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THE WEEKLY GWINNETT HERALD.
■ l'KKl'l.^'
Ml 0
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■ fS & BOWLES
|H S 1 f,O in advan<-<
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■*,, for Everybody
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Wm , Ul ,, »/(/»•</ 4'/
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■ Ki , Herriii.W K Rn-W!
IIUMUTI KK Tit UN
■ I0 ,„ Suwjnniv. •>.•>!' 1’
H A)i » DKIMUrCKB OK MAILS.
..arrives 1- ih*p.irt«
■ sf,rk -iK‘P'*i'ts li i m ar-
Monday and Thursday.
■ u ,li._Airiv. , s HI a 111, do
IHily.
■ Rum-Arrive 12 dr
■i[..Welnwduy and Saturnay.
HI w. 11. H AItVKV, V. M.
H CIIUKI'HKS
Hist— Kiv J U King, Pastor.
Hilhf Ist and 3th Sundays.
Hs.noui. -A I’ I’atlillo, Su|.l
a l 3 p in
Bbrian—Ui-v ,1 T’ Met lelianii,
H - oil 2nd uh<l 4th Sundays
Hn:'ii
Hs, liunl. I It I’l well. Sll|)l
Hiulav at 9.30 a nr
KCRTII.I.B Masonic Loduic. — it
IV M., S A llagood, S W ,
i J IV. Meets on Tuesday
ur lieln. e lull moon in each
BNON I‘IIAI-TKR, No 39, It A
Spence, II P, A T Pattill"
fts Fiiday nigh' belore the
y In each month.
in Si'pkrior Court. —N. I
r. Judge. Convenes on the Ist
in March and September.
COUNTY OmOKKS.
isstONßiis—l D Spence, Chair,
rk, N lietmetl, JetfersonUritt, J
dnj, J E Cloud,
vv—J M Patterson.
URY--J T laimkin.
i S C—L> T Cain.
lsutivKß-(j_W Pharr.
loi,i,BCTna—J 0 Loweiy.
jsuRKR.- It N Robinson
IiLIkJI
nvinilv loi-iitcd in 4Jwill
|Hf •’> irii'liti lii, iirnlVssinuu
:i- I I’llVMriun Id tin- l it izi'in
JM'iilidii Id ail culls will 111'
: uni 11'S1111 1 11 ci 1 ;i; I lie rt'si
' 1 m ii mi lit - Hul l .•■mi -
ImI (jiuo
■Farm mans
JW'i' lours on impirovcd
Middle and Northern
i.fui.iiuti ii on cbeapt r
u '"“ xny one in Atlanta.
Addres,
■'RAXCIHFON aine,
Filter Building,
■ Atlanta Gu.
H>nl littli.—lmo.
Bpoa Pressesiane
■ fliUs, Etc,
A’OTTOX I’KESS
■ HAND OB STEAM
■. F 1; -A & :i HOLLER
Mr M .CAHI'HA S
l*o WE U ENGINE-',
■ LF ; iS ' IT LLEYN, Slll 'l -
etc.
■ AicCojiiis, Tayi.ou, A Co.
Atlanta Machine Works.
MEißoingto Faint!
B.”’ w iR pay vou to use
Bsm W< ! l!T11 ’ MAHTINE/, &
B oA AN ’ S FUBEFItE
■ A AItED paints.
■ W'I 1 "* lii mistime 1 -si
■colort'u u e<l will! them. Send
■ 'Vl\\v viV)' 1 lisl "f houses
■ ' Al (JUAN, Arrant s,
U l "mii hawivm-ev ille, (i«.
H lia,, ; U• ' V »»«>., -'1 Alu
■"l"»alM Lui St ". Atlanta.
■* l ‘. ,V; "aims. Oils Vill
DAISY'S LOVE.
“ 1 here ! ’ said Hubert Win
Held.
He was si. tog on the sunny
south door s'.ep of i„e great, fra
grau/, hry scented barn, where the
sunbeams inter laced each otner
like slender, waging threads of
gold, and the boughs of the old
button-ball tree moved softly in
the summer breeze.
He was a bright-eyed, brigh
laced young fellow, dressed in a
coil, whiic linen suit, with tlieglq
ter of a diamond stud at his throat
and slender, sLapely hands, and
close beside him I) aisy Wallace
sat with her pretty bands folded
on her lap.
She was a daisv by nature as
well as by mime —u fresh faced,
sunny haired little creature,whose
big, brown eyes were shaded by
long, dark laslie’, and wli se nose
turned up at the end the least bi*
in the world, giving a roguish
piquancy to the whole expression j
of her countenance.
“How dirl you doit?” saidDai-y
with her scarlet lips apart aud the
brown eyes limpid with interest.
“ ( h. I managed.’’ said Herbert,
He bad sp.it a tiny gold dollar
in two and wrought a bole in each
through which he had passed u
slend-r blue ribbon.
“l>o you like them Daisy ?”
“ Fery much,
“Then you shall wear one aud I
the other, as pledges of our en
gagement.
Daisy blushed and laughed, as
Herbert suspended tlie golden
trinket rout d her neck, and theu
glanced down, a’ ihe broad en
gag-.ment ling, that circled the
forefinger of her left baud, Her
belt s eye following her look.
“You do no/ regret i, Daisy 1”
“liegret it ? No, Herbert!’’
“Because, Daisy, you are so
young !”
“I am not too young to know
mv owu mind, V/erbert,’ she said
with au assumption of dignity
which wm very pretty look up
on. “I was sixteen last wiek !”
Sixteen! Daisy Walluce felt all
the digni'y ot her mature years.—
sixteen years old and engaged.
Aud they sat there under the
shadow of the button-ball tree,
wiih the fragrance of the new hay
coming ever and anon lo their sen
ses, talking of the he use which
was one day to be theirs, and even
deciding, in boy and girl fashion,
whai was to be the color of theii
carpe.is, aud the special flowers to
be planted io the gardeu, and even
the pattern of the antique furni
ture which was to decorate Hei
belts library!
Hew foolish we are,” he said, at
length, starting up witn a laugh.
“Yes, but it is very pleasant to
be foolish," Itaisy answered srnil
ing and blushing it the same in
stum.
Yet, engaged lovers though they
were. Daisy had a woman’s coq.'.ei
isli lii tie instincts, and in the
course if time they wrought
trouble betwren the young hearts.
“I don’t like it Daisy!'' Herbert
said stoutly.
“Tba/’e because you are so o!d
--fashioned in your ideas," said
Daisy, erecting her slight figure,
to look as dignified as possible.—
“All the girls are delighted with
Mr. Sykes/eigh. ’
All the girls are not engaged to
be married!" retorted Herbert, bit
terly.
“Does it follow that Lec.ause I
am engaged to be a prisoner ?
“l)a : sy, you know better than
that."
“Yon are two exacting. Herbert.
I hope you are not going to turn
a jealous Viver."
“I am not jealous Daisy, he Hu
swered. a little coldly; “but I do
not like to see the woman who is
to be my wile receiving attentions
from a man whose character is, to
say the bes l of it, uaceitain.
Daisy pouted, and tore the pe *
als off the bunch of roses shewoie
in her belt.
“You will not encourage Lim
anymore, Daisy f" pleaded Her
bert, after a moment ol sileuce.
“1 have not encouraged him,
Herbert."
•At all events," he answered,
“you know how I feel upon the sub
ject now, and x trust you will re-
Lawrenceville Georgia, Tuesday November 4 1884
spect my feelings.’’
Ho went away, for the first time
since their engagemant, without a
kiss, and Daisy, stauding there on
the ph. zz t, /bought hew very un
reasonable Hu bet Winfield was
growing.
But a pretty girl of sixteen can
not always regu ate her frisks and
sane es, as if she were a staid mat
ron of six and f. i ty—and the very
next day Miss Daisy allowed her
sell to lie coaxed to a pic-nic par -
ty, where Mr. Kevere Sykesleigh
was one of /he principal actors,
anu, of course, Mr. Sykesleigh, oe
ng 'o a certain degree responsi
ble for her presence, was obliged,
not at all unwillingly, to see her
there.
Ai.d, as ill hick would have it
she was jus/ driving up io 'he
door, si/'ing by Mr. Sykesleigh
side, when Herbert Winfieid en
tered the gate. He turned in -
stantly away.
“Herbert,” she c died, leaning
over the side of the carriage—
“//erbert!”
Bat be either did not hear her
or would not heed, and Daisy was
too proud to repeat the call.
“Let him go.” si e thought to
herself, with provoking dignity.—
“He will conic back soon enough.'
Here,’however, was wheie Miss
Daisy miscalculated the relative
strength of a man’s pride aad a
man’s love. Herbert waited for
h«r to send for him—she waited
for him to come, and neithter of
these events transpired. At the
end of a inon/h he wrote her a
brief no e, cold note of farewell—
she answered it. by enclosing the
engagement ring without a word
of common/.
“But I wont send the little gold
dollar,” Daisy though/; with an in
voluntary paDg at her h“art. “He
will never think of that.”
How many engagements tint,
might have ripened into a long
life of mutual happiness are bio
ken, just so! Aas ! did we knew
all life’s sec.ets, how soft oui
hearts would glow tuwaid one an
other.
*****
Ten years as erward, and Daisy
Wallace; tar away from her tree
bowered country home, was stand
tog beside a meager fire of careful
ly husbanded coals, ler hands
clasped thoughtfully before her.
after th* old, girlish fashion she
had not yet forgotten.
‘‘l don’t like to part with it,
mother,’’ she Baid, sadly, *‘it was
papa's present in the o'd days !’’
“We can remember papa with
out any such relics, Daisy," Mrs.
Wallace answered; “and we need
the money."
Daisy took down the little clock
with its carved gar/aud of ivey
leaves, from which the dial peep
ed, wi/h gilde 1 hands and ligures
traced in dain .y enamels.
“I suppose it must go, bul I
should like to keep it,’’ she said.
Nevertheless, Daisy pu» on her
shawl aud bonnet, and wrapped
/he tiny clock in fragments o
brown paper, as if it had been a
hn uau creature.
The keeper of the second hand
curiosity shop was not at all anx
ious to buy the clock. “He had
plenty of such trifles on hand al
ready,” he said, “they did not sell
w<dl —but to oblige the lady, he
would /at her have a dollar for it.’
“A dollar !”
“And that’s more than it’s really
worth,” the sly Jew answered.
What was Daisy ti dot What
can a poor, forlorn woman do ,
when all thekuaves andchexfs in
the woild conspire against her f
Only submit —and bo Da : sy left
the clock and went slowly home,
with the dirty one-dollar bill in
her portemonuaie.
The man put the deck n his
window, chuckling to himself over
his excellent bargain as he did so
—and t was not long oefoie a cus
tomer arrived.
Herbert Winfield wanted just
such a picturesque little pieae of
earviug for his library mantel—
the very mantel he and Daisy had
talked about, years ago—and he
prompily walked in and asked ibe
price.
“Ten dollars, sir—and cheap at
that.” ihe dealer autwered. Look
at the carvings.’’
DEVOTED TO NEWS, LITERATURE AND LOCAL AFFAIRS
And Herbert paid the ten dol
lars and took the little clock Lorre
“It finishes up that side of the
room very nicely,"/Herbert though i
“Stay —l nave half a mind to try
how it would look ou Hie bracket
over the table."
As he lifted it down, something
seemed to click far down on the
top of the ease, below the carved
wiea h of ivory leaves- -something
so uidden and obteure that even
'he shrewd eye of the .lew dealer
had failed to perceive i<s presence
Heibert Winfie'd, his curiosity
somewhit piqued, unscrewed the
top and there, on /he dusty case,
lay a slender blue lil-b u, as if it
had sometime been caught there,
wi h a dollar splint gold attached
to its azure fillet.
“What do they tell you, Daisy?
Do they speak the secret of my
heart, and say tbwt 1 love you
stid as dearly as ever? Daisy,you
will come back to my heart."
He drew out the gold coin,
hanging from its faded ribbon,
and extended it smilingly towarit
her.
“Oh, Herbert! 1 have missed it.
and wept over it so often. Where
did you find it?”
He told her adding: “It is a
golden link, dearest, to bind our
two hearts together; u littl guide
which has led me back to your side
after all these years of estrange
ment!”
When Mrs. Wallace returned
from her brief absence, she found
Daisy once more the betrothed
bride of Herbert Winfield. The
ten years of tri- >1 and p rverty were
bn a dream that had passed away
ant been forgotten—and round
Daisy’s neck hung, as of old, the
txilsman she had not seen fer such
a weary while—thetmy gold dol
lar on its ribbon of blue!
The “course of true love” had
no’ run smoothly, but it was true
lo7e, ana so it came right at last!
—• ♦ » >i
BLaSSED Al'E I’AY/NG .SUB
SCRIBE KS.
Blessed is the man who doth
subscribe for a paper and paytlh
therefor. His feet shall not s and
upon slippery places; he shall
not be forsaken by his friends nor
persecuted by his enemies nor
shall his seed even be seen beg
Blessed is he that waike’h to
tne office of the newspaper, yea,
even entereih the sanctum and
payeth a year’s subscrip ion there
for, Selah!
//e ihall learn wisdom day by
day and be exalted above his fel
lows.
He shall talk knowingly upon
all subjects, and bis neighbors
shall be astonished at the much
ness of bis learning.
He shall uot pay an additional
per cent. or. taxes, for his eyes
shall behold i he notice of /he eollee.
tor, and he «ill take warning there
by.
He shall not. contract bad debt s
or lose good bargains.
Verily, he shall bring his pro
duce to the market when the prices
are exceedingly got d and with
hold it when the price deseen
deth.
lie shall not take hold of rid
hot pokers for his knowledge of
'•metallurgy will teach him that
hot iron burns.
His children shall uot vex him
nor his wife wear breeches.
He shall live to a good old age
and w aen his dying hour is at hand
his sou! shall not be troubled as to
is future state.
But it were better for him that
doth uot subscribe for the news
paper that he be bound hand
and foot and cast upon a sea her
bed.
He shall have no rest either by
day or r.ignt, for visions of his
creditors shall dance upon his
stomach by night and their adu .1
presence torment him by day,
If pet chance he Las a moment’s
peace, it is only that he may have
a moment’s rest ere the memory
of an evil lacerates his mind, us
the goad pricks the hide of the
strong ox, so that Ins puuishmeut
m >y bo no longer drawn out.
Hia children shall grow up in
wickedness, they shall put /heir
hands to their noses and vex him
to wrath, and his wife shall kick
him om of oed jsfci
BELVA LOCKWOOD
'/here was .noi a wrinkle upon
iLk blow rs Belva Lockwood as
she sat’in tue Fitb avenue hotel
Saturday.savs the New York Her
a'd, ami chatted with a reporter.
Her iron gray hair was brush
ed xratly from all temptation
toward the giddy bang aflecod
by women withoutfa uisson.
She wore a plain black silk dress
wihite lace collar caught by a situ
pie cameo brooch at the bosom.
No shorthand reporter could
wri<e fast enough to record her
words.
“What airangt merits have f
made to ga her iu my votes .here?*’
she said. “Well I dm’t know
that I have made auy."
“What’s thejuseof making speesh
es then ?"”
“Because I want to show that
there is something in my cause
If I get one electorial and it is
cast in Washington that will prove
that a woman can be president if
she gets votes enough. Now one
of the things that lam in favor
of is the right of commercial
drummers to go where they
please witbctit being taxed. That
gives me the suppm-tof the drum
mers. I wa> t the national bank
wiped out, an l I want——
tl The ear’ ' .” sn gested the re
porter.
“Oh no. We are very modest
in our demands. A woman is of
uo use wltnout a man, and a man
is of no use witout a woman. Let
us help each other and have rairu
al comfort.”
“That’s right, Belva,” said Mrs
Springer, Chicago ladv who sa’
near banging the floor with her
umbtella.” “I’m glad to hear you
talk plain ou 1 . You don’t believe
in the folly of marraige though ? ’
Oh yes I do said tue fair po
litician. “Let natare take its
course.’’
“My daughter herebas beenlook
ing out for suitable chance,” said
Mrs Spriuger severely, and Miss
Springer blushed a deep carna
ion.
Accept ne as a sacrifice,” sai 1
Mr. Adams, a young man with a
dark moustache,pro 1 ’ ucing u Bible
aud handing it to Mrs. Lock
wood. “I am ready to me mar
ried now.”
Be carefu l .” said Mrs Lock
wood, “or you'd get caught,. As
« lawyer I advise you tha l a sim
ple declaration is a marriage in
this stale.”
“Is Dr. Mary Walker suporting
yon ?’’ asked the reporter.
“Ha !ha ! ha! ha! ha! ha!
Ask Mr. idams,” Shouted Mrs,
Lockwood, supressing a rebell
ious Lock ol hair that wanted to
be a bang. “He’s almost eugaged
to her Mr. Adams it is perfec/ly ter
ible.”
Airs Lock wood expressed her
self on all other issues of the cam
paign, and said she would veuti
t a/e her ideas fully in the Acidemv
of Music to nighi.
Winfield started, and colored,
and hi, heart throbbed! It was us
if Daisy's own voice had called to
him, out of the depths i f the past
He was never one who took heed
of sighs or omens—and this was a
sign he could not disregard!
Straight to the curiosity shop
he went.
“Who sold you that clock? ’ lie
sked.
“The Ltt/e French clock wi/h
the gailitul of ivory leaves round
the top, I mean!”
The man turned to his books
wi<u a s’ow deliberation which
was indescribably aggrava/iug to
Winfields iuveiiaii mood
•1 don’t know the name,” he an
swered, “but I know whew they
live, yll No. Raymer street —
a tall young lady, with Lrown
eyes and very pale che-ks!
How Herbert’s heart ihiobbed
as he ascended the narrow, uii
carpeted stairway of ihe tenement
house, its ledges worn into little
hollows by the read of many feet
aud knocked at the door whicu
had been printed ou' to him as
the entrance to Mrs. Wallace’s
room.
How the old times came back to
him as he entered »ud saw Daisy
sitting a/1 alone at the wiudew,
sewing wearily away at some coarse
work
She rose up. with a little shriek
“Herbert.!”
“Yes. Daisy, it is I! Are you
sorry to see me?’
"Oh. no. no!" she sobbed. “I
am so glad. I thought everybody
had forgoten me!”
“Did you suppose I could ever
forget yon Daisy?”
lie listened to the story of re
verse and trouble which she hail
to tell, wit It a teuiier sympathy
which soothed her like the touch
of a frieud.’y hand.
“Why did you not send to me
Daisy?" he asked, almost reproach
fnlly
“I thought you did not caro for
me any more, Herbert!”
“Look in my eyes, Daiay, aud
tell me wnat you think now!”
She glanced shyly up—then her
ook felll
Fmnlilmu \»t es
Bonnet strings must match the
material of the drees.
Buckles iustead of huitins far.
ten many handsome corsages
Silk p ush tnd fine cloth turban
caps are wo-n by smalt boys.
Ladies frequently tie a bow of
ribon to their watches in lieu of a
cnain.
Tan is the favorite color for
fall gloves whether of kid, silk or
isle thread.
Black tulle is to be used ei'eu
sively this winter for ball dress
es.
Demi trained dresses are agaiu
adop:e l for.csrriage wear aud de
mi toilet at borne.
Large h.ooe cloaks easily put
on add takeu oil' will be ,11 hi gh
avor as the season a lvauces.
Tufts of ostrich feathers decor
ate the skirts and (lraperitH o
rna .y eluboia'e evening ilreses.
Bonnets covered with m item 1
like the dress and liued wi/li vol
et are destimil to rival tliose of
felt. |
Beits can be worn with waists
7 hey are narrow or wide accord
ing to taste. Deep belts are not
suitable for woman witn shon
waists.
Lace is used lo excess iu millin
ery, and even forms the entire bon
net even for midwinter wear in
Rome cases, the trimming beiug
feathers am! hands of fur.
A case of great importance was
•'ecidid in tin Washington police
c nr. /he iilie (Ly. Aii aged
colored ci 1/ 11 was cbulged with
•he atrocious dime of keeping a
dog without license. At ti r st
the case seemed to be deed
against the prisoner, the aspect
of all'airs was speedily changed
when the plea was ptr. in that the
defendant did not keep a dug,
but a puppy six raonibs old
Fortunately the judge wes a "ian
of intelligence. He at once re
marked that Avhile the law was
clear as to a tax on dogs it was si
lent as to puppies. He knew
from experience, he sail-, that a
puppy lid not become a dog until
it was a year old. The case was
therefore ordered dismissed and
the colored citizen aud his pup
inarched oft in triumph.
Duriug the siege of Paris M,
Lisbonne, Prefect of i!eiault,seci
ibe following telegram to Gum
betta at Tours: “How shall I
send to Paris for the Mobiles of
Heiauli ten thousand pairs of
sboeu?” 7’liere was uo reply He
tried again- Stiii there was no
reply, His third and last tele
gram was more successful. It
lent, “Your silence is inexplicable
and I sbail send in my resignation
if Ido aot get a reply I ask now
for the last time how I can send
io our Mobiles in Paris ten thous
uid pairs of shoes?" The answer
cauie it last: “Lei your slims be
accompanied by thrte hundred
Uiousund men. That is the way
to do it."
the girls locked up for the
night wife ?”
Yes."
“Coachman cUained V
‘Yes."
“Has the patent mtcher-chaich
er in the front yard teen oiEd so
that ii works we'l ?”
“Yes.".
“Well, we might as well chloro
form "the gardener ant. go to
sleep."
A new color is called cauard.
It resembles the bluish green of
ducks’ feather. It is very popular
ijust now wi h Republican news-
I paper editors.
correspondence:
NEWS NOTES FROM THE
STRONGHOLDS OF STYLES
IN TWO CITIES
Despite unfavorable atmos
pheres the display of fabrics and
fashions for fall arc magnificent
and divercified to a degree.
The proverbial -‘cloth of gold”
in all its sumptuous phases me
characteristic features of existing
inodes “Havo Relievo” is the title
applied to tlie new Imaghe velet
of uniquo design sunk deep in the
pile—-of which Lord Sl Taylor
make a specialty. Stylish walk
ing costume combined with broclt
es of the same excellent aud adap*
tivs biaml.
Parasian Jackets and Fedora
vest fronts are still in high vogue,
as are the profuse panics draper
ies wh’ch accompany them. *
La Perle du cuchmere is an ex
cel lent brand of impor ed silk, of
which the Ridleys make a special
ty. Their fashion magazine for
autumn con mins a fund of goods
which can iot fail to render it a
boon of beniticenre in any borne
to the land.
Recent millinery ope mugs at
the great centers in the Quaker
City were characterized by the
accus/omed rush and crush of
communities iu'eut upon thu lat
est caprices of style.
Amid a thousand trimmed
shapes and half a hundred thou
uud uiurimmed, it becomes an ar
tistic aud commercial posibility
to rescue /he chapeau best ad«pt
ed to the personality of the wear
er. Cooper aud Couards open
ing was a grand success imported
toilets and wraps from the old
worlds strongnclds of style inter
spersed with the rarest designs of
this deservedly popular house
were in prominent order aniTeaclT
and every department of novel
ties eouiprii-iiig tlie great caravan
aai ie of goods and s/yles teemed
in the triumphs which speak vol
ume for the modes, methods and
facilities of tlie management.
The building has been greatly en
larged and improved, aud the ar
rangements now enDiely complet
ed offered such average for furu
tolling at suitable figures all class
es of patrons in the city and out
of ii as few combinations can
boast. The mail order truiiac
tiun are uoteworlhly fea/ures iu
tin. ci implies-ed business of tbe
esliiblishmen by which tlie coun
try buyer las ull tbe ailvuntug
*s mums die Ji aw backs of a shop
in| to, ii- and from catalogue and
price list furuisbed patrons with
a view to commissions executed
per p ist, mistakes are aiciu 10 im
possible. bo much for the pro
gress of Ihe age.
Sidney Makle.
DOKM IT FAT
Come let us reasou together,
does it pay the worldlaine to pa'-
ro.'iize the grog-shop it is a two
edged sword and cuts botli ways at
once.
It catches our young men and
boys before they reach the church
and Sabbath school wnile they are
on their way and they never leach
its doors or else it catches them no 1
they return.
The church opms its blessed
doors two or three days in tin
week; the saloon grinds ou und
on with its mill of destruction a 1
the days of every week; ad the
months of every year.
Does it pay to have scores of
woringmea i>oor, ragged and tinan
ciahy ruined, in order that one sal
loon keeper may be dressed iu
broadcloth and Hush ot money?
Does it pay to nave fifiy work
ingmen lire on bone soup and half
rations in order that one Balloon
keeper may flourish od roast tur.
key and champaign?
Does it pay (o have the mothers
and children of twenty fumilies
dressed in rage starved into the
semblance of emaciated searecr jw
and hr ug in novels in order that
the saloon keeper’s wife may dress
in ta/ii, and her children grow fat
and hearty, and live in a bay-win
dow parlor?
Does it pay to have citizens in
jail to be supported at the public
expense, because another citizen
jVol. XIV.—Ne 82
sells him liquor?
Does it pay to have oae citizen
supported by tax payers of
tbe county in "the lutanie asylum
because another citiaen him
crazy by selling him lifuor?
Dees it pay to arreet, try," east,
vict. and punish a man at a coat
of one thou,and dollarejto the tax
payers of,the county, because*aa
othe*- man sold him liquor, under
the influence of which he nonmii*
ted murd/r ?
Does it pay for a paltry liceaaa
to sell whisky, and than spend
thousands of dollars cf tbe tax
payers money in prosecuting .‘or a
crime committed while crazed by
the whisky ?
Does it pay to have one tbofl
sand homes blasted, ruined da
fltod and tnrned into belle of dir*
cord and misery, is ordei that ana
wholesale liquor dealer may omasa
a fortune ?
Does i* pay to permit tbe aXtr
ist.ence of a traffic which only ts*
suits in crime, poverty miseryjaad
death, and which never did, never
can and never will do auy good ?
It never pays to do wrong; your
sin will fiud ycu out, whether oth
ers find it out,the sin knows where
you are, and will always keep yott
posted of that fact. It doee net
I>“>-
I hope all the readers of the
Heboid will read this peace and
study it for their own benefit, and
for the benefit of their ehildrea.
Yours Reap’t.
T. L O'Kelley.
TV/E TH REH!~CANDIDATD».
Blaine is a married man, Rutter
is a widower, Cleveland la a baehe
lor.
Butler was born in New
shire. Cleveland in New Mereey
and Blame in Pennsylvania.
Cleveland is 47 years old, Bhrfae
54 and Butler (16.
Blaine is a Presbyterian, Bader
an Episcopalian, Cleveland a Cga
gregationist..
Butler to hsavier than Bivins ;
Cleveland is the heaviest of tba
three,
Cleveland’s hair is trr uiugßlains
has gray hair, Butter is bald.
Biairs’s favorite ina/miaentit
the accordion, Butler's the bugle
and Cleveland's the bassoon.
Butler drioks old wine, Blaine
likes brandy and seltzer, Cleve
land prefers beer.
Cleveland has always been aDem
ocrat. Blaine always a Republican
Butler has been every/bing.
Blaine wears a full beard, But
ler and Cleveland wear only mue
tachev.
Bu ler is an L- L. D. so is Bleiue
but noi so is Cleveland.
Cleveland is the poorest of the
dime candidates, Bu/lsr is richer
than Blaine and Cleveland togeth
er.
Butler audClcveland are lawyers
by profession, Blaine Is a peliti
cian.
Butler’s family consists of a son
and daughter, Blaine has six or
seven children.
Both Butler and Blaine erb
grandfather,h but Cleveland i*
not.
Blaine makes his speeches rapid
ly, Butler delevers his oi*ati ns da
liberately, Cleveland’s style is eon
ctse aud pdished.
Butler wt-aiH the smallest abas
of tbe three. Cleveland ti e big
gest.
Cleveland se’dotn jokes. BatUtr
is witty. Bla re laugh* at other
people’s wit.
All die candidate* have big
heads, but Bu/ler has the biggeat
A a negro church in the 'lowar
part of tlia county the following
was sung as a hymn nut lsug
8 nee ; *
Juue -bug got da golden wing
Lightnin’ bug da fituur,
Beb-bng got no wiug at alt,
But be git dar all de Mina.
Chorus—Nigger baby bow lag
ged.
iViggei baby bow logged.
Sigger baby bow legged,
Kase he walk too boob. t
Evergreen—The Newly Land##
Irshmau.