The people. (Barnwell C.H., S.C.) 1877-1884, September 28, 1882, Image 1
I. la vrttlac la <
•I^ay* glaa yoar
aad onamnnim
^Uom to be pnbliahad aboald ba vritlaa
^Piinrfy indicated t
***’*&.
*m~t • 1 » . "
- w *; 4 Art , ic1 ®* ! or publication nhould be
^rntten in a clear, legible hand, and on
o°»y one aide of the page.
*, All ohengos in alTertiaemsati mun
"*«h as on Fried r.
' f
Jfc'I.H.F. MILHOUS,
DiiNTAt, SURGEON,
blackville. s 0.
Office-near his residence on R R. Ayenue.
n haT| t || <> l* Will i fiud 11 mor « comfortable to
« L'or d n ? at th ' 0 ®ee, as he has
fm D J CU !r- * ood ‘KLt and the
inform«d P M *PI ,1UncM - «•> ^ould be
iue to "■‘v 8 l r ? vu) u* to their com
sIVJi »»» dl * a ^ i,,i,nen ^ thou Sb
urdayl ? h f f ° Un<1 his oflic * on Bat
■ *!}" ^“''OOC to attend calls
thiemirboat iternwell and adjoining conn-
! 21 ^ a * 181 y
OS. B. S. QUATUEaUM,
-s—SURGEON OENTISr,
WILL’S TON, 8. o/
Olfijeoyer Cspt. W. H. Kennedy, atof*
CaJWaitendml urroagbrnt Barawd
at*d a-daua; c.urt^m. R.tieott will
B-.U it to the., adia«u 5 e to have we k
d.»oeatJ..tflle. ^ [wplu
J. B1ERS0N SMITH,
•Krafite s»4 Nrrkukil Mtist.
I IM’IAN s C.
•I. A. I* ATT Kit HON,
Hurn.on lientiat.
H ww
(M mnmurmm 4» •
1 !• Mf p 9%Pm
MitNMMi #«■»%*I #
• %40%* I a
RC8T. O. WHITE,
M A H II |« K
a % I
THE PEOPLE.
. ■ • : r . • • /
diaa|
pnblkatkja
-tki-
VOL. VI. NO. 4 BARNWELL, C. H., 8. C., THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1882.
$2 a Year.
m wffl ka fMakM
of Use writer, not aaeeaaailly lor
cation, bat as a nanaity at good
fcML
Aidreas, THE PEOPLE,
Barnwell 0. H., a 0.
THE WHEEL O’
THE
.''I*
BREAST.
Tbrouah river, of Vein*, on a namelesa nuest
The tide of my life goc. hurriedly sweeping.
Tdl It reaches that curious wheefo’ the t>relit,
“ ■■■ * v • V vaaMh UUriABUB WUUtTl u vur? ur
The human heart, whfch Is never at rest;
Faster, faster, It ortta, and, leaping,
Pitting, dashing, Meed mg away
eVnt el and the river r
The
work night and day.
GRANITE WORKS
MtSIMui anUS ..
* \pppp eft • A 'pf |
i AC
Pttp f I
out t mi i m
• ■
tnem wl funsa
■ f * aea%
ilil tf«s% %
thw pp Am
eux k Co^
ppppjppp as ..
h». (•mrp. US* fWtwr i
%t«i mi Pt%b lu'U
•»-i*l i niki.sjsr%»s s c
mm Ksfumui
2«M* K Hsg ntrrwi,
* »|»|»e • AoaA#SMf wf |
i'HASLOriBX, II C,
K wsm •• lw* .1 ‘4 .cwAsa a ghc
> .11 h*a«t- <s* %#*. ia •+nf w«i*
Al*< V>a*.. U..^r* ~-g-— A* (a
CHARLES C. LESLIE
Whofcaal* aad Belail l>««Wr In
Fnfc. (iiar. Ubitrn, Tirtln, Trrnpi»».
OVHiern. Klo.
HtoUr, N.s. IS and 20 Piah Ma.ket
% CHARLESTON, 8.
All ordera groaiptly attended to.
(Vruis Cash or C-iyrA^f'ptanof.
•JgSJly]
THOS. McG. CARR,
K-A-SIItON A nr,E
Shaving and l?air Brmiig Saio«n,
- * ** *.* 114 Market Street,
(O it) I) >( j- Eti\t of King 6 reel ) -
miilKUy] CHARLESTON, 8 C
TONIC!
‘ : lii—
TUE GREAT REMEDY FOR
PULMONARY DI-E48E3,
COUQH8. COLDS,
BR0NCHI118, Ac.
A Mi GENERAL DEBILITY.
T know not wherefore, I know not whither,
This strange tide rushes with such mad force;
It glides on hither. It slides on thither,
Oyer and over the self-same course,
With never an outlet and never a source;
And. lashing Itself to the heat of passion.
It whirls the heart In milt-wheel fashion.
1 can hear In the hush of the still, still night
The ceaseless hum of that mighty river*
] can hear It rushing, gurgling, gushing, .
With a wild, delirious, strange delight,
And a conscious pride In Its Sense of might
As it hurries and worries my heart forever,
And 1 wonder oft, as I lie awake
And list to the river that teethes and surges
Ovei'tho wheel that it chides and urges—
I woader oft If the wheel will break
With the mighty preaeura It bears, tome day.
Or slowly and wearily wear away.
C nr little by little the heart it wearing.
Ike the wheel o lb- miH. at tL. tide goe
tearing
Amt ptungtng hurriedly through the breast
tea netw.wk of veins oa a aamaleaa nueat.
Try>n and forth unto unknown oceans.
l*» carfWra of fl'-rre emotions,
w tth never a pause, or aa hour for rest.
—A lii Wheeler, in q>ica*i TVUsms,
. i
va,
ELI’S hV ROtiv
Mrs. Blinks deetorwJ th- wouldn't I
bate another *wr of Umm# Unlr nun
•na-ea • Lha bowse again ' f.-r whet '
ari» Iher hatw^sV* MTt R nks t
•bed lw aw WSmrtnuaale way. aa tbe |
C*A*d » ewrrwaasoo at the forhtag rba r. I
Um Ffbwrb tloch aw4 (be - * i .oil Biro J
Owr Husoe ■Nf4io vtpp tba ball Aasjg 1
•M af tbaoa. pm wowl aw **E yaw's* >
• *^f. pHI »awt a 4sf j
h*d m* a pAayUsww "
a hw4 ftwhl as the wafrh
•aM'• hawaol harh awd awsahwrWae war
IWSiwaa wtWMO tba wssih A w -i—f |
•a* tba haem aw4 thw thaaf awl wsar ter 1
Mi Iba static wa4 by saNBWMSWWm V J
BNaaw wws awa tbsaB Mwww Am OBsMtt i
thw* Mr* Nbwha bad ms aaa swswf ap»w 7
bw.tN§ ■ w*a "a «hws •«. * 4 w ^
• •* tar* * ■ na4 w »# • Warn asaaMA
bkh Wm h hwf sN* atal aNwsll thus 11 nag
•Mat BkaAa ewa mt tha swam Ar. w.4 W *
hmsbwwAa yawll w4 Nwl 4 w has haws lw I
mwwaiWBBM ^h.wh Sma la tbsswrl baa as
b**d rig I* *%» awwa earn tmiW ]
•♦we aaa ha staMhl bm4 paw iba 7C, saw
tpRtpm wtP %p MKmp PkPpB pH p^Hpie #
0kmmm f #ntd f Mb# 4 ■ Am*- ... v - ■» a I
HPPPPtH pH % H*pp mmmppfi*' PMPPPPPPPHFP *
P&PPm^ +* M HHp tOT Pp % pmmP* n I
p+4 few* if 1 mmpp pp p+m
4pppp +%m»P pprppH4ppH PP MMl PtPPPptH p Ppb
PPpf top PPpgP+pp
T W Pm* Mhm MMh PHPPtPpP A P0PP** P pP
PmmppmP Ppp+ppH PP PPf P+4 PPP+P '
Ppppppp pppS PPpppPPm 4tpp ♦*%■« % i-ii 1 nim I ■
Eba iPPPPtPPPL Pm4 * NMMB pP PmPP W8NN8 *
taMH PP% *
ppp+f p ftMHMP Pp Ppm pp^mp i+mppp *4ppp r ‘
fc* 4MHHS $PP* P0 %**m*p * 4.
ppppp+pf pp+HH
course, exaggeration bom of disap
pointed hopes.
In the course of a week of alternate
slutting and starving, the dog began to
Recognize the Blinkscs as ids friendsaud
protectors, and showing untnistakabll,
sigps of contrition, for his previous un-
grktcful'conduct, and a deslrdTo concil
iate, he was finally hilcased from du-
rancc„...ViIe and allowed to roam about
the*Blinks domain at his own swdet will
But although he had entered into so
cial compact with the Blinkses. Towser
(for suen was his title) showed ho dis
position to widen hiS circle of friends,
ihe lirat morning after his release, the
milkman was seen running frantically
away from the house e'ith torn clothing
and horrified visage, while Towser was
peering at him ever the high fence,
shouting Ids frog opera as well as a
mouthful of coat-tail would permit him.
* The milkman did not come again, and
he had apparently told his misadventure
toaM-lhu milk-dealing fraternity, for
not one of them could be induced to
come within twenty rods of the Blink*
redden**. But thw was not alL Th*
buirhrr, the baker, th* candlestick-
tuakcr. and rrm tb* grocer, one and
1, suddenly ceas'd lheir calls for or-
m, and aa it was a good mile to lb*
t
ger of war
fer It’iuks
Mr*. H. m
Blinks tnsd
an kdant a
BsA aw
tbnl |
r*m*v**«i
**
II
. ia ib«
aa-w-****
were ia dan-
muist
7»r % B
■7
rv.f.
| saw eg
from 1
Imka
«l
ba vUlAge
XtiSH*'.-™,
i Coie TankMt
, I
wares,
knives,
not
A Yank eo peddler while traveling in the
West became somewhat embarrassed
for want of funds, and resolved to em
bark in his accustomed occupation. He
reached a small city in one of the fron
tier Stetep. After takitlg a stirtey Hf the
surroundings he received his stock of
goods and proceeded to dispose of his
consisting of scissors, pocket-
razors, spoons, etc. He had
journeyed far before ata Ofllcer
cdsted him and called for a Ijoettae.
had none and so informed the official
who, finding the peddler a stranger and
not familiar with the law, desired to be
as lenient as possible, and simply di
rected him to the City Hall to receive
the necessary document. The Yankee
proceeded to find the proper official
and inquired the prioe of a license to
run for a week, and found it more than
his surplus capital. Therefore he se
cured one for only A day. At night the
Yankee footed np his profits, and found
that he bad lost money, and resolv
to continue without renewing his
Several days paMbd. and be
tested, bat ode
Old Hotel Registers.
‘‘What becomes of the bid hotel reg-
7,
was in nowise m<>l<
day aboot ten o’olock in
be was approached b^aN
man. with the inB
cense." Th* Y
errtainlv." and
fig
fo lo»r.l him
the
I 1 **-
Ger-
■U-
istem? ’ inquired .» Sun reporter tit Je
rome Lelnnd, of the Sturtevant House.
/‘Got ’em all in a big safe down
staits. Come and take a look," said
Mr. Lelatid. Then .he led the way
through a subterranean labyrinth of
cooks, ranges, laundries, stores and
wine cellars to a vault under the side
walk next to a room where the ther-
tndmeter would have registered 200 de-
K ies, if the register Bad permitted.
e hot room contaiued thektove where
irons were heated for the laundry.
*• You see I had this vault built on pur
pose to keep these books. No danger of
their getting damp oi mildewed here.”
“Do you ever have to refer to them?"
“ Very often it becomes necessary to
establish the fact that a man was hi
at a certain time. It is a conynon
currence to fix the dates of bu*in<3gL
transactions by these registers, and (hAy
are frequently used in court." *—
*• put that must be a trouble to yon?*’
“ Yea, of course; but we don’t mind
taking A little trouble for a friend
Here
T«mn
ppk pppppH p4 p Heppppppppp/ppp T
ppmPpmP uta* m «t bmmrn p+4
•• Are you bothered by getting your
clerks subpu-naed to produee the books
la courtT'
jb, jm. ••Mom it Isms; bat it is vary difficult to
_ But tba ka certain that any of us was bare at
asatlv satis- aay particular time, if we
ap. saj>ag: .M* *® fi® laMify "
K t UaA at | Yaa mat I »i a a gvaal m«
aatograpb* ia tb—
^Uts of 'em, bs
to ba cwt oat.
fari as a*
af tba Asuvft
tba oM refries* •<
Ha baa a tb*m a
cd tba moat dteSra-
•f tba lari barf aa*
ba b«a k*pt r*4|g
tSriMf tbam la ms
* aatarivapb Mata** rWs
»aaf v> k ■> aWa ba ism
H «a«a (m tbasr page* map
iba aamas af t iai. Mebsm*.
PmP A Lmg baa af ^eaedeaaa
ms4 iba ^Saa Maaae 4a**ag tba
■ aastbaebmf'
Tba I
Pare (he Taas of Colts.
It is not generally recognized bow
much harm comes to horses from the
simple overgrowth of the toes; and yet,
in (he case df young and unshod horses
especially, hardly Anything is more do
structive to their soundness and perma
nent utility. Judging from the numbet
of dolts turned out everywhere with the
whole winter growth on their toes, there
seems to be' a surprising amount of ig
norance on this matter; aau it becomes
the more necessary to draw special at
tention to the neea Of paring.
A good average slope for the front of
a healthy hoof Is one forming an angle
of forty-five degrees Mrith the ground on
which it rests. In other wofds, if a
perpendicular line were drawn upward
from the toe, the line of the front of the
hoof would be midway between such
oe-T vertical line and the flat surface of the
sole or ground. But the average foot
S ows far more rapidly at the toe than
e heel, and wears off much more slow
ly. Tbe heel, too, m it grows, tarns in
ward, so that even with an equal growth
it never projects as does the overgrow*
toe. As tbe foot Increases ia taglbt
therefore, tbe effect is shown
especially at the toe, and with addition
to the length of tbe Ine, tbe front of tbe
foot end id the pneterm recedes farther
from tbe vertknl pnelUon. end ef-
enrerko the bort
h U Ibis lb#
^If one and i hnM w> two
It.* will .du-n <i.ni rush (be soak
■ of the bool and tbe|
by nM-tbSrd l*M
gte terms I by tbs feet d tbe
rn?t?i
HUMOROUS.
—A real stylish house
ji New York costs $100,
999 more than we’ve got
Rtgitier.
street
•99,-,
Haven
ion a good
1,000; Inst
ot—Htw i
—Brooklyn, N. Y.. has been counting
up her lawyers, and •• rejoiced to find
that she has only about 1.600.—Z>efro»<
Free Brest.
Ladies when being courted ought not
to object to the moderate use of tobac
co. They should recollect that where
there is a “flame’’ there must be some
stnoke. • .
-“ Great Pains Taken" is the head-
of an advertisement in one of the
dailies. Probably some gentleman has
eaten « whole watermelon.- Boston
Commercial Bulletin.
- Definition of loot; Stadent wante to
know what is meant by the word “teoP’
In the war dispatches. Why, a late is
a thing with strings that you strum with
your fingers. Hence, anything that yon
can get your fingers on to, that’s loot
—Burlington Havkeye.
—Water privileges: “Ton advertise
that there is a fine stream of water on
Ihfl pUoe. but I don’t see it," remarked
a stranger who wanted to root tbe place.
Tbe landlord aaid: “Juet work that
C mp handle a little, and yon w H see a
a stream of water. Ton don't expect
to bar* tbe Niagara Kalis oa tbe p «*
for fifteen sbilltags a month, do yonP*—
JMfMnpa.
TW
mMan* riMkri* ri mm»
fanpmfif to ton n» kMri, Me
sbfi* t e* *ne* anas St Vbooftoa bn mss
• namm bn smfii *• fan* • dbBM sang*
span aa m^eanmsM fafiton eaankse*
IV- eaMmaf wws a resaa kw**«■* sb* bMi
amf > k— m*ri4l smf seams as k—rib p—4
> gita— f • say toes bn was p-assw>—4
af ea •amok—* s—wsrismaw'— nwwkf bw Itos
e-- nswss fieiasw It — pessnm b—nw wws
I ia e»d woN kAe-<bs «f saantofht Vann
#•* *sa . tmomefr part af (be mamsns
sd tbe irwMWsw wbssb be bmf mmptori
freae t-me ka Maw dostog toe Iftft se
oMevtamrif afibs«teA erne be leafied as
i*'■ -gk b# w«nid ttba very mwra iw add
lw tbe ewHeeltott.
Ksnks wee la a paamdarv He sw-ri
—dand newsiagfy leamrkcri in tbn dwe
IbaS be woe e ate* firUets. tost lb* aai
mal did not apesar to take lb* ram pi t-
mewl ia tbe srs i that was tateadad.
bat repeatedly kao.k*d tbe maisie
agwai Le bar* of bis rag* ia a m<»*t
ferocious man err. awakening tbe livliest
fear* ia Blink’s breast least •«* of those
aiau should suddenly give away j
Rimka, therefore, retreated m good
order and set about bribing somelwidy
to take bis treasure home. He finally
found an expressman whose needs were
greater than his fears, and after much
labor ami the loss of some skin and
much blood, the man siu'ceedeil in
getting the ideal dog into his wagon.
Excepting the frog oiiera which the t i-
mal indulged in. with an occasional in
term ssion which was devoted to testing
the strength of his prison bars, the
journey to Blink's house was devoid of
interest.
The wagoner unloaded his living and
lively freight at Blinks’, and with the
loss of a few more square inches of cuti-
eje and a few pints more of blood, the
box and the dog were safely landed on
Blinks’ piazza.
Mrs. Bli
4-1 a
links was, of course, delighted
at the noble beast “So gentle-look
ing," she remarked, extending her hand
to pat his head through tbe bars. She
diu not carry out her in^rfition, howev
er. There was something in the glare
gentle-looking" dog’s eyes
ne*
that
and glistening teeth that made
change her mind. So she stepped back
several paces, and admired nim from
a safer distance.
The Blinkses ooagratulated each other
several times upon tbe acquisition of
such a treasure Of coarse, be was a
little frightened now—It did not occur
to them that aavbndv alee was fnght-
-* aaiUuug
teg rite* T
Mb’! *i*J tout
tbiBlIbl I
SttBf It#
tbe ideal drig
animal away. t»
teams foe lb* **
ma>l* bo coadit
brenme of bia
•aid
•nywbrrv any-
Take him aw ay
when oalv take him aamy!"
Tbe Htiakars have aerer kept - a d«jg
since, not even “a d<»g that is a dog;
and if vou want to make Blinks tearing
mml, all you hare cot to do is to ask him
if he lias boughf another dog yet. —Bos
ton Transcript.
The Art of HexxotiaL
These attempts at revising the art of
mezzotint as employed upon original
work have a special interest besides that
which attaches to them as experiments
so far sncoesfcful and promising to be
still more so. They show the de
sire to cultivate a very beautiful
and refined style in which English
artists, inspired as they . were by
the beautiful pictures of Reynolds and
Gainsborough, more than a hundred
years ago, arrived at the highest perfec
tion. That the method should ever have
been suffered to fall into disuse, and be
supplanted by the more mechanical and
less artistic work produced in various
forms by various tools used to cut into
the plate in a more or less stiff and un-
I liajit manner, ia much to be regretted,
t in essentially a painter’s method, more
pictorial than any other, and broader in
treatment, and one, therefore, that eat?
able* the artist to give fnll expremiou to
uis feeling for the beauties of light and
shade and every charm of gradation and
-suggested color possible to a mono
chrome. \ i
r-l to laAa
I —A tbe man
It— del net gii
A be paet a Weed**
—I mwtatem Aad
ua« a* to what shoe
dog. He men
t ITOfi,
called
■early 11 > yeaff*. For lb*
4 Wi* hie b* was a
I'ervgna* Wmu, tbe
tewa ta New fratUeii. aad
rteea year* at him hf* be was tbe
Irmtewav* *4 '
k*uiBer-iew4 ot Boskoa, wbo
DC A Mr. Cobb had tbe rare latkaty *4
living in three centunca. The mm* ia
true ot Fnoaim Hafaaolt, wbo wai
in fWdinia in l.VC, and died ia
and of Thomaa Parr commonly
"Old Parr,* and who very properly
might have bean called "Oread Parr."
He waa Ivors in Rhropsbiie, in 1488, and
died in 1635, at the mature awe of 152
rears aad nine months. His death was
hastened by his being taken by the Earl
of Arundel to the Court of Charles L,
for exhibition. He married at the age
of 120 years, when he seemed to be in
perfect health, and cultivated the soil
until he wns 130. There ia no well au
thenticated case of any one having got
nliove Parr in the matter of age, though
Mrs. Lititia Cox, who died in Jamaica,
iu 1838, claimed to have been a young
woman when Port Royal waa destroyed
l\y- an earthquake, June 9, 1692, which
would have made her over 160,
The Nataral Result.
An Austrian family waa recently
blessed with a baby boy, the first one
in the family. Next door was a family
in which there were half a dozen chil
dren. When the arrival of tha boy next
door was announced, little Johnny, aged
six yean, asked:
“flava they dot a boy, sure enough V’
“Tea, there ia a boy over there at
last.*
"Than they will hare a whole lot
morn. That’s the wap wo did.”—Texas
m/pm-.
—A petroleum pipe
from tbe Con baa oU l
C«
4
ka* a teg mi
a g a remei
As
are keya,
to by *44
Bat there ta «■* brief abere tbe eW
aai mgarAml with mtsrb
Thai le tbe KMlh A *****
Hrial. avd owdvf lbs rim* areprtriiw
■top that b wa* wbea *torteri aeore tbaa
year* agu. ibat at Hutebk
A I tori lag For many yean tbe obi
often referv-d
Tba* aad aga n they have beaa
itb them
aabptraaa, burrs Trrum* Kmai-
ly tbe proprietor* got tired of fitmtab-
ing eo much teetirooov to court* with
out adequate oompenaatioa. It was
found that by keeping tbe register*
often a couple who stayed but one night
and paid ten dollar* into the hotel
treasury might entail fifty dollars worth
of bother by legal proceedings in prov-
rister. Therefore, about an
ing the register. Therefore, about six
months ago. orders were given to burn
the registers a* fast at they an- filled, concluded he most be near a (arm honae
fit
As the urbane light-haired clerk ex-
f ressed it; “ We don t let’em get cold.
ut get ’em out of the way at the earli
est possible moment. People can now
look elsewhere for testimony. Wo can’t
atlord to keep one clerk hunting for
books and another on the witness stand
all the time."—A r . Sun. -* .
The Press of Business.
An Oil City young man was reading
about recent doings in the Arctic re
gions, and his beet girl was sitting near
by, watching the wagging of his mus
tache as the words rolled out She was
evidently more absorbed in the mus
tache than in the story. He continued :
-‘‘She arrived at the mouth ot tbe
River Lena about three months ago.
The Jeannette was crushed-—^—^
“ Wlmtr asked the quiAly,
standin^ip.
" Jeannette waa crushed by— 1
“ Oh 1 bat wasn’t that just too lovely.
Only think, to be completely crashed !”
“ What are yon talking about, dear-
eetr asked tba Toon* man in eurprie*.
••Iwfia saying how grand it was to ba
Did yoo aay it
Ok I bowl wtebl bad
b* •Urtad
at a a
a trata
•mkred
and _
turond
dined to give’ a reason. He tried to ia-
doo* other train mea to go, bat all re
fused. He took a lantern acid turpndom
Liiueelf aad went back some hundred
pace*. He soon heard a frittering ul
tort around him in all dtrechooa, and
'thought he had got into a ahaep pea, until
♦juddenly bia ears wore assailed with a
choron* of anaries and bowls, and* be
well supplied with doga, but on reiMing
bis lantern, he saw tbe snow almost black
with savage forma whose eyes glared at
him like balls of fire. For the first time
he realized that he waa surrounded by
wolves. His hair stood erect and his
tongue cleaved to the roof of his mouth.
He hastily placed the torpedoes on the
track and began to beat a retreat The
howling pack circled round him and he
yelled to the engineer to hack the train
down to him, but his voice was drowned
umid the demonise howling of the gaunt
savages which were snapping at his coat
tails. He kept them off with hit lan
tern, whirling round like a Dervish, till
he reached the train. In a few minutes
he heard the torpedoes explode and the
howls prew more furious. He said the
whole prairie seemed alive with the
hrutea. He conceived a brilliant idea.
He liegan to toss torpedoes to them, and
r them explode, and by the
■omuls judged they were doing good
••xacutioo. He said bs threw out about
2,000 torpedoes, whan ha got order* to
run- to the next station. Whan No. 5,
the train folloafog, got to tha station he
ah* was thrown off tbe track by
badar-
I.M
sat. all fmass sM4E aad R
sad of 1
they
but **jb rvrired.
After this ftf’nre wa
a small iasset powder I
doner, half fllted lbs
powder aad Maw It all i
making a Aaa da
wa* beard, as when a I
spider’s web, only loci
half hour every fly ia
dead. The fly season ia now robbed o4
its terrors for os, lor a few puffs of tba
bellows each morning before sweeping
keep* our rooms free from flies. The
powder costs 60 cents per pound at
wholesale, bat with care will last soma
time, for gentle puffs ot tbe powder
answer every purpose, as it is only neo
assary to blow it once where tbe flies
ean breath it.—Cbr. Rural Nine Yorker.
Won tbe Wager.
Fred Flasher and
Flounce were discussihg tbe meat
power of controlling thought,
flasher:
“I will give you a pair of floras V
you can think of positively nothing for
five minutes and still be awake."
“Done," she responded.
Five minutes passed.
“I’ve won the gloves! "she exclaimed.
“How did you manage to think ot
nothing for tbe whole five minutes?" be
mind firmly on your
>pt it there," aba re-