Newspaper Page Text
c c r f) <&Ui )U. /fi t'f Julat r<+ ^V wA ^■7 /u<) s: , i . t ' x V V# ALL the ;News oi Ciavton Smyrna and Vioin ifor only $1 per year The Largest HOME Circula tion of any Paper in thts Vi ônity jj 4 No. 3 CLAYTON, DEL, TUESDAY AFTERNOON, JULY 6, 1897. VOL.' IX A SIMPLE TIRE REPAIR. ! I i J j j 1 i t . e the Gf adaating Glass of the Smyrna High School To BY HEV. GEORGE W. DflJVIE, Sunday Morning, June 27, 1897, at St. Peter's Church. — ) 4 V-'- • F Â'-éÊm ■ ... W : * if"' •* m '"Si'"-**» A ; : t 7&j BiKÊW a 'V mu - REV. GEORGE W. RAÉE. Rector op St. Peter's P. E. Church, Smyrna, Del. Text : —-'lie sent fortha dove from hin." Gen. 8. 8. We are met together here to-fiav to send out the graduating class of the Smyrna High School into the great, wide world. And if I have chosen the abeve text ns the nucleus-thought around which to gather what I have to say this morning it is because I think I see in the sending forth of the dove from tho nrk a striking parallel to the intention underlying the ceremonies of this occa sion'. For yon, my dear young friends, your graduation is verily a going out of the dove over the world's flood; for that hied star, ds in the Bible for gentleness and inexperience of character aud, with its silver wings, for a fresh and pure ex terior. There's nothing so cbnrmiDg to tho eye in all the world—not Solomon i<. his glory—not the lily with its white ness of untrodden snow—nor the silver wings of the dovo—ns the plumage with which nature clolhes the yonng, un worldly, life in the Springtime of its ex istence. And as" to the" internal traits symbolized by tho dove, I trust yon have the dove's gentleness and inexper ience. I do not like to see old heads on young shoulders. I do not care for the boy or tbe girl who has his or her mind stored with the suspicions aud distrust and evil snrmisiugs of the aged. You will, some day, have an experience of yonr own and the world may beat you into n harsh-tempered, suspicions, travelled-stainedaniortunate; but nntil that day dawns cling to the kind voices and the pure thoughts and the guiielcss neis of heart of youth. For believe me tho hour will often come hereafter when you will long to push time back iu its flight and think and feel as yon do to day, looking wistfully over tbe years at the shadow-faces of the companions who Bit now beside you; reaching out yonr hands to clasp their vanished hands, and listening for tile sound of voices that will Ire still. Therefore do not borrow aoy of tbe evil from yonr nnliyed years; "sufficient unto the day is the evil there of." It is as young, really young, people that I venture to address you this morn, ing and to point out to you the signifi cance of this present gathering and those ■which will take place in the next few days. I am here partly to congratulate yon that yon are ready to go ont from ihe ark of school life. I take for granted yon have used yonr time and advantages to the utmost, I take for granted you have appreciated the efforts of the officers of yonr school to give you the very best éducation possible under the curriculum. I believe they have done their part by you to fit you for this honr; I ask you now, have yon done your part by your selves iu receiving their mstrnction and in learning bow to tbink? Let me take this for granted also. Then you are for tunate indeed iu going out with the training that will greatly help towards yonr future success iu your struggle in tlie arena of life. These gatherings also mean the saying gooil-byo to yonr dear school-days' life in Smyrna and the severing of ties which liaye grown very strong indeed as you have matured—ties which now you will regret to have broken, lam sure. I only mention the fact; I could not venture to voice the feelings that fill your minds, the minds of your teachers and parents on such an occasion as this. Poets have endeavored to throw your complex thoughts into verse and have failed. Painters have attempted to cast on can vns the eloqneut pathos incident to tbe breaking of home ties and ns we have looked at their pictures we have invari nbly felt that not half has been told. The whole eonld not be told in human lan In order to bave before us all gunge. its pathetic charm we must see with our own eyes one of those scenes in the his tory of a family when the son or daugh ter breaks the sacred circle about the family hoarlli by the former going out to make his fortune, the latter, to the sound ot the marriage bells, removing to another household for life. How lov ingly they all hang about him or her— What scores of unpaid tilings are to be Saul iu the burry of parting—What seenes of childhood days are being hastily recalled—What words of anxious warning and loving counsel are droppiug from the father's and the mother's lips! Uow fussily does the old mother busy herself over those last nothings of pre paration iu order to hide the tears that have silently stolen into her eyes and voice! What a pathetic pretense to in difference the dear old father affects at speeding the partrag guest, as thor gh he would say in callous tones: • riee how easy it is to say good-bye, to break tlie sweet home life and a nd the loved one out upon the flood of time to God knows where to come hack some where in the future years God knows np how. If I am not mistaken your parents aud teachers aye aud you yourselves are passing through some such experience as this in this transition period of your career when you are on the eve of your departure from school to college, from boyhood and girlhood to manhood aud womanhood, from the careless and rol licksome iden that life is all a geat play' gronud to that other thought that life is the arena for struggle, for culture, for winning or loosing a crowu, from the mere desire to quaff the cap of pleasure, to that more noble yearning where you loug for some moments in a weary life when you may know and feel that yon have been, yourselves, the fathers aud the dealers out of some small blessing. Perhaps it is all for the best,; for who knows but that the pain you will feel at the breaking up of schooldays aud the severing of the present close'bonds of companionship will drive eonie of you, perhaps all, to lift up your Siearts iu humble and wistful adoratic golden life wberei they n/ye-' bye. to tlie h^noil. Our services, at this time, mean yet more. I 6tand here to day to put 1 into words the anxiety we, who area es pecially interested, feel about those whom we are in the act of sending dyt upon tbe world. We remember tl*t you, my dear young friends, arejneii^ a divided path ; one fork runs away to tbe left, wide and gilded and sorrowful ; the other bears off to the right, narrow, difficult, peaceful ; the one leads down into tlie shadows of unnameable terrors; tbe other winds up on the hillside where the sun is pouring its light on a smiling Innd. As you sit here to day we try to lift the curtain of futurity and see which of these paths you will take. Is that your form moving down there pale, bun" gry, wretched, writhing in the coils Of regret at a mispeut life? We cannot see the face ; for the darkness hides it. Is that you over on the hillside ministering to the poor, esteemed in the community for helping on every scheme for the up lifting and happiness of tbe unfortunate? We know not; no apocalyptic vision lias been given ns in which we may behold what will befall yon hereafter. We can only wonder and pray. Another thought troubles us At this period in yonr life you realize that your responsibilities are being shifted from other shoulders to your own. This should effect a material change in yonr attitude toward men and things and mil if yon are wise in your generation, said that Frederick the Great was seated at a drinking boot with Ins gay com panions when word was brought to him that his father was dead. He rose up in their midst and exclaimed quite serionsiy "stop yonr fooling, I am Emperor of Germany. " If I mistake not, tbe scenes through which yon are passing now will bring about some such change as this in yonr feelings. Heretofore your parentB and teachers have, in your most import ant interests, been thinking for you, watching over yon, picking the stones out of your path before you reached them so you would not stumble. Hence forth yon will be compelled to think,and watch aud gath r up the stones for your selves. Heretofore you have been living under sealed orders as ships sometimes sail with sealed directions placed in tbe hands of the captain to be opened far out on tho voyage. Others have held in their keeping the reasons for your cor duct. You have simply obeyed without, in many cast B, troubling yourselves to ask wiit. The time has come when yon must break that seal of heaven's recorded will to men nnd reason out the mysteries thrown, in half truths and shadowy visions, by Nature and God. on tbe path way along which yon travel to the grave. "Why do I live?" "What is my place in tlie great family of humanity?" 'Tor what were these hands made, this mind stored with useful knowledge?" "How shall I work to-day that when tbe night cometh I may go to the universal slum ber, not like the galley stave, at night scourged to his dungeon, but as one that wraps the drapery of his couch about him and lies down to pleasant dreams. Yon must, perforce, think it all ont for yourselves. It is ber how easy it is to make mistakes. Do growing as it rolls nntil it reaches the We are very anxious for yon at this poiut for we, drawing on a much larger fund of experience than yours, remem you know that the primary meaning of the Greek word for sin is "mistake," the missing of a mark. You may not imitate the example of Frederick the Great at the proper time aud say to the idle aud childish sports and companions * "stop your fooling, I am a man now; I have grave duties to occupy me henceforth." You may not face the questions you ought to ask just now and the error of judgment will not go on rolling aud dignity of crimes against yourBelf and others. If it is easy to make mistakes it it proportionately difficnlt to recover from them. Of course recovery ia possible, thanks to the everlasting arms, yet yon must pay the penalty inevitably attached to error, but even then how hard it is to undo these moral errors and to triumph in spite of them. We are not all so fortunate as was Columbus who fonud his Eldorado in Bpite of false calculations. There was but cne thing that saved him and can save us and that is to have the main un derlying purpose of our lives light and true. Then indeed it will frequently come to pass that in spite of a wrong judgment and the spirit of procrastina tiou a stont heart may help us to triumph over our first mistakes and go on to yio tory. But this is the exception to thr rule. The rule is one long regret, one great struggle to recover and then to sigh with a certain old man who looking back over his own career said wearily to a friend: "It is a sad thing to makes mistake in life." Therefore we say to you to-day, begin aright, settle the ques. tions of life which you ought to settle now and go oa us the Iieolews did when they left Egypt, as Columbus did when he left Spain, with your faces steadfastly s«t towards an honorable uame at the setting sun. (1) SIEZE YODn OPPO RTUNITIE8 AS THEY pass you. A legend on one of the walls of the temple at Delphos read thus: "Know tliv opportunity. " And the Bard ol Avon has put the warning in equally forcible terms : "There's a tide in the affairs of men, Which, taken at the flood, leads on to fortune; Omitted, all tke voyage cf tboir life Is bound in shallows and in miseries." They ave golden words ; therefore if you see the chance to make a friend, take it without fail for friends make more great men than genius. If you can lift the life burden from any should ers of the weary, lift it uff and bear it a little way on the journey, for you may help some one of the elect unawares. If you can place a kind action anywhere in yonr leach drop it there and pass on, yon may find it again some day when you are poor and in need. If a sweet thought or a gentle feeling comes knock ing at your door let it in and give it shelter, to-morrow it may be the one small star of consolation to shine out over your own life's night of discourage ment. If some great truth appears be fore your mind like a Bethlehem star and strangely stirs your nature to -its depths, follow it at once, it may lead you to the cradle of a new and God-sent hone of better things, "If on tliy soul, as thou dost read, a ray of purer light Breaks in—oh check it not; give it full scope. Admitted, it will break the clouds which long have dimmer! thy sightand lead thee till at las: Coi:valions, like tlie sun's meridian beams, Illuminate thy mind." < (2). It is equally important to float into and stay in the swim of the river of truth and see that no snag twists you o/jUiJu w u pull of the shore» r.hcvc y eu will stick to the end of your days while others are moving on down the stream of an borable and useful life to the shoreless sen. What multitudes throng tbe banks of life on either side watching the great and good go by. In the lonely quarry near Baalbec I once saw a gigau tio block of stone squared and dressed nearly to completion and seemed to have been destined for some vast temple, bnt it lies there to.day, neglected and for gotten, while the building went up with out it. It reminded me of the great temple of truth that is rising out our midst out of living stones. In this structure, if there is a uich for you and there is, for God hath said it—will you let it pass you by? Shall another take your place? Will you suffer that temple to rise to completion without you and your support? Do not ; for even now there are too many such blocks of humanity half chiselled lying all about us lonely and neglected, abandoned he cause they would bear no more of the fashioning essential for the builder's use. Keceive a warning from these splen did might-Juive-becns aud take your place in the world, in society, in literature, in business, in the Qhurch and, instead of standing still, catch step and march along in the throng that is coming from the east and from the west and from the north and from the south to sit down with Abraham and Isaac and Jacob in the kingdom of God. But do not be discouraged if you baye found it more difficult than same of your classmates to reach your gradua tion, if yon have been forced to born the midnight oil while they, with en vious ease, mastered the lessons of tho hour. You have a thought to comfort you, which is, that there is a certain talent in the reach of every young person quite as effective iu the practical affairs of life as smartness: Application. Gun powder has placed the big man and tbe small one on the same footing in a dual; so does application give the dull boy equal chances for success with the bright one. I have read that one of the great est of English divines-Isaac Barrow— was so stupid in his youth that even his own father observed aud admitted it- he must have been dull indeed—often ex pressing his contempt for bis son. Yet, when years afterwards, the University of Cambridge sought for a successor to the great and brilliant Newton, tlieqoun dain stupid Isaac Barrow was seleoted to fill bis place. The one passed before the world like some splendid comet, rash- light while the other began as and slowly grew into a sun. In these two illustrious liyes we haye a striking illustration of the race genius and application and both won the crown, fess that the former has greater tempta tions than eyer attack tho latter. In the race of life the smart boy is very much inclined to run a little ways ahead like the hare and then sit down to wait for tho dull boy to catch up. Standing still is always demoralizing besides the nu expected so often happens iu life that it is silly to couut victory until one has tlie crown on his head. I imagine it is for this reason and others that so many tal en ted men fail utterly iu the world. The fact is patent, whatever the reasons be, that many of them do fail and are out stripped in the race by those having no genius to draw upon,mnst work on every day and all dayr, plodding slowly but moving, if they hope to arrive at tht' goal at i ist. Again 1 would have you remember Huit knowledge is power. Whatever occupa tion you may take up in the future, this education, this mental training, this fund ol information, which you have acquired duriug your school year?, will help you and make you a stronger man see how But we must con and woman by reason of üb possession. Che State bas a theory that the best cit izen is the -educated citizen, the mau who can grasp the great issues of politi cal economy aud judge intelligently as which will best conserve the highest in- ! of the people. And if she has i committed this power to you it is with j the in plied understauding that you will use it in a careful study of the country's needs and cast your influence at all times on the side of better laws, of effl oient office holders and of wiser hand ling ot publie questions by those in au thority over you. You may so use this power thus committed to you in a way that will be disastrous to yourselves and to the State or you may moke of it a great blessing. It may deepen your al ready preconceived prejudices about things and people and so mako you in capable of listening to reason, or it may give you a larger and better judg ment of truth than you would otherwise have. You may use it as a weapon to dethrone God from yonr heart or through 61*68 tS it you may staud forth as an able cham pion of all that is good aud true. But oh! my dear young friends, do not forget that you ha<« this power only in a very small measure. Do not imag ine yon can lay aside your studies at this point. You have only begun. There are fields of thought into which you have not as yet looked. There are deeps of literature, of science, of history, of the intellectual side of Christianity, of poetry, of art, which lie before you un sounded. If you hope to keep up with the times you must go on studying as long as you live;for there is a new revel" ation of the phenomena of nature every decade, which will necessrtate a contin uous shifting of yonr views to harmou ize with the uewly discovered facts. With these few words of advice dis posed" of, my mind now turns to a differ ent matter. I have discribed you. young ladies and gentlemen of the Graduating Class, ! world ns Noah sent his doves out upon the flood. The idea uow presses upcu me to wonder and try to fortell how you will return to us after you haveobtniued your freedom and go forth to tbiuk aud act for and become a law within your selves. That you will come back in after years to the scenes of this day, if not in person at least iu thought, in heart, I no doubt. Often from the world, about to be sent out into tile have when care and disappointment and humiliation have been beating like some fierce tempest upon your heart, you will look back to this day aud recall these seenes nnd they will come to yon ove r the years like some bright, sweet vision from heaven. I wish to place you, now, yonder iu the 20th century as old men aud women with yonr race nearly run and then I would bring that battered form and face of yours back here to day aud place it beside that face of yours that is looking up at me in all the fresh no: said purity of youth. What kind of form and face will they be? There are three possibilities for you. (1) 1 MAT HEAD ON THAT WRINKLED COUN TENANCE, UNR-ST FAILURE, DISAP POINTMENT, UNREINED PASSION. The first dove that Noah forced out of the ark found no rest for-the sole of her foot. A great Fainter once discovered a boy on the streut of a certain city with a face so beautiful, so like a cherub, that he took the lad m and painted him and placed the portrait on his wall as the very embodiment of all that was inno ceut aud pure. Years went by and the artist conceived the idea of making a companion picture to that one, bnt the latter must be a perfect contrast to the former. He stood in the streets aud studied the througs of faces that passed him but he could never find one that was debased enough to suit his purpose Then he visited the streets where crim inals and outlaws iived but he could uot get a face as depraved as he desired. Still bent ou his purpose he one day called at the cells where the condemned were kept. And there ho saw nu old .young man, sensual, haggard, sin-stained depraved, with not a trace of any virtue left in his face. He painted this demon and placed the picture upon the wall beside the other. A short time after wards he discovered that they were the portraits of one and the same man. The man had come back to himself there upon the wall of that artist's room to look wifli his blear, blood-shot,eyes aud his broken heart upon his own boyhood aud long in vain that lie might become a child again. Shall this be tbe fate of any one of you? God forbid. We pray God that yon may quit yourselves like men, living in the world yet avoiding its evil. (2) . Ac other possibility is that you may return os Noah's dove, sent out the sec ond came back with an olive brauch in her mouth; the symbol of peace and earthly prosperity. Yon may make a uame for yonrseif in some department of life's activity. You. young men, may strug gle up to an honorable place in the bus iness world or in one of the professions. You, young ladies, may bare the shap ing of the lives of some good, strong, talented men or find a vocation for your selves iu which you may excel. Iu the past some Smyrna youth have succeeded, why not-yon in the future? (3) . Your third possibility is still more exalted than the others—you may imi täte the dove which Noah sent forth for the third time which did not come back iu person but gave the patriarch the as surance that tbe dread deluge was gone and the prisoner might now go out of the ark with safety. It is a good thing to go out into tlie world and make your fortune, my young friends, aud those, who in after years will rejoice most over any success you miiy have, will be these friends of jour youth now clustering about you to day. But there's one tbiDg better than the making of your personal fortune, it is helping on the fortunes of others; it is so to act out there iu the world as to iufnse into the hearts of your nnxions, suspicious, un certain fellow travellers the conviction of there being a larger life for them iliau that they are now living; the assurance that failli aud hope and charity are r<al virtues, that houesty is the best policy, that true happiness consists iu this "to do justly, and to love mercy and to walk humbly with thy God " When iu the great hereafter you shall meet again at the feet of God, bearing down the gifts which the world has bestowed udoo you, that one of you will be accounted tlie greatest and will receive the sweetest benediction from the throne, wLo bears in his hand, not the gold of Arabia nor the jewels of Golconda, bnt the evidence that he hag been generous after his power, forgiving to those who injured him, gentle in his judgment of human infirmities, that he has retained hisfaith in God in the midst of an unbelieving and wiped some tears off of some faces of those who mourn. CA.STOH.IA., The fae zimfio eigaatore U at Id conclusion, it only remains for me to say bow ardently I wish you prosper ous and righteous lives; a safe journey ^through the wilderness from Egypt to Canaan; the realization of all the high aims, the good intentions, the soaring ambitions, which fill and thrill jour youthful hearts, In order to accomplish this you must observe as yön go. See how evil ap proaches you Under many fotms. Bee how stealthily God draws near to watch and bless yon. Choose well the core panions with whom you will associate, "Walk circumspectly, not as fools.' Take the Bible with you in your hands and God with you in yonr thoughts and Uj heaven sent dreams your brethren v*th you in your hearts. Remember that you will pass this way but once and so be Christlikc as you go. And success will surely meet you in a larger and belter way than you ever dreamed possible. Luke Joseph you will look down from a tlironenpon aconquered world at last, wondering, subdued, rich iu heart, with his wise, true words on your lips: "Yo thought evil against me but God meant it unto good. " PARSONS' TWO FEATS. A HARD STROKE AND A REMARKABLE RIDE DURING THE CIVIL WAR. Cat a Man'» Head Off With a Saber—Rode Two Hundred Miles In eighteen Hours. Other Instances of Decapitation In Bat tie. It is claimed by authorities on the art sf war that the greatest blow of the campaign between Greeco and Turkey was struck by Colonel Mahmoud Bey, who with one swift stroke of his sword completely severed a Greek officer's head from his body. These same author ities generously admit that this trick may have been quite common in ancient times, when stalwart men swung heavy battleaxes, but they agree that it is practically unknown in modern war fare. History is silent on the subject. There is not a plethora of literature bearing on its accomplishment. The original of all such stories is, of course, ' 'The Ad ventures of Jack the Giant Killer," which, for obvious reasons, does not help the subject. Scott describes a sim ilar episode iu "The Talisman," but the best decapitation story, from an artistic point of view, is fonnd iu the memoirs of Captain John Smith. The doughty captain vouches for the veracity of the details, though that is no good reason why we should not use the cus tomary pinch of salt. According to his trnthfnl chronicle, he overcame in tour nament the three champions of the Turkish army, decapitating each one with a single blow of his heavy sword. A writer who is evidently informed on the subject claims that Mahmoud Bey could not have accomplished the feat of decapitation with an ordinary saber and asserts that the Turk's yata ghan was "leaded" with quicksilver. The yataghan, be explains, is a short sword, shaped something like a butcher's cleaver, with an running along point. This tuba! carries a charge of quicksilver. When, the sw ord is laid up right, this quicksilver rests at the hilt. As a blow is strua'c tho liquid metal is hurled down tbufprooved channel, lend ing deadly rjjjticnal weight to the blow. The assc rtidisp. ade that sole instance «""■ 'n® kind in the history of 100 years Is not borne ont by facts. The same feat was performed during tho civil war, pot with a "loaded" yata ghan, bnt with an ordinary United States army si{ber. The man who wield ed the sword in this episode, Colonel E. Bloss Parsons, died recently in Roches ter. Colonel Parsons was one of the wealthiest and best known men in New York state, and though be had never related the story tho details were found among his private papers after his death. The incident was illustrated and de scribed in Harper's Weekly at the time. It was in 1864. Colonel Parsons, who was noted as a horseman, was attached to General Sheridan 'b staff. While rcc onnoiteriug one day with a squad of troopers under General Davis they were surprised by a detachment of Confeder ate cavalry. A pitched battle ensued, and Parsons, who was in tho rear, saw a rebel officer level a revolver at Gen eral Davis' head. Jabbing tho spurs in to his horse, he swung his saber above his head, ami, dashing by just as the officer fired, lie made a terrific full arm sweep. The Confederate's head leaped from tho shoulders as swiftly as if it had been severed by a guillotine. Tho feat is more remarkable when it is considered that Parsons was a slim, beardless fellow of 21. In comparison Mahmoud Ivy's single slash with his yataghan loses much of its importance. Colonel Parsons was brevetted gener al for distinguished services during the war, bnt characteristic modesty forbade the nse of that title when he returned to civilian life. Not only did he per form the only autheutio feat of decapi tation during the civil war, but he was the hero cf a remarkable ride. A few days before the battle cf Gettysburg was fought General Meade had an im portant message to send to General Harding, 10O miles distant. As the route was through a country swarming with rebels, the message was written on tissue paper, that it might he swal lowed in case the carrier was captured. The commander was in doubt regarding a suitable messenger. He summoned General Davis to headquarters. "General, who is the hardest rider, as well as tha most trustworthy man, iu the service?" asked Meado. "Colonel Parsons, sir," was the prompt reply. "Send him to me at once. " It was 6 o'clock on a Monday night when General Meade gave the yonng officer his Instructions. He was to ride with all baste to General Harding's headquarters and retnm at onco with ^patently hollow tube e back from hilt to this is the an answer. The messenger retired. Two hundred miles wero to be covered. The roads were heavy, and they led through the enemy 's country. Exactly at noon on the following day Colonel 1'arsous entered General Meade's tent. The latter's face grew purple witli rage, and he ripped out a string of oaths. ' "Is this the way you obey orders?" he thundered. _ " What are yon hanging around camp for? You ought to be with General Harding by this time." "I have jnst returned from General Harding, sir." "Yon lie!" exclaimed the exasperated general. Parson's face paled, and he dug tho nails in his hands to restrain himself. "Geueral Meade, " he said in a voice that ill - concealed his auger, "if you were uot my oommuudiug officer, I would knock you down for that insult. " Without the formality of a salute he turned ou his heel and left the tent. Meade afterward made an ample apol ogy. Colonel Parsons killed two horses aud went himself without a particle of food. For 18 hours he was not ont of the sad dle.—Chicago Times-Herald. Quotation, sir, is a good thing. There is a community of mind in it. Classical quotation is the parole of literary men all over the world.—Johnson. CASTOHIA. Tie fae Is every vr&ppez. A SIMPLE TIRE REPAIR. Punctures in the well known Mor gan & Wright tire are mended about as easily as a man would close a hole in his finger with a bit of court plas ter. Inside of the inner tube of the tire lies a long strip of patching rub ber, like this : me to By injecting M. & W. quick-repair cement through the puncture into this inner tube, aud then pressing down on the tire with tHe thumb, like this, a on ÆJ 532 « the repair -.trip inside is picked up by the cement, thus closing the puncture, like this: Ä frl Very simple, but—now every rider .should remember these two "buts," or he will fail : Be injecting* cement, pump up If you don't, the inner tube the t will Pc flabby, like this, o is !: yfvi and the cement will not get inside of it, where the repair strip lies. When you have a puncture, get right off. Riding a tire flat, when it has tack or nail in it, may damage it con siderably. of is of as is iu PRAYERS THE LITTLE CHILDREN SAY The prayers the little children say- - They are not fine of speech, But they hold deeper mystery Than any tome could teach, And they reach farther up to heaven Than wiser praye The angels laugh to hear each day The prayers the little children say. The pray No toiling angel brings. They pass right through the shining ray Tliat searches selfish tilings. (They are so little that they slip Between the guarding wings. ) Aud God says, ''Hush and give them way!' Tho prayers the little children say. The prayers the little children say— Ah, if we knew the samel For ours, so vise and gaunt and gray, Walk wearily and lame, And by tke time they come to God They have forgot his name. Would The prayers the littlo children say ! —Post Wheeler in Now York Prcs3. rt-ru-h. the little chldrcn say may some-time learn to pray TROUBLE FOR HIS HONESTY. to The Negative Reward of Virtue In tin Windy City by the Luke. "A qneer thing happened to me,'' said Bailey, lighting a fresh cigar. "It was only one of those incidents of streel travel that might happen to any one, but vuroy ing from t'je put upon it. " "Let's hear it, " said the other fel lows, making themselves comfortable. "I was riding on tho electric," sait Bailey, "aud iu tho seat opposite was pretty girl. " "Ob, you consider yonrseif a judge?" remarked one of the crowd. "I certainly do, and I let her set that I appreciated her good looks. Bnt my admiration made no impression. The young woman busied herself in get ting her fare ready, and I watched her as sho deftly extracted a dime from her pocketbook and held it on tho palm of pretty hand, ready for the conductor." "Yon were hit hard, Bailey." "Then I thought mo of my own fare, and as I was bolding a newspaper in my hand I roso nnd dived down into my pocket for a nickel. The conductor came along and I handed it to him jnst as lay vis-a-vis said: " 'What has become of my 10 cents?' "There she sat staring at her hand, which was no longer occupied by the piece of silver. We all looked for it. but it had disappeared, and she found a nickel with which sho paid her fare. At that moment I slipped my band into my overcoat pocket and found there the 10 cent piece. "How could you identify it?" asked one of tho boys. "I never carry money in an outside pocket. Besides it had not been there a moment before. No, I knew how it hap pened. My paper had whisked it from her hand, and it had dropped from it to my pocket, as I explained to her. " "Was she surprised? What did she say?" "Boys, I can't tell you all sho said. Please don't ask me. She remarked that no one could judge by appearances, and sho hoped it was my first beginning iu a life of crime; that if I had been hardened I would not have returned it to her, bnt that probably I saw that she suspected me, and a lot more, while the fellows in the other seats were guy ing me. But you can bet yonr bottom dollar I never find uny woman's money and return it to her again. Not much, Mary Ann."—Chicago Times-Herald. A Press Built by Franklin. "I onee worked a printing press that was built and operated for u long while by Ben Franklin, " said Colonel Charles Gonter. "The machine was quite a primitive affair, but it answered the purpose. I was then a boy in Lancaster, Pa., aud was learning the printer's trade in tbe office of the Lancaster Union. ' John W. Forney, who made such a success of the Philadelphia Press, was a 'prentice with me, and we took turns working tho old Franklin press. It was made entirely of wood except for a marble slab that answered the pur pose of a ted. On this slab the forms of type were placed, aud they would have to be inked with a long, clumsy roller before each impression. "One day Forney would wield the roller, aud the next day it fell my turn to smear on tbe ink. We could print about Û0 or 7S sheets an hour. The work was laborious, hut we performed it cheerfully because of (ho knowledge that Beu Frauklin had doue the very same work on the press many a day be fore we were born. James Buchanan used to come in occasionally aud en courage us at our task and predict a brilliant career for -both of us if we stuck to the trade we wero then learn ing. a ' I " "This was way back iu 1841, aud I'm a young man yet. Events that are crowded into the years since then con tain the history of the building of one of tho most powerful nations the world has every known, and the processions of men that have passed in review since then call for the pen of another Plutarch to portray, and that cramped, rickety little Franklin press that John W. For ney and I used to work played a big part in the making of the 1 : a 1 1 oil and the making of the processions of men. Still X am not old."—St. Louis Repub lic. , - Ostentation has been described as tbe way ither people "show off."—Town and j&ountry Journal. DêWitt's Colic & Cholera Cure. quickly cures Dysentery and Dl«rrb(M< _a STUART, THE PAINTER. üurktos Hits Born of HI« Faculty For Hearting Faces. "I don't want people to look at my pictures and say how beautiful 'the dra pery is. The face is what I care about, " laidStnart, the great American painter. ÎP was once asked what he considered the most characteristic feature of the face. He replied by pressing the end of his pencil against the tip of his nose, listorting it oddly. His faculty at reading physiognomy sometimes made curious hits There was a person in Newport celebrated for tiis powers of calculation, bnt in other respeots almost an idiot. One day Ituart, being in the British museum, ■ame upon a bust whoso like uess was ipparently unmistakable. Calling the •nrator, ho said, 'I see yon have a head if 'Calculating Jemmy. ' " ''Calculating Jemmy I"' repeated the curator in amazement "That is she head of Sir Isaac Newton. " On another occasion, while dining with the Duke of Northumberland, his host privily called his attention to a gentleman and asked the painter if he knew him. Stnart had never seen him before. "Tell me what sort cf a man ha is." "I may speak frankly?" "By all means. " "Well, if the Almighty ever wrote a legible hand he is the greatest rascal that ever disgraced society. " It appeared that the man was an at torney who had been detected in sundry dishonorable acts. - Stuart's daughter tells a pretty story of her father's garret, where many of his unfinished pictures were stored: " The garret was my playground, and a beautiful sketch of Mme. Bonaparte was the idol that I worshiped. At last I got possession of colors and an old panel and fell to wort copying the pic ture. Suddenly I heard a frightful roar iug sound. The kitchen chimney was on fire. Presently my father appeared, to sec if the fire was likely to do any dam age. He saw that I looked very foolish at being canght at snch presumptuous employment and pretended not to see me. But presently he could not resist looking over my shoulder. • " 'Why, boy,' said he—so he used to address me—'you must not mix your colors with turpentine. Yon most have some oil.' " It is pleasant to add that the little girl who thus found her inspiration eventually became a portrait painter of merit.—Youth's Companion. FOR AN OCEAN VOYAGE. Take Only Half the Clothes You Think Will Need. ' 'Take only half the clothing that you think yon will need for an ocean voy age nnd do not attempt to have a small trunk in yonr stateroom," writes Em ma M. Hooper in The Ladies' Home Journal. "Have in yonr largest shawl strap a traveling rug, heavy wrap—a golf cape is excellent—snu umbrella, rubbers, small cushion to tie on the back of yonr deck chair, a warm dress of plain design, and a flannel wrapper to nse as a nightgown. Wear a chamois pocket well secured with a tape about the waist for your letter of credit, jew elry, money, etc. "In a large traveling bag place a change of underwear, hose, bedroom slippers and needed toilet articles, with which include a small hot water bag, bottle of salts, vaseline, box of cathar tic pills aud bottle of camphor. Do not folget a coauertuble iclotL f-tc.w: 1 *-w.'.p and a gauze veil if you are afraid of a little sunburn. Wear a jacket salt of mixed cheviot or serge and a silk waist on board. After starting put cu the old er gown and lounge in it until yon laud, when it can be given to a stewardess. Some travelers try to dress for dinner aud carry a steamer trnuk filled with silk waists end fancy neckwear, but for an eight day journey this is poor taste and a lot of trouble. Others buve the small trunk in tho cabin, and before lauding pack the things in it that are to be used only on the return voyage, and send it to the ship company's offico un til their return. It mnst be remembered that 33 pounds of baggage is the aver age weight allowed free on the conti nent Warm wraps and woolen under wear are necessary at all seasons going açross the Atlantic. " Friendship In Kentucky. When Judge Pendleton grows reminis cent, he is always interesting, aud when Mr. Henry Tompkins walked iu he said: "Mr. Tompkins, your cousin, Lonis Garth, was the only bully I ever saw who was a brave man. He was the most overbearing mau I ever saw. He was in a poker game in camp with Lieutenant Forrest, a brother of General N. B. For rest, and he called Forrest a liar. For rest pulled his pistol, a double barreled Weapon, aud, placing it to Garth's breast, ho palled tbe trigger. The car tridge failed to fire, and Garth spat out a chew of tobacco aud without moving a muscle said*, "Lieutenant, yon had better try the other barrel." Forrest pnt his weapon up aud said, "Garth, you are a brave mau, and I will uot shoot a brave man. " They were insep arable friends forever afterward.— Owensboro Inquirer. The Spear. In old days, when the spear was used as a weapon of war, meu had to bo very careful bow they carried it. If in a strange country they boro their spears point forward, it was taken as a decla ration of war, while if they carried them ou their shoulders with the point backward they were treated as friends. It is my creed that a man has no claim upon his iYllow creatures beyhud bread and water and a grave, unless he can win it by his own strength or skill. —Hawthorne. Let him who neglects to raise the fallen fear lest when he falls no one will stretch out his hand to lift him np.—Saadi. Wonderful Forethought. The habit of companies which insure against accidents to compel tbeiri pa trons to resort to tho courts to recover in case of injury was the occasion of this singular thoughtfulness; told by the president of a largo accident company: "Some time ago," he said, "a large policy holder in my company was roil over by a Brooklyn trolley car and bis right leg painfully crushed, mained conscious after the shock for three minutes, during which time ho palled out his watch and called the at tention of the crowd to tho fact that it was just 15 minutes cf 12. His policy expired at noon, aud his foresight was rewarded by tho immediate payment of bis weekly indemnity without coutro versy or litigation. "—Youth's Compan ion. Ho re A paper published in Greenland can | boast of tbo longest uame in existence j j t j s Arrangagliotio Nati ; ßysaramlnas Siuik. Escaping the Organ Grinders. Resido close to a dentist's if yon are not fond of street music. Itinerant or gan meu carefully avoid playing any where near tbe houso of a practitioner Who can effectually stop or remove all troublesome grinders.—London Punch. ginnarï'i Senators and presidents have dits ! so high with pain enough, uot"l5eca they found the places especially agreo able, bnt to vindicate 4hëir manhood in | onr eyes.—Emerson. \ oik 11 i.-e One Minute Cough Cibre, cures Good " of is a he a of to to of Is essential to health. Every nook and corner of the system is reached by the blood, and its quality the condition of every organ de pends. Good blood means strong nerves, good digestion, robust health. Impure blood means scrofula, dyspepsia, rheuma tism, catarrh or other diseases. The surest way to have good blood is to take Hood'a Sarsaparilla. This medicine purifies, vi talizes, and enriches the blood, and aends the elements of health and strength to every nerve, organ and tissue. It creates a good appetite, gives refreshing sleep and cures that tired feeling. Remember, Bl od m Hoods Sarsaparilla Is the best—In fact the One True Blood Purifier. ij ji r«-ii cure I.lver Ills; easy to Mood S HillS take, easy tooperate. 25 c. FOB rA'ISKR SKX This remedy beinj; in jected directly to tht seat of those disease i of the Genito-Urinarj Organs, requires change of «lief. Can guaranteed iu 1 to Ü days. Nmall plain pack fV TTm age. by mail, ÆL iä teold only by W. It. Key IE BRJHT SlO I 81.00 o.. .vole Agents, dayton, D el. $500 lie ward! WE wilt pay the above reward for any ca Liver Complaint. Dyspepsia, Sick Headache In digestion Constipation or Costiveness we cannot cure wit'a West's Vegetable Liver Pills, when the directions are strictly complied with. They are purely Vegetable, and never fail to give sat isfaction. Sugar Coated. Large boxes, 25 cents. Beware of counterfeits and imitations. The gen anutactured only by THE JOHN C. WEST COMPANY, CHICAGO, ILL. W. It. Keys & Co., Sole Agents, Clayton,.Del. . A Bum's BMgtfttri. Splendid curative agent for Nervois or 8 lache. Brain Exhaustion, Sleei-lessnes -i Neuralgia; aÎ30 for Riisi idney Disord or.;. Acid L>v jiepsia, Anteoiio. Antidote for Alcohols aud c&hsr e ge esaoa. Price, 10, 2öund £0cent THE ARNOLD CHEMICAL CO. 1 51 S. Western Avenue, Sid B taerr.l tism. Coat, 12 G CHIC G" W. R. Keys & Co., Sole Agents, Clayton, Del. LADIES norooraot Arf DR - FELIX LE BRUN'3 f 7 Steel! Pennyroyal Pills _I are the original nnd onlv [ FRENCH, safe anù reliable cure on t!io market. Pries. *1.00; sent bvtnaiL Genuine sold only bv w, R. Keys ACo., Sole Agents. Clayton, Del. a a of 50 YEARS* EXPERIENCE. I k trade marks, ffr DEsicNs, r F>TT^ COPYRIGHTS &0. Anyone sending a sketch and description may quickly ascertain, free, whether probably patentable. Communications strictly confidential. Oldest agency for securing patent« In America. We have a Washington office. invention is Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive special notice in the SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN, beautifully illustrated, largest circulation any scientific Journal, weekly, termsS3.C0 a year; ths. Specimen copies and Hand on Patents sent free. Address MUNN & CO., 301 Broadway, New York. of nv : i . 1 •*' sysssssasm The only sure Core fbr easy. 15c. at Druggists. PARKER 3 HAIR BALSAM Cleanse« and beautifies the hahe Promote« a luxuriant growth. _ Fails to Restore Gray Hair to its Youthful Color. & hair falling Druggist« Cures scalp fia 50c, and $1 î'C-consu^pt.ve PABKER'9 GINGER TONIC. Many who less and tliacourntfed have regained health by ny kind use m HIS I ml undoubtedly largest in num bers, variety and elegance of design and quality. and And Watches, Ladies Gents. And Chains, Ladies Gents. And, Charms, Ladies Gents. Yes; in large numbers. and and And Clocks. Our space too small to sliow them. In fact, larger stock of ev erything in Jewelry and Sil verware than ever before. Pens, Pencils and Tooth Picks. Nose Glasses and Spectacles. Ça5ter |\loueItie5 in Abundance. Has reputation for repairing Clocks, Watches ami Jewelry iu ail expert aud satisfactoraliy manner at low prices. JeiaeleF and Optieian, ! i WRIGHT, 220 King Street, Wilmington, Del. Hon. W. J. Bryan's Book All who are interested in farthering the sale of Hon. W. J. Bryan'» new book shonld correspond immediately with the publisher«. The work will contain . . . JL 1S ICCODJT Of ns CiMPlIGN TO DR. US BIOGRAPBT, TRirmsimswin ms HOST IMPORTAIT THE RJSUITS 0? TH CAMPAIGN OP 1896. A B1RÏW OF TIB POLITICAL SITUATION • •• W A!*532 noanced his intention of devoting one-half of all royalties to fart liering the cease of bimetal! isnu There are already indioationa of an enormous sale. Address W. B. CO*KEY COMPANY, Publisher« 341-351 Dearbor« St...CHICAGO .••AGENTS JOHN L. SEEMANS, ..AUCTIONEER.. P. O.-CLAYTON OR DELANEY'S Prompt attention givian tocalliug Sales Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use in time. 8old by druggists. FREE ! ß Çfyairçuritl? £uçry U/atçi? CHRISTMAS ?RESt TS. Bracelets,... ... Wat« bes, guaranteed. Solid Gold Ring, liabj ( ... Misses' Solid Gold Kings Boys' Solid Gold Tiger Eye Rings$1.25up Gents' Solid Gold Tiger i*ve Rings* Diamond Rings, $5 special, up to £300.(X) Engagement or Wedding Kings, onr own make. Solid Gold, extra wide Any size or style mode to order. ENGRAVED FREE. Silyer Novelties, Clock«, Silverware • * P & L l.J. .. .iOC Up 81.00 up. $:! no up #5.00 up L. THOMAS & CO., Opticians and Jemeleps, 409 Market St., Wilmington, Del. Look for Green Sign. OFHCAL DEPARTMENT, Optician Graduate from Philadelphia Optical College. Eyes examined free. Solid Gold Glasses Reduced from <3 00 to Si 50. LADIES' AND GENTS' < ' Underwear ad Hosiery,' The Finest Assortment IN CLtAYTON. ALSO A SPECIAL LINE OF s h o e s Special attention is called to onr line of Staple and Fancy Groceries, Cigars Tobaccos, Confectionery, 4c. GEORGE BROCKSON; CLAYTON, DEL. GOTO -— E, SHAW'S NEW STORE and Save Money. We carry a full and complete line of Groceries and Provisions also a fine lot of CIGARS AND TOBACCO. Highest cash price paid for country produce E. SHAW, CLAYTON. DEL ZR,rZ". W-A.X.H.H3J-NT CIa^L"Z"T01Sr, XJIE1X,., -AGENT FOR The Coniinentai Fire Insuiance Company. REVIVO RESTORES VITALITY. ~ T.T : i ' l ' T. Tr ub, ' . »K :\ i ^ <, Wade a «fOffiVVell Mail . '-V . .fl 1st Day 15th Day. THE GREAT of Me. 30th Day. PREKTOH RÈMEmir profin Hi o ab lesttHft in 30 tlnya. It acta powerfully aud quickly. Cures, when all others fail. Young men will regain their lost manhood, and old will rcrover their youthful vigor by usinfc RKVI VO. It quickly and surely restore« Nervous« . Lort Vitality, lmpotency. Nightly Emissions, Lost Power, Failing Memory, Wasting Diseases, and txcess and indiscretion, for study, business or marriage, li only cures by starting at tlie s.?at of disease, but is a great nerve tonic aud blood builder, bring ing back the pink glow to pale cheeks and re storing the lire of youth. It wards off Insanity and Consumption. Insist other. It # 1.00 per package, or tlve written guarantee the money. Circular free. Address all effects of self-abuse which unfits having REVIVO, no pocket. By mall, six for 85.00, with a post refond be carried i OYAL MEDICINJÎ CO., 271 Wabash Ave., CHICAGO, ILL F«>r sale by T. L. Mason, Clayton, Del. fflannering & Williams ABTISTIC PAINTERS! AND — PAPER HANGERS! 2d door below Postoffice, COMMERCE ST., SMYRNA, DEL. li Call aud see us before hav ing work done. MANNERING & WILLIAMS Commerce Street. rm I BÜY YOUB Coal and Wood OF Qosijriff Ö BeeK, (Successors to James C. Robinson.) SMYRNA, - DEL. Deabrs in Coal, Wood, Lime, Cement and Plaster. Satisfaction guaranteed and all ordeis prorrptly fi ltd. TheClayton Lumber Yard COME AND SEE OUR STOCK OF luaabbr Examine Quality and get Prices Before Purchasing. A Full Line of Lumoer, Sash, Dons, Moulding ALWAYS ON HAND. We also carry a full line ot Coal Ltehigh St Ltee, (all sizes) Well screened and delivered promptly. Also agent for WHRIGHTSVIL .E LAND L!ME»nd the VICTOR AND CREDINDA BICYCLES. Give us a call. A. L. HUCSCH. JR., CLAYTON, DEL.