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■ Gofne, Cfow, Ghapticleef - • •' • ; ^ 7 •• ’.V. ' - ' . " _ ; Day Breaks, Wake the / In •pflns, wh«*n Lore vra« young, HU heart wan free from o:ire. And lighter than the air. And time he song: , “The little leaves that on the bou^h are hung bhall never fade again, for Ix>ve is young/' Then golden summer came. And Love was in Ills prime, ^ Aud swiftly went the time " And hia heart was flame. But autumn next drew nigh. And Love aweary grew, And found ids fair untrue. And heaved a sigh. And now the winter dread Ha* borne I^ove home, And laid him in a tomb— For !/jve is dead. “Oh. wherefore sorrow that the leave* are shed? They can Uu louger bloom, fiir I/>ve is dead." . -James L. Thorucly. -That thfjr may r*rly gnil ofu-n, singly hh«1 In acorn —anti alw ays to their atlvAiitagt* U*— S, pARNWELL, s. c. -Whti tiegin* the tnule cntiipAlcn of INLOI thillt iiialice tow Arils nt>ne t > —4iooJ hIII to aII hut clAiuiiiiK Anti tlctnAiitllng— A Fair Field. A Free Fight and no Favors. The new l»rnnm a«e«t|M rlean An*! the new mercliAnt works for p*>pulArity more fhAti pn*llt. Thr ytotog man U not In ••hcft»rr tht* WAr” grtaivra, ntir Is he hit|tp>bniint| with tin* g* rment t*f svArhe UiAt w rsps thtr oltl ifAtler fr*»iu Ii«*aU to Ioot. —4 Uims for himsrlf Ami will mskftlAlIv proof of tht* fa«*tth*t In all— —Uila Awrtion of the m»U* ih> morfhant t an surpass him in— QUALITY AND PRICES —Of MIM KIXANKOI S MKIU llAMMSK nanUty the An^rimn Pcoplo,- —and that nobtaly In all the m>uth can approach Itiui in— THE POVERTY OF PRICES. IS STOTK of !>KY and HKKSH f;0<*l>S, ^NOTIOXS, FANCY (WtHW. ■■I >tapln sud FAmy tirtHfrit^i, Furniture, Wagona. Huggics, ltt>atl < arts, I * Farm Implements; all lltois** Furnishing Uttitl*, Shoes and s|t**<*ialtics Is full, etrfiiplet* and suisTh In trvery dlrrrtloii. The ladies anti the little folks, the j lords of creation and the sturdy laborer* (u tin* fields and the farm* can find' gisuls ranged tit suit all their need* anti prieetl to meet all their cireumstanccs. The special attention of all the people i* asked to the New l»e|>artuiv of the only | EXCLUSIVE CLOTHING STORE -T In the County, which is fully stocked with the finest and most fashionable wear ing apparel ami furnishing giwttls that good ♦jistc ttoiltl **leet, anti good money etujld buy eh»*ap. 'I'hese gotnls are all new, all nit*e, all tailor fit, and so selected that all can l*e aiil*cd. £Aiy KXTHA LARCK SIZKS, for large men—Kxtra Long Suits for tall men , and In this department certainly leading theCtuinty. The'young gentlemen who | have heretofore l»een forced to go to the high priced Merchant Tailors of the J neighboring cities fnr day and dreaa suits ean now find at .M ItTFAhSOX’S the Iwst gootls, finely finished and fitting perfectly, of the latest fashions and at price* f*r below the figures they have hern forced to pay. Too busy to talk more I invite everybody to come to see me am] my goods and find out my man-hies* low prices. Then I will talk to yvur heart’s content, and to the happiness of your purse and pocket. . RgmembBr! This is A Golden Opportunity To BUy Good Goods. * ' WANTS TO BUY Five Thousand Bales of Cotton Before Christinas, for which the host cash price* will be paid. Take the flood tide of presept opportunities. Sell to the highest bidder, buy from the lowest seller, MICHAUSON is both, anti don’t wait for bargains to drop Into your mouth a* doe* the following frog, but ** r^vfi.^Vr ♦"t ( Jump at the Chance Now Offered. - A MAD MAN’S HAIR ■* * "Yon know her, then?". “Yes, I met her last year at Monaco." “What was she called, do you remem ber?" "Let me see; her Christum name was Violet. She was one of the women who an* seldom rnlW by a surname. The Lady Violet was the name that ’was in everybody** mouth, or, Violet toot court. Stay, 1 remember seeing her name once in the hotel lxw>k—Lady Violet Montar- gis—a j>ecnliar name, which struck me fur some retison or other tit the time. “Ah, she war rather an adept at coin ing name*. When 1 knew her she was Hon. Frances Dalrymple—a girl with dark hair and light blue eyes; one of those fare conilnnations which are down right unnatural, and which often 1**- tokeii some internal derangement of *y»- tem, whether moral, intellectual or phys ical. A Iwautiful girl, certainly, but with that steely look which yon. see wmiethue* on the surface* of the Thames, bine steel mixed with water IHie*. Kc* ley Halswelle know* how to draw the effect. iu» you can see in thi* year’s (}r«aveuur. It always ap)M*ar* to me to e«irtrey a moral; the water Uliea tempt yon. and the cold, imddiona water drt>wna y*m; tliereftire. Iwware.^ the lilies. If jssvr old I Tulip I>mmroond had only taken that nuiral heart r . '•Philip Drummond! who is he?" “Have I never told yoo? Well, I will gire you my experience of the Hon. Frannw Daln tuple, and tlien you shall give me yours of the Lady Violet Mont- argia. It waa in a country house In the ru>rth in September. Our n urn tier* were tolerably large, but an omnium gatherum lot. and very ill aeawted. You know the sort of iMiuaelsdd 1 mean, where there ia no presiding hoeteea and every thing ia all a tort et a travera. There was, indeed, a Mrs. Lionel Tmtinan. who was the lawful wife of our host. Lionel Trotman. retired an gar l*>ilcr. or •sanethlng of the kind; bat she hml the talent of self effacement to a degree that waa jaisitively jsur.ful. Nobody knew wliere she was at any moment of the day. and I assure you that it was a week of herculean difficulty to discover her whereabout* in her own drawing room hef.irr saying giMsl night. The ronae- qnence was we did what wa* right in our own eyes in wicked and selfish c« >nple*. such a* a disintegratetl honse- hol 1 will relapse into when the ^ireiiiding and i«mdential hand ia withdrawn. Of these cmiplea the most devoted and per- haj* the most interesting was the Hi*n. Miss Frances and Philip Drummond. "Drummond was n brawny muscular hem, a fine fellow, nnhamiiered by ex cessive brain, a keen sitortsman and a g«ssi friend. She was—well, I dare say yon discovered at Monaco. Only yon must remember that at the time of which I am speaking she had not devel oped th(*sc predatory instincts which 1 am told she afterward acquired so per- niciqnsly for her friend*. She seeme<l a soft, lovable woman, with Inatrous eja** and r]ieaking hand*. A* a matter of fact, her hand* spoke more than her tongue—it is the way with some incura ble histrionic women. "One day I wjia not ont with the rest of the ahooting party, owing to a pro** of business letters or a fit of laziness—I forget which. But I pottered out in the afternoon over the tumii* a short way from the house. I was at the hall iloqr on my return when two men brought home a ghastly burden. It was poor Philip Drummond, who had shot him self, no one knew exactly how, in get ting over a hedge or in making his way through some tangled covets. I helped the men to bring his poor rigid limbs into the house, wondering to myself how I could best break the news to the un : discoverable Mrs. Tfoftnan, or, harder still, to the reserved and somewhat haughty Miss Dalrymple. We had not grot far into the house when she met us, at the head of the stairs. There wtis no explosion of grief such as I feared; only a sudden tightening of the comers of the mouth and a blanched look either of superstitious dread or hardly realized sorrow. She looked for an instant on the corpse, asked the single question, ‘He shot himself, of course?* and then swiftly withdrew. ” "That evening as I was going to bed 1 met her again in the corridor. ‘I was waiting for you,’ she said, and then she began to beg me, by all that I held most precious, to let her see -the dead body. The request struck me ns unnatural, I remember, and somewhat heartless. Al though I could not have formulated my objections in words I felt that she was asking what jarred on my own feelings and did not suit the circumstances of the case../ At the same time I knew that the relations in which they stood to each other prevented me from refusing. ‘I loved him io,’ she said with an air of passionate abandon, ‘and I must see him for the last time. Yon can come, too, if yon like.’ T led her to the threshold of the death chamber, threw open the door for her, but did not enter. ‘You will leave the door open, pie—e,’ wa* all that she spoke. "Impelled by an irresistible curiosity I stood at the doorway and watched her. The room was only illuminated by a candle which aha carried in her hand. Dark shadows sommndad the bed on which wh* stretched the sh—form of f the man whuen 1 had h%own as PhiUp j Drummond. The rigid outlines of his body stood out Ixmeath tho merciful wltite covering which the hands of lov- ing care had placed over his death dis torted features. All the rest of the rooifi' was black with the darkness of night; 1 only the ghastly light of the single can dle, shaded by her hand, bathed in the flickering white gleams the liody of the man who had gained eternal sleep, I , saw her kneel by the Itedsidej I saw Ijer lift the linen from his face with delilx’f- nte hand. Then, after gazing long and earnestly at the fact? of her lover, she drew a penknife from her pocket and with a quick movement punctured the vein at the side of his temple. "*Peste,’ she said; 'I forgot that dead men do not bleed.’ Then changing her resolve she cut a lock of brown hair from his fore head and swiftly passed me tm I stood at the door. ‘(KhhI night,’she whisjiered, as the faint echoes of her footsteps rang down the corridor. "The whole party broke np the next day, and we one and all departed to dif ferent jioints of the com]siss. I do not «upi>yse that any one but myself knew of the scene I have tried to descrilio; but on me it left an ineffaceable impression. It was, iierhap*. natural that she should wish to see him, but her strange action and her abrupt, swift movements utterly dissipated the idea of a touching fare well. Did she really love him or not? Was the situation, of which I was an unwilling witness, the last act in a heart's tragedy? Perhaps yon can tell | mar ; • "'Well. I can give you inf experience, and then yon can judge for yourself. As I told yon, I met her under an another name at Monaco. You rrmmnber that a merciful dispensation of providence secured me in the nick of time the accu mulated life treasure of an affectionate aunt I wa* abroad at the time when I heard the news of my good fortune, and as 1 owed neither regret jwir, perhapa, i even respect to my defunct relative, I was not deterred by any feelings of com- 1 jmncti.m from enjoying myself. At Monaco I met the Lady \ inlet Montargis —a real celebrity, a* I Warned, who was not unknown at Paris or Vienna or even ! Buda-Pe*th. "There had been an unusual run on the hank, and every one waa watching her game and staking on her lock. The first time I saw her she waa only just be ginning her career of Iriamiti. I fol lowed her. more oat ot gallantry than oat of any determined gambler’s resolve. Afterward 1 had sufficient instinct in these matter* to know that I was In the presence of one of tho— who, fur the moment, cannot even by accident go wrong. It was really wonderful to see her at the tables; a few strangers and newcomers, who did not know how the cards lay, played their usual caution 1 game and lost; the <4der hands kept aloof, as they always do, when aotne diabolic influence ia in the air. After a few days a friend Introduced me to her. and I got to know her pretty well. Any where el—, except at the tabfce. she was |s«itively charming, insouciante, debon- nair, full of {mlished allurement* and iruddious beauty. Immersed in the game, ! she was a devil; no other word could de scribe bur. "One night there waa a strange invgy- don of things—a positive debacle. Lady Violet Montargis was haring heavily and 1—ding her follower* to incurable ruin. She came hurriedly to me, and in a low, 1 whisper spoke the— remarkable words: " ‘For the lore of heaven go to my rooms aud ask my maid for ray ring; the i will know which one I mean; you see I : have not my nsnal rings on my fingers.* "She spoke nervously and rftpidly.with j a fare ont of which had departed all the tiimnphant calm, giving place to a low I contracts! look of inscrutable cunning. ! 1 performed her commission for her, and then ventured to ask her the reason. 1 knew that all gamblers are superstitious, bnt was hardly prepared for her reply. " ‘Sung de Dien,’ she said, ‘could yon not guess that the ring contained a sui cide’s hair?* "—John M. Marqu&ud in At lanta Constitution. Tils tJ— of Flowers* Flowers are used ranch more sensibly than they used to be. The absurd fash ion of loading n young woman down with a dozen or more huge bouquets, every one measuring from fifteen to twerfty inches ocrons. is no longer in vogue. The atrocious custom died of its own inappropriateness. It is possible even with the roost deli cate blossoms, which are the essence of grace and refinement, to be positively vulgar. The large corsage bouquets/ which were so popi at for two or three years seem to have vanished, not to re appear, from the very fact of their over size and overuse. This is true as well of the bnnch of flowers for the street dress as for the ball toilet. Flowers are not so worn because of their wide and exag gerated nse when they got ont of the hands of women of taste and refine ment into those of the sort who bleach their hair and tlanb their facca The fashionables now pt rmit themselves only a bunch of violets in the spring, when a craving for flowers cannot be stifled. Morf coloring is naod in funeral flow ers thAn ever before. Set pieces are no longer used. Loose flowers furnished by members of the family are the only ones considered appropriate. This is a sensi ble departure. Why should the stiff waxen camellias and the tuberose tie al ways nsed? To some sensitive minds the— flowers are so associated with death that, see* at any time, they only recall a scene of mourning. Flowers at a fu- neral are intended to console the living ’ with their loving toneb and gracious softening of the grim outlines. There is more tenderness in the droop of one I*a France ro— than In forty stiff, inodorous japonicas.—New Y'ork Ledger. GUILIELMUS REX. Th* folk who Hv«*d I* Rhaksspeare's day ' And asw that fljfure ^awi By Looriun Bridie-—hia frequent way— They little knew what man he was! Tb* pointed beard, the courteous mten. 7 The equal port to high and k*r, ▲II this they -saw or might have seen— But not the light behind the brow I Tii* dtmtfet’atnod*** *1— *, The slender sword hilt's plain dee ice. What sign had these for prince or clown? Few turned, or none, to scan him twice. Yet 'twos the king of England's kings! The rest with all tliefr pomps ami trains ▲re moldered. half remembered thing*— TIs he alone that Urea and reign*! —Thomas Bailey Aldrich in Century. I; The "Coincident Franklins.” On Glade mountain. West Virginia, resides the "coincident Franklins,’’ a family which is, in one resi»ect at least, the most peculiar of any in the whole country. The Franklins are a family of coincidences. The father and mother were married on the 14th of October. ‘They have had nine children, all of wlnftn were born on the 14th of October. Five of the nine are dead, and. strange to say, every single one of them breathed his last on the fateful 14th day of October. The name of the head of the family ia Joshua Franklin. He waa a Confederate soldier, and was captured twice and had two brothers killed in the war between tho states. All fonr of these mishaps and misfortunes of war occurred on the memorable Mth day of October. In the neighborhood where the Frank- - , GEN, FREMONT** LENIENCY. Ths Pioneer's Clemency |o a Comlearned Mexican Prisoner of War. Jtlst before the capture of San Lnia Obispo the men under Freinont hadi been subjected to great exposure and to privation and hardships of all kinds, and their hatred of the Mexicans hJt reached its height In fact, jt was pret ty clearly . understood that if any of the enemy was unfortunate enough to fall into their hands they would spend bnt little time or sentiment in disponing of him. On Dec. 15, two day* after the taking of the town, the pickets captured Dow Jose de Jesn Pico, who was called Totci He was tried by court martial on the charge of breaking his parMe, wo* found guilty and was sentenced to be shot. The fact that Pico was a leader rendered him still more an object of hatred and distrust, and on every side, were heard nrnrmnrs of approval when it wag decid ed that he shoam pay the ponaU^r of his treachery with his life. The execution waa ordered for half pant 10 o’clock in the o'clock the whole bat to iKirade on the filaza. tion was to take place. Was confined in a room ! Fremont, with two or fleers, wa* present, awai of the prisoner's family to farewell of the beloved father. The prisoner, with ; was seat 'd on one side. ! stood Freinont with folded T1«« FUh Irn*,l to Walk. Henrik Dshl. of Aalesund, Norway, waa a reader and follower of Darwin. Wishing to apply hia theory of the limit of adaptability of a apeciee to its environment, he procured a herring from a neighboring fjord ami carried it home In a tub of sea water. He renewed the water dolly for some time, and grad ually redn—d the quantity, with so little inconvenience to the herring that he poor laded that the fish might in time learn to breathe air undiluted with water, like the cat and the man. It turned ont as he expected, and the water was finally tamed out of the tub of the herring, never to he replaced even for bathing. Henrik next removed the Ash from its tub and placed it on the ground.where It flopped about very awk wardly at first, bat soon learned tumor* freely and rapidly. In a little while the herring waa able to follow it* master without diflculty, mad then it became hia constant compan ion about the streets of the city. On a certain unfortunate day Ueurik had oo- ceeioQ to erree a dilapidated bridge which epanned an arm of the harbor. The herring coming gracefully along, heed Ices of danger, now and again spring ing at the ephemera, for which it had acquired an especial fondness, missed its footing, slipped through a crack into the water beneath and was drowned.—For est and Stream. :.n family live, and. in t.wt t-r noire nmnovud from its outside of their immediate latitude, the meanor. "Franklins of Glade mountain’’ are looked upon with superstitions awe. (t is said that not a single human being who know* of tlie mystery surrounding the family can be prevailed upon to stay in the house or about the premises on either the day or night of UcL 14.—bt. Louis Rcpublio. A Cold n*u. According to the Scandinavian myth ology, all who dio bravely in battle are snatched away to Valhalla, (Min’s mag nificent banquet hall in tho sky. Those who. after lives of ignoble lal>or or In glorious ease, dio of sickness descend to a cold and dismal eavem beneath tho ground called Niflheira—i. o., tho mist world. Thi* abode is rilled by tho god dess of death, whose name is Hel. The place of torment for reprobates is Nas- trond, deeper underground than Nifi- heim and far toward the frigid north. — This grim prison is described in the following passage from the prose "Edda," written in Iceland in the Thirteenth century: "In Nastrond there is a vast and direful structure with doors that face the north. It is formed entirely of the backs of serpents wattled together like wicker work. But the serpents’ heads are turned toward the inside of the hall and continually vomit forth floods of venom, in which wade all those who commit murder or who forswear themselves.” According to the “Voius- pa," a poem of earlier date, the evil doer* in Nastrond are also gnawed by the dragon Nidhogg. —Popular Science. Lanar Pictures. During the past two years the Lick telescope has been used considerably in obtaining photographs of the heavenly bodies. A series of lunar pictures have been taken representing the moon in most of her phase*. These photographs, taken at the chemical focus of the gloss, have a diameter of over forty-five inches. From the image thus obtained enlarge ments have’ been made, showing the moon over three feet in diameter and with on immense amount of detail. In order to focilitate the distribution of these photographs and enlargements a few photographic dealer* have been fur nished with copie* of the original nega tive* by Profemor Holden.—Hartford Conran L A Coo* Way. „ “Well, how did you get rid of your t friend?" I took hftB down to the ferry and thesUD.*’ r N«w Y«k HtfoU. r*at« la Sautkcra InHIa. The caste system ia terribly strict The Pul Ieohs and Gaanekar* (the latter the lowest of all) are wretched creatarea, the former only being privileged to wear a garment reaching to their knees and a fillet on their head*, also to em|iloy bar ber*. The Caonekars are never allowed to come near the town, add even in the villages, when they come to buy rice. CoL Drury has seen them deposit the price twenty paces in front of the shop and retire to a certain distance: then the shopkeeper would come ont. pm down the nee. take up the money andjvrith- draw, when the poor slave would'take possession of his purchase. Twenty S-ards is the prescribed distance that must ajways be maintained between a low caste person and one of a higher. Bnt when a Brahmin come* along the road the people scatter on both sides to make way for the purer being.—Spec tator. Reading and Croealng the Leg*. Men often cross their leg* at public meetings because they go there to listen or to be entertained. They are not the factors in the performance, and they natnrally place themselves in the most comfortable position known—namely, leaning well back in their chair* and crossing their legs. A man almost in variably crosses his leg* when he reads a newspaper, but is more apt to lie down when be reads a book.“He reads the paper, of course, to inform himself, but at the same time the perusal of its con tents is^recreation to him, and his body again seeks its position of relaxation. When a man is reading a newspaper and waiting for his breakfast hi* legs are al ways crossed, but as soon as the break- last is ready he pnts the paper aside, straightens out his legs under the table, and turns his whole mind on the duties of the day.—St Louis Republic. Say "Titanic Yott.^ I suppose when you do a friend a good tarn, and he Is so busy enjoying it* bene fit* that he goes off in a hurry and for gets to say "Thank you.” you are likely to say to yourself, "I’ll next try my hand on somebody at least who con get breath enough before he eats his cherries to look bock ou the orchard." Ingratitude is the great trio] of parents with children and of God with man. I’d rather s man would hurl "Thanks awfully” at me than to keep dumb. Even conventional and slang thanks are better than utter discourtesy and blank ingratitude.— Lewiston Journal Cr**l«y** Boa*. —- , It is said that a friend once found Horace Greeley at 2 o'clock in the tnor»-. ■ ing. st the close of a long, hard day’s j work, with a heap ot applications for autographs before him. which he intend ed to answer. ••This time you need for sleep,” urged his friend. "Why do you reply to themT "They send me return stamps,” haan- psteoasly, ia his shrill voice; "I •tool thnwevnU."*—Youth's Com- Mali** Clear Itoara. What do you think of s woman who can ran a factory and tarn oat l.OUO ci gar boxes s day? Think she is a myth? Well, she is not, bat a tall, fair and forty specimen of womanhood who can balance 200 pounds and manage a force of twenty people. Her name Is Mr*. Mary Bleffert. her factory is on Attor ney street, and her has bend Is the head assistant of her establishment. Not very many year* ago this majestic merchant was employed in a hot factory with hundred* of other little women. She was quick wilted, ambitions and restless. A young fellow named Bleffert hod charge of her diviakm. He admired her skill, love followed admiration and marriage love. There was no wedding tonr. no kalsncnined poetry, no sauo rib bons and no fool tab expenditures. There was a honeymoon, though, and it has not waned, either. There was a toy savings bonk, then a bank account, a lot of dreaming and planning and then the Bleffert bos factory. It ia right that the strong should lead, and that's what Mary Bleffert has been doing for the lost five years, and that's why she is mistress of a prosperous badness.—New York World. Calaratl Aralptnra. it may not be generally known that much of the sculpture of ancient Athena waa originally paintid in bright colom. Until recently archsralogista maintained the theory that the refined art of the Greeks had found its expression in the pure form of the marble, disregarding color, and any evidences to the con trary were destroyed, as only giving rise to troublesome theories, subversive of the true worahip of Greek art Within the iMist few yean, however, several in teresting pieces of painted sculpture have been discovered which have given rise to some interesting speculations among students and artista. —Harper's. i officers present was thnl fet (’apt. Jtichard OWeas, whs iced a living for. bnt when* The officers in grim grouped about when the wife, with eight or nine jtmng children, dressed in the deepest mourning, wife was s beautiful woman <if bearing, and th# children of refined appearance. No tered to break the silence, grown oppressive. Then fell upon their knees, and wifti eyes aud outstretched begged for the life so dear to Among the stern soldier. had never fraced a living foe. bnt wheat eyes were then dimmed with Ump at the pathetic sight befpre h ly, f<w he could no Iqpger.«» self, be uttered the ope woAt ^remout’s face relnsed Its expraartou. and he eueletmed. "Y*C Dick. 1 know we had rather me* a thou sand of them in the field to-morrow than this one life." Turuiug to are free." ^ The prisoner fell upon hia knma at lYstnant s feet and pressed the hem hie cloak to trie lips, endaiming brokenly In Spanish: "My life wm forfeit. Ten have given It back, and henceforth It shall be devoted Pico ordered that his and from that day cm devoted follower of danger of evqnr whose life he UB gi Sau Francisco that wfll A Strang* Cetneldraee. A curious coincidence is said to have occurred in one of the London chess re sort*. A gentleman was looking on for some time at a game being played be tween two excellent chesaiata. He left them etill playing. The next day he started for a long sojourn abroad. He was away nearly five years, during which time he had been round the world. On his return to London he went to the same chess resort that he had formerly visited, and there at the same table as before were the same two players whom he had five year* before left at the game. —London Tit-Bit*. ' An I in po*tor. Helen (of Pittsburg)—Did I under stand you to say yon were a Pittsburger, Mr. Heartiboy? Mr. H.—1 am. 1 was born and raised there. Helen (freezingly)—It is impossible. You, with your arms and limbs un broken, and not even the scar of a cable car cowcatcher on your browl You "a Pittsburger! 1 had become attached to you—1 frankly admit But yon ore an impostor. Leave mel—Pittsburg Bul letin. ™ When Newspaper* Were Costly. Senator Saunders, of Montana, set* a higher money valne on hi* newspaper than most men do. Before the Northern Pacific railway was opened he nsed to pay $107 a year for the weekly edition of The New York Poet which reached him by pony express across the plains, at a cost of $1 a copy in gold, which was then equal to over $2 in greenbacks.— San Francisco Argonaut Undo Sam's MuclUga. No matter how good the mncilage may be oiyi/makee. one never considers it as gbod as the postage stamp mncilage. Every one tries to duplicate it Jt is not hard to make it. as the preparation is very simple. Here it is: Dextrine, two parts; acetic add, one part water, fire parts; alcohol, one part—New York Journal Aa To build a chimney forever and not fill un must build It Urge inches square; uee geo instead of lime up to the eotnb; it inside with clay mixed with *aH; chimney tops nse the very best of wet them and Uy them ia csMsg mor tar. The chimney should not he built tight tb beams and rafters; there is where the cracks in your chimney* crane, and where most of thfeffree origi nate. an the chimney sometimes gets red hot A chimraq^miH from the cellar up is better and Tes* dangerous than one hung on the wall Do not get your stove pipe hole too does to the cdhng. but about eighteen inches from It—New York Journal Ths Pollts Frrnehi When Gen. Moreau was in ffwUu%d States he was once the viotim of a rather droll misunderstanding. He, was pres ent at a concert where a piece was sung by the choir with the refrain: J*— "To-morrow, to-morrow.” Haiing a very imperfect knowledge of English be fancied it to be a Canute given in his honor, and thought he dis tinguished the words: "To Moreau, to Korean.” Each time the refrain was repeated he rose to his feet and gracefully bowed on all sides, to the great astonishment of the audience, who did not know what to make of it—Le Figaro. ~A—_1 Powers of the English Professor Jacob Grimm, the author of the most learned German grammar and. jointly with his brother, the best German dictionary, says: "Among all the mod ern languages none has, by giving up sad confounding all the laws of eound, and by cutting off nearly all.the iofieo- C i, acquired greater strength and r than the English. Its fullness of free middle sounds, whic^ cannot be taught, but only learned, is the cause of an essential force of expression such os perhaps never stood at the command of any other language of men.” "Why fastF* said il*** Stylo, don’t we have break- boarder impatiently. ▲ Hrarty ■ A well knqjvn traveling agent for a Philadelphia carriage paper has carried off the honor* for eating in this city. At- a recent meal for himself haeoneuxned two whole chicfcsal, fried style, five pounds; one steak, ten ears of corn, toos sliced with onions, potatoes and one dozen corn cakes. Ho was the only assn who partook of the meal, and he did uot fall into ashes what, he —Cincinnati Eaquirta ' Apprsot Stas mi What is the of the a eysf Most aboutthros rias of a •eye that at a ^*2 y- m Oldztaget. "We