The county record. [volume] (Kingstree, S.C.) 1885-1975, January 13, 1898, Image 5
are
^^B^Bdeplored.
yon keep your
lest coutradI<^^^^^MP
^H^^^Kve stated In that or
Suppose you should
j^^Kurself?what then? It seem^H^H
m^Fa rule of wisdom never to rely o^^^B
memory alone, but bring the pas^^H
judgment into tbe thousand-eyed
?nt, and live ever In a new day." ^
t)ear Child. *
Ldttle Petle?Will it make much
noise, Mr. Constant?
Mr. Constant?What, my boy?
? . ' - -- I.I ? l-i..11 n.K? rflll I
?aau buc wtvu^ui, vu
would pop to-night, and I was wonder- I
Ing If it could be beard upstairs.?Philadelphia
North American.
La When the 1,000 cats shipped from Maine to
ML Philadelphia reached their destination, the '
wAroof garden business In that city revived j
iTX
Purely a Local Disease.
Eczema is a local disease and needs local J
treatment. The irritated, diseased Bkln must j
be soothed and smoothed and healed. No uss to i
dose yourself and ruin your stomach Just because j
of an Itching eruption. Tetterlne Is the only
simple, sale and certain cure tor Tetter, Kc- |
sema, Klnfworm and other skin troubles. At (
druggists or by mall tor 90 cents In stamps
J. T. Shuptrlne, Savannah, Ga.
It is now said that the Kansas boy lawyer
is a fake, and somebody has shaved the
Georgia baby that was born with whiskers.
Statk or Ohio, Citt or Toledo, 1 _
Lucas Ootnmr. . , A_
Frank J. Cjceeet makes oath that he is the
senior partner of the firm of F.J. Gbwey &
Co., doi ng boslnessU the City ofToisdo^Oejinty
and State aforesaid, and that said Km will par
the sum of one hundrsd dollars for eaoh
and every case of CATakm that cannot be
cored by the use of HalU Cpm.
Sworn to before me and subscribed ih my
(?a? I presence, this dlh day Of Bsoomber,
j seal V A. D. 188c. A. W.GiJuaaK,
Hall's Catarrh Curs is taken intornapyi and
acts dlrrctly on tbe Wooa ana nwyiyw
? of the system. Send for tertmetd^free.
F. J. Ch*j**t & Uo^ Toledo, 0.
Sold by Druggists, 78c.
Hall's family Pills are the best. v
Oh, What Splendid Coffee.
Mr. Goodman, Williams Co., 111., writes:
From one paokage Salzer's German Coffee
Berry, costing 16c. I grew 600 lbs. of better
coffee than I can buy In stores at SO oents a
Ik" a. c. 8
. A paokage of this ooffee and big seed and
plant,, catalogue is sent yon by John A.
Salrer Seed Co.. La Cross, Wis., upon receipt
of 16 /cents stamps and this notice.
. The Morning Post, Raleigh, N. C.
& Jiortb^^roltG&'s Leading Dally Paper.
^BjTh^^Mprints all the newa worth printing.
M Objectionable ever Inserted. Rates
50c. per month.
H^^^^^^HHoQerican fad to sympathise with
of other nations and to forget
^^n^^^^Vhoare robbed at homn
^^HRRres Cold in One Day.
Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All !
^HP^ggists refund money if ltfails to cure. 35c.
JM A fig tail on the heed of aChinaman is the
eae for Europe to fight.
f Fits permanently eared. No fits or nervoas'
pees-after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Greet
v Nerve Restorer, fftriai bottle and treatise free
Dr. R. H. Kura. Ltd.. 881 Arch tit, Phihu. Pa.
A men with wheels in hie. head is not to
be trusted with the machinery of government
' Cheer 8t*r Tobacco?The Best
Smoke Sledge Cigarettes.
Ail rraaos unionist- in Great Britain are
asked to pay six cents a week to support
the striking engineers. <
, . . \
Mrs. Window's Soothing Syrup for children
teething, softens the gums, reducing inflamation,allay
s pain,cures wind colic, 25c. a bottle.
ILook ont for colds
a a ir TT
At season. nwp
Your blood pure and
Rich and jour sjstem
Toned up by taking
Hood's Sarrsaparilla. Then
You will be able to
Resist exposure to which
' A debilitated sjstem
Would quickly yield.
^ 8 N. 0. Ka, 2.-'98.
PHPHlCrry tMdlsrtritCK
III | V MTfcacrAlatHnMkroritMlf. I'otifetc.
rl I O 1)b1 ^KKKEY. Chicago, 111*.
1- w w~w~w y f
A A A A A A A
I Avt
i
T4 Is your hair dry, har:
m fadin^or turning gray?
dandruff trouble you? F
BHkj conditions there is an inf
flair l
>
i <
izzzzzzz:
IE-TIN A traJB,
mtmiz \mfc Wishc? Divjrccffor a Pe^r
* cullar Reason. J
One New Jersey woman dies not beJeve
In the old adage th&tj'all is fair1
n love and war." Though her bus-<
>and loves her dearly, she has filed aJ
?lea for a divorce from him. Her name
is Mrs. Lizzie Temple, and she lives in
IBridgeton, In the mosqnito State. The
Kory she tells of how her husband seK
-ed her as his wife is strange and,
Vjf(L .She says that she was drugged.
Vff. married while In a trance, and it ls<
jTOf this reason that she wishes to havej
ihe knot cut. She charges her sister
Anno with limine a consDirntor in the
plot which made h#r Temple's wife.
Mrs. Temple is 10 years old and extremely
pretty. Her husLand is 35
rears old and wealthy.
For two years Temple has been deroted
to the young woman. She says
tie has oftefi asked her to be his wife.
But sho has always refused him.
Miss Anna Simkins, Mrs. Temple's
sister, poses as a clairvoyant. She told
Justice Pierce that Anua pretends to
see the future in consideration of money,
which must be paid in advance. To
Auna wvnt Temple, having been refused
by Miss Lizzie.
This is what happened, according to
the unhappy woman's story:
Miss Anna went into a trance, or
teemed to go into one.
"I see you and Lizzie being married,"
the said to the infatuated Temple. If
kou pay me $20d," the clairvoyant continue.
will make my vision a real- j
Ity."
The bargain was struck. Temple paid
the money to Miss Anna. A few plghts
Ifterward she Invited Lizzie to her
home. After a while Temple appeared
there.
3Irs. Temple declared that he invited
her to take a drink of sarsaparilla. She
(fid so. Thereafter her mind was cloudMl.
She is certain the drink was
drugged.
A paper waa put Into ber hand on
which she scratched ber name. A question
was asked her. Although she did
not understand it, she answered: "Yes."
She fell Into a stupor.
When she awoke she was In Temple's
house.
"You are my wife," he said. "You ;
married me last night"
Her mother supports and reaffirms
the young wife's strange story.
A Practical Teat.
Dom Pedro, the last emperor of Brazil,
was a man of a practical turn of*
mind, as the following story told of him
well illustrates, says Harper's Bound
iTable.
' He once gave an audience to a young
(engineer who came to show him a new
appliance for stopping railway engines.
tThe emperor was pleased with the
idea, but wished to put It to a practical
'teat
I "Day after \ to-morrow," said he,
"have your engine ready. We will
i have k coupled to my. saloon-carriage
and start When going at full speed I
will give the signal to stop and then we '
{will see how your Invention works."
' At the appointed time all was In readiness.
The emperor entered his carriage,
the young Inventor mounted his
engine and on they sped for several
miles as fast as they could go. There
came no signal, and the engineer began
to fear that the emperor had fallen
asleep. Suddenly the engineer came to j
L amnml thp pdsre of the:
jJL Bliaiy imiv ? ?- ,
irtlff, when, to,, his horror, on the track
i directly ahead of them the engineer
saw a huge bowlder.
. fid' had Just sufficient presence of
mind to turn the crank of Ms brake and
puD the engine up within a couple of
yards of the fatal block.
Here the emperor pot his bead out of
his car window and demanded to know
the cause of the sodden stoppage. The
engineer pointed to the rock, and, much
to his surprise, Dom Pedro began to ,
laugh. 4
"Push it to one side and go on," he
said, calmly.
The engineer obeyed and kleking the
stone was still farther astonished to
see tt crumble into dust before Mm.
? It was nothing more nor led* than a
block of starch which the emperor had
had placed on the rails the night befnro
'
' A Time for Everything.
"I have made alt the arrangements
for your divorce," said the lawyer. ,
"Shall I secure It at once?"
"No," replied the sensational actress,
after some reflection. "Not yet My
press agent is on bis vacation."?Wash- .
ington Star.
T 'T YJ
V? H:
jrs
\ \
sh, and *brittlk? Is It * h
Is it falling out X Does
'or any or all of \hese < ]
allibie remedy in Ayer's ^ ]
figor.
, . a
x * ilii
J I
Om^OYSAND?H|
s'
THIS I^THEIR DEPARTMM
the paper.
mf.
Quaint Saylngra and Cute DoInjr? of
Little Folks Everywhere, GethereB
end Printed Here for All Other Llt'l
tie Ones to Rend.
When Papa Waa a Boy*
"When papn was a little boy
You Toally couldn't find
In all the State of Washington
A child so quick of mind.
His mother never called but once,
And pa was always there;
He never made the baby cry,
Or pulled his sister's hair.
"He never slid down banisters, Or
made the slightest noise;
And never in his life was knownTo
fight with other boys.
He always studied hard at school,
And got his lessons right;
And chopping wood and milking cows
Were papa's chief delight.
"He always rose at six o'clock
And went to bed at eight,
And never lay abed till noon '
And never sat up late.
He finished Latin, French and Greek
When he was ten years old.
And knew the .Spanish alphabet
As soon as he was told.
"He never grumbled when he had
To do the evening chores,
And ne'er in all his life forgot
To shut the stable door*.
He never, never thought of play
Until his work was done,
He labored hard from break of day
Until the set of snn.
"He never scraped his muddy shoes #
Upon the parlor floor,
And never answered back his ma,
And never banged the door.
Bat truly, I could never see,"
Said little Dick Malloy,
"How he could never do these things,
And really be a boy."
-Pittsburg Dispatch.
A Six-Year-Old Scorcher.
Miss. Marguerite Bucblgnanl, daughter
of Hannibal Buchlgnani, of Lexington,
Ky., Is the youngest female longjdlstance
bicycle rider in Kentucky, if
not In the entire country.
; 8he was born Feb. 26, 1891. She
learned to ride a bicycle early last
year, and last spring she and her father
node to Winchester, a distance of
eighteen miles, in two hoars and eight
minutes. They were two hours and a
half making the return trip, thus making
the riding time of the thirty-six
miles 4 hours and 38 minutes.
The next long ride the little girl took
was to Richmond, Ky., a distance 01
twenty-six miles. The road la a fairly
good one, barring about four miles near
the Kentucky River, which stream it
crosses. The hill going down on this
side of the rirer is two miles long,
while the one on the other side is of
equal distance, and is very steep and
crooked. She made the distance, notwithstanding
these drawbacks, in 4.
boars and 10 minutes.
^ j / u ,
Little Girls ia Holland.
Some of you not overindustrious little
girls might profit by the example of
the little girls In Holland, who learn
ito knit when only 4 or 5 years old. Tbey
begin with two needles; their mothers
teach them to make pretty wash-cloths,
lamp mats and many usefnl things.
When they have learned to use five
needles they make wristbands and
stockings. Every little Dutch girl gets
from her mother a "wonder ball" for
the first piece of work done with five
needles. Candies, trinkets, and many
pretty trifles are hidden in a ball of
wool, which is put livajiandsome case
with a set of neodle^XAs the girl knits
away, oue thing sa?ter another is
* ?- * 1.^11 Trlinn
orougui oux irum uu^ iwn, &uu,
the whole is used up. they find In the
center a gold piece or i ring for a gift
?Pennsylvania Grit. s
A Word to Boys.
You are made to be kyud, generous,
magna niinous. 1
If there Is a boy In sclool who has
a club-foot don't let him \novr Vou
ever saw It. |
If there Is a poor boy With ragged
elothbs, don't talk about rags in his
hearing. I
If there Is a lame boy, assign him
some part in the game thatidoesn't require
running. \
If there la a hungry one! give him
part of your dinner. 1
If there is a dull one, help aim learn
his lesson. I
If there is a bright one, be\ not enrlous
of him, for If one boy Is mrond of
his talents, and another Is envious of
them, there are two great wronfes, and
ao more talent than before. X
If a larger or stronger boy aas lnlured
you, and Is sorry for It, forgive
him. All the school will show bji their
countenances how much better \lt Is
than to have a great fuss. 1
Juvenile Jokes. 1
"How old are you, dear?" asked!old
Mr. Trotter of little Ethel Gazzaml
"I am 10 and 5-12 years, sir," replied
Et^el, who has Just got into fractions.
"No, Willie, dear," said mamma, "bo
nore cakes to-night. Don't you knjw
rou cannot sleep on a full atom^V'
\
walk tne
In the otr- !
.
? '
!
o her sick
atn'J read
egged the j
e read to
mes from
heep, and
cloth Into
oat made
\
i?Ont o\
' '
who has |
taught herand shut his crush 1
hat. One even^however, he appeared
with an onjnary silk hat, which he
left In the hall. Presently he saw the
child coming with his new hat crushed
into accordion plaits. "Oh, uncle,"
she cried, "this one Is very hard. ^I've
had to sit on It, but I can't get it more
than half shut?'
WHAT THE LAW DECIDES.
For the loss of the fingers of a little
child who puts her hand up the spout
of a coffee grinder In a store or shop,
while there with her father to make a
purchase, it Is held. In Holbrook vs.
Aldrich (Mass.), 36 L. R. A. 493, that
the shopkeeper Is not liable.
An ordinance regulating the number
of hours in which laborers and mechanics
shall be employed on the public
works belonging to the city, and
making its violation a mlsderheanor, is
h*lrt. In State vs. MeNallv (La.). 36 L.
R. A. 533, to be Invalid, as the Legls-1
lature only can create such an offense. |
An evident and notorious abandonment
of a public road, with the physical
closing of It, known to the municipal
authorities, on the faith of which
private parties have expended money
In Improvements, Is held, In Baldwin vs.
Trimble (Md.), 36 L. R. A. 489, to eon
stltute an estoppel against the reassertlon
of the public easement
A claim of a homestead exemption in
property conveyed to defraud credit- J
ors, when such conveyance has been I
set aside at the suit of a creditor and I
the land declared subject to his judg-i
ment, Is upheld in Kennedy vs. First!
National Bank (Ala.), 36 L. R. A. 308^
Several Judges dissent and very elabcfl
rate opinions review the authorities ofl
the subject on both sides.
Placing fireworks in the parlor
residence for use the next day
Fourth of July celebration Is beld,^H
Heron vs. Phoenix Mut. F. Insurai^H
Company (Pa.), 36 L. R. A. 517,
avoid the Insurance on the build
der a clause prohibiting flreworlB
be "kept, used or allowed" on the
lsee, "any usage of common dr ? I
to the contrary notwithstanding.
An heir expectant placed by
er In possession of land bongbt f^^^H
and which the father intends
to him, is held, in Home Insj^^^H
Company vs. Mendenhall (111.),
A. 374, to have an Insurable
although the land was bought a^^Hfl
ter's sale in partition and the
not yet been made because
for confirmation of the rcport^^H^B
elapsed.
The destruction of a substn I
tion of leased premises
lessee's fault Is held, in
South Omaha Ice and 'c. II
(Neb.), 36 L. R. A. 424, to BBBH
lessee from liability for renB^^^^H
unless lie expressly
of the destruction. This
common-law rule aud appro^Hj^^^^B
Ion of Judge Brewer in a
"because Is a magnl^^^^H^H
against slavish devotion
rules becau^^HI^^Hj
the spirit of humanity o^HN^H
is based on a of
century."
Beginning of
The art of making
miliar to the Chinese
ages, but it was not
until the early part
century, when John
from ScblaJz, in
the says Harpe^^Hj^^^^HH
Bottger was appren^^^^^^^^^^H
apothecary, where
who, in
service
to
The yonng
fortune as goo^H^^B|^^^HH
ran away
in the year 1700.
found protect
the
to
newly found
ThenoorfelM^^B^^^HB
grossly
which hflB^HB^H^B
valuele^^B^^fl|^B|^^B|
the possitriHtv^fl^^^^^^H^^^^H
so liappea^^^^B^^^^^^^HB
number of
gether
ble crucIbles^^^^^^^H^^^^^^B
he ac^^^^B^IH^^Hfl^B
the of
denly founc^^HH^B^^^^^BB
a poor alch^^P^B|^^B^^^B^B
This
in
brownlsh-i^^^aB^^^^^^^^^Hfl
made chfe^B^^^^^^^^B^^^B
iD<pfii^^H^H
placed
his po<B^BHB^^B[^^^B
fl
gets ^^B|H|HH
fl
Hue* U, beware#, a*r^^H
t%M (L> ttb:
itau trAAWe;
^totw?*V /rtomaehT
generated
the heart aaa ousa^^^HH
aettph. khe
gestldn
mo
u?d
csxae
than