The Gwinnett herald. (Lawrenceville, Ga.) 1885-1897, September 28, 1897, Image 1

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VOL. XXVII. NO 29 notes of the day. Russell Sage recently gave the children of a New York Jiillago a free ride over one of his railways. In every mile of railway there are seven feet foftr inches not Covered by the rails, the space left fyr expansion. Another paving material has been discovered in Florida at Tampa. It is the pebble phos phate, and is said to be very good and chrap, A resident of North Carolina is gleefully pointing to a sun flower stalk on his place that is twelve feet tall and hass2 flow ers upon it. In a run between Wibber and Titusville, a New Jersey wheel man caught a whole swarm of bees on hi'* back and carried them a nunib.r of miles. Nevada is the most sparsely settled state in America. There are nearly two and a half square miles to each inhabitant. Next comes Idaho with one inhabi tant to each square mile. A loving Ha.kensnack neph ew, charged with the duty of preparing an epitaph for a disa greeable old uncle ''just dead, suggested the following: “Deep ly regretted by all who never knew him. ” The Russian photographers have a strange way of punishing those who, having received their pooto, do not pay their bi ts. They hung the pictures of the delinquents upside down at the entrance of their studies. - King Leopold of Belgium of fers a prize of $5,000 for the best military history of Belgium from the Roman invasion to th - present day. It may he writ ten in English, French, Herman Italian, Spanish or Flemish,and manuscripts must reach Belgi um before January 1001. % Some Swiss convicts escaped from prison and an ad vertisement announcing the fact says that “with the close-crop ped hair, knickerbockers and striped jackets the fugativenuir derers may easily be mistaken for American or English tour ists excursioning in theValaisan Alps.” in the house of a deaf mute brother and sistee, William and Julia Barnes, who have lived alone on a farn near Columbus, Mo., an investigating commit tee of neighbors found, after the death of the brother at 66, mor. ey to the amount of $5,000 hid den about in all sorts of niuces. WITH THE WISE. Find a way or make one. Everything is either pusher or pushed. The world always lis tens to a man with a will in him.—Marden. The only worthy end of all learning, of all science, of all life, in fact, is that human be ings should love one another better. —George Eliot. A loving confidence in the God we have offended is the key to His heart, the key which unlocks the treasury to His! grace. —Gould burn. There are no songs compar able to the songs of Zion, no j orations equal * those of the prophets, ana no politics like those whose which the script ures teach. —John Milton. If you would be well with a gr-at mind, leave him with a favorable impression of you: if with a little mind, leave him with a favorable impression of himself. —C deridge. Restraining grace is an amaz ing work of God. It is more wonderful than his setting a bound to the sea that it cannot pass over. Think what a hell every unconverted bosom would become if the Spirit were to withdraw and give men over to their own hearts’ lusts.—Me Cheyne Cr atiou is the organ, and a gracious man finds out its keys, Jays his band thereon and wakes the whole system of the uni verse to th*' harmony <<f praise. Mountains and hills, and oth--r great objects are as it were the bass of tlnj, chorus while the trees of the wood, and all things that have life, take up the air of the melodious song,—Spur s' in. THE TRUE REMEDY. W. M -Repi lie, editor Tjskilwa j 111., “Chief,” says: “Wtf will not keep house without Dr. King’s New Discovery for Con sumption, Coughs and Colds Experimented with many oth ers, but never got the true rem edy until we used Dr. King’s New Discovery No other rem edy can take its place in our home, us in it we have a certain and sure cure for Coughs, Colds, Whqopiqg Cough etc. 1 ’ Ri* jdlo to experiment with other remedies, even if they are urged OU you as just as good as Dr. King’s New Discovery, They aye not as good because this remedy has a record of cures and besides is guaranteed It uever fails t*> satisfy. Trial bottles free at A. M. Winn’s drugstore The Gwinnett Herald. PLANET MARKS ON*THK BODY. EVERY PERSON HAS ONE AT BIRTH. GOVERNED BY STARS. From the Boston Journal. “I assure you I have no moles,” say some people, hut this is impossible; every liunitm creature when it is born bears on some part of its body the mark of the sign pr planet which governed at the hour of its conception and nativity, and moles are contingent on these, impressed by the influ ence of the celestial signs, and answering thereto, not only in their formation and position, but varying according to the dominion of the several plan ets. Moles are of three colors, red, honey color, and black, flat or raised like a wart, those on the right side of the face or person being usually symbolical of good, while those on the left mostly denote ills and misfort unes. After a long and exhaustive study of the science, a savant says he is convinced that, not only the character, tastes, and disposition of an individual, but the future itself to a great extent may be determined by the locul position, relation and general appearance of these natural marks. If the sun, at a nativity, bo in Aries and ascendant, the mark of that sign will be on the head, probably on the left ear. When Venus is lady, a flat violet mark will be found on the thighs. When born under Gemini the mark is on the arms. If born under the first part of the sign of Cancer, t he mark is above the breast, and lias no feeHiig if pierced by a needle. Those who are born under Capicoru have the sign on th** knees. When Leo is ascendant the marks are on the left breast. If Mercury be lord, the marks are on the left side, or upon the legs. The nutivity being under Vir go, there are black or reddish spots upon the stomach. The lust of the signs, Pisces, governs tho feet, and those born under this dominion are of pleasant countenance, brave and ingenious. A man haviug a mole on the right side of the forehead will be exceedingly lucky. To a •woman it denotes gifts from the dead. One on the left side of the forehead foretells, to a man, long imprisonment,and it shows a woman to be foolish, simple and idle. A mole on the hinder part of the neck predicts a happy life, but threatens untimely death by drowning. A mole on both sides of the neck, opposite to each other, foretells dangers and perils with ill fortune. A man having a mole on the left side >4' the upper lip rarely marries, and in a woman it de ludes trouble and suffering If on the under lrp, it shows her to bo improvident, and a man had best beware of her, A nude in the hollow of the chin denotes a woman to be contentious ami quarrelsome. On the edge of the chin, it shows good fortune, happy mar riage and a long life, of what ever color it may be, excepting black. To possess a mole upon the throat is very unlucky, indi cating that the individual will (lit* by the hand of justice, or should it appear as a wart he perishes by water. On the right side of the up per lid, a finger’s breadth above the mouth, a unde signifies t*> either sex great fortune. A woman having it wili be come ly, graceful, healthy in body, and careful for the things of this world; she will marry well and live happily, her best time for marriage botweeu 19 and 24, and she will make a true wife and uu exceptionally hap py mother. tt» Assistant Post master-General \ferrjit has called upoq .\lbprt Daggett, of \Va»nington, D. C-, aim wux tRe lowest bidder, to sta'p definitely wfiat facilities lie has for carrying out the con tract for furnishing postal cards k the government for the next fogr years. LAWRENCEVILLE, GEORGIA, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 28th 1897 SOME GUEER PEOPLE. The Tsimpseans are compos ed of the following tribes: The Crow, Bear,Whale, Frog, Wolf, Beaver and Eagle. Each of these represents a family or tribe corresponding to the clan Campbells of Scotland, or the Nakamuras of Japan. Each tribe lias its own crest, as in Japan at this day. A member of the Wolf tribe has the wolf for its crest, and a Bear has the moon and stars, showing his celestial origin. An Indian may not marry one of his own crest. Rut lie may marry into any other clan excepting an allied tribe. A Crow may marry into any clan except the Frog, the Frog into any but the Crow; the Whale any but the Bear, the Bear any but. the Whale; the Beaver any but. the Eagle, the Eagle any but the Beaver, and the Wolf, being so different frt.ni all in ancestry, may marry into any tribe. Suppose a Wolf marries a Crow woman; the children are all Crows. They are named after the mother, not after the father. In quarrels between two tribes, as the Wolf and l Crow,the children, being Crows, would bo forced to join their mother against their father, and he would fight against ull Crows, including his own fami ly- A Crow is a member of a Crow family, or crest, to such an extent that when in a dis tant. village he would sojourn with a Crow household, and tvouljl there tie treated as a veritable son or brother. If in the village there are no Crows, then, as the Frogs are closely allied, hi* would go to them and receive tie* same treatment as if he were a Frogs So among ill allied crests, the same loy alty is maintained. —The Chau tauqua. AN ANCIENt’rATTLE SNAKE. A huge rattlesnake has for fifty years been known to live in the cliffs of Jennie’s creek, Johnson county j and many at tempts have been made to cap ture it. One day last week a cow belonging to Dan Davis, who lives in the neighborhood, was bitter, by a snake, and by marks in the sand and weeds in the pasture tie In Mr. Davis con cluded at ouce that the cow was bitten by a huge rattlesnake, and offered $25 to any one who | would kill it One of Mr. Da vis’ farm hands armed himself with two 38-calibre pistols and followed Ihe trail about a mile i to a cave in th** cliffs. Climb j ing a sapling overlooking the| month of the cave, lie remained I there between three and four I boors, when the monster ap peared. The hunter fired nine shots into the snake before lie killed it, and on measuring it it was found t<> be 18 feet long. Its body in circumference measured 29 inches. The rattles on its tail were two feet long and eight inches broad. Citizens of 6<> and 70 years of age who live in the vicinity say that when they were young they heard pimple tulk of a mou ster snake inhabiting tbosecliffs and signs of the reptile have been seen every few years.— Louisville Journul. USING LONG WORDS. Doctors who are in the habit of using long words when visit ing people may take a hint from the following little story: Ail old woman, whose hiisliaud wus not very well, sent for the doctor, who came and saw the old wife “l will send him soii|e* medi cine which must be taken in a recumbent position.” After he had gone I lib old woman sat d< wo greatly puz z|ed. “A recumbent position—a ro cumhent position!” she kept ! repeating. “1 haven’t got one.” At last sh thought, “l will go and see it Nurse |,owu has got i one to ism! me.” Accordingly she wont and j said to the nurse: .“Have you a recumbent po Sltioo to Ipnd |pe to tuku some medicine in?” The nurse, who was equally as ignorant as the clfi woman, replied: “1 had one, but to tell you the truth, I have lost it.” Historical No es. SOME INTERESTING PARA GRAPHS. WRITTEN FOR THE HERAI.D. John Calvin, (ho f under of Presbyterianism and the author of the Calvinistic doctrine, was born in the year 1509. He took r.n active part in thi great French Reformation whee he was quite young, It is said that lie accomplished much good during Ids ministry. Bu! his doctrir.e was one that was full of error. Tho doctrine that he preached was that if predestination and election, which means that God foreor dained whatsoever comes to pass. And that he elected a definite number of people, I) •- fore the foundation of the world, for salvation and that, in his own good time and plea*- are, he will effectually call these chosen ones and they will be saved.- This doctrine means that those who are not elected shall all be finally lost. The Presbyterian chinch of this day holds precisely the same views which Calvin taught away back in the fifteenth cen tury. Calvin lived to bo 55 years old and died in the year 1564. * * Abraham Lincoln, that noted abolitionist, was the first presi dent of the United Htates elec ted by the Republican party. This is how ins election cam*- about. In 1860 the Democrats split on tho slavery question, and the Northern wing nomina ted Stephen A. Douglas and ihe Southern wing put < rlli John C. Breckenridge. When lie election came off the Republi cans had a majority of the elec toral votes and Abraham Lin coln. was declared elected. Shortly after Lincoln’s inau guration the bloody struggle be tween the States caine on. On April Ith, 1565. while the President and quite a number of friends were at Ford’s Thea er in Washington, John Wilkes Booth, an actor, stepped up be hind Lincoln and shot him through the head. From the effects of the wound he died next morning- Audrew Johnson, the Vice- President, of courre, succeed'd him and he quietly assumed the duties of a president. • « * Queen Elizabeth, of England ascended the throne a' tie ng** of 25. She was the daughter of Ileury the VIII. and Anne Boleyn. During her reign there wrs much disturbance thmugbout the kingdom. A gr*-at many people were beheaded by her or der. One of the most prominent persons executed during her reign was her cousin, Mary, queen of Scots, who was a ven blood-thirsty woman, herself. She was charged with conspira cy against the govern tin nt. Elizabeth was never married. And it is raid that she requested that these words be ii.scrib* d upon her tombstone: “Qinen Elizabeth. She lived and <li<d a maiden queen. ” She reigned for forty years, and di*d at tin* uga of 7‘>. ♦ * • One of the strangest facts in connection with the hi-tory o Massachusetts was the Salem witchcraft. It was a> out the ySnr 1692, when the people got the idea into their heads thai there were witches in the New England States. It was usually some poor o'cl W'OiuaU, who WUS suspected of Being possessed of evilj spirits, . ml wis taken in custody ai d severely flogged until she con fessed the crime. A half a ; hundred were cruelly dealt with and geod many were put to death. Finally the people woke up to tlieif t'oßy and stopped tiles persecutions. There are folks in this en lightened age who believe in ghosts aud such Uke. Ak*'H Pekci.Es. LawreuceyiUc, I When tjod send* darkness, ! |et ft be dgrk. Tie so vain to think we oau light it up with candles, or make it anything i but dark. It nitty be because jof the darkness we shall see some new beauty in the stars. PUCKETT *B. 1 Last week’s letter. | The cotton crop will not be as large as was at first expected. We are glad to note that our community is free from sick ness. Rev. J. 11. Braziel, of Suwa nee, was in our midst last week. On last third Sunday at the residence of W.T. Wallace Wil liam C. Maguire was married to Miss Amanda Wilbanks. We wish for the young couple a long and happy life. Prof. Cheek closed his school at Troy last Friday, Squire Wallace says if there are any more couples who wish to marry just let them come to hiip. He will foot the bill. James Langley and mother, of Walnut Grove, were here Sat urday. The church at Hog Mountain has called its saint: pastor for another year. Mathew Cain ami wife visited h-!• sister, Mrs. E, C, Ha.es, last Sunday night. C E Puckett is th*- happy fattier of a bright baby girl. fl E. Hayes has ginned 24 bailee of cotton lip to this time Jl’roJ. 8. C. Wood, of Dacnla, wis the guest of your scribe last \vsek. J. Bradberry and wife vis it edjjfcr parents last. Thursday. IIJk "re" Wft * ol,r tw. James Pratt is visiting Mrs. J. E Wal Mm \\Ti- 11 *-r * - last jThotmis A . Maynard, of Itu i r, passed through our midst r. •♦■litly. Thomas Cheek and Roscoe Bu r II are now enlarging pictures. The young people enjoyed a watermelon slicing at the resi dence of Edwin Hayoß Saturday afterdoon. iF. M. Hayem has accepted a p<LiiLi >n at Flowery Brandh. ■'lie chime of t he wedding bell is■istinctly heard in thisvicin- If the people want to get all the news <>f state and county af fairs, just let them take the old reliable Herald. CRUSH. [ L ist week’s letter. | Making syrup, picking cot ton and mowing hay is the or der of the day. If it continues warm and dry cotton will mo l all be open, picked and sold, Mr. E. T. Hopkins has re cently purchasei him a new wheel. Morris Magnus, who does a fin - barber business at Nor erms, was here Friday. Mrs. Alston Martin has been very ill, but is better now Messrs. M. C Dnuanu, J. 1/ Henderson, W. C. Nesbitt, Lon Jordon and Wash. Mills, of Norcross, were Imre Sunday. Dr. H. C. Hopkins, of Li* thonia, was in our midst recent ly. 8. Z. Dyer, J. P. Miner. Mr. and Mrs. G. B. Chapman, of Atlanta, visited fri-mis and rel atives in this section Sunday. J. A. Hazelrigs, of Craig, J. F. Robinson and si-ter, of M* allow, visited here Sunday Mr Homer Johnson is very ill with bilious fever. M. D. Corley is not improv ing from his illness very much. Sorry to say that Mr. Wilse Nichols and llis little boy, Paul, are sick with typhoid fever. * , Mr. Oscar Leathers ami near ly all his family have typhoid f*-V l\. Everybody remember the old adage, “One dunce of preventa tive is worth one pound of cur*,” This will save time, d ictor bills and trouble, I) 8. Wright, of Mobile, Ala., arrived here Sunday. He will probably locate hern for awhile Mr U. L. Shaw is helping W. N. Franklin complete bis dwelling. Mrs. G* R Uhapman, of At lanta. is spending a week or so with her mother, Mrs, Me-. Daniel. Rev. M r. Adams preached an uhlp sermou at Beaver Ruin school house Sunday. The singing at It. F. Jackson’s Sunday night was enjoyed bv all. Mr. Buchanan, of Atlanta, is here visiting Ins brother-in laws, J. N. Corley and J. F (JytUusw. Misses Annie and Cora Webb, of Lawrenceville, were here re cently. I here was an interesting game of ball played here Saturday af ternoon. Miss Eunice Rahim, of Nor cross, visited here recently. G. W. Mills and sons had good luck seining Saturday af ternoon. Dr. H. T. Dickens, of Nor cross, removed a pea from the nose of Mr. Franklin’s little hoy nose, which had been there for two days. The Doctor, last Saturday, removed a portion of Miss Rosie Erwin’s jaw bone, on account of a malignant growth. Mr. J. N. Corley has a very tall stalk of corn. W. I’. Webb, of Lawrence ville, was here Saturday. R. R. Miner happened to a wreck Sunday, whish complete ly demolished one of buggy wheels. 8. C. Hopkins has a pony that makes a mile in little over two minutes. POINTED PARAGRAPHS. A bad epigram, like a worn out pencil, bus no point to it. Compliments on a tombstone might be properly tunned epi taffy ✓- Marriage is an eye salve that restores the sight of blind lov ers. Converse with a man who al ways agrees with you as monotonous as talking to an echo. The wise man profits by ex perience, but be is still wiser who profits by the experience of others. When a man has a reputation for wisdom he can say foolish things and his friends applaud them as sarcasm. It takes the average woman about twice as hug to make up her complexion us it does to make op her rniiul. Some men are never satisfied to remain at tha bottom of the ladder, they always try to get farther down. A man gets very little credit for what he does in this world, but he gets lots of blame for what lie doesn’t. If you want to see the smart est, cutest, sweetest baby that ever lived, just get any mother to show you hers. The girl who tries to imitate a man is idiotic, but the imita tion is very flattering just the same A man isn’t always to blame for thinking more of his type writer than be does of his wife, for he can dictate to his type writer. Some of us have more ups und downs in this life than others, hut when we get to the cemeta ry will all he on a dead level ODDS ANDENDS OF NEWS. The English Supreme court has ou its bench ten judges who have passed the age when by law they may voluntariully re tire on u pension. A tree in Windsor park, Eng land, called William the Con querer’i Oak, is supposed to be 1,200 years old. The famous Bentley und Winfarthing oaks are at least two centuries older. For the modest sum rd" 37 cents the French postoffice will transport t*> any part of the re public a package weighing us much as 22 pounds, provided it does not measure more than five cubic feet.. 'lhe statue to Fredi rick Doug las, which the park commission ers will place in one of the pub lic squares of Rochester, N. V., will probably be the first statue ever erected to a negro in the United States, HUMOROUS. Breathless Huuter—Say, boy, did you see a rabbit run by here? Boy—Yes, sir. Hunter —How long ago? lloy—l think it’ll be three years next Christmas. Maude —I'm in for bud luck this month, 1 suppose, 1 raw the new moon last night over my left shoulder. Gladys—Did you ? I had better luck than that. I saw it over Ben right shoulder. Mother —What in the matter, my diar ? Why at" yuu cry ing T Harry (between sobs)—l left my m’lassescandy an thut chair and the deacon's a-settiu’ on it A man at Mancie, Ind., swal lowed a potato hug l>y accident, and then followed it with some pari* green as an antid<a<u. The doctors took him in hand and he is likely to recover, hut he | thinks the dying agonies of that potato hug were awful. 1.00 PER ANNUM. IN ADVANCE MISSIONARY COL UMN. | This column is devoted to the missionary cause, and ised, ited by the W. F. M. Soc’ety, Lawrenceville auxiliary. | WOMAN IN THE NEW TESTAMENT. 1. An obedient maiden, Luke i. 38. 2. A righteous woman, I.uke i. 5, 6. 3. A praying woman, Luke ii. 37, 38. 4. A woman of faith, Math ew, xv. 27, 28. 5. The woman who gave all, Mark xii. 41, 42, 43, 44. 6. Ministering women, Luke viii. 8. 7. A home missionary, John tv, 28,29. 8. A woman’s devotion, her memorial, Mark xiv. 8 to 9 in clusive. 9. The woman who made a good choice, Luke x. 42. 10. A busy housekeeper,Luke x. 40. 11. Women who understood Christ, John xi. 27, 28, 29. 12. Women “last at the cross,” Mathew xxvii. 55, 56. 13. “And earliest at the grave,” Mathew, xxviii. 1, 2. 14. The heralds of the resur rection, Mathew xviii, 6 to 10 inclusive. 15. A woman full of good works. Acts ix. 26. 16. A hospitable woman, Acts xvi. 14, 15. 17. A woman who taught an eloquent preacher,Acts xviii. 24, 26. 18. One of Paul’s helpers, Rom. xvi. 1, 2. 19. Raul’s co-laborers, Rom. xvi. 0, 12. 20. The grandmother and mother of a minister. 2 Timo thy 1. 5. 21. What the Church needs to remember in behalf of the Woman’s Missionary Society, Philippines iv. 3. Help those women which labored with me in the gospel.—Exchange. asking in ohkist’s name. From “Searching in the Si lence,” by George Mathe son, D. D, Hitherto ye have asked nothing in my name, ask ami ye shall re ceive. (John xvi. Z-1.) The Master is wearying for the development of the pupil. He seeks it in the progress of His prayers. He measures the value of His prayers, not by what He wants, but by His rea son for wanting it. “Ye have asked nothing in My name” means “Ye have asked nothing in My interest.” It makes no difference that Adam asks an apjile, and John the right hand in the kingdom, they both ask equally amiss, for each desired only his own joy. The fault in Adam is not that he seeks the apple, but that he seeks it from the wrong gur den. The same fault may be got from either of two gardens —Eden orGethseinane. At the gates of Eden I seek it, tor my self, at the gates of Gethsemane, I desire it for another. The one is a request in my own name, the other is in the name of Je sus. Name above every name, pu rify my desires. It is by my desires that thou measureet my progress; teaeli me to pray. It is not new desires that 1 want; it is a new name in which to bank the old treasures —thy name instead of mine. Men have called me a worldling in tha bygone time, because I have sought so much for gold. Yet. it is not less of gold I would seek now, it is less of self. I feel os if I needed the wealth of this world more than lever did. Hut now I need it for thee. It is not a change of money, it is a change of investment. 1 put it in tliy name. 1 bank it for thee l would not have less worldly toil. I would not lie seen more seldom iu the exchange. I would not relax the wheels of industry nor abate the ardor of enterprise. 1 waut a change of thought,not of theater. 1 would send my merchandise over a mightier sea than ever before it traversed —the ocean of thy love. 1 would make the once mammon of unrighteousness a hehvenly f rtend. I would plant schools, l would build colleges, | would endow hospitals, 1 would improve the dwellings of ! the poor, 1 would supply the destitute with a home, 1 would provide the fallen with a refuge, 1 would fill up that which thou hast left behind, Forbid that 1 should be too unworthy to pray, “Command that these stones he made bread.” It was once the tempter’s prayer, but thy lgist Supper bus made it sacramental. Hitherto I have asked it ouly for the wants of my own wilderness. When 1 have heard the cry of the multi tude in the desert, 1 shall breathe it again in thy name. t«*yal makes the food pure, wholesome and delicious* bvW4j &AKIHO POWDER Absolutely Pure WOVAI BAKING POWDER CO . HE* VPPk. t vourfiiL HOSPER, raid. you can lay your ivery section of the ■very corner of the y family. Hence, ace your I 0 -i'; 1 1 cl. WOKDd. OF WISDOM. It in difficult to say who docs the most mischief, enemies with the worst intentions or friends with best. Such us thy words are, such will thy affections be; such thy deeds as thy affections, such thy life as thy deeds. There is a great struggle be tween vanity and patience when we have to meet a person who admires us but who bore us. One of the highest mounta ns upon v hich we may stand in this life, is to be able to look t>ack upon a long life well spent. Beware of' prejudices. A man’s mind is like a rat trap; prejudices creep in easily, but it is doubtful if they ever get out again. Want of prudence is too fre quently the want of virtue; nor is on earth a more powerful ad vocate for vice than poverty. Don’t get the notion that you are the greatest person in crea tion, There are plenty of other people who are just as small as you are. The worst penalty of evil do ing is to grow into likeness w ith the bud; for each man’s soul changes according to the nature of his deeds, for better or for worse. Patient, hopeful waiting is hard work when it is the only work possible to us iu an inier geucy. But patient waiting is in its time the highest duty of a faithful •oul. A good and wise man wil 1 at times be angry w ith the world, and also grieved at it; but no man can ever he long discon tented w ith t he world if he does his duty in it. We should so live and labor in our time that what comes to us as seed may go to the next generation us blossom, and that what came to us as blossom may go to them as fruit. This is what we mean by progress. Many ideas grow belter when transplanted into another mind than in tho one where they sprang up That which was a weed tu one intelligence becomes a Ilower in another, and a dow er again dwindles to a mere weed by the same change.—The South-West. Kipaus Tubules. BJfiaus Tubules assist digesUeft.