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-kR r t R gc rr' c,N j '.2w 5-4 vt4/k - A FaiyCmain,Dvtdto ]Literature, Mliscellany, News, Agricultur,Maktsic Vol xv. WEDNESDAY MO140RNING, JULY 9, 1879.0o.8 THE HERALD IS PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY 30PNlG, At Newberry, S. C. BY THOS. F. GRYNEKER, Editor and Proprietor. Terms, S2.00 per dnun. Invariably iu Aav:;nce. -- ?;>c.aperis stopped at the expiration of time for which it is pal!. 7 The t< mark denotes expiration oi sub criptioa. CIoting. HEAD -QUARTERS FOR CL O T H iNG. Our stock of Men's, Youths' and Boy's CLOTUTNG AND FURNISHING GOODS, Fr6 48 ING and SUMMER, is now com e is second ii no 6stablishment. of e tatt No'ai6 ii being spared to keep it first class in every respect. In addition to %ur Ready-Made Clothing, &c., we are prepared to get up suits, or any garment,. to order, guaranteeing satisfaction in every particular, furnishing several hun dred samples of different fabrics from which to select. We respectfully solicit a trial of our ikill in this direction, feeling sure that if those of our people who are wont to send abroad for their Clothing will give us an opportunity we will secure to them equal satifacion and-save them money. We hall attention to our Furrishing Goods Department, especially to our Laun dried and Unlaundried Sh!rts, of the latter we claim to sell the best $1.00 Shirt to be found in any market. Also to our stock of Men's and Boy's Hats, embracing Stiff and Soft Cassimeres, Mackinaws, Leghorus, &c., all of the latest srtvles. We invite examina tion of all; if you are not pleased do not buy. Respectfully, No. 4 Mollohon Row, NEWBERRY, S. C. Apr. 2$, I7-ly. IL.L. KIN ARD, At the Old Stand of Swaffield's. Opposite - .the Wheeler House, C01/UMBIA, S. C., Has just opened one -of the L ARGEST AND BEST SELECTED STOCKS of SPRING AND SUMMER OCL OTHING, HATS, CAPS, ANDGod FurnlishingGod Eer offered in the City of Columbia. The styles of Spring Clothing are very handsome ~ and very cheap. Men's Suits, $12.5 to $25.00. Youths' Suits, $3.00) to $12.00. Boy's Suits, 4 to 10 ye ars, $1.50, $2.00), and up to $10 0). Hats at all prices. A GO~OD STRAW H AT, only 10 cents. 4cebratejA STAR SHIRT, manc e t$ed ' pessly for fiih rettiI 'trah ~ I 'niieaues and-iave titeEtai? Srt made to order and guarantee a fit. Also, the MONARCH PATENT BOUND BOSOM UNL AUNDRIED SHIRT, the best in the market, for $9.00 per dozen. Eg- A libe.rat discount to Ministers. Watches, Clocks, Jewelry. WATiIIES AND IEWVELBI At the New Store on Hotel Let. I hav~e nodJ on hand a large and elegant assortment of WkTGI$E, .CLCKS, JEWELRY, Silver and Plated Ware, VIOLIN AND GUITAR STRINGS, SPECTACLES AND SPECTACLE CASES, WEDDING AND BIRTHDAY PRESENTS. Im ENDESS. VAIY. .All orders b>y mail promptly attended to. Watchkmaking and Repairing Done Cheaply and with Dispatch. Oall and examine my stock and prices. EDUARD SCHOLTZ. Nov. 21, 47-tf. IEMffTinL0lfl416 COLUMBIA, S. C. The undersigned has the best appointed exclusive TAILORING ESTIBLISHENT IN THE STATE. r~nr A NmIIla MFuJ~ 10I e3PI.9CCthfR?CONN. 2= INTODCE, 1865. IIV A'TORP'a HER is the fruitful source of many diser-ses, promi nent aaon.g which a:e DYSPEPSIA, SICK-HEADACHE, COSTIVENESS, DYSENiTERY, BILIOUS FEVER, AGUE AND FEVER, JAUNDICE, PILES, RHEUMATISM, KIDNEY COM PLAINT, COLIC, ETCi - SYMPTOiS OF A TOR 4PID) LIVER. Loss of Appetite and Iausea, the bowels are costive, but smotimes alternate with looseness, Fain in the Head, accompanied ~with a_uil sensationin the backpart,Pam in theright sideandUinderte_ shoulder l lss after eating, with a_ disin lination to exertion of bodyormind, Irri iability_of temper,ILw pirits,Lss of memory, with~afneling ofhavingneglected ime duty,_ General weariness; Dizziness, Flutterir g at the Heart._Dots_before the eyes, Yellow Skin, Headache genera3li over the right eye, Restlessness at night ith~KthA dream, highly colored Urine. jF THESE WARNINGS ARE UNEM ED. SERIOUS DISEASES WILL SOON BE DEVELOPED. TUTT'S PILLS are especially adapted to such cases, a single dose effects such a change of feeling as to astortish the.sufferer. TUTT'S PILLS rImp o -id froku snbstanc es that are free from any properties that can injare the most delicate organization. They Search, Cleanse, Pari fy, and lnigorate the entire System. By relieving the en gorged Liver, they cleanse the blood from poisonous hum ors, and thus Impart health and vitality to the body, causing the bowels to act naturally, without which no one can feel well. A Noted Divine sys: Dr tT-w~ Str; For-t4m yearsIinebn L mAtyr to Djyspepsia. Constipation and Piles. Last Spring your Pills were rew,nended to =e. I used them (butwith little fith). I aw now a *Well man ae good appetft-, digestionper cr. reznar sfo!dl, js kone. -md Ihave pkired otypotmrdsoidleeb'. .hey are w o rth e we n ouisville, Ky. TUT T'S PILLS, rheir arst effect is to Incre:sc t he Appetite, nd cause the body to Ttke on Flesh. thus I iie ystem-is-ourished, and by their Toi- Ace tion on the Digestivo Orgaur, it -uinr 5tools are produced. DR, J. F, HAYWOOD, OF NEW YORK, SAYS: to dg thse Live r t tt cennot fbenTie-7 nb n or ~hsproe no re:ndy h s ee bee'n ivrtad thnt SOLD EVERYWHESE, PRICE 25 CENTS. >fce 85 Mfurray Streek5 New Yorkt. . Iar Dr. TUTT'S MANUAL of Veinable Infe: natia and Usefalleceipts." sailbeuaiedfrc n iplication. rUTT'S HAiR DYE. ~inw aiAn on War.ams cb aed to a Gt.ossT s amess as spring y ter. ~old by Druggists, .or )ffice, 33 Murray St., New Yor'k. D&. SASEORm's LIvER LNvIGOIaATOR B a Standard Family Remedy for iseases of the Liver, Stomach nd Bowels. -It is Purely 5 egeable.- It never S 3 [ebitates-It is ~f* atate n Conic. s' 0 00' 6Invigorn~tor has~ ~ eenu used in myv practice an by th:epi , for more th a) V:y"rs Apr. 10, 16-ly. NEWYR SHffRPI~ Established. Reliable. Everything bought with taste and dis rction. N. Y. Correspondent of HE~RALD otnected with this Agency. Send for cir uar with prices. Best city referenices. ddress 31RS. EL~LEN L AMA R. 877 Br'oadwvay, New York. A pr. 9, 15-tf. STON BI ERI HOllSE, Pasengers on both the up and down *rains have the usual time for DINNER at Xlston, the junction of the G. & C. R. R., Lfd the S. U. & C. R. R. .re well preparedl. and the charge rea able.MRS. M. A. ELKINS. n.: .t.-... . MABY'S REPROOF. Times were hard, as Harry said; "Twas a rainy morning; Coffee seemed the least bit scorched; Cook had given warning. I thought Harry almost crQss, Or at least provcking;. , Think I only made things worse With my careless joking. For he rose to start down town Didn't kiss the baby; When I asked, "Be home at noon?" Answered curtly,;"May be!" Edith looked up with a pout Hal to listen tarried; "Husbins is so cross," she said. "Dess I won't det mahwied." Cunning baby! Harry turned, And there came a twinkle In hi :ye which chased away An anxious, worried wrinkle. "Kiss me, baby! There, you rogue!" And he shook her lightly: Then kissed me, and said "Good-by" Left us smiling brightly. Soon I heard my Edith say To the doll she carried: "Husbins can be very nice Dess I will det mahwied !" A cTRAN"GE STORY, I was stationed at Agra dur ing the Cabul disaster in 1841 one of a mere handful of Brit ish troops, left in cbarge of wives, sisters and daughters of the actors in that unhappy ex pedition. And a weary, beart breaking time it was. The lieu. tenant-governor, who had prayed and besought the Calcutta au thorities not to risk the adven ture, had the worst forebodings for its fate ; -and although he did all an able, kindly and well-man nered man could do to maintain the spirits of the circle, those who knew hin could read too well what his fears were. Words could not describe-indeed it is painful for me even now to recall-the dreary wretchcdness of that fatal month,' durifi which no'tidings came of the devoted army. Even ing after evening saw the roads crowded by anxious women, sit ting there for hours, that they might hear the first news of those who were dearito them. and even ing after evening saw them re turn in despair. And thein, at last, the niews came that the sole survivor had staggered, half 9,live, back to his countrymen with the tidings of the great disaster, the wail that ascended from those beart-broken creatures I shall never, whbile I live, forget. There had been a captain in one of the native regiments, an old ac qnaintance of mine, of the namre of Donnelly-Jerry Donnelly, as he was called by every one. He was careful to explain to all his friends that his name was Jerome, and not Jeremiah, although why he so unduly preferred the saint to the prophet, I never understood. Jerry Donnelly, however he was, and as strange and eccentric a creature as ever breathed. He was a very good-looking fellow and a first-rate officer, but a careless, rollicking, half-insane madcap of a man, with an amaz ing flow of spirits, little education or culture, a great-almost mirac ulous-talent for languages, with a soft heart and easy temper. It was impossible to make him an gry ; and in all circumstances, however unpleasant, he maintain ed a placid serenity, which seemf ed to imply that he was on inti mate terms with fortune and knew the very worst that she could do. Among the o;ther' trics which the fickle goddess had played him was that she h1ad married him. Why he ever married as he did no one could imagine. The lady was neither handsome, elever nor rieb. She was simply passable as to looks, with the liveliness of good ealth and youth-a quality not inapt to develop itself in vivacity of temper when those other at tributes disappear. But, on some impuise, Jer-ry Donnelly had asked her the momentous question, and been favorably answer-ed. A most uncomfortable couple were they. Jerry, from the very firt, neglected her-not inten tion' ally, I believe, but simply because PFr e mom ent he for-ot. her ex. istence. It never seemed to him necessary to alter his former bacb elor round in any respect ; and, a I the lady had no notion of-being ne glected, sho iesented the indiffer rence, and chalked out a line foi herself. They never quarreled outwardly, but were hardly ever together. So stood the domestic circle, i such it could be called, of Captair Donnelly, when he was ordered on General Elphinstone's expedi tion. His wife would fain hav< remained at Calcutta, but, as al the wives were going to Arra she for very shame was obliged t< go there also. On the first ru mors of the diasster she was very indifferent-said she was surc Jerry would turn up at the inost inconvemient time ; and if he vaq happy, she was. When, however the tidings were confirmed, and it was certain that Jerry had perish ed with his comrades, a great change came over her. She shut herself up for months, saw no on< and went nowhere. And when at the end of a year, she begar once more to look at the world she was a grave, thoughtful, soft ened woman. She went up tc Calcutta after that, and I nevei saw her again until I came homc on a furlough in 1847. She wac then ivin- in a pretty place it Somersetshire, and was known as Mrs. Courtnay, of' Branley Hall .1 met her accidentally, but sh( was very glad to see me and ex plained to me what I had nol heard, that when she arrived al Calcutta she found that poor Jerry had, four months before he lefl Agra, succeeded to this place o: Branley Hall by the death of a distant relative. He had previous. Iy made a will, leaving her all his worldly goods, then slendei enough, so that in the end this fine estate had come to her, and a new name with it. She asked me comre down and see her, which ]I did, and learned more of the his tory. Sorrow and prosperity greatly changed her for the better. Even Iher looks had improved, and she was a p)leasant, thoughtful, agree able woman. She had remained four years in Calcutta before she retarned. and had at once assumed the .name of' Courtnay, whbich was one of the conditions on which the bequest was made.. "You know, Colonel Hastings, I could not have lost the estate, for what would poor Jerry have said when he came back ?" I thought the woman's head must have been affected by her troubles, and said nothing. "I~ see you think me deranged, but I knew he was alive all the time." - Why, what could have induced you to think so ?" "I knew him, Colonel Hastings. It was in your bungalow at Cal cutta, about two years after I had gone back. Late in the evening I beard a footstep outside which strangely affected me. I was ly ing half asleep, anid, starting up in a drowsy state, I beard a voice at the veranda, and, as I thought, inquiring of my stupid old servant whether I lived there. The steps thenm turned away. 1 darted to the casement, and although the figure was clad in the most extra ordinary compound of European and Asiatic garments, I am sure it was Jerry. I darted down stairs and rushed out, but he had dis apeard. .The servant said he was a bad fakir and wished to get in the bungalow, but he could or would tell me nothing of what he had said. But I am quite sure it was Jerry. So Ilam quite certain he will come back-but you remember he never was punctual," she added, with a faint smile. 1 did not say if Jerry was alive she must have heard of him some oter way ; but I took leave of her and shortly afterward returned to Idia. In 1853 I was appointed to an embassy to Nepaul, a very striking country, governed by a powerful, warlike race. The first minister or vizier of the country met us, as in the Nepauleze fashion, outside of the capital, and we had a very courteous and gratifying recep tion. He was a tall, handsome Rtisellanteus. HAWK EYE MAN IMPROV- , ING:HIS OPPORTUNITIES. tei 01 During the day, too, I went to 8 the great Norton Iron works and th learned how to make nails. I can make a nail now as well as anybody, but I am not going to trly. This is an iron town. When th iron is busy and the mills are to running the town is lively and happy, and away up in the scale w of prosperity. Iron ? The bills are full of it, and the way it is worked up is a caution. ab I went down to the works in N< the morning, and then I was down se there again with Hartford Grider po at, midnight. I stared until my of eyes ached, and I could have th seen more if. I had had more: to eyes. si INTELLIGENT QUALIFICATIONS. tri Why, the machine that makes the nail, ought to be allowed to be vote. It ought to be sent to con gress. If ever one of the ma chines in the Norton mills runs Ia for congress I will come back to ci Ashland and vote for it. a] THE FAULTLESS MACHINE. en It would make a good congress up man. It can make nails, and it can make them to perfection, and ho it doesn't try to do anything else. I watched one of them for an hour, and it went on all the time, M making good, useful, perfect nails. It never once talked a bit. It never went out to take a drink. It never wanted to introduce th a bill to make the government . issue four hundred billions of kegs it of nails, and loan them to the su he people who want to build chicken in houses. It didn't say that it i thought nails should be remone- hi tized, and made a legal tender for the payment of all debts, public and private, and for the pay- ga ment of all debts. It didn't ~ na say that the country would nev- A er be prosperous until we had an interconvertible currency of shingle nails, secured by a bonded as fund of railroad spikes. I.t just ~ made nails. And it made them I well. It kne w it:could make nails, t and so it just 'went aliead andm made them. THE FALLIBLE HUMAN. st .Now, I once knew a man who ce made shoes. He could cobble a toi pair of old shoes, too. He could a I ew on an invisible patch with yellow thread, so that it would look like sunrise on tho Ohio.ly How he could make shoes. Well, sir, one day that man dropped his wax in a panfull of pegs, laid down his hammer and got to tell ing what the govern ment ought n to do, and what congress ou ght toib do, and what he would do if he b were there, and the first thing he 7 knew they sent him to congress. n He used to charge only ten cents p for sewing on a patch as big as a fifty cent piece, and only e twenty cents for a new heel, andin ifty cents for half soles. And he pounded leather all day for about ne dollar and eighty-five cents. mc And the very first day he was ha n congress, he introduced a bill cla for the free coinage of $9,000,000,- me 00,000,000,000,000,000,000 in one gr ollar greenbacks, with a provi- p sion that the amount should be ad doubled, if it should appear that mc he amount originally specified in sh4 bhe bill was insufficient to meet di~ the demands of the trade.th And yet that man could make ket ood shoes. it That's what I liked about the co ail machine. it did what it could wiL o best. ry THEREFORE, fen Suppose now, every man in con- 1mi rss was a nail machine, and to ould cut about 5,000 kegs of nails mo er week, as well and perfectly as yo tese machines at Ashland. Who IYo would care for the ievolutionary Ibu~ plans of the friends of the sixth section ? The government could sell nails enough in a month to sel, keep the army going for a year. fro The more I look at the nail ma- be cire the more thoroughly I am convinced that it would do better in congress4ban did my friend the cot shomake On and conversed with me in Persian. which I spoke fluently. After our interview, .one of the attendants informed me tbe vizier wished to see me alone, and be accordingly conducted me to an inner apart me't. le ordered the attendant to withdraw, and then, in tones only too familiar, he exclaimed "Well, Hastings, my boy, how go on the Plungers?" It was Jerry Donnelly, by all that was miraculous. I bad ob served him staring earnestly at me during the interview, and something in his gestures seemed not unfamiliar to me, but his flow ing beard, solemn air and Oriental dress so much disguised him, that even when I heard the well-re membered voice could scarcely realize his identity. "But what on earth are you doing here, Jerry ?" said I, "why don't you go home to your wife like a Christian ?" "My wife ! well that's the whole affair. You see, she's somebody else's wife, so I'm betteroutol the way; it would be a pity that poor Sophie should commit bigamy." "I assure you that you are en tirely mistakon. Mrs. Dounelly is not married again." "Basn't she, though," said he. "Don't I know better ? Didn't I go back to my bungalow and find out that she had married that starched fool, Courtnay, when she knew I never could endure him !" To his intense astonishment I told him how the truth was and in turn he related to me his own ad ventures. He had been carried into Tartary, and there detained for three years, when he was allowed to accompany a caravan or body of pilgrims to Nepaul. Being by that time a proficient in the language, he was taken notice of at court, but very strictly watched. He effected his escape, however, disguised as a fakir and made his way to Calcutta, but finding, as he :thought, his wife married again to a man in his old regiment, ho returned, was taken into favor and had risen to his present distinction. "WVell, I always was a blunder ing fool, but 1 went home with .a heart so sore to Sophie and avow ing that I would never vex her aniy more with my vagaries, that when I heard her called Mrs. Courtnay I turned to stone, and did not care a rap what becejme of me, even to be made a vizier, which, I assure you, Charlie, is no joke in its way." "Well, at all ev'ents you must come home now 'and enjoy your good fortune." "I am not sure about that," said he. "Recollect, she has grown ac customed to be mistress, and I have grown accustomed to be a vizier. She won't like to be con tradicted, anid it's a thing I never could bear, and what I never allow on any account. Now, ifI wont home, she would not be mistress, and as sure as fate she woul.d con tradict me.. Maybe it is better as it is." Next morning hc sent for me again. "I have been thinking," he said, "of~ all the strange stories you told me. I am all changed since we parted. I hardly know myself to be the same man I used to be, and am not sure I should treat Sophie well. But ask her to come out here and then she can try. If she likes me in this out landish place, I will go home with her; if we quarrel here no one will be the wiser, and I can con tinue to be dead." "But," said I, "have you no in cumbrances? Perhaps shemin object to the details of your esta,b lish ment. "Not a bit," said Jerry, "I have none of your Eastern prejudices; let her come and she will find no body to disturb her." So she did come, and after living in Nepaul for two years, brought Jerry back in triumph to Bran ley Hall; and such is the true version of a tale which made some noise in the newspapers a few years ago. This is the walking year ; the exL will be lapn.ean. RAPID TRANSIT. The way these mills get away th the iron. Why, it seems to 3. that about twenty minutes af the ore is brought to the top the ground, the full grown nail belping to smash some man's lmb out in Iowa. IRON CLAD WAGES. It takes money to run a nail 11. Why, some of the workmen ey tell me, earn from ten dollars twenty dollars a day. And they do earn it. They >rk cheap at that. THE POETRY OF IRON. There is a wonderful faspination out iron work and iron workers. )velists have- made them the ,nes and heroes their stories; ets have made them the themes deathless song. We sing of e forge of Tubal Cain, and Hec. r swore "by the forge that thed Mars' helm," but the other ides are passed over. When did poets, in lofty num rs sing the carpenter lathing a ek room on the second floor? Who chants the brawny arms d the thrilling deeds of a man mbing a four story ladder with aod of mortar? Does anybody stand with rapt iotion watching a painter putty a nail hole ? I would not exchange my one ar at midnight in the i-ron )rks at Ashland, for a whole ek of watching a man mix )rtar with a hoe. THE DREAM OF THE NAIL. Why, these iron works surround e Ashlanders with enough ro nce to last a western commun ,at least six weeks. And yet I ppose there are people about r09who never saw a nail made their lives. I have known times, my own eminently useful and bly ornamental career, times ien I was trying to nail a.front to to a leather hinge, when I shed there 'bad never been a il made anywhere by anybody. id I watched them as.they fell im the ponderous machines, fast rain drops, and it seemed to , as I watched them fall, that ould hear the dull, treacherous ad of the hammer, on the bu n thumb, the low wail of a wo n's auguish, "the big, big D" of trong man in his agony. These ange, weird feelings and fan s rushed into my mind like a -rent. I stopped and picked up >rand new nail, as a memento of r visit. Then I laid it down again. Sad but not slowly. WHY ? [ have an impression, I know t where I got it, that a new laid ii, like a new laid egg, is warm. Ld that it is far more percept e in the case of the nail. It .y not be so in every instance. presume there may be some ils laid cold. But the one I ked up was not so everlastingly a whizzling cold, and I did not ~estigate any farther. i Physician writes to young ni as follows :"My profession i thrown me with women of all sss, and my experience teaches that heaven never gave a ~ater proof of his love than to ce women here with him. My ice is go and propose to the *st sensible girl you know. If accepts you tell her you will ide the last dollar with her and t you will love with all your rt into the bargain ; and then p your promise. My word for she will live within your in ne, and to your last hour you I regret that you did not mar sooner. Stop worrying about inine extravagance and femn ne untruth. Just you be true er-love her sincerely, and a re fond, faithful, foolish slave 2 will never meet any where. u will no'. deserve her, I know, she will never know it." e sometimes congratulate our es at the moment from waking m a troubled dream. It may so after death. i scolding woman, like a train iductor, is pretty much always he ril ADVERTISING RATES. Advertisements inserted at the rate. of '1.00 per square (one inch) for first insertion .nd 75 cents for eacl subsequent insertion. Double column advertisements tten per Cen t. ,n above. Notices of meetings, obituaries and tributes of respect, same rates per sqaare as ordinay advertisements. Special Notices in Local column 15 cents per I.ine. Advertisements not marked with the num ber of inscrtions will be kept in till forbid, and charged acccrdin,Iy. S>ccial comracts made with large adver tiers. with liberal deductions on above rates. --:0: JO2 PRI.ATIIG DONE WJTH NEATNESS AND DISPATCH. TERMS CASH. -ENNATION OF STARVING. For the first two days through which a strong aud healthy man is doomed to exist upon nothing his sufferings are perhaps more acute than t le niain stages he feels an inordinate, unspeak able craving at the stomach night and day. The mind runs on beef; bread and -tiher substantials, but still, in a great measure, the body retains its strength. On the third and fourth days, but especially on the fourth, this incessant craving gives place to a sinking and weak ness of the stomach, accompanied by a uausea. The unfortunate sufferer still desires fbod, but with loss of strength he loses that eager craving w hich is felt in the earliest stages. Should he chance to obtain a morsel or two of food he swallows it with a wolfish avidity ; but five minutes after ward his sufferings are more in tense than ever. He feels as if he had swallowed a live lobster, which is clawing and feeding upon the very foundation of his exis tence. On the fifth day his cheeks suddenly appear hollow and sunk en, his body atennated, his color is ashy pale, and his eyes wild, glassy, cannibalish. The different parts of the system now war with each other. The stomach calls upon the legs to go r'" tin quest of food ; the legs, ? otn very weak ness, refuse. Thbe sixth day'brings with it increased suffering, al-' though. the pangs of hunger are lost in an over-powering languor and sickn~ess. The head becomes giddy ; the ghosts of well remem. bered dinners pass in hideous pro cession through his mind. The seventb day comes, bringing in creased lassitude and further pros tration of strength. The arms hangs lifelessly, the legs drag heavily. The desire for food is still left to a degree, but it must be brought, not sought. The rmis. erable remnant of life which still hangs to the sufferer is a burden almost too grievous to be borne, yet his inherent love of existence induces a desire to preserve it, if' it can be saved without a tax up on bodily exertion. The mind wanders. At one moment he thinks his weary limbs cannot sus tain him a mile, the next he is en dowed with unnatural strength, and if there be a certainty of re lief before him, dashes bravely and strongly f o r wv a r d , wondering whence proceeds his ne w and sud den impulse. It would do you immense good to have a quiet talk, once in a while, with the man who does not like you. He would probably open your eyes to a side of your character which, excusing friend ship, does not allow you to look upon, and which your own self' conceit has kept covered up. A Nebraska City woman not only listened at a keyhole, but fired through it at a man whose talk offended her. "Take away woman," asks a writer, "and whbat would follow ?" We would ; give us something hard next time. Whbo is powerful ? He who can control his passions. Who is rich? He who is content with what he has. Some Qf the grandest things which have been achieved were by those whom we thought our nferiors. INarrow not your mind to your wn selfishness, but give it a road field for your fellow-men to wvork in. A ny place where the mind of