Newspaper Page Text
THE CEDARTOWJS RECORD.
W, S, D. WIKLE & 00., Proprietors,
CEDARTOWN, GEORGIA, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1874.
VOLUME T. NUMBER *2.
•^r-riTsrQ /\p rpTrn TJtrppiT htvo docl <lod t0 hold * great iiitcrnatioya!
Will Wo Ur XUXi VV UliA. Catho | lo oongreu in London, with tho object
EAST.
An illicit distillery iu Brooklyn, New
York, liaa boon eoizoil, toRothor with a large
amount of whisky and materials for itn man-
ufacturo. Tbo property noizwl anil destroyed
ia estimated to bo worth #75,000.
St. Joe, ft small oil town in Butler
connty, PemiHylvania, wan deetroyod by lire
lant week. Twenty-five dwellings, two drug
stores, and sevorml livery stablea, wore con
sumed. Tho firo originated iu a dofoetivo lino.
WEST.
An Omaha telegram aftyn tho officers
and branch societies of Nebraska, in bolialf of
tho grasshopper sufforors, are receiving con
tributions to moot immediate demands. It
is proposed to send a car load a week of
provisions and clothing to each of the six
principal stations in tho wee torn oountiea,
whero tho crops wore deatroyod, of tho lib
eral contributions now arriving. Nino cars
of supplies have already been forwardod.
SOUTH.
A InrRO lire is raging iu tho groat
Dismal Hwamp.
Kftina A Co.Vgrooery, at” Vicksburg,
Miss., was burued Oct. 31st. Loss #'25,G00;
insured for #8,000.
Competition baa reduoed tho atenm-
|»oat freight rates 40 per cout. betwo
cago and Now Orleans.
Tho steamship Ht, Lonia, from Now
Orleans for Liverpool, put in at Savanna h
Oa., last woek, with cotton on lire.
A young man, by tho name of Corwin,
at Moran, Ind.. was caught by tho buzz-saw,
in tho mill at that place, and was literally
sawed in two. 1I« diod in a fow hours.
Hon. Jeremiah White, ono of I he
owners of tho Houston (Texas) Co. Democrat,
was shot and killed by John H. Hubbard,
Friday last. Tho act was a deliberate assas
sination, no offense, it is allogod, having been
given.
Tlio fireman's oharitablo association
of Now Orleans, Iim resolvod to discontinue
business, unless tho city pays thorn by tlio
15th of Novetnbor. They control tlio tiro de
partment. Tho city owes thorn ono hundred
thousand dollars.
A .1 if,patch from Salisbury, N. O.,
says that Gen. Jas. G. Blount lias Iroon con
victed of conspiracy to defraud tlio Unitod
States out of a largo sum of money intended
for tlio Chorokoo Indians living in that state.
I!o is now iu Jail at Salisbury.
Tho Louisvillo Courier-Journal pub
lishes a roviow of tho trado In loaf tobacco
for tho past year, showing Louisville to bo tho
largest market for that staplo in tlio world.
For tho past year tho sales aggrogatod 89,970
hogsheads, against 53,056 for tlio twelve
months previous, tho total aunmut of sales
being *7,077,710.
A fire at Memphis last week deatroy.il
tlio rosidonco of lion. Jacob Thompson, comer
of Landordaio stroot and Hernando road.
A portion of tho furniture was saved. It is
bohovod tlio lionso was first robbod and then
sot on Are. Mr. Thompson and family
absent, attonding tlio Episcopal convention hi
Now York. Loss, *15,000; no Insurance.
In tho unit of Wm. M. Farrington
against tho Memphis city railroad for *12,000,
for services as president, and against which
tho company brought a conntor-suit for *100,-
0(H), for allogod damages sustained under
Farrington’s administration, tho Jury returned
a verdict granting Farrington nearly #12,000,
and tlio conntor-sult was thrown out of court.
A dispatch from Osceola, Ark., states
that a negro named Jack I’hllUpa outraged tlio
wife of a planter near there. From tlio treat
ment received she will probably die, as she was
within a fow weoks of hor confinement. Tho
nogro was arrostod and brought to Osceola,
tho citizens of which place, both white and
black, improvised a court, and after bearing
tho evidence, took tho prisoner out and shot
him to death.
An officer sent from Fort McPherson,
Nebraska, a fow days ago, by Oon. Ord, to
visit all sections of the grasshopper districts,
roports that ho finds no cases of actual star
vation, but much suffering, sgmn of which
lias been partially relioved from various aonr-
cos. Relief must bo given or hundreds will
starvo before winter is half ovor. Within ton
days many will be without a pound of com
or flour. The prosent aid they are receiving
is but a drop in tlio bucket. Unless tlio gov
ernment aids them thoir alternative is fearful
to contemplate.
FOREIGN.
Tho sister of the Tiohborno claimant
have petitioned the qncon for his rnleaso.
The Duko of Aborcorn has been
eloctod grand master of the Froo Masons of
Ireland.
At the request of Gen. Garibaldi the
subscriptions for his reliof have been
|>ouded.
Geu- Jovollar has entered Turuol,
the Carllsts flying befoie liim. Large bodies
of insurgents have offored to surrender at
Maeetrazzo.
Advices from Cape Town, of the 11th
of October, state that the gold fields were at
tracting more attention, large nuggets being
found almost daily. The crops throughout the
colony are in good condition.
It is reported that tho relations be
tween the Czar and President Serrano have
assumed a thoroughly cordial character, and
s it is expected Rnssia will, in a short time, for-
i mally recoguizo the republican government
of Spain.
On the trial of Kullman, physicians
\ wore csllod to testify in regard to the wound
I of Bismarck. It appears that ho received a
sovere nervous shock, and ono doctor testified
| that tlio mere exertion of writing now ex-
of maintaining tho doctrinos of papal infalli
bility, assorting tlio i>oi>o's right to tenijioral
as woll as spiritual power, and tho duty of all
Christians to return to the allogianooof Rome.
It is stated tide determination in tho result of
direct instructions from tl*i Vatican, and some
of tho highest dignitaries of tho church will
attend tlio oottgrosB. Archbishop Manning,
in a speech at Westminster, admitted that ills
spiritual influence greatly increased sinoo lie
lost his temporalities. If arbitration was ovor
to eupereedn war, tho pops would bo tho only
possiblo authorized arbitrator. Tho Catholic
world, ho addod, was throatonod with a con
troversy on all docreos of tlio oecumenical
council. There was undoubtedly approaching
ono of tho mightiest contests Hie religious
world had ever seen. Theroforo, it was noc-
ooeary to fearlessly assert, through tho froo
pross of England, the pope’s rights and his
pretensions to world-wide allegiatico.
MISCELLANEOUS.
Internal revenue receipts for tho
month omling Oct. 31st, #921,827 ; for the fis
cal year, #35,042,498.
Eighty workmen have boeu discharged
at the Washington navy-yard. A further
reduction will soon tako place.
Tho secretary of the treasury has is
sued a call for tlvo million dollars of coupon
bonds—five-twenties-- to be rodoomod Foil. 3,
at which date Interest will ceaso.
Tho secretary of tho treasury 1ms
directed tlio assistant treasurer at Now York
soil #500,000 gold each Thursday during the
mth < f Novomber, tlio aggregate amount to
l»0 *2.000,000.
Gen. Humphreys, ohiof of engineers,
lias roconinicndcd tlio appropriation of ono
hundred thousand dollars for tlio onlargo-
meut of tho Loniavillo and Portland canal
according to tlio plans heretofore reportod.
It is announced that tho new direct
cable company expect to commonoo business
this month, and have made a contract with tlio
A*(antic and Pacific tolograph company for
tlio transmission of thoir messages at tlio end
AUTl'MN l.KAVKS.
of tho lino.
Tho redemption agonoy of tho treasu
ry department, which lias been iu arrears for
sumo works iu tlio redemption of national hank
notes, is now up to date, and, thorofoio, ena-
ablod to make prompt returns for all* remit
tances of such notes sont iu for redemption.
Tho cable of tho direct Unitod States
company, which parted and was Inst, wliilo
boing laid by Uio Faraday, has boon picked up
by that vessel in laUtudo 50:31, longitude 24:19,
at a depth of 1,871 fathoms. It was spliood
to tho portion remaining on hoard tlio Fi
day, and tlio work of paying out lias again
commenced.
Geu. Benet, chief of tho’ ordnance
department, says, iu his annual roport, that
not loss than a half million dollars should bo
oxpendod at tho natitmal armory, not only as
a measure Of oeOfSomy, OWt 1 K> mako a better
selection of wos|*oiis in caso of war. Cor-
tainly not loss than a half million of tlio best
arms should bo manufactured as rapidly as
tlio monetary condition of the country will
pormit. Oon. Bonet recommends tlio estab
lishment of a grand arsenal, in thtf vicinity of
Now York, for manufacturing purposes.
Tho names of Messrs. Wood and Oox,
of Now York, lUwDll, of Pennsylvania, lion-,
of Indiana, and Payne, of Ohio, have boon
discussed for tlio next spoakonihip. Oon.
Banks is also spokon of. but ho does not call
himself a democrat, and tills > regarded os
putting him out of tho rango 'of probablo so
lootlon. Thoro is no prominont person yo
spoken of for tho clerkship of tlio noxt liouso
Tlio prosout force in that oflico is made np al-
togothor of republicans, and, of course, thoro
wiil he many changes among thorn. Mr. Bar
clay, tho Journal clork, remains under all dy
nasties, and in not likely to bo removed.
MY UNCLE WAS A BACHELOR.
“You havo often wondered, Goorgo,
why it is I havo never married—won
dered, and most probably rojoiood, for
at my death, you know, tho old plaoe
will oome to you, ns it onuio to me, freo
of debt or oncumbrauoe. I sunpoRo
you havo attributed my oouilrraod bach
elorhood to Romo disappointment in
lovo iu early life, oh ? Ah, well! I'll
toll you tho whole Btory. It may serve
a warning to you, l wan geiug to say,
ly I do not believe in ouo man's ox-
pononoo being of any use to another.
And as to warning, hah 1 they never
save. But I am in a retrospective mood
to-night, so if yon care to hoar the
sto -y, von shall."
My Unole Goorgo and I wore staying
np at Barlnig, a small flBhing place of
his in tho Highlands, to whioh wo re
sorted regularly twice a year for about
a fortnight, in pursuit of salmon. 1
had lost my father when I was about
four years old. and sinoo that timo his
brother, my Unole Goorgo, had boon
my father in all but tho naino. Indeed,
I think we wore fonder of oacli other
than fathers and sons usually arc in
these days.
It*had always boon a wonder to mo,
and to evory ono cine, that Uncle George
hail never married. Homo pooplo de
clared that ho had boon hopelessly in
love with tho beautiful Duchess do ,
and that il waR for hor sako ho had re
mained siuglo; others hiutod *nt some
Emigration Statistics.
i ono woek in Jnly last 2,000 stoer-
pasBongors sailed for Europe from
New York. Last Saturday week 500
sailed in a sigle ship. During the
year ending Juno HO, 1873, tho outgoing
passengers by sea from tho Unitod
Htatos were 110,154. During tho flvo
years previous tho average annual num
ber was 81,000. Of these departing
53,700 were cabin passengers and 05,*
448 were “other than oabiu." Tho ex
cess iu the year named is not duo to
the Vienna exhibition, for during tho
three months of the spring and sum
mer, when travel was at its height, tho
steamships carried only about 500 more
passengers abroad than in the corres
ponding period of 1872. For the year
ending with June, 187-3, 47,744 citizens
of tho United Htatos came home, and
13,388 “ aliens not intending to remain"
arrived. Tho whole immigration for
tho year was 473,141, exclusive of our
returning citizens. The remarkable
increaso in the number of people going
abroad indicates tho return of immi
grants for good. Some havo made
their fortunes; some have been dis
appointed •/.oven labor has failed. This
last cause has operated for the past year
more than heretofore, as the returns of
next season will show.
A dispatch from Hong Kong says the
latest advices from Pekin and Yeddo are of a
pacific nature. Tho general belief is that war
will be avoided. The Japanese government
lias intimated that.Chineae residents iu Japan
will not bo molested, if war is declared.
It is reported that Italy is ubont to
issue a memorandum to European powe
calling attention to the dangers to Italy frn
the intrigues of tlie Vatican, declaring tli
the government can no longer tolerate a vo
spiracy in its own capital, and urging the po
era to discontinue the custom of keeping ai
b&ssadors at the holy
English Journals.
Mr. Bailey, of the Danbury News,
has recently returned from a scrutiniz
ing journey through tho worm-eaten
monarchies of Europe, and wherever he
went he ferreted out things about news
papers. He thinks that “they are
rather slow concerns, are tho London
dailies. They crowd thoir advertisers
into repulsive limits; they mix up thoir
matter without regard to classification ;
they publish but a beggarly handful of
Americau newB; they report in full the
most insignificant speeches ; they don’t
seem to realize that there is such an at
traction os condensed newH paragraphs
they issue no Hnnday naper, and but
one or two have a weekly; they ignore
agriculture and science, personals and
gossip; they carefully exclude all humor
and head-lines, and come to their read
ers every week-day a sombre and mown
fill spectnelo that is most exasperating
to behold."
Men adore clothes, says a fash
correspondent. Tn fact., men have so
female weaknesses as well as tho women.
A small spirit of envy and uncharitable-
ness occupies a man’s breast as well as
woman’s bosom, and holds out to the
tnuglomunt; wliilo some maintained
boldly that Hir Goorgo Wyvillo was
married, and that I, his nephew, and
lioir presumptive in tho eyes of tho
world, should look very foolish some
day on tho baronetcy and Wyvillo
tie being olaimod by tlio son of my
ole’s old oollogo bed-maker.
But to all those stories I turned n
deaf oar. I know enough of Undo
George to fool suro thoro was not a
shadow of truth iu anyof thorn. My
undo often spoko of tho Duchess do.
as (what she was)ono of tho huudsoniost
women nnd most finished coquettes of
hor day. But I felt oortain ho had
novor cared for hor ; ho would not havo
talked so much about her if ho had.
And as to an ontanglem<*nt or a secret
marriage, why, I knew all my undo’s
affairs os well as I knew those of Charlie
Baynsford, my bosom friend aud
brother officer, who had boon gazottod
ns ensign nnd lieutonnut in ihe 5th
Foot Guards tho same day as myself,
a!milt two months before. No ; wlmt-
ovor reason my undo may havo had for
remaining siuglo, it was ono ho had
carefully guarded from tho whole world.
I was glad that I was going to hoar it*at
last.
I refilled my glass with whisky and
water, lit my pot pipe, about tho color
ing ot which I was so anxious, and
drawing ray chair nearer to tho firo, pre
pared to listen in oomfort.
“ I was about thirteen, Goorgo, when
I first saw Nora O’Byrne. I was at Eton
then, aud sho was a flowor-girl in tho
streets of Windsor. Tho first day I
ovor saw hor—I remember it os well as
if it wore yesterday—it was a bittorly
cold March afternoon, and sho was
standing outside the then only hotel in
tbo place soiling violets. To this hour
I can not stand wooing a girl selling vio
lets in tho street. I gavo hor all tho
money I had in my pookot. and my
heart with it. It is no use attempting
to describe hor. All descriptions of hor
real beauty arc futile. Sho was simply
tho loveliest child, as slio was afterward
tlio loveliest womau, I ovor beheld. Day
after day I used to see hor. I con
trived to meet hor quietly. I did all I
could for hor, and it wont to my lioart
to feel that I could do so little. I used
to givo hor food ; clothing was of no use
giviug, for hor mother took it away di
rectly, and pawned it to buy gin.
I need scarcely tell yon that Nora
no common beggar girl. Her father
had boon a well-to-do workman, and
during hiH lifetime sho had boon to
school, and had learned how to road and
write ; bnt after his death she had been
reduced to beggary through hor moth
er’s fatal propensity for drink. For
nearly two years of my life I spent ev
ery shilling I could spare on that child,
and I loved hor as I havo never loved
ony other human being. And what is
more, I kept my boyish lovo a secret
from every one—no easy matter as you
may imagine.
“ When I was fifteen I had a bad at
tack of typhns fever. I was staying at
Wyville at the time, for the Hammer
vacation with my unole, Sir Rupert.
Ho had a perfect horror of sickness, of
fever especially ; and direotly I was ta
ken ill, ho left the house to pay a visit
lo some friends near Windsor. He
promised mo that when tho school met
again ho would rido ovor, and givo tho
follows at my house tho latest accounts
tho Girards. My mothor (took a liouso
in Hertford street, aud I lived with her.
I went everywhere, and „waa mado
much of. I was heir to Wyvillo cnBtlo
nnd fiftoeu thousand a yoar—to say
nothing of tho baronetcy; nnd I could
havo marriod—as my undo aud mother
was alv7nys tolling nio-*-almost anybody
I chose; bnt I did uot choose.
“Straugons it may appear, I novor
met a girl I could enro for—novor mot
anyone who could make me forget for
ouo moment my ohildiah Jove.. I grow
tired of everything soonor thnu moBt
mon, aud at twenty, having obtained
several months lonvn of absonoo, I
started for n tour iu the oast with my
old friend Baynsford, who wbh thon
Captain Fellowcs. WJj«o wo were at
Smyrna l received n letter from rty
mother, telling mo that my nnolo was
going to 1m) married.*- sra-T had boon
taught from ehildhood to consider
myself his
with what
the intelligence. My mothor wrote
very illegible hand, and, nioroovor, al
ways crossed pages, oonBcquohtly do-
ciphering hor letters was no oasy task.
I could uot make tho namo of my un
do's fiance, although Fellowcs nnd I sat
up half tho night trying to disoovor it.
My mother said Hir Rupert had met
her in Paris, and I thought the word wo
oould not dooipher looked liko n French
name,
“ London was no plnoo for tno now, I
decided, nnd determined to lonvo tho
Guards and exohnugo into some* rogi-
mont going to Canaan— a country I was
particularly anxious to sec. Wo linger
ed a good donl on our way homo, and
wore a great part of tho time iu out-of-
tho way places, whore wo saw no news
papers. TIiuh I missed rending tho an
nouncement of my trade's marringo.
When 1 arrived in town I hoard of noth
ing bnt tho extraordinary beauty of
Lady Wyvillo; nnd many were tho
warnings I received—half in jest, half
in earnest—not to full in love with my
aunt. It was very odd, but I paid no
attention thereto, until, nt a hall whioh
I rove nftor attended, the duchess said
to mo, ' Sho is porfootly heautiful.’
“I made sofno oommonplnoo reply,
Hiioh as that ft was only very projty wo
men who ovor ’mlmitto^ beauty in oth
ers, and thou, with tho littlo duchess
on my arm, I wont to groot my undo
nnd his bride.
“ She was drossod nil iu whito—not
tho faintest trace of oolor about hor—
and hor lovoly face turnod as whito as
hor bridnl wreath, ns alio onmo face to
face with mo. It was Nora—Norn
whom I had last soon iu rags, barefoot
ed, asking alms from the pnsHcngorH,
and now mot again thus— at .an ombos-
sndor’s ball aud talking to a foreign
priuoo!
“My unoLo introduced me to his
bride, and I mado n profound bow, and
with a fnco as white ns hor own congrat
ulated hot on her mafringo, nnd express
ed' the gratification'^44* nt nmktnf^her
acquaintance. T -
“She gavo mo snohnlook, poor girl f
I know tlion that sho find novor forgot-
tou me. I passed on with the dnohoss
into tho ball-room, ami I felt rather
than saw that Norn turlod to look after
RAVAGES OF A PESTILENCE.
How (lio Indiana Wore Destroyed lit
umiruntln In
Tlio following npponrs ns a communi
cation from Mr. J. J. Warren, iu tho
Los Aiigolos (Oal.) Star :
I havo road of tho horrors of tho
Loudon plagno, and of tho more than
decimation by postilouoo of tho inhab
itants of various pnrtH of tho world, in
differout ages, nnd of tho destruction
of mankind by tho angels of tho Lord
aud by dostroying angels ; bnt I havo
novor road or hoard of suoh a gonornl
destruction of n pooplo by any angel,
good or bad, or by plague or postilouoo,
ns that whioh swept the valloy of tho
Snoramonto aud San Joaquin in tho
summer of 1833.
In tho autumn of 1832, n party, of
wliloh tho writer was a member, trav-
olod from tho mountain down along tho
lioir, you may fancy, Goorgo, bnnkB of tho Son Joaquin rivor, and up
feelings of disgust I reooivod thoBO of tho Sacramento to somodistauoe
“ abovo tho oonfiuouoo of tho lnttor with
Foathor rivor. Tho nnmbor of Indians
living along aud in tho vicinity of tlio
banks of tho rivers was so muon greater
than I had ovor soou living upon tho
same area of country, that it prosontod
a constant source of surprise. Tho con
clusion was thon ronohod by mo Hint
thoro was no otlior plnoo ou tho conti
nent, north of tho tropio. tho natural
productions of whioh oould supppot so
largo n population as was thon living iu
tho section of country to whioh I have
referred.
Tn tho lnttor part of tho suminor of
1833 wo outorod tho northern extremity
of tho Snoramonto valloy from tho Kin-
mntli-lnko and I’itt-rivor oountrios. Wo
found tlio northorn part of tho valley
strewn with tlio skolotons nnd frngmonts
of skelotons of Indinus under tho Blind
ing treos, .around springs and the con
venient watering places, upon the banks
of tho river anil ovor the plain, whore
wolves nnd ooyotos, waddling from troo
to troo or ovor tho plain, their liidos
distended with unnatural fatness, had
dragged aud donudod thorn. From
tho head of tlio valley to tho Araorioau
rirer bnt ouo living Indian was seen,
and ho was tho mostporfaotporsoniflon-
tion of solitude that was over prosontod
to my view ; his wasted mnsolos, his
eyes deeply sunk in thoir sookots, as if
thoro wero no brains within tho ornui
uni, oinitod n dull, vaoant pazo,
astonished to boliold a living boing,
whon ho boliovod that all, all wore dead,
nnd lie ulono loft, tolling most emphati
cally of his utter loneliness, of how ho
l»d soon tho destroying angel ongngod
in his work of donth on ovory hand, nnd
wherovor his oyos wero turnod, until ho
himself was prostrated, not killed, but
loft to riso upon his foot, niidnvandor
about among tlio bones and fostoring
bodies of his folk. Tho dwellings of
tho Indinns iu tho numorous villages te-
oatod upon and along tho banks of tho
Snoramonto rivor aiid its tributaries
-worn void, nnd no foot-trnokH.but those
of fowls nnd wild bonsts wore to bo
soou iu tho lonely villages.
As wo trnvolod southorly tho skolotons
wore of a froslior npponranoo, nnd be
fore reaching tho bnttos, nnd from
tlionoo southorly, tho outiro or pi
dovourod bodies of the Indinus,
stages of (loony, wore so invariably
found in nnd about nil the oonvoniont
nnd dosirnblo camping places that it
hoontno nocossary, in ordor to oacnpo
tho stonoh of decomposing humanity,
to sook our night’s ononmpment upon tho
opon plain.
Aftor crossing Foathor rivor. those
villages nlong tho Hnoraraonto whioh in
tho wintor previous wore oach inhabited
by hundreds of Indians, wore dosolato
and the nbodo of ruin. Tho samo ap
palling proofs of tho dire calamity wore
constantly presented to us as wo trav
eled up tho Han Joaquin. Neither
biblical nor profauo history lias por
trayed snob mournful results of tho
mnroli of a dostroying angel as wore
prosontod to our sonses ns wo ropassod
through, along by and around those
sllont and vacated villages, whioh somo
ton months boforo wo had soon swarm
ing witli Indian life, nnd rosaiindiug
prooodod tho dnrkuoss; gloom onmo
upon their labors siloutly ns n thiof in
the night, ami it was uot until the wholo
of tho mines prosontod a sulphurous
appearance Hint tlioy loft thoir work.
A Mid-Ocean Hock.
Tho Mercury publishes n rather sen
sational report of a rook iu tho middle
of tho Atlnutio ocean ns a solution of
tho mystery regarding tho fate of tho
steamBhlns City of Boston, President,
Pacific, United Kingdom, tlio Ismailin
nnd other vosnols that have novor beou
hoard from after lonving port. Tho
rook, it npponrs, lion in latitude 40 north
and longitude 02.18. It woh discovered
by Onpt. Pioasso, of tho Italian bark
Teresa, whioh arrived at Quoonrtown
Ootobor 2, from N«w York. Onpt. Pi-
00880 makes the lollowiaaijoport of bis
disoovory:
On tho ninth of Hoptcmbor, at ono p.
m., wind northerly, very light and dear
weather, with son porfootly smooth, ob-
sorvod ou tho horizon a largo rook in
tho slinpo of a trnpezoum, about four
miles to tho windward, in latitude 40
north, lougitudo 02.18 west; triod to
boat up to it, but, owing to tlio lightnoss
of the wind, oould uot do so. Tlio rook
lay north and south, and wan of a red
dish-brown oolor; disoornod thoscawood
ou it plainly with n glosB. Tho dimou-
sious are ns follows: Length, 100 motros,
3 foot, 3} inches por metre, ou tlio south
«» 1UUI>,0] lliuuun (HU IUUHU, UU lUU OUMkU
part; 14 motros broad, and 0 metres out
of tho water, whioh was low about half-
past two i». m. Tho rook bore north,
nnd wo made, by chronometer calcula
tion, tho rook was iu tho exaot position
of lntitmlo iO north,J longitude (12.18
west.
Onpt. PionsHO states that lio lias n chart
of 1848 by Nouoys on board, with this
rook marked on it, but thoro are two
(legreos difference in lougitudo. Thin,
ho says, is accounted for by tho inoor-
reotnessof thooldohronomotors. Ho was
surprised nt not fludiug this rook on an
English chart by Wilson, dated 1872,
ami also on n French chart, samo date,
whioh is ou board. Ho states that ho
triod for soundings, but oould got none
in tho vicinity of tho rook. Aooordiug
to Onpt. Picasso's roport, tbo rook is
within a few sooonds of tlio samo dogreo
as Now York is situatod in, aud ou a
straight liuo from west to oast, lying
about 550 milos from our harbor, and
of i
The ohief aqthorities of the church | last years of life into the bargain !
I did not return to Eton till after
tho Christmas holidays, and then Nora
was gone—where I could not loam. In
vain I made inquiries of different peo
pie in tho town who know tho girl by
sight. All I could learn was that
neither she nor her mother had been
seen since the boginning of September,
I was nearly frantic with anxiety. I
give yon my word, George, that never
but once in my life have I folt anything
like the utter grief and desolation of
that time, when I thought of Nora, with
her extraordinary' beauty, thrown upon
tlni wide world with no other protection
than that drunken old mother.
“ Well, time passed on, and when I
was eighteen I left Eton and went into
Is sho not boanBful ?’ my com
panion asked with lofity. ‘Ah, I waH
right. T oould son von wore dosporatolv
opris with hor. Whatis it you English
onll it? Lovo nt first sight ? Toko my
lulvioo, mon ami, ami do not floe too
mnoh of your lovoly mint.’
‘“I shall follow your advice/ I said ;
‘I moan to soo ns little of hor ns possi
ble. ’
“Something iu my voico mado my
companion glnnoo up f and thon, with
triio tact aud good breoding, sho has
tened to change tho subject. Bho was
a kiml-licartcd littlo woman, in spito of
hor trifiiug language. I know that novor
again to mu or nny living being did she
recur to wlint slio hnanotiood that even
ing ; nnd that sho had noticed more
than slio chose to say J folt oortain.
“I novor saw Nora again so ns to
spunk to hor during ray uuolo’s lifotimo.
I 'exchanged at onoo into a regiment
under oruors for Onnadn, Thoro I re
mained three years, until tho death of 1
Hir Rupert rocnllod mo to England.
Nora had no children, so I was now Sir
Goorgo Wyvillo. ‘ Hho might ns woll
havo.waited for mo/1 thought bitterly.
I mot her onoo at ou* solicitor's, ou
business, just aftor ray return homo,
and that was tho last timo I ovor saw
hor in the world. Hho lived entirely in
London, doing an immonso deal of
good, I believe, among tho Irish poor.
“But hor career of usofolnoss was a
short ono. Hho only survived Hir Ru
pert four yours. To me she died the
hour whon she bcoamo liis wife. Hho
wrote to mo onoo after slio was a widow,
tolling mo nil tho circumstances of hor
marriage—how that Hir Rupert had
rescued hor from a life of beggary in
tho Btroets, nnd sent her to school for
four years, and that she had felt herself
bound in honor and gratitude to marry
him.
“Hho concluded hor letter by ex
pressing a hope that we might still bo
friends. Friends! I had no more
friendship to offer her than I had lovo
to offer any other woman ; and my un
cle’s widtfw was sacred in my eyes.
“ I nover saw Nora again.
“ I beliovo the world talked a good
deal about my strange oonduot toward
my aunt, and pronounced it to bo ' very
bad taste/ now that I had come into
tho title and estates. Only tho Dnoh-
esse de , I fancy, gave mo credit for
having some good reason for thus avoid
ing Lady Wyvillo.
“There, Georgo, you know tho story
of my life—why I havo remained a
bachelor all my days. I am not aware
that there is nny particular moral to
bo deduced from my tale, unless it is
‘•nly to fall in love in your own rank
of life/ a piece of advice that was very
frequently given to me when I was
young. I hope you will profit by it
better than I nave done."
nonrly iu the oourso of tho ooeiui steam
ers, in wlint is known ns tho soutliorn
pnsflftgo. ■
Magnetic Women.
In tho intolleotual ns iu tlio physioal
world, thoro are natural and nrtiiloial
magnets—tlioso produced by those.
Most women are tho nrtiiloial, gnining
by onltnre, adaptation, training, iu-
fiation, imitation, a portion of wlint a
fow woraon—tlio natural magnates—
havo by inheritance. Magnotism may
bo oommunioatod by oontoot, oitlior
material or social, mid.it often is, with
out intention or violation. Unless
thoro be organio opposition, a really
magnetic woman may impart something
of nor powor to hor intimates, easily
whon thoir sympathy is so oomploto
The Frisky Flea.
The avorgo woman hates a flea with
an intensity almost diabolioal in its na
ture. Hho will pnrsuo ono of thoso
littlo lnnoooiits with tho remorsoloss-
uoHH of a (lend, and if yon ever oxpoot
to soo a beautiful oxompliiloation of
womanly traits novor look for it when
she knows that a flon is about. And in
proportion ns tho woman hatos, tho flea
seems to lovo, and is novor enjoying
ecstatic bliKS unless favored with hor
sooioty. Ho likes to sook hor oouoh in
tho stilly hours Of the night, woo her
from slumber, aud ‘ftatfu a sheltered
nook witness hor foverish
osoopo liis caresses; h i porlinps be
doos not renoli tlio acme of enjoyment
until lio can slyly nooompany hor to
ohuroli anil not mako liis prosonoo
known until she has satisfactorily set
tled her furbelows and flonnoos on tho
ousliionod sont nil rondy to bo admired
nnd mako note of how othors look.
And tlion tho lien bogins liis manipula
tions, knowing!full woll that lio lias his
victim nt n disadvantage. Here there
onu bo no hasty flinging of skirts, no
assuming of unboooming postures wliilo
making frnntio grabs nt tho raisohiovous
aud innncossiblo monster. If yon note
tho woman olosoly, yon will soo a com
pression of the lip and look of linto
nnd pain orooping into tlio face whioh ,
sho would fain conceal nnd not reveal,
for are not many oyos upon hor ? Ono
momout sho sottlos herself a littlo more
firmly on ono side, ns though hoping to
crush tho aggressor, bnt the noxt mo*
mont'.feols him scampering upward, when
sho sottlos backward quioltly to ontoh
him botwoon hor baok nnd tlio rail, but
all in vain—his flag is still tliore. Ono
dainty gaiter may rub up against its
follow ns far iib may bo done without
disarranging drapery, anil tliore may bo
a quiot, yot novortholoss vioious olutoh
of a jowolod hand under tlio protonso
of arranging flowing drnpory, bub all in
vain. And tlio flon, how ho doos enjoy
it. Ho roams hither and thither at his
own sweet will, unoaring for tho boiling
wrath whioh fairly makes tho whito
flosh upon which ho plays shiver bo-
nontli liis light trend. And perhaps
the ilea has his mi to, aud then tho an
guish is doubled. At ono moment thoy
are playing tag ; at another hido and
sook, nnd wliilo tho ono is cosily nestled
away, tlio otlior rushes liitlior and
tliither to And it in n way whioli is
maddening ; and tliou thoy aot tho part
of explorers, and prospoot ovory hill
and dale of tlio form divine. Bnt ono
thing thoy do not do, thoy do not
go to sloop. And during this hour
of martyrdom how tlio wrath of
tho woman gathers, and liow only
thoughts of diro <?vongoanoo mako
tlio briof agony ondurablo. But at last
Goethe’s ideal of married life, and
ono to whioh ho striotly adhered, is de
scribed by himself as tho union of two
persons of cultivated faculties, identical
in opinion and purposes, between whom
thoro existn that best kind of equality,
similarity of powers and capacities with
reciprocal superiority in thorn, so that
one can enjoy tho lnxury of looking up
to the other, aud can have alternately
.. . . i i j i
with voices from hundreds of human
throats.
Around the nakod villages, graves,
and the ashes of funeral pyres, tho skol-
otoiis and swollen bodios told a talo of
doath, suoh as no written record has
ovor revoalod. From tho hood of tlio
Haoramonto valloy until wo readied tlio
month of King’s rivor, not exceeding
live livo Indians wore soon, and lioro wo
fonnd encamped a village of Indians
iflhong whom tho destroying angel was
sating hip^oed of human victims by a
.ghastly carnage. During tho ono night
more than a score of victims wore
added to the hosts upon whioli ho had
beou feeding. Tho wailing of that
stricken village during that night was
incessant and most terrible. The sword
of tho destroyer was a remittent fever,
with whioh tho victims wore first strick
en down, to bo finished by a hot-air
bath, followed by a plunge into a cold
water ono. It was ovidont to ns, from
the signs wo saw, that at first tho Indi-
dians buried thoir dead ; but whon the
dead became so numerous that tho liv
ing oould not bury them, resort was had
to the burning of the dead bodios, and
whon tho living, from diminished num
bers, wero unnble to do this, thoy aban
doned their villages, tho siok and tlio dy
ing, and fled in dismay, only to die by tbo
springs and pools of water, and beneath
tlio shade of protecting trees.
Tlio Total Eclipse in Africa.
A copy of the “Capo Argus” g
the following account of tho ideas of
tho natives regarding tho recent eclipse:
In Natal the Zulus stopped work when
tho oolipso began, and resumed whon it
was over, demanding two days’ wages,
tho eclipse, in their opinion, having
been a short night. At the diamond-
fields the natives rushed ont of their
claims, horror-stricken, and said tho sun
was dying. Tho grandest living tableau
over soon was the great gathering of
horror-stricken nudes watching, witli
foarfnlly rounded and glaring oyos,
mouth opon, and fingers pointed at what
they boliovod to bo tho (lying moments
of the almighty luminary, whoso ma
jesty is tlio only God thoy know. Tlio
effect of the eclipso on the imagination
of tho natives, as depioted in tlioir coun
tenances, was terrible. They
grouped together on tho heights ofjthe
partially and notivo as to bogot homogeneity,
is, in all Human magnotism moves in circles,
returning in added force to its point of
emanation wliilo youth and vigor last.
Fitness dwells in this, for a circle is tlio
form of grace, tho symbol of continuity;
aud magnetism is compulsion fairly
cloaked ns tlio continuity of grooo.
Man ontolios not a littlo of his magnet
ism, whon not inherent, from his fom-
iuino associates. Ho is molded ; roflnod,
rounded by tliom through tho inflnonoe
of that porvadiug property. Ho is
rarely amiable or interested who is nn-
nooustomod to tho sooietry of women,
Hho can oonvert clownishness into com
plaisance, selfishness into benovolonoe,
so serenely and skillfully that he hardly
knows lie has been translated. Her
magnetism daily performs miracles,
which, from thoir commonness, get no
orodit. Half tlio suooess of man with
man ho owos to tho lessons whioh
woman lias taught liim, and, by n
strange perversion of justice, by a ma
lignant violation of gratitude, mosc of
his success with womau likewise. That
sho should givo into his hands the
weapons lie turns against hor, and in
struct liim in thoir eflootivo use, reveals
tiio sarcasm of hor destiny.—Junius
Henri Brown,
the pleasure of leading and being led in Kopje, silent awe-stricken. They
the path of development, | knew nothing of the ghastly light that
UotliHclilld'H Maxims.
Tho will of tlio late Baron Rothschild
consisted of twenty-five articles, of
whioh paragraph twenty, remarkable
for its beautiful lessons of filial obedi
ence and brotherly love, is as follows :
14 1 exhort all my beloved children al
ways to livo in harmony ; never to loosen
family bonds ; to nvoid all differences,
dissensions and litigations ; to use for-
boamnee toward each otlior, and not to
allow temper te get tho better of them,
and to bo friendly in their dispositions.
My children possess a good example in
their excellent grandparent. Friendli
ness was always tho sure condition to
tho happiness and success of tho whole
Rothschild family. May my children
now and nover lose sight of this family
tradition, and may they follow (he ex
hortation of ray Into father, their grand
father, oontained in paragraph fifteen of
bis last will, always to remain true and
faithful, and without changing, to the
paternal faith of Israel/’
tlio sorvioo wlnoli has seemed so long is
ended, and with os mnoh majesty as
hor writhing form will permit, she sails
homo without loitering, you may bo
sure. Tha house reached, with ono
bound sbo is within the privacy of lie*
own oh amber, aud there all restraint in
oast aside. With lightning haste off
oomo tho barricades behind whioh the
flea found intrenobmont, and at last she
stands liko a gladiator stripped for the
fight, nnd then tho fate of tho invader
is sonlod. Ho is pursued with remnrse-
Iohb fury, and tho battlo does not end
until tho victor shakos aloft tho soalp
of tlio foo, and vows that so perish
always tlio flea who dares to invodo tho
snored torritory of hor person.
Don’t Dio Youiiff. *
Ouo of tho most curious discoveries
mndo during a rcoont investigation of
tlio almshousos of this state is that tho
paupors havo an obstinate wav of not
dying. Tlio average length of life after
admission to thoir comfortable ostab-
ments is said to bo twenty years, though
tlio inmates are, upon entering, most of
tliom, woll ndvanood. Suoh is the ad
vantage of boing free from Ixithorntion,
worry, frot, trouble, anxioty, disap
pointment, and the like tilings, tho
namos of whioh may bo found in Dr.
Roger’s Thesaurus. It was long ago
settled by agreement of the moralists
and tho physiologists that fuss kills
more than fevor, and s^ds greater
numbers to an untimely sepuloher.
Tho wise pauper may say, if bo takes
tho troublo of saying anything: i
havo mado n snug harbor at last; I have
all that the richest man is sure of—
three moals daily, a bed nightly, and
clothes to put on when I got up in tho
morning. Good-by, hope l I have no
further occasion for your anohor, my
lady I Farewell, oare ! You shall not
kill mo as you did tho oat! Nothingto
do but to live ; and, by George, I will
live as long as possible. Old boy, you
havo got into a good thing! Don t
mako a donkey of yoursolf by prema
turely exhaling! ” He doesn t it seems
—and why should he ?—Now York
Irlbunc.
Weather Signs,
Farmors prediot a hard winter beoauso
rabbits arc burrowing far into tho
ground. It is wise in a rabbit to do
this. If lie didn’t some young man
wonld have him out of that with a
forked stick pretty quick. However, if
that is a sign, it oan bo offset by
tho notion of certain cockroaches
around this office. Not ono of thorn
has ovon commenced to dig yet. Thoy
ramblo around as if they expected op-
plo trees to blossom in January, and
sort o’ turn up their noses when thoy
hear any thing about oold weather or
tho wolf of starvation. They don’t
seem to care a cent whethor they swing
on a gas burner or roost on the steam
pipes, andjtheir utter recklessness goes to
show thut tho coming winter won’t bo
of muoh account.—Detroit Free Press,
The peanut crop amounts |to only
750,000 bnshols this year, and after tho
fomalo colleges have been suppliod
there won’t be a pint apieoe for the rest
of us,
Two Strange Human Beings.
X W08 onoo Bitting in a cool under-
ground saloon at Loipsio, while without
people wore ready to die from heat,
when a new guest entered and took a
seat opposite mo. Tho sweat rolled in*«,
great drops down his face, and he wnj
kept busy with his hnndkorohiof, till at
last ho found relief in the oxolamation,
“Fearfully hot.” I watched atten
tively as he called for a oool dnnk, for
I expected evory moment that ho would
fall from his chair in a fit of apoplexy.
The man must hKVo noticed that I was
observing him, for he turned toward me
enddenly, Baying, “l am a .
of person, am I not? Why? I
asked. “Beoanso I perspire only on
the right Hide." And so it waa; hia
right oheek and the right half of hifl
forehead were as hot as firo, whilo the
oertain cockroaches
in my astonishment, was about to enter
into conversation with him regarding the
“ Then wo are tho opposite and oonn
torparts of each other, for I perapiro
only on tho loft sido." This, too, waa
tho faot. Ho the pair took Mate oppo
site each other, and shook hands like
two men who had just fonnd eaoh his
other half .—Popular Soienoe Monthly.
—It is asserted as a faot that DiBraeli
is quite spoony on tho Empress En-
gouio, and all because tho prenuer has
taken to wearing forget-me-not, in bis
button-hole,