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warn
SUIjena ©corgian.
II. II. CARLTON & CO.,Proprietors:
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION
W-T- u ,• / : '•
JE COPY, On« Year, a OO
K , vc COPIES, On* Y*»r,-._ 8 78
TP' 1 COPIES, On* Year,,..... ' 18 OO
J/ic Official City tBaper
Kates of Advertising:
SI i
, and 75 o*nU for each mb-.
Trm.lrnt advert iHrrocn
per «|U»r» for tk* flnt
icqurnt luurtlon.
AU <« r .M.vM tramlent rsxpt
»li'-rf iMtlal contract* *re mad*.
T™ line* apace of this type (or on* lock nuke on*
/<* Liberal contracts nfcdo with jearlr advertiser*.
Hates of Legal Advertising.'
Application tur Letters of DiamUaion Adm’tV,
Application f«*r Lo-ticrs of Dlam'on Guard.
> ilr-i of Land, \Cs, |»er square
Salt** Perishable Property, 10 day*, per
lMrajr Notices, .’10days
Miffntf sales, |Hir l«*vv of 10 Hues or less,
'hpritf MortirsR© f». fit. Sales per square.
Tux Collector's Sales, par square.
5 00
800
3 00
Advertisements.
’ .KING’S;"gL t RE
' 9241 »i *)Mq <Tq.fc.' -CU- ll.
l^#*$*§flLERV
I CERTAIN REMEDY
nr; ugW BMM . ,
FOR T9E (pjatfaE AMONG
Poulttt; v 0f ill‘Kinds.
UsedtwiceaweekitwDl ;
Prevent the Disease,
. And keep the Poultry in a
HEALTHY CONDITION 1 .
iMpMip
bottle, which makes TWO GALLONS of
the Medicine. . ' * Prepared by
. , Dr. WM. KING,
Athens, Ga.—33-tf.
MurtW, per aquan. cm It time..
it id ion Notice* tin advance)
Nisl’s, per square, sacb time . ....
Business & Professional Cards.
^ || W. 11. LITTLE,
Attorney al .Law, :i
CARNBSVILLB, GA.-i.' . .. ■ *
J. S. DORTCH,
Attorney at Za?r f
CARXJSVILLE, GA.
rarsicMn.
O I>. A. C. lt>X. offers hi. profcsrional Services to
the citizen* of Athena and viotnl
• office at the Drug Store of R. T.
ollcge Avenue, Athens, Ga.
The Enterprise long looked For!
AT th
FRANKLIN
iby A Col,
21-tf.
COBH, ERWIN & .COBB,
Attorneys at Z,aw }
ATHENS, GA. ‘
Oihit in the Deupree Bni!ding. ^
•A M. JArKsoN....,.. :
Attorneys at Law •«.
Athene, Georgia.
P. G# THOMPSON,
Attorney at Law,
'cml utu-iitiou paid to criminal practice. For ref.iv
l * .pplyto Ex. Gov. T. f. WitUud Hon. David
Montgomery Ala. Office over Barn’.
AT THE
HOUSE
Meals can be had at all honn, for
CENTS lEiA-Cn.
TWO DOELARfi PER DAY.
- A FINE OYSTER SALOON
Oiraten will be aold by the quart and callonf to those
wno wish them. Give na a trial and wa will please von
. -. . v. . w. A. JESTEK/ 7
.. Oct. 2S-tr ' IIRELK Proprictors.
WEATHERLY & COT
ARE NOW READY
aai Juiiw {rad?.
Having just returned from New York with a large end
•*»*.► well selected stock of ”
Goods and Groceries,
Jtesdy-Made Clothing, Hats, Boots,
1 Shoes, Wood and Willow
Ware, Hardware, Crock-
' erv, Drugs, &<\
Trfce* to init these hard time. AH kinds of
COUNTRY PRODUCE
’ k.pton, Montgomery Ala.
B-tihtii*, (is.
A. E0CHRAM&
• *-t£
JOHN MILLEDOE.
LOCHRANE & MILLEDOE.
t rtrtV j* ittxb A i.ilA W ,
ATLANTA, CM*"'
t>iV«c, Xo. 2i Pryor St., Opp. Kimball House.
.T01IX T. OSBORX,
Attorney at La w. #
ELBERTON, GA.
If— J. K
fill practice in the counties of th, North«m Circuit,
Ersntlm and Habersliam ot the Western
LSroait; «tU give special alientionto all clahna entrust-
IrJ to MS can-. Jan. 10,1874^-ly.. ,
. T. A. SALE, *
DENTIST.’
Jefferson Davis.
Room for the Hottents! Room !.
Venganee of God let them wreak!
Hither the sutlers some.
Preaching the gospel of cheek.
Hear the brass boma a* they blow them t
Sec them, how f>l atant and bold I.
■!: Rebels will now hardly know them,
But by their backs, as of old.
ll Who is their enemy f Sec him!
Broken by manifold ill. • d ’*V
Death standiag ready to free him— ^ i
, Weak, but a gentleman still. ! ..
Once a proud pedple browned him.
Placed him in highest command';
Then the crazed victors bound him,
,i Lowest ot all the land.
' 1 * nt; * r to"***!* « a ‘V;T
Though they bonld fetter his Hum ; •
Never his courage forsook him,
Never he stooped to shame.
Victory ne’er could elate hint,
Never defeat overthrow, ~
Honor conld easily sate him,
Strong was lie nnder his woe.
Now, he is conquered, but standing
Upright before ns all;
Still is his aspect commanding,
Proud and erect in bis fait :
Nothing he muttefs of anger,
Ilate in his heart is not found;
Speaks but to rouse from their languor
Hearts that arc bowed to the ground.
Howl at this man; but be hears not,
Hiss; but he doe* not care.
Threaten and curse; but he fears not.
Strike; but he bids yon not spare.
Rail at the oak of the forest!
Blast it with lightning and hail!
Stilh when the storm beats the sorest,
What does your anger avail t 3, ‘
Howl; but you never can move him,
Silent and cnlm and strong.
Here will bis people love him—
Yonder will God judge his wrong.
[ST. Louis Times.
RSKSalling. Mr. Storon h£Tf
informed me that the'bnildin^and ground
had cost nearly $5,000,000. • He said he
did not expect the property .would pay as
an investment, k wE/he thinks, be a
credit and an aptdal benefit to the city.
This is all he wants. He can afford to build
one hotel, if H only costa $5,000,000. But
why Mr. Sharon, who is- a fixator, from
Nevada^should have such an extraordinary
h interest m San Francisco, jfjather strange.
[From the Baltimore Guette.
TftcJllan tcho Slops his Paper.
When a man exhausts all other tomes of
conversation be is very opt to talk about him
self, and it is not unnatural that, in appalling
meagerness of news which makes the mid
summer period so trying to the editorial soul,
tho newspapers should talk about journalism.
Fortunately, to save them from the charge
of egotism, convenient excuse » afforded to
the writers who are now giving their theories
aji3gwp¥s«a: ass
j** ^ r * 10 res 'de, ism£ji curious collection of sentiments and
but he does not live there *0r< the contra
ry, he has a very charming house in this
city, and never goes to Nevada, except on
^hnsmess trip, from one year to another.
However, he goes quite as oft .-: as his col-
leaguo does. , v } s . ~
Alne fnrniture in, the,,RPhlaca .will cost
fl,000,000. Thts ls the sum'laid apart for
it. The mirrors alone, will cost $100,000,
and the chandeliers .$45,000. The silver
vill cost $60,000, and the'linen $75,000.
Mr. Leland estimates that the fnmitnre in
each room will cost $1,000. ’Diifl.bf course,
nriM nnf vnfnw t/x tin iviJaw.. i!._
Miscellaneous Selections.
does not refer to tfce parlors or reception
rooms, each of which will reqifire * from
$5,000 to $10,000. The furqmuo through-
out*the hotel, like the building is to bese-
verely plain, and will he mad^in this city.
Tho builders have adopted thp fashion, so
prevalent in Paris a few years ago, of fur
nishing with light-colored woods. There
will be very little rosewood aim mahogany
in the Palace. The wood turn will ho al
most entirely native, such asgpUen mahog
any, lanrel, manzauita, oak, rtXwood, eta,
all of light color. Mr. Leland will intro
duce a novel feature in S311 Srancisco in
tho matter of help. There aiw at present,
not a dozen colored waiters in {he city; hut
he has now under contract over two hun
dred negroes for his dining-room, under
Nathan Randolph, of the Ocean, at Lon<?
Branch. The waiters arq paid from $30 to
$35; while in Washington, Baltimore or.
Richmond, the best colored
had for $20 a month.
opinions, on that mysterious moral engine—
1 he Press. It is not a little curious and
amusing to read the widely differing theories
which are held by the various writers, and
not at all singular Jhateseh holds views otathe
province ot the Press, of which his own joura*.
al 13 an exponent. For instance, we. are not
surprised to find That excellent example of
the enterprise of Western journalism, the
Cincinnati Commercial; which has a remark
able scent for news, .presenting news-gather
ing as the great feature of the Press to which
Ml others are subordinate, and giving the ed
itorial utteranoes a minor place. Nor on
the other hand, should we expect to see that
very able and valuable hebdomadal, tho New
York ]\atum, doing otherwise than setting
down 4 the newsgathering journals as simply
i ?ews mongers,’ and putting forward the pol
ished and elaborate editorial essay as the per-
feettop of the true journalism. But all this
discussion and turning on of side-lights is of
little avail, and the true end and aim of jour-
nalism remains, a conundrum to whicbevery
man will have his own answer and it may be
added that all will be right.
But our purpose in referring to the pres
ent discussion was to call attention to one
phase of journalism which has not received
as much consideration as it should—the rela
tion of the subscriber to his newspaper. We
are glnd to see their relationship commented
upon by . the Nation in its review of the wbrk
^tp which we have referred, for it is a fruitful
Persevering *ignes.
“ I am going to learn, too.” . • -
“You? oh hear it! Agnes going to learn,
too;” and Ursula’s laugh was merry and long.
Why doyou laugh?” asked Agnes her
“Because you are such a goose.”
“ It is not being a goose to try, wheirmam-
!, for you might know
Agues learnitigto play
fji
* -T Detective's Blunder.
t The Virginia City (Noy.> Evening Ckroni 1
trie relates this lncidentir-^Aboufctwo monthff »*i
ago a young lawyer of this«ty and Els news
ly acquired wife were -returning from a visit
to the bay. ^yearied a trifle with constant
billing and cootng ? the young husband K
some feeble excuse or other and ‘slipped off ”'
to the smoking car h* burn a cigar and think 1 ^
with a sigh of the departed , lmchelor daya-.:
when he could spit out of the wiQdow over
his boot toes, with none to say, “Oh, please.
Steve, dear, don’t.” J i ifm •
The bride; with rather an. injured expres
sion, was siting. u> her palace car, musing on
of attraction MThe whole car. Tfro^rough”
that looking men were standing in the aisle, gaz-
* nnd inn flf nav nlnonln anJ tk**. —-* • _
conn tine
mu says I may.
“You are a
you could not doTTM
by note!” and Ursula sunk down among tii'c
cushions, almost upsetting mamma’s astral
on the tabic, and laughed until Agnes, quite
cast down from her flight of high spirits, ran
off to find mamma and to know if she really,
being “nobody but Agues,” could learn to
play on the piano by notes.
i/.I. shall learn this oue t^^H
one to-morrow, and these the next day ‘ and ing at her closely, and then- referring' to~a
Ithcnext, raid Ursula gome time Afterwards, paper which one held in hi* hands.
th« 1
exetrisw in heHbook.
shall have finished them aU by New Year’s : lect
day, and be ready for a real, regular piece.” | vacant seat beside her, and with a knowing
What, a piece like. Lucille plays?” asked wink'obagrvedt? *d ji;«
DOS. 44 A rrimrl (vat.nn Vanm«. W ?*■ «*a.U J-
, ,, L , re may ho, and difficult theme. Thero is no doubt, as
had for t-0 a feonth. When t|e hotel will. tWiVaffon writer ^ays, that’ the subscriber
ho opened, it is difficult to say; certainly looks upon himsrif as E sort^of jeint partner
not witlun a month, although the carpeU in thexnewspaper enterprise ta whicht Ee non.
. . , . - although the carpets
are being laid on the top floors. 1 The price
per day, when it is to be remembered that
in San Francisco the best accommodations
are to he had for $3, or at mosbJM per day,
seems rather unreasonable, hqimr fcd 50 per
Yet, Mr.Lefe^ysSalf
day in gold.
taken In
oaraerof
April 21,
- sad •** «* at the
CIGAR AND TOBACCO
emporium;.
^MRJ^HA tis.e r,
3sro X oica-AJEts, •
Chewing ana Smoking Tobacco, 9
^ r riPES, MATCH CAKES, Ete., Sir.
I«t .ll who dc.iro to enjoy 0 red lnxury In the way of
’ unallcost,
kind or chewing and it a comparatively _
call at hi. emporium, on College Arenac, Athena, Ga.
May 12,18TR—J8-tf
'; A.THE3STS
MARBLE
Mamixe yard
_ _ ROBERTSON.:
Boom, over Hif* -^^5
~ ^
t ^ VU
Jr
A LI. operation, on Teeth warranted, to give aatiefac^
lioa^in Work and Prieea. Terms, Very Low For
A“/
A. G. McCURRY,
Attorney at Law. * 1
HARTWfeLL, GEORGIA. '
WILL give strict personal attention to all bnrineas eu-
I mated to bit eare. Ang. A—40—ly. *"
.Peraena desiring work of
ahop adjoming the old Oemetary.
S. M. HERRINGTON,
Notary Public & Ex-Officio Justice
of the Peace.
a.-jovjrl. J. Lampkins’ atora. March Sl-Sm.
FRANK HARALSON,
A T T O RNB Y AT L A W,
CLEVELAND, GA.
ill practice in
[Cor. of tho N. Y. Tribune.
The Palace Hotel. ,
Tho name of the new hotel is the Palace.
d 'V™? P T0 ) ecte ? 1 by Mr. Ralston, of the
Bank of California, who has personally done! his rooms are already engaged;
more to popularize not only the city of San »«- : ■
Francisco, but the whole State of California, The Reporter's BrMe.
than any body else. Few can appreciate The Pittsburg Leader say*: lout week
the gigantic proportions of the palace, and young Paddington, a reporter on the Afa^r.
I have obtmned certain figures from the ar- got married. The next morning his bride
clntect to aid the ima^uation. There ate availed herself of a wife’s dearest privilege
neariy it thousand rooms m tho hotel; there and went through his pockets. « 8he found
are 500 bath rooms. There is not a rqom some interesting letters from tailors, boarding
in the house for guests that is less than 16 mistresses, and washerwomen, bht these res
met square, and more than half of them are I oeived only a passing.gbiiSoe. She scorned
-U feet square. Every room has a closet, a the writers. But was fascinated her jitten-
nrc-place, a marble mantle six feet long, a J lion was his private memorandum book. She
French plate mirror, and standard eras read there a number of items whfah
lights. Every room is also provided with 1 to her our* mind « iWsern 11W1—• uitray
fi^t ventilation is Uftr(3on^egiJ^L-lkiriil MgftitedeserifedSgfegher / Annie
has a flue leading to a ltofrmr
&
sets,
El wood, drew pis-
iher on the roof; thus oozing a draft I tol 14th, missed, exposure prevented by com- all interest in the concern, in a brief letter,
’ Tries off-impure gases. There are | promise, no information;’~ William Mauler
ntHatmi
7 of Ah
irafir
SPUING- AND SCMMEIt
, jumhcafeooSs?'
Mna.T. A. A Dina would moat r
taform the
respectfally
Ladies of Athtn» and of counties adjacent, that the has
now reqeived^ and opanad a naoat choioemnd select as-
which carries nff-impure gases. There are promise, no information
2,042 ventilaung tubes opening outward on promises revelation ofsecrets of counterfeit-
the«fbof of tho hotel Kour things were 1 mg.-* 19th mem.—‘ ’How to Make Money
sqgght by tho builders, space, light, air and Easy’—splendid article; ‘ Miss Martha
frugiiatioffi* The first story of the hotel is Medytater—back gate haf past eleven p. m.—
twenty -seven feet three inohps: second, fif- arrangements for elopement—parents discov-
, teen feet nine inches; third,sfourtecn feet er plot—true love-crushed in bud‘ Michael
'leven inches; fifth, thirteen feet aixinches; Manahow, murderer,"threatens to confess to-
sixth, thirteen feet six inches; seventh, six- morrow afternoon—bush money wanted—
teen feet six inches. To <tarp<*.the hofcU must see him;’ and of. such hamwmg deeds
including rooms, halls and stairs, 1 *tnd assignations with the wicked did she
quire 28 miles of carpet of ortouwy width. readrilReafs blinded her eyes, and, broken-
As before stated, the hotel cover* .nearly hearted, silently nhRpfed from the house, and
1Q0.000 square feet of ^land—the exact fig- taking the first car to Allegheny was soon
um being 90,250. The Windsor, in New sobbing on the bosom of her father. She
York, is only a third as larga., The Fifth, could on, Y had •**» betrayed by the _
Avenue hotel is 200 feot square, while the brute Paddington, who associated only with, what I say. What I do say now is that you
Palace is 350 by 275. and «™«ain« 562250 counterfeiters, bloodthirsty outlaws and other are entirely wrong, and wrong, I fear, through
more square fe?t. % other wordsTtwo awful people, the worst of her sex; and the
hotels of the size of the Fifth Avanue oould j old roan patted* her on the head and trok
be put into tho Palace, and there would be I down his double-barreled shot-gun- He
plenty of room to spare,*to say nothing of reached Paddington’s room*befbre the unsus-
an extra story. The principal dining room pecting monster was out of bed. He was
of the Palace is 150 by 55 feet—not irri aroused by the entrance of hisfrantic father-
’ood proportion, owing probably to the in-law, who'filled the calves of jioth legs with
leight of the room. ‘ * Jbirdshot as the young man spiSng to an up-
This dining room is larger than any pri-1 right position, and blew U.huhdred bushels
j-_WrP® W8 P a P er enterprise fe w]
tributes his mite in the way of it subscription.
And in a certain degree ha iOi’i Ba| the ex-
aegerated importance which many patrons of
a journal attach fe,their .connections with it
is oertainly one of the..rat assuring and at
the same time vexatious features to the news
time vexatious
paper business. . ,
Mr. Stoproypapw is, ah'„men r . the jwst
frequent hunter of the newspaper
Iferdly a day passes hut a peppery
card or an angry persoMl qall reminds, pu
of hisi whereahoufe rTlps journal in which
heis joint partner because, he coutributefaev^
era! pieces of fractional currency weekly or
yearly_ to its support, fe.continually crossing
bis opinion and incurring his displeasure.
The man he deems most fit for a particular
office is uot the only, individual whom tbe
editorial mind, in its obtuseness, regards as
mm*’
The upshort is the speedy dissolution of part
nership, and Stopmypapib's withdrawal from
White. Union, Lam-,
rente Court at
-■ Ain, Town*, an<] Fannins, and the Supreme Court at
' nia. Will tivs epedaf attention to all (dalme'sn-
• Ang. 1118IS-41—tf. *
ing and Summer Millinery Goods, com-
belateatbtylcsand banionaof
Hnis, Bonnets, Ribbons, Laces,
Flowers, Gloves, &c.,
Which the vrQI aell at reaaooatle prioea. «ive her a
caUbefore porcheeingeUenrhO*. Ordeis from adia-
tance carefully fllled. -Store looted on Breed atreet,
oue door above National Bank.
April 21,1875—25-tf.
GROOVER, STUBBS & GO.
Cotton Kaotor^,
ABB \<n.
General Commission Mferchairts
SOvamutbf Ga. ■■ ■
CAtSMIFOR wools,
.1 ' —ba-rL:_. Z.
CLOTH FOR-WOOL.
ena Mannfhctnring Companv are now making a
r-- - * i Gopdt fKah *
er variety of Woolen <
»ever before,
ninch la
fedUfej
Exchange them for Wftiol,
U to M more to tho interest of tho Planter to
the Wool for Cl ,th, rather than have it Card-
Mi for Samplca and Term* of
1375—22-tf.
< Ml for SenwJoi and Terms ol
K L. ULGPMF1ELD, Agent,
TS AND SHOES
TO ORDER.
. W9M v «
UwjrMwiNpMi w> T HkStn>sup,
be fonml at the!
Wilding, Thou
Turnout* and ,
entrusted
•**
ARTIST,
Has removed hi» Shop/rom tlio old Lombard Boilding
" aid* of UpUivre Arenne^next door to the
■al, Sod First Claw Work
10,1875-M-tf.
'Vatciuiiaker and Jeweller,
giveretiefutioB-
J^S-tf.
BUCK & GARDNER,
Carpenters and General Jobt
Bajpectfu!!,' offer tlieir —
aorvlees to tho ciliaana of Athena
>7, Socation,
March Jd. 1875—ly,
MISS C
FadMenable
>«*
T OVERU
Br66A
Would respoctfully in*jm the_
fS^ y io°D^SiSiWfr
^' Fashionable s
^SBsear
LOOK OUT FOR FINE B1
W. B. DEUORE, Aomrr,
of which the Nation gives a model;
Sir—My name is Brown; I have sub
scribed to your paper for many years and
generally concur in your opinions. _ But
your article on grasshopper ravages in last
Tuesday’s issue was something for which I
was certainly uot prepared and which I have
read with the deepest pain. I have noknowls
edge of the subject except what I get from
the papers,- and have not given it any partic
ular consideratiow; but ! am satisfied you
cannot honestly have reached conclusions so
wildly differing from mine. Nor have; I the
time or incliuatiou to discuss the matter wife
you. If I had I doubt if you have intelli
gence enough and candor euough to consider
Agnes.
“ Yes, something like hers;”'
New Yearis? How raan^ i days fe
• lots, of days; Ido. not know how
many."
_“Why, I’ve only four exercises learned,
Ureula, and you ore talking o£ learning a
piepe.” | . :j/ ... * ■
“ Well, [fold you ,so, Gqore; I knew yoa
could not learn.”
“Cannot learn,” thought Agnes, turning
away; “cannot learn ? If Ursula can learn
them by New Years, so can I, if I do as
mamma says, persevere;” and sbe- ran out
to take a peep at Towser—poor Ursula had
said feat she could not learn. * * T1 -.
But Ursula begun begun ou the exertsise
of the day. “Howeasy.it is” she , said to
herself, stopping, after fee first few ; notes, to
see if the exenases did not look like Luc/lIe’s
scales; “I can learn iff fe a minutetwo
or three more notes and 'a nstop. “To-mor
row’s exercise looks like a femr;” and Ursula
hummed a pretty little air, thinking how fine,
it would be could she play such ah‘ air by.
The first note over again; two or three
stumbling sounds, and Ursula had to stop to
remember what she must do when there
were more notes than she had fingers, and to
regret feat exercise makers ever arranged for
a passing of thumhS.and crossing of fingers.
“If this is it, mjdl shall not learn it in a
minute;”.and she’ twisted around on fee
twisting piano-stool, and wished the practice
hour was over* - But knowing that, somehow,
fee.must getfefee; end, fee commenced at i
fee first note to stumbletmd blupder to the
layt, and recommenced once more only to
vhon - a Via mmaIiaJ #I<a aL * _ ll’
J 00 ?* g«t-up, N»qT;.i»ft it worftido.r
You re copped dead to rights this time,., ; ‘
“Sir!” gasped the frightetted lady, feriilW :
in ^ ( Wck^into fee fourthemteorarir.rivytO od:
ly. ^Nadoe^od^ought to agraeenffi^
stage. I ndver ses anyihing T>eti«f^*8oiie.^ ' ‘‘
But it won’t do. You’ve gCt- td chlne trick
wife us, Nance, an’you standftmighty gtwd :-ii
chdnce of goiu’over fee hay (or^yj^ort-.fl
l “8fr, : What do yon mWWlUhrih.fe* ***
Mrs.—-*r,i thoroughly alannedi «t»ShfrtHfe : ’
to her feet..j..f|W4ll no geutfeDiijy*5toqtxne
from the. insult of this fellow ?T.,, *
“Gentlemen,” said tifeman;' ^iBt’tefrd to
ypur owntuuineee&nd FU.feq<Moi«ibe.[ Eve
been hunting this bird for.lwa u JBonths- and
more, an’ Pve'got her at last.. Me puts on a
good deal wf style, but if y&fve dW fieiWI *' : *
Ifi Nanoo Browm one of the ’cutest 'thieves
F-nx
y to thero were several Virginians on
stoft when she reached the sixth note, all they at once identified the lawyer
in confusion. *•“- -*-•—• **-* ' Tr ‘
I don’t like it,” she cried; “ it is ugly
and hard; Til never learn it, Fm sure;” and
she glanced at fee hour. “If 1 could skip
get on With, th A J ^h»tfei- K
Soinenour passed
. Medical Notice.
of many of my fhrnwr paWon*, I
PRACTICE OF. MEPICINE
WM. KING, M. D. Neatly printed, and' fot sale cneap at few
> of Inthou
of VotoaUi.
Jon* 10. l«75-«-,».
office.
ri.no. in tho bo-lmj-,^
ramtinir, and mo»t vriUb. delivcre
vate residence in New York, with Ufa ot oorn-husks out of the.mattr^ and set the
dozen exceptions. It is even larger ihah I bed clothing on fire, when . he rushed out,
six city lots in New York, and countingthe followed by fee 1 mangled reporter crying
hreakmst room and^private dining rooms, ‘ Murder!’ The two woruaj^vho were
they are equal. to thirteen city feta in that scrubbing fee stairs knew tfiiPbride had
city, ' •. » | been murdered by the two manidcs, and
A novel feature in American hotels has I they threw their buckets <ff water, chunks of
been adopted in the Palace in the matter ofl soap and scrubbing brushes after them, and
•‘attendant*. * A sub-office ig provided on yelled for the police, who were dozing against
each of fee seven floors. In each office is fee telegraph pole on tiyTcrifner. It has all
an annunciator, and each floor has its spe- (-been explained; but Paddington, who has a
cial servants, so that a bell can be answered r* sub’ on, and is lying up wife both legs
almost instantly. Each floor has also "a bandaged, has given out that he has gone on
lett£r-box,whi<5» empties into a tube leading a visit to Philadelphia. „
to The .omn office. Jhe^-risoapwu-1 Newspa^rboBorks.—There is not a more
pareek cl^te in^tanSyany intoler £l nU ^ n ^S a J?4? tt ^^!l 8 :
fire-proof AU fee partitions and^Walls are then ^ ^
built of briok and atone, laid in cotnen* and I®P er T, ,7 °T- An« w,
handed together With iron. The hotel it- J
self is of brick and iron, the brick portions j listens keenly to y P vato
being plastered in the color of |2L?toonrarnhim mtfri leas J^Tnra K
a . nd lh " loose iVfeecom posing roe&fa^he is worse
As an Additional protection against fire, • ^ ^ We remember
spacious escape stairway has been built I Jl-jLwI bore. who.
from fee roof to fee ground floor, com-j g °°j v . marri rf do, thought he
P 08 ^ of ^closed mlincMumng opci^ » JJ took his fresh victim
bulb, b, »blch hol er, ogj jSEbnd.,
hotel to bo visited
night, by watchmen,
button which communicati
with fee general offioe, where an indicator I ao "
is provided under lock. The watchmen I no 1
arc required to touch each of these buttons I Louisville, September 7.—A special dis-
in their rouuds, and if they foil to do so at patch, to the Courier Journal, from Holly
the proper times, fee indicator shows it,I Springs Mias., saw the largest political
Within fee trails of fee building-are four I meeting ever held in fee State since fee war,
10-inch artesian wells, wife a tested capaci-1 occurred yesterday. Senator Gordon; of
g of 28,00(5 gallons of water pqr hour. | Georgia, and Coogreggman Lamar, of Missis-
These weUa communicate with a reservoir sippi, spoke. Ltuge nnmbera of colored men
best I have ever seen. They are worked peace reigned in Georgia
hydraulic power and make better speed, sisSippi. Congressman J
more safe, make less noise and leas onding Senator Gordon s
ey-than any in fee country. As if fee fee politics of the
elevators were not enough to convey up the acts of the Republican party in Misi^
ile up aud down, fee builders have Lippi, abd fixed on Governor Ames the blood
" seven stairways, reaching from the of fee colored men killed in the Vicksburg
the garden floor. . riots.
ererv hour davLrad ^ey have to cover’ein up , at night to
a at ^tch° of whidi is a kee P the rats and miceout.' SuitingUieaction
a,at each otwm«n» a tot ^ ewQ(dbepnlleddown ,he “hd”toshow
L L i^S^r how it worked. Was anybody mad ? Oh
supply of. WWH , .... — w
14,550'feet of bore," whieb would seem to reldiers. He appealed to the colored people
be in themselves a sufficient protection to unite with the white people and drive out
-ainst fire. carpet-baggers. He contrasted the condition
The Palace has five elevators, which arc of his State with Mississippi, declared that
ie best I have ever seen. They are worked peace reigned in Georgia ana misrule in Mis-
’ *. Congressman Lamar followed, sec-
Senator Gordon’s effort. He reviewed
than any in the country. As if fee 1 fee politics of the State since the war, held
fee workings of a malignant aud disingenu
ous mind.
That the grasshoppers are not fee beasts
you take them to be. is the opinion of many
good men of my acquaintance; your assertion
that the damage they did has been exaggera
ted has been a great shuck to many of your
admirers. If you cannot take any other po
sition than this «n the matter, pray let it
alone. I have burned your last number in
order to keep it out of the hands of my fami
ly.
Hastily yours, John Brown.
Is there a newspaper that does uot receive
such epistles almost daily ? And is it not mel
ancholy, when you think of it, that in spite
of preaching, and precept and example, jnen
holding the idea that their newspaper should
be the vehicle of their own particular opimon,
should have existence in this Nineteenth Cen
tury of ours? There is certainly a theme for
prolific discussion ih the relationship we have
pointed out—few joint partnership idea of
journalism. We fear Stopmypaper’s impor
tance has been overlooked by everybody out
himsHf. The editorial mind is philosophic
as well as a mathematical; and it has found
by experience that- when two men subscribe
for the very reason feat Stopmypaper quits,
which is an invariable rule, bankruptcy is
not near at hand. Hence Stopmypaper
is ignorant. His flame is eliminated from
the books without a sigh of regret. He
is not even called an ass. He is accepted as
simply an inevitable and infinitesmal inci
dent And forgotten. Now this is all wrong.
Stopmypaper is a man and brother, and is
worth saving. He it nbt to blame for see
ing only one side of fee shield. A great
many of ns do that We ought to nave
patience wife him, and denude him of the
error which he holds that the newspaper w
of no use to'him unless it is a reflex ef bis
sentiments, and that he in any way reform
ing iter bettering himself by ceasing to
read it ,
There is a. great problem hoe for eolation.
The Stopmypapers are a large family, and
when a newspaper has ten thousand readers,
and is outspoken and plain, some of fee fiscal
ly are daily getting hurt And the worst of
it is they are always getting hurt. It w
utterly impossible for them to get a no
paper that will agree wife them for any
length of time, and they are plunged into *
state of chronic unhappiness. Suppose come
of the writers who are whiling away fee
sultry hours involving mind essays on “Sum
mer Resorts,” “Totty,” “The Marriage
Question,* and the like, or in airing their
hobbies on the kind ef journalism they would
like for themselves, consume a. little phoe-
phorus in serious thought on the solemn
topic which we have suggested—how can we
make one of the Stopmypaper happy without
offending some of the
JifVitmg
day has done, and Agnes screwed the stool a
little higher and begun her practice? wonder
ing in spite of herself, as sne looked at the
puzzling dots and lines, if it could be possbile
that Ursula was right and feat she could not
learn.
“It is hard,” she thought, as she tried and
failed and tried again; “hairi, but nice too,
and mamma says that almost everything is
hard at first”
Steadily one note followed another; fee
line when finished was re-begun 1 wife the
right hand, then with the left, then both
together. •. . v
Agnes was tired.
‘Mamma says we must not mind being
tired if we want to learo,” she thought, as she
tested her fingers, and then went on again
steady as the tick of the parlor clock; note
at a time, line afteciline, till fee little fingers
ached and the head was weary, and fee ex
ercise at the eqd of time was done.
Ursula was sleeping one day, and just
awoke in time to hear pretty, clear notes,
and, knowing Lucille way away, started up
to see Agnes, a little finger-sore aud a good
deal tired, finishing her hour.
“What are you trying that for?” asked
Ursula, coming closer; “why, it’s away
ahead in the book.”
“It’s ray lesson,” replied Agnes, looking
up.
“Your lesson?’ and Ursula counted up os
well as she could in her mind how many
lessons she was behind, and, cross as could
be, took up a book.
“Monsieur will bring a real tune for me to
day; it is New Year almost;” and Mon
sieur came in to bring the “tune” and to give
fee lessons, just in time to catch Ursma’s
cross answer and to seeing and. hearing:
‘.‘Practice brings pieces; little fingers that
practice are better than larger ones that do
not.”
“Why should Agnes get ahead, Monsieur,
while I am away back in the bock?”
“Perseverance, Mim Ursula, perseverance;
music comes by perseverance.”
So, on New Yea^a day, while Uusula
rocked in fee cushioned chair, and thought
how “stupid music was, to be so difficult,”
and thought how she would. 2‘practice well
to-morrow,” Agnes played a soft‘little air
that, to her, was the sweetest music in the
wodd, and, while She was _ playing leaned
nearer to Lucille to whiopef:
“Sister, was there ever anything so nice
as to persevere?”
on■ the.wwt, here she is. I’d have taken hex
quietly, but if she wants to mate a row,, its
her own business] I’m' Detective——, aud ,
here’s liiy warrant.”' *»•» « 4uiH>
“Ob, this &■ intolerable,” et&d the port
lady, bursting info tears,of.iodignation and
shame. “Gentiemm m gBSaK
iaontheHraln.; Go find hijp,™Ior iieaven’s
There presently appeared about fee wild-
est looking^ryar.ftut»id*a>fBtosktom( !Thd
detective grinned, at the vehement pyplaw^.
tions of fee hnsband, and fee other officer
warned**!*® q\ftfc or'he woow' 1
arrestnilum for interfering. Fortunately 5 '
.u , > - the. train,
t , .;W as a
respectable citizen, though, the mania ere
The detectives vrere profuse ill their apolo-
Ip . gies, and got out fee, ear- in donble-quick
ii Hr 1 * lnn r nn * k —* L *
£
ftTrn
• How old are you Y asked an English
railroad conductor of a little - girl who was
trying to pass on a half ticket. _ ‘ I am
nine at home, but iu the train only six and ai
half.’
INDIAN OUTBREAK IN NEVADA.
San Francihco, September 7.—An . ex
tensive Indian outbreak is reported in East
ern Nevada and Western Utiih. A number
of settlers and miners have been killed, wo
men and children being removed to places
of safety. Troops of volunteers are going
to the scene. Tne. military commander in
feu city has been asked for arms. and am
munition. Orders have been issued tor in
fantry and cavalry to proceed at once from
this city and Benicia to Eastern Nevada.
The rising is attributed to Mormon influ
ences.
Nothing new concerning the Bank of
California. Arrangements are proceeding
quietly and prosperously towards a settle
ment.
' • - v / ^
A clergyman says; I one married a hand
some young couple, and as I took th^bride
by fee hand, at the dose of fee ceremony*
and gave her my warmest congratulations,
Ifijof Men Meed WHves for.
It is not to sweep the house, make the
bed, and cook the meals chiefly, that a titan
wants a wife. If this k all he needs, hired
help can do it cheaper than a wife. If this
is all, when a young man calls to see a lady
send him into the pantry to taste the bread
and cake she has made, send him to inspect ' U
the needle work and bed-making; or, put a - r
broom in her hand and send him to witness
its use. Such things are important, and
the wise young men will quickly. look
after them; but what the true iiia&%aata
wife a wife is her companionship, sympathy
and love- The way ot life baa mitay dreary
places in it,aqda man needs acpujpqpioq.;
to go wife nife. A man is romewjhat over
taken by misfortune; he Meets with failures
and defeats; trials and temptations beset
him, and he needs one to stand by and srym-;
pathize. He has some hard battles to fight
wife poverty, enemies, and with mn ;'and
he needs a woman that when he puts his
arms around her, he feels that he has some
thing to fight for, and that she will help
him to fight; that she will put her lips to
her hands tohhr^tiuirtaad imptlrtkupUi^ '
tion. All through life, through storms and
through sunshine, conflict and victory;
through adverse apjd through favoring
winds, man needs a' woman’s love. The
heart yearns for it. A mater’s or mother’s
love will hardly supply the need. Yet,
many seek for nothing further than success
in housework. Justly enough. half, of these. .
get nothing more; the other half; surprised/' r
beyond measure, have gotten more than
they sought. Their wires surprise them
by bringing out a noble idea in marriage^
and disclosing a treasury of courage, sym
pathy and love. ^ /
An Important Medical Discovert.—
Dr. Thomas Nocholson, of St. Louis, who
has been giving special attention to the study
of small-pox for five, years, claunf.to have
discovered a specific which is destined to
work a revolution-fit tho treatment df khfifl"
loathsome disease, and rob it 6f half its
terrors by preventing the formation of
pustules and consequent ffittieg cffee muqp,
while at the same time remimite; the danger
of contagion. His theory' is that the sur
face eruption is not Caused bp poison in' the
blood, but is due to the smflora inflation of
the skin, which is : so dried up by the fever
as tOcause a total suspension of its excretory
function; and bus treatment is to restofehs
neariy os possible the normal condition of
the skin by external application. For this ;
purpose he uses the following prepartion, in
which it will be seen that gasoline, one pint;'
gum camphor, as it will dissolve;-pulverized
sulphate of soda, one drachm; pure carbolic
acid, half a drachm. The - body of fee
patient is to be covered , wife gauze linen,
over,which the gasoline compound is to be
sponged freely, as occasion requires, after
whiich the body must be fanned to induce
more rapid evaporation. This process is to
be repeated till all signs of inflamation have
ceased; Not only is fee intense cutaneous
heat reduced by this operation, and a feeling
of great relief enjoyed by tho patient, but
fee di^wtiog odor of the sick room, is
destroyed and fee danger of infection reduced
to fee minimum. ' • ' " ' .
7?
,-:-C
she tossed her pretty face, and pointing to
fee bridegnxm 1 * replied, “I think he is fee
one to be congratulated.”
A French butcher who was on his death-
bed said to his wife: “If I die, Francoise,
you must marry our shop boy. He is a good
young man, -and fee business cannot be car
ried on without a man to look after it.” “I
haye been thinking about that already," said
his wife. .' . ; •’ hf 5w
Copy was out. The devil picked up a pa- It wasa fine compliment toGeneral T——
per and said, “Here’s something ‘About
Woman.’ Must I cut it'out?” “No !”*thun-
dered the editor. “The first disturbance
ever created in the world was occasioned by
the devil fooling about a woman.”
when the newspaper said of him that-ba
“ charged at the head of his column on many
a bloody field, and after fee battle was often
seen sitting under a tree, combing the mini*
halls out of his hair.”