Anderson intelligencer.(Anderson, S.C.) 1890-04-10.€¦ · SYLVESTER BLECKLEY CO. l%0HE}r$'GoLUMN,...

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BY CLLNKSCALES & LANGSTON. THE NEW BLOOD MEDICINE. Compound Syrup of Red Clover! WE wish especially to call the attention of Physicians to the above remedy, and ask that they examine into its merits before making their prescriptions for the usual Spring disorders. We would be glad to furnish the for mala for this preparation to any Physician who will call at onr Store. This Syrup combines, in an agreeable form, the medicinal properties of the more recently dis¬ covered and most approved Alterative, Tonic aod Blood Purifying remedies of the vegetable kingdom. It will be found much superior to the Blood Purifiers usually sold, and very much cheaper. ORB & SLOAN , ANDERSON, S.G. SULLIVAN MANUFACTURING CO. HEW MACHINERY, NEW PLANT THROUGHOUT, A FULL STOCK OF LUMBER, dressed or undressed, SHINGLES, LATHS, WOOD-WORK, and BUILDING MATERIAL of all kinds. ALL ORDERS EXECUTED PROMPTLY. CAR LOAD OF DOORS, SASH AND BLINDS, To t>e sold at Bottom Figures. S&* Oar Works are conveniently located near the C. & G. Depot, with Mr. JESSE M. SMITH Superintendent. COTTON PLANTEES. The Brooks Cotton Planter. Also, the justly popular ELLIOTT COTTON PLANTER. Take your choice between these two Planten. They are the best on the mar¬ ket. No other Planters can compare with them. Remember that we are selling. -The Best Side Harrows on the Market. Simple, strong, durable and cheap. Headquarters on Plows, Hoes and Agricultu¬ ral Implements of all Mnds, § SULLIVAN HARDWARE CO. IMMENSE DAILY ARRIVALS OP HEW, PRETTY, AND Fashionable Goods -AT- Sylvester Bleckley Go's ! NOTIONS, In Endless Varieties. LACES, EMBROIDERIES AND RUOHINGS. Large Assortment, Best Selections, and Very Cheap. The Latest Designs in Van Dyke And Directoire Styles. IN OUR DRESS GOODS DEPARTMENT You can find all kinds, shades and patterns, to suit everybody, withJFrimmings to match, and at prices to enable all to buy. We cordially IUYITE . L^IDIES Of the County and Oily to call and examine our Goods, promising them POLITE ATTENTION AND FAIR DEALING. WE HAVE A SPLENDID STOCK OF HUES, IÜLES, BUGGIES, WAGONS ill HARNESS, Of all descriptions for sale, and can fit you up with anything in this line. Don't buy without calling at BLECKLEY'S STABLBS. WE HAVE ON HAND A GOOD STOCK OF THE DOWLAW COTTON PLANTERS, The price on which has been reduced, so that all can bny. Also, a good stock of EUREKA HARROWS, Beut made. HOES, PLOWS, and everything you want. Yours, very truly, SYLVESTER BLECKLEY CO. l%0HE}r$'GoLUMN, *^ All communications! intended for this Column should be addressed to D. H. RUSSELL, School Commissioner, Ander¬ son, S. c. Siabtown is and baa been for years an educational landmark in tbe County. Tbe people tbere take a juat pride in tbeir ancient reputation for school facili¬ ties, and always keep a good school in successful operation. This year tbe school is in charge of Miss Mary B jggs, a teacher "to tbe manor born/' and one who has bad several years' experience in the work, first as assistant and now as principal. We spent two very pleasant boars with her school, and greatly enjoy* ed the readiness with which her pupils engaged in their exercises. Everything in her school was able to read and. write, even the very yonag ones, and the more advanced showed progress in tbeir stud¬ ies, affording proof of a faithful and con¬ scientious teacher. Years ago, in tbe "Auld Lang Syne," Rev. John L. Ken¬ nedy, familiarly, known by the boys as "old boss," held sway in the walls of old Thalian Academy, and from far and near tbe youth of the land flocked to his school, and from tbe classic precincts of the old Academy many boys have gone forth to do honor to tbeir preceptor, and shed lustre upon tbeir country. And to¬ day wherever th ;se boy^meet and clasp bands and recount tbe incidents of their academic career, tbere is a fellow feeliDg among them which makes them all feel akin, and not a man of tbem but pays a tribute to tbe memory of father Kenne¬ dy. And they are planning now to rear a abaft to his memory amid the scenes where hin life work was done, and more than three hundred of them have con¬ tributed tbeir mite to erect this shaft, until now the fund .on band amounts to three hundred dollars. But while all this is timely and appropriate, no marble ahaft can perpetuate bis memory as does tbe monument erected and forever en¬ shrined in tbe loyal hearts of more than three thousand students who hc.ve gone out from under bis tutelage into the va¬ rious wall's of life. Over into Brushy Creek and tbe first school wo came to is at Mt. Fisgah, taught by Miss Jennie Williams, who has recently come to ns from Pickens. We noted quite a difference in this school, in the fact thait last year there were quite a number who could neither read nor write, while this year nearly all were able fio do something at both, and tbe teacher assured us she was making strenuous efforts along that line. Eskew sowed some good seed, and did some good work there, and we take it that Miss Williams is carrying it on. Bayond Pisgah, a short distance, we came to tbe Maple Springs colored school, taught by Sarah Evans. This school was small, and from what we saw and heard, we should say tbe teacher was small, too, which may account for. the size of the school. '«¦»¦ - At Mountain Springs we found our brother, Edwaid King, at the fore. This place has been without school privileges almost for several terms. One or two short summer terms have been taught there, but the neighborhood, feeling tbe need of something more, have recently put up a good building and employed Mr. King for a ten month's term, and there we found him earnestly striving to do his whole duty, and we feel sure that bis work will tell when tbe results are footed up. Mr. King has been out of tbe school room for some time, but is zealously trying to "catch on" to the edu¬ cational progress and spirit of the age, and is bound to succeed. We did not visit tbe Saluda and Be- thesda school*, for the reason that Miss Stenhouse, the teacher of the former school, had written to inform us that she had been compelled to close on account of continued ill health.. We greatly re¬ gretted not being able to meet her in her school, as we greatly enjoy inspecting the work of an accomplished teacher, and Buch wo take her to be from past observation. At Betheeda they are run¬ ning no school, for the reason that the community is engaged in putting up a concrete school building, and propose to have themse lves laid off into a separate School District for the purpose of estab¬ lishing a high grade permanent school. This is well, and speaks well for tbe edu¬ cational Bpirit of tbe community, and we wish tbem a hearty good speed in tbe work. Wo have promised ourself an¬ other visit tc that community this spring. From this place we drove to Cedar Wreath, to pay our respects to Miss Jen¬ nie iCosamond. Through cold, rain and mud the drive was anything but a pleas¬ ant one, but once inside the building, the air of busy work pervading the room, and the evidence of good work having been done in the past cheered us, aud drove away all thoughts ol the elements outside. Miss Jennie reports her school not as large as usual, but in spite of the weather three-fourths of tbem were present for duty. Having been at work here ,for several successive terms, her work is telling on her pupils, and it is to be hoped that faithful and conscientious as she is, her people will keep her it it for years to come. REPORT OF MISS JENNIE BOASAHOND'S SCHOOL AT CEDAR WREATH. first class. Master Claude Rosamond, 931. Not absent in two months. Miss Mamie Williams, 83. Not absent in one month. second class. Maater Lawrence Meritt, 80. Not ab' sent in one month. third class. Little MisB Minnie Meritt, 75. Reci¬ tation and Deportment. Hoping you will visit us again, I am Very truly, Jennie Eosamond. . The greatest elevation ever attained by a balloonist was 87,000 feet, or about seven miles. Tbe ascent was made September 5, 18C2, at Wolvflrhampton, England iNDEKSON, S. C.f 5 BILL ARF'S PHILOSOPHY. Atlanta CoiutUttiion. At last the graves of the Georgia sol¬ diers who fell at Frederickeburg are marked with marble head-stones, with name and company and regiment, chisel* ed deep into the rock. Mrs. Barney is happy, and so are her noble companions .the ladies of the Memorial Society. With them it haB been a labor of love- love that never grows weary. Only a few months ago they made their appeal to Georgia, and right well has Georgia responded. Two hundred and three of her patriot boys are Bleeping there.far away from home and kindred.kindred whose loving hands would have brought sweet flowers in their season and kept the turf green upon their graves, and watered them with tears. But loving hearta were there, and those graves have not been neglected. Woman can ever be trusted to perform the sweetest, tendereat, holiest duties that belong to oar nature. The poet says, Man's inhumanity to man, Makes countless thousands mourn, But woman's hnmanity makes as many thousands rejoice. Mrs, Barney is a no¬ ble Virginia woman.one who went through the war like a soldier, and was always on duty.duty to the sick and the wounded and the dying.duty in the hos¬ pital and out of it.duty in the sacrifice she made of personal comfort and per¬ sonal security.duty to Georgians and Texaus, and all, as well as to Virginians, and ever since the war she has continued on duty.duty to the dead who sleep near her home. Not a soldier under the sod at Frederickuburg, but would eay, if bis spirit could speak to us, 'she is my moth¬ er and my sister.' Tbr.t bloodstained soil has always been very dear to me, for our Tom Cobb fell there. Tom Cobb, the beat loved son of Georgia; the pride of all our people; the Christian hero; the friend of humanity; the learned and brilliant and noble gentleman. He was in his prime of manhood and was my ideal of a noble man. Mrs. Barney writes: "If I could only see all tbese dear graves marked with marble headstones, I would die happy. We must hurry and get through this work before the veterans are all dead, for I fear that the next generation may be too busy to think of them. There are 1,800 graves here, graves of eouthern patriots.and none are permanently marked, except those from Georgia. I feel Bure that the other States would re¬ spond if there was some one to move them. Virginia has done very well. She has sent us $450; Texas has sent $142; Maryland, $20; Florida, $8; North Carolina, $6; South Carolina, $2, Arkan¬ sas, $2 and Tennessee $2. I know that there isjuBt as much patriotism in the hearts of those people as there i'b in Georgia, and all tbat is wanted is for some good man or woman to awaken it. The marble headstones that you sent us are beautiful, the work well done and the lettering perfect. They were escorted from the depot to the cemetery by a guard of honor .the Maury Camp of Confeder¬ ate VeteranB, under command of Captain Lee, a brother of Fitz Hugh Lee and a nephew of Robert E. Lee. With their own soldier hands they took them from the wagons and placed them in -the graves. It was a silent, impressive cere¬ mony, for .Not a drum was heard, nor a funeral note.' The band very kindly offered their servi¬ ces, but we thought best to dispense with it. Georgia's patriotism shall be known and published, and perhaps the other States will soon awake and emulate her example." Yes, tbey will.I know they will if the women will take bold of the work. There is not a town or village in any of those States that would not willingly Bend ten dollars if some good woman would Bee two other good women and say: "Now let us go round this morning and ask for a half dollar or a quarter from every man we meet. Let us be in a hur¬ ry, and be in earnest. We are very late about this thing, but not too late. We can raise ten dollars in an hour." If the ladies will do this, tbey can raise a thousand dollars in a week. It will not take that much from each State. Perhaps five hundred will dö, but those good la¬ dies have long since laid the foundation of a monument to the unknown and unrecorded dead, and they would rejoice to get money to complete it. But let us see to the graves of the known and the recorded dead, and if any money is left, it will not be lost or misspent. The city of Macon raised one hundred and fifty dollars for the graves at Johnson's island, and just so the cities of Nashville and Chatlanooga and Memphis and Birming¬ ham and Anniston and Montgomery and Meridian and Jackson and others, still farther west, would gladly do likewise to preserve the graves of their own soldiers. Patriotism demands it, and so does grati¬ tude and State pride and southern pride. Let every town and village send five or ten dollars, and the good work is done. Get the editor to help. Publish a notice that you are going to call next day on everybody for half a dollar, and say you are obliged to have it and will stay until you get it. A man dunned me on the street the other day for six dollars, and I told him I would see about it, but tbat I had to go to the barber's shop just then. Well, he said, he was in no particular hurry and could wait that long, and so he followed me and took a seat and watched until the barber got through with me, and of course, I bad to go and hunt up the money to get rid of him. That's the way to do Borne folks. Send the money to Mrs. J. N. Barney.she will find the marble and furnish the names of the dead. We bad so many marble companies in our State tbat we preferred to have Georgia marble over Georgia graves, and so I interviewed them and found tbem more than liberal. Tbey are all northern men, but they have do¬ mesticated and affiliated and acclimated with us, and they like us and we like them. I made a contract with George B. Sickles & Co., of Täte, in Pickena County. Mr. Sickles fought us for four years just as hard as he could, but he won't do so any more. He gave us a beautiful polished marble thirty inches long, twelve inches wide nnd one and a CHUESDAY MOENI half inches thick for one dollar, and that is really less than its cost. His contri¬ bution amounted to over one hundred dol¬ lars in the discount that was made upon the marble and the lettering. Now let every good mau stop his work a minute and say, "I will go one dollar on one grave, I will Bure," and if he can't find any woman going around for the money let him seed a money order or a dollar bill to Mre. Barney. She will get it. Tbe mail won't be robbed.not a cent of it will go to feed or fatten any¬ body. Tbe are no salaries, to pay. It is all woman's work, and it ia free work. Mrs. Barney received a letter from Phil¬ adelphia, inclosing twenty dollars, and all that was written was: "A boy who fought in blue sends this to preserve the graves of the boys who fought in gray." Wasn't that nice and kind? I would like to nabor with that man. Would to God that we were a nation of friends. The northern people who have come south will respond willingly to this work. I know that they will. Why Bhouldn't they? We are taxed every day and have been for twenty-five years to preserve tbe graves of tbeir dead soldiers, and to pension the survivors and all their kindred. The annual pension bill of ninety-eight millions has just passed, and not a dollar of it will come to our people. We fought for our convictions and they fought for theirs, and that is all there is in it, or about it. We are exactly even in patriotism, and ought to be even in everything else, but we are not. But tbey are coming down to live with us and are coming fast, and we are har¬ monizing with them. In a few years 1 hey will have as much to do with the race problem as we will, and then Mr. Ingalls, and Mr. Cook, and all their sort will have to stand aside. But I am con¬ cerned for the dead now, the living can take care of themselves. Bill A p.p. A Curious Coincidence. "I used to travel around the country with a patent hay fork," said the man with the green patch on his left eye, as it came his turn to tell a story. "I am not going to say anything about that patent more than that no farmer ever got any benefit from it. What I wish to bring out is what might be called a curious coincidence, and one that I have kicked myself over a dozen times. "It was in this way," be continued, as be got settled back on his seat. "Far¬ mers have their weak spots the same as other folks. You can hit some of them by .praising their buildings, others by ad¬ miring tbeir horses, others again, through their hogs or calves. I had a way of hit¬ ting them all, and it worked to my great profit every time. When I got up in the morning, after staying all night with a farmer, I got off something as follows: "I had a very curious dream last night. I dreamed that I was digging out behind your barn, just on a line with a big knot bole in tbe sixth board from the west end, and I unearthed a tin box con¬ taining two thousand dollars in green¬ backs. The dream was so vivid that I almost feel the box in my hand. There's nothing in a dream, of course, but I never bad one that seemed so real." "Mind you, I had taken notice of the knot hole the evening before. Sometimes I fixed a place behind the barn and sometimes near a stump, or so many paceB from a certain tree or straw-stack; bat it was all settled on beforehand. It wasn't one time in twenty that a farmer would chaige me for my lodgings after giving him this dream. It hit urn' plump centre, and they were only too anxious to get me out of the way so they could be¬ gin digging." "Go on," said several voices, as he made a long pause. "Well, one morning, after lodging with a farmer all night, and getting his note for fifty dollars for a hayfork, I related the usual dream in the usual way. This time it was buried treasure beneath a Btump near his barn. I saw that be was hard hit at once, and he left me eating breakfast and went down to dig. I was chuckling over bis greenness, when he came walking in with a tin box under bis arm." "You don't say ?" "But I do, and It was a box be had dug out a foot or so below the surface. It was broken open right then and tbere, and may I be drowned for a yaller dog if the contents didn't pan out $4,625 in just as good greenbacks as ever you Baw." "But.but." "There were no buts about it. He found the money and kept it, as was his right, and no one ever came to claim it. ThiB two dollar bill was a part of it. He gave it to me as a reward for my dream, and I am keeping it as a relic to show what a fool a man can make of himself. That's all, gentlemen.all except that I want some of you to kick me as soon as convenient.".iVetü Yortffitar, Down Went Horse and Man. A peculiar incident which occurred last week at Westminister, on the Air Line Road, was related to a reporter for the News the other day by a gentleman who witnessed the occurrence. A man was Bitting astride a horse near tbe rail¬ road track when the train rolled up. The horse became frightened and began backing. Before tbe rider suspected danger, the animal had backed on the rotted plank covering of an old well. The planking gave way and down went horse and rider "to the bottom of the well," to the terroz. and amazement of people who happened to see the strange accident. The well was forty feet deep and the fall was terrific. An old rail was sticking upright in the mud of the bottom, and on this the horse was im¬ paled, suffering a horrible death. The man was brought out more dead than alive, it is said. He had been pinioned between tbe walls of tbe cavity and tbe struggling horse, never having left his saddle in the tumble of forty feet. It it thought that he will recover, though the escape will be hardly less than miracu¬ lous.. Greenville News, April 4. . The name of Wannamaker, the Postmaster General, has been given to five new towns in the Unitod States since he took uilico. NG, APEIL 10, 1890 LAUGHING AND CRYING. How The.ho Outward Signs of Joy and Sor¬ row A fleet Human Nn n.re. "I suppose the most promirjeut cause of laughter," says I»r. William A. Ham¬ mond, "is a sudden revolntion of the emotions.that is, a change from one emotion to another, especially when the changes are of a pleasant character. Thus, for instance, when we have been reading something rather calculated to excite grief and we come to something of a ridiculous character our tendency is to laugb, while if we had the ridiculous all through we probably would not laugh at all. Then we laugh at attempted wit rather than at true wit. True wit rather excites pleasure, but does not produce laughter, as does buffoonery. We laugh at the antics of a clown, but not at the sayings of Moliere." "What is the immediate cause of laughter ?" "It is the reflex action excited by the causes I have mentioned acting through the brain and nervous system upon the respiratory muscles, throwing them into spasmodic action. Laughter is a spasm of the respiratory muscles, accompanied by a relaxation of the muscles of the face and sometimes by the shedding of tears." "At what age do people 'laugh the moBt?" "I think it is not often the case that adult men laugh. They smile, but laughing is in greater part confined to women and children. A mere child laughs readily, and an elderly per¬ son who has long passed the middle life is very apt to laugh at Blight causes. This, however, is dangerous for them to do, as they may bring on apoplexy or drop dead from some heart disease if they in* dulge too immoderately. I have known several instances of death being brought on in this way by old people. Then per« sons of enfeebled faculties will laugh at certain things which would not excite risibility with an adult of well ordered mind. A very curious circumstance con¬ nected with laughter is that, especially with children, and sometimes with wo* men and frequently with old people, the visible expression of the emotion does not correspond with their real feeling. They laugh when surprised. I bad a patient once who laughed whenever he saw a funeial. He meant to cry rather than to laugb. There was another who laughed immoderately whenever he read the obituary columns of a newspaper. He said he did so because be felt so sor¬ ry. He would laugh from five to ten minutes at a time before he could control himself." "Do not ignorant people laugh more than the educated ?" "Yes; that is bscause they have not been so accustomed to control their emo¬ tions as are people of refined life. But the reasons for laughter are most intri¬ cate. I have a patient who laughs over a solemn French book he is reading. He laughs over in a most exciteable manner, and what he laughs at I cannot imagine." "What are the facts in regard to weep¬ ing?" "Weeping, the shedding of tears, is rarely indulged in by adult men of good mind for causes of real sorrow. Old per¬ sons, women and children, weep ; men of well ordered minds do not. Man does not weep as a rule under pain ; be may groan, but he does not shed tears, though children and women will do so often on slight occasions. "What produces weeping?" "Generally physical pain. Adults do not usually express sympathy for real suf¬ fering with tears. It is a very oariouB thing that men will witness the real suf¬ fering of a poor woman having her leg amputated in a perfectly stoical manner. They go to the theatre, and seeing a girl taking the part of oae in distress, shed tears during half the play. I have looked upon "many distressing scenes un¬ moved so far as weeping is concerned, but upon watching acted suffering I have had tears come into my eyes. A remarkable example of this principle is that of Nena Sahib, the Indian mutineer. He could never read a pitiful atory with¬ out crying over it, yet he inflicted the most horrible tortures on the men and women who fell into his bands, and seemed to enjoy their misery." "At what age do people, weep most readily ?" "The proclivity to shed tears is very well marked in old people, especially when they are suffering from some.brain disease, such as apoplexy, or have suffer¬ ed from it. They weep over trifles. I had under my care at one time one of the most eminent gentlemen of his time, who occupied a post next to the highest under the government, who would cry because his coffee was cold, and yet that man's mind in its best condition was one of the best this country ever produced. I have seen him cry for ten minutes on such occasions. He was suffering from brain disease. Some persons can't weep even when they want to, though the grief of those persons is very distressing, and is very apt to produce serious disturbance of the nervous system, and when tears do come it is a great reli'Tor them." "What effect do thu>e emotions have on people?" "I think that laughter is better for mankind than weeping. I think those amusements which tend to produce laughter, tend, other things being equal, to prolong life, while those circumstances that tend to produce weeping and emo¬ tional distress tend to shorten life." "What harai might excessive laughter cause?" "It might cause death." "What would be the affect of excessive weeping ?" "People are more apt to die from that than from laughter. Laughter kills only as it interferes with the action of the heart, or a* it would restrict the muscleB of respiration so greatly that they preBS upon the large muscles of the neck and cause apoplexy, whereas weeping pro¬ duces heart dlBeast quite often. It hi better to laugh than weep, that is cer¬ tain.". Washington Post. .A number of Pennsylvania girls have bonded together and resolved to die old maids. That is, they say they will marry no man who smokes., drinks, chews, don't go to church, or awenro. THE CLEMSON COLLEGE. Important Meeting and Action of the Ex¬ ecutive Committee. Greenville News, April 3. An important meeting of the execu¬ tive committee of the board of Trustees of the Clemson Agricultural College was held at Pendleton, Tuesday. All the members of the committee were present, as follows: Col. R. W. Simpson, Col. Jas. L. Orr, Col. D. K. Norris, Col. R. E. Bowen and Allan Johnstone. Colonel Orr returned to the city yes¬ terday, and in respose to inquiries gave a reporter for the Daily News a full state¬ ment of the business transacted by the committee. The executive committee was called together to consider and decide upon plans for the buildings for the new insti¬ tution to be erected at Fort Hill by the State's munificence. The preparation of these plans had been entrusted to Bruce & Morgan, a well known firm of Atlanta architects. Mr. Bruce, the senior mem¬ ber of the firm, was present at the meet¬ ing at Pendleton, and submitted to the committee a series of plans for their in¬ spection. No one set of these designs was chosen, but the committee made up from all the plans submitted one set which they conceive to embody the best points of all, and which they will recom¬ mend to the Trustees for adoption. The plans selected comprehend, it is believ¬ ed, all the buildings that will be needed to start the institution and furnish it ample accommodations for years to come. The committee's plans contemplate the erection of six college buildings and ten professors' bouses. Of the college buildings proper, attention will be chiefly devoted to the main building. This will be an imposing structure of modern and aristic design, embodying all the latest achievements in the construction of school buildings. It will be built of brick, three stories high, 90 feet wide by 112 feet in length. The building will contain twelve lecture rooms, two society rooms and a muslum, together with offices for the president and the treasu¬ rer. Attached to the main building will be a chapel measuring fifty by seventy- five feet. Next in importance will be the library and mechanical department building. The laboratory will be a two story struc¬ ture, fifty feet wide and eighty feet long. It will 'be modeled after tb a most ap¬ proved German laboratories and will be complete in every appointtaent. The building for the accommodation of the department of mechanical work will be two stories high, and 40 by 100 feet in dimensions. Both these structures, as well as all the other college buildings, will be built of brick. The buildings for dormitory purposes will be two in number and will furnish accommodations for 150 students. The buildings will be two stories high, and 38 feet wide by 120 feet long.. They will be of plain design but substantial con¬ struction, the idea being not to lavish expense on dormitory buildings as has been done in similar institutions, but to concentrate the chief cost on the main college building. A building for the mess hall and kitchen will be put up in connection with the dormitories. Ten professors' houses will be built, a residence for the president and another for the director of the experimental farm being included in that number. The residences will be of four and ten rooms each, of modern styles of architecture. The total cost of all these buildings, as estimated by the committee, will be $100,000. It has been found that a very large part of the material needed in the con¬ struction of the buildings can be obtain¬ ed on the spot, on the Clemson property, thereby materially cheapening the cost of buildiDg. The clay on the place has been tested by an expert and found to be excellent brick clay. Since there is an abundance of this clay on the farm, all the brick for the buildings will be made there. Examination has also developed on the place an abundant supply of good building granite, which will be used in the foundations. It is probable that the greater part of the lumber used in the buildings will be obtained from the same source, there being an abundance of tim¬ ber on the property. The architects will proceed at once to prepare the details and elevations of the plans decided on by the executive com¬ mittee. As perfected they will be sub¬ mitted to a meeting of the full board of the college trustees to be called as soon as the decision in the Clemson will case, now pending before the United States Supreme Court, is announced. The de¬ cision will probably be received within three or four weeks, at the latest, and as soon thereafter as convenient the trus¬ tees will meet, adopt the plan? and order the beginning of the actual work on the buildings. The committee on curricu¬ lum, consisting of Col. B. W. Edwards, B. K. Tillman, J. E. Tindal, M. L. Don¬ aldson and J. E, Wannamaker, is ex- peted to report at the same time that the executive committee reports on the building plans. After their session at Pendleton, Tues¬ day, the committee visited Fort Hill and located the sites for the college buildings. The main building, about which the others will be harmoniously grouped, will occupy the smooth plateau directly in front of the stately old mansion of John C. Calboun, and about 300 yards distant from it. The spot is the hight- est point for some distance around, and the ground slopes away from it gradually in every direction, making the drainage perfect. The situation is picturesque, a broad campus sloping away in front of the site of the buildings and a grove of giant oaks clustering in the rear. The old Calboun mansion, will be, of course, religiously preserved. . Among the rules of a New York livery stable where the animals of many wealthy men are kept, are the following: "No man will be employed who drinks intoxicating liquors. No man shall speak loud to any of the horses or in the stable where they are. Horsee of good blood are nervous, and loud, excited con¬ versation is felt by 6very horse who hearB it, and keeps them all nervous and unea¬ sy. No man shall use profane language in the hearing of borooe." VOLUM A Typical Brate of a Husband In Chi¬ cago, Boss Peters, one of the most prominent men on the Chicago Board of Trade, a partner of the late J. T. Lester, the stock broker, has been served with divorce pa¬ pers of an extraordinary sort by his wife, who, as Miss Marion E. Howard, of Brooklyn, wedded Peters a few years ago. The wedding was a faultless, styl-, ish affair, and seemed particular charm¬ ing by reason of the fact that both par¬ ties were young, handsome and very wealthy. Mrs. Peters' attorney is W. A. Foster, one of the lawyers in the an¬ archist and Cronin cases. Her bill char¬ ges that Peters is so engrossed with club life that he has no time ar inclination to attend the demands of home. From the time the couple commenced housekeep¬ ing a few weeks after their marriage, Mr. Peters, his wife says, has been com¬ ing home nightly from 12 to 3 a. m. in a cab intoxicated. He awakes some time before noon and wants the morning paper at once, and he has often pushed his wife out of bed and compelled her to bring him his favorite journal. Mrs. Peters is very fond of amusement, particularly theatres, but Peters, she says, goes to the play-houses alone, refusing to take her along. The last time be accompanied her anywhere was to the dog show about a year ago. Mrs. Peters' parents, she says, gave her a §3,000 trousseau, the principal dress costing $10 a yard at wholesale in New York. Mr. Peters continually avers that the costume was illy contrived, mean and penurious, and her parents should have been ashamed of it. During their entire married life, it is said, Peters did not give her over $150 worth of apparel. Mrs. Peters says her husband criticizes her manner of eating, saying she devours her food like a "hog," and that her voice is "disagreeable,'' "course" and "vulgar." The bill con¬ cludes with a statement that though Peters has failed to furnish bis wife with clothing and viciously curses at the bills of the household, he is a constant patron of the most expensive tailors in America- Caring Properly for Shoes. Shoes are one of the expenses of a toi¬ let that may be reduced only by care. A worn out shoe is no possible of renova¬ tion ; no amount of skill will make it pass as new. The only possible way to save the shoe-leather is to care properly for the shoes while wearing them. A writer in the Brooklyn Eagle makes some very wise suggestions about the proper care of shoes: "Particular attention should be paid, in every home, to the care of shoes. Where there are children there is gener¬ ally an accumulation of shoes partly worn and wholly worn, and these are all thrown in the bottom of the closet to¬ gether and must be assorted when want¬ ed. When taken out they are some¬ times moldy, because they are thrown in when damp and dirty.; Many of these are of no earthly use to their possessors, but are hoarded up with the idea that some day they will be needed ; yet rare¬ ly is thrs true, as they are put away in such a rough condition that when taken out they are generally unfit for use. Shoes that are worn regularly, if cared for, will last longer than if neglected. A French kid shoe, if kicked around on the close floor or under the bed, will not last as long or look as well as one infe¬ rior in quality if properly cared for. When shoes are taken off they should be wiped with a eof!. cloth, and after airing a little while, oiled or polished and put in a box by themselves, or a shoe-bag, and when wanted for use can be taken out ready for wear. It is not advisable to use much of the dressing so fashiona¬ ble for ladies' and children's shoes, as most of them crack the leather and ruin it. I have seen expensive shoes, the tops all cracked open in less than a month by the use of shoe dressing; therefore, unless you can find one that has been tested, it is better to use a little sweet oil colored with black ink and rubbed well in. For some years past I have used a polish that has con¬ siderable glycerine in it, and found that it preserves the shoes wonderfully, always keeping them new looking. If a lift begins to wear off the heel, I have it attended to at once, and never take off the shoes without wiping all the dust from the crevices and putting them care¬ fully away. The result is I have worn one pair of boots every day for one year, and another year for a house shoe. I have a pair of boots that were made to order, for which I paid $8. I have worn them every day for two winters, or rather from October to May, and shall wear them another, and perhaps two seasons more. In the spring I rub them with oil and put them away carefully, and in the fall they look as good as new. Never wear a shoe unbuttoned, if you care to have it shapely. Never put wet shoes to the fire to dry, as it hardens them and makes them difficult to put on. When taken off the foot wet, smooth into as good shape as possible and rub them as dry as you can with an old soft cloth, then put them in a medium piace to dry. If your shoes get muddy, wash them off with cold water and rub dry with a soft cloth. This can be done quickly, so that the leather may not get wet through, then pull into shape and leave standing until quite dry. After this use a little good polish and the shoes will be as fresh as if quite new." How's This? We offer One Hundred Dollars reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by taking Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Props., Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and be¬ lieve him perfectly honorable in all buai- ness transactions and financially r.ble to carry out any obligation made by that firm. West & Truax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O. Waldixg, Kikxax & Marvin, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, 0. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mu¬ cous surfaces of the system. Price 75c por bottle. Sold by all Druggists. E XXIV..NO. 40. ALL SORTS OF PARAGRAPHS, . A miser died at Fort Scott with $27,000 on his person. . The fruit in Illinois is declared to be uninjured by the freeze. . It is said that Robert Ingersoll has shown signs of conversion to Christiani¬ ty. . A Mormon settlement is thriving at the foot of Pilot Mountain, North Carolina. . There are two rights a woman is slow to claim: the right to an old garter and the right to an old paper buc- tle. . Every man is the architect of his own fortune. And it's lucky for the most of us that there is no building inspector around. . Two boys playing near Wichita, Kansas, set the prairie on lire just for fun. The loss to the neighborhood was §150,000 to $200,000. . It is not a bad plan to think to yourself what yon would do in case yon were awakened at night to find your house on fire. . A New French invention is a smoke bomb intended to be fired into the ranks of the enemy who uses smokeless powder and obscures his view. . "I thought you were going to marry Miss Goldthwaite." "Her family were all opposed to it." "Well, but if the girl herself." "I said all the family. She was one of 'em." . "One of our delinquent subscribers," writes a Georgia editor, "has asked us to change his address. But we have not seen a dollar in six weeks, and can't change anything." . "George," said Mrs. Gazley re¬ proachfully, "before we married you al¬ ways insisted on carrying my packages for me." "Yes," replied George, "but I didn't have to pay for them then.".N. Y. Sun. . A woman who has been living in abject poverty for a number of years in Philadelphia, has just learned that her husband whom she had mourned as dead is still living in luaho, and has amassed a fortune. . It took just seventeen days for Geo. Macomb, a Michigander, to bury his wife, put up a headstone, repaint his house, and marry a second time. What a bless¬ ing it was that God took her away from such a man. . It is said that all the Presidents of the United States except General Harri¬ son had blue eyes. Socrates, Shakes¬ peare, Loche, Bacon, Milton, Goethe, Franklin, Napoleon and Humboildt, all had blue eyes, . Sam Lee, a Chinese laundryman, of Dubukue, Iowa, was killed by his assist¬ ant, Frank Foak, who, when a crowd rushed in, wrote on a piece of paper: "He owe me three months' wages, I shoot him; I die too," and then shot himself. . A bill 400 feet high, composed of copper, silver and gold, has been dkcov- ered in the Mexican State of Chiapas. A river bo wing on one side of the mound has largely uncovered the deposit, and many hundred thousand tons of ore are in sight. . From coal is obtained the means of producing over four hundred shades of colors, a great variety of perfumes, two explosive agents, various acids and med¬ icines, insecticides, salts, saccharine, fruit flavors, the bitter taste of beer, asphaltum, lubricating oils, and varnish. . At the table of a well-known Meth¬ odist minister the subjects of widows was under discussion, when one of the sons inquired, "What is a grass widow?" "Why, Harry," responded the other, "don't you know ? A grass widow is a woman whose husband died with hay fe¬ ver. . A prize of fifty dollars for the best essay on the relation of the temperance question to political economy, has been offered for the competition of college un¬ der graduates by the National W. T. C. U. department of organization and in¬ struction in the higher institutions of learning. . A conjugal dialogue: "Before our marriage," complained the wife, "you assured me that my pathway through life should be strewn with roses, whereas I spend my evenings mending stockings." "Well, darling, you know you couldn't walk on roses, barefooted, on account of the thornB." . Job Biggs, the mail carrier on the Campbell, N. 0., route, delivers his mail to the offices on foot, walking twenty-four miles one day and thirty-one miles next day. During a year he steps over 8,454 miles, and at this rate would cover the circuit of the globe in three years, ex¬ clusive of Sundays. . Kansas City, Mo., has been invaded by a new religious sect. A man named Silas Wilcox is the originator of this body, and be claims that blood should be used for healing purposes. He quotes the Bible as his authority for the state¬ ment. In one house two little emaciated children were found by inspectors. Scars covering both arms showed how often they had been bled. A consumptive father lay almost dead on the bed. He confessed to the drinking of his children's blood to save his own life. . Considerable importance is attached to the formal opening of the factory of the American Pine Fibre company, at Cronley, near Wilmington, N. C, which took place last week in the presence of a large number of interested spectators. The company is utilizing the leaves of the longleaf pine for commercial pur- poses,and the industry promises to become an important one. The origin of the company was in the operations of the jute trust. A substitute for jute became a necessity, and one of the substitutes discovered was pine fibre matting. Bag¬ ging, matting, carpet lining, etc., will be made out of the pine leaves. The mate¬ rial is plentiful, and the demand for the product is great. Confirmed. The favorable impression produced on the' first appearance of the agreeable liquid fruit remedy Syrup of Figs a few years ago has been more than confirmed by the pleasant experience of all who have used Jit, and the success of the proprietors andlmanufacturers of the California Fig Syrup Company.

Transcript of Anderson intelligencer.(Anderson, S.C.) 1890-04-10.€¦ · SYLVESTER BLECKLEY CO. l%0HE}r$'GoLUMN,...

Page 1: Anderson intelligencer.(Anderson, S.C.) 1890-04-10.€¦ · SYLVESTER BLECKLEY CO. l%0HE}r$'GoLUMN, *^All communications!intended for this Columnshouldbeaddressedto D. H. RUSSELL,SchoolCommissioner,Ander¬

BY CLLNKSCALES & LANGSTON.

THE NEW BLOOD MEDICINE.Compound Syrup of Red Clover!

WE wish especially to call the attention of Physiciansto the above remedy, and ask that they examine into itsmerits before making their prescriptions for the usualSpring disorders. We would be glad to furnish the formala for this preparation to any Physician who will callat onr Store. This Syrup combines, in an agreeableform, the medicinal properties of the more recently dis¬covered and most approved Alterative, Tonic aod BloodPurifying remedies of the vegetable kingdom. It will befound much superior to the Blood Purifiers usually sold,and very much cheaper.

ORB & SLOAN , ANDERSON, S.G.

SULLIVAN MANUFACTURING CO.HEW MACHINERY,

NEW PLANT THROUGHOUT,A FULL STOCK OF LUMBER, dressed or undressed,

SHINGLES, LATHS, WOOD-WORK, andBUILDING MATERIAL of all kinds.

ALL ORDERS EXECUTED PROMPTLY.

CAR LOAD OF DOORS, SASH AND BLINDS,To t>e sold at Bottom Figures.

S&* Oar Works are conveniently located near the C. & G. Depot, with Mr.JESSE M. SMITH Superintendent.

COTTON PLANTEES.

The Brooks Cotton Planter.Also, the justly popular

ELLIOTT COTTON PLANTER.Take your choice between these two Planten. They are the best on the mar¬

ket. No other Planters can compare with them. Remember that we are selling.

-The Best Side Harrows on the Market.Simple, strong, durable and cheap.

Headquarters on Plows, Hoes and Agricultu¬ral Implements of all Mnds,

§ SULLIVAN HARDWARE CO.

IMMENSE DAILY ARRIVALSOP HEW, PRETTY, AND

Fashionable Goods-AT-

Sylvester Bleckley Go's !

NOTIONS,In Endless Varieties.

LACES, EMBROIDERIES AND RUOHINGS.Large Assortment,

Best Selections, andVery Cheap.

The Latest Designs in Van DykeAnd Directoire Styles.IN OUR

DRESS GOODS DEPARTMENTYou can find all kinds, shades and patterns, to suit

everybody, withJFrimmings to match, andat prices to enable all to buy. We

cordially

IUYITE. L^IDIESOf the County and Oily to call and examine our Goods,

promising them POLITE ATTENTIONAND FAIR DEALING.

WE HAVE A SPLENDID STOCK OF

HUES, IÜLES, BUGGIES, WAGONS ill HARNESS,Of all descriptions for sale, and can fit you up with anything

in this line. Don't buy without calling atBLECKLEY'S STABLBS.

WE HAVE ON HAND A GOOD STOCK OF THE

DOWLAW COTTON PLANTERS,The price on which has been reduced, so that all can

bny. Also, a good stock of

EUREKA HARROWS,Beut made.

HOES, PLOWS, and everything you want.

Yours, very truly,

SYLVESTER BLECKLEY CO.

l%0HE}r$'GoLUMN,*^ All communications! intended for

this Column should be addressed to D. H.RUSSELL, School Commissioner, Ander¬son, S. c.

Siabtown is and baa been for years an

educational landmark in tbe County.Tbe people tbere take a juat pride intbeir ancient reputation for school facili¬ties, and always keep a good school insuccessful operation. This year tbeschool is in charge of Miss Mary B jggs, ateacher "to tbe manor born/' and one

who has bad several years' experience inthe work, first as assistant and now as

principal. We spent two very pleasantboars with her school, and greatly enjoy*ed the readiness with which her pupilsengaged in their exercises. Everythingin her school was able to read and. write,even the very yonag ones, and the more

advanced showed progress in tbeir stud¬ies, affording proof of a faithful and con¬scientious teacher. Years ago, in tbe"Auld Lang Syne," Rev. John L. Ken¬nedy, familiarly, known by the boys as

"old boss," held sway in the walls of oldThalian Academy, and from far and near

tbe youth of the land flocked to hisschool, and from tbe classic precincts ofthe old Academy many boys have goneforth to do honor to tbeir preceptor, andshed lustre upon tbeir country. And to¬day wherever th ;se boy^meet and claspbands and recount tbe incidents of theiracademic career, tbere is a fellow feeliDgamong them which makes them all feelakin, and not a man of tbem but pays a

tribute to tbe memory of father Kenne¬dy. And they are planning now to rear a

abaft to his memory amid the scenes

where hin life work was done, and more

than three hundred of them have con¬

tributed tbeir mite to erect this shaft,until now the fund .on band amounts tothree hundred dollars. But while allthis is timely and appropriate, no marbleahaft can perpetuate bis memory as doestbe monument erected and forever en¬

shrined in tbe loyal hearts of more thanthree thousand students who hc.ve goneout from under bis tutelage into the va¬

rious wall's of life.

Over into Brushy Creek and tbe firstschool wo came to is at Mt. Fisgah,taught by Miss Jennie Williams, whohas recently come to ns from Pickens.We noted quite a difference in thisschool, in the fact thait last year therewere quite a number who could neitherread nor write, while this year nearly allwere able fio do something at both, andtbe teacher assured us she was makingstrenuous efforts along that line. Eskewsowed some good seed, and did some

good work there, and we take it thatMiss Williams is carrying it on.

Bayond Pisgah, a short distance, we

came to tbe Maple Springs coloredschool, taught by Sarah Evans. Thisschool was small, and from what we saw

and heard, we should say tbe teacher was

small, too, which may account for. thesize of the school.

'«¦»¦ -

At Mountain Springs we found our

brother, Edwaid King, at the fore. Thisplace has been without school privilegesalmost for several terms. One or twoshort summer terms have been taughtthere, but the neighborhood, feeling tbeneed of something more, have recentlyput up a good building and employedMr. King for a ten month's term, andthere we found him earnestly striving todo his whole duty, and we feel sure thatbis work will tell when tbe results are

footed up. Mr. King has been out oftbe school room for some time, but iszealously trying to "catch on" to the edu¬cational progress and spirit of the age,and is bound to succeed.

We did not visit tbe Saluda and Be-thesda school*, for the reason that MissStenhouse, the teacher of the formerschool, had written to inform us that shehad been compelled to close on accountof continued ill health.. We greatly re¬

gretted not being able to meet her in herschool, as we greatly enjoy inspectingthe work of an accomplished teacher,and Buch wo take her to be from pastobservation. At Betheeda they are run¬

ning no school, for the reason that thecommunity is engaged in putting up a

concrete school building, and propose tohave themse lves laid off into a separateSchool District for the purpose of estab¬lishing a high grade permanent school.This is well, and speaks well for tbe edu¬cational Bpirit of tbe community, and we

wish tbem a hearty good speed in tbework. Wo have promised ourself an¬

other visit tc that community this spring.From this place we drove to Cedar

Wreath, to pay our respects to Miss Jen¬nie iCosamond. Through cold, rain andmud the drive was anything but a pleas¬ant one, but once inside the building, theair of busy work pervading the room, andthe evidence of good work having beendone in the past cheered us, aud droveaway all thoughts ol the elements outside.Miss Jennie reports her school not as

large as usual, but in spite of the weatherthree-fourths of tbem were present forduty. Having been at work here ,forseveral successive terms, her work istelling on her pupils, and it is to behoped that faithful and conscientious as

she is, her people will keep her it it foryears to come.

REPORT OF MISS JENNIE BOASAHOND'SSCHOOL AT CEDAR WREATH.

first class.Master Claude Rosamond, 931. Not

absent in two months.Miss Mamie Williams, 83. Not absent

in one month.second class.

Maater Lawrence Meritt, 80. Not ab'sent in one month.

third class.

Little MisB Minnie Meritt, 75. Reci¬tation and Deportment.Hoping you will visit us again, I am

Very truly,Jennie Eosamond.

. The greatest elevation ever attainedby a balloonist was 87,000 feet, or aboutseven miles. Tbe ascent was madeSeptember 5, 18C2, at Wolvflrhampton,England

iNDEKSON, S. C.f 5BILL ARF'S PHILOSOPHY.

Atlanta CoiutUttiion.At last the graves of the Georgia sol¬

diers who fell at Frederickeburg are

marked with marble head-stones, withname and company and regiment, chisel*ed deep into the rock. Mrs. Barney ishappy, and so are her noble companions.the ladies of the Memorial Society.With them it haB been a labor of love-love that never grows weary. Only a

few months ago they made their appealto Georgia, and right well has Georgiaresponded. Two hundred and three ofher patriot boys are Bleeping there.faraway from home and kindred.kindredwhose loving hands would have broughtsweet flowers in their season and kept theturf green upon their graves, and wateredthem with tears. But loving hearta were

there, and those graves have not beenneglected. Woman can ever be trustedto perform the sweetest, tendereat, holiestduties that belong to oar nature. Thepoet says,

Man's inhumanity to man,Makes countless thousands mourn,

But woman's hnmanity makes as manythousands rejoice. Mrs, Barney is a no¬

ble Virginia woman.one who wentthrough the war like a soldier, and was

always on duty.duty to the sick and thewounded and the dying.duty in the hos¬pital and out of it.duty in the sacrificeshe made of personal comfort and per¬sonal security.duty to Georgians andTexaus, and all, as well as to Virginians,and ever since the war she has continuedon duty.duty to the dead who sleep near

her home. Not a soldier under the sodat Frederickuburg, but would eay, if bisspirit could speak to us, 'she is my moth¬er and my sister.' Tbr.t bloodstainedsoil has always been very dear to me, forour Tom Cobb fell there. Tom Cobb, thebeat loved son of Georgia; the pride ofall our people; the Christian hero; thefriend of humanity; the learned andbrilliant and noble gentleman. He was

in his prime of manhood and was myideal of a noble man.

Mrs. Barney writes: "If I could onlysee all tbese dear graves marked withmarble headstones, I would die happy.We must hurry and get through thiswork before the veterans are all dead, forI fear that the next generation may betoo busy to think of them. There are

1,800 graves here, graves of eouthernpatriots.and none are permanentlymarked, except those from Georgia. Ifeel Bure that the other States would re¬

spond if there was some one to move

them. Virginia has done very well.She has sent us $450; Texas has sent$142; Maryland, $20; Florida, $8; NorthCarolina, $6; South Carolina, $2, Arkan¬sas, $2 and Tennessee $2. I know thatthere isjuBt as much patriotism in thehearts of those people as there i'b inGeorgia, and all tbat is wanted is forsome good man or woman to awaken it.The marble headstones that you sent us

are beautiful, the work well done and thelettering perfect. They were escortedfrom the depot to the cemetery by a guardof honor .the Maury Camp of Confeder¬ate VeteranB, under command of CaptainLee, a brother of Fitz Hugh Lee and a

nephew of Robert E. Lee. With theirown soldier hands they took them fromthe wagons and placed them in -thegraves. It was a silent, impressive cere¬

mony, for.Not a drum was heard, nor a funeral

note.'The band very kindly offered their servi¬ces, but we thought best to dispense withit. Georgia's patriotism shall be knownand published, and perhaps the otherStates will soon awake and emulate herexample."

Yes, tbey will.I know they will if thewomen will take bold of the work.There is not a town or village in any

of those States that would not willinglyBend ten dollars if some good womanwould Bee two other good women andsay: "Now let us go round this morningand ask for a half dollar or a quarter fromevery man we meet. Let us be in a hur¬ry, and be in earnest. We are very lateabout this thing, but not too late. Wecan raise ten dollars in an hour." If theladies will do this, tbey can raise a

thousand dollars in a week. It will nottake that much from each State. Perhapsfive hundred will dö, but those good la¬dies have long since laid the foundationof a monument to the unknown andunrecorded dead, and they would rejoiceto get money to complete it. But let us

see to the graves of the known and therecorded dead, and if any money is left,it will not be lost or misspent. The cityof Macon raised one hundred and fiftydollars for the graves at Johnson's island,and just so the cities of Nashville andChatlanooga and Memphis and Birming¬ham and Anniston and Montgomery andMeridian and Jackson and others, stillfarther west, would gladly do likewise topreserve the graves of their own soldiers.Patriotism demands it, and so does grati¬tude and State pride and southern pride.Let every town and village send five or

ten dollars, and the good work is done.Get the editor to help. Publish a noticethat you are going to call next day on

everybody for half a dollar, and say youare obliged to have it and will stay untilyou get it. A man dunned me on thestreet the other day for six dollars, and Itold him I would see about it, but tbat Ihad to go to the barber's shop just then.Well, he said, he was in no particularhurry and could wait that long, and so

he followed me and took a seat andwatched until the barber got throughwith me, and of course, I bad to go andhunt up the money to get rid of him.That's the way to do Borne folks. Sendthe money to Mrs. J. N. Barney.shewill find the marble and furnish thenames of the dead. We bad so manymarble companies in our State tbat we

preferred to have Georgia marble over

Georgia graves, and so I interviewed themand found tbem more than liberal. Tbeyare all northern men, but they have do¬mesticated and affiliated and acclimatedwith us, and they like us and we likethem. I made a contract with GeorgeB. Sickles & Co., of Täte, in PickenaCounty. Mr. Sickles fought us for fouryears just as hard as he could, but hewon't do so any more. He gave us a

beautiful polished marble thirty incheslong, twelve inches wide nnd one and a

CHUESDAY MOENIhalf inches thick for one dollar, and thatis really less than its cost. His contri¬bution amounted to over one hundred dol¬lars in the discount that was made uponthe marble and the lettering.Now let every good mau stop his work

a minute and say, "I will go one dollaron one grave, I will Bure," and if he can'tfind any woman going around for themoney let him seed a money order or a

dollar bill to Mre. Barney. She will getit. Tbe mail won't be robbed.not a

cent of it will go to feed or fatten any¬body. Tbe are no salaries, to pay. It isall woman's work, and it ia free work.Mrs. Barney received a letter from Phil¬adelphia, inclosing twenty dollars, andall that was written was: "A boy whofought in blue sends this to preserve thegraves of the boys who fought in gray."Wasn't that nice and kind? I wouldlike to nabor with that man. Would toGod that we were a nation of friends.The northern people who have come

south will respond willingly to this work.I know that they will. Why Bhouldn'tthey? We are taxed every day andhave been for twenty-five years topreserve tbe graves of tbeir dead soldiers,and to pension the survivors and all theirkindred. The annual pension bill ofninety-eight millions has just passed, andnot a dollar of it will come to our people.We fought for our convictions and theyfought for theirs, and that is all there isin it, or about it. We are exactly even

in patriotism, and ought to be even ineverything else, but we are not.But tbey are coming down to live with

us and are coming fast, and we are har¬monizing with them. In a few years1 hey will have as much to do with therace problem as we will, and then Mr.Ingalls, and Mr. Cook, and all their sortwill have to stand aside. But I am con¬

cerned for the dead now, the living can

take care of themselves.Bill A p.p.

A Curious Coincidence.

"I used to travel around the countrywith a patent hay fork," said the manwith the green patch on his left eye, as itcame his turn to tell a story. "I am notgoing to say anything about that patentmore than that no farmer ever got anybenefit from it. What I wish to bringout is what might be called a curiouscoincidence, and one that I havekicked myself over a dozen times.

"It was in this way," be continued, as

be got settled back on his seat. "Far¬mers have their weak spots the same as

other folks. You can hit some of themby.praising their buildings, others by ad¬miring tbeir horses, others again, throughtheir hogs or calves. I had a way of hit¬ting them all, and it worked to my greatprofit every time. When I got up in themorning, after staying all night witha farmer, I got off something as

follows:"I had a very curious dream last

night. I dreamed that I was digging outbehind your barn, just on a line with a

big knot bole in tbe sixth board from thewest end, and I unearthed a tin box con¬

taining two thousand dollars in green¬backs. The dream was so vivid that Ialmost feel the box in my hand. There'snothing in a dream, of course, but Inever bad one that seemed so real.""Mind you, I had taken notice of the

knot hole the evening before. SometimesI fixed a place behind the barn andsometimes near a stump, or so manypaceB from a certain tree or straw-stack;bat it was all settled on beforehand. Itwasn't one time in twenty that a farmerwould chaige me for my lodgings aftergiving him this dream. It hit urn' plumpcentre, and they were only too anxious toget me out of the way so they could be¬gin digging.""Go on," said several voices, as he made

a long pause."Well, one morning, after lodging with

a farmer all night, and getting his notefor fifty dollars for a hayfork, I relatedthe usual dream in the usual way. Thistime it was buried treasure beneath a

Btump near his barn. I saw that be was

hard hit at once, and he left me eatingbreakfast and went down to dig. I was

chuckling over bis greenness, when hecame walking in with a tin box under bisarm.""You don't say ?""But I do, and It was a box be had dug

out a foot or so below the surface. It wasbroken open right then and tbere, andmay I be drowned for a yaller dog if thecontents didn't pan out $4,625 in just as

good greenbacks as ever you Baw.""But.but.""There were no buts about it. He

found the money and kept it, as was hisright, and no one ever came to claim it.ThiB two dollar bill was a part of it. Hegave it to me as a reward for my dream,and I am keeping it as a relic to showwhat a fool a man can make of himself.That's all, gentlemen.all except that Iwant some of you to kick me as soon asconvenient.".iVetü Yortffitar,

Down Went Horse and Man.

A peculiar incident which occurredlast week at Westminister, on the AirLine Road, was related to a reporter forthe News the other day by a gentlemanwho witnessed the occurrence. A man

was Bitting astride a horse near tbe rail¬road track when the train rolled up.The horse became frightened and beganbacking. Before tbe rider suspecteddanger, the animal had backed on therotted plank covering of an old well.The planking gave way and down wenthorse and rider "to the bottom of thewell," to the terroz. and amazement ofpeople who happened to see the strangeaccident. The well was forty feet deepand the fall was terrific. An old railwas sticking upright in the mud of thebottom, and on this the horse was im¬paled, suffering a horrible death. Theman was brought out more dead thanalive, it is said. He had been pinionedbetween tbe walls of tbe cavity and tbestruggling horse, never having left hissaddle in the tumble of forty feet. It itthought that he will recover, though theescape will be hardly less than miracu¬lous.. Greenville News, April 4.

. The name of Wannamaker, thePostmaster General, has been given tofive new towns in the Unitod States sincehe took uilico.

NG, APEIL 10, 1890LAUGHING AND CRYING.

How The.ho Outward Signs of Joy and Sor¬row A fleet Human Nn n.re.

"I suppose the most promirjeut cause

of laughter," says I»r. William A. Ham¬mond, "is a sudden revolntion of theemotions.that is, a change from one

emotion to another, especially when thechanges are of a pleasant character.Thus, for instance, when we have beenreading something rather calculated toexcite grief and we come to something ofa ridiculous character our tendency is tolaugb, while if we had the ridiculous allthrough we probably would not laugh atall. Then we laugh at attempted witrather than at true wit. True wit ratherexcites pleasure, but does not producelaughter, as does buffoonery. We laughat the antics of a clown, but not at thesayings of Moliere.""What is the immediate cause of

laughter ?""It is the reflex action excited by the

causes I have mentioned acting throughthe brain and nervous system upon therespiratory muscles, throwing them intospasmodic action. Laughter is a spasmof the respiratory muscles, accompaniedby a relaxation of the muscles of the faceand sometimes by the shedding of tears.""At what age do people 'laugh the

moBt?""I think it is not often the case that

adult men laugh. They smile, butlaughing is in greater part confinedto women and children. A mere

child laughs readily, and an elderly per¬son who has long passed the middle lifeis very apt to laugh at Blight causes.

This, however, is dangerous for them to

do, as they may bring on apoplexy or dropdead from some heart disease if they in*dulge too immoderately. I have knownseveral instances of death being broughton in this way by old people. Then per«sons of enfeebled faculties will laugh atcertain things which would not exciterisibility with an adult of well orderedmind. A very curious circumstance con¬

nected with laughter is that, especiallywith children, and sometimes with wo*

men and frequently with old people, thevisible expression of the emotion doesnot correspond with their real feeling.They laugh when surprised. I bad a

patient once who laughed whenever hesaw a funeial. He meant to cry ratherthan to laugb. There was another wholaughed immoderately whenever he readthe obituary columns of a newspaper.He said he did so because be felt so sor¬

ry. He would laugh from five to tenminutes at a time before he could controlhimself.""Do not ignorant people laugh more

than the educated ?""Yes; that is bscause they have not

been so accustomed to control their emo¬tions as are people of refined life. Butthe reasons for laughter are most intri¬cate. I have a patient who laughs over

a solemn French book he is reading.He laughs over in a most exciteablemanner, and what he laughs at I cannotimagine.""What are the facts in regard to weep¬

ing?""Weeping, the shedding of tears, is

rarely indulged in by adult men of goodmind for causes of real sorrow. Old per¬sons, women and children, weep ; men ofwell ordered minds do not. Man doesnot weep as a rule under pain ; be maygroan, but he does not shed tears, thoughchildren and women will do so often on

slight occasions."What produces weeping?""Generally physical pain. Adults do

not usually express sympathy for real suf¬fering with tears. It is a very oariouBthing that men will witness the real suf¬fering of a poor woman having her legamputated in a perfectly stoical manner.

They go to the theatre, and seeing a

girl taking the part of oae in distress,shed tears during half the play. I havelooked upon "many distressing scenes un¬

moved so far as weeping is concerned,but upon watching acted suffering I havehad tears come into my eyes. Aremarkable example of this principle isthat of Nena Sahib, the Indian mutineer.He could never read a pitiful atory with¬out crying over it, yet he inflicted themost horrible tortures on the men andwomen who fell into his bands, andseemed to enjoy their misery.""At what age do people, weep most

readily ?""The proclivity to shed tears is very

well marked in old people, especiallywhen they are suffering from some.braindisease, such as apoplexy, or have suffer¬ed from it. They weep over trifles. Ihad under my care at one time one ofthe most eminent gentlemen of his time,who occupied a post next to the highestunder the government, who would crybecause his coffee was cold, and yet thatman's mind in its best condition was one

of the best this country ever produced.I have seen him cry for ten minutes on

such occasions. He was suffering frombrain disease. Some persons can't weepeven when they want to, though the griefof those persons is very distressing, andis very apt to produce serious disturbanceof the nervous system, and when tears docome it is a great reli'Tor them.""What effect do thu>e emotions have

on people?""I think that laughter is better for

mankind than weeping. I think thoseamusements which tend to producelaughter, tend, other things being equal,to prolong life, while those circumstancesthat tend to produce weeping and emo¬

tional distress tend to shorten life.""What harai might excessive laughter

cause?""It might cause death.""What would be the affect of excessive

weeping ?""People are more apt to die from that

than from laughter. Laughter kills onlyas it interferes with the action of theheart, or a* it would restrict the muscleBof respiration so greatly that they preBSupon the large muscles of the neck andcause apoplexy, whereas weeping pro¬duces heart dlBeast quite often. It hibetter to laugh than weep, that is cer¬

tain.". Washington Post.

.A number of Pennsylvania girls havebonded together and resolved to die oldmaids. That is, they say they will marryno man who smokes., drinks, chews, don'tgo to church, or awenro.

THE CLEMSON COLLEGE.Important Meeting and Action of the Ex¬

ecutive Committee.

Greenville News, April 3.

An important meeting of the execu¬

tive committee of the board of Trusteesof the Clemson Agricultural College was

held at Pendleton, Tuesday. All themembers of the committee were present,as follows: Col. R. W. Simpson, Col.Jas. L. Orr, Col. D. K. Norris, Col. R.E. Bowen and Allan Johnstone.

Colonel Orr returned to the city yes¬terday, and in respose to inquiries gave a

reporter for the Daily News a full state¬ment of the business transacted by thecommittee.The executive committee was called

together to consider and decide uponplans for the buildings for the new insti¬tution to be erected at Fort Hill by theState's munificence. The preparation ofthese plans had been entrusted to Bruce& Morgan, a well known firm of Atlantaarchitects. Mr. Bruce, the senior mem¬ber of the firm, was present at the meet¬ing at Pendleton, and submitted to thecommittee a series of plans for their in¬spection. No one set of these designswas chosen, but the committee made upfrom all the plans submitted one setwhich they conceive to embody the bestpoints of all, and which they will recom¬

mend to the Trustees for adoption. Theplans selected comprehend, it is believ¬ed, all the buildings that will be neededto start the institution and furnish itample accommodations for years to come.The committee's plans contemplate

the erection of six college buildings andten professors' bouses. Of the collegebuildings proper, attention will be chieflydevoted to the main building. This willbe an imposing structure of modern andaristic design, embodying all the latestachievements in the construction ofschool buildings. It will be built ofbrick, three stories high, 90 feet wide by112 feet in length. The building willcontain twelve lecture rooms, two societyrooms and a muslum, together withoffices for the president and the treasu¬rer. Attached to the main building willbe a chapel measuring fifty by seventy-five feet.Next in importance will be the library

and mechanical department building.The laboratory will be a two story struc¬ture, fifty feet wide and eighty feet long.It will 'be modeled after tb a most ap¬proved German laboratories and will becomplete in every appointtaent. Thebuilding for the accommodation of thedepartment of mechanical work will betwo stories high, and 40 by 100 feet indimensions. Both these structures, as

well as all the other college buildings,will be built of brick.The buildings for dormitory purposes

will be two in number and will furnishaccommodations for 150 students. Thebuildings will be two stories high, and38 feet wide by 120 feet long.. They willbe of plain design but substantial con¬

struction, the idea being not to lavishexpense on dormitory buildings as hasbeen done in similar institutions, but toconcentrate the chief cost on the maincollege building. A building for themess hall and kitchen will be put up inconnection with the dormitories.Ten professors' houses will be built, a

residence for the president and anotherfor the director of the experimental farmbeing included in that number. Theresidences will be of four and ten rooms

each, of modern styles of architecture.The total cost of all these buildings, as

estimated by the committee, will be$100,000.

It has been found that a very largepart of the material needed in the con¬

struction of the buildings can be obtain¬ed on the spot, on the Clemson property,thereby materially cheapening the costof buildiDg. The clay on the place hasbeen tested by an expert and found to beexcellent brick clay. Since there is anabundance of this clay on the farm, allthe brick for the buildings will be madethere. Examination has also developedon the place an abundant supply of goodbuilding granite, which will be used inthe foundations. It is probable that thegreater part of the lumber used in thebuildings will be obtained from the samesource, there being an abundance of tim¬ber on the property.The architects will proceed at once to

prepare the details and elevations of theplans decided on by the executive com¬

mittee. As perfected they will be sub¬mitted to a meeting of the full board ofthe college trustees to be called as soon

as the decision in the Clemson will case,now pending before the United StatesSupreme Court, is announced. The de¬cision will probably be received withinthree or four weeks, at the latest, and as

soon thereafter as convenient the trus¬tees will meet, adopt the plan? and orderthe beginning of the actual work on thebuildings. The committee on curricu¬lum, consisting of Col. B. W. Edwards,B. K. Tillman, J. E. Tindal, M. L. Don¬aldson and J. E, Wannamaker, is ex-peted to report at the same time thatthe executive committee reports on thebuilding plans.

After their session at Pendleton, Tues¬day, the committee visited Fort Hill andlocated the sites for the college buildings.The main building, about which theothers will be harmoniously grouped,will occupy the smooth plateau directlyin front of the stately old mansion ofJohn C. Calboun, and about 300 yardsdistant from it. The spot is the hight-est point for some distance around, andthe ground slopes away from it graduallyin every direction, making the drainageperfect. The situation is picturesque, a

broad campus sloping away in front ofthe site of the buildings and a grove ofgiant oaks clustering in the rear. Theold Calboun mansion, will be, of course,religiously preserved.. Among the rules of a New York

livery stable where the animals of manywealthy men are kept, are the following:"No man will be employed who drinksintoxicating liquors. No man shallspeak loud to any of the horses or in thestable where they are. Horsee of goodblood are nervous, and loud, excited con¬

versation is felt by 6very horse who hearBit, and keeps them all nervous and unea¬

sy. No man shall use profane languagein the hearing of borooe."

VOLUMA Typical Brate of a Husband In Chi¬

cago,

Boss Peters, one of the most prominentmen on the Chicago Board of Trade, a

partner of the late J. T. Lester, the stockbroker, has been served with divorce pa¬pers of an extraordinary sort by hiswife, who, as Miss Marion E. Howard,of Brooklyn, wedded Peters a few yearsago. The wedding was a faultless, styl-,ish affair, and seemed particular charm¬ing by reason of the fact that both par¬ties were young, handsome and verywealthy. Mrs. Peters' attorney is W.A. Foster, one of the lawyers in the an¬

archist and Cronin cases. Her bill char¬ges that Peters is so engrossed with clublife that he has no time ar inclination toattend the demands of home. From thetime the couple commenced housekeep¬ing a few weeks after their marriage,Mr. Peters, his wife says, has been com¬ing home nightly from 12 to 3 a. m. in a

cab intoxicated. He awakes some timebefore noon and wants the morning paperat once, and he has often pushed his wifeout of bed and compelled her to bringhim his favorite journal. Mrs. Peters isvery fond of amusement, particularlytheatres, but Peters, she says, goes to theplay-houses alone, refusing to take heralong. The last time be accompaniedher anywhere was to the dog show abouta year ago. Mrs. Peters' parents, shesays, gave her a §3,000 trousseau, theprincipal dress costing $10 a yard atwholesale in New York. Mr. Peterscontinually avers that the costume was

illy contrived, mean and penurious, andher parents should have been ashamed ofit. During their entire married life, itis said, Peters did not give her over $150worth of apparel. Mrs. Peters says herhusband criticizes her manner of eating,saying she devours her food like a "hog,"and that her voice is "disagreeable,''"course" and "vulgar." The bill con¬cludes with a statement that thoughPeters has failed to furnish bis wife withclothing and viciously curses at the billsof the household, he is a constant patronof the most expensive tailors in America-

Caring Properly for Shoes.

Shoes are one of the expenses of a toi¬let that may be reduced only by care. Aworn out shoe is no possible of renova¬

tion ; no amount of skill will make itpass as new. The only possible way tosave the shoe-leather is to care properlyfor the shoes while wearing them. Awriter in the Brooklyn Eagle makes some

very wise suggestions about the propercare of shoes:

"Particular attention should be paid,in every home, to the care of shoes.Where there are children there is gener¬ally an accumulation of shoes partlyworn and wholly worn, and these are allthrown in the bottom of the closet to¬

gether and must be assorted when want¬ed. When taken out they are some¬

times moldy, because they are thrownin when damp and dirty.; Many of theseare of no earthly use to their possessors,but are hoarded up with the idea thatsome day they will be needed ; yet rare¬

ly is thrs true, as they are put away insuch a rough condition that when takenout they are generally unfit for use.

Shoes that are worn regularly, if caredfor, will last longer than if neglected.A French kid shoe, if kicked around on

the close floor or under the bed, will notlast as long or look as well as one infe¬rior in quality if properly cared for.When shoes are taken off they should bewiped with a eof!. cloth, and after airinga little while, oiled or polished and putin a box by themselves, or a shoe-bag,and when wanted for use can be takenout ready for wear. It is not advisableto use much of the dressing so fashiona¬ble for ladies' and children's shoes, as

most of them crack the leather and ruinit. I have seen expensive shoes, thetops all cracked open in less than a

month by the use of shoe dressing;therefore, unless you can find one thathas been tested, it is better to use a littlesweet oil colored with black inkand rubbed well in. For some yearspast I have used a polish that has con¬

siderable glycerine in it, and found thatit preserves the shoes wonderfully,always keeping them new looking. If alift begins to wear off the heel, I have itattended to at once, and never take offthe shoes without wiping all the dustfrom the crevices and putting them care¬

fully away. The result is I have worn

one pair of boots every day for one year,and another year for a house shoe. Ihave a pair of boots that were made toorder, for which I paid $8. I have worn

them every day for two winters, or ratherfrom October to May, and shall wear

them another, and perhaps two seasons

more. In the spring I rub them withoil and put them away carefully, and inthe fall they look as good as new. Neverwear a shoe unbuttoned, if you care tohave it shapely. Never put wetshoes to the fire to dry, as it hardensthem and makes them difficult to put on.

When taken off the foot wet, smooth intoas good shape as possible and rub themas dry as you can with an old soft cloth,then put them in a medium piace to dry.If your shoes get muddy, wash them offwith cold water and rub dry with a softcloth. This can be done quickly, so thatthe leather may not get wet through,then pull into shape and leave standinguntil quite dry. After this use a littlegood polish and the shoes will be as

fresh as if quite new."

How's This?

We offer One Hundred Dollars rewardfor any case of Catarrh that cannot becured by taking Hall's Catarrh Cure.

F. J. CHENEY & CO., Props.,Toledo, O.

We, the undersigned, have known F.J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and be¬lieve him perfectly honorable in all buai-ness transactions and financially r.ble tocarry out any obligation made by thatfirm.West & Truax, Wholesale Druggists,

Toledo, O.Waldixg, Kikxax & Marvin,

Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, 0.Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally,

acting directly upon the blood and mu¬

cous surfaces of the system. Price 75cpor bottle. Sold by all Druggists.

E XXIV..NO. 40.

ALL SORTS OF PARAGRAPHS,

. A miser died at Fort Scott with$27,000 on his person.. The fruit in Illinois is declared to

be uninjured by the freeze.. It is said that Robert Ingersoll has

shown signs of conversion to Christiani¬ty.. A Mormon settlement is thriving

at the foot of Pilot Mountain, NorthCarolina.. There are two rights a woman is

slow to claim: the right to an oldgarter and the right to an old paper buc-tle.. Every man is the architect of his

own fortune. And it's lucky for the mostof us that there is no building inspectoraround.. Two boys playing near Wichita,

Kansas, set the prairie on lire just for fun.The loss to the neighborhood was §150,000to $200,000.. It is not a bad plan to think to

yourself what yon would do in case yonwere awakened at night to find yourhouse on fire.. A New French invention is a smoke

bomb intended to be fired into the ranksof the enemy who uses smokeless powderand obscures his view.. "I thought you were going to marry

Miss Goldthwaite." "Her family were allopposed to it." "Well, but if the girlherself." "I said all the family. Shewas one of 'em.". "One of our delinquent subscribers,"

writes a Georgia editor, "has asked us tochange his address. But we have notseen a dollar in six weeks, and can'tchange anything.". "George," said Mrs. Gazley re¬

proachfully, "before we married you al¬ways insisted on carrying my packagesfor me." "Yes," replied George, "but Ididn't have to pay for them then.".N.Y. Sun.. A woman who has been living in

abject poverty for a number of yearsinPhiladelphia, has just learned that herhusband whom she had mourned as deadis still living in luaho, and has amasseda fortune.. It took just seventeen days for Geo.

Macomb, a Michigander, to bury his wife,put up a headstone, repaint his house,and marry a second time. What a bless¬ing it was that God took her away fromsuch a man.. It is said that all the Presidents of

the United States except General Harri¬son had blue eyes. Socrates, Shakes¬peare, Loche, Bacon, Milton, Goethe,Franklin, Napoleon and Humboildt, allhad blue eyes,. Sam Lee, a Chinese laundryman, of

Dubukue, Iowa, was killed by his assist¬ant, Frank Foak, who, when a crowdrushed in, wrote on a piece of paper:"He owe me three months' wages, Ishoot him; I die too," and then shothimself.. A bill 400 feet high, composed of

copper, silver and gold, has been dkcov-ered in the Mexican State of Chiapas. Ariver bo wing on one side of the moundhas largely uncovered the deposit, andmany hundred thousand tons of ore are

in sight.. From coal is obtained the means of

producing over four hundred shades ofcolors, a great variety of perfumes, twoexplosive agents, various acids and med¬icines, insecticides, salts, saccharine,fruit flavors, the bitter taste of beer,asphaltum, lubricating oils, and varnish.. At the table of a well-known Meth¬

odist minister the subjects of widows wasunder discussion, when one of the sons

inquired, "What is a grass widow?""Why, Harry," responded the other,"don't you know ? A grass widow is a

woman whose husband died with hay fe¬ver.. A prize of fifty dollars for the best

essay on the relation of the temperancequestion to political economy, has beenoffered for the competition of college un¬

der graduates by the National W. T. C.U. department of organization and in¬struction in the higher institutions oflearning.. A conjugal dialogue: "Before our

marriage," complained the wife, "youassured me that my pathway through lifeshould be strewn with roses, whereas Ispend my evenings mending stockings.""Well, darling, you know you couldn'twalk on roses, barefooted, on account ofthe thornB.". Job Biggs, the mail carrier on the

Campbell, N. 0., route, delivers his mailto the offices on foot, walking twenty-fourmiles one day and thirty-one miles nextday. During a year he steps over 8,454miles, and at this rate would cover thecircuit of the globe in three years, ex¬clusive of Sundays.. Kansas City, Mo., has been invaded

by a new religious sect. A man namedSilas Wilcox is the originator of thisbody, and be claims that blood should beused for healing purposes. He quotesthe Bible as his authority for the state¬ment. In one house two little emaciatedchildren were found by inspectors.Scars covering both arms showed howoften they had been bled. A consumptivefather lay almost dead on the bed. Heconfessed to the drinking of his children'sblood to save his own life.. Considerable importance is attached

to the formal opening of the factory ofthe American Pine Fibre company, atCronley, near Wilmington, N. C, whichtook place last week in the presence of a

large number of interested spectators.The company is utilizing the leaves ofthe longleaf pine for commercial pur-poses,and the industry promises to becomean important one. The origin of thecompany was in the operations of thejute trust. A substitute for jute becamea necessity, and one of the substitutesdiscovered was pine fibre matting. Bag¬ging, matting, carpet lining, etc., will bemade out of the pine leaves. The mate¬rial is plentiful, and the demand for theproduct is great.

Confirmed.

The favorable impression produced onthe' first appearance of the agreeableliquid fruit remedy Syrup of Figs a fewyears ago has been more than confirmedby the pleasant experience of all who haveused Jit, and the success of the proprietorsandlmanufacturers of the California FigSyrup Company.