The Ellijay courier. (Ellijay, Ga.) 1875-189?, October 06, 1881, Image 1
oral jruraxiLMß. . **SSS a Immimiikknil ■hli*|kMr ££asw,><i KWwvarteKla- a .qrai, I. It rVi food for, *'*' -WOWS® ivijml With tit* lljfht J bring.” -fit -VtoAota* .until tiltamntijfii ' .[ WOmiML-.. . 0, AMMtekal I with I vu dud; Unot |Ol lutWi-() H V I John wanted to know awhile ago If “ future ” waa in the peat tenee; •*•; |w j .TCatISSBJKTTW"'' j And only *Jd, “0, what a head Haa oor dear little MgrttaltA” And onoo tNWJiIp to ffaow To write a composition, Btrn, he talped me all the aame; J 0 ayTi Bat the other day I heard him aag: 1 He gave amlleßiat cttttfbMjftl a mfle, <•*< And played “The Old Man’s Drunk Again” oa hlaflnte. - ■. •■toiWvi -n rt •* \. • - Who had one grain of einee, v T I’d gtre him my doll . And push him through a hedge-fenca. THE H W'Wtp£&A PER ‘ Pr&?edif!g the fee-of papj-rtia by the I Egyptian’s, records were kepw and cor respondence carried bn-by inscribing on clay briifes, mdtal plates, ivory tablets, etc., the matter to or com municated. Thte was'ttie • common method of Egypt at the time of the exo dus t>f the children ef Israel. Stamped cla y cylinder, an ac count'of the deluge has' oeeA round, aid a similar cylinder in the niusetTHT of the East India Conijaift *ostqiusj| of the annals or decrees of Nebuchad nezzar. { nOy *JH.YI'f? / *J\ reed whicff could be unrolled. into sheets, WfmHlteMlha a* paptt 3$ 4 before Christ, and thenoefpr waM, for years'or more, papyruS whs thebptjr paper. The prophet Isa . iah speaks of this material when he says in chapter xix., “The paper reeds by ‘ • ;**• and everything sown by thqj brooks shall wither, be be no more,” a prophecy that has been Papynm plant, once abundant .enough to be the world’s onij& paper. is found no mo*e anywhesp., * a Th* u*a of pelfchiaent begw<2oo yew*, before* OhrM, •nd - had • febtotfegia: • HI of Egypt J, T W J? , .*■ toi •<K a *4HHKpr|P ¥>° i°s9f^£hn is ,*ir jfetafy totoqiMUhtejnwhMh oppsistyd of thousands of volumes of books written on papyrus. "'To prevent the success of exports-. tion of papyrus. The rival then had recourse 1 to 'parchment, the -prepared skinS <3l animals, and thiis parchment 1 came into use. As late, however, as the twelfth century, papyrus wife usedj | a Papal bull, dated 975, written on papyrus, being, until 1871, in the Mu seum of the Louvre,'Paris. The books of ancient Borne were written on papy rus by slaves educated for this business. Europe learned the art of paper-malp ing from the So** CCMSnAUaMS&K. cess that the Saracens brought to Spain after their conqifest, in 704 had bleu inf vogue in China over 1,000 years. The process was simply beating toj-f>ulp, in mortars, of vegetable fiber, and then dryi*gfit /a paper the same way to-day, as they are to the use of labor-saving ma chinery. The only machine alljfSittool J i*il The use of paper for documents oegan ®* eenluiy. TKa~usS~'2>f rags for paper-making began in the ord of the building of a mill for paper - milking I’is 1 ’is 1370, the mill in Germany. The mill was, however, only far reducing the -fiber ,-io amilq, by, - - stamps kui by Water j^\rerf4naVift?‘iir' no way like our modem mills. In 1588 >' 'AGortamtmadeisacl* good paper that Queen Elizabeth knighted him and gave bias ajmonopoly f- gathering rags in fee kingdom for te* years. The real value of t6 mtet fiforo dated when the art oftpritoteg-snisfite:' . ™ i printing been discovered earlier there' would Wbeen. IMe use for it, ®, neither the bark nor straw paper of the Chinese, the papyrus of fl.e nor the parchment of the Greeks would ’ have’ bwi? etifficfently 'pldfEiftl for the j demands of the printing press. Ger many, using cotton, flax and rags, and rlffit "water jaft wind power Joi.the.ir duction to pulp and fiber, was ready for f the Wninter and his press, , and these ; made possible the 5 BeffirWfcion. ") ft i The rag engine, the.raw j terial is t4‘pjp'' 4s - aX*?rmaH N mventiSn Ites/thato f ? 00 year? old. As t late as 1756, in this kind of ingenious | workmen, rags were reduced ’to tdtlp by a • Fourdrinier machine. He had so little , raooWfagement at home tht he took hifi j invention to London, where he interest ed thfc Fotirdrinler r bfbtlieVl, vreJltSy i '* s wtationers, W his work, v.lk fttead j Fourdriniers purchased the patents and experimented with tbem at a <jf. $300,000. Their experiments ended in the preslnf Fourdrinilr machine of onr , J mills—| machine that haa made possible the enormous paper industry of the world, an industry of which Pliny wrote ELLIJ AY 981 COURIER. BAiiar aJ Pakbshsr ) ! gfee upon fTie employment 6T papei *• the UMlherat’ourdriuier reaped no # vantage from their invention. They j spent their entire fortune and died fin W> v< afc fte years. ‘ - j• t -mfll in the United £>twt£s in Germantown, Pa., in 1690. The first paper compalif ‘ i tor Wß9§i HQft varidb success for some years, and then cealed oi*£afln& e°^ a furlough for an English soldier wno tm- mill las again started. In 1776 the Legislatiire • passed resolutions for the appointment of adkableyfcidiStlis ht Wacli\ljMri\ to jre ceive rags, and the peijpte of the State were urged to save, tSeir rags for psfpas making. lit 17 of \for cester, .^o and ; tljere began the ’business which his sons t granabf|i '6 Httll, engaged in in KM same town; .and his . David Garsoi, tifii ateb-deacon dan ts ten gaged in fee fcusinoas and'Owning the original mill fix ** ’H I „ The addiriif tixjk .np *he- akt of paper 1 "‘“'■’"fl f r*”" this time fa) itf prejenT perfection, describing the process, the iirveiitinus, improYomeyfmu<tt, and.the* importance of paper making in an du- A’ariy ai wi*V|p The different mate) ials ' used, the many and .various paper p od boats to collars and front car , wheels.to petticoats. Holyoke is how mantfKuCjbfclftfcnter of ■ $£ United Steteß -j mills of that city Having a capacity*-ef* 15(totots ppr-dny. ’life tally prpdu<ition of paper in the United States is gstimat ed at 2,000 tons, of which *lst/ *ar* for writmgpiwposes. About 4,000 tons *of ' .fiber aremsed daily to produce the paper BOW M'PHERSO!? 8188. * Gtens. MBher*>n and Logan, jwho had been te Gen. Sherman’s headquart ers (before Atlanta), rode up to tkfcjrear (4 flte coi-ps And distq.mut jed- in m -champ f ‘ ’ opCifstreteh, wlnioh had probably beeh a fieKf % *ibse. ■ TMb Was* abeat j.O w dis. mounted picket firing pn jjipleft aria apparently. t-th* rear oj the tomb 1 line.’ After listening to it for s’ tew min utes, McPherson said he would go out in that direction see y4m|l| meant. Caking te Caph -JKlbnra Haop, of his to follow, he mounted “Blaekie,” his favorite horse; tand galoped down the lane or narrow road, running in the rear of the Seventeenth oorps, at an angle of 45 degrees from the main line, trmw; -AWW# corps, had been ordered to the left, with instructions to form at rfgW 1 he had not had time to get into position, coupe-* quently fjid firing could not be .on his skirmish line, which led to the Conclu sion on. Hood’s tacticsbeing well known te he n'as on the lookout for dashes; hehJe his anxiety. It was not more than fifteen minutes after McPher son Wd l&of, derlies, had dashed down the lane i 4b& .horse, came galloping back with a wound in the shoulder, from which the blood was Kin a perfect stream. TM*y that “ the General n £4* K|Bely following the- - horse came Capt. Knox and the tWtJlaaM derlies. Knox dashed np and in hn 4x eited manner exclaimed, “He is aAad. GetSfn ti|nbiilaHee qpick,” Gen. Wpbmn E. Strong, now 'of Chicago, and Capt. D. H. Buell, ordnance officer, started at once with thrf headquarters ambulance down the lane, followed by several Of* the” mounted < mem teßuell rode and skirmished with the rebel picked keeping them back on til Gen. StroJ% got the body into the ambulance. Thejk j drove with all speed to where Goa. Logan and the officers were. Df. Alawitt hastily opened his coat and dis ccfvere’d thatr tke 'bullet had passed di ireeteytirbugli him in- | stantly. The body was taken at once tq Gen. Sherman’s headquarters, from where ! i€ tvas sent, in of Gen. McPherson’s personal staff, to Marietta, ‘wher'S 'lTwas embalmed and sent with the same escort to the home of his , aged . mother at Ofjde, Ohio. •**•' . Capt. Knox, who accompanied Jhe Wjmi bnt , a distance down the lane when a shot was fired from an ambush, taking effect -m the shoulder of the General’s horse. They reined up, but had not time to Wirti-tmfii'hiSA.hst/W*vftred and the fell, heavjly tp the ground. He neither gpokfe nqr moved a muscle. After the lattlF lIEA several skirffiAerf appearance, pe ofHs£o psbed no and, tool; off the General’s waist belt As Aon- A he retired, a nxe talker of fee Union pioneer corps ran np and rifledtße Gehetal’iYookets, tak *ihg .*• peuket!h#ok containing about S7OO. Tub proportion A men to women who commit suicide is as four to one. vlxidJAl. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 6, 18*1. f BISTORT OT A 8080. Will Hays, of Louisville,' Kv., has s made a smail tertnne -by wrrting:fiongs. f Bat he got no money ftpip thQ. latter, it gave hint a jstart in his business. ’’Just before the pwaejlftd says,' *1 waq withaope young x resembled the ideal pictursa of low’s ‘Evangeline’so clpsely that I called her by tfie fiamrir 'We danced at an ont •door frolic one evening, and soon dis covered that four of ns could sing to gether. We tried popular quartettes, and getsateog. so wsi wo became enthusiastic. About 2 o’clock in the 'morning we home. The night was as bright as da^ r with the full moon hanging in the sky, and as-we Me feat down in a nook to rest, and ‘ Evangeline ’• to sug gest other song3 to sing. * I’ll write a Skid 4 ‘if iyou’ll prcifiise to ting it before we go home. ’ This was agreed to. On the opposite side of the rpaij' was a white pitok fanca. , we’ wepe BffMug a party of negroes had been , Toasting ears of com, find the charred sticks Jay all around. With them I wrote thq first verse of Jhe song on the *Sopplaqk*)f the notjea fdr four voices on the four planks beneath. Theil Oftet Itood f *ff- 9ii it. -The girls were delighted, and insisted on hav. ing a chorus, so T wrote the chorus on the planks. Well, we sApgf it over and over, and jfflnt home singing it.’' Next morning’Evangeline rimmsaing and wridf it out and finish it. I told her I couldn’t do it, but she might go down and oopy it off- the fence. She took an umbrella and sheet of paper, and soon came ba<3& r ■with words and music. Then she iip on having another verse, so I ■wrote 'ano’theAverse, oti condition thatT was to have a kiss for it, and Bhe to have fee music.” —. Hays sent the composition to various) music publishers, but couldn’t sell JJ, 1 aridit wsii at length made public by .the ' , ’fbteebJ‘ s negro minsHel. Three hundred tbousand copies have onlf' pay the author- has received, „ „ v**- Scotch reels and country >dences were file fasriion*' in 1814 ; then came the qilaih’ille in 1815,' and' then the waltz, the pioneers whereof were Lord Bal tnerston. Mme. de Lieven and the PrincessEsf&ttuizy. ' 4 event,"wrote BSfees,ever produced go greet a sen sation in Ijnglish society as the intro duction of tli® German waltz.” u ml that time t)ie.i English country Scotch steps, and an occasional Hwh ■ land reel formed the. school of the |ric iug-master and the evening recreation,of the British youth; even lii the fijst dak cles. But peace ’ ’wits drawing foreigners were arriving, and the toSEe for continental customs and manners became the order of the day. The youhg Duke of Devonshire, as the “Magndfi Apollo” of the drawing-rooms in London, was at the head of fee Innovations; and, as the card-playing dowagers, with their quadrille, whist and macao, went out, the young continentalized world came in with its French quadrille and German waltz. 'The war being over, too,those young people, drank champagne, ifb tfie* great horror of the old-fashioned lowers: of qld?{iort, ptnwfe and propriety. *3 * / " .''oniWEßß fee namea that the translator turns ent imJlltgAm little mar£a on tu' The superscriptions, after being trann ifited, read something after this ion: “Sam Lfe. laundry" Th follows city aiq4. State to due order. Tbs Sam Laos are the lriofet numerous; ant pome the HonLeee, then the WahLeaa, fee Luqg Lees, fee Chung Lees wbA the Bung Lees. The not far be hind,. The Lung family te not so anmar oub. The Won Lungs and fes Ling Lungs are thq most numerous. The Tiks, too, are qt ftPfM l is a prosperous lffandrymaa. The Chin Cfiins are yet scarce, as are the Chow Chows. It is surprising to notice the number of O’Briens and Cullina and other lrifih names. This is accounted .for from the feet that the Chinamen of ten marry Irishwomen and take feeii wives’ namea. TBS SATISFIED MOT. It is happiness to be in as contented a frame of mind as was fee boy of this aneod#e:t. m A small boy was hoeing ’in Tr sterile field by the roadside, when a passer-by stopped and said: rn f JHp to your _oom is rather - e-fertoinly.CAad ttetery. dwarf corn.” “ But it looks yallbr. ” “Certainly. We planted the yalter kind.” “But it looks as if you wouldn’t get mere than half a crop.” “Oi course not,” said the boy. “We planted her on shares. ” ’ * -qe ** * ■; ' f ,’n wk .' • “T 0 A BAB BCMRr. v , , Mr. Cheney, fc ftamer of Indiana, hsv- T <ng a married daughte* hying in Ne oraska, was shocked bj,a from her husband saying that 4er body wo'ul J arrive fee next evening. Thfe was overcome with blow- Hurried preparations for tfeoUrning gar ments and the preliminaries to fee' fuie ral were made, and, on tb- dismal even ing, dressed all in v. nt 'to fee Btation to meet hearse and two or three carriages were’ drawn up in line, and a mtriierous crofd, attracted partly by curiosity, partly Ibif sympathy, accompanied fee bereaved household. As fee train approached a solemn silenoe settled upon fee assem bly, and as it stopped there was ;rp spectful hnfeTlOfttfee ceremony of a xe dea ■ uot of a ch—wtii to odl for decorous e y upqp it told hiA Jmhnghtwitft fshamed to csfr ry on tliat way at such a time. It the Wlhch so quickly tdls it*- story had not S*£ f, Mr. ClxeneYwßpped forward and askedforthe Wpse.' The baggage man staredkttihim as if he were crazy, and, making no reply, went on overhaul ing the trunks, as if it°feght bfe under them somewhere. SudcWity Mb. Cheney felt tui arm abo*t-hte>irintmii\d aiktes ■ • Tt wasliis daughter. TjreTfefflfflb mem bers of the family wen) into hysterics. There were shouts and tears and laugh .ter. The daughter, appalled at the somber dresses, was frightened almost lilto a faipting fit, Bhe oould offer no emanation of fee* telegram, Bhe oould nt say<misitdvely whether in a moment o| absent-minded ness her husband had ictualiy sent the dispatch as received, lor whether he wtote it so bMndte 4 * W. 4116 operator misren&ii. Affair”* refused to ride home in tU hea and took Her place in' fee raraW* jwife tha chief mourners. A J 1 nisjBCTBB Worsts. | l.m ; The Boston Transcript gives i three 1 columns of “rejected poems” wife Cuii introduction: “Nothing gives an editor more genu ine pain than to reject poetry, ami yet the limits of the ordinary newspaper are such fept a great deal goes into the waste-haslet ' which, if printed, wbuld * Itteetnesfi is ounuaHy waHtoi inAhe office of a literary nesqpiaper to perfume fee of Sahara.; An idea seems tq have got about thaiedi tors in raneral do^ip^ Nothing oheefs the editorial. heart so much as to get five or six ppims every morning about fee seasons, fixity chairs, little graves, ‘She is Gonef torn hearts, and such; Even if he cannot use them, they put him 4iME*tereeable state of mind, and heip?to*iJbfinfenp for his day’s work; and, then, an editor has nothing to do but to put liia heels up on the desk and read poetry al) day. The truth is, so ife r -they themselves are con cenroffj'feditors don’t get half enough ’out adverti|eiricntß itja if .pub lishers would aUow, but the irit of gain hea!3s thflm off. that VgqW ■y*mi* the ' OtTB BOBZAtt A WOMB FOB AN KB, . IIOBIAB. .*'> tr. Mr. William North, a quarter of k' century ago a New York joumafist of repute, was asked to write an “editorial” calculated to inflict femage on coercive teetotalism. He was promised S2O for a suitable article, “now long shall it be?” As long or short to- yon ptensa'Ylfe ß the reply ; not quantity, is the object" Thereupon North indited this powerful article : Wa had rather jw fee whole world get one man kept This sentence was printed as a leader in the journal which had retained Mr. North, and he was rewarded for his work at the rate of a dollar a word—undoubt edly the highest price ever paid for a newspaper editorial. Whatever may be thought of fee soundness of his argu ment, it had a very unusual merit in the prohibition controversy—brevity. During the past fifty years, the Mem- Avalanche thinks, there has not been' so long 1 a duration of extremely hoV weather as has been felt in most parts of the country, but especially, perhaps, jn the South, since about the middle of One. £lAy4iftßft Hill* long be re ||embe|*d> fee; year, when the North was visited by more sun strokes and more storms and whirlwinds than in any previous year daring the past fifty, when more houses were blown down and more lives destroyed by tor nadoes than evig before, and when fee South waa more generally burnt up in her corn crop*. 1 1 ' ' ' ■ HIMIII—■■ II 1.. II IM'Ut -'Tr i . 1 ■ *)•( 0 3 :!•(!% i 1 i The Santa. Fe New Mexican girt* the folk) wing particular* ot the killing of tire terrible outlaw WUliam Bonny, known as “ Billy the Kid," By Sheriff Pat Garrett, of h XWUhtyt *N*w Mexico: 1 Garret* wet informed of tire ' Kid’s 'whereabouts while in Xiincola; ♦oaiftq and arriyed atSamaer-uißQarch ‘of thwoutkw after, nigliifoU., Atalxjqk, midnight he went to th% hgnpe of Pee* jSdAxweU, accompanied by ‘two men named John W. Poe and T. M. McKfhjiy, whom lie had \>roiiglit WonifiioriM'lwifh him. ’ffie two men were told-ter; etanri "on giiarfl at Wife gale, while Garrett went cfh and entered the room of Mr. Maxwell. The latter was in bed at the time, and Garrett quiokly informed him of Object of jjjfr He had scarcely dpne so yyhea in waficea ** Bflly the ] Bad,” armed* wrth Tniiid'iiHl %WtblVeK Garrett dtofpell hehftfd <he head f the 1 bed and regained l there to aaronchmg portion. Kid tits in hiasteqkygg feet, and was apparently alarmed at seen *hft tw^- meq outijide, fev ho asked i o| ‘ ‘ Who are nand tlje question quickly; Stax well made no reply’and the Ed then caught sight of Gaft-dltt. Be did hot ap parently recognize the man, but.pointed his revolver at him and asked, “ Who is it? Who is it?” Garrett had not had. time to draw fils revolver, and, finding it had readied a point at which caution or delay would prove fatal, reached reimd afid. gfltet. 4 gid,,stwted .back, but for .some reason or other did not fire. Per haps ‘bfe'cwuser 1 he had no idea that Garrett was in that part* of the 1 'Oeidlfy, and suspected no harm, ,Whgti l evW thiaarSHSetr was, hi% •fatal. With, i his desperate enomj’f j weapon aimed full at his breast at k dis tance of a few feet, Pat Garrett, with the quickness and precision for whioh he is famed, pulled down’on tiio fad and fired. That shot was the last the Kid Was to hear on this earth. Ho fell back on the floor piereed through tho heart, and in a moment was as dead as any of the men whom he had served in the some way, with less justice, and sim- wreak, a petty spite or satisfy his thirst for blood, Cmrrott and* Mix well jumped into f the middle'iff* the roifin, which was lighted oily by the beams of • the rhfeon, and GtoTrett had ftJmgatfcffie.. tfoit of knowing fulfilled a tinty from, which 'mask : would lgwp. shwtilfcin aoqmpiished,flM task priliob had occupied his thoughts and for months. ORATBTAJins pijiL OF BOLD. ft is now aaserfoi that : thb drain of ’ g<Jid is ndt tcSwardfTkErofSe’br Xridia, ü ßtit ih of l AM4orican people, under the persistent: praotice of dentis try. 'So literally, is, this-true that few of our people cap smile without giving Burfaoq T fodicatfona qf g<rUL The facetious mathematician oi 'ffie .New Times surmises that, at’the present rate of disappearance, our gold siippl/’ win have been' depMtdd ih Atnetteati ’cemeteries in hot less than 800 y**s. What then ? Will unfaelingspgcplatprs be permitted to organize, for example, a “ Greenwood Bonanza Company,” and to publish a prospectus asserting that surface indications of gold-bearing citizens aro particularly rich 1 in ils territory; that it has erected a mill capable of crushing twenty full-grown or thirty j uvehiJo* -jirtvs daily, and that, so -for as its mining operations have been conducted, tlie yield has averaged aevfcuty ounces of gqjd to every ton .pf tleqeasgd ( y]Vil] yy]|nfr to s&e m every graveyard in the Country, and vrill mourning friends calmly g ’rich'“corpse df ’ll ree.-nfty dead eftikm’’ 1 “ j’iinsfad’ f by some aMtuufeminei.?.' . It 'fa priaboblpthis. 4ioiat ion of cemeteries and ti|i? Wishing and smelting of gold-bearing citizens .will Ijg permitted. If-apcpulators attempt any thing of tho there wjfi'bej endless disputes between mining companies", , liud the heirs df of bernfe- 1, l t e fel T6 fwiumek&HM hmm>~ ’ give tfieif whole attention the peace, and the advocates.of the rte ccvery erf gold and its restoration tq its former place in the currency of the . world will ba called “ghouls” by the ar men, which, on the whole,’ is }f a worse *w?>ril trail' “Shyiociis?” 1 Tlie only way in which the disappear- • ance of gold can be prevented is by find ing a substitute for it pe % material for filling teeth. If this, ip done in time, gold may continue in circulation. If it, is not done, the triumph ol the silver mine owners is inevitable and only a century distant * SO atOttß “ MXHORTERB. n The “Exhorter” of the Methodist TSpiscopal OhWdh ff' lld to rapidly becoming extinct. The disappearance i ot this order of men is not pwdag tottiia [ want of a field fn which they may op erate—for tho field was never hrgader, nor more ih need of such a service, than at this . time—but to the decadence of deep and clear oohvictions for sin among 4 professed Christians, and the sense of the fearful danger inoamd by Jiving without repentance and faith. With sin reduced to a misfortune, and hell to a myth, the occupation of the Exhorter is gone. —New York MethodUl. ssbsSEiiL —-to-*—!4— l FARMISQ IS CmSA. nese farm-honses, for every* douseSh a little colony, consisting of tiiree generai > tions—namely, the hiaatnl-*' | dren and'his Children’s children. Thera they -live in Xhoee that axe able tp Work on the farm, more labor is requiredthe'lfllAgg et is/hlred to'asAlat’trafi. ’Tlcplfn well, dress plainly, afiil are THtftM'bfeig ! in ny way •ppreeseda* female member* ate* I hoidjiaveenuch mamhberty ’of higher rank. ( Tbqy ?*at,* gs, usual, afp.ngt confined to , the ljpnse oy prevented from loojring on, and speaking to ptrangers, ns are the "higher classes. If a I court pfthb Itedbe utfeiftectollysha vrilj feed at ntrtnftw of- 4mlh old md„ young, sitting <m;the.ramlu,.-ldl ¥ i au#- trtnmiy employed Qfk fipny, ?lK?j#PPa,^}, d “W i o’f on *, so *htft u blltdl ' thnb a'gli their dotuaßlie life., ‘ u'i .isssi .ivw ioo TJtts -fak rxsTio v or rntrsoimojmt, ' The following, hints fur4b® prevention of eunatroke mregil'en. Bp a_.New York physioiap,:; Cxar jcise, h hot waathor, shbydd be very moderate; tho clothing should bo thin and johsb,*£ri!!l ’ah abundance pi 'coTd should *bii , dr*ftdt •- > -Workmen 1 and Bohliers l 'shoul(l understand that as soon as they cense ,i to perspire, while ot in the hot Sun, j -%7- * m m .danger pi hud iipWr.l#. **•• Cceely and c opiously to afford for cutaneous transpiration, a£d also keep the skin aid clothing wet with watgf. u Impending sunstroke may of ten be ■' warded off by > these simple measures, at iiu afa fco - jubJ’! ’ a >f Beside the cessation of perspiration, the pupils are apt to be contracted, and there is great frequency of micturition. When there is marked exhaustion, with a weak pivfse, resulting from the eold waifer npf)licMflc4i“ VJ ’Mtohleb Wdnrtnis-. '(cr stiihUlante. The * free die of water, howevfer, both' externally and internal- - ly, by lhhee e*i>ouml tw Jhe - (tjfppt rays of 4h* ¥..dfi-rttije be**jaropliFj^juq Me B gfc diers and others who adopt this measure, wadfiing their hands and fafefes, as well 4 as drinking cbpiOusly df water every tiilr#tliey oome within reach *f will generally enjoy perfect Immunity from Straw hate should-bs wrpjn, ventilated at the top, qnd thfi qrown of the JiaJyfllW .'wib 4 Jewves Of wet’ spongp. .if bettef to ,wear uel shirts, in order not to check perspir ation. *Wfe may etpose f Ourselves for a long timelff'fflf Bhlf _ sleep in*a heated raom, md? enjoy per- Tcet immunity from if -we j keep our,ki*r,*wd ulotiiiug wet uith lo i.il %opi,, :: ;• The sitftatrrWpthl structure and the size of the ninfert brqnaach point it ou as the Srst’and. general receptacle for the food, which receives in the month only sufficient mastication to enable the animal to swallow it. When swallowed, it is then received by the rumen, and mgrsel after morsel' it taken uqti) this, the first of the animafs four stomachs, is 'A sense of rople tidfi precedes rumination, during Tvhiph act thr animal gwieraby Igfifrta a re cumbent posture.„ bayuft ;s posed that the food taken is again ruougawdj it is only tho bulky o X solid jwtipns Oar undpfflb TBB* tfheaThe riiftnh? is moderately ML i* ' will ; mtffct' J bn fW oonlerttej* |qd frSV sqhfeeze out the fluid which, wifi pai onward inter, the thi| Cr. fourth" stomachs, while, Oef emlwaoei orf^omimh P*W “4 retried tetbe mo^g^’W. ,-iiesaaUon of the cnewUlf Ot the cum which occuri ak ft sympteHr df most'in ternal diseaie* of eslttic ' id u * tmr. -Tf iwi Lsii j TO COOK A ’POpSttit ’ mt • ‘ Benator- Garjaad,. off. Arkansas, wn AppsUSdtto .dieectiojis hpw to OQpk a ’po*sun?T c '‘Th#* bent of njy mind,” ho replied, “is that if you would boil the Opossum in salt and red-peppef wafer until he iS quite ten- and 'vben’bibfrti' him in an old- men dr skillet, whereirrareAnd • ‘•his body a goodly number ot potatoes are baked and browned,, yon will have a diah-nnnvaled and more than Oriental, and a person who could not relish it, whethef he this’possum hot or cold, would have no celestial fire in hi* soul, nor inusio eithJr.' , ”is to*Whefher 'pos- * snm’is hof rii dbld, the-B#n* titf cdfifeSSed ftabiUty toicteafde. “Bath brthan'mte# him entirely,” ho added, “ I would try to eat bin)i||| any uay cqold find him, and I opin ion that he is better ho't or oold accord ing to the state he is in when I last par take of him." ’ :■> v—c. i.wwen tmwr. decided by T a Jnuge tlmt nc * *r-juuds for divorbe. ** ''' .TjQ.l. v l-no^. I ■**“. .. wm w. mmm mJapvfMl t**MrCtaaMw aka taut* ■* SUM mt inmU tm gam, Sal star* A Iwc MttMMteaaaMi W at, ■wtatytU* nwanekWaduAlMiMtaMra, -jTrwn ' -~l If wtta iHirti ■< ila-lao* iaaja~' ’ ~ k ' Snw wteat la this a companion to t*k* (br Hlf ' I t On* mlfht m walfmanx a anudsal Sox. TaaWUaal mates Imt fall axtant; tanmalwara m ka horad wlta ba aaly aim aha plan- IT ,0 Fn<JßKi;cm;theactor, called onJthePope, and says he wore stockings of white silk ; white ghoea yq-Pf golden crosses by way h 4. hackly; A long white 'cassock of merino, hcmqd (With silk of a pale rose ooior.; a that reached below his elbows, which was also bordered by rose-colored silk; and a white sfik skull capjjspth. a-rose-colored binding and a jejfVl ,hl- A heavy bhain, from dejjen&eff' k large cross Cht with .diamonds ah? Babies, hung around his neckf] tfpoli’his hands he wore ■ mittens pf silk, which ■reached to the filst ioint of his tihgeife. He wore a white- belt or ~sash around lfis waist. ; *-*- * *'■ ' Wl-MASANTRLES. mm u aia firteni —T Follow Che example of trcW keep some the shade. Manx of the ricliest planters of San livg ou cpffee grounds. Navaa-write the word "finis" back ward. .It will be a " sin if ” yqu do. A Pta wateaever known te wash, bnt •a great many people have seen the pig drab. -• ,*- ,x A DRT-aocms house advertises laws dresses thfft Will Wash. Isn’t itths bnsi ness of a laundress to wash?- - Tan hog may not be thoroughly post ed in arithmetic, but When yotf oome to a square Acrt he is there—the hog is. “What makes the hair fab out 1 ?” asks a correspondent. Usually it is the prop erty iff, the deceased that makes thb heirs fall out A river’s mouth is larger than its head, the sea has arms but no hands, and a mountain has s foot but no legs. isn’t it? • -u.... - • ™ is : * r *L v*’ ; Bev. Georgs H. Hepwobth has writ ten a romance entitled “111” It is in §§§, and the interest is *tling and unled. —Loweli Courier. * A correspondent writes; "** Will yon tell us what Mrs. Langtry’s maiden namo was ?” Certainly ; her maiden aim was to marry Mr. Langtry. ’ Manx a newspaper has been assassin ated in Aha same way as the late Sultan aAJMuI A*i*e bjfpieans pf scissors. —New Yqrk Advertiser. . A UTSMv'B-y ear-old said to her, mother day* “Mamma, you married papa °“® else c W ,d K et him, didn't quite' earnest. * is the greatest charge on reo ord ?” spiked the Professor of History. -And the absent-minded student an swei'ed: "Sqventpen dollars for hack -birefor.aetf and girl for two hours." • An Arkansas journal says tliat they hove in that State a spring so powerfully impregnated with iron that the farmers' horses which drink at jt never have to be f hoe growing on their feel naturally. . , . Caught in the act: Clara—“,o Char ley, yon haughty boy 1 throw your cigar away jnst as j oome round the corner,” Charley—“ Why didn’t you say yon wanted it ? How was I to know?” That genial old provorh manufacturer who wrote, “All work and .no play makes Jack a doll boy,’*-forgot to add that alkplay and no work makes Jack a professional sport at 20 years of age, - and lands him in the penitentiary at 30. "HUnbt;” said his wife, with chilling ' severity, v“L saw you coming out of a saloon this afternoon.’V,'“Well, my replied the heartless man, “yotwwouldn’t have your husband stay ing all day, wqnjd yon V '* PhtsiOians have decided that a man hailiflgftfi SSi is,aife all town in Kansas has two heerts. What a predicament he will be in when his girl asks him, “Do you *love mtewith all your heart?” He will have tokay, .“ Which heart?” and that may break the engagement Philade lphia Sun. X , Mi Potatoes, —When oM potatoes begin *t6loofwieir flavor,’ the caok'ffnnst snm mofi all Iter skill to atone for the loss. An excellent way of ooeking them is The foltowing: Peel and slice some po tatoes and arrange them in a deep bak ing dish, putting salt, pepper and bits •butte* between ’Pill the of : (hsh-vuAh milk, and bake m a moderate oven .until the potatoes are done. A favorite dish in the West Indies is pre pared.as follows : Two pounds of peeled potatoes are washed and grated; four ounces each are added of sugar and but ter-melted ; ope teaspoonful each of salt and pepper; mixed well together, placed in a. baking dish, and put into a brisk oveq nntil done and it shows a delicate brown color. Another mode of prepar ing.potatoes by the French, after the potatoes are boiiecf in their jhekets, is to them with a fork; pnt them into * stewpan with some batter and salt, moisten through with cream and let them grow dry while stirring over tfie fire; add more cream and oon tinhe adding for nearly an hour; turn them info a dish and brown them on the toj> with a salamander. > A PxrfctDKLTHiA drug olerk blundered in compounding e dose for his own tak ing, and last his life thsraby.