Columbus enquirer-sun. (Columbus, Ga.) 1886-1893, October 05, 1890, Image 10

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10 MQDJKIK - SI A COUMBIS, GEOKGU, SINDAY, OCTOBER 5, 18' 0. IN BONNIE SCOTLAND- EDGAR WAKEMAN TELLS OF A PLEASANT TOUR. THE BOMAS BOAD—THE MISTS AND FOGS OF SCOTIA—THE HOME OF GABBIEL AND EVAN GELINE. [Copyrighted for the Enquirer-Sun.] Beauly, Scotland, Sept. 15,1890.—This is the month of silence among the birds of Scotland. You see all manner of them here and there flying lazily close to th<5 earth, or raminatingly poised upon swaying boughs as if overcome with pensiveness and mel ancholy. The consciousness of this au tumnal -silence of the songsters comes upon you suddenly as you tramp by hedge and field along these grand old Scottish ways. You turn aside with an impulse to discover in the forest if it be a seeming or a reality. Leaping a wall which separates you from a coppice already tinted with the first delicate pencilings of the frost, and plunging among the brush and brambles at its edge, you find a ragged hollow. This can be clearly traced, straight as an arrow, for a long distance. There is A WONDERFUL FASCINATION in this bramble-covered swail. You pother about it for a little, and find it paved with huge stones. More digging discloses solid walls set beneath the rubbish at its sides. You have discovered an old Roman Road. The sea itself hardly broke the line of this stout old artery, along which once surged the iron blood of Rome. Stern Agricola rode at the head of his legions past the very spot on which you are standing. Al most ceaseless tides of warriors swept over this road to Mons Grampus, that ten thousand slain and stark Caledonian bar barians might form an impassable wall to the mist-wreathed - mountains beyond. Eighteen hundred years have passed since jealous Domitian recalled to Rome this invincible leader of steel-mailed slaughterers, and the glowing pen of Tac itus told the surpassing bravery of the skin-clad Northmen who fell beneath his onslaughts; but as you linger upon the old Roman Road, dreaming until the sun is almost level with the far mountain-tops flaming their blue heather marvelously, countless wraiths pass and repass in olden battle allray. Then that it is the nineteenth and not the first century upon which the ■sun is shining is jrecalled to you by the, face of a keenly observant but solemn col lie dog breaking between some clumps of golden broom above your head. He has been minding a flock of sheep, grazing yonder on the brae-side; and he has step ped aside for a moment to interrupt your vagarous fancies about Agricola and all the other grim old fellows OF HIS BLOOD LETTING TIME, and to study your intentions and possibly examine your credentials. You beg his pardon for the trespass; leap the wail to the highway again; gaze back down the valley upon a score of red-roofed hamlets; push to: ward to the wayside inn where you are to tarry; and, between the walls of its huge chamber, you march in dreams from the Seven Hills to the Gram pians, with mailed hosts and forests of spears, along that old Roman Road .throughout the livelong night. Nature wears other aspects than those of gladnesss in Scotland. The rain falls as though tumbled upon you by mischiev ous elves who have watched for your un wary coming; and the fog and mist flap about the mountains and slap the face of the glens and valleys like a ship’s sails POUNDING ITS DECK IN A STORM. But you find a sovereignty of elation and exaltation in wandering alone among the scenic glories of any land; even in Scot land through a mist thick as Stathglass porridge. A good staff or stick, a stout pair of legs, a receptive mind, and above all a cheery and sympathetic heart, what ever your luck, are the regal companions for such loiterings. Nature never fan s to appear to single devotees at her/myriad doors and windows, ever shut/to noisy crowds, with radiant welcontirtgs. How witching the morning is, half disclosing the wondrous charms of^Tailey, haugh, lock, river, glen and mqtfntain! ‘ At times scarcely can your hand/be seen before you for the strange eddi*4, curlings and fan tastic convolution' 0 f the fog. There is your road, centsfries old and as hard as Scot wity—beneath your feet. You can not. mi stake that. AVhat is to the Tighter left, or before, only your fancy, quickened by the morning's awakening . life, intensified by NEAR AND FAR MYSTERIOUS SOUNDS, can locate and divine. Tramp, tramp, tramp, bravely as you may, these grow into consciousness so imperative of recog- dition, that, despite yourseif, ever and again you stop to listen, listen. Drip, drip, drip, from the leaves of the hedges into water basins of rock, the great drops striking like silver pellets, upon swinging glass; until the very chimes of the fairies are rung in your ears beside the road. Not a rod away, but invisible, rivulets of the night’s making wimple from rocks to pools, from the staccato of tenor trills to the bairitone minors of stately psalms. Ju3t at your side a goose will suddenly hiss as if reaching with its long neck from the door-puddle beside some invisible sheet ing, to snap at you from behind the cur taining mist. Beyond or behind, some chained dog MAKING A DISMAL HEWGAG of kennel-door and chain, leaps in and out baying to bis peasant-master of un timely footsteps. Over your head the restless abrasiou of boughs whispers that the leaves from their very weight of fog cups, sigh and moan as if impatient of their sunless poisoining. Hedge-(tranches crackle from the water-weight as in the frost-battles of approaching winter. Here and there, as the heavy breeze* move a trifle, comes the hesitant pipe of stirring bird, the patter of wild hares’ feet upon the slippery leaves, the half-caught,hoarse resonance of hidden waterfall; while faint and far and strangely muffled the notes of school-bells, by little ciachans in the distance, steal along the folds of the clinging mist. Making your way is some times like pushing through IMPALPABLE BANKS OF SNOW. But before the crackle and flame of the old inn fire-place,in the presence of scones white as a dove's wing, bacon crisp and brown, an omelet as yellow as a frost- painted beach-leaf, a jug of cream sweet as a nut-kernel, a fragrant brewing of tea in the delph pot under the. “cosey,” and a gnid wife bustling about in a sort of a cheery frenzy to make you welcome, 90a have reason to be glad of the blood-tingle to be found in doing half a dozen miles, before breakfast,through a genuine Scotch fog. If you tramp in Scotland you cannot avoid the humidity, nor can yon fail to observe one of the curious effects upon Scotch people themselves. They are either wholly indifferent to its influence or seem to possess a sort of liking for it, from lang syne companionship. A fish poacher will cast his hook in contented ness ALL DAY LONG THROUGH A STEADY DESZZLE. All sorts of peasant-folk along the road side pursue their regular vocations in pelt ing showers, as if utterly unconscious of the drenching element. Excursion and picnic parties set forth for a day's outing in a pouring rain with the same enthusi asm as on a clear morning. You will see as many fine ladies shopping in Princess street, Edinburgh, on a rainy day as on a clear one. The indifference to the mist and rain may have become a national characteristic through the universal use by Scottish people of woolen clothing, so perfect in quality and comfortable in tex ture as to protect the body from the ill- effect of sudden change in temperature and the chill of evaporating moisture, But you cannot account for the apparent actual liking of mist and drizzle, drizzle and mist save on the theory that endless companionship, with anything as exaspera ting as intermittant fog, sun and drizzle, in time, gives the habit of liking, if not indeed of love. That THE SCOTCH LOVE THEIR MISTS and drizzles you have endless proof. ‘•Dear Anld Reekie” (old Foggy or Smoky) is not only the prideful appellation for mist-wreathed, drizzle-sprinkled Edin burgh, one of the most interesting cities of the world, but it is the love-name of all old Scotia itself. Any day in the year—for in Scotland you will be caught in a shower or swirled in a fog. every day of the year—you will meet groups of society ladies or business men gathered at cross ings or near important building entrances, cheery as^arks on a June morning in their exchange of courtesies of gossip, while tiny rills of rain are merrily coursing from their ears, chins and noses, or seeking along tolerative vertebra* the sequestered and spongy shades of waist-bands, hip- pockets and kilted skirts. While about George Square at Glasglow, the old Tron Steeple, Dumfries, the picturesque landing place at Oban, and along High street or in Waterloo Place, Edinburgh, you will see scores of people standing idle' in the rain; as though they had come out of irk some and confining habitations for an in vigorating sup, literally sup, of this sort of fresh air. Perhaps it is the WIZARD WITCHERY OF SCOTT, as poet and novelist, perhaps the radiant romance of all Scottish Borderland, but you never tire of tender Tweed-vale and its sweetly flowing stream. You are not the first to feel this. The old monks loved the valley and dotted the Tweedside with splendid monasteries. Their grazing lands were the richest; their cattle the finest; their grain of the'plumpest kernel; their fruit the sweetest; in all Britain. Tradition has it that the fine old appple orchards still standing here—all of them on the Tweed’s north hanks, and many of them as wonderful in their fruitage as in that marvelous Yale of Apples where ONCE DWELT GABRIEL AND EVANGELINE at the edge of Minas Basin—where planted by these cowled and sandaled folk. That must have been hundreds of years ago. But these rare old trees arfihig, gnarled and gray enough for that. Little hamlets have grown up within and about these ancient orchards. JWeavers’ villages they once were. The- clack of the dusty loom is now still; hiit they are quaint old nests housing -,«juaint old folk, who have ripened ani v mellowed in these sunny Wt glass are little-outlooks from this peasant fortalice of snuggery. Opposite the one into which you are peering an old, old woman is asleep. She has been knitting and looking and dreaming out through the apple boughs across the sunlight valley. Her white old face is as white as her white old mutch cap. She had knit to the mid dle of her needle and then fallen asleep. But her thin old hands hold the needles upright and clenched, as though duty lasted beyond consciousness; and her cat has come to the opposite settle to stare at the silent face, as if doubtful of the mean ing when the clicking needles stopped. This is the only soul yon have found in Gattonside among the apple orchards and their sunshide by the Tweed. Edgar L. Wakeman. LESION ELIXIR. A Pleasant Lemon Drink. For biliousness and constipation, take Lemon Elixir. For indigestion and foul stomach, take Lemon Elixir. For sick and nervous headaches, take Lemon Elixir. For sleeplessness and nervousness, take Lemon Elixir. For loss of appetite and debility, take Lemon Elixir. For fevers, chills and malaria, take Lemon Elixir. Dr. Mozlev’s Lemon Elixir will not fail you in any of the above named diseases, all of which arise from a torpid or diseased liver, stimach, kidneys or bowells. Prepared only by Dr. H. Mozley, At lanta, Ga. 50c and $1.00 per bottle, at druggist. A Prominent Minister Writes. After ten years of great suffering from indigestion with great nervour prostration biliousness, disordered kidneys and con stipation. I have been cured by Dr. Moz ley’s Lemon Elixir and am' now a well man. Rev. C. G. Davis, Eld. M. E. Church South. No. 28 Tatnall St. Atlanta. Ga. Blood Purifier Cures Boils, Old Sores, Scrofulous deers. Scrof ulous Sores, Scrofulous Humor and all scrofulous diseases. Primary, Secondary and Tertiary Con tagious Blood Poison, Ulcerous Sores, diseases of the Scalp, Salt Rheum, Blotches. Pustules, Pimp les,Itch,Tetter,Ring-worms,Scald-Head,Eczema, Rheumatism, Constitutional Blood Poison, Mer curial Rheumatism, Diseases of the Bones, Gen eral Debility andall diseases arising from imj Blood or Hereditary Taint. Sold by retail a jilts. $1 per bottle. Roy Remedy Co., Atlanta FWTENT. ZFITZZETU G--EI LIEZEJ. Lexington, Va., January 17,1890.—Mr. A K iHawkes—Dear Sir: When I require the use of lasses I wear your pantiscopic crystalized lenses, n respect to brilliancy and clearness of vision, they are superior to any glasses 1 have ever used. Respectfully, Fitzhcgh Lee, Ex-Governor of Virginia. These famous glasses adjusted to defective eye- ight at drug store of EVANS & HOWARD, Co- Curnbus. Ga. aprll fri sun wed n r m RAOAM’S places aloqg / the Tweed until they fit into their orchard environment as the orchards themselves blend with the restful land scape'. If you have wandered up and down the Tweed, perhaps of all these Brae-side nests vou have found Gattonside by Melrose, the dreamiest and quaintest. Leaving the glorious abbey to your right you saunter along a shadowy road over arched with Scottish firs and beeches, cool and fragrant. On the one side is ancient St. Cuthbert’s and a moss grown mill and dam. Tiny fields with tidily stocked grain rise in patches of yellow, gray and green on the* other. At the end of the vista now and then flashes the blue of the Tweed. Then an old suspension bridge is crossed. Above and below anglers stand WAIST DEEP IN THE RIVER and a few cars are taking gravel from its shining bed. A little farther on groups of old peasant women, pausing now and then to bless the Covenanters or boil a new bree from an old scandal, are cutting thistles and weeds with sickles at the water side. These brambles will be dried to help piece out the meagre fuel in the near winter days. At the village edge the road ends; or rather blends into a score of century-beaten paths; for Gattonside has no street. Each of its thatched houses, as if with a touch of Scotch obstinacy, sets its face towards its own liking; but all have the Tweed and its songs just be low them; and everyone has its orchard enclosed with a yellow or white sinuous wall. Huge as oaks are these knotted old apple trees, but their well pruned branches are bending even to the cottage roofs with such loads of “rosy cheekit” apples that their scarlet blends strangely with the red tiles, and gives the whole village an ap pearance of a gorgeous cloak spread upon the emerald of the hill-side. When the blossoms are lush in the spring time what a glory of color must lie under the -un here in old Gattonside! If men live in the village your keenest gaze cannot find them. It is shopless, save where in one little window “sweeties” of ancient make and flavor are exposed. It is kirkless and nought but the sound of the old abbey bell from a mile away at Melrose disturbs ihe wondrous quiet of the place. ALL DOORS ARE OPEN to all in Scotland, and you peer into this cottage and that. The incarnation of sweetness and cleanliness, but no human, is beheld. Here is an old school-house de serted ard silent. An orchard was its play-gronnd, but a few sheep are grazing among its tender grasses now. Uncon sciously you have begun to tip-toe through the hamlet, for it seems as though even a footfall might break the spell of silence and repose; and you pass on to reach the rough, red road that leads co the primeval forest beyond. But no, here is such a quaint old cottage that you halt again. Something like an arched front from whiqh rises a huge chimney arrests your atteution. On either side of the chimney is a tiny pane of glass. You peep into on* and see the ODDEST INGLE-NOOK IN ALL SCOTLAND. A huge arch sustaining the bowed wall of the cottage and the chimney above en closes a cavernous fire-place. At each side of this a settle of stone is built in the bow beneath the arch. The panes of TheGwiteet Discovery of the Age. 'Wld in thbory, but the remedy RBCENTLY DISCOVERED. CURES WITHOUT FAIL CATARRH, CONSUMPTION, ASTHMA, HAY FEVER. BRONCHITIS, RHEUMATISM, DYSPEPSIA, CANCER, SCROFULA, DIABETES, BRIGHT’S DISEASE, MALARIAL FEVER, DIPTHERIA AND CHILLS. In short, nil forms of Organic and Functional Disease. Tte cures effected by this Medicine are in many cases MIRACLESI 6old only in Jugs containing One Gallon. Three Dollars—a small investment wnen Health and Life can be obtained. “History of the Microbe Killer” Free. CALL ON OR ADDRESS W. Wakefield, .sole agent for Columbus, Ga.. No. « 7’wftlfth sf-eaa. THE GLORY OF MAN STRENGTH VITALITY! How Lost! How Regained KNOW THYSELF THE SCIENCE OF LIFE A Scientific and Standard Popular Medical Treatise on the Errors of Youth,Premature Decline, Nervous and Physical Debility, Impurities of the Blood. Exhausted Vitality HHDMHS Resulting from Folly, Vice, Ignorance, Exceaaes oi Overtaxation, Enervating and unfitting the victim for V.’oik, Business, the Married or Social Relation. Avoid unskillful pretenders. Possess this great w'u-k. It contains ;*«>o pages, royal Svo. Beautiful binfling, embossed, full pit. Price only $1.00 by mail, postpaid, concealed in plain wrapper. Illus trative Prospectus Free, if von apply now. The diaiin^niBhed aulbor, Yv'm. H. Parker, M. T\, re ceived the GOLD AND JEWELLED MEDAL from the National Medical A^orhiriou lor this PRIZE ESSAY on NERVOUS aad PHYSICAL DEBILITY .Dr. Parker and acorp* of Assistant Physicians may be consulted, confi dentially, by mail or in person, at the office of THE PEABODY MEDICAL INSTITUTE, No. 4 Bulfinch St., Boston. Pilots.* to whom all yders for books or letters for advice should be directed a? above. AUCTION SALE OF THE C S Harrison 30-Acres Survey IN BEALLWOOD A Half Mile North of Columbus And the Present Terminus of the Colum bus Street Railroad. On Tuesday, October the 7th, 1890, in the city of Columbus, at the corner of Broad and Tenth streets, at 11 o’clock a. m., the above 30 acres will be sold to the highest b dder. It is situated on the east side of Hamilton avenue, adjoining the land of Mrs. William Griggs on the north, Mrs. Ennis on the east, and the City Land Com pany on the south, and very near the home of Col. William H. Young The 30 acres have been subdivided into lots 65 feet 4 inches wide, 148 feet in length. Four teenth, Fifteenth, Sixteenth, Seventeenth and Eighteenth avenues, on the present plan of the city of Columbus, have been extended through said lands north and south, and Forty-second and Forty-third streets running east and west. Fifteenth avenue has a width of 70 feet, the other avenues and streets a width of 50 feet. Beal- wood is noted for being one of the healthiest sub urbs of the city, having an altitude of 135 feet above Broad street. Excel ent well water, and the best of neighbors. Twelve acres of this tract is heavily timbered with virgin forest, consisting of pine, oak and hickory. Any one of the tim bered lots offered for sale has at least $100 worth of wood on it. The sale is made without reserve. Now is your opportunity to get a portion of this valuable land, and secure a home which in the near future will be within the limits of Colum bus . If you fail to buy at this sale you will have to pay from one to two hundred per cent, profit hereafter. Terms—One-third cash. bal-mce one and two year-, at eight per cent., with privilege of all cash if preferred. Circulars with plat of the sur vey will be on hand on the day of sale, to-wit: 11 o’clock a. m., Tuesday, October 7th, 1890. Titles perfect. Apply to Grigsby E. Thomas, Jr., ATTORNEY AT JLAW. sepl4-ds Chappell College, r>’ for young lames, OOI-TJ^CSTJS : C3-.A. Unexcelled advantages in ail branches oi higher female education. The OJiLLEtiF GOJIE for borirding pupils offers special at tractions. An excellent Primary Ifepartmeiit Is connected with the College. Bi r oataiogas write ro J. Harris Chappell, A. M., eriil lv "rMldenl. OYER 1,000 INCANMT ELECTRIC LIGHTS USED IN COLUMBUS. 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Our great offer t- sule-crii ^rs ecii; see any < v< r In refolore made. Charles Dickens was the greatest novelist who ever hr. d. No an Lor before o 1 s.nce ills time has ■a. n rl . fame hat he achieved, and his works are <' eu more popular to-day than during his lilvtime. They alsund in wit. humor, patin e. niasteriy delineation of character, vivid descriptions o! places and incidents, thriilna: and skillfully wrought piers. Eaen book is intensely interesting. No h. nieei uu!d be witln nt a s< t of tin se great and remark- gb.e u. iks. Not to have read them is to be far bci rtid the age in which we live. The g.-t of Dickens’ woibs which we offer as a 5^=* Wholesale at Patterson & Thomas and Brannon Carson. DIVIDEMI NOTRE. The Georgia Hume Insurance Company. A quarterly dividend of three (3) per cent will be paid the shareholders of this Company on demand. %oct25t Wm. C. CO ART, SecT. u. is i-.cacknowledged leading remedy for all the cnnoiaral discharges and private diseases of men. 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F-.r a quarter a century t-»ey Imve been • elvbraietl in t-v**ry nook uud corner of the civiliz^-l world. let. there are thousands of homos i ? America, not yet supplied with a set« f Dickens, the usual high cost of the books preventing people in moderate eircumsranees irom enjoying this luxury. But now, owing to the use of modern improved printing, folding and stitching machinery, the extremely low price of wliite paper, and the great competition in the bo k trade, we are enables to offer t«» our subeerrifers and readers a set of Dickens’ works at a price Winch all can afford to pay. Every home in the land mav now be supplied with a set of the great author s works. Our Great Offer la Sutoteis to tbe WEEKLY i MIL i li to every man, young, middle-aged, and old; postage paid. Addres# Jr. H. Du KIont,3Sl Columbus Ave., Boston, Mask We will send the ENTIKK SET OF DICKENS’ WORKS in TWELVFT VOLUMES, as above described, all postage prepaid by ourselves, also THI. WEEKLY ENQUIKER-SUJi for ONE YEAR upon receipt of 81.65, w: is only 65 cents more than the regular subscription price of this paper. Our m i therefore, practically get a set of Dickens’ works in twelve volumes for only ?55 c • : - This is the grandest premium ever offered. Up to this time a set of Dickens' w . has usually been 810.00 or more. Tell ail your friends that they can get a —* Dickens’ works, in twelve volumes, with a year's subscription to the < ULl’Mi ' WEEKLY ENQUIRER-SUX for only 81.65. Subscribe now and get this gr^at mium. If your subscription has not expir d, it will make no difference, for it will extended one year from date of expiration. We will also give a set of Diekcii-. - above, free and post-paid, to any one sending us a club of ten yearly subscribers. Address b. h. Richardson, Enquirer-Sun, COLUMBUS. GA.