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BY T. L. GANTT.
OGLETHORPE ECHO
PUBLISHED
EVEBY FRIDAY HOMING,
BY T. L. GANTT,
Editor and Proprietor.
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CASH RATES OF ADVERTISING.
The following table shows our lowest cash
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made from them in any case. Parties can
readily tell what their advertisement will
cost tlfem before it is inserted. We count our
space by the inch.
TIME. 1 in. 2 in. 3 in. 4 in. i col i col. 1 col
Tw’k7sl .00 $2.00 S3JKJ s4.o<f*6.<XJ SIO.OO sl4
2 “ 1.75 2.75 4.00 5.00 8.00 13.00 18
3 “ 2.50 3.25 5.00 6.00 10.00 10.00 22
4 “ 3.00 4.00 6.00 7.00 11.00 18.88 26
5 “ 3.50 4.50 6.00 8.00 12.00 20.00 30
6 “ 4.00 5.00 7.50 8.00 bf.OO 22.00 33
8 *' 5.00 6.00 9.0010.00 15.00 25.00 40
3 mot, 6.00 8.0011.0014.00 18.00 30.00 50
4 “ 7.00 10.0014.0017.00 21.00 35.00 50
6 “ 8.50 12.0016.00 20.00 26.00 45.00 75
9 “ 10.00 15.00 20.00 25.00 33.00 60.00 100
12 “ 12.00 18.00 24.00 30.00 40.00 7j.OQ 120
Local Notices charged 15c. per line for first
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Business and Professional Cards will
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LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTS.
Sheriff Sales, per levy, 10 lines $5 00
Executors’, Admini4trators’ and Guardi
an’s Sales, per square 7 00
Each additional square 5 00
Notice to Debtors and Creditors, 30 days, 4 00
Notice of Leave to seli, 30 days 3 00
Letters of Administration, 30 days 4 00
Letters of Dismission, 3 months 5 00
Letters of Guardianship, 30 days 1 00
Letters of Dis. Guardianship, 40 days.... 3 75
Ilomestead Notices, 2 insertions 2 00
Rule Nisi’s per square, each insertion... 1 00
—■
GEORGIA RAILROAD SCHEDULE
The following is the schedule on the Geor
gia Railroad, with time of arrival.at and de
parture from every station on the Athens
Branch:
UP DAY PASSENGER TRAIN.
Leave Augusta at 8:45 a. m.
Arrive at Union Point 12:27 p. m.
Leave Union Point 12:52 p. m.
Arrive at Atlanta 5:45 p. m.
DOWN DAY PASSENGER TRAIN.
Leave Atlanta at 7:014 a. ni.
Arrive at Union Point 11:32 a. m.
Leave Uuion Point 11:33 a. m.
Arrive at Augusta 3:30 p. in.
UP NIGHT PASSENGER TRAIN.
Leave Augusta’at 8:15 p. m.
Arrive at Atlanta.... . 6:25 a. m.
Remains one minute at Union Point.
ATHENS BRANCH TRAIN.
DAY TRAIN.
Time
Stations. Arrive. Depart, bet.
sta’s.
A. M.
Athens 8 45 25
Wintersville 9 10 9 15 30
Crawford 9 45 9 50 25
Antioch 10 15 10 18 15
Maxey’s 10 33 10 35 15
Woodville 10 50 10 55 20
Union Point 11 15
UP TRAIN.
Union Point...P. M. 100 I 20
Woodville 120 125 | 15
Maxey’s. 1 40 1 45 15
Antioch 200 205 | 25
Crawford 2 30 2 35 30
Wintersville 305 310 | 25
Athens | 335
NIGHT TRAIN— Down.
Athens a. m. 10 00 25
Wintersville 10 25 10 30 30
Crawford 11 00 11 05 25
Antioch 11 30 11 32 15
Maxev’s 11 47 11 49 15
Woodville 12 04 12 10 25
Union Point 12 35 a. m.
Up Xight Train.
Union Point 3 55 25
Woodville 4 20 4 24 15
Maxey’s 4 39 4 41 15
Antioch 4 56 4 58 25
Crawford 5 23 5 27 30
Wintersville 5 57 6 02 28
Athens 6 30
IF YOU
Want a Situation-
Want a Salesman —
Want to buy a Horse —
Want to rent a Store —
Want to sell a Piano —
Want to lend Money—
Want a Servant Girl —
Want to sell a Horse—
Want to buy a House—
Want to rent a House —
Want a job of Painting—
Want to sell Groceries—
Want to sell Furniture —
Want to sell Hardware —
Want to sell Dry Goods—
Want to sell Real Estate-
Want a job of Carpentering—
Want to sell Millinery Goods—
Want to sell a House and Lot—
Want to find any one’s Address—
Want to sell a piece of Furniture —
Want to buy a second-hand Carriage—
Want to find any thing you have lost—
Want to sell Agricultural Implements —
Want to Advertise anything to advantage—
Want to find an owner to anything found —
Advertise in THE OGLETHORPE ECHO.
®l)c #gktl)®rfK €clj®.
IN STORE!
50,000 Bacon Sides.
25 bbls. Best O. K. Lard.
5 car-loads Corn.
100 bbls. Sugars.
50 sacks Coffee.
And numerous other goods in our line, just
received and for sale at prices that defy com
petition.
TALMADEE, HODGSON & C 0„
feblß-4t College Avenue, Athens, Ga.
The Moneyless Man.
The following beautiful poem is from
the pen of the gifted tragedian, Lawrence
Barrett:
Is there a place on the face of the earth
Where charity dwelleth, where* virtue has
birth ?
Where bosoms in kindness and mercy will
heave,
And the poor and the wretched shall ask and
receive ?
Is there no place on earth where a knock
from the poor
Will bring a kind angel to open the door?
Ah! search the wide world wherever you can,
There is no door open for the moneyless man.
Go look in the hall where the chandelier light
Drives off from its splendor the darkness of
night;
Where the rich, hanging velvet in shadowy
fold
Sweeps gracefully down, with its trimmings
of gold.
And mirrors of silver take up and review
In long lighted vistas the ’wildering view ;
Go there in your patches, and find if you can
A welcoming smile for the moneyless man.
Go look to your Judges, in dark flowing gown,
With the scales wherein law weigheth quietly
down;
Where he frowns on the weak and then smiles
on the strong,
And punishes right while he justifies wrong;
Where jurors their lips on the Bible have laid
To render a verdict they’ve already made;
Go there in the court-room, and find if you can
Any law for the case of a moneyless man.
Go look in the banks where mammon has told
His hundreds and thousands of silver and gold;
Where, safe from the hands of the starving
and poor
Lies pile upon pile of the glittering ore ;
Walk up to the counter—ah, there you may stay
’Till your limbs have grown old and your
hair turns gray,
And you’ll find at the bank notone of the clan
With money to lend to a moneyless man.
Go look in your church of the cloud-reaching
spire,
Which gives back to the sun his same look of
fire,
Where the arches and columns are gorgeous
within,
Amhtlie walks seem as pure as a soul without
sin ;
Go down the long aisle—see the rich and the
great,
In the pomp and the pride of their worldly
estate,
Walk down in your patches and find if you can
Who opens a pew for a moneyless man.
Then go to your hovel —no raven has fed
The wife who has suffered so long for her bread;
Kneel down by her pallet and kiss the death
frost
From the lip' of the angel your poverty lost—
Then turn in your agony upward to God,
And bless v. iie it smites you the chastening
rod ;
And you’ll find at the end of your life’s little
span
There’s a w r eleome above for the moneyless
man.
How it Feels to be Hanged.—
Having attempted to hang himself, but
having been prematurely cut down, a
young gentleman of Paris has survived
to give this account of his sensations:
“As I kicked away the chair and fell
I had the sensation of receiving a blow
from a hammer on the top of my head.
I did not feel the rope, and the only de
fined sensation of weight in my head.
My head seemed heavier and bigger than
the great belle of Notre Dame. It was
night all about me, and then there came
a terrible cold in the lower part of my
hotly, and then a sharp pain where the
rope was tearing my neck, and then—
nothing.”
A Poor Opinion of Lions. —Dr. Liv
ingstone is said to have expressed the
utmost contempt for lions. “ You talk
about the majesty of the lion,” said he
chatting one day at a party in London
with Sir Edwin Landseer, “ but you do
not know the beast. There is no more
majesty about him in the forest than
there is about that poodle. It is all poe
try. Lions are arrant cowards—cowardly,
sneaking beasts. l r ou can hardly tell a
lion from a dunkev. When you come
upon a lion suddenly he tucks his tail
between his legs and bolts. He will
spring upon you if he comes upon you
unawares and can have time to crouch,
but if a man has courage to look a lion
in the face, you need not even cock your
rifle.”
CRAWFORD, GEORGIA, FRIDAY MORNING, MARCH 12, 1875.
DOUBLE INCEST.
A FATHER'S BRUTAL CRIME.
[From the St. Louis Globe].
In the fall of 1870 Mr. Kingsley, then
of New York, consulted his wife about
moving to Nebraska to secure a cheap
home, while a good opportunity present
ed itself. This man was poor, but re
spected by all who knew him in his na
tive town ; and although he toiled early
and late, yet fortune did not smile upon
him and his, and the consequence was
many times his family was allowed to
suffer. According to arrangements,
Mr. Kingsley disposed of all superflu
ous goods, and with his wife and his
children started for Nebraska in April,
1871. With only a small purse of about
$75 to make the trip, two of the smallest
children were sent to an aunt iu Min
nesota, while the rest of the family
landed in Lincoln in a few days from
the start, with the small sum of sixty
five cents left them. No doubt many
would have become discouraged, and
with a sinking heart, given up in de
spair. But not so with this family, as
Mrs. Kingsley was a woman of indomi
table will, and expressing a strong de
sire to push forward, the husband and
children caught renewed spirit, and for
a time the prospects of gaining a home
were very bright. How well the plans
laid out for securing the end, the sequel
of this story will tell.
The family remained in Lincoln for
six weeks, during which time Kingsley
worked around town at anything lie
could get to do, while the w r ife and
children also did ail in their power to
keep the wolf from their door. At the
expiration of six weeks an opportunity
came to the head of the family to visit
Fillmore county, which he gladly avail
ed himself of. One bright spring morn
ing he bid his family farewell and start
ed to look at some land. After
arriving at his destination, he was
compelled to remain there for a
considerable length of time, for he it re
membered that the B. and M. was only
finished to a short distance beyond Lin
coln at that time, and the trip must
needs be made by wagon. Pretty soon,
probably four weeks, he returned to Lin
coln, and, leaving all his children liere,
he again made his way back to Fillmore,
accompanied by his wife, who at that
time was pregnant with child. He
could not get back as soon as was ex
pected, and in the meantime, the chil
dren who were left here became dis
couraged, and, supposing the Indians
had killed their father and mother, they
hired out and worked for their board,
until one day their father returned with
a big wagon and took them to their sup
posed future home.
After getting a claim, the next move
was to build a house, which they did ;
but as there was no lumber-yard short
of Lincoln, the idea of furnishing the
sod mansion with doors and wrindows
was entirely abandoned. The entire
family worked hard all that summer,
and many times the children and par
ents retired to their hay couches with a
hunger that is often fqlt in anew coun
try. When winter came on a family
consultation was held, and it was deci
ded that Mr. Kingsley should again come
to Lincoln and bring with him the two
oldest daughters, one fifteen and the oth
er thirteen, in order that they could earn
something to support the family. At
this time, the neighbors at Grafton,
Fillmore county, began to talk among
themselves in regard to the changed ap
pearance of the eldest girl, whose name
is Charlotte, and several times it was
whispered to the mother that something
was wrong ; but, as the girl had never
been allowed to keep company, the
mother refused to believe that things
were not altogether right, but at the same
time a laint suspicion crossed her mind.
Who could have been so far gone as to
attempt the seduction of an innocent
girl, was beyond the conception of the
poor mother.
But to return to the time when they
came to Lincoln : It was in the month
of November that Kingsley once more
arrived here, but nothing turned up to
give him a job, and he was about to
again venture back to his rural home,
Avhen the demand for hands secured him
the lucrative position of wood- chopper
at Bellievue. He wrote to his wife, in
forming her that he should at once leave
to go to work, and hence, she must re
turn to take care of her children. Upon
arriving here, she at once saw that Char
lotte would be confined iu a short time,
and tried to prevail upon her to tell who
was the cause of it. But all to no purpose,
for the girl was very obstinate, and it
[ was not until the night she gave birth to
a child, that she confessed who was her
seducer.
Taking the young girl's hand in her
own, Mrs. Kingsley knelt down by the
bedside, and with the tears streaming
down her troubled face, finally extract
ed the truth from the sick girl. “Char
lotte,” said her mother, “you are very
near death. As you hope for heaven,
make your poor mother a confidant,
and tell who has brought you here.” The
answer came slowly ; “Ma, no man has
e ver touched me but my own father.”
Who can imagine the thoughts of that
woman ! Who, indeed, can tell of the
pent-up feelings that stirred within her?
Who, but a mother, could sympathize
with her ? Facing the floor for ten long
and dreary hours, this human creature
knew not what to do. After calming
down somewhat, she went to her nearest
neighbor and there poured forth a tale
that would curdle the heart’s blood of
any sane person. The good woman,
with all her sympathies aroused, advised
Mrs. Kingsley to return home and com
pose herself. Going back to the bedside
of the erring one, she asked of her when
this had commenced. The poor girl,
with a penitent air and in a trembling
voice, said : “Mother, the summer be
fore we came out here, my father came
to me one day, when you were out sew
ing, and using all his strength, accom
plished the deed before I could resist.
He then told me never to relate it to you,
as it would set you crazy ; and, through
the love I bore you, the truth never came
out, although he often repeated his first
actions. The last time he misused me
was just three days after your child was
born.”
Before morning dawned Charlotte was
a mother, and the babe lived some eight
weeks. All this time Kingsley had been
writing to his wife, and in every letter
an earnest inquiry was made as to Char
lotte’s health ; but his wife never gave
him a word of satisfaction, which, as a
matter of course, left him rather uncer
tain as to the result. A few days after
the babe was buried he returned to Lin
coln, and soon made his way to his
mined daughter’s room. His miud
must have been somewhat relieved upon
learning that all had passed over, but
when his wife looked at him, the dirty
scoundrel quailed, and, with tears falling
fast, he paced the floor, begging his wife
not to expose him. No one will blame
the poor heart-broken woman for scorn
ing the human brute’s pleadings, and
no one would suppose for a moment
that she would relent. But when her
thirteen year-old daughter, Rosa, fKng
herself before her mother, and with
childish eloquence, begged that pa and
ma should not separate, it is no wonder
that the loving mother finally consented
to remain at home—merely to save her
children from a living disgrace, and not
to love and cherish the husband who
had so mercilessly and outrageously
blasted a kind wife and affectionate
mother. Kingsley promised that4f he
was not exposed, nothing should be left
undone to atone for the Avrong he bad
committed. His wife told him that the
love she on e bore, could never more be
bestoAved upon, but would treat him with
respect—which she ahvays did. For a
time, all the happiness that Avas possible
for them to enjoy under such circum
stances, came to them,
Very soon, however, word came that
the homestead Avas not very safe, unless
some of the family should immediately
move on it. After placing Charlotte
in a respectable family, and securing a
like situation for Rosa, Mrs. Kingsley
took the other two children and departed
for the homestead, for the purpose of se
curing the crops, which promised to be
abundant. It Avas understood that
Kingsley was to stay here, and, if possi
ble, to make enough money to Avinter
the family. To show what a mean spirit
this man possesses, we Avill relate a very
trifling circumstance :
During that time that this wife Avas in
attendance at the bed-side of Chailotte,
she (Mrs. Kingsley) had, by the assis
tance of her boy, who was then ten years
old, gathered some 900 pounds of paper
rags and shipped them to Omaha. The
rags amounted to sl7, and Avhen Mrs.
Kingsley left, she enjoined her husband
to settle a three dollar debt and imme
diately forward the balance to Grafton,
Avhich he did. In a few weeks he wrote
to his wife, asking for the loan of sl3 to
buy provisions to keep him, for fear he
would get no work. Upon receipt of
this request she mailed the money, but
something told her that she must take
the letter out of the post-office, which
she accordingly did, and instead of the
money coming, Rosa was astonished the
next day to see her mother at the door.
While she was down at Grafton, the lady
with whom Rosa was living died, which
compelled Rosa to live with her father;
and when Mrs. Kingsley made her unex
pected appearance she noticed a guilty
look come over her daughter’s face.
The second day of Mrs. Kingsley’s return
to Lincoln, her little baby took sick and
died within a Aveek. This was about a
year from the time Charlotte had made
her confession, audit is beyond the de
scription of a human being to relate hoAv
the poor sick at-heart mother must have
felt when Rosa called her and tearful’v
told hoAv her father had brutally forced
her and committed a second blasting
deed. This Avas in the forenoon, and
Avhen her husband came to dinner, Mrs.
Kingsley, in a measured and solemn
voice, told him that they must separate,
and that she would hand him over to re
ceive the doom he so richly deserved.
Another scene of tears and promises,
but all of no avail—the woman had
made up her mind ! Noav, then, the
following will show what he wanted with
the sl3 spoken of above : The little
boy (some days before his mother’s re
turn), alluded to in this article, happen
ed to overhear a plot in which it Avas ar
ranged that Kingsley should go to the
mountains and there make sffiucient
money to pay Rosa’s expenses to the
same place. This, however, was knock
ed to pieces by the woman’s return in
stead of the money.
What could the poor Avoman do ? She
consulted a lady friend,Avho raised SSO and
advised her to go back East to her friends.
She Avenfc back East, and during the time
she remained there letters passed between
her and Rosa, Avho had moved out on the
homestead Avith her father. The letters
Avere ahvays encouraging on both sides,
but about the middle of May, 1874, Rosa
suddenly stopped writing, and no A\'ord
could be had in regard to her. This
naturally made the mother uneasy, and
learning through another source that
her husband had disposed of the home
stead and jumped the country, she work
ed for money to bring her back to the
scene of desolation. She could not start
until about five weeks ago, and in six
days more she landed in Lincoln. Mak
ing inquiries, she learned that her hus
band had decamped, taking Avith him
Charlotte and Rosa.
She consulted laAvyera in this city, and
they advised her to seud postal cards in
every direction, asking for imformation
of the runaway parties. She did so, and
soon an ans Aver came back that the per
sons were iu the town of Tiesiding, Wy
oming Territory. After a great deal
of trouble and anxiety upon the part of
Mrs. Kingsley, Marshal Cooper at last
started Avith a Avarrant for the arrest of
Kingsley and his two daughters. Coop-"
er returned yesterday Avith only the man
and his oldest daughter. If you, dear
reader, could have seen this poor, miser
able woman ( Mrs. Kingsley ), as Mar
shal Cooper told her that Rosa had a
baby but three days old, and that Henry
T. Kingsley, this most unnatural parent,
was the father of that child, we have no
doubt your fingers Avould have involun
tarily tightened, as you imagined they
were clutching at the throat of this
brutal beast in human shape. The pre
liminary examination will come off be
fore Judge FoxAvorty to-day at 1 oclock.
A more saddened commentary on hu
man frailty and wickedness was neA r er
penned than is afforded by a plain, un
varnished recital of this shocking tale
of ruin and woe. The hardest heart
must melt in sympathy towaads these
miserable victims of unhallowed passion,
and if there Avas even a case in Avliieh the
injunction “Judge not” should be re
moved, it is this.
After human revenge shall have been
satiated, who can picture the terrible
and agonizing future of the lives render
ed so horribly burdensome? Never again
while existence on earth lasts, can one
ray of hope or one hour of comfort bless
the guilt-weighted souls of those so
utterly lost. A curse like this beyond
human comprehension in its merciless
intensity, and pity would start affright
ed if besought to stand between this
guilty monster and the doom that he
deserves, but connot receive.
How to Fix the Clock.— When the
clock stops, do not take it to the repair
shop till you have tried as follows : Take
off the pointers and the face ; take off the
pendulum and its wire. Remove the
ratchet from the “ tick ” wheel, and the
clock will run down with great velocity ;
let it go; the increasing speed wears
the gum and dust from the pinions—the
clock cleans itself. If you have any
sperm oil, put the least bit on the axles.
Put the machine together, and nine
times in ten it will run just as well as if
it had been taken to the shop. In fact,
this is the way most shopmen clean
clocks. If, instead of a pend’dum, the
clock has a watch escapement, the latter
can be taken out in an instant, without
taking the work apart, and the result is
I the same. It takes about twenty minutes
j to clean a braes clock, and save dollars.
VOL I--NO. 23.
BODY-SNATCHING IN CHICAGO.
The Ghastly and Ghoulish Work of Two
Resurrectionists—Terrible Seenea in ThLr
Improvised Charnel-House.
A horrible and shocking case of body
snatching Avas brought to light last night
by police officers at the Chicago Avenue
Station, and one or two young men who
are guilty of the disinterment and trafic
in dead bodies was brought to grief by
two pistol shots from the weapon of an
officer. The details of this fearful crime
are sickening in the extreme, and beggars
adequate description. A small barn in the
North Division has been used as a char
nel-house, where bodies have been pack
eddnto boxes and barrels and a trafic
in human flesh carried on for a period
of three months Avitliout interruption,
and in the most systematic, bold and se
cret manner. Graves in cemeteries have
been dug up, coffins opened, bodies drawn
from them Avith hooks driven into the
faces of the deceased, and the garments
of the sacred dead torn from them, and
the corpses placed in a Avagon and cover
ed up and conveyed from the place of
sepulchre to the barn. The facts of this
outrage on the living and desecration of
the dead, and the captnre and shooting
of one of the despoilers, and the terrific
struggle and escape of the other, are as
foilow's:
Three days ago the neighbors in thb
vicinity of the channel-house, which is lo
ted in an alley, in rear of No. 167 Wells
street —a dry goods store kept by Mr.
Brunswick—noticed that some parties
Avere acting about the barn in a supicious
manner, and some of them supposed that
they were secreting stolen goods. The
men were noticed generally about 8
o’clock in the evening, driving up in a
Avagon, lifting something out, put
ting it in the barn. On learning of this
Captain Guild ordered four of his men ta
keep a close watch on the place, and
continue it until they were satisfied re
garding the business the parties were en
gaged in. Two oi the officers kept watch
Saturday night, and suav two men drive
up in a wagon, remove something in ft
mysteriously, and place it in a wagon,
but what the something was they were
at a loss to discover. Sunday morning,
at daybreak, Officer Langen, one of
the watches, when all was favorable,
took an observation through a small
opening in the side of the stable, and saw
a sight which startled and sickened him.
His astonished gaze met the ghastly fea
tures of a corpse, whose glassy eyes
seemed to start from their spheres, and
caused him to tremble for the nonoe. In
three other barrels he could see the
bared shoulders of three other bodies,
Avhich had been bent and crouched into
the narroAv space. On the floor lay the
corpse of a Avoman, apparently young
and devoid of all clothing, except a pair
of Avhite hose. This latter body had the
appearance of having been dead for some
time. Horror-struck and startled beyond
measure, the officer withdrew and repor
ted to his brother-officer what he saw,
and they reported what they had seen to
Captain Gund. The barn Avas watched
Sunday night, and no one appeared, but
the bodies Avere not disturbed by the
policemen. They kneAV that their game
Avould appear soon, and they kept a silent
watch. Last evening Officers Schaack
and Bowen ivere the watchers, and
they found a favorable place for obser
vation in a barn directly opposite that
used at the warehouse for the dead
bodies.
They had not long to wait before tw#
men appeared and carried the bodies to
a wagon, when they were charged by the
police and one man Avounded and cap-'
tured, Avhile the other escaped with two
balls through him.
Ancient Wonders.
Nineveh was fourteen miles long,
eight miles wide and forty miles around,
with a wall one hundred feet high, and
thick enough for three chariots abreast.
Babylon was fifty miles within the walls,
which were seventy-five feet thick and
one hundred brazen gates. The Tempi*
of Diana at Ephesus was four hundred
and twenty feet to the support of the
roof; it was one hundred years in build
ing. The largest of the pyramids was four
hundred and eighty-one feet in height,
and eight hundred and fifty-three feet on
the sides. The base covered eleven acrea.
1 he stones are about sixty feet in length,
and the layers are two hundred and
eight. It employed 350,000 men in
building. The labyrinth of Egypt con
tains three hundred chambers and twelve
halls. Thebes, in Eygpt, presents rain*
twenty-seven miles around, and contain
ed 350,000 citizens and 400,000 slave*.
The Temple of Delphos was so rich in
donation that it was plundered of $50,-
000,000, and the Emperof Nero carried
away from it two hundred statue*. The
walls of Rome were thirteen jnilerardund,