. t! ?! ruins of Memphis, and belong- ] i. ii i; helieved, to the period of tho \ N .I'i Dynasty, which would mako it t :;rowu a Unit 13,000 D. C., or bo nearly ( ) years old. lie planted tho 6eod j arly in the spring, and carefully nursed t it. It grow rapidly, and at tho timo of { lining measured from six and a half to l even feet high. Tho loaves alternato on t ho stalk liko common wheat, but tlio t ?r? ha t of tho plant is tho most singular art of it, for, instead of growing hi tho ;.r like modern corn, tiicro is a heavy lie tor of small twigs in placo of tho .pindlc which hangs downward from its ( ,vi i; lit, and each twig is thickly studded j iv it U kernels, each of which is In a ncpa- .j ale husk. From w.K.t is threshed a ( arger crop will be grown next year, as ( he result proves this gfoiuid to exceed a (|iiality anything that tho luoderu train can grow.?Plymouth (Mass.) Cor. Jinciuuati Euijuircr. Dird fancieis say that tho voices of Viuet iean hred rauui ios b .como liaislier a each generation. German birds must jo constantly, imported tik.orefifiiyo-u i i THE ETHICS OF SUICIDE. | (1 Mysterious Inconsistency?Tli? Kingdom?Moral Cowardice. I A very mysterious inconsistency to human naluro lies in the contrast! between lifo which makes self preservwttoo its first love, nnd that utter contemjpAHH intolernnco of it which induces sert^~*4B struct ion. By all human laws, the man* who takes another's lifo in defending his own is held guiltless of murder; his deed is accounted justifiable in recognition of tho self saving instinct with which tho croator has accompanied tho gift of lifo ! to all his creatures. With the earliest consciousness of young animals this in- i ntinct appears in timidity and shrinking from danger, real or imaginary; and down to tho lowest order of beings, a wounded thing will exert its last strength to escapo having its existencmfalottcd out. As for tho human species, havo it on Scripturo authority that "all that a man bath will ho give for hi3 lifo." In view of this, who that is unaware <1? r.?J- - ? iiiu iucis wouici expect to so conitantly hear of men aud womeu, aud 5ven children, finding life unbearable md ending all? What a surprising vioation of this innato principlo it seems, vhen for this or that cause, and often or 110 causo that is ovident, somo chooso leath rather than life! Suicide is not entirely confined to the lunian species. There are numerous roll authenticated instances of different? 1 nimals deliberately killing themselves rhen circumstances rondored lifo no 1 inger desirable, A recent traveler in 1 lie tropics tells of coming at various j lines upon the skeleton of a species of ' oisonous serpent within a circlo of * ;aves of the prickly cactus, and later tho iddlo was solved by liis seeing somo 1 lonkcys engaged in surrounding a Bleep- I lg reptile with tho spinous vegetation. J Ipon awaking and finding itself im- '' risoned and all its nttempts to escape T itile, the serpent presently took refugo 1 stinging its own body und dying at ice. It is commonly reported that tho * tme thing happens when a poisonous v take is hemmed in by lire, in a spasm 0 ! desperation at finding 110 chance of es- * ipe, it turns its means of self dofpnon to means of self destruction. 4 ^ Tlio animal kingdom is a law unto ;elf. Not so with man. Ho is subject 111 the higher law of dut}' and nccounta- ^ lily , r.ad no environment can bo called Ir ipoless to one who believes in Ti gra- T' ana overruling power and tlio better ** o to come. A portion of tlio ulai'^^Qfiig imbei of current suicid.i^^t "rt^mist bo nfesscd, nwnl^lr.jriw*t5iily tho sincerest .y 111 oioiv _ iihscoptible and benevolent nr^ ll!Y .u probably there aro very many -Srses of this kind, wero tho secret causes that havo actuated tho victims brought to light. Yet wherever human law is founded on tho divino law, self destruction must necessarily bo regarded as a criuio. A man's buildings aro not bis own in the sense that lie can set them on lire and burn them down with impunity; much less is his life?a possession which cannot ho restored?so exclusively personal that lio has tho right ?.o end it by violcnco in an hour of discouragement or disgust. Tho yearly list of suicides in some of tho countries of Europo is appalling to contemplate. Tho waters of tho Seino give up their dead daily, and drowning is but one among tho common methods ?c.r .jbuflrime: r.r? t1u? mortal coil. Passion, impetuosity and, above all, inndelily, aro prominent factors in recruiting tho army of suicides. Statistics of ull nations show that occasionally there occurs what lias been called an epidemic of suicidewhether this is an illustrati ftcc of example, or tho resun. general impelling force, such r temperature during tbo , exhausting heat of summer, remains an | nncntlln.! ii- - * I uugt,?uu IjUCSUUIl! J.lUlb IIIO U1UUU1 OI I July has long been noted for tho largo number of its suicides favors tho latter conclusion. Of direct causes among ; young people, affairs of tho heart, lovo matters that have taken an unfortunato j turn, must be reckoned tho leading ono. Very often, 'too, tho circumstances attending tiieso cases aro unspeakably pathetic. Next couio losses or monoy and business, friends and health. Of criminals who liavo rccourso to dagger, bullet or rope to evado just penalty, it is unnecessary to speak. Thero is a moral cowardico in tleeing from the battlo of life, which strikingly contrasts with tho patient, heroic endurauce of multitudes of men and women in every land and in all sorts of hard j conditions. To tlio tempted it might j serve as a tonic to read history on this | point, or better, to recall events. Think, i for example, of tho crow of tho Jeannette in their frozen fastnesses, and of Capt. DeLong and his men in tho Lena ; Delta, dying of blow starvation, yet j I vavo to the last. But what need to go | beyond tho streets of a city, with Its views of pinched tuid haggard faces and toiling decrepitude, for heroes and heroines that shall ho forever nameless^? Lavinia fc>. Goodwin in Boston Globe. Tlio Pctrolcnm I'roUiicm;; Strata. Oil producing strata do not always boong to tho same geological period. In lYumucKy and Tennessee tiio petroleum s furnished by tho lower silurinn; that s, by tho most ancient si rati lied rocks, [n Upper Canada it i.? found in tlio lower Devonian, and in Pennsylvania in tho ;ppev Devonian. rpringaof western Virginia llow from tlio upper curbonifer>us strata. In Connecticut and North Carolina coal oil is found in the trias, in Colorado and Utah in tho lignites of tho sretneeous formation, while tho oil prolucing regions of California belong to lie tertiary period, ll is a remarkable act that most of tho deposits of tho mciont world exist in comparatively relent tertiary formations, as for instance hose of tho oil impregnated sands of Vlsace, of tlio south of France, and of \bruzzia and UmiUn in Italy. Thcro i no muuerous deposits in Calicin and tho Danubinn provinces similarly placed, vhilo tho strata that contain tlioso of lio Crimea, the Caucasus and tho island if Tainan aro of nearly tho tamo geologcal epoch. It is a fact to ho noted that 110 oils coming from tho greatest depth no of tho host quality, thoso produced Tom nearer tho surfaco of tho earth looming to havo lost somo of their vola- 1 ilo elements.?San Francisco Chronicle. ' a i A Nut for Vegetarians. K? Here is a lint for vegetarians to crack. x Indian runner lives almost entirely ^ >n dried meat and ho can stand iuoro r aliguo than any other man in tho world. . I'ho Dluckfoot runners do 800 miles over J lie roughest country in four days and in j ho r:.co tho liorso st.fiuls no chanco igainfll them.?Detroit Free I'ress. A t'liriotis ("nliiciileiicv. | | Ioiul Mother? JIv dear, aro you feel- t ng any hotter? , Dully- I ilimiii ; j'tn the jeli all gono? : Foiul Mother Yes, my dear. j Fai.1v- Well, 1 g.ji'ss 1 am well enough j i ogel up now.?Frcloriul West, f i Uttto D* VTMhsn of Dysp?p?la Many havaBlsooursctfiearnedly upon dreams, prc^Hteding vJfo theories and making piefl^S suggq/ions, yet no one n>al_ solution of from our noisy, busy worla to JtHj vague and va*t territory where, Hollow ns a breathing spell, Dreamland lie* f^ iorn of light? but no man may set iu, milestones along that trackless wasto. only know tiiat, when all things lapse to "u sleep and a forgetting" tho imagination becomes a fly-by-night, and tip,, wits speed over laud and sea like wilol birds set free from the cage. | There are fc?v crcjntures exempt from theso nocturnal jciurneyings, however brief and circumsci-ibed they muy be. Tho dog* "hunts ifa dreams," the cat fights its battles ovar again, and the bird 6ings in its sleep", ivhilo even tho most commonplace persim can usually give some crude account; of his experiences in slumber. Certain J dreams aro common to all people? fallfhg from a precipice, down, down, to s|)mo unfathomed gulf ?striving to walk I upon a floor that sinks horribly beneath tliio feet?endeavoring, in urgent haste, tc/l put on garments that drop off,* turn W1"lr>ng side out, and develop othy impiLjh propensities?riding in a coacfr wbiclfti suddenly crumbles to pieces, and lcav&g ouo staring in tho road. So to 6pcn??l?t it is a marked pecuiarity of dreams irthat "the bottom drops Jut of orerythindv" So rebellious aj i-e dreams, and so erratic n their course, \ vi,at they cannot be cotn>elled by any cP ffort of will; wild fire tould be moro t' asilv cliained. Wo may ong ardently t(^i see*onco moro, in "the vilderness of 6Heep," sorno beloved and 'anished face; jJy-et this poor solace may 0 denied, whiljT-) alien images crowd into ho brain. UiTpon this subject Iiazlltt rroto, "I neva f.rdreatn of tho face of any ne I am partic ularly attached to. I have nought almo6 j& to agony of tho samo per>n for years, 1 pearly without ceasing, so 3 to liavo herf Jfaco always before me, and ) bo hauntedpT by a i>erpetual consciousess of disapJAointed passion, yet I never , 1 all that tiSfmo dreamt of that person tore than "Loico or twico, and-t-luw. not vor can tb? last impression ^Fciveoby tho ^nmd beforo slumber Overwhelms it bo calculated upon; for wo may read of Mother Blood's execution, and dream, immediately nlterward, of a cabbage garder ; or, transversely, we may lift omrilnH hv tlia onntl.inrr .,1 ? ?- v.vr>?.v>? -'J ??.V <uvgv J 'itIV.1V4 meditations, yet the weird magician, who bears the branch of poppies, will beokonms to follow through seas of gore. Experiment has proved that dreams may do influenced, if not controlled, through the inlets of the senses; the thunder of drays upon tho cobblestones suggests a tempest to the dreamer, and tho fumes of sulphur or tho pleasant odors of aromatic water near his nostrils transport him to strago countries. For this reason the noises of awakening lifo give color and movement to tho visions that ' hang upon the edgo of day," rendering them moro real and vivid than those which come at dead of night. It is one of tho peculiarities of dreams to seem to be tending toward somo stupenduous climax, and then to turn away 1 with nt*.-- a., i.iiwni.n Tim dreamer remains imperturbable in tho faco of tho most astounding transformations; if animals, and even inanimate objects, become gifted with speech, ho is not surprised; yet lie is likely to startled and torrilled by tho most trifling things. If ho dreams of being pursued, it is not by a lion or tiger, but, perhaps, let us say, by an indistinct yellow blui*, hovering near the ground like a will-o'-tlio-wisp?unspeakably sinister to his fancy?darting from thickets, and gliding in and out among flirt trr>r><; It is somewhat disenchanting to realize I that dyspepsia is one of the prime factors in dream making. It matters little whether the conscience l>o clear, if the digfetion be not in equally good case. Most people have experienced the excitation, tho supcrsensitiveness of every faculty, brought about by a febrile condition of the blood?tho lightness of head and limb, extending, as one fancies, even to the loss of gravity?the strange, unfamiliar aspect assumed by well known oyects about tho room; for fever, like nlcifgestion, is a fertile breeder of phantasms. ?New Orleans Times-Democrat. llow to fitxvo Clippings. After trying many ways of preserving 6craps and clippings of transient value, which are wanted for reference in writing any article. 1 have adopted this plan: Instead of putting them away in envelopes or lx)xes, where it would bo hard to lind them, I simply put them in order, with a letter clip at the top to hold theni together. I can immediately refer to any one of them, and when I have finished with them I throw tho worthless ones in the scrap basket and paste the others in nty book.?"C. E. E." in The Writer. Tlio Turis exhibition Train. An endless railway train, consisting of 100 platform cars, is to bo one of tho attractions at tho Paris exhibition. The lino will be sunk so that the platforms will l*e on a level with the surface, and tho UaihA.l'.i run slowly enough U> |<eimit most peoplo to step on and olf whilo it i3 in motion; but for the accommodation of elderly peoplo a stop of fifteen seconds every minute will be made. The motive power will bo electrieitv.?New York Sun. Blue Lines Ua?l for tho Kjres. For som j titno past the school ntlioritics liavo recognized tho injurious effect on tho vision of the use of writing paper ruled with blue lines. The grand ducal school committeo at Mayence is the lirst in Germany that has taken positive steps in banishing this paper from the public schools. From and after the 1st of January no ruled paper is tol>e allowed with lines other than black.?Paris American Tiio Croaker and tho Elcktr. Tho kicker is a developer; tho croaker .i nn incubus. Tho kicker incites to improvement; tho croaker to indigna*1 .1 j uul resentment. The kicker only is heard given-ono dollar uccomuiodaIots at threo dollar rates; the croaker ; vould bo just as noisy if I10 was getting . hreo dollar accommodations and paying J lothing. Tho kicker is a lively, jovial, j irdgressivo fellow; tho croaker is a dis- ! pal nuisance, who lags superfluous on \ hf stage.?Augusta Ga.) Chronicle. , A boy naturally wants to do every- J hlog, and nothing very long. NonrM- , er how enjoyable a now jnh may ?? it , ;oon grows old with a boy. If>- i :i nut- , xrcl experimenter?ncce>. arily .m l ? . ( ilways wantin ; to do 1 ii. j : 1!.ir - | 10can't do.?Hamlin Ga;!au l i i Asnci- j con Magazine. , r * HOW TO LIVE LONG. | Facts That Coi:tcnariaus Kapply ?Fating , j Too Much. I Dles-md are tit? poverty Btrickon, if } longevity bo a blessing. Tlio majority r of the eighty-four centenarians who were alive in Franco at tho taking of the last census wero extremely poor. There were i twenty-ouo of them living on alms ns ; beggars or in almshouses. Tho open air ! life of a shepherd must bo also conducive to long life. A beggar named Rives, ?t Tarbes, wns born in 1770, and a woman who herded goats in the Ceven- i nes mountains had exceeded 118 years. Widows survive into a great old age: ] their husbands more often than widow- i ers pay such a bad compliment to their j wives. Tiio proportion of the centenarian widows as compared to tho same class of J widowers was as 41 to 23 in 1884. Is this because tho ungentle Bex are tho ' moro deeply sentimental, or tho gentle ' one^ eat less and havo better regulated J tempers? You know?or perhaps you don't i know?that nothing hastens 6enility like habitual guzzling. Would it not bo well * to hang up the above statistics in tho ] dining rooms of city companies and at ] the Mansion house? Your elderly guzzler on tho shaily side of middlo life is, ] I linilolt Iwi 11 trno in mniiv i'nciuv>ta ilnml His brain is starved by the clogging of i tho hair like arteries which used to feed 1 it. Tho sediment that chokes them comes of too nutritive food and *oo much of it. His bones aro denso and weighty, his muscles rigid, his knuckles chalky, and his lungs and throat ready to catch j cold. Turkish baths keep oil, in a de- ! grce, tlieso effects, but the best plan is not 1 to bo gourmand. '' Those centenarian beggars, I dare say, had not the means of eating heavily, and few in the south of France, to which ' they belong, drink deep. Meat, too, is j there dear and trying to bad teeth, and fruit is plentiful, cheap and good. This last won't make bone and muscle in a child?a reason why it docs not clog 1 capillary arteries. 13ut in tho south it i has a deal of force in it derived straight from tho sun, which is convertible into ' vivacity. Eggs aro also plentiful, liens laying in tho south four more months hi tho year than in the north. Tho egg is ideal food for any ono who wants u lot of nutriment in a 6mall volume. I/should pity tho French mendicant who* could at villago inns an onie\?uo or an oeuf sur le plat. It is a fact worth noting that most of tho families who were raised to high positions and profusely gilded by the First Napoleon are extinct, and that those still existing are represented chiefly by women. The First Empire and its wars did not play havoc with the dukes and princes who sprang up around its head. Tho harm was done by the second empire, whoso ideal was fairo bombance. Tho higher class Bonapartists ate, drank, and were nearly all guzzlers, and man- 1 aged to soak any amount of fine wines at their lunches and dinners. Tho 1 fashion in their time came in of having as j many wino glasses at each plate as there are lines in a great stack of chimneys. When appetito palled, llio sorbet russo was brought in to act on tlio unfortunato ' stomach as a tonic and enable it to go through as much moro as it had gone J through already. Ono of tho reasons ' why tho lato Marshal Bazaino could not get quickly out of Metz to bar the way against tho Prussians was that tho emperor started beforo him, and so the road 1 was diockcu witntne servicwtioic. wioiio 1 and tho wagons carrying tho belongings 1 of his imperial majesty, which were ' truly impedimenta. 1 When tho Israelites woro under a the- 1 ocracy, and tho chief priest's sons ato as ' do city of London aldermen, the Philis- I tines routed them. Likewise Marshal do 1 Soubiso was immortalized hy his sauco J for mutton chops and disgraced by his defeats. Tho old French monarchy was dotio for when Louis XVT, whether trying to fly from France or a prisoner of ! tho assembly in ono of its most stormy sittings, could not do without a heavy meal at llio usual hour. I never saw 1 anything so prodigious as the scrvico do la louche at tho Tuileries and Fontaine- ' bleau. The kitchens (hero were vast fac- j torie$, and wero situated at a great distanco from tho court dining and banqueting rooms out of respect for imperial nostrils. By tho time, therefore, tho dishes got to table they wero spoiled.? Paris Cor. London Truth. About Undo Sam's Musicians. . On a sign board in front of the regular 1 army recruiting station in Park row 1 every day in tho year can bo seen tho words, "Musicians wanted." Clarinets, lifers and snare drummers are always in demand, because skilled musicians can t find more lucrative employment outside ^ of tho army and consequently they do i | not enlist. Tho pay ot an army musician ' is $20 per month, and no distinction is | made between a pounder of tho bass ^ drum and a skillful clarinetist/ Another deterring influence is that the army musicians nro not allowed to play outside of camp or barracks and thus earn an extra honest dollar. Cornet players r nro as plentiful as sparrows in tho park and applications nro received every day for positions. Tho clarinet player's t place in (lie band is the hardest to Jill.? * Now York Evening Sun. T) 10 lCcil Clover Crop. Tho failure of several crops cf red ~ ciovcr in new /A-aiainl was explained by ' the absence of llio fructifying insects ; which uro requisite and necessary to tho | perfection of certain plants. A hundred wild bees were imported from England and set free, and in that district the I clovoi has begun to ilourish.?New York Sun. While searching through his father's effects Ticket Agent Moffelt, of Knoxville, Tenu., found a gourd over 100 ; years old. It contained many old papers, j among them a note from Davy Crockett, payable to William Moffctt, for one shilling and tbrco ponce for a barrel of whisky end a k<?g of cider.?Now York Evening World. No Scarcity of Salt. It is said on tho be?t authority that 50,000,000 bushels of salt uro consume! in this country. Tho average A merle:, i ajeta away with fifty pounds of salt every y ear. The quantity taken at a time is <> anall that a person hardly notices it, but i year's consumption of salt bv one person is almost a bushel. An Englishman ;ots along on twenty-two pounus a ye::r, md in Franco an ordinary man swallows Ughtcon pounds between New Year's lay and December. If calculations unoiint anything there :; no dan;, r of a scarcity of tho saline article, for a famous statistician has declared that if r.'l tiie salt in the ocean were .piicd to;, a!. \ i; would make a bulk equal to : ?,i ?,< ) uibio miles. lie never saw all tis .:..... jut ho says it is there, and till that m d jo done is to get it safely ashore.?Cur- j rent Literature. LES MISERABLES. "or what nro wo thankful? O sagos, declare, >oui your high, carveu pulpits, to suffering men; 1V0 list to your sermon, your anthem, your prayer, four soft benediction. No Riawer Is thero the question we ask you; trio chili autumn air Slows tho words to our faces again, ITou'vo talked of tho merchant ships sailing tho seas. \tul told of tho treasures the harvest would yield; )f tho fruit hanging low on tho o'erburdened trees; Df tho odorous breath of tho vine on tho breeze; Jut whenco comes tho mandate, tho law that decrees rhat wo starve in tho brown stubblefleld? tV'o battled at noonday with dust and with heat; IV o snug and wo jested to lighten our toil; tVo hoped tho drear winter with plenty to greet? Mi, tho inirago to near fainting hearts was so sweet? Hut empty our hands, baro and bloddiDg our feet; i'ho labor was ours, not tho^poil. the harvests aro garnered, tho myriad sheaves Chat piled tho wido fields like gold from tho mino Fill up tho great barns from tho iloor to the eaves; rho grapes that grow ripo amidst whispering leaves stain red, laughing lips while a starving one grieves Dutsido for tho dregs of tbo wine. For what aro wo thankful f For prisons and pain; For our babes murd'rtng sleep with their famishing cries; For tho snow and tho sleet, tho wind and tho rain Beating out tho dull life from tho heart and tho brain: For tho gravo wo at last in potter's field gain; For tho stouo with its deeply cut lies. ?Margaret Holmes in New York World. The Faco of a Scoundrel. Undoubtedly Cagliostro was tbo most iblo and successful scoundrel who ever lived. Thomas Carlyle, ufter carefully inspecting his portrait, describes his face us follows: "Fittest of visages were they to bo worn by the quack of quacks! A. most portentous faco of scoundrelism; a llat, snub, abominablo face; llat nosed, greasy, full of greediness, sensuality, ax like obstinacy; a forehead impudeut, refusing to bo ashamed; and then two eyes turned up serapbically languishing, as if in divine contemplation and adoration; a touch of quiz, too; on tho whole, perhaps tho most perfect quack faco produced in tho eighteenth century."?Detroit Free Press. 0 Uotli Sides of tlio Question. Ethel (entering suddenly)?Jack, dear, I wish you to lend mo your baseball mask for?well, for six months at least. Brother Jack?Gracious! sister mine, what on earth are you going to do? Ethel?Well?if I must toll?it is this way: You know llarry and I arc engaged now. Ho cornea every evening and stays?quite a while. Ho is so extremely demonstrative, and ho has such an?agpressivo mustache. I believe in free trade up to a certain point, then I am for protection.?Pittsburg Bulletin. III.-* IMaco in Society. According to a New York correspondent, tho western man is looming up on the horizon of tho New York woman in a most astonishing way. "Ho is .just beginning," ho writes, "to take Ins place hero in social life, and ho taken an awfully big place. lie lakes away the breath of tho eastern girl by bis self confident methods, and by tho time site recovers it she very often finds that it is in reality her heart that is gone."?Chicago Herald. Urcmen's Statuo of Liberty. The quaintest tiling in Bremen is its statuo of liberty, tho "Boland" lis it is called. It is a colossal figure, eighteen feet high, and ectea-trrttrar-temwaf tho town in 1412. In 0110 huge hand the giant holds a shield marked with an eagle (that symbol of liberty in all ages), in iho other a naked sword. It was the gauntlet thrown down to all tho world lliat Bremen would bo free.?Chicago Herald. _ .Silk frcm Wild Worms. A curious method of sillc mnnufacturq is said to exist in tho Chinese province of Ivwnugtung, wlicro arc found wild silk worms feeding on the camphor tree. The full grown caterpillar is cut open and the -ilk is taken out in a form resembling catgut, subjected to a hardening process, nul made into fish linos.?Arkausaw Traveler. ? Sharks and Convicts. There (at Cayenne) when a convict lies tho body is borno to tho 6ea and a jroat bell is tolled. And then is tho visions, glaucous sea surface furrowed sudlenly by fins innumerable, swart, sharp, riangular?tho legions of tho sharks -ushiug to tho hideous funeral. They mow the bell!?Harper's. Knowlcdgo of Unman Nature. "And so your nico clergyman is going o bo married, Mrs. Marigold], I hopfl rou'll like his wife as well as you like lim." "Well, ma'am, I'm suro I liopo so? >ut wo generally find that when the genleman is haffable, tho lady's 'aughtyl" ?Loudon Punch. Chiefs as Top Spiunora. An independent stalo in tho Malay'Pclinsula is Paliang. It has just been oximiucd from tho outskirts by souio Englishmen, who report it caj>ablo of suptort ing a largo poulntion if tho rulers vould caso from spending tlieir time liietly in top spinning.?Nov York fciun. The First Symptoms Of all Lung diseases arc much t ho same: fevcrishne.ss, loss of appetite, soro throat, pains in the client and back, headache, etc. In a few days you may lie well, or, 011 the other hand, you may be down with Pneumonia or " galloping Consumption." itun no risks, hut begin immediately to take Aycr's Cherry Pectoral. Several years ago, James Itirehard, of Duricii, Conn., was severely ill. Tho doctors said lie was in Consumption, and that tin y could do nothing for him, but advised liim, asa last resort, to try Aycr's Cherry Pectoral. After taking this medicine, two or throe months, bo was pronounced a well man. His health remains good to the present day. .T. S. Dradley, Maiden, Mass., writes : " Three winters ago 1 took a severe cold, which rapidly developed into P.rouchitis and Consumption. I was so weak that I could not sit, up, was much emaciated, and coughed incessantly. I consulted several doctors, but they were powerless, and all agreed that I was in Consumption. At last, a friend brought mo a bottle of Aycr's Cherry Pectoral. From the Hirst, dose, I found relief. Two I Kittles cured me, and my health has since been perfect." Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, rni'.i'AnKn nv Dr. J. C. Ayer St Co., Lowell, Mass. )?<il<l iiy all Druggists. 1 Vice f I ; al* bottles, ' * ? PIJLil)3IONT AIR LINE RICHMOND & DANVILLE RAILROADGKEENVILLE & COLUMBIA DIVISION CONDENSED SCHEDULE la ofTcct August 19, 1888. (Trains run on 75th Meridian tima.) NORTHBOUND No. 64. No. 61. 'K Leave Cha'aton 7 00 a. m. Leave Columbia... flO 26 a. m. Arrive Alston 11 22 a. m. Aeavo Alston 11 26 p. m. Arrive Union 1 26 p. m. 4 25 p. ra. Arrive Spartanburg. 2 60 p. m. 0 45 p. m. l'ryon " Saluda ? Flat lloek " llcndersonville... " Asbeville 7 00 p. m. " Hot Springs ' Poiuaria 11 60 a. m. Ir'rive Prosperity... 12 22 p. m. " Newberry 12 30 p. m. " Laurens " Ninety-Six... 1 45 p. ro. ?' Greenwood...., 2 27 p. m. ? Greenville 6 30 p m " Abbeville 3 65 p.m. ? Anderson 4 25 p. m. " Seneca 5 45 p.m. " Wnllialla G 45 p. m. Atlanta 10 40 p.m. ? SOUTHBOUND, No 55 No. 60 Leave Walnalla f7 00 a. m. " Seneca 8 00 a. m. ' Anderson. ... 0 35 a. in. " Abbeville 10 30 a. m. ' Greenville 8 40 a. m. ' Greenwood... 11 50 p. in. ' Ninety Six.... 12 40 p. m. t '? Laurens v< " Newberry 2 15 p. m. ? Prosperity 2 40 p.m. Arrive Alston 3 25 p. m. Leave Hot Springs. *0 50 a m Leavo Asbeville 8 26 a. m . | " llen<ler80uvillo rial hock. " Saluda " Tryon " Spartanburg.. J-11 65 a.m. " Union 1 40 p. m. 9 45 a m Arrive Alston *3 35 p. m " Columbia 4 40 p. ni. " Augusta 9 10 p. m. " Charleston via S. Daily. f Daily except Sunday HQ),,. Through Car Service. Main Line Trains Nos. 54 anil 56 daily between Columbia and Alston, and daily except Sunday between Alston and Greenville. Through passenger coach between Cha'ston and Mort isiown, viaS. C. Railway, Columbia and Spartanburg. Tickets on sale at principal stations to all points. On train No. 50 and 51 Pullman sleeper between Charleston and Hot Springs, N. C., via A. C. L , Columbia and Spartanburg. J ns.. rJ nj lor 1). Cardwell Sol. llaa Ass't Gen'l Gen. Pass. Aj't. Pass. Agent. Traffie ManaColumbia, ft C ger. WO NDE RF UL SUCCESS. ! ?~ l-lCOSlUli i IS iLAiixin ? i All the PATTERNS you wish to uce during the year, for nothing, (a having of from $3.00 to $4.00), by subscribing for THE UNION TIMES ?AND? ?)emorest's m??jEH* "Monthly 7Vlaga!5ine With Twelve Orders for Cut Psper Patterns of your own selection and of any size. BOTH PUBLICATIONS, ONE YEAR. ?FOR? $3.50 (THREE FIFTY). Demorest's m * the BEsl Of all tli? Magazines. Coktaisina SToniEs, Porks, and other Literary attractions, comkinino AllTISTIC, scientific, and household matters. niustriitcti with Original tit eel Engravm lags, 1'hotogravurc.t, Oil ficturee an& fine Wooilcuta, making it the Model Maga, sino of America. Each Magazine contains nconpon order entitling ; the holder to the selection of unv pattern illustrated I in the fashion department in tnat number, and la j any <>f the sizes manufactured, making patterns during the venr of the value of over three dollars. DUMOUEST'S MONTHLY is justly cntlUed tho World's Model Magazine. The Largest in Form, tha Largest in Circulation, and the best TWO Dollar . Family Magazine issued. 1888 will bo the Twentyfourth year of its publication, and it stands a? V? head of'Family Periodicals. It contains 7ti jf ... large quarto. HYxllJtf inches, elegantly printed V ' T , , fully illustrated. Published by W. JcnalngA Deuiorest, New York ft i ne^H And by Special Agreement Com- 7 tho ^ bined with the n 4h DNION TIMES AT $3.50 PER TEAR. Sill . - W Thousand application* for patent* la a Pfl (lie United State* and Foreign oonnf Pn tries, the publiahers of the ficientlflo r s -it American oontinae to act aa solicitors H for patents, careats, trade-marks, copymmM rights. eto., for the United States, and to obtain patents in Canada. England, Kranoe, Germany, and all other countries. Thelrexpert* enco is t.ur.jualod and their facilities ar? unsur- ' . panned. Drawing* and * pacifications prepared and filed In the i'atent Oflre on short notice. Terms ?ery reasnnahl >. No charge for examination of models or drawings. Advice hy mail free. 1 Patents obtained t hroiteh Mttnn A Go. are not load I Inthe HClKN'Tle-'IC AMKIIICAN, which hao ?v I the largcat circulation end is the most influential \ " nowapaper of ita kind published In the world. / The advantages of suoh a notice every patents* ?* understands. This large and splendidly Illustrated newspaper j ie published WKKKIiY il $3.00 a year, and is admitted to be the beat paper devoted to eoienoe. mechanics, inventions, engineering works, and other departments of Industrial progress, pnblisiiod in any country. It containa the namea of all patentees and title of every invention patented each week. Try it four months for one dollen. Bold by all newsdealers. If you have an invention to patent write to Munn A Co., publishers of Soientlflo Am*rloa% 161 ilrnadway, New York. ". ' i v' ' ? Handbook about patents mailed free, !. B cki.kn's Arnica Salvk.?Tiik \i.v?: in the world for Cuts, Rruisea. Borjl^ I I ic< :?, Salt Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter*; {'happed Hands. Chilblains, ( orns, and all | Skin Eruptions, nnd positively cures Files i or no fny required. It is pmtnitited.to give Perfect / uisfaction, or money refunded. , I ri.e 2*> cents per box. For swla by Foee7 A Bro. Feb. 10, ly. I j Will return In October. I have ptst potted my return to Union (ill f v'" j the first of October. / * S. J dies He prepared 10 come in livfly then. ( W. C. GALLAGHER. / * Photographer. ' /1 I May 26 2X Vim, ( % i f I