University of South Carolina Libraries
A Family Paper Devoted to Literature. Mliscellany, News, Agriculture, Alarkets, &c. oL XX. NEWB E RRY. S. C ., T HU RSD A,Y, IDE CEME ER 18, 1884. rGtUNS AT COS'l iaving determined to close o .ock of Guns before Christmas, .ierig the entire lot at cost fo The stoek is all new , bought this low prices, and this is an oppoi seldom ofiered of getting a nice Gt very small price at S. P. BOOZER 50-3t. -Hardware Si PIA N OS, p(I Upright and Sqt et n"-periority of the ---T1 A frai recognizel and acknowI drt-e highest musial authoritir y.-aemaud for them is as stead asing as their merits are bec< ..ore extensively known. fligh est Honor Over s4l American andl manly Eur rivals :at the Exposition, Paris. 1S Have the Endorsement of ove 100 different Colleges. Sewinari Schools as to their Durability 'hey are Perfect in Tone and i manship and Elegant in Appearance. A large assortment of second Pianos slw'ays on hand. General Wholesale Agents fo Burdett, Palace, Sterilig. New gland, and Wilcox and Whi * OR GANS. 508 and ORGANS sold on EAQ $TALLMENTS. eianos taken in Exchange, also o .Xhly repaired. g3rSend for Illustrated Piano o ganl Catalogue. Ch us. M. Stie No. o.: NORTH LIBERT-STRE BALTIMORE. MD. F. Werber,.,r.. Agent. Newberr; 0t0YtRACTORS -AND JBUILDEI Lumber Mil M Tho pdersigued respectfully iu 'the citizens of Newberry an, ftirronndlng Counties that. having ;el as Helena. they are prepared tc miwt f'or. and build. Churches. D jage aind othear Buld~Ings, We gni We erl?,4letAn both In the qual our win k 4a1 d the prices charge It. l;ilit ai e:SVell+eut saw wi t&ru aliso .iopnteed. at skaut jAti S a.w and tiress lumber. Orders soll CKL.EY BRO %kS l tiU OWN P fleligious, Moral, Misc appusd Go (odBooks giOcygRJgge of iba B)K a STOgS,wEers a iii ya z.kp ooks at 80E3h prICes a= -Qpng4}t TaU to Jinsee Sale. Ag4 nobok U, a good friend: it dipte ou isord #94. Is always ret agJI .you lasure;it cas De rdal ta s d o mison ibe taste We sI dee tob of t1e0. - " atherB Book ai .O en4, We des re ;o ponnee to the 911 eo ebi and a r~ou nI o the o ~and ar KARBLE~ AW1D GRAW'ViE in 4g eles aggiTe arsd48' pe4eEpng e1r~ g Sh site elass'i work has .t eiigid in Newberry; conseE ire reeygailly stilit a liberal *1Iele~at4od . ..One blooki t'i0 tf 1?ZR&O SAlLffU mre money than a ..goL 3e1n? sch .e hg sope from. Ters og. JiLS?- pBod oraine,4 -ane Nov -, eeny-eive f7)Ares~,mr cort Agg PRL,dthe Wilonl 4wbIg.idsle Iti el-a m-,~ .eee ads suctibl o woodensf (7t. Ares, inoyre ha Appled y lado o - .G W '4gr $ .nb and h e isoFFi sep 1 tfA'd ds4opleo wo onIA btgI s eh wep 1 e tof h , btggtI cirou tr, adT~ g tot nso Twl1 PRE:TTIkST: ut our TIE LARGEST! we are r cash. TIlE J1OST VARIED ! fall. at ty THE CHEAPEST! A-sortnent of Christmas and other is Cards, of the hatn'l-oteest designs ever tore. befor" putchased, are to be seen at the HERALD B0OK STORE. They range in price froni two for five cents andI upward. Come a:id see t'n. MAN'S O CANISM Is the mnept complex work of the Creator, and when thi' cninpiicsrt-d <trueture. "o exquisite hs 'rought. is disturbed by .ii-ease, the ho-t emcieut aid -hould be sou;ht fr.m the n,ort skilled physician--for the hurmin body is tot, isre. nrecioui -o be tiec<d. It becomes the ques FF" tion, then : "What phy,ieiau shall be em edg7ed ploveil ?" Dr. OsCAa JoiNissa, of the University nd of Berlin, Germany. has made a life-long study n- of ailments of the Nervous and Genito-Urinary aming System. HIS REMEDIES CURE S Any Debiliry or Derangement of the Nervous o an Sy,teu, ine;uding Spermatorea, Gonorrbma, Sy philis, Str :ture, Ini,o:ence, etc., etc. B-eaue you may have been cheated ant fooled by quacks, who claim to cure this cin s of di-orders, do nor hesitate to give Dr. Johnn uesn's method a fair trial before your case becouses chton ic and incurable. r9.F R E E. es atId A valuable treatise, explanatory of Dr. Jo hanne--en's system, will be sent by mail, post Vo.-7. paid and securely sealed from observation, to any auffe er addressing his sole authorized agent for the United State' and Canada. HENRY VOGELER. -hand 49 South Street, New York. Complicated symptoms treated from Dr. Jo r bannesaen's Special Prescription, under ad EHg. vice of a duly qualified consulting physician. Aell~' correponde-nce held as strictly contiden tial, and advice by mail free of charge " Dec 11-841 year. Wright&J. W.Coppock r Or- We now announce that our stock of CLOTHING -and MINHIIIIIH GOOS ----POE Meu, YoUths, Boys and Ohlldren, S. IS NOW COMPLETE, and we think UNSURPASSED in en anything that tends to constitute form A First-Class Stock l the Our ine of loca loDRESS SUITS aran ty o was never MORE HANDSOME, d for jwe while our t Business Suits 99 are a decided improvement on any. thing we have ever been able to get. Special attention given to the se ~ES. lection of Youths' and Boys' Goods, No doubt every mother will be grat. 1Aed at the improvement in this line. ella- We claim to sell thie RAID for the amount charged, and no one of her will doubt the asszrt ion when a comparisonl is made. Tndeed. our whQle lie of Fi'lrnishingGoods was iayt Never So Good as Now, and in every instance we will give *g a fil value for the g.moint invest ed as any other house CAn afford to do. and we guarantee satisfaction. Respecttally, * WRIGHT & 1. W. COPPOCK, In Front of OQurt JHouse, OctQ94I Newberry, S, C. m BLOOD And its unparaed abuscs, tr seily and MB. freeily diseu-,sed In a ,.. dit paga book, mailed fre to aay .airesa, by Blood 8a!;nI Co,Atianta, Gs, beap-. Drop a postat fur It, as evy man and war hi4t- 195'4 needs and wilt be delighted with its vat. Lhai4e pagle apd en tirely ney reyelaiggns, SW05 ometua shake a Nation of reople ai.d . es arouse them to actIon. Exnressions simllar -rto the followintg, from a well known Drug gist er Atlanta. pour in fro4 segtlons wnhere -B. B. B. has beec used. 09 It is our airm boilet that B. B.B,ith tha Bood Punriner on the3 maitet, We are selling to four or five bottles cf It to one of any other ute1 p gergIils of tste id, It has .ailed In no j, pstance to give 'entire satisfaction. Merit Is W. A SMITH &e P0., pragglsts.I 9This Is the only blood taedicin@ knowrn * tat combines quick action, certain effect, nig cheap price and unbounded satisfaction n"'sWE PROVE c, is ered, That one single bottle of B3. B. Bs. will do as hih much work in curing Blood Poisons, Skin cor Affections, Serofula, Kidney Troubles, Cs. tarfl and Rheumatism as sIx bottles of any CE. othe r pparatipn gix ealib, Onc 50-year-old chronic ulcer cpired i spjro .-. fgla of csildren pured with one bottle. Slood S poIQson pureid wIth a [#w pottles. It never fails. W@ 9914 1jiie pp g npok forxp. Eud for It. L'un botle p1.00, sig for M 02. tanded Expressej ou receiiof priae, ifrygur pruge ogCm.. glgt canl'& supptIFyOU0. Address a than~ BiLOOD BALE 00)1 Atlanta, ga, ilaa d..k In Newtborry by Dr, S. 7. Pan;: Ai,,, rel and Lung Affecton Wfl-BB'"Tu~ doshy gvesr D. C. fanda care oryolol O E BACHELUK OF MANY. There's one thing to the ladies I plainly wish to say, I'm a m:an of no pretenses ; I'm lifty, if a day : I'ml neither gay nor ainiable. I'ni fusy, and I'pi platin ; But, girls, you needn't plot for me-al plotting is in vain. 1 I never see the brightest eyes, and all their witcherv Is wasting ammunuition, if its aim is hurt ing me,; I never see the reddest lips Iii proof against all smiles; I rather think I'm not the man for any woman's wiles. I can sew on my own buttons, my stock ings I can mend, And women's hands around my room are not what I intend; I want no knitted, netted things, no traveling bags, no wraps, No slippers and no comforters, no paint ed plaues, no caps. I buy the things that I require ; so, ladies. hear me say, All such attentions spent on me are sim ply thrown away So shake your curls and give your gifts. bewilder all vou can,. But just rememnber, if you please, that I auu not the nmaii. I've heard there's twenty-one old maids consider me there "fate' And clever widows live or six that wish with me to mate ; There's pretty school-girls who insist I "must have had some loss," And say I'm so "romantic" when I'm only tired or cross. But, ladies, all attentions from this date I hope will cease ; The only favor that I ask, is to be left in peace ; For I consider one thing sure as any thing can be- t I will not marry any girl, and none shall t marry me. * * * * * * * That's just exactly what he said about a year ago, Now, if you could but see his rooms, they - are a perfect show Of netted things, and knitted things, I and painted plaques and screens, a Of photographs of famous men, and Beauty's living queens ; While on the hearth-stone sits his wife she's sweet and good, I know, And if you tell him of the words he t said a year ago, t He answers you, without a blush, "Oh, a that's the usual way ; -No one believes a single word old bache. lors may say ; When the right angel comes along, they C marry any day." X. B. -ED's DRAWER, in Harper's Magaziue. I SCIENTIFIC MISCELLANY. 1 THE THEORY OF VAcCINATION.-. Prof. Tyndall suggests that, just as the soil may be so effectually robbed of some essential ingredient by one a. bundant crop as to be incapable of pro, ducing another, so in the human eya. tem a parasitic disease may so com. pletely exhaust the blood of some in, t gredient necessary to the growth and propagation of the parasite that the produ.tion of a second crop in fatal r >r considerable quantity may be im ossible. It would thus appear that protective vacination or inoculation is simply the introduction into the d blood of weakened and comparative ly harmless disease germs to con- I smre the material which might be ome food for similar germs In a more vigorous and dangerous con- t ition. Wixn Womc~.-A gale at East St. ouis in 1871, according to Mr. c, J Shaler Smith, overturned a locomno tive, exerting a force of no less tha~n a 93 pounds per square foit. At St. I Charles a jail was destroyed In 1877, I the pressure required being 84 poundsa per square foot. At Mar~sbt4eld, in I 1880, a brick mansion was leveled,a the force neceisary being 58. pounds I per square foot. iBelow these extra rdinary pressures, Mr. Smith has instancedi npmerous cases of trains blown off rails, and bridges, etc., a blown down, by gales of 24 to 81 pounds per square fOOt. Sucessful experiments in dlstrlh I buting the electric light to great dis aces haye been mar'do In connec ton with the Turin ElectrIcal E~x ibton. A Siemeps machine of 30 1 borepower generated a "currentt grhicI was simultanoQsly .used by severni electric light systems spread t over a cf'cupit of abont 25 miles. A motor driven by' small charges of gunp.cotton is an English novelty. It is said to be applicable wuerever small powers are required, A German botanist has given in stances. of the modification of plants by insects so as to produ~ce new 1 varieties. GREAT Wons.-According to Mr. 1 J. E, B3eddard, a London geologist, earthworms two feet in length havp been found in the British Isles, and various species as large or larger are known to exist in South America, Western Africa, Australia and New Zealand. The largest species known, however, inhabits South Africa. F'or ty years ago a specirgen was de? I scribed which measured si; feet two Inches in length, but it seems to have been nearly forgotten until the otber day, when a gigantic creature of the same species was sent to the London I Geological Gardens from Cape Colo-1 ly. The longest measqrement of this worm yet taken reaches sig feet five inches, its diameter being nears ly ha.lf an~ inc. MONET %qETToN.-=4 short tine since Pa4l Reineph discovered seveal kind1s pf minute plants,-in lding two algae which had before been unknown -growing upon coins fev having been long enough in ioaforganic matter, A iManga ran botanist, Jules Bohaarschimidt,1 has more recently found the micro sopp growths upon paper money, een~ tire cflaesit speciifles t be ilg free froin them. :He hafdlced sea'e an',c,er, innledn'ialhangh they are (are-th. two new al_ :escribed by Reinsch. PICTURaES o SorND.-Some inarkahie photo?raphs Or bullet in its fiiglit-uuder the ilu atioI of an electric spark -I: been secured by 'Prol. E. 'Mach. Prague lie has also ph,otograp the air streams which one may s >ver a Blunsen burncr placed in si: hine; and has even obtained pictur f waves of sound. tles. i:st 1,ei nade visible by a mllet:o, in whii ulvantage is taken of tile irregui efraction of light by air -ei in vilb ion by sound. A French astronomer has folu easons for believing that a circu. )rotuberance-presuma: ly a volea -which exists in the souti-rn he sphere of Venus has an clevation :ot less than seventy ni,es i cgards such a vast : :ount:n as 1 .ncomupatible with the planets v< :anie nature. A TU.IAIY-.OOT %2IA I. The Italian corvette Vetor Pisa ias been voyaging around the wo: ;ince April. 1882. carrying on a ser )f deep-sea soundings. a yssa,al th, nometrical measurements, and im ng c:hections of marine zo)olo 1'he soundings have been nade wi r1te Thompson steel wire suppleme( ed with a rod invented by Sig:n lumbo, the captain of the ship.whi t Negretti and Zanibra tlhvri,oinct as employed. A tow-net. openii tnd closing autonatically,w"ns alwa ent down with the wire, ami oft )rought up marine animals not hit rto known. Among the exploits he Vetlor Pisani's crew was the en ure in the bay of Panama of a sha >ver thirty feet in length, twenty fe n circumference at the largest pa: td nine feet in diameter. This enc nous fish is of the species Rhinod< ypieus, probably the most gigan ish in existence, sometimes attainiu length of fifty feet or more. T aptive in question, having bei vounded. was held to the boats wi ines fixed to the harpoons At fir le described a narrow curve. but Ir ated by shout s --f he sailors. ran < ,t a velocity of about 2 miles a: hoc ro the first boat, which held the lin he other boats were fastened, and ci f the corvette's oQtccrs writes th t was a strange sensation to be tow< y the monster for more than thri Lurs. Finally the shark becan reak from loss of blood, when it r uired no fewer than nine boats aul him to a sand beach, where I ras stranded and eventually dissect a a scientific manner.-Phud'ph relegraph. UE W4% GIVEN TilE Jon. le called at the house and ask< she had any carpets to beat, addit hat he had beep in the business ov wenty years. 4*Bow much to beat that parlor cb et ?" She asked. "One dollar." "Why, that's awful. There was an here yesterday who oiered o the job for fifty cents." "Exacdy, madam; but how was repared ?" *IHe had a club in his Ian'' "1 presume so. 14e intended ake the carpet out on a yaeant it tidn't he F'' "Yes, sir, Our~ yard Ia too sina -ou know." *Exactly. Thast Is a tapestry Bru els carpet. .1t is badly worn. X# I tumerous boles in it. lie wou rake a g;-eat show in getting it a .d in here. Out on the lot he won ;ive you away to every one wl ,sgd who the carpet belonged t a that the way to do a job of th ortl" "How do yo do it ?" "I take the carpet out through tl 1ey, I wheel it hom.e, I beat n the yard surroumnded by a hij oard fence and while I ain retur ug t, all nicely rolled up r,ud ce red with clith, if any one gel s r that I have I reply that it ls a vi et carpet for '22 Blank 4,reet, o one geks any questIops I cal he boxges pn either side of yog at Lsk If' they have ordered a new W on. They watch rne gn4 seer ome In here," Hie was given the job. 8'IT 55 E F5GUltE QF" FA T T4trIy.ieven Individual votes he people of Tennessee decided ti ulectin of President yolk. T hirtyseven electoral votes of 1 olored people of the South elect lleveland an4 defeated Blaine leveland's majority ove; Blaine I g 87. If the .epublicans had n nfranhised the Negroes thle Dem rats could not have won the victo: in the 4th of November. Trhe Republicans, in order to pi >etuate their power in omcce enfra bised the Negro as their ally. Y iteen years the Negro was true is party, but now the Negro giv is strength to the Democrats, an e Republicans are overthrown aft iixteen years of unprecedenteda ression of the white inn of t oqth Now since the Negro ligned on the si4e of good gover nent, the Repqblicans who made 'goj qf him *for their pwn eggrp lizeruent, -nay well regret t4ieir fol n strengthening the arpxg of ( [emcats, 87 is the fat,cful #gun An~ old lady from the country, w: stedd opera for the #rst time, ered the Academy of Music just ;e troupe were all singing togeti .n chorus: "Ah !" she remarki tney don't care now that they ha ,ur -moneg. WSe, they dre a afi [g together s'o'thlat they 'ean ae BILL ARP AT HOME. re- The Young Folks Give a ('audy ui Pulling, se W1hic"h ..rfn-ds the Philosopher Much En. of joynent, not Unall>oed with J)isc,un.j or-t id The Frolic at the Counitry .1r:ad./y. and ce RIow the Young Folks Enjoed Thei>n se- lces. us Candy pullings are a nuisance, but ng I suppose we are to have them. I rl have now arrived at that age and ar frame of mind that I submit to any -a- thing-anything to plhase the chil dren. And so when they got their ml mother's consent the matter was all ar arranged and the company invited ,o without consulting me. There was a m.- spare room in the house and as I had of some writing to do, I adjourned my ie self there to have a quiet time. While ot I was ruminating before the fire and ,- su,oking the pipe of peace and tran qnility, the young folks began to gather and, before I knew it, the young ladies were ushered into my .room as a reception room, and I was kindly informed that I would have to Id vacate. With a sigh of resignation I es retired and poked around generally. r 1 wish I had a room-a room of my k- own-and Mrs. Arp says she wisbes Y. she had a room-a room of her own. ti But she can't have one. She never i- will have one, for children and grand or children would be lost and I would L+ be lost. She can't slip off to Nabor e Freeman's but what a dozen want to ag know where she is and when she is Ys coming back. The dog and the cat =U follow her. No, she will never have a '- room to herself. of But I found good company at the p- candy pulling and bad a good time r anyhow, for I do love these naborly et visits. I love to see the young folks rt, happy, and I love to discourse poli. >r- tics and ciops and naborhood news .n with the older ones. But this candy ic business is not all serene, one of the ig girls burned her hand dreadfully and ie is still carrying it in a bandage. And u then it is so messy, as Mrs. Arp says. tl The children get candy all over the I floor, and the tables and bureau. It 1- sticks to my stockings yet when I ' get ready to go to bed. It melts and r. smokes on the hearth. The dishes are all daubed and hard to clean up ie again. The door knobs and dipper at handles are sticky, and they keep d sticky as long as the candy lasts. But every pleasure has its draw-back. Af e ter every dinner the dishes are to be e washed. After every repose the bed t has to be made up. We ride and e drive and then the horse has to be d put up and fed. We dance to sweet music and have to pay the fiddler. We go on a picnic of an excursion and come home tired and weary. Ev ery pleasure seems to be followed by pin or by trouble, just as the night follows the day. But still it Is right, 1g for it is natnie, We live in contasts r 0d enjoy them. Suppose we do bunt all day and find no game. Hope is a good thing, and it was one of the questions we used tQ debate when I was a boy, "whether the pursuit or othe possession gave the most pless ure.'' I took the af#rmative one time wih Iwas pursuing rmy sweetheart eihlove and hope and devotion, and I argued ray side with earnest elo o,~uence. But when I lost her and an ote*,io got possession, 1. flop *pad over* to the other side, In a year or so I recovered and piursued Mrs. Arp with fear an tre;pbling, and when I possesed her I was happy. The pursuit is a. liyely, interesting d andI uncertain businees, where a tsweet ',ounig maiden is concerned, d but the p,ossession $s solid and sure o and never gives out. ou ~.We had a frolic atorcountry' Sacademy last week. The night you were all jubilating in Atlanta we were q1uietly enjoying Qurselves near our Shomes with our wives and children. it The ladies, God bless them, ingited rh us to a supper in the academy, a 'u. splen4id supper, a feast of good y. tbings with no headache ip thepm My Sfolks killed a turkey and baked some 3. bake og the peighbozs did likewih-e, y and they ggt Qysters somnewhe e and at long~ table. were spread and giga~ned id with ggod things and we thought it n. was all a~ free show pntell we got ae there and 'found a door-leeper and had to pay to go in. Th~eu they tin isheA up with bills of fare, and to everything there wyas a price, but we couldent back out, for the sight and -the savory smell provoked en appe tite. After I had made them a little of speech, which I had prepared for the Lie occasion, one kind lady manager con Lie ducted me to a seat and said I was be her gnest and the choipest viands 3d should cost mne nothing; with this - *ssurance i partook amagingly and le feast'ed to m,y entire content, and ot about that time another kind lady Q presented me iny bill and called for ry a dollar-a whole dolls~r, and said I had oysters twice and turkey twice. r- I paid it with cheerful alacrity, but n somehow I don't appreciate so many or managers on such occasions. Never to theles:, I had the honor of being one es fair lady's guest even though I was id another's victim, Then I paid for e-r Mr's. Arp and the children and tho't p- I was done, but they had a fish pond be in one corner, behind a curtain, and is the children wanted to drop a line a- just to see what they would catch a well that cost some dimes and next n, came a raffe for a fine, large eghe, and ly they all wanted achance, and Mrs. L59 4rp took a notion she could throw a-* 18 with three dice, and shore enough she threw four and retired with ma. bo troniy dignity and said she didn't ,* want the cake nohow. Well, the show as went on, and on untell they got all er our change and had enough money dto plaster the school-house ."I here was gocd mnsic thera ina the true. -. teenvere 'coinulted by the young Sfolks about a danee, just alittle edAtic t,o wind un 'on, but they said "no", and they said it like the meant it, and I reck-on they did, anr the young folks surrendered and said well, if we can't dance we can have a little twistifieation. Before any, body knew what that meant the flu was cleared and the mnsic began and the twistification, too, and they twis ted ali around and about, and cross el over, and hands all round, and Ciangild p trtners, and promenade all, and parly voo Fiaricais, and I don't know what all, and the solemn trus tecs looked on with enjoyment, and were satisfied because it was only a twistification. Well, it was a goodh_ frolic and no f.eliigs hurt. and we all Went howe happy. but an fal scarce of change. GCov. Biown has got some preferred stock il our school h,onse. WYe preferred his money to anybody's for he had more of it. if we had had hin there, with his swallow tail coat on, we would have preferred some wore. When he gives us two bun dred dollars more we'll name it the Brown institute, but not till then. The name is for sale, but we are not going to do like those Dalton folks and name our sclhool for him before we get the moji v. They have never got any yet. Gov. Brown don't pay for honors when he can get them fur nothing. Old father D.obbin is our rich man up here, and we are going to try him for an endowment and call it the Dobbins old field school. He likes old-field schools, but he has no use for colleges or seminaries or universities. He says he has watched them for forty years, and every year they turn out a splendid crop of ele gant, high-strung vagabonds, with but few exceptions. But education is the Amejican watchword now, and we wili have to conform. If the na tion gets an overdose, 1 reckon we wil; find it out sooner or later. Birn Axp. RECUPERATIVE POWER. One of the manifestations of the impatience of our people is that when one "run's down," as the saying goes, instead of taking. constitutional rem edies that slowly but surely repair waste, to build up the system, the practice is to seek violent and pow erful incitements to strength, which only prove delusive, and do more harm than good. Tue business man who at last finds that he is losing vi tality, and that he has sacrificsd health to greed, endeavors to make atonement in a day or, at furthest, in a week, by heavy doses of quinine, or by brandy, and the young man who has degenerated by sloth or more active vices, overdoes the exercise of the gymnasium in the vain effort to regain health h, a coup cretat. Ever the same story of national impatience; the feverish alacrity to ruin the phys. iqne by late hours, tobacco, rapid eat. ing and diveis dissipations, and the absurd ael 1 to restore its functions while a locomotive is naking its dis tanee between New York and Chica go. Nature has ways of her own, and even the enterpFising Yankee can not wake an oak~ ti ee grow to ma turity in a~ week, or put such a ms chine ce the human body in perfect workiing ord'.er in that time, after it has onoe been abused and utterly deranged. Even the wealthy invalid cannot make good the dr-afts he has drawn too often atnd too ra&hly, by the magic spell of a Boropsan tour. The exhausted body makes its lam eintatiop heard in~ a French boule vard as w'eil as at home, and there is no curative property in a foreign rai! wav car. Yr-ars of transgreson need at the least months of expiation, and the man or the woman wbo lays the foon dation of restored health in six months does well. Meanwhile the simple remedies, air, water and whole some food, sleep, judicious exercise. and time to back them, will be fruit foi of result. Be patient and be of good cheer; don't use your sub stance on qnack nostrums; study the matter of diet, the efHcao,y of water and a coarse crash towelj the venti lation of yonr slee.ping chamber; the value of the dumb:bells, and for toDic or alterative the superiority of the mineral spr-ings to all the dr-ugs you~ can buy. Set your peroid for a gene ral improvement is mi onths ahead inst&ad~ of si; days, and you will es, cape the discouragement and the despair which beset the impatient Amer-ican when he finds that his health has run down. Tou. GnEvy To GET ALONo.--A very innocent looking old mani who had been waiting twenty-eight hours for a Lake Superior boat, and who was told to be at the foot of Woodward avenue at noon yesterday, came slouching down to zhe wharf about '4 o'clock P. M , and mildly queried : "SQ the boat isn't in yet?" "In! Why, she's come and gone.! Got in before noon and laid three hours." '-1evcy! but I was to go on that boat!" "Didn't the agent tell you when tc come?" *'Yes, he aid at noon, but I was looking around town, and it sot in to rain, and I suppose she'd wait until after it cleared r,p. You don't meac she went off in thie shower?" "Yes, she did." "Right in the pouring rain?" "Yes, sir,' '-La suz, but I wouldnt have ce. lieved tsey'd do it iMebbe it's jusi as well I didn't go. for I've nothing but this old umbrella. and4 gettin wet allus brings on tho g'le~matiee -Detroit FreviPress. irue averege number of employeet in the Government printing .otce at Washington, D. C.,- is ab.out 8,140, Tlhe ap;ong disbursed for Balaries it .inn kr,Q n er n. . The act to charter the Midland Raiiroad Cmpany, whtch has passed a s'cond readinr in both Houses of the Legislat ure. is as follows: Be it enected by the Senate and Ilouse of iipreseitatives of the State of South Carolina, now met and sit ting in General Assembyi, and by the authority of the same : SUia:-OrN 1. That .Joseph R. Rob ertson. J. Adger Smythe, William Bor:ieuan, Frank E. Taylor. F. W. Wa-reier, S. A. Durham. F. .. Pelzer, Gerge W. Williams, Jr., W iili:in A. Courtenay. F. S. Rodgers. 0. F. 14 itters, E. P. Jervev. A. Norden, C P. l'o:penheim. A. F. C. Cramer, C. F. i'anknin and G. W. Egan, and s:Ieh otier persons or corporations as ;aat b" asaociat.ed with them. and their successors and assigns. be. and ,hey are hereby. created a body po litie and corporate, by the name and style of The Midland Railroad Com pany of South Carolina," and by that name nay sue and be sued, plead and be imtlfead ed. in any Court of Law and ecuity in this State or the united St;tes; in:av ut:ke :y-laws and ap p,,.t all niecessary ollicers and pre s, ribe titetr duties. anti mnv ac pt. purhaste, hoid. lease or otherwise ac quire any l;roperty. real or per-onalt. n:ecesstry or convenient to and ir the luirposes hereinafter mentioned, and to use, scll and convey and dis pose of the same as the interest o; the said company requires; may make contracts, have and use a com '13oni seal and do all other lawful acts properly incident to and connected with said corporation and necessary and convenient for the. control and transaction of its business: Provided. That their by-laws be not repugnant to the Constitution and laws of this State or of the United States. SEc. 2. That the said company be, and is hereby, authorized and empow. ered to construct, maintain and op. crate a railroad extending from the City of Greenville to the City of Charleston by the most direct and practicable row e, that is to say, by way of the Town of Laurens in the County of Laurens, the Town of New berry in the County of Newberry, through the Counties of Lexington and Richland by way of the City of Columbia, through the Counties of Richland, Lexington and Orangeburg by the way of the Town of Orange burg, thence through the Counties of Colleton, Berkeley and Charleston to and into the City of Charleston. That the said Midland Railroad must so construct its road that it shall not cross the public road, commonly called the Meeting street road, within six miles of the City of Charleston. And the said company shall have the power to extend the said railroad to any point on the boundary line be tween this State and the State of North Carolina as the said company may hereafter determine. SEC. S. That the capital stock of said comnpany shall be five hundred thousand dollars, in shares of one hundred dollars each, with the priv. ilege from time to time of increasing the capital stock in sucb\amounts as said company may by a majority vote of the stockholders determine, to carry out the purposes of this Act, said capital stock not to exceed, however, the sum of four million dol lavs, and such shares to be transfera b-e in such manner as the by-laws may direct. That when the sum of one hundred thousand dollars shall have been subscribed to the capital stock of said company, the said cor porators, or a majority of them, shall within a reasonable tim~e thereafter appoint a time and place for the meeting of said stockholders, of which thirty days' notice shall be given in such newspapers of the State as they may deem necessary, at which time and place the said stockholders may proceed to the organization of ' said company by the election of a presi dent ana ten directors, who shall hold their offces for one year and until thur~ successors are elected, which shall be the first board of directors, and which board nay in their by laws prescribe the time and wanner of' holding their subsequent annual elections for president and directors, subject to the approval of the stock holders at their ensuing annual meet. ing. Sxto,4, That for the purpose of raising the, capital stock of' the said company hereby incorporated, it small be lawful to open books of subscription at such times and places, and under the direction of such per sons as the said corporators may ap. point, and that said subscription to said capital stock may be made in land, money, bonds, machinery, ma terials and work at such rates as may be agreed upon with said company; and said company shall have power to mortgage its property and fran chises, and issue bonds on such terms and conditions and for such purposes and uses of said corporation as the said company may from time to time deem necessary. SEc. 5. That the said railroad com pany shall have every right, power and privilege necessary for the pur pose of acquiring such lands or rights of way as they may requaire for the location or construction of said railroad, or for the erection or loca tion of depots, warehouses, stations and other necessary and couvenient establishments. or for extending or altering the same, and said company shall have the tenefit of every procesi or p;roceediing, and shall be subj?c1 to all the restr1ctious provided or imposed by she laws of this State SEC. 6. That the said comlpany shall~ han full power and authority so f;nnect with or cross any othei railroad cor a ilroads on the proposed line, and also to p)urchase, lease or anousiat, with any other railroad or railroads in or out of this State in such manner and upon such terms as may be agrecd between such railroad companies: Provided. That the same be not inconsistent with the laws of this State: And provided, further; that upon the consolidation, purchase or lease by siirl (omp:any of any rail road now chartered, or hereafter to be chartered, between any points through which said railroad hereby incorporated must run under this charter te route of the other such railros iay be the route of the said Midland-Railroad Company of South Carolina between such points in lieu and stead of the route hereinbefore established as the route between such points. SEc. 7. That the said railroad com pany be, and they are her. -y, author rized and empowered, by and with the consent of the City Council of Charlestc..., to construct their track through one or mo! e of the public streets, roads or ways of the City of Charleston and to extend the same to any or all the wt arves in the City of Charleston : Pro--ided. That in such construction and extension all ne cessary precau: d'ns in executing the work be taken not to obstruct or otherwise. impair the use of any s: rect or public way through which or across which the said railroad may be constructed or extended. SEC. 8. The said ogmpanv is also authorized and em ered to build purchase, own, hold, use, charter, self, or otherwise dispose of steamships and sailing vessels in connection with their railroad transportation, so as to carry on the basiness of a gei eral through coastwise and- foreign transportation to and from any point on its own line or connections. SEC. 9. That the said railroad.com pany is further authorized and em powered forthwith upon the comple tion, or acquirement by purchase, lease, or consolidation. as hereinbe fore provided, of any portion or sec tion of said railroad between any points through which the same must run under this charter, to operate and maintain such portion or section with all the rights,.powers and privilegc$ hereby granted this company. - SEC. -10. Each stockholder in the said corporation shall be jointly and severally liable to the creditors there of in an amount. besides the value of his share or shares therein, not ex ceeding 5 per cent of the par value of the share or ,thares held by him- at the time the demand of the creditors was created: Provided, That such demand shall have been .payable within one year :- Provided, also, That proceedings to hold su^.h stock holders liable therefor shdi be coin menced whilst he remains a stock holder therein, or within two years after he shall have ceased to be such stockholder: Provided, further, That persons holding stock in such com pany as executorR, administrators, or by way of collateral security, shalI not be personally subject to the lia bilities of the stockholders under the foregoing provisions; but the person pledging such stock shall be liable as a stockholder, and the estates and funds in the hands of such execu tors, or administrators, shall be.liable in their hands, in like manner and to the same extent as the decelled testator or intestate,' or the waldbr person interested in such ti-ast' und; would have been if they had respea tively been living and competent to act ~and hold the stuck in their own names. SEC. 11. That this Act sal sbe held and deemed a public Act, and the rights, powers and privileirercan ferred by this act shall vest and- con tinue in the said company and their successors for and during the term of thirty years or until repealed. to be computed from the 'time of the ap proval of this act : Provided, Thattbis charter shall cease and determ~ine un less the said railroad is commenced ander the provis'ions of this Aoftbe fore the thirty-flrst day of Debeir. eighteen hundred and eighty4sir; and completed before the first day of January. eighteen hundred and nigie ty-ive. A .Go.E TRTH.--The .Boston Taenscript, a dear old paper that, we regret to say, we receive never often er than semi-occasionally, frequeitly comes out with some- agricultural in formation that fills us with .joy, and makes us wish to sell out our brown stone fronts and miscellaneous tene ment-houses, atnd move Aiht tit in the country, for the purpose of set ting down and becoming the brother of the golden-rod and the good-natur ed mule. The Transcript; in a little article entitled "Bees in Orchards,'' remarks:- . "It is said a larger crop of :apples is raised when a hive of bees is- sta tioned in the orchard.'. Correct, Benvolio, correct thou ki't, thou onseemly caitiff. And the crop of apples would be larger still' if'the bees were yellow-jackets, with sabres sfficiently long and sharp to sting the small boy through .the hat or boots. Bees are very good to make the apple-crop large. independent of the Transcripts reasons.which incluide a lot of allusions to "pollen,'' "pistils," "hybrids"' and other things used around an orchard. But yellow jack eta are better still, and a Siberian bloodci,nd beats evei-thryelow icets. Because the bioodhound is evrywhere at once, and gets in.his work without prov'ocation; and- t hat makes the apple-cropTarge and the small boy d;op small, The same paper gives a long-winl, dd accoumnt of a F'rench..method of preserving grapes. O give a better mrethod in a.. (werds:-haug