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EquITalent to Writing Twenty DookS. r An energetic physician in Sn itzer land has been counting, by means of a pedometer, the number of steps taken by him in a year. The total he fitds to be 26,740 per day, or 9,760, 000 for the year. To discount this a newspaper writer comes forward .'. tbe number of words he has tten wihia the samts period. He ananaged to turn out 810,000. An ordinary book contains some 40,000 words; hence the labor of the news - paper man for the twelve months was equivalent to the writing of twenty books.- Chicazo Times-Herald. Gold Mine in a Well. While digging a well in the heart of the city of Fort Smith, Ark., gold bearing sand was brought up, and the community is not a little stirred up at finding that they have been living over a gold mine. The property on wbich the find was mads is the prop erty of the city, and is a part of the old military reservation, which was donated to the city ten years ago. New Orleans Picarune. UABK TilE LOTELM I To EhemMore Than to Others Is Due the Pair Play Accorded to Whee'men. From the beginning of cycling in this qountry the makers have been its strongest belrarks, andto them is due the credit for the C ud position riders of the bicycle hold. To oh membere of the trade, therefore, we owe much, as it was their pluck and their money tWt have made for us our position. ~I . COL. Ma.T. . LOVELL ~Am'ong the men mno early felt the benefits of eyoling. and did not hesitate to expond money, Is Colonel Ben. S. Lovell, of Bost.n, Treasurer of the John P. Lovell Arms Com pany, of that city. Their firm name bas been a familiar one for over fifty years, hav ing been established in 1840. doing a sport ing goods and gun business. Being in a kindred trade, it was but natural that they should engage in the making and selling of bicycles. Their success has been unbounded as they have made a name for the Loveli Diamond Cycles that is a familiar house hold one in every hamlet in the land. It is not possible to have done that without cost, and a considerable one, too, as readers of current literature will admit, for have not all of us encountered the symbolic words "Loyel! Diamond' To estimate the gross amount that has been expended for advertis ing would be adifficult task.but it is said that considerably over $100.000 was spent by them during 18014. .All the big Eastern dailies -had e'ntire pages, which cost lots of money, and the magazines fied many pages exploit ing Loveti Diamond Cycles. Can It be wondered at, then, that cycling has become popular, when men like Colonel Lovell spend such sums to make it so? Colonel Lovell is Treasurer of the John P. Lovell Arms Company, and is a man of rare bbsiness attainments, nequired by long ex e nce and an aptitude possessed by few. private life he has won the respect and es teem of every one he has been brought in contact with, while his public record is equally good, on five different occasions rep resenting his town in the Legislature, serving - n both branches. He served on the staff of Governot Long for three consecutive years, and is now amember of GovernorGreenhalge's staff. He has been a delegate to four National conventions, and there Is not an office in the gift of his townsmuen which would not be at bin disposal were it not for his great business responsibilities. There Is no man in the hicycle business more respected than Colonel Ben..8. Lovell, and no better bicycle is made inthe.world than the.ovll imna. The Lade. fle pleasant effect and perfect safety with which ladles may use the California liquid lax ative, Syrup of Figs, under all conditions makes it their favorite remedy To get the true and genuine article, look for the name of the California Fig Syrup Co., printed near the bottom of the package. Always ..Cures Indigtestion, Dyspensia, Bad Breath, Debilt ty. Sour Stomach, Want of Appetite, Distress Aftr Eating, ad all evils arising from a weak or disordered stomach. It builds ujp from the first de'se, and a bottle or two wIil - ure the worst cases, and insure a good appe tite, excellent digestion and result in vigor pus he-rlth and buoyancy of spirits. There Is -ao b.'tte-r way to insure good health and a to:lif, than to keep the stomacht riht. tyher' ysppsia Romedy s guarantedt Drnk. Forsale DryD uggists. Manufacured by C. 0. Tyner, Atlanta. Every Motber 5bourd Always'larg i bottle of Parker's Ginger Tonic. Nothing so jood for pain,weakness, colds and sleeplessnes iWife used **MOTHEa's FurIZE" before first hild--.wsquickly relieved~suffered but little; recovery rapId. E. E. JOWNSTON, Eufaula, Ana. I use Piso's Cure for Consumption botb i my fauftly and practice.-Dr. G. W. PAT. .rr~nsos. Inkster. Mich., INov. 5. 1891. [fff~icted-with sore eyes useDr. Isaac Thomp son's Eye water. Druggistssell at 25c per bottlc Always Tired lleuoribei dangerous cbondition, because It, means that the vitality is becomIng exhaust,~ et by reason of impoverished blood. Give1 new life to the vito! l uid and the ner'ves andj musoles will grow stronger. Hood's Sar-a parilla gives strength, because it makes' pure, rich glood. Remember Hood's Sarsaparilla! Is the only true blond purifier prouminently in the public eye tdday. $1; six for $5. H ood's Pills la e.iN SColumbian Agency. BinghamtonN.Y. Cir. free. ASK YOUR DRUGGIST FOR IT IS * THE BEST * FoQD FOR Dyspeptic,Delicate,Infirm and AGED PERSONS * JHN CARL.E & SONS, New York. * lHEMWELL'S TRIAL, T LEXINGTON, N.C. HE PLEADS SELF-DEFENSE. rhe Proceedings Day by Day. The 3Main Point. SATUhDAY's PROCEEDINGS. In the trial Saturday, the main witness iras Chief of Police Michael, who did not reach the scene of the tragedy, but who tes ifed as to the causes which led up to the hooting. He attempted several times to lisarmShemwell during the morning, but ineffectually. At the trial previous to the killing, old Dr. Payne, whose head was ban daged as a result of a wound inflicted by a shot from Shemwell's weapon, during the irst shooting, said: "I will have to put on my glasses, as I cannot see out of one eye." Sfiemwell remarked: -I wish I had got the other." The witness contradicted himself badly during the cross-examination, but held firm ly to the statement above. MONDAY'S PnocEEDINGS. Baxter Shemwell was called to the stand. He said: ''I was 37 years old in March. Have been married since June 8th, 1882. I bought an interest intbeLexington Drug Company in January. 1895. Owned part in it at that time. Had made no threats against Dr. Lee Payne. We met in the barber shop Saturday night, the 23d of February. Had some words. After it was over I met Chief-of-Po lice Michael and told him something relative to the trouble and also told my wife when I reached home. "Monday morning early I was coming up street to my place of business. Had got five 'or six feet beyond Dr. Payne, Sr's., yard gate; heard someone say 'Shemwell;' looked and saw the old doctor beckoning me with his right hand and closing front door with left which was 75 feet from the gate. I stepped back ic the gate and put my arm on the gate post to await his arrival there;- waited until he came within eight or ten feet and said: 'Good morning, Dr. Payne.' He made no reply to my salute. but walked up near me and said: 'I understand that you drew a .istol on my son.' I si2rl: 'He put his bands to his pocket and Ijust did it to save myself; besides I thought that this matter was set ,tied.' Then he kinder turned a3 to walk back to the gate, and said: 'You are armed now, are you not. sir?' Said it twice. I never an wered but looked enraged at him. Then he caught hold of his coat and said: 'I can whip you myself. sir. Then I think I said, 'if you ;are going to whip me. come outside and don't stand inside and abuse me.' Then he threw up to me about practicing for my mother and making no charges. Something else passed. I can't remember what. Soon after I said I wanted you people to let me and my business alone. He then asked me: 'How are we bothering your business? I replied you had continually bothered Wheeler and ruined his business by cireula ' that he kept old medicines and substituted prescrip tions. He immediately shook his fist in my face and called me a liar. I had a cologne bottle in my hand. I reached over and struck him with it. He immediately pulled out his pistol and snapped it at me. About the same time I reached for mine, and just then Mr. Redwine stepped up and caught me and my pistol went off, shooting into the ground be low. Mr. Redwine shoved me into the street. About that time I saw Lee Payne coming from the office with pistol in hand. Then I dlon't remember who fired. first. I, re teating across the street, emptied my pistol and got behind a tree. All three of us did shotingr. I was about the middle of the strtet when I fired my last shot. Then I got behlr'd the tree. I heard either Mrs. Har grae. Dr. Payne, Sr's.. sister, or his wife say 'Come back, Brother Robert. and the other, who was standing In Dr. Payne's porh. say 'Run. Shemwell or they will kill you.' When I was leaving I heard Dr. Lee Pay~ne say 'Run, you cowardly cuss;' also saw; him go to the office and come back with a gun. I could not tell what kind of gun and I did run. Ithought he was stooping from iside of the fence as if trying to shoot me. . rememb~er telling Will Hammer to bring me a gun, after seeing Dr. Lee payne with a -gui. "I went over to Peacock's store and called for a gun, but didn't get it. Went imnmedi att ly to Redwine's. Got a bo'r of cartridges . Peacock's. At Redwine's I got a donolk barelled shot-gun. Said to nobody that 'y'trday I was glad that I didn't kill hime, bu': to-day I am sorry.' I went on down the st. eet from Redwine's, somewhere near Mrs. Adder ton's gate. Then I met my wife, who 'aid to me: 'You-are not going down there. If you go. I go, and if they kill you they will 1:l1 me. too.' 'MIes. Adderton came out, caught the lapel o! my coat. and said: 'Batster, be quiet. Ycu used to listen to Mr. Addertcn; now I wnt you to listen to me and be quiet,' I sad: 'They way-laid me and tried to kill me,' and then came on up the street. I did c say that I would kill them bo0th befo'-e niht.~ I came on with my wife to the- drug store. I did not dare the Payoes out of lhe ofle; did not see them in the office. ''I asked June Michael, the officer who came to me, why dlidn't be arrest the Paynen fist. He did go for them, I thick, and left them and came to me. I said: 'Have you disarmed the Paynes?' He 1:alled out the two pi~tols and said 'yes.' I went on inte the court house with Mr. G:-illth when I de clined to give up my pistols. I was coming out of the door of the grand jury room. He (Jutne Miehae!) asked me for my pistols. I tcld him to come and go to the drug sto:e atid I would place them there. I wa'ked back to the grand jury room with him. In tee I gave him one of my pistols. I raised the window ancd jumped out. he grabbing my cat and pulling it off. Then I wa'ked rtraight te the drug store. Ho brougiet may ?ost and also the pistol. and I pL't them in the drawer. After I ptut away my pistots I went to Griffith's offiee and then from th'ere back to the drug store where Muitebeae! came and showed me the Payne's pistols. Then I went into the court room for the trial, sittiug :ext to my cuosel, Robbins & Roper. We gave bomds for our appearance. The Pay"ne le the rcom at once, arter signing. They cooldI have gone nearly home before I l.efl. (I have no recollection of sayig, 'I w --ed i'. got the other eye'). I remar'ed to some wort men 'hat all wa.s over now. to get down to businese; went ak, got my pistols and looked over my m'ail. As I come back somebody met me and 'red to me a few minutes. Then Isteppe~l out, met ey-Stjerlif G:iffith and told him al.t w; ove:. I was going honme. Whek I came at on the street from the court heuze. the pynes r-e not j.a sight. Did not know iey Ira I gone to Lawyer Willitms' office. "They had time to get home. "abou t the lower coruer of the Methoist chuch I si-w -1:e Paynes the first time that'I rnew they were nihead of me on the .side walk. I looked i'p arnd saw the docto'. Saw someody withl them who had on a cheviot. I may have gaickened my step a 14tle to pass hw befet-eethby got to the office, for I kne'u that thev '.ad gut's rhe'e. I caught "p. paes ed Mfr. Croft; ne was about eight or ten .'ee oehind. I spo.ke to him, called his name. After passing him and about even with :Dr. Payne, Sr., Crotts hollered out: 'Doctor! doctor! Shemwel is on you.' "About that time I was a step ahead of the old doctor, and about even with the young doctor. As I got aheadl of the old doctor, voung Dr. Payne immediately drew a pistol. I stopped to grab for mine. T'be old doctor grbed me by the arm, shoved me out in the street beyond the ditc:h. I stumbled and liked to have fell. Heshoved me beyond the ditch. I jerked my left hand loose, jerked ie other loose, got'my pistol out and looked and shot at Dr. Lee Payne. He (Dr. Lae) was running arotmd t rying to shoot me as th. old doctor shoved me back. Just. as I shot the old doctor grabbed at me a sec'on I time and got shot. I grabbed (Lee) Payne's beard and fell, the old doctor falling on top. Somebody came up and I hollered take bimte off. Di'n't know that the old doct-or was shot. As we were pulled up the old doctor had my coat. I said: "Take him loose. andl !rid to loosen him, when he turned loom. lie sasgered and fell. Then I kn'ew, for the i-s time, that he was shot. I neverat temnpie-d to get my pistols till Dr. Lee Payne drew his on me. I got t hem out as soon as I got loose roi the old doctor at first. Think I shot b~i p'istols.'Pulled both when D-. Lee drew b eistel; was watlk ing on by them on-.wm oe. -Nmither docto: made any demoistrationm Zj romtsaid 'Shemwell is on yor..' Leo v9 -iramediately drew his pistol wheai I never attempted to draw mine till Dr. Lee Payne drew his. When I was taken ont of the fight I was very weak. As I came upoal the sid,, walk. just before I got there my wjfe. came up and caught hold of me. I also pul an arm around her waist. She said: -Honey.. I thought this thing was settled.' I replied. 'So did I, but I had it to do.' About thid time or possibly before this, my little so. I p cried and said: 'Papa is not guilty. I sa-.' Dr. Payne draw his pistol first.' He alsq said: 'I saved my papa's life. I pulled tb pistol off of his beart.' I told nobody that 11 was going to kill both. 1. "I came on back up the street. Met Jund Michael somewhere and said: 'June, f thought you disarmed those men.' We were near Mrs. Adderton's gate when I said it. "Then I came on to the drug sto-e. Mr. Kenney, deputy sheriff, was with me. I " asked him to .et me wash. I was muddy. g Was behind the counter, about half way of the store. I saw Sheriff Leonard step in. I threw up my hands and said: 'She:-iff, I am your prisoner,' and think I said: - have killed the wrong man'-substartia'lv that. Then I was taken to jail. Mr. Long went over a long list of scrape3 in which Shemwell had been engaged and G put them in for what they were worth. Shem well giving an explanation of each represent Ing plausibly his side, after whieh court ad- IL journed for the day. t TUESDAY'S PROCEEDIiNGs. h, The State introdu'ed Messrt. Tbomwason. ti H. P. Gaflimore W. P. Smith. J. T. Kineryd s C. 0. Bean, all subst;aialy coroorntag 1tr wi had already been said by .,;tnesses of t, the State about the killing. All stood Ote w eross-examination very well. tr The State rested its case with the examina- U tUon of a countryman named Teague. VU, Many witnesses were examined by the defense to corroborate Shemwell's statement. g A number of marked inconsistencies were it brought out by the cross examinatio n. Some si of Shemwell's statements were not corrobo- v rated, yet many of them were. I! wEDNESDAY's PRoCEEDINGS. Court convened at the usual hour and the d following witnesses were put on the stand c and testified, but there were no new devel- sI opments: J. D. Neal. J. H. Hamner, J. D. T Redwine, A. A. Springs, Sr., and Jr.. D. J. tI Crotts. J. M. Kennidy, Miss Geitrude Ham- P ner, Henry Tussey, Mrs. Payne. Sr.. and Jr. A number of witnesses were examined as to Shemwell's character, and the evidence was P all in and the trial concluded. Shemwell's I story for the defense and Dr. Lee Payne'z U story for the State have been substantially e corroborated by many witnesses. In the r morning the argument will open with Judge ( ontgomery's speech. t te b 'TRIO OF GIRLS NOW. h k The PresIdent's Thi: Daughter Born a C "Gray Gables," His Summer Home. At -'Gray Gables," the summer home of I President Cleveland, at Buzzard's Bay. Mass., e a little girl was born to Mrs. Cleveland at 4.80 o'clock p. m. Dr. Joseph D. Bryant, - the attending physician, said that mother b and child were doing well. U . r C on Otobe 3.1891 an onSeptmber9, 93 DRthwa b3r Dt rKY. ~ ln' e i i ity, which was the Clevelands' homno for a e me after they left the White House in 1889. r Ruth weighed eight ponnis at her birth. ~ Esther was born in the White House after Mr. ~ Cleveland's second term had begun. 1: A PULLMAN OF' SLEEPING ~ Pilgrirns and Priests Telescoped by.~ a Second Section. Many Never r Awoke. .The Engineer Asleep. I In the early hours of Wednesday morning there occurred an accident on. the Granmd Trunk road at Craig's Road. Quebe'., that r has seldom been excelled in horror by any similar event in Canadian railway annals. A special excursion train erushed into an- I other train of the same kind precedin.: it r and killed some twenty people. whil: thet wounded are numbere:d in the= viinity o~f two score. The trains that came in collision ws-'re special excursion trains filled with pilgrims en route from .Sherbrooke. Richmond ano, I Windsor Mills. to Levis. where they were to cross over to Quebec. and Proceed to the I shrine at St. Anne de Beaupre. and were ollowing one another with an interval of some twenty minutes between them. The first train reached Craig's Road sta Ition, which is fourteen miles west of Levis. about 3 o'clock. and stopped at the tank to tak'3 water. Due precautions were taken and the semaphore thrown to danger signal for the following train. Only the trainm-a were out and about attending to their duties. The Pullman in the rear was wrapped in 'i lence and the sleepers were unaware of thme terrible late that was rushing upon them. Suddenly there was a great crash-thes ond train coming at full speed had dashed into the rear Pullman of the first section. Every berth in the Pullman wvas wrecked and some of the occupants wvho were killed. ne'.'sr knew what happened to them. They (lied sleeping. Others awoke to their horrible surroundings and p)ostion. maimed. bleed ing and bruised, conscious of little els;e but the agony that raeked them. It was~ an axw ful scene. The work of rescue began at once. The colored rorter' of the Pullman "ar Bahnoral received fatal injuries. - and has since dicd. Thie following is the eorrent list of the dead: Charles Bedard, mail clerk. H''cor Mceod, engineer. Rihmuondl: iihardI L. Perkins. fireman.1Richmond: RWv. J. L. M. r ier. Richmond: Rev-. F. P. Dignan, Windsor Mills: Mr. Cogan, Kiehmond: Miss X'alin. St .Jose1;h de Lev'is: Miss Phaneur. St. Jo-.-ph de Leyis: Mrs. J1. B. Cayer. Danville: Miss, Delicourte. Shefford: aunt of Mi~ss Van. name unknown. St. Joseph de Levis: J1ohn O'Ferrall. Capleton. The' injured number 28. all having Fr n h names, and belonging in the Prov-in'- of Quebee. It is hard to say where the blame for the aident rests. It has been sugge-t'ed that Enginee'r MeLeod might have dozed off to) sleep and thus have missed the warning semaphore and wvas unconscious of his whereabouts. Indeed, this would seem to be the only theory that "an be. a'lvan""d, but a strict investigation will be h'-ld at once to determine the re'sponsibility. Belgium's i~ving D~eath.. Mmne Joniaux, the Belgian poison er; has entered upon her term of life imprisonment of such a hideous form that death must soon follow'. They put her in e. cell into which daylight cannot penetrate. She will never see a human being, never hear a human voice again. They will push her food in through a slit in the wall of her cell. She will go mad at the end of a few months if death does not come tirst. Even the mod stup~iid and do graded have succumbed to this Izurrox o living burial within two Tears. - USINESS TROUBLES. LOQUENT REV. DR. TALMAGR reaches a Timely Sermon on BusinesS Cares, Trials and TemptationS. TEXT: "T'e' wore thy mercha its In all rts of thir -."1-- kiel xxvii.. 2. We arc at th- opninz door of returning ttional pr 'sperity. The coming e-ops. the ~tablish'n.nt of public confldnce and, ove al1. .he blessing of God witl turn in ,oni all C-.!tions of America the widest. eat:t lror-perity this country has ever :v. Buvt that door of success is not yet lv :>e and thousands of business men yet sufiering from the distressing times rflti which we have been passing. Somei of the best men in the land have lt-red. mnu whos2 hearts are mlisted in erv ge)l werk and whose bands have essed every great charity. The church of a I can afford to extend to them her sym thies a-id plead before heaven with all -ailin: pyraver. The schools such men havo tabliied, the churches they have built, e asylnns and beneficent institutions they Ve istelre.l will be their eulogy long after eir banking institutions are forgotten. ich mnu can never fail. They have their ensure s isanks that never break and will .millionaires forever. But I thought it ould be appropriate to-day and useful for e to talk about the trials and temptations our business men and try to offer some rative preseriptions. In the first plate, I havo to remark that a -eat many of our business men feel ruinous ials and temptations coming to them from aill and limite I capital in business. It Is 1.rywhere understood that it now takes tr or four times a, much to do business ell than it onco did. Once a few hundred llars were turned ints goods. The mer munt would be his own storekeeper, his own desman, his own hookkeeper. He would anage al the affairs himself, and every inz woul.l be net profit. Wonderful minges have come. Costly dpparatus; exz naive advertisinv, exorbitant stord rents: 1avy taxation, expensivo agencies are only irts of the demand made upon our com; ercial men; and when they have found iemsolves in such circumitances with small Lpital they have sometimes been tempted tq in against the rocks of moral and financial struction. This temptation of limited tpital has ruined men in two ways. Some mes they have shrunk down under the mptation. They have yielded the battle fore the first shot was fired. At the first Rrd dun they surren-lered, Thdr kneos nocked together at the fall Mi the aition r's harmmer. They blanched at the finan4 al peril. They did not Understatid that xere is such a thing as heroism in ierchan: ise and that there are Waterloos of the :unter and that a man can fight no braver attle with the sword than he can with the rdstiek. Their souls melted in them be Lse sugars were up when they wanted to y au-1 dowa when they wanted to sell. and nalable goods were on the. shelf and d debts in their lelger. Tho gloom of ieir countenanees overshadowed even their ry goods and groceries. IlespondencV, ming from limited capital, blasted the. thers have felt it in h different way. They ave said: "Here. I have been trudging long. I have been trying to b3 honest all ise years. I find it is of no use. Now it i make or break." Thed small tfraft that Duld have stood the stream is pilt out bo; ond the lighthouse on the great sea of spec lation. He borrows a few thousand dollars :m friends who dare not refusehini and he oes bartering on a large scale. He reasons i this way: "Perhaps I may succeed, and if don't I will be no worse off than I am now, >r $100.000 taken from nothing, nothing re iainis. Stocks are the d ice- with which he* gain les. He 1:ought for a few dollarsvast tracts f Western landI. Some man at the East, lin~ 2g on a fat homestead, meets this gambler fortune and is persuaded to trade off his sat e for lots in a Western city, with large venues, and costly palaees, and lake ste-am rs smoking at the wharves, and rail trains oming down with lightning speed from erv direction. There it ls all on paper! 'he ity has never been built nor the rail' ads constructed. but everything points that rav, and the thing will be done as sure as ou live. Well, the man goes on, stopping tno fraud or out rage. In his splendid quipage he dashes past, while the honest tborer looks up antd wipes the sweat from is brow anti sayvs, "I wonder where that ian got all his m'onev?" After a while the ubble bursts. Creditors rush in. The law itches, but, finds nothing in its grasp. The ten who were swindlledI say "I don't know ow I could have ever been <deceived by that an," andl the pictorials, in handsome wood t, set forth the hero who in ten years had enius enough to rail for 215,000! An.1 thait is the process; by which many ave been~ tempited through limitation of pital to rush into labsyrinlths from which bey ouldl not be~ extricated. I would not ant to chain honest enterprise. I would t want to block up any of the avenues for onst accumnulation that open before young in. On th e cntrary, I would like to cheer 'iem on aund rejoies when they reach the onl. 1.ut wheni ther" are su':h mnultitudles of xen going to ruin for this life and the life tat is to comeu tharough wrong notions of hat are lawful spieres of enterprise It Is it dut v of the Chare'h of God], and the minis ars of 'religion. :anu the friends of all young 1e, I ' uitter a plain, emnphatie, unmis iabe prot'est. These are the Influences !at drown men in destruction and per it ion. Aain. a great many of our business men re temupted to ove'ranxiety and care. You now that nearly nau commeresai ousin'sses re overdone in this daty. S nittea with the eve of quick gain, our cities at a cr~o wdl2 pith men resolved to be rich at all h tzar1I3. hey do not earo how money comes if ,it >nly comes. Our best merchants are thr w.t nto competition with men of more means .nd less conscience, andI if an opoortunity accumulation be neglected one lh mr ome one else p'icks it up. From anuary to December the struggle gn>e n. Night gives no quiet to limbs tosse ng in restlessness nor to a brain that nil not stop thinking. The drea-ns are arrowed by imaginary loss and flushedl tith imaginary gains. Even the Sitb 'ath cannot dam back the tide of anxiety, or this wave of worldliness dashes clear ver the churches and leaves its foa'n on ibles and prayer books. Men who ar-i lying on salaries or by the cultivation of the oilecannot understand the wear ani tear of he body and mind to which our merc:xaat; re subjected when they do not know but hat their livelihood ani their businesi tonr are denendent upon the uncertaintieS if the next ~hour. This excitement of the rain, this corroding care of the heart, this train of effort that exhausts the spirit, ends a great many of our best men in iu le life into the grave, their life dashed ont gainst money safesa. They go with their tore on their ijaeks. They trudge like c:im -l,v 1 itin:. from Aleppo to D)a-l-Seu2. L'hey make their life a crucifixion. Stani g eh ind desks and counters, banished rm the fresh air, weighed down by cark g ear-s. th-'uy a-- s> many suicides. O'm. I vish I could t o day rub out some of these is of e:ure: that i could life some of t'ho urdns trorn the heart; that I could givin -elaxation to s-ome of these worn muscles. it imhne for you to begin to take it a little asier. D)- vour best and then trust Ge-l or the rest. 'Do not fret. God manages all he alTairs of your life, and He manages hem for the best. Consider the lilies. They dways hasw robes. Behold the fowls of the air! They always tave nests. Take a long breath. Bethink etimes that God did not make you for a yck horse. Dig yourselves out from among he hogsheads andi the shelves, and in th's ight of the holy Sabbath day resolve that nou will give to the winds your fears, and! ;our fretfulness, andi your distresses. You >rought nothing into the world, and it is rery certain you can carry nothing out. Eaving food and raiment, be therewith con tent. The merchant came home from the store. There had been agreat disaster there. He opene.l the front door and said in the midst of his family circle: "I am ruined. Everything is gone. I am all ruined." His wife said, "I am left," and the little child threw up its hands and said, ".Papa, I am ~ere." The aged grandmother, seated in the room, said,'"Then you have all the prom ises of God beside, John." And he burst In to tears and said: "God forgive me that I have been so ungrateful! I find I have a great many things left. God forgive me!" Again, I remark that many of our business ren are tempted to neglect their home rluties. How often it is that the store and bome clash, but there ought not to be any ollision. It is often the case that theafather isthe mere treasurer of the family, a sort of gro-eries. ine worx or ramlly government he does not touch. Once or twice in a year he calls the children up on a Sabbath after noon, when he has a half hour he does not exactly know what to do with, and in that half hour be disciplines the children and chides them and corrects their faults and gives them a great deal of good advice. and then wonders all the rest of the year that his )hildren do not do better when they have the wonderful advantage of that semi-annual :astigation. The family table, which ought to be the place for pleasant discussion And cheerful aess. often becomes the place of perilous xxpedition. If there be any blessing asked ,t all, it is cut off at both ends and with the mand'on the carving knife. He counts on his fingers, making estimates in the inter tices of the repast. The work done, the hat toes to the head, and he starts down the street, and before the amily have arisen !rom the table he has bound up another bundle of goods and says to the customer, 'Anything more I cando for you to-day, ir?" A man has more responsibilities than those which are disebarged by pitting com Detent instructors over his children and giv ng them a drawing master and a mtisic tacher. The physical culture of the child Prill not be attended to unless the 'ather looks to it. He must some Imes lose his dignity. He must unlim >er his joints. He must sometimes lead :hern out to their sports and games. Tue parent who cannot forget the severe duties >f life sometimes, to fly the kite and trundle the hoop and chase the ball and jump the .ope with his children, ought never to have ceen tempted out of a crusty and uinredeem tble solitariness, If you want to keep your :hildren away from places of sin you can nly do it by making your home attractive, koti ma preich sermonis and advocate re forms and deiounceo wickedness, an-1 yet your children will b- captivated by tbe glit iering saloon of sin unless you cani mr e your home a brighter place than arv ether place on earth to them. Ob. gather all charms into your house. If you can afford it, briug boo's anl pic tures and cheerful entertainments to the household. But above all teac' those children, not by half an hour tvcc a year on the Sabbath day, but day after .lay and every day teach theta that religion is a great gladness; that it throws chains of gol: aboift the acck; that it take3 no spring from the foot, no blithedess frotm the heart, no sparkle from the eye, no ring fro" the laugh ter, but that "her ways are ways of plezttant ness, and ;Ill her paths are peace." I sympa ihize *ith the work being done in many of our cities by *hicUl b1tutifil room,_% are set anart by our Youn MIen's Christtianescia tIons, ana I pray God to prosper them in all things. But I tell you there is something back of that and before that. We need more happy, consecrated, cheerful Christian homes everywhere. Again I remark that a great many of our business men are terapted to put the attain rient Of money above the value of the soul. It is d graid thing to have plenty of money. The moie you get of it the better, if it como honesty and go usefully. For the lack of it sickness dies without medicine, and -hunger finds it coffin in the empty bread tray, and nakedness shivers for lack of clothes and fire. When I hear a man in canting tirade against money-a Christian man-as though it had no possible use on earth and he had no in terest in it at all, I come almost to think that the heaven that would be appropriate for him would be an everlasting poorhouse. While, my friends, We do admit there is such a thing as the lawful usc of money -a profitable use of money-let Its rec ognize also the fact that money cannot satis f_ a man's soul; that it cannot glitter in the dark valley; that It cannot pay our fare cross the Jordan of death; that it cannot Unlock the gate of heaven. There are men ii all occupations who seemto act as though they thought that a pack of bonds and mort gages could be traded off for a title to heaven and as though ggld would be a law ful tender in that place where it is so com mon that they make pavements out of, It. alvation by Christ is the only salvation_. Tresttres in heaven are the only incorrupti ble treasures. Have you ever ciphered out in the rule of loss and gain the sum, "What shalt It profit amn if he gain the whole world and lose his own soul?" However fine your apparel, the winds of death will flutter it like rags. Home puta and a threadbare coat have sometimes been the shadow of coming robes made white in the blood of the Lamb.: The pearl of great price is worth more than any gem you can bring from the ocean, than Australian or Brazilian mines strung in one careanet. Seek after God, find His righteousness, and all shall be welt here--all shalt be well here after. Some of you remember the shipwreck of the Central America. That noble ship had, I think, about 500 passengers aboard. Sud denly the storm came, and the surges tramped the decks and swung into the hatches, and there went up a hundred voiced death shriek, The foam on the jaw of the wave. The pitching of the steamer as though It were leaping a mountain. The dismal flare of the signal rockets. The long cough of t be steam pipes. The hiss of extinguished furnaces. The walking of Go d on the wave! The steamer went not down without a strug gle. As the passengers stationed themselves in rows to bail out the vessel, hark to the thump of the buckets, as men unused to toil, with blistere I hands and straine~l muscle, tug for their lives. There is~ a sail seen against the sky. The flash of the distress gun is noticed; its voie heard not, for it is choke1 in the louder booming of the sea. A few passengers escaped, but the steamer gave one great lureh anti was gone! So there are so'unt men who sail o2 prosperously in life. All's well, all's well. But at last some financial disatster comes-:1 euro clydon. Down the~y g >! Ti-: botto-n of th~e comnmer cil sea is strewa with shattere~l hulks. But becauso your ".roperty goes do not let your soi go. Though all else perish, save that, for I have to tell you of a more stupenloius shipwreck than that which I just mentio' Il. God launched this world 600) years a;'. It has been going on under freight of mun tains and im'nortils, but on1 day it will stagger at the cry of fire. The timbers of rock will burn, the mountains fla-ne like masts, and the clouds like sails in the judgment hurricane. Then G>1 shall take the passengers oli the den'. ani fromn the berths those who have long bee2 asleep in Jesus, and He will set them far beyond the Ireach'of storm and peril. Bat how many shall go down will never b3 known until it shall be announced one day in heaven. The shipwrck of a worl.! S> many millions save:P! So many millions drowned! Oh, my dear hearers, whatevrs you lose, though your houses go, thoug'a your lands go, though all your earthly possessions perish. may God Almighty, through the blood of the overlasting covenant, save nil your souls! How a BullIrog Bellows. "Do yo know how a bullfrog lee lows?" said ex-Magistrate Camp last night as he spread out his legs and joined in the conversation of the side walk group in front of the Willard Hotel. "Now, most people think that when a bullfrog bellows he is laying upon a big log or rock just blowinag off. That's not so. When a bullfrog bellows he is lying flat out on the water, this way," and the speaker spread out his broad palm. "I've seen 'em. You know he has a sor t of wat tle under his throat. Wecll, he fills that about half full of watey and blows out the air through it. You've all put water in a bottle and then blown into it?" There was no response, bat Mr. Camp continued : "You know ho w that sounds. Well a frog bellows in that same way, and it sounds jast like blowing in a bottle partly fillied with water. Just this way," and the speaker expanded his own "wattle" and gave an imitation so natural as to alarm the cook in the hotel kitchen. "Do you know where a frog's teeth ar?" continued 'd3quire Camp, en couraged by the absence of argument. "In his stomach?" somnelo ly sug g'ested. "No. A frog's teeth," resomed 'Squire Camp, impressively, "are just about the middle of his backbone, be tween his hind and fore legs."-Louis yle Courier-Journal. George Gould's y~acht, the Tigilini, reached New York the other day Ieighteen (lays out 'romn Southamptou t was one of the quicke.-t tipns or record. One day she logged di7 kos. Drowsy NoIs are Bids a t AntioUg. An auction sale story comes from Philadelphia. A refrigerator was put up. It was a good-looking article, Cc and $10 was bid. "Ridiculous," said a the auctioneer, "who bids $11?" A fu man in the corner nodded, and for a ft moment it looked as though he would re get a bargain, but somebody else th shouted $12. The auctioneer looked w at the man in the corner and got an- Sa other nod, and after some delay, some body went a dollar better. "Fourteen uj I'm bid," shouted the man with the al hammer, and he shouted it four or p, five times, and just before he declared m the lot sold came another nod from fa the quiet bidder, and the lot 'Was sold. w "Your ice-box. What name?" asked y the bookkeeper. But the man only 01 nodded his head and appeared not to u hear. "What name?" was again shout- h4 ed, and somebody leaned over and re peated the question in stentorian f tones. The man made a quick move- b ment, rubbed his eyes, and wanted to e know what was the matter. "I didn't , buy no ice-box," he said, "I've been 1i asleep." "This ain't no place to a sleep," said the auctioneer, "uad you'll pay for that box or stand the a difference on the resale." There was t a warm altercation, and lawsait is e threatened. A nol is as good as a wink to an auctioneer that knows his business. -Atlanta Constitution. a .... -_ - b t A Small Boy's Goa:l Memory. V r One of the dentists of this city has a j precocious child of about four sum- i mers. The bright little fellow keeps his father and mother wide awake dur ing the whole day by his wit and keen ness. When the child was about two i years of age his parents visited Ni agara Falls. Baby we-nt along. The other day i friend of the family was - at the house, and she spoke of Niagara. The four-year-old quickly spoke up that he had been there. His mother told him that he certainly could not remember it, but the child said that he could. His mother asking him what it looked like, Johnnie replied: "It looks like a great big ocean going aw ful fast."-Albany (N. Y.) Journal. led Cotton. Red cotton has been raised at Alpha. retta, Ga., where a well-known planter has quite a quantity of that curious stuff, every stalk of which is a deep red, even the leaf, boil and bloom. This novel crop comes from planting Eeeds obtained six or seven years ago from a freak stalk of red cotton found grcwing in Florida.-New York Mer cury. Los Angeles, Cal., has a mule which is named Trilby because of its pretty eet 0 A& gewed Tares for Hay. Quite a number of farmers neat Cornelius, Ore., have sown tares for hay. Tares are becoming very ropu lar with the farmers where they have been tried, making an excellent pas ture for pigs and producing four or ive tons of fine hay per acre-New York Post. Tobacco Stinking Breath. Not pleasant to always carry around, but it don't compare with- the nerve-destroying power that tobacco keeps at work night and day to make you weak and impotent. Dull eyes, loss of intorest in sweet words and looks tell the story. Brace up-quit. No To-Bac Is a sure3 quick cure. Guaranteed by Druggistseverywhere. Book, titled"Don't Tobacco Slpit or Smoke Your Life Away," free. Ad. Sterling Blemedy Co., New York City or Chicago. ______ Notdee. I want every man and woman in the United States Interested in the Opium and W* habts tohaveoe ofmy biooks on these ds eses. Address B. M. WJoolley, Atlanta, Ga., Box 881. and one will be sat you free. .ZEvey Cause But the Eight Ose. Your headache: Yeu laylt to every dans but the ~e one-indigestion. So few pol know what indigetion really Is. Hdykow ey have it. 'The cure Is Bipaus aus.A sige one gives relief. Ask your Qrua*t. Nw Is the T'imei to Care Yeur Corse' pth Hindercorns. It takes them out peet apd gives conifert._Ask your drug _sc. k {3E.A. Itood, Toledo, Ohio, says: " HaB'e s tarrh Cure cured my wife of caterrh Sftemn rears ago and she has had no return of It. It'sn a sure cure." Sold by Druggists, 75c. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children teething, softens the gums, reduces Inflamma tion, allays pain, cures wind colIc. 25c. a bottle. Theiwin be an enormous paeiah eop in the State of Washington thIs year. e ON THE ROAD - - to recovery,th - - young woman - who is taking / Doctor Pierce's / Favorite Pre scription. In , maidenhood, wo '~ 'J ~ manhood, wife - 9 , , hoo andmoth / erhood the " Pre . -, ', scripton "is a I, . ' supporting tonic 'and nervine ~ajI that's peculiarly .,adapted to her nee ds, regulat , ing.andstrength ' h ening the system Sand curing the derangements of the sex. Why is it so many women owe their beauty to Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription? Because beauty of form and face radiate from the common center-health. The best bodily condition results from good food, fresh airI and exercise coupled with the judicious use of the "Prescription." It reaches the orngi of the trouble and corrects it. Exhausi are made to produce larg use of Fertilizers rich in 'Write for our "Farmers' Guid is brim full of useful information fo, will1 m1a a nd save vou inneyi TDROT raraym. i ae Courier-erald, -agiaw, McL)Y ft was publicly talked all over Clare-' unty, Michigan, for some time before the urier-Herald sent a reporter to Dover to ly investigate the Coulter matter. He' ally went, and we publish to-day his fUlk ort. The Coulters are prominent people, ough Mrs. C. in response to the questdo ,ether she objected to being interviewed, Id, "Certainly.not." Her story follows: j 'About 14 years ago we decided to take our abode in Dover and everything wenty. Dg smoothly for several years, businesw', gressed, and being of a saving tempera-" et we accumulated quite an itant. Our' ily increase I as the years rolled by and, a now ha-o 5 ehil.lren living, the ol01t.Z1 ungest $, but sickness made its way fnli ir household, and doctors' BlT' froodel on us. until we have nothingI4It but our )me and these sweet children. .krythang ent to satisfy the claims of phyifelians "About three yea-s ao I had a miserabl I eling at the bac of my ears. my right handL ame paralyzed and the paralysis extend' I to my arm and throat, and would affet y bead an-i efes. sometimes for days E ould lose my sight. my fae was deformed. feless as it were, my nose was drawn to ones de, and I presented a pitiable appearauce ad never expecting to regain my natural tial expressions. I employed the best phy clans that could be procared, expending tousands of dollars for their services. but: >uld not obtain relief. At last, they statedmy* &se was beyond the reach of medical skill d it would be but a short time untiitheend rould come. This certainly was not very iouraging to me, but I never gave up ope. In connection with receiving the at Dndance of physicians I have tried every tedicine known to the apotheeary but sever eceived any relief until Dr. Williams Pink ills for Pale People came to my assIstane. efore I had taken halt of the first boa-the Leformity in my face had left me, and be~e our boxes had been consumed the paral-IR tad disappeu.red entirely, and much to M-* urprise I felt like a new woman. I have Lot taken any medicine since last spring,. nst about a year ago, and my trouble has; tot appeared since. I owe my health, my/ ife to Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. "A short time since my little boy John ras afflicted with St. Vitus' dance. He ould not walk across the room without as ilstance, in fact he would fall all over him elf but after taking a few boxes of Dr.. rillams' Pink Pills, SL Vitus" dance entre y left him, and no trace ot the affliction is1 eft. These Pills are worth their weight in . ;old. You may sayin this connection that 1: m willing at any time to make affidavit to bhe truth of these statements, and further more, I will answer any communication cen -eraing my case. as I consider it- nothing more than right and just that I should assit Buffering humanity." Dr. Williams' Pink Pills contain all tb8 elements necessary to give new life and rich, ness to the blood and restore shattered' nerves. They are for sale by all druggists or may be had by %%ail from Dr. W Kedicine Company, Schenectady, N. Y.,tQX 0 cents per box, or six boxes for $2.50. On the Chiral Roads. They have narrow, roads in Chitral. They are just wide enough for camels to walk in single file, and when one of his camels fell dead on the march Colonel Kelly was obliged to blow the aareass up so that the rest could pas. -New Orleans Picayune. The Greatest riedicul Discover -. of the Age. KENNEDY'S Medical Discovery3 DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXIURY, MASS. Has discovered in one of our *coamo pasture weeds a remedy that cures every kind of Humor, from the' wor'st Scrofala down to a common pimple. He has tried It in over eleven hundretI ases, and never failed except in twoceases (both thunder humor). He has now in' his possession over two hundred certl0 cates of its value, all within twenty mils of oston. Send postal card for book. A beneit is always experienced from the first bottle, and a perfect eurels warranted 'when the right quantity Is taken. When the lungs are affected it eauses shooting pains, like needles passing through them; the same with the Liver or Bowels. This is jalieeythducts - Sbeing stopped, and always disappears in a - wee aferfmneIt. Bead the labeL Ith-tmach Is foul or bilious It wIll aus squeamish feelings ar first. No change of diet ever necessary. Est the best you can get, and enough of It. Dose, one tablespoonful In water at bed time Sold by all Druggists. oHNsoN's CHILL AND FEVER TONIC c ost, you 50 centa a bottle If t fe . X~a._l ndota.necent unless it does. wht oe Ctills and Ferer. 4th. BHlorrh Fever. k. TTEOI a . 8t."aGripp Hoey baek if one bottle fai. Ask yourds'.eabod t. A. B. GrZaaDLLV, savannah, Ga-. Proprletor Do TO AVOID THIs 'E7Y 2 0C TETRN RATC f-mi~ -o-r~ Fo.o. 8. N. U.---28. UOCAll SAVE IE! Yo U By Ordering Your ,ui lIAil AlID BII, Ifi, .1 H. AKDRREWS, cIABLOT, N. 0, IVWrte for Prices and Terms. -PARKER'S - HAIR BAL.SAMI - Prootesa luxrian growth. ioe,.nd~lst Du g ed Soils er and better crops by the Potash. r 4" a 142-page illustrated book. It farmers. It will be sent free, and