The gazette. (Elberton, Ga.) 1872-1881, July 05, 1876, Image 1

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pnWfessioisi.L LARDS. ATTORNEY AT LAW, ELBHRTOKi GA. Special attention to the collection of claims, [ly L. J. GARTRELL, ATTORNEY AT LAW, ATLANTA , GA, PRACTICES IN THE tINtTED STATES Clß euit and District Courts at Atlanta, and Supreme and Superior Courts of the State. elkerton business carps. SHANNON & WORLEY, ATTORNEYH AT LAW, ELBERTOiS, GA. ITT ILL PRACTICE JN THE COtjRTS OF W the Norther'S Clrcliltand Franklin county flSrSpeciist'attention given to collections. J. S. HARNETT, ATTO RN E Y AT LAW, ELBBRTOK, GA. JOKIN T. OSBORN; Attorney and counselor at law, ELBEitTON, GA. WILL PRACTICE TN SUPERIOR COURTS and Supreme Court. Prompt attention to the collection of claims. ncv,l7,ly T. J. BOWMAN & CO-, REAL ESTATE AGENTS EIjBFRTOIV GA. WILL attend ty the business of effecting sales and purchases of REAL ESTATE as Agents, on REASONABLE TERMS. Applications should be made to T. J. BOWMAN. SepifLft# LIGHT CARRIAGES & BUGGIES. fggfl J. V\ AULD (Ca RRI AGE IIIaiN IJFACT' R i: g, gt •: sto gi:o ug ia . WITH GOOD WORKMAN! LOW BST TRICKS! b LOSE PERSONAL ATTENTION TO BUSINESS. an 6 A* EXPERIENCE OF 27 YEARS, life hopes b'y ficrnesf ami fair dealing to compete tiny cither manufactory. flood Buggio's, v/arrdnted, - $125 to $l6O ii KPAUUNG and BLACKSMITH ing. tVork done in this line in t very best style. The libst I liimcVs, TERMS CASH. Ay 2 2-1 v i YTiw.T mi a mV, - T IT E REAL I, IV E Fashionable Tailor, Up-Stairs-. ovSr sivift & Arnold’s Store, ELHGRI'ON, GEORGIA. te’ Call and Sec Him. THE ELBIRrrON DRUG STORE H. C. EDMUNDS, Praetor. Has always on hand a full line of Ihire Drugs and Fateiii Medicines Alakes a specialty of STATIONERY AND PERFUMERY Anew assortment of WRITING PAPER & ENVELOPES Plain and fancy. just, received, including a sup ply ot LEGAL CAP. UIGARS ANI) TOBACCO of all varieties,.constantly on hand. F. A. F. NOB*LETT, m.&mun iaioe ELBBRTON, GA. Will contract for work in STONE and BRICK anywhere in Elbert and Hart counties. frelG-6m W. C. PRESLEY, WMfL ELRF.KTON, GA. Will make first class harness to order, war ranted, and at prices to suit the times. Will be glad to show specimens of liis work to ; parties, and no barm is done if ho work is wished. Repairing IPonQ Promptly. F. W. JACOBS, HOUSE I SIGN PAINTER Glazier and Grainer, GA. Orders So licited, Satisfaction Guaranteed ‘ ipSXsE’s - PALACE DINING DOOMS, ATLANTA, GEORGIA. Champion Dining Saloon of tlie Soutli kvkrVßody is invited to call. THE GAZETTE. USTow Series. A WARNING TO CANDIDATES POE OPPIOE. As aspirants for political honors are heard of all, over the United States, it would not be out of place to give the experience of a gentleman who run for the Legislature in one of the Northern counties, several years ago : It was after the fall election that we met him. His name was not Stretch, but we will so designate him. He poured his sorrowful story in the ear of an at tentive, sympathetic listener: “No, sir; I’N never run for office again,” said Mr. Stretch. “You know when they came and asked me if I’d ac cept a nomination in the legislature they told me that the whole community want ed mo to run and that I was certain to be elected, because I was a man whose character was so gded that nobody could find fault with it. I thought bo myself, and agreed to run, and accordingly they nominated me. Well sir, the very next morning, the Argus came out with an assertion that 1 had been detected steal ing chickens, and it gave a full history of the ease, together with pictures of the chickens, and after darkly hinting that since abandoning chicken steal ing I had been continually engaged in other forms of robbery, it asked if the people of this State wanted to see a chichen thief making laws for them. And tho mischief of it was that I did hook a couple of chickens from my grandmother’s coop when I was a boy, but how’u th’ thunder they ever found it out beats me. It was fifty-two years ago. “Now look at my nose ! It ain’t much of a noso for beauty, is it ?—I know well enough that it’s crooked. But nobody ever alluded to it until I was nominated, and then tho Argus said thero was a tradition that I had my nose mashed around sideways during my career as a prize fighter, although some people in sisted that I ha 1 run it hard against a door while I was drunk. And then all the illustrated papers in the State be gan to publish pictures of me with a nose like the jib-sheet of an oyster sloop, only twisted around sideways; and one of them said when I sneered on the front porch the concussion acted like a boomerang and blew the back door open. And then they tackled me about ray war record. You know I was out with the militia. And then tho Argue pub lished a letter from a man who said that during thaJjatUo of Gettysburg I. was in a refrTgeraioi r ih a cellar in the town, pretending that I was ordered there to mount guard over sowe rations of cold beef. And the Argus asserted that the only manoeuvre I was ever good at was falling back ; that whenever tho enemy was expected to be approaching I always made a bee-line for Nova Scotia, and never turned up till after the fight but once, and then We were surprised, and I fired my musket so wildly that I shot our own Colonel in the leg and surrendered to an Irishman who belonged to our reg iment, and who came up to me to bor row a plug of tobacco. To tell the truth, I wasn’t much of a fighting man, but how iu the mischief they found out about that refrigerator gets me. Awful, isn’t itf T wouldn’t have minded it so much, only they got up a poster and stuck it around the streets and headed it ‘Stretch’s War Record/ and put ou it a picture of me with a monstrous lop sided nose, sitting inside that refrigera tor gnawing at a bono of the roast beef. And then, as the campaign went on, they’ accused me of having delirium tre mens, of wiping my nose on my sleeve, of robbing a bank, of selling my dead aunt to a medical college, and of hold ing the doctrine that the whale did not swallow Jonah, and that when Moses crossed tire Red Sea he paddled over in a boat. The Argus said that if my wife dared to tell how I treated her the com munity would be filled with horror, but anybody might see for themselves, who would notice, that her back hair was thinned out. And it said that I had a wen on my leg that unfitted me for ac tive duty any how, even if I had not for feited all claim to* public confidence by turning my grandfather out of doors when he was dying of consump tion, and then setting my dog on him and making tlie man roost in a mulberry tree on tho coldest night last winter for fear of being eaten up. ' People began to avoid me on the streets. The general impression prevail ed that I was a desperate and hardened villain. I might have stood that, but you know the way they levied on me for expenses was awful. There was that band, I kept that band in luxury for three months; and it used to come around and serenade me three nights in the week, and wake all the babies in the neighborhood. I lost 200 votes in consequence of those awakened babies. Then the club would come and call on me for a speech, and then I would have to ask them in to feed, and they would stay there and howl wntil 4 o’clock in the morning, and get drunk and fight and smash' tho furniture and bleed over the carpets. Then they would assess me for a mass meeting and adjourn. I lmncted.out cash for posters, rum, brass bands, fire-works, torchlight processions, transparencies and flags, and the Argus all the time accusing me of buying up voters and having repeaters in my pay. The night of tho election the brass band and club came to congratulate me on my success, and after having a fine spree and concluding with a riot in the parlor, I went to bed, glad I had won anyhow. The first' thing I saw in the Argus next morning was the announce- ESTABLISHED 1859. ELBERTOI, GEORGIA, JULY 5,1876. ment that the hoary-headed chicken stealer had been beaten by over 2,000 majority, and would have to keep his eccentric nose at home and reflect that a free people would never elect to a re sponsible office a man who would tree his consumptive grandfather and traffic in the remains of his aunt. So that lets me out of politics. When I run for of fice again you may chuck mo right into an insane asylum.—Cov. Enterprise. GEORGIA PENITENTIARY AND THE LESSEES. Sixty days ago Gov. Smith issued his proclamation inviting bids for the lease of the Georgia penitentiary under the act of the General Assembly, providing for the leasing for not less than twenty years. Although it'Was generally known that such a lease as the law provided would be immensely profitable to those Who should secure it, yet thero were but three companies who put in bids for any considerable portion of the penitentiary. These companies were, first, the Dade Coal Company, engaged in mining in Dado county, Ga. Second, a company composed of Messrs. Grant, Colonel Simpson, of Wilkes county, Major Mur phy, of Haris county, and their associ ates. Third, a company of planters from Southwest Georgia, composed of Messrs. Lockett & Jordan, W. B. Lowe and their associates. Their bids were all in on the 15th inst, but the Governor declined to accept eithir, because he was at a loss to de cido which was best for the State, and further because he believed all of them were at too low a figure—the highest being $-110,000 for the whole peniten tiary for the twenty years ; and the high est for one-half of the penitentiary for twenty years being $237,500. The Gov ernor thought the whole worth for the twenty years at least half a million of dollars and refused to let it go fur lees. Ho notified all the bidders of hi3 decis ion, and the final result was as follows: Tho Dado Coal Company took 300 long term men, and the other two companies divide the remainder between them; but tho State is to secure from each, under a heavy bond, the pro rata proportion of the annual payment of $25,000, or half a million in the twenty years. The State is certainly to bo congratu lated on having this institution disposed of for the next twenty years, placed in the hands of some of tho best citizens of the State. And while tho bidders Lave doubtless "one of tho iu.xjl jv ,'ilta ble contracts ever awarded in the State, the Governor has secured for the State a large revenue instead of a tax; of from $50,000 to SIOO,OOO per annum, as was the case before the present piau of leas ing was adopted. [Atlanta Constitution. FORCE DERIVED PROM THE SUN’S HEAT. An interesting computation has been made of the amount of force imparted to the earth by tho sun’s heat. Accord ing to the best investigations that have been made, there is received in one min ute enough heat to raise the tempera ture of five and olio half Centigrade. If, now, we compare this with the work done by a given amount of heat, as util ized in a steam engine, it will bo found that the heat sent to the earth in the sun’s rays during the space of one min ute is able to do as much work ns would bo done by two thousand.steam engines, 100 horse-power each, working con tinuously for the space of four thousand years. What becomes of this inconceivably great amount of power is worthy of con sideration ; and we begin to realize the nature of the problems of the future sci entists when we reflect that by far the laiger part of this heat force expends itself upon the earth in actual Work, on ly a small portion of it being radiated in to space. Of course the result accom plished, such as the maintenance of the temperature of the earth, ocean, and at mosphere, the stimulating of animal and vegetable life, etc., etc., must be the equivalent of the power retained by our globe. NOT EXACTLY THAT WAY. There is a beautiful incident in somepf the new Sunday school books. It opens with a terrible storm at sea, which great ly frightens tho captain’s wife and all the sailors. The captain himself w r as very cool, and when his wife wondered he took down a sword, flourished it iu the air a’id asked: “Are you not afraid ?” She wasn’t. She said she had faith in her husbat'd’slove and friendship. “Neither am I afraid of the storm,”<ho continued, “for I have faith in the Lord’s love and protection.” A captain on the Erie Canal read the little story the other day and it touched . his heart. He descended to the cabin, where his wife was mixing biscuit, and , putting his fi3t under her nose ho asked : “Betsy, are you not afraid ?” “Nawt much,” she replied, giving him a dangerous look. “Why not"?” he yelled. It would have been very proper for her to have said something about Divine Providence, but she didn’t. She rc plied : “Because, if you don’t git that paw oxTt ef my face, I’ll put up this dough and break another rib for ye!” Uneasy rests the head that wears a crown, or even a plug hat, this warm weather. AN EXCITING RACE. The San Francisco Chronicle tells the following story of an engineer : It was four years ago last winter. I was com ing down with a train loaded with cattle. Tlhe weather had been bad for weeks, Usd the snow lay deep, but was melting of fast in the warm weather that had lifted nearly a week. Tho ground was sfreurated, and I noticed that things looked shaky on the mountain. I was feeling my way along carefully, thinking the track might spring, as the bed was Wet and sloppy, when just as I got around the point of this ridge, I looked i?p, and it seemed to mo that the whole mountain above mo had broken loose. For hundreds cf feet wide the hillside was in motion, and charging down on me. The slide started a hundred yards above the . track and was coming right down on me like lightning. Rocks, trees and snow clrifts plunged dowd the face of the mountain with a thundering roar, and seemed bent on overwhelming ns mid burying us in the canyon thousands of feet below. I was never so close to death before, although I have had my share of perils on the road. For a mo ment I was stupefied, the danger was so great and escape so hopeless, but only for a moment. I determirffed not to die without an effort, but clapped on all steam, whilo tho brakes were thrown off at the same time. You can see for your self that tho grade is heavy here, and can believe that we made fast time. The engine seemed-to know her danger, and to gather horsolf for an effort. Site leaped, quivering and snorting, down the grade in the maddest race I ever saw. Down camo the avalanche like lightning directly upon us, throwing up clouds of Hying snow and splinters and rock, and and away flew the engine like a thing tff life and beauty, art she was, dragging tho cars like tho wind down the grade after he? ribreast of the slide. But it seemed doomed to be all in vain. The avalanclie camo faster every moment. It was al most upon us. The rocks begun to bound against the cars and over them, apd the train was hidden in a cloud of snow. J3ut we were flying through tho air now ; the wheels seemed never to touch the rail, and just as I was giving tjp hope the engine rushed past that point of land just back there where the little ravine comes down. This turned tho current of the slide, so to speak, a lit Lie,"and was our salvation. The en yjyie rushed past the point just as tho Fjfah reached the track, ami a “big- pin© uprooted in tho edge of tho avalanche, ft 11 across the next car to the last one and crushed it. The track was swept away like a cobweb in a gale, and the couplings of the cars broke and the cars fell into the chasm left in the wake of the slide, aad were carried down to tho river, a thousand yards below. What there is left of them lies there yet. Tho jerk made the engine and train jump the track, but she kept on her feet, and wo got off with a fow bruises. That I ac count ono of tho greatest dangers I ever had in my twenty years of railroading. FRIGHTFUL DEATH, The unnatural habit of kissing dogs has been the cause of a horrible death of a young lady. Lady M., a Berlin paper tells us, had for some time been afflicted with periodic indisposition, fre quently becoming so Serious as to pro dace swelling of the abdomen. The medicines prescribed by physicians avail ed nothing, and as little benefit did the patient receive from visiting, several years, watering places of established reputation. On the contrary, the malady grew to tie so intolerable that, upon con ference held, physicians called in Privy Counselor Wilms for a consultation. Tins physician, observing the sick lady for some time, and after having pro pounded several questions, suddenly asked: “Has this lady, perhaps, a dog ?” Surprised at such a question, her friends shook their heads negatively. “But, did she ever have ono ?” the physician continued. “Yes, some three years ago,” was the answer. “And the lady certainly allowed the dog to kiss her once in a while ?” Mr. Wilms asked. It, too, bad to be admit ted, when the doctor felt fully satisfied of the cause of the indispostion. He concluded that in kissing the dog blad der worms—infinitesimal animals with which none but sick dogs are troubled, as usual—were made to pass- into the liver of the patient. The operation per formed by Mr. Wilms, shortly; afterward, fully established the correctness of the diagnosis. The liver of the patient was peopled by innumerable worms, which it was patent had passed from tho dog. The lady w&s operated on three times, and tho fourth she died. We are of the opinion that this case should be read far and near. Wo add another medical observation in regal'd to calf’s liver, so popular in most fami lies. The consumption of this article ever calls for great care, and it should never be need except when in its raw State it is of one color. Calf’s liver is also frequently full of worms. A mere speck lighter or darker than the rest is enough to causo suspicion. Two Pennsylvania tramps stopped at the house of a lone widow, and one went in to beg. Very soon he came out with a bloody noso and a first class black eye. “Well, did you get anything, Jack ?” “Yes,” growled he, “I’ve got the widow's might.” Vol. Y.-No. 10. FAIRLY CAUGHT. Thero ars more ways than one to con vey a gentle and effectual admonition to the erring brother. Here is a good story of the oldeii time that will illus trate ortr iiieaning, and who knows but that it may suit a certain locality not a thousand miles from this. Rev. Mr. had preached to one of the congregations of his own circuit, and as was the custom of the Methodist preachers in those days, after preaching held a class meeting. He had ques tioned each brother and sister ou the subject of their experience and practice, and enjoyment of the divine life, giving each a word of encouragement and ad vice; until all the members had been questioned but a certain prominent church member who it seemed owned a distillery .but kept it in the mountains, “on the sly, ”as he thought. Mr. had, however, found odt the fact, and after some serious conversation with others, the following took place: Preacher—Well, brother Jerry, how do you come on making whiskey? Brother (somewhat startled) —Oh, I don’t know exactly—tolerably well enough. P.—Well, brother, what do you give for corn ? B.—Fifty cents a bushel. Ahem ! P.-—Fifty cents ! Very cheap at that, I should say; bat another question : how much whiskey do you suppose one bushel of corn will make 1 B.—Can’t say; I suppose three gal lons (very much confused.) P.—Sc ! three gallons ! Why, that’s a considerable turn out, I should judge. But, brother, what do you get a gal lon for whiskey ? B.—(looking rather wild) —A dollar and a half. P. —A dollar and a half! Two hand red per cent., and that, too, I reckon by the barrel! You get more by the jug full, I suppose. But-tell mo, bro tber, isn’t the slops very good to fat ten liogs ? B.—Yes ; very good. P.—-And won’t your hogs como very nigh paying for the corn ? 13.—(red as a beet) —Well, vory nigh it. P.—But to coma down to tho ques tion —Brother, do you make a good article? Will it bear ahead? By this time the poor delinquent was perfectly overwhelmed with confusion, and wished he had neverCeen a distillery nor tho preacher cither. Put Mr. — knew his man, and after the meeting adjourned, took him aside and remon strated with him with such good effect that he actually broke up bis distillery and became a consistent Methodist But it was a long time before his neigh bors forgot to ask him whether he “made a good article/' and “if it would bear a bead!” 4<9>4 SIZE OF 00UNTRJ.ES, Greece is about the size of Vermont. Palestine is ono fourth tho size of New York. Hindostan is moro than a hundred times as large as Palestine. The great desert of Africa has nearly tho present dimensions of tho United States. The red Sea would reach from Wash ington to Colorado, and is three times as wide as lake Ontario. The English channel is nearly as largo as lake Superior. The Mediterranean, if placed across North America, would make soa nav igation from San Diego to the city of Baltimore The Caspian sea would stretch from New York to St. Augustine, and as wide as from New York to Rochester. Great Britain is about two-thirds the size of Hindostan; one.twelfth of Chi na, and one-twenty-fifth of tho United States. The gulf of Mexico is about ten Limes the size of lake Superioi', and as large as the sea of Kamschatka, bay of Bengal, China sea, Okhotsk or Japan sea; lake Ontario would go in each of them more than fifty times. Tho following bodies of water are about the same size: German ocean, Black sea, Yellow sea ; Hudson bay is rather large. The Baltic, Adriatic, Porsian gulf, and ASgean sea, half as large, and somewhat larger than lako Superior. Don’t Like the Financial Plank in the Platform. —A New York letter says the bondholders and money monopolists of Wall street hre not well satisfied with the Cincinnati platform. They express regret that the financial plank did not, in express terms, declare adherence to the specie resumption act. They say the resolution on that subject is danger ously vague, and that if a movement is made at the next session of Congress to repeal the act, thero is nothing in the Cincinnati*platform to bar the way. Vory emphatic expressions of dissent are also heard from the other classes of persons, with reference to the anti-Chinese plank, but, as usual, in a day or two all this feeling will subside, aud nothing will bo heard save exhortations from everybody to everybody to support the platform and the man who stands upon it. The Springfield, Mass., school-marm who recently thought to subdue the rampant spirits pf a ana*U girl by keep ing her two hours after school, was re warded when the term waa up, with a motto lozenge bearing tho pathetic in quiry, “Must wo part ?" EGGS AS FOOD. Would it not be wise to substitute more eggs for meat iu our daily diet? About ohe third of the weight of an egg is solid hvqriincnt, which is more tl th can be said of meat. There are no bo., as afid tough pieces that have to be laid aside. A good egg is made up of ten parts shell, sixty parts white, and thirty parts yolk. The white of an egg com tains eighty six per cent water, the yolk fifty two per cent., while tho average weight fan egg is about two ounce;. Practically an, egg is animal food, and yet there is none of the disagreeable work of tho butcher necessary to obtain it. Eggs are best when cooked three and a half minutes, as this takes away tho sliminess that is sO offensive to some, and makes them easier to digest. Hard boiled eggs should be eaten with bread, and masticated very finely. An • excellent sandwich can be made with eggs and brown bread, or an egg spread on toast is excellent food. Fried eggs are not so easily digested as boiled ones. An egg dropped into hot water is not only clean and handsome, but a deli cious morsel. Most peoplo spoil tho taste of eggs by adding pepper and too much salt. Only stale eggs require salt to make them palatable; real fresh ones are better without it, or at least a very little; a little fresh blitter is tho best dressing. Eggs contain a groat deal of phosphorus, which is useful to those who uso their brains much. Tho ordinary way of boiling eggs makes tho white too hard before sulli dent heat “has reached the yolk, and therefore some epicures suggest to put only boiling water on tho eggs; and let them stand for some five or si± minutes without putting them on tho fire; bnt if this is dono with cold eggs hi a cold dish, it cools so quickly that tho eggs will not be cooked at. all; it is better, therefore, to pour warm water on tho eggs, of a temperature that will not burn tho hands, say 180 or 140 deg. Fahr., leave it on a few minutes so as to thoroughly warm tho eggs, then pour it off, and immediately pour on enough boiling water to cover tho eggs, and in fivo minutes they will be all right. Curious Suicide. —A strange suieido was that of James A. Moore. He was an Jinvcntor and a Quaker. His first step was to register himself at tho Lake HoUs.a ill Lafayette, lud, and pay his board in advance for ono week. He then visited a machine shop, where lio had riveted to the head of a broad-axe two bars cf iron. On either side, fasten ed to these bars like a Fan Ho to an axe, he arranged ii system of wooden bars. The extreme end of those was fastened to a crosspiece secured to tho floor by hinges. Tho uxo was raised and held in a nearly perpendicular position by cords fastened to the wall. Between the cords stood a candle so fixed as to burn them off and let down tho axe. Under this Moore put a basket filled with; cotton which had been saturated with chloroform. He placed his head in this and cpomiUj becMUYui insensible. The cord was burned, tho axe fell, and the Load was completely severed from the body. He left a paper on tho side of his gullotine inscribed, “For salo or rent. Hari-kari Patent applied for." • - * *; A gentleman is a rarer thing than some of us think for. Which of us can point out many such in his circle—men whoso aims ure generous ; wliOfe'O truth is constant and elevated ; who can look the world honestly in the face, with an equal, manly sympathy for the great and tho small? We all know a hundred whose coats are woll-mado, and a score who has excellent manners,.but of geu tlemcn, how many ? Let us take a lit tle scrap of paper and each make his list.—[Thackery. —r— - : —: <!•> X- A British Empire Horse supply Asso ciation has been formed in Loudon with a capital of one million dollars, to import horses from tho United States- It is expected to buy borseg here at an aver age price of one hundred dollars, have a. steamer which will carry four hundred and fifty horses make six round trips a year, and Sell the horses in England at two hundred and fifty dollars. £bo was a colored lady and attending a revival of religion, and had worked herself up to the extreme pitch of going to the good place in a moment, or soon er if possible. As her .friends gave vent to their feelings, sho likewiso gavo vent to her feelings, and exclaimed : “I wish I was a June bug!” A brother of sable hue, standiug near by, inquired : “What you want to bo one for?” “So I coulu fly to glory !” sho said. “You fool nig ger, woodpecker kotch you ’foro you got half way dar.” Wo claim to know something about arithmetic, but when Mrs. Hopper upon starting Town town refuses us two dol lars to pay our cigar man with, saying “she’s only got a dollar and a half to her name,” and comes back with a two dol lar neck-tie and a dollar and a half pair of kid gloves, it is beyond our caleu lation. What a mother lacks in skill sho makes up in enthusiasm, when she cuts her boy’s hair. The back of his head may look like thunder, but every scollop is a bright vision of devoted affection to tho understanding mind. A dog ran into a garden at Waterford, N. Y., after being poisoned with arsenic, and saliva from its mouth flow on some lettuce. An entiro family was made al most fatally sick by eating the leaves. A New Orleans belle has eloped with a barber. Her mama.cries och, hone! Her friends razo ’cr came from their vis iting lists, and her father vows that ho intends to lather the fellow who carried hef oi The following rhymes are furnished by a contemporary for tho use of Radical poets: “Hayes, blaze,.craze, daze, amaze, prays, gaze, neighs, raise, ways, brays