Newspaper Page Text
By 3. P. SAWTELL.]
- ■ ry ■ ■■—
vox. xvn.
OUR PLATFORM: "FEAR THE LORD, TELL THE TRUTH, AND MAKE MONEY,"
[Terns: $100 In Advance.
CUTHBERT, GA., FRIDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1883.
NO; 50
THE APPEAL
Published Every Friday Morning.
. TERMS:
UNI TEAS t> SO
BIX IMONTitl. ,...4.1. 74
(Invariably in advance.)
Jl papers slopped at expiration of
| for, anlMS in cases-where parties
• kno.trn to be responsible and tliejr dsalre
h contin nance.
Advertising Rates Moderate.
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TUTT f S
i PILLS
TORPID BOWELS,
BfesapsiSs
l-SgffiSreSS
Ur, DltitfuM,Flats. rMu.tthe,
Is"the Lou of
MANHOOD
A L*a«ie r-n Uie Nature,Treatnteatand
Radical core of Seminal Wsakwi. or
2 Spermaforrixca, indnced by Seli Abn-e,
lavoluutHry Emi«*lotia, Irapoteaor, N*r-
»• :wn Debility, and Impedimenta to Mar-
. a
vte.by Koaert.J. CMvenreU,
thorof the M ilrcen Book," eta.
r TIm world-retMWMd author. In this ad
1 * ml ruble Lector#, clearly prove* from m*
' own experience Uut the awfol conarqnan-
* ti« Sr'inuimMeSrtw^SEK
^'jnlat Mlidtaffont a mode ’<of «nr« at once
•*- I teitain and eff:ctnal,br which every »of
IlT, privauly^uud
Meat nnder seal, in a plain wvelop, to
any address, poat paid, on iscslpt of al*
eenta or two postage stamps. Address,
THE CULVER WELL MEDICAL CO.
41 Ann 8L. flew York. N. Y ; .
.ssptHct Post 0flics Box, 430.
Soaps! Soaps!
rE keep on band the best ToQetBoap,
’ Lanndry Boisp, Medicated Soap,
Potash, Starch. Blolnjr, r *
• TOOK!
- ; J. P.
t BRO.
Absolutely Pure.
This Powder never varies. A marvel Of
parity, sircuuth and Wlioleiomeiies*, Jdofa
sminomical thiiti the ordinary. kind*, and
cannot he sold in competition with the
multitude of low test, short weight, alum
or phosphate |-ow<iar*. Bold only in cans.
Koval linking Powder Co., loll Wall street,
» V. ~p:t lj
ANDREW
Fejiale College,
cvriiitmiT, a a.
Op* n6 its next annual session
September 10, 1883.
of thoi
red. Our work U thorough in all thu
ishlei the reirnlar College course we
? well organised dwtM.rtn.entd In Off
, French. Vocal and Instrumental Music
Ail. No extra charges lor Instruction
aiifthcnks, Class Binging and l’enuii
•rms among the best, considering t
itUngcs a Horded. For Catalogue or «
ilormatlon, white to the Prcsldeut,
IIcv. HOWARD W. KEY, A. M,
Oriental Saloon
AND
Restaurant,
Brand Street, Ivifauln, Ala.,
Is headquarters for
Meals nt nil Ilutirs.
M V Georgia friends, when lltev \I«U
Kufaula, can trH N twj-mr-f meal st my
Oysters, Fish, Game,
.. .iny other twenty called for will be foi
ished In the b«i of style.
oi'sTf ,m ' p. H. MORRIS,
HO MORE EYE-GLASSES,
Mitchell's l’yc Salve,
A Ceit.In, P.f- uni ICtlfcilve llraxl, tor
Sore, Weak f, Inflamed Eyes,
Producing Long-SightCiliiet*. un«l Heitor-
H.K the Bight or the Old.
nres Te*r Drops, Granulation, Klye Tu
mors, U«4 Ky.s, Malted Kvel.asU-
es, mol producing <jukk
Relief nnd Perm*-
pent Cure.
Also, equally cfllcaclons when n*ed »<
...her mala ii<«. such as Ulcers, Fever Sort
Tumors, Balt Rheum, Burns, Piles, «
' ever inflimation exists, Mitbchell
may be ts«-d to advantage
Bold by ull Druggists at 25 eenta.
The Great Lamp Emporium.
W k huvejust rccelrcdth** Urtff* and
most beautiful supply oft Lnmo
Goods vycr brought to this tasrkeL We
have variegated colors of glass, which I*
entirely new; Especially do w« Invite yon
to Call and ace h«w cheap we sell them.
J P. TOOMBS St BRO.
Lemon Elixir.
A plrasnut Laaton Drink. Regulate*
the Liver and Bowels An elegant
substitute for nil Cut hart le Pdls. Care* all
diseases ol the Liver, Constipation, Bad
Breath, Boar fitonurfi, Indigestion.
Try ■ bottle and be convinced of It* mer
It*. For aala lor
J. P. TOOMBS * BBO.
H. K. &r F B. THURBERS
FINE CIGARS.
NUMBER 3 AND NUMBER 19.'
At T. 8. POWELL'S,
Drngfist and Bookseller.
Valuable City Property
For Sale. ;
IBB Beautiful Mid DeflrtW. Baltam,
. on Lumpkin llwt, known u lU
j '‘Douglass House,”-
U ottailoT Mb. for . fcw. wwU.nlu
ImKlTn^illVont innSSt. « pod Or
^ SKKI
pint.. In CukUrt, nnd wtU koaoldnlu
T. DOUGLAS
TrusHes.
V rTB are offering at cost, oral ptrtbu-
r erisown pn- c. a large iotpf Tnw
EuVVtt Traw .. Awj. BI{0 j
Biding on a Bail.
Whistling through the forest*,
Tumbling through the bridge*,
Bumping over arcbe*
Or derailed on ridge*;
Colliding it* the mountains,
Telescoping In the vale,
Bless me I it I* awful,
Biding on a rail.
Men at different station*
' Don't know red from blue,
Get the siguals mixed up,
Engineers too;
High aud lowly people,
Birds of every feather,
On a common level
Smash up all together.
| Whistling through tbo forc»t.->,
Tumbling through the bridges,
Bumping over arches,
Or derailed on ridges;
Colliding in tbo mountain?,
*f Telescoping in the vale,
Bless luu 1 it is awlul
Biding on a rail.
—Philadelphia Call.
Tho True Gentleman.
The following sketch of tho true
gentleman was found in an old
manor house in Gloucettcrshi
England, written und framed, uud
hung over tho manllu-picco of a
tnpesttied silting room:
Thu true gentleman is God’i
servant, tho world’s master, nnd
his own man. Virtue his busii
study his recreation! contentment
his refit, nnd happiness his reward,
(jod is his lather; thu church his
mother, the saints his brethren,
all that need him his friends.
lion his chaplain; Christianity
his chamberlain; sobriety his but
ler; temperance his cook; hospitality
his housekeeper; Providence hi
steward; charity his treasurer; piety
his mistress of the lions*; aud dis
cretion his porter, to let in or out
ns most lit. This is tho whole
family, made up of tho virtues,
and ho is the master of thu house,
lie is necessitated to take the
world on tho way to heavon, but
ho walks through it as fast
ho can, nnd all his l>utdueHH by tho
wuy is to make himself und otiit'
happy. Take him in two words
—a man and a Christian.”
Guosts.
Don’t invite them if you don’t
want them.
D -n’t run into debt to entertain
them in stylo. *
Don’t wear your Sunday dross
when you arc cooking the dinner,
Don’t show them off too public.
!y if they happen lobe distinguish
eJ individuals, und don’t hide
them if they are poor relatives.
Don’t change the complexion of
your family prayers to match the
religion to that which happens to
belong.
Don’t tell them every miiiuto to
make tbom^lves at homo, but
make your house no home like
they can't help feeling al home.
Appeal to Mie People of
■rt , Georgia.
Probably the must wonderful
tree io tho world is tho Ikmbab or
Mailboy bicad tree. It grows only
to the height of forty feet, but is
thirty feet in diameter. Tho figo
of this tree is quite incalculable.
Humboldt consider* it “tho oldest
living organic tnouument of our
planet.” A good sized room Cun
bo cut in tho trunk of the Baobab,
with comfortable accomodations
for thirty men, and tho treo still
live and flourish. The fruit, whioli
is nourishing, is about 4 foot long
Tho treo grows very slowly, a
specimen at Kew, in England,
which is more than eighty years
old, bqviligonly attained a height
of one and a half feet. Ths oldest
known Baobabs are estimated to
be over 5,000 years old.
Discsic* of an exhaustive, nature
that have s tendency to orosto an
unnatural feeling sacb as fatigue,
lassitude nnd great weakness
throughout tho system owe their
origin to a lack of iron id the
blood; Brown's Iron Bitters will
restore the blood to its natural
healthful condition. Gat the blood
pure by using Ibis remedy and
disease will bo quickly banished.
A scientist says that in the moon
a hickory not falling from a bough
would crash through a mao like a
mhiDie bait.' That ssttles It. Wo
shall never go to tbs moon to gsth*
er hickory nan.
It Seems.to Satisfy
A family want,'and I wonder how
we ever got along without Pars
Uer’a Girger Tonic, it cured me
of nervous prostration, and I have
used It since for alt sorts o( mb-
plsints in our family. Mrs. Jibes,
Albany,
From the Woman’s Christian Tern-
perance Union.
Tho Woman's National Christian
Temperance Union have sot apart
tho 23d of December ns a day of
thanksgiving and prayed to God
for the rapid advaueuwent of tho
temperanco causo throughout our
country aud throughout tho world.
The progress has been so marvel.
ous of what was a fow years ago
conbidcred such a forlone hope,
that God has surely been in it,
working bpoii tho lieartasand con
sciences of men and womon and
stirriug them up to duty .aiid tbo
porfurmauce of his will.
TIir morning light la breaking,
The ilurknce? disappears,
The sons of earth arc waking
To pcueleatial tour*.
Each breeze that sweeps the occuq
Brings tidings Irom nfar,
Of earth''« remotest nations
Prepare for Zion’s war.
And the light that is breaking
is so full of promise to tho wretch
ed und hopeless, to the captive and
siu-burdenod, to tho innocent nnd
lefenscless nnd to tho suffering
md perishing, as to appear ulmost
like tho second coming of the Slur
of Bethlehem.
Let God’s people then, every
where, lake courage, und rejoicing
with thunksgiving take held and
hcl|> along in the work.
Wo cull uj)on the Siato of Geor
gia to return special thanks for tho
glorioua victories gained and the
benefits received. Our sister .States
looking towards us with inter
est, nnd for cxamplo. Let ui
with God's help set thorn a noble
one of speedy and lusting refer,
mation.
Tho day *ct apart is tho mini-
ersary of the Woman’s Teni|>or»
nee movement in our country,
ind ns it falls upon Sunday thu
ministers throughout ihcStato
requested to preach a Gospel tom-
jternneo sermon, on tho morning
of iho 23d of December. And the
people are requested to have tem*
mus-i ineclit.g-i in tho af
ternoon or nl night, al which coU
lections Shull ho taken us a "thank
ffering” to thccuuso, nnd dojiuled
to tho Woman's Christian Toinpor-
Union, to help them in their
work.
The funds thus collected will he
osliy used in distribution o'
temperanco literature, for thu pur*
of arousing mid kcoping alive
the public interest upon the sub
ject. Many good people may bo
willing to help us who are opposed
to total abstinence and prohibi
tion, Wo liopo they may help
u«; nnd wo onk them earnestly that
if the original bleating of puro
stimulants fins been turned by
iniftsuso nnd udultcralion into the
most blighting curao to tho human
race, nnd is so recklessly destroying
souls that aro so precious' in tho
world to Como as to keep two
Kingdoms—Heaven and hell—at
istant warfare for tho possession
of them, then is H.not right to ask
God's deliroranco from such an
evil, and to do nil we can to banish
it from our midst ?
If wo nro wrong in our plan of
work may God pardon it aud'briug
it to nothing, if right, may He
bless and direct and prosper,
To thoso.who are opposed to us
wo claim leniency for tho sako of
our motivo and tho expected good.
To those who mo in sympathy
with us, wo ask their praycra sod
their encouraging help. And,, as
tho 23d is a day set opart for this
special purpose, wo hope the efforts
will be made in our behalf through
out the entire State.
We earposl!y beg that “temper
ance people" especially will exert
thcrasclyes to mako arrangements
for tbo occasion.
Respectfully,
Mus. W. 0. Sibley,
Slate President W. C. T. U., Au
gusta, Ga.
Mist M. II. Stokes,
Secretary, Atlanta r Go.
Mbs. M. A. McCalla,
Treasurer, Atlanta, Ga,caro Ale*
Calls Bros..
A Providence man atapped a
stranger's faco for ataring at bio
wife in a street car, nad he begin
nlng to feel himself a hero, when
tko car stepped and a liltlo girt
helped* tbo Impudent man off Ha
wm atone blind, k
A Husband’s Love,
A man who ovidontly thinks he
knows, says: It is easy enough to
win a husband. Most any attraa*
live little dumpling with a bright
oyo and coaxing voice can gathor
in n noblo husbaud, but it is pret
ty difficult to retain him. Noble
husbands aro thicker than lmtr on
a dog, but tho grand difficulty is
to draw oat their truo nobility and
secure it at home.
It a wife only understands her
business sho can introduce the
soothiug racket in her new Holds
of operations and* walk away with
tho whoio busioess.^Most men
like to bo loved and soothod.
There is something iu tho man's
groat, rough, earnest naturo that
can bo wou quicker and easier
with gontleuoss and pio than by
tho logic of tho broom handle and
tho bilious courso of roasoning
with bread and milk diot.
We have seen a girl who under
stood her business take a reformed
oud agent by the iioho, ho to speak,
and load him through life in such
a way that ho wouldn’t know but
that ho was boss of the ruticlw
So pcrfoct was tho delusion, that
when sho asked him to bring in a
scuttle of coal, or got up iu his
night--shirt and kill a burglar, that
ho know was nothing hut a bobs
tailed cow four blocks away, he
always wcut, uud he fellas though
ho countol it a mark of special
favor that a poor, unworthy worm
of tho dust, liko him, should ho
sought out and dolcgatod to go
and ctiaso a Inino cow ucross nine
vacant lots with an old barrel stave
and clothed in nothing but a little
iti-icf authority und a knit under-
shirt.
Wo cannot exactly describe this
magic power of a devoted wife
over her husband, and wo do not
intend to try it. It is an unsoon
motive, n namoless leverage that
makes tho husbaud get up in tho
doad hour of tho night and set the
pnnenko batter near tho parlor
stovo.
A man need not think that be-
cuuso ho gots up and looks for
burglars in the night und u other,
wise obedient that it is because ho
his no backbone.
It is simply becauso ho is the
husband of a woman of whom he
ought to l>o proud,
Mother’o Turn.
“It’s mother’s turn to bo taken
care of uow.”
Tho speaker was a winsora
young girl, whoio bright oyo,
fresh color and eager looks told of
liglilhourted happiness. Just out
of sohool, sho hud the air of cul
ture which is on added attraction
to a blilho young face. It was
mother's turn now. Did sho know
how many hearts went out to her
for her unsclfinh words?
. Too many mothers in tkoir love
of their daughters, entirely over
look tho idea that themselves need
recreation, They do without all
tho oa«y, pretty and charming
thing*, nnd say nothing, and the
daughters do not think thcro is
any loif.dcnial Involved. Jennie
gets tho new dress and mother
wears tho old one, larnod upsido
down and wrongsido out. Lucy
goes oil tbo mountain trip, nnd
mother »tnya at home and keep*
bouse.’ Emily is tired of study
and must lie down in tho aftsr*
uoon, but mother, though her
back achce, bos uo time for such
recroalion.
Girls, take good care of your
mothers. Coax them to lot you
relieve them of some of the har*
der duties which for years they
have patiently borne.
Five Thousand Dollars a Pound.
In a letter to the Atlanta Con
siitution Bill Arp soya: “As i
goneral thing the girls show too
muoh anxiety (o marry. They are
too sweet un tho boy*. They,
ought to stand oft’ and look rci
served and precious and put on
Jerusalem airs and say: “Young
man, you don't know who you are
fooling with. I’m a treasure, I am.
I weigh 115 pounds and am worth
$1,000 a pound." Well they aro.
A good nico healthy girl who can
mako her own dress and got up a
good supper for company and is
not ashamed to wait on tho table
wbilo thoy aro c-ating, is just
worth $1,000 a pound. But this
is nothing to what they will bo
worth. Why Mrs. Arp has cut
and made up at least 2,000 gar*
ments of one kind and another.
Sho has sowed 500,000 stitches
and patched oud darned and
washed faces, foot and combed
hair iunumbcrable. Sho has lied
up 500 sore loos aud cut fingers
and burns and bruises and kissed
away a thousand tears. Sho has
watched 'em by night and by day
and keeps on watching, and right
now whito I am writing on* my
piazza she is looking up tho big
road, and says: *I’m afraid some
thing will happen to them boys,
thoy aru too little to go oft by
themselves.' There aro two little
nejthows hero just out of school
and they and my hoys havo gone
off on a scursion, and 1 call ’em
the infantry calvary uud tell Mrs.
Arp it is ull right, but sho sits
hero sowing with her specks on,
and says: ‘Thoso children buv
overstayed their timo. I ui
afraid something has hojqicncd.
If they don’t corno back soon
know that I will havo to stall
after them, for that’s always tho
wav. Mrs. Arp is worth at least
$5,000 a pound und sho weighs
right smart, nnd keeps a getting
hoavicr. 1 am rich, I am. I feel
wealthy whenevor I look at her.”
An able author says: “Picklca
aro exceedingly unwholesome aa
articles ol food,/and often oausc
acuto dyspepsia. Young ladies
addicted to their froe uio may bo
assured that they must certainly
part with tbeir favorito dainty or
bid farewell to good digestion.
Cucumbers preserved with salt
and vinegar aro next to itnpoieible
o| digestion," 1)l
Ha who tedclously attends,
pointedly create*, calmly speaka,
coolly answers, and ceases when
he bat no more to eay, fa in poa
season of some of tba beet reqqb
sites of man.
It Is etsy to pick ont flaws io
other people's work* bot far more
profitable to do batter work your*
‘ ! ’ * '
How to Confer a Favor.
Many a kindness has been
dcred nugatory by llio manner in
which it was done. You should
be thankful to (he friend in need;
but il by his manner of couierriug
a favor ho iiiMill* your prklo, it is
im|>n*siblo that your fueling*
should bo thorn ol umnixod grati
tudo. Wo uro all utoro prone to
scan tho motives when favors aro
conferred, than when they aro re:
fused; and thu former often gives
more pain than tho latter. All
this arisos from tho mannor of tho
giver or refu*or. How necessary
it is therefore, in all iho*e who aro
desirous of leaving a favorable im
pression behind them, to cuttlvato
an acquaintance with this really
fascinating art of doing good
deeds iu a proper muoner. A
really benevolent expression, what
over may bo tbo harshness of fea
ture or abruptness of manner of
tho individual. Wbero things aro
othorwiso, tiioro is a flaw iu tho
moral constitution; tboro is an un
questionable defect aomowhore.
Beal benevolence of fooling and
character cannot bo assumed; an
imitation is aoon detected, even
by tbo roost inexperienced.
Don’t Scold.
Avoid tbo scolding tone. A
tired mother may find it bard to
do this; but it is alio who will got
most good by observing this rnlo.
Tho tone of scolding wcais upon
the throat just wbero a woman
who la not over atrong le apt to
feel tho aobe of extreme fatlguo.
Tbo children, too, tifco are great
imitators, will , be euro to catch
the scolding tone and will talk to
tbolr dolls, to one another by^and
by, to their own children, very
much os their mothers are talking
to them. By all meansAvoid this
bad Lono all you who govern otb-
ere. n .-?f
Sweet-Minded Women.
My daughter here is something
worth reading evory night oud
morning, al least:
So great is the influence of a
sweet minded women on those
around her that it is almost bound
loss. It is to her that friends oome
in seasoa of sorrow and siokness
for help and comfort; one toothing
touch of her kindly hand works
wonders lu the feverish child; a
few words let fall from her lips in
tho car of a sorrowing sister do
much to rniso the load of grief
that is bowing its victim down to
the dust in anguish. Tho hus
band coinoa homo worn o.ut with
the pressure of busiucss, and feel
ing irritable with tho world in
general; but when ho outers the
euzy silting room, and sees the
blaze of the bright fire, nnd moots
his wife’s smiling face, hesucoumbs
in a moment to tho soothing loflu
oucos which act as the balm of
Gilead to his wounded spirits.—
We all aro wearied with combat
ing with the stern realities of life.
The rough school-boy flies in fa
rage from the taunts of his com
panions to find solace in his moth
urs smile; thu littlo one, full of
grief with its own large trouble,
finds a haven of rest on its moth-
breast; and so one might go
on with instances of tho inflticncc
tlmt a bwoet minded woman has
in the social life with which sho is
connected. Beauty is an insiguifi
cant power whoti compared with
hers.
A fashion paper say* “kittens’
heads aro to tako tbo place of
birds'heads on the coming bon<
Ths first thing wo know
some woman will be carried to
the hospital with a fractured sknll.
Somo absent-minded liuaband will
sling a boot-jock at tbo kitten'a
bead. P
Winter, with it* anow and ice,
will soon bo hero, and from thoo*
sonde of home will go up tbo night-
ly cry: , “S*y, uke your cold feet
away from my back.”
Professor Dana on Creation.
Prof. Dana discussed tho book
of Genesis nud geology recently, iu
Presidout Porter's lecture room,
and had many licarors. Tho Pro
fessor s:iid tho earth had been
gradually made, und in nil the dif
ferent periods of tbo world’s
growth there has been a gradual
progress iu the forms of life.
In tho nreham ngu thcro was
probably iiodifc; this was followed
by un age in which there were the
lowest forms of it, us sponges and
worms. Then came in regular
order fistic*, reptile*, small quad
rupeds, birds, large quadrupeds,
and, last of nil, man. As to Ihcso
facts tboro aro no geological doubts.
When the fiat wont forth tho re
sult was not Immediately accom
plished. Tho days wero longer
than 24 hours. Tho jicriods of
tho carlh'ii rotnliou hud not thou
been discovered. Thcro *aro two
great pel iods, tho inorganic aud
tho organic, tho account ol each
of which is begun with tho crea
tion of light. Science shows that
light is moleculur motion, and if
molecular energy ever began it
was then.
Tho first creation was the uni
verse, tho next separating of tho
Uiflurent parts of tho system.
Then the llmd rose abovo tho wa
ter, and on It a primitive vegeta
tion grow, which roceivod Sts
light from the earth's aurora,
Then comos tbo second, the orpao<
io era—tbo crestion of the sun,
moon, nod atari waa simply brook
ing away tho clouds which , encir
cle tho earth. In tho inorganic
ora Uio principle of life in tho low
est kind of plants was begun,, and
in tho organic ora this lifo grad
ually advaucos till man is created.
The account of Genesis and., geol
ogy accord In a wonderful .way,
Moses probably did not fully un
derstand wbat he wrote, nod we
cannot but believo that ho roust
havo boon inspired whop ho .wrote
that which the greatest advance
in science has but just enabled
man to ondontand.—New Haven
Evening JtegUterv •
Of Interest to Teamsters.
A farmer who had uac<] * wag*
an with broad Urn oo tho wheela
long enough toaacartaio their re
lalivo valve na compared with
narrow Urea, write: A four-inch
Uro will carry two roc, over aoft
ground with greater caao to tho
loam lhan a two and one-fc.lf inch
tiro' will refry oao tun. Tho
wboela aro no. ao much .trained
byatoacaand rough tracka on
iho road, and tho road ia not oat
np, bat, on tha contrary, ia packed
down and kept amooth. Tbo
prevalent idea that tha draught
ia iacreaacd by wrdening tha tiro
ia ultogclhcr inaelear; ou lire con.
Uary, a wido lira toluce. the
draught. Tho extra coat of tho
tiro ia repaid many liinca ovor
every year in tho extra work that
cin.bc done by a team.'— L'hlcugo
Brevitie*. /,
Agreeable advice ii addovOM*
ful advice, • - ,
Koopcool and you command
everybody. ,f
Heaven never help* the man
who will not act. v
Affliction, like the ironamlth,
abapea aa it etrikef.
We give advioa by tbo bttlhet,
bat tako it by tbo grain.
Adrnoui.il your frtende private-,
ly; praiao them openly.
Know how aublimo a thing'it II
to auKIrr and be atrong.
Mako youraelf necoaaaijr, and
your success ia aaaared.
Anger alwaya hurta tu mora
than tho one wo get mad ah
Ilcavon oft io mercy smitet even
when tho blow asvoroat is.
Do not appear to notice tpaoca.
rncius of Bpoeoh in other*.
Happiness ia whero we fiod It)
but rarely wiicr, wo seek it.
fuduienco is the rust of tho mind
aud tho inlet of every visa.
Life and Death alike are angels
nud tho nicisongeia of Qod.
Corn is cleaned with wiud, and
the soul with chaaioning.
Much dourer bo the tbinga which
como through hard distress.
What a man gets for uothingho
is apt to value it at wbat it coat
Our actions aro oar own; their
uocacqucnccs belong to HoavM.
Du always tludious to bo io har
mony with the ordinances of Qod.
’Tis ever commonjlhat men aro
merriest when thoy sro from home.
Everything greet is not alweys
good, but all good things are great.
Iadiscrulion, rashness, filee-
hood, levity, and mtlice produce
each other.
He that will not look beforvhim
will havo to look beblod him—with
regret.
Day by e good storo of pttitoee,
but bo sure to pat it whore yoa
uan find it.
Tho eceda of oar own punish
ment uro sown at the eamo time
o commit sill.
Itomomber that in til miaorios
lamenting becomes foola; sod action
wise folks.
Nothing extinguishes human
ambition ao perfectly na tbo abw
•cnco of obstacles,
A rudoncss is worse than a crimsj
it la a blunder, bccauso it ia so
easy to bo polito.,
There is nothlag useless to tnva
of sense; elevsr people turn every,
thing to aooount.
Salts.
A good story,is told of tho well-
known engineer, William A. Sweet
ur8yricaso. Casually meeting ■
prominent lawyer one day > brief
conversation ensuod, in tho couno
of wblub Mr. Swcet]hipponod to
ask ''the Judgo" what bo thought
of soma question they wero dil-
cuitlng, without reelly meaning to
ask legal advioa io the earns way.
Soon afterward Mr. Sweet reeoiv.
cd a bill from tho Judge, "for legal
advice, *1,000,” whioh be paid
promptly without • ward ol voi>«
plaint. 1
Timo ptiiod on,’ nod out day
the Judge, who waa also heavily
interested in salt manuiieture,
needed lomo mechanical advtew
about soma machinery which was
uot running satisfactorily, aud
asked Mr. Sweet to look at tbo
msehines and Ull him what wao
needed. Mr. 8weol looked them
over lor two or three hours, aud
indicated the eauae of tha trouble.
When he went home he promptly
made ont a bill against tbo Jedge,
"lor mechanical advice, •1,600,”
and fbo bill waa duly paid, iur.
mailing probably one of the few
Instances on record in wbiob me.
ebonies ever get ebeed of the law.
—American MacMnut.
The health sod beauty of obit-
dreu can be restored by giving
them Shrioor'e Iudie% Veraifegw
to kill tha worms tbet darken tbeir
complexion.
Miss J. K. King, Hertwell, flu,
says: "I used Brown’s Iron Bitten
for dyspeptU end eick beedeehe
with great benefll.” (
Mr. P. P. Profit, Hertwell, Ob,
•ays: - I used Brown's I roe Bitten
‘ir indigestion, peer appetite af*
ills beet results.”