The Newberry herald and news. (Newberry, S.C.) 1884-1903, February 21, 1902, Image 4
N. p ra and M" fix
FUiruI T.X EXTENSItON
L- gi,lat ure Extesds t.heo 1im 11, WiAl-Pt
F;kttv itj M--re:h 30.
The time for the paymetit of taxes
has been furthered extended until
Marca 30. The bill was introduced
by Representative Ashley, of Ander
son, aneL has passed the house. It
received a second reading in the
senvi;e ia3t night, and it will undoubt
edly finally pass that body and will
receive the sanction of the Governor.
The time had been extended by the
Governor and Comptroller General to
March 1, but Mr. Ashley went them
twenty-nine days better. In this c.,n
nection Senator Gaines tried to have
a law passed requiring a penalty of
one per cent. to be charged from the
time taxes were due until the end of
the extended time. This p. posi
tion was overwhelmingly defeated.
Alfonso.
Alfonso, the boy-king of Spain,
who is to be crowned on the 17th of
May, is only 16 years old. He has
never known a father's care nor guid
ance, his father having died six
months before Alfonso was born.
Upon his mother, the queen regent
Christena, devolved the hard task of
rearing her son, who was, by the
constitution of Spain, (unlike that of
other monarchies)king from infancy,
absolute sovereign over 17,000,000
people. To bring him up.wisely was
her great desire.
There having been 12 reigning
Alfonso's, the Spaniards said no
good fortune followed the number of
18, and bitterly opposed naming the
new king Alfonso, but in this, as in
other matters, the queen-motber was
firm and named her boy for his
father, as well as had him christened
in the same robe which his father wore
* upon a similar occasion. The young
prince was baptized in water taken
from the River Jordan.
Having been trained by a mother,
who has taught him to have sympa
thy with his people, he assumes the
dnties of King and takes the reigns
- of government into his own hands,
and despite the unlucky 13, he begins
his reign with the fair prospect of
fulfilling the hopes of his mother
and uplitting the fallen fortunes of
his people, by a wise and beneficent
reign.L
Hardening Effects of Affliction.
In one of his paragraphs on
Lord Byron Macaulay has, uninten
tiondily perhaps, but most power
fully, described the searing influen
ces of afflictions in themselves.
With great genius and much to
build him up, Byron lived from the
first in an atmosphere loaded with
pains and aggravations in body and
in mind, and under their influence,
year after year and month after
month, he continued to repeat that
to be wretched is the destiny of all
that to be eminently wretched is
the destiny of the eminent; that all
the desires by which we are cursed
lead alike to misery; if not gratified
-to the misery of disappointment
if gratified to the misery of satiety.
-(Patterson on Elijah.)
Catarrh has become suck a commes
disease tLat a person entirely free fross
this disgusting complaint is seldom met
with. It is customary to speak of Catarrh
as nothing more serious than a bad cold
a simple inflammation of the nose and
throat. It is, in fact, a complicated and
very dangerous disease; if not at first, it
very soon becomes so.
The blood is quickly contaminated by
thefoul secretions, and the poison through
the general circulation is carried to all
parts of the system.
Salves, washes and sprays are usatis.
factory and disappointing, because they do
not reach the seat of the trouble. S. S. S.
does. It cleanses the blood of the poison
and eliminates from the system all catar
rhal secretions, and thus cures thorou~ghly
and permanently the worst cases.
Mr. T. A. williams, a leadiug dry-od neer
chant of Spartanburg, S. C., writes:'* For yemo
I had a severe case of
nasal Catarrh, with all
the disagreeable effects
which belong to that
disease, and which
make life painful and
unendurable. I u1 s e d
mediciues prescribed by
leading physicians and
suggested by numbers
of friends, but without
getting any better. I
then began to take S. S.
S. It had the' desired
effect, a ni d cured mec
after taking eighteen
bottles. In my opinion S. S. S. is the only medi
cine now in use that will effect a permaneat cure
of Catarrh."
SSS is the only purely veg
known, and the great.
est of all blood medi j
S S cines and tonics.
If you have Catarrh don't wait until i
becomes deep-seated and chronic, but be,
gin at once the use of S. S. S., and send ;
ororbo nBod n knDsae
afdort our konsBoodan about yourease. V
and wor psicianst about your case.
Will We Never Forget?
Some of our ablest scholars be
lieve that memorv will live forever.
In view of this the words from
Russell 11. Conweli are of peculiar
value. lie says: "The human
mind really forfets nothing. The
evidence of this is shown by that i
great psychologist in Germany,
who states that ignorant people
who know nothing of a foreign
language, yet after hearing it once
will, in times of sickness, repeat in
detail the conversation which they
have heard. The old illustration
may be recalled of that servant girl
who heard that minister in Eng
land recite a verse from the IIe
brew while she was sweeping the
room; years after that she wa-s
taken ill, and in the midst of de
lirium, she recited that verse of
Hebrew. This shows, as thousands
of other illustrations do, that the
mind retains everything, every
item, every idle word, every idle
thought.
"It was well established thai a
man in his sleep recited what he
could not in anywise recall while
he was awake.
"A man heard a tune when he
was asleep and never heard it any
other time. More than four years
afterwards he sat down at his in
strument and composed a tune,
which they discovered was plag
iarism entire. He thought it was
an original composition. It is a
most surprising illustration that the
human mind never forgets any
thing.-''Exchange.
Lesson for a Boy.
I had overheard a conversation
between Karl and his mother. She
had work for him to do, which in
terferred with some of hi~s plans
for enjoyment, and, though Karl
obeyed her, it was not without a
good deal of grumbling. .He had
much to say about never being al
lowed to do as he pleased; that it
would be time enough for him to
settle down to work when he was
older. While the sense of injury
was strong upon him, I came out on
the piazza, and said: "Karl, why
do you try to break that colt of
yours?''"
The boy looked up in surprise.
"Why I want him to be good for
something."~
"But he likes his own way," 1
objected. "Why shouldn't he have
it?"
By this time Karl was staring at
me in perplexity. "I'd like to
know the good of a horse that al
ways has his own way !" he said,
as-if rather indignant at my lack of
common sense.
"And as for working." I went
on, "'I should think there was time
enough for that when he gets to be
an old horse."
"Why, don't you see if he doesn't
learn when he's a colt,'' Karl began.
When he stopped, blushed, and
looked at me rather appealingly.
I heard no more complaints from
him that day.-Church Record.
The Gift Without The Giver.
''No, she isn't stingy', she's just
selfish,"' said an old woman, speak
ing of a relative. "She'll give
if it's needed, she'il give her share
f an thing that grows in hL r
ields or her orchards, but tihe one
hing she never gives is amite of
erself.
"I'd expect her to send bro b
nd jellies if 1 were s'ck, or blank
ts if I were cold, but I wouldn't
xpect her to come and spend no
fternoon with me because 1 was
onely, or to be really interested
af any troubles I had-or anyi joys,
ither, for that matter. I'd niever
hink of carrying her any of my
oy's letters to read, as I (10 to
little Mrs. Stone at the Corner.
Tom's been a way nine mon t his no w,
n a voyage, and Mrs. Stone h-is
eard every one of his letters
Ve've hunted up together ini h-;r
ig atlas the places w here he'll go
nd when she comies across anmy
bing about one of t hem in thle
ewspapers she always renmmber s
~nd tells me. She doesn't do it
st to please me, either ; she's in
erested.
'Mrs. Stone scarcely has a spare
ollar to share withI any\ bodAy, but
~ou never think of that. 1 guess
t's as much what folks'll let you
are with them as what they share
vith you that counts. "--Forward.
Write Them a Letter.
Don't -o to 1tli : 2 - t rv -r ball, 0:
Mut stay :i, your !C' - n
Dei\ N ourself to lh f:K s t- e.. :'u
AmIl aso":i 'ZI : 8' 7:
Write to the sad old flk home.
Who sit when t . isne,
With fo!led hands and dowlcast e\c,
And think of the t:)-ent one.
Write them a letter t,-jh:r1jt.
Don't selfishly scribble: "Excuse ny h1iaste Or
I've scarcely time to w.ite,
Lest their brooding thoughts go wander
ing back II
To many a by-gone night.
When they lost their needed sleep and rest
And every breath was a prayer
That God would leave their delicate babe A
To their tender love and care.
Write them a letter to-night.
Don't let them feel that you've no more
need W
Of their love and councel wise;
Eor the heart grows strangely seasitive
When age has dimmed the eyes
It might be well to let them believe
You never forgot them quite
That you deemed it a pleasure, when far
away,
Lona letters home to write. Then -
Write them a letter to-night.
Don't think that the young and giddy
friends, t
Who make your pastime gay,
Have half the anxious thoughts for you
That the old folks have to-day. t
For the sad old folks at home,
With locks fas: turning white, ot
Are longing to hear from the abs'-nt one
Oh, write them a letter to-night! bt
-Exchange.
The Inner of Life.
st
it
Standing by the telegraph wires, t
one may often hear the mystic hi
wailing and sighing of the winds ot
among them, like the strains of an ea
Xolian harp; but one knows noth- "o:
shl
ing of the message flashing along to
them. Joyous may be the inner ot
language of those wires, swift as
the lightning, far-reaching and full
of mercy, but a stranger intermed
dles not therewith. Fit emblem Do
of the believer's inner life. Menea
hear our outward notes of sorrow,
wrung from us by external cir Th
eumstances, but the message of ce-]
lestial peace, the divine commnun- Tn
ings with the better land, the se
cret heartthrobs of heaven-born D)e
lesire, they' cannot perceive. Tihe1
Au
:arnal can see but the out ward man
bood, but the life hidden with Th
Christ in God, flesh and blood can
ot discern.-Spurgeon. I
Forgiveness Do
It is said of Cranmer that he was I
tore than ready to forgive, for he No
lways returned good for evil It'
Thi
was a common saying, "Do my
Lord of Canterbury an ill turn, and
e will be your friend as long as
you live."
PLEASE LET W
To wait not anot!
making preparatior
yourself good hea:
coming winter. C
buy of us at once at
We know of n
strongly illustrates
that "An ounce of
better than -a poi
Every health conta
maintaining, flesh c
delicious Vinol wil
you to be an adc
against sickness.
.We guarantee the action of
Vinol and will refund its cost ci
to any one nct satisfied with the cc
resuIts obtained by its use. w
.~3rwlii
o the oth.rl
bhought tIhCy'd put' Il1i1l ill :I
d the said, "We wi!! no l(nger
with you.
ou're so very guin, sour
e the ene'er ahpp HC ur.
jel we ight hed aj ,t
)o they left i a,
ittin'g ' u
I>c xv"&1A.
gVcile wed~ .k '*
L21 I
e right. phiZc -\:ra c u
Gersa v.
The will of God r pec
At wC shail iv e by I .
ppine-,s and life: I.
ler s misery or d It.
IV have tLO dlie fO r it -
t the purp c Of aC1nn
oIld rat her h or
t by it s sa .-r iice. :
-g , its y :ts ft:c
shall be to thm r
nd o a g bL;t. Ct Is
engt an Ir
hei.:r r Ight reintim I j
ch ot her tv eir int r
rrow,. lv sre
s tren-hecv o
er.-Ruskin.
Don't Worry, Dear.
n't worry, dear; the b) akeIst years
['hat clog the forwtri vit-x,
ch thins to not hing when It uears,
nd we may s.1u;iter throu-:.'
e (darkest m!om11n; never comnes,
t only loomis bufore;
e loss if home is what heuu:nbs,
Not troubleai hed.r
lay thrill wit~h say) agin.
e burden bear 1) bes we eau
nd thiere''l b)e n1one to b('a;
rd work has neve4r -zil ed a liai.
ut worry cl its sare.
a't worry, deat; dloin't Lhnch, don't
yield,
ut dare-thre y~St to come;
r give the~ enemyli the IIeld
~eCase we beait is 1rum.
se little woes '.hat hover near
Lre nothing, though they gall;
know that life is love, dear,
nfd life and !ove are all.
amiuel Merwinl, in Youth's CompiIanionI
URGE YOU
1er dayT before
s to insure for
th during the
all on us and
d begin taking
b
>thing that s
eting that of
thbe found saiy
preionat oanrie
innbtag, snuiengthd
e.n &ry n &
Vinoh is pnotd en cattic.d?
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IRINS
ILY SERVICE
-!I irinciral cities
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Ti Local At
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ji Clinton.
N.,.
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0 fp 5r. p
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av Time. Local
9 0; ru: 12 57amClnt'n to
4. 4am 12 :iLM Atlanta
.....01; 2Wam N.5
..... 7 oiau am 2 PM
-n u ....... ' :2 pn. 2 43 am 33 p
..14'21 t. 4 10 am 407pm
- h .. ? pm. 4 *i am 440 ps
2 .1 3 9am 610pM
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t .~:ba . . .. 4 0; pTn r: )
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C .... ...0ii, coriuts at Intton
rL ifixaiwa. Nn. 5.j. affording
- . -o r (Ii iek e-st r., ~ute by several hoUrS
,"i.atuiooga, Nadhville St. Louis,
iintl 5il- pamtWeS'.
:n_C).mgtmnuatPeter! bur-' Utchmond,
~ ~ ' '111Pov-7:'riouth NorfAx, olumnbia
J%eksoa2ville Arid Atlanta, with
.I57a 245p
1 'iIi c i'estibule t.,ains carrying
81(6~pi,4 carmbetween all
_s Hai !,Wu~ ile books are good
i; tr , a ..?. wAy; also to Washing
" tt,Pu1mranreevtos
W. P. Scruga,T.P A.,
. . nvaunatinto
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c.. n .to a Petrsbur3 R1hmnd
-.gton Por.:not 206 k olmi
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E ee dndy Oc ter ,Ir.
b ~ tdd TinEaERON
ST'iATOS IE
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* Munt-r.u4 Co2c6 be6
50anta YEARS'1
e e a db d eTitI0 may3
T . - u:h. ore further nr a
- --r for wecrigte nts
T' M & CM EceiN,
Carol,ina ndNot
1 .l jouna Te1ns$Er
N No.1rodwy e No.
Waahlve,t,59
ent ial. IIand book on Patenta
eeney for securing patents.
n hr uch Munn & Co. receive
w out, charge, in the
y strated Weekly. Largest cir
enut e journal. Terms, $3 a -
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618roadway,