Union recorder. (Milledgeville, Ga.) 1886-current, November 01, 1887, Image 1

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men Volume LVIII. [« Federal Union Established In 1829. | Southern Recorder " 1819. Consolidated 1872. Milledgeville, Ga., November 1. 1887. Number 17- BALDWIN COUNTY. BALDWIN SHERIFFS SALE. W ILL be sold before the Court House door, in the City of Mil- ledgeville, during legal sale hours, on the first Tuesday in Nov., 1887, the following described propert^y, to-witj Uiiuwi»K ucdi/huvu F , *i Vi .. . One house u,nd lot in the city of Milledgeville, and known in the plan of said city as being the home place of Henry Temples, deceased, contain ing one acre, more or less, and being the South-west corner of lot on Mont gomery and Clark streets. Levied on as the property of J. T. Temples, to satisfy one Co. Court flfa in favor of Thos. Johnson vs. J. T. Temples. Levy made and Defendant iiotitied in person, this Oct. the 3rd, 188i. Also at the same time and place; One house and lot in the city of Mill edgeville, and known In the plan of said city as being in square No. 80, and part of lot NO. 8, fronting on Wayne street 09 feet and 2j inches. Levied on as the property of Mrs. Dixie Haygood to satisfy a Superior Court ft fa in favor of E. Wall. Levy made August 8th,-1887. C W. ENNIS, Sheriff. Oct. 5th, 1887. U tds Petition For Letters of Dismiision. GEORGIA, Baldwin County, Court of Ordinary, Oct. Term, 1887. W HEREAS, L. Carrington, Execu tor upon the estate of Emmie DeLaunay Nisbet, deceased, has filed his petition in said court for letters of dismission from his trust as such Exec utor. These are therefore to cite and ad monish all persons interested, heirs or creditors, to show cause on or by the January term next of said court, to be held on tlft first Monday in Jan uary, 1888, why letters of dismission from said trust should not be granted to said petitioner as prayed for. Witness my hand and official signa ture tliis October the 3rd, 1887. I DANIEL B. SANFORD, 13 3m.] Ordinary. Petition for Letters of Adminis tration. GEORGIA, Baldwin County. Court of Ordinurv, Oct. Term, 1887. W HEREAS, Walter Paine, Clerk of the Superior Court for said county, lias filed his petition in said Court, for letters of administration upon the estate of Joe. Reeves, c., deceased. These are therefore to cite and ad monish all persons interested, heirs or creditors, to show cause on or by the November Term next, of said court, to be held on the first Monday in November, 1887, why letters of ad ministration upon the estate of said deceased should not be granted to said petitioner as prayed for. Witness my hand and official sig nature this the 3d October. 1887. DANIEL B. SANFORD, 13 lm.] Ordinary. Petition for Leave to Sell. GEORGIA, Baldwin County. Courtof Ordinary, Oct. Term, 1837. W HEREAS, C. W. Ennis, Adminis trator upon the estate of W. T. Ethridge, deceased, has ffled hi# petition in said Court for leave to sell the real and personal property belong ing to said deceased. . These are therefore to cite anil ad- mpnisli all persons interested, heirs or creditors, to show cause on or by the November term, next, of said court to be held on the first Monday in November, 1887, why leave to sell said real and personal property, should not be granted to said peti tioner as prayed for. Witness my hand and official signa ture this the 3rd October, 1887. DANIEL B. SANFORD, 13 lm.] Ordinary Year's Support. GEORGIA, BnUlwin County. Court or ordinary October Torni, 1887. W HEREAS the commissions™ appoint ed to set apart a year’s support for Mrs. M. E. Whitaker, widow of S, E. Whita ker. deceased, have filed their report In said court. , , , , These are therefore to cite and admonish all persons interested, heirs or creditors, to show cause on or by the November Term, next of said Court to he held on the first Monday in Novem ber, 1887, why the report of the said commis sioners should not he approved, made I he Judg ment of said Court and he recorded. Witness my baud and ottlciai signature, this ttic 3rd October, 1887. DANIEL I). SANFORD, 13 lm. Ordinary. PURELY VEGETABLE. It acts with extraordinary efficacy on the |VER , K | DNE ys, and Bowels. AN EFFECTUAL SPECIFIC FOR Malaria, llowel Complaints, Dyspepsia, Hick Headache, Constipation, llilionsness, Kidney Affections, Jaundice, 1 Mental Depression, Colic. BEST FAMILY MEDICINE Ho Household Should be Without It, and, by being kept ready for Immediate use, will save many an hour of suffering and many a dollar in time and doctors' bills. THERE 18 BUT ONE SIMMONS LIVER REGULATOR In (hat yes got ths genuine with red "2" •a frent of Wrapper. Prepared paly by J.H.ZEIUN A CO., Sole Proprietor*, Philadelphia, Pa. PRICE, •l.OO. Mareh 29, 1887. 28 <:w ly Valuable Property FOR SALE. F OUR well improved, valuable lots, three on East Green Street, oppo site the Methodist church, flic other on East Hancock Street adjoining the Baptist Harsonage. This property-is without doubt the most desirable, for sale in the city, being central ly- located, convenient to business, churches and college. Buildings all new and of modern design. Property- sold subject to present lease. I will at any time, take pleasure in showing tiie property to any who may desire to purchase. For terms, &c., apply- to S. BARRETT. Milledgeville, Gu., Aug. 29, '87. 8 tf FOR SALE. T HE residence of Mr. O. H. Fox on North Wayne Street. Large lot. House and out houses in good repair. Terms #1,700. Apply to O. H. FOX. Milledgeville, Ga., Sep. 27, 1887. 12 tf. Notice to Debtors And Creditors. GEORGIA, Baldwin Countv. 4 LL PERSONS indebted to the eetate of Sam- uel E. Whitaker, late of Baldwin county, deceased, are requested to make payment, mid all persons having demands against said estate are requested to present them to me iu terms of tiie law. H. 1>. ALLEN. Sept. 27, 1837. 12 fit. AdmT. Tax Notice. M Y BOOKS are now open for the collection of the State and Coun ty Tax for the year 1887. The books will be closed 20th December next, as the law directs. Office at tiie Court- House. Office hours from 9 a. m., to 4 p. nu 1 will he at my office at the Court House on Tuesdays and Satur days. T. W. TURK, Tax Collector Baldwin County. Sept. 20th. 1387, 11 3m. T FOR SALE HE residence of Alfred Hall; 3 rooms; front and back porches and kitchen attached; good well of water; one-half acre of ground; 100 yards south-east of College, on Elbert street; bouse new. For terms apply to ALFRED HALL. Milledgeville, Oct. 11. 14 lm. Petition for Letters of Adminis tration. GEORGIA, Baldwin County, Court of Ordinary, Oct. Term, 1887., W HEREAS, M. W. Hall has filed his Petition in said Court for let ter of administration upon the estate of Mollie S. Hall, deceased. These are therefore to cite and ad monish all persons interested, heirs or creditors, to show cause on or by the November Term, next, of said court, to be held on the first Monday in Novem ber, 1887, why letters of administration upon the estate of said deceased should not be granted to said petitioner as graved for. Witness my hand and official signa ture this the 3rd day of Oct., 1887. DANIEL B. SANFORD. 13 lm.] Ordinary. To Rent. R ESIDENCE Oil Jefferson street, formerly occupied by T. J. Barks dale. For terms, apply to P. J. CLINE. Milledgeville, Ga., Aug. Oth, ’*7. 5 tf Administrator’s Sale GEORGIA, Baldwin County. B Y VIRTUE of an order granted by J the Court of ()rdinary of said conn- \ ty, will he sold before the Court House i door, in tiie city of Milledgeville, on i the first Tuesday in November, 1887,1 between tile legal hours of sale, the following real property belonging to the estate of Mrs. Martha F. Robin son, late of said county, deceased, to- wit; , , 1 AH that tract of land situate, lying and being in the 115th Dist., G. M., of said State and county, bounded on the north by lands of C. E. Prosser, east by I). H. Wilkinson, south by Sam Walker, and west by Mrs. J. Butler, containing eighty acres, more or less, known as the Martha Robinson place. Sold for the purpose of paying debts and division. Terms cash. W. H. STEMBRIDGE, Oct. 4. 13 lm. Administrator. WHELESS STAMP JstI WC1LCOM g rN AT 1 owl -press co- 748 REYNOLD STREET, AUGUSTA, GA, Agents Wanted! Catalogue FREE! RUBBER STAMPS, SEALS, BADGES, CHECKS,STENCILS, STEEL STAMPS, &c. Sole Manufacturers ol' The WhelessSelf-Inking Rubber Stamp Printing Press. Aug. 30, 1887 8 ly Suggestions on the Tai’iff Question. Our Southern Protectionists are constantly boasting of Southern pro gress in manufactures of all kinds, cotton, iron and other productions. Are we not all interested and delight ed in this progress? We have taught it for over thirty years and urge its continuance. One great objection we have to the protective policy is the obstacles it throws in the path of Southern progress. It neutralizes our advantages of climate, increases the price of machinery, and everything else we need, to sustain our manufac turing enterprises. In advocating the present protective tariff our Southern protectionists are fighting for the North and against the South.' Can’t Southern protectionists see it? Let us reason together for a moment or two, and let us look at the highest authority for our facts and see what the census has revealed. We wish to be short and consume but little space and time, We will take two represen tative States, New- York and Georgia. New York has nearly, if not quite fortv-flve thousand manufacturing es tablishments with a capital of over #500,000,000. The census of 1880 show ed that there were about 30 cotton factories in Georgia. They have probably increased to 55 or 00 since. We write hastily and from memory. In all the Southern States we may safely say there are not more than 275 oi 300. Add all the Northern estab lishments together and see what a small chance we have, compared with them, in the race under protection. We are told that protection will build up our factories. It will all the time be hampering and checking us in such industries. Why, look at these mighty establishments at the NoVth entrenched in a capital of very nearly three billions of dollars. Can’t anybody see the absurdity of the idea that we can break down or rival those giant establishments, especially when the protective tariff* puts upon the people of the South, annually, a tax greater than the entire sum obtained for their cotton. We revenue tariff men do not wish to break them down. We would not do it if we could. We desire the prosperity of every section and take pride in the great and grow ing interests of all. Those powerful establishments don’t need the chari ties of the struggling people of this country. Did they not prosper, as well as all other interests, under the low tariffs from Mr. Polk’s time to the accession of Mr. Lincoln to the Presi dency, when the tariff duties averaged only 18 per cent? They now average over 45 per cent. Let us look at the early tariffs for a moment when they needed aid if ever. The first tariff act passed July 4, 1789, was from 5 to 15 percent.; the 2nd passed lOt.h of August 1790, was from 3 to 154 per cent. The next general tariff of 1792, was from 7£ to 15 per cent; that of 1794 was from 10 to 20 per cent. We might add more specific acts, but only state that for the first 15 years they did not go higher than 224 per cent and for the first 22 years did not ex ceed that sum. The point we make is this, that the Northern manufactories grew and sustained themselves during all that time, when England exerted all her power to break them down. We could showjhe acts of her Parliament to prove tliis assertion but no one will deny it. That ' was when the American manufactories were in truth infant establishments. And now, when they are giants, the government is called upon to keep up a protec tion for tiie suckling manufactories of the country, hacked by three bil lions of dollars, to the extent of more than 45 per cent. Shame upon such full grown mam moth beggary and robbery. Tiie great manufacturers of the country gave up their splendid commercial marine, their hundreds of ships and sixty thousand sailors, with which they could have continued to com pete with England for the billions of her annual commerce, to filch by law, the pockets of the people at home. Oh shame! where is tby blush? A Good Suggestion. The Augusta Gazette makes an im portant suggestion to the tax payers of Georgia, which, if generally adopt ed, throughout the State next fall, will have the effect to remedy a great curse now bearing heavily on their shoulders. It is tliis; At nominating conventions in the several counties, that the people be sure to put out no man for either branch of the Legisla ture who can afford to stay in Atlan ta, away from his business at home, four or five months at the public ex pense. This means, send only men to the legislature who are known at home as men who have something else to do besides loafing in Atlanta, lolling in easy chairs and eating good victuals at four dollars a day, for five months in the year. (Jur State Fairs and Expositions ought to he held iu the month of November. The record of past years sliowB that that month is the freest from rain and storms of any in the (all and winter. Tiie beautiful Indian ! Summer comes in that mouth and usually lasts two or three weeks. i The Piedmont Exposition cleared ! $10,000, after paying $150,000 for the ' grounds, building, etc. Atlanta people j are already talking of a World g Fair 1 iu 1888. The Coming Newspaper. When the South was politically di vided by two great parties, Whig and Democratic, the massos looked to tiie leading organs of the press at the seat of government of their respec tive States for counsel and polities both of principle and organization. Then a column leader, or even one much longer, in such papers as those of father Ritchie and Gales and Sea ton at Washington were read as at tentively and sacredly as the deacon in the church reads Ins Sunday morn ing’s chapter in the Bible, from be ginning to end, and often with more lasting impression. The South lias hut one party now, and long po litical leaders in the press are read by few, if any of the masses who do the voting at the polls. The ever alert newspaper organs recognized this change, and set about to meet it. Then began immense double and triple sheets, and a reduction in price so striking ns to captivate the aver age subscriber, who jumped at a chance to get a paper three times as big for the same money he had been paying ulj Ids life-for the one publish ed at his county site. He thought lie was making a sharp trade when he stopped taking-ids home paper, which he always read from end to end, (and then was hungry for more) and sent off to some city, North or South, for a big paper to get something cheap and with more reading matter than his home paper contained. Well, he S ot the big paper, and is not happy. le hasn’t got time, he says, to read it, and if tie had, the type is so little it hurts Ids eyes, and what he does find to read is not what lie under stands or cares for. He don’t see in it anything about home affairs, and his neighbors, and finds himself, when lie comes to the county town, so ig norant ol' what is going on right un der Ids nose, he is ashamed of himself, quits the big weekly away off yonder, subscribes forliis county paper, which is only fifty cents a year more, reads it, and his wife arid-children read it, and get as mad as a wet lien if any body takes it out of the office and reads it before they do, and he swears, if Godwin only forgive him, lie will never stop Ids home paper uguin while he lives. That is just the way of it. But what the man wants now to read in his paper, is the news. He wants a paper with hundreds of short paragraphs, disconnected, well selected, on live subjects, so that he can pick it up at odd times, read here and there and lay it down without having to make a mark at the line where he stopped reading. That’s what he wants. The big papers are now trying, be sides the double sheets, to attract the eye of readers with pictures of nota ble people, which are about as cor rect likenesses of the original as if pine knots had been used to print their faces instead of wood and lead cuts. These features of the present newspaper are fatiguing the patience of readers, and they are sick of them. Immense so-called “Trade Journals” are got out to attract advertisers, wlio are foolish enough to bite at such bait. Not one man, woman, or child, outside of a city, ever reads ad vertisements in a “Trade Journal” and the only use they are put to in the country is to make bustles, kindle fires, and clean lamp chimneys. What tiie people—the country and town readers want—and will have, is the newspaper that contains home and (State anil National news boiled down to the smallest possible space, and plenty of it. They don’t want an immense blanket sheet, or two or three sheets pasted together, or loose and hard to handle, but an averuge sized sheet filled with the latest home and foreign news, put together in such a shape and so arranged that they can turn right to the very page and column to find what they want. That’s what they want and they mean to have it, too. STATE INEBRIATE ASYLUM. Views of the Projector of the Move- • ment. Hon. P. G. Veazey, the represen tative from Taliaferro county, intro duced a resolution in the house of representation to appoint a coinmis- son to consider tiie utility and feasibil ity of establishing in this state an asylum for inebriates, which was adopted. Meeting Mr. Veazey, a representa tlve of Tiie Constitution asked him as to the purposes and plans of the com mission. Mr. Veazey explained that believing that there was need of such an institution he offered the resolu tion in order that the question might be fully discussed, and some plan adopted to care for and cure those addicted to alcoholic stimulants and opiates. In many cases the drink habit is a disease and requires careful treatment to secure a cure. ‘‘In fruining the commission” remarked Mr Veuzey, “1 endeavored to select men of scientific attainments and liberal and progressive views. Dr. Joseph P. Logan, of Atlanta, is regarded as a profound thinker. Dr. Eugene Fos ter, of Augusta, is a physician of rare learning and ability. Dr. T. O. Powell, of Milledgeville, superintend ent of the lunatic asylum, is conceded to he tiie ablest anil best superintend ent in this country, and his enlarged experience will materially aid the commission. Dr. J. T. DeJarnette, of Putnam, is an experienced physi cian, a prudent legislator, and a man * of culture. Dr. Seth N. Jordan, of Columbus, is a young physician of eminence and skill. Walter B. Hill is one of tiie ablest members of tiie Ma con bar. Rev. J. G. UibHoti, of Ogle- thorp county, is a Baptist divine, known ns tile Spurgeon of Georgia. Colonel J. H. Estill, of Savannah, whose name is as familiar as household words or Morning News. Hon. How ell Cobb of Athens, Hon. H. W. J. Ham of Guinseville, and Hon. Harper Mack of Americus, Hon. R. N. Lamar of Milledgeville, are all well known men.” “How about the feasibility of the asylum?” inquired the Constitution man. “Well,” replied Mr. Veazey, “1 hardly know how to answer it just now, the commission is raised to set tle that. But it is t bought that the old executive mansion at Milledgeville can he utilized for this purpose, and placed under the charge of Dr. T. O. Powell, as a branch of the lunatic asylum. This will make the establish ment of the inebriate asylum com paratively an inexpensive experi ment. “When will the commission organ ize?” “I.can’t say,’’said Mr. Veazey, “but I hear the name of Dr. Logan suggest ed for chairman, and Dr. Eugene Fos ter for secretary. I suppose they will organize soon, and submit the result of their actions to the governor next fall.’’—Atlanta Constitution. Washington Letter. From Our Regular Correspondent. Washington, Oct. 24, 1887. Editors Union-Rkcordkii: ' The number of Interesting oases befor e the Supreme Court of the United States probably has not been so large for years as at the present timo. Among the number 1 may mention the cases of the Virginia State officials, who have been released un der writs of habeas corpus—the trial being set for healing on the first Monday In No vember; the appeal of the Chicago anarch ists, whose counsel, Generuls Roger A. Pryor and Benjamin F. Butler, have ap plied for a writ of supercedas—to be heard next Thursday. Besides those, there are a number of prohibition cases,—all of which, the first named Included, involve constitu tional questions of the gravest import to the legal rights of the citizens. Hence their Importance and the general Interest that attaches to them. Civil Service Is again to the front, both in the departments, where the examina tion of the clocks has been resumed, and In the public prints, where the diverging views of Civil Service Commissioners Oberly and Edgerton furnish current top ics of editorial comment and private dis cussion. Mr. EdgerUiu boldly Dikes Issuo with Ills colleague on the position taken by him In regard to the alleged Illegality of Government employes being active mem bers of political associations, and asserts his belief that there Is no good foundation either In law or in reason for such a con clusion. Secretary Bnynrd authorizes a denial of the reported difference between Attorney General Garland and himself, over the question of the Alaskan seal fisheries. Some Washington newspapers and corres pondents, In their zeal to furnish sensa tional news, have even gravely atated that Secretary Bayard would surely resign if the President did not endorse his views. During the past week there was a con vention of Agricultural Scientists, repre senting all of the agricultural colleges and experimental stations in the United States. This meeting was provided for by a special act of Congress, with the view of fostering progressive methods and measures of farming and Increasing the producing ca pacity of the land in cultivation. The pro ceedings of the convention were very harm onious and satisfactory, and Its delibera tions will doubtless result in great and lasting good to the agricultural Interest of the country. The State Department has announced the ratllcatlon of the extradition treaty with Guatemala, which was sent to the Senate many years ago, during Grant's Presidency, thelastelauso being as follows: “Neither Government shall be requited to give up Its own citizens under the stipula tions of tills convention.” This treaty Is significant a* showing a return to the old Democratic doctrines of firmly dealing with foreign nations. The fact that Postmaster General Vilas was the only member of the President’s Cabinet who accompanied him on his late tour is considered of great political signifi cance In some quarters, as it is thro light to foreshadow a Vice-Presidential candidacy, on tiie part of the gentleman mimed. There are those who believe that Mr. Vilas has more ambitious designs, that his real purpose Is to place himself in tralnlug with the view of succeeding his present chief in 1892. The Capitol has been overhauled and renovated, preparatory to the meeting fit the national anions. Among the Improve ment" are elsgant new carpets, and new covering for the desks. The candidates for the various offices In the gift ol the House are making an unu sually vigorous canvass. While there U no possible way of forecasting the result, I should not lie ut all surprised to see several changes In the House officials. Nobody Is safe except Ex-Speaker Carlisle. After their great tour, covering .4,500 miles, and crossing seventeen states, ev erywhere being overwhelmed with grand popular ovations, President and Mrs. Cleveland returned to the Capital with as little ceremony or ostentation as if the dis tinguished travelers wero the humblest private citizens—truly a happy and im pressive illustration of the genius and spir it of our republican system of government. The President and his wife wero delighted with their varied and pleasing experiences of tho past three weeks, and both of them resume their duties, brightened and re freshed by their association with tho great American public. Last Thursday was ft notable day in the history of Richmond, Va. The corner stone of the monument to be erected iu that city to the memory of Gen. Robert E. Lee, was laid with ap propriate ceremonies, and there was a vast crowd in attendance on the mem orable occasion. For tho Union Recordor. Pencillings from my Perch. By Mu. Pickle. No. 10. What is artful in matters of friend ship, is reserve in matters of love. I dont like anything that is forced ; least of all a forced child. A babe is not “u well spring of pleasure in a house” when mother amt the cow are both dry. A *** A man who is regardless of the feel ings of others, is not a gentleman, whatever accomplishments he may claim to possess. *** April and May are favorite months with tke disciples of Old Isaak. Tis then tho fishermen exeurt to the neighboring brook. When the fish don’t bite, a sight of the big blue bot tle buried to its neck in the long wet grass is a ready restorer of depressed spirits. In October and November the hunter’s horn is carried undercov er and holds about bint. **# Byron wrote Don Juan with gin and water close by his . manuscript, and Blackstone composed his Cqm- mentaries with the inkstand on one side of his paper and a bottle of old Port on the other. But this is no ar gument to prove that Georgia genius can't thrive in prohibition counties; and this, too, in spite of the Jugernaut car. Chunking a fellow when he is down, and in the ditch, is mighty mean. But Bacon expresses it prettier; “When from private appetite it is re solved that a creature shall be sacri ficed, it is easy to pick up sticks enough from any thicket whither it hath strayed to make a fire to offer it with”. *•** See you a man full of humor—not that sort of a fellow who thinks noth ing is funnier than to frighten his sis ter by pointing a gun at her and see her fall over a chair and dislooate her bustle and back hair, or laugh till he cries when the clown in the circug falls on the saw dust, humps hiinsfelf, and grabs his belly with painful emo tion—but a man who laughs way down in his heart, the smile appearing like the flicker of a sunbeam on the surface, hiding the depth of a peren nial well, as he reuds something Cer vantes, Sydney Smith, Christopher North, Tom Hood, or our own in comparable Washington Irving has written—when you see such a man in your pilgrimage by the way, if relig ion, love, honor, self-devotion dnd all the charities of the soul don’t abide in his bosom, lie is a curiosity that would enrich Harnum’s Museum, .% The most successful way to attack a man’s follies and prejudices is not to fire at him with the heavy artillery of argument; if you did he might come off with the self-conscious air of a conqueror, and by some of his friends be crowned with the hays Of a hero. Hut show up his weakness in its nak ed absurdity—surround hiin with all its comic accessories—cover it with a pile of pompous and outlandish lan guage, and if you don’t see him take night like a dog in a country village with an antiquated oyster can tied to his tail, lapping the earth at, every leap to getaway from human habita tion, then I have done one side of hu man nature gross injustice. *** Bovs.—This is a fruitful theme and one short paragraph is not enough to do the subject justice; or even touch the wide field covered all over as it is with knuek-holes, the debris of ball liases, marble rings, hop-skotch fig*- ures, jam-juice, cake crumbs, knife handles, old tops, tobacco quids and cigarette stumps; but the boys shall not be overlooked, “that the mind of desultory man, studious of change,” may be indulged. It is said “boys will be boys,” and “noise will be noise.” The man who never was a boy, so to speak, and in a boyish sense, and tiie man who has a culti vated ear for all kinds of noises, will not accept the above propositions as exact. There are, ana ever will be, boys that are not boys, and noise that is not noise, paradoxical as it mav seem. There are hoys not in their teens who are nothing but old chil dren, and will be so all their lives. So it is with noise, as that in a partially dUtif ear, the thundering of tl\e cata ract and the avalanche, and that caught up from the parlor when a fellow and his girl are tasting the hon ey of plighted love in the most ap proved oscalutory, fashion. There is as much difference between boys as there is between men. I don’t know any boys, who were boys when I was a boy, who have made any “noise in the world,” since they have grown to be men, who laid about in the shade, reading, dreaming or sleeping at the summer school recesses, when the oth er boys were at play. It is the full grown boy who makes the full grown man. Fashion may change in some things hut an old well tried remedy is grap pled with hooks of steel. Such is White's Cream Vermifuge, which ha3 a larger sale than any so-called rem edy, because it never fails to expel worms from a child who is their vic tim. Therefore do not defer its use, but relieve your child speedily by a dose of White’s Cream Vermifuge.