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THE OGLETHORPE ECHO
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'**r fefti
* HWr7»*~ 1.08
K ta*. .80
Tertha C«4»* **» iAMM.
p*p*r *«it until tit* Baoa»j to p*i
S ocm* given e*fb *’ ^r.hw two wwk« before the
t raftota of bi* Mbi ■. **»4 if critwcripboe * act
wed, t! . ji*j**r ;■ a! •* £*oo&tmo*d.
-.y person who will "end a* the ttaiue* of 8v*
. ; v- r:vr», with |So ■'**£. win be entitled to
y«*r'* eu»«fc'r.pUoo free. Jio dab r*ie*
Mrs. Loftj and I.
' Iff*. Lofty keep* tfirljfc
So do I.
Siife h*# tl^ to dr&* it,
Noue h^ve f:
SI- a nn pTsin W m*.h her ooor.hmsn
Tboa am I. -
With 3»T b oe-t-retl lan^lan? baby,
TmutSHag b*.
-I hide hita faoe j«st elie should t<ee
Th< catmh bov *n ! tnvr me.
H -r fuse hnuband ha* white fingerd.
Midf )<«!■ not.
K’t couM jjive hi* h idfe a palace—
Vine, a cot.
~-z.'zszr~~- u
•“"Ei"”* 1 "*
An'l prav* that He who tnrn* life's sands
«ii ho!d ti» lojedjMM i, I i* lamda.
Mr* Loft* him her Jew® *,
Ko have f;
i~*+* ***** »»ftaso bemedto,
Nwk-l.
B\e «iii leave hers a- deatlTs portdJ.
i'y-md-ly:
hoir my t'easaro with me
When I die.
y .t I have I..te,». .1 e lis. gold u
Sis i .suits ter wealth- iuos- can't be teld.
She ha* thoae who 'ovt* her station.
None hare !;
Jl.rt I ve otit. tree ! eart beside roo -
Glad tin J.
I d n'jite'iange it tor ahin_donj,
N >. tot!
C>i will -eigh rt id Wm balance,
’ fiy-hiiif
.And t s eri the diff* r.-ncc lie'll define
'! «ixt Mt*T t ft;{h w'tei^ nine.
LOVE AND FROST.
There w:is beauty enough to be found
in Mutn.. valley, wliat witli the rivet
m. i the take and the forest-erowned
hi Is. It least m summer time ; ami even
the dry, cold tignr of a Minnesota win
ter could not take it all away. NVver
theless, there-was nothing, else there
half SO beatitifn! a* Wna Enoaon,
Her witte r, d, old Norwegian father
had settled himself on a, good-enough
j iee. laud, away Bp als>ve the head rif
•"« hike, miles away from Mataska vil
la.ttv and no one could say he had so
much as one friend more, at the end of
a tiv- years'residence, for hw than house. the day the
first toulwr was eat
.V thoroiiglrgoiug miser was old Jan,
ant hr* ergaty selfishness included not
only h v earthly nrnl gmala; his and the gift «te*ir or
U s -n tiwii not very
able eornpauy, bat also las one jewel of
slaughter. in the village;
.Rarely was Nome seen
almorf never at nil at any merry-making
of the neighborly country folk ; and old
Jan seemed to take an ogreish sort of
pleasure in preventing her from enter
toning his TisftoB; house. -youngmen especially
at own
And so, the more Noma's beauty
grew mprtiuuipnit.tSBS^.rjEi and beimme known among Encron them,
the
among the free-hearted settlers fit the
Jlita-ku v.il .'V.
And yet there were those who hs,l
succeed' d in breaking through or climb
ing over thc mid old miser’s wall of re
serve. .
John Pintier had done it, by his
fstheEs advice ; for Judge Pinner was
Jiiu Encsdtis.UwT*>r t 'anu be ba*! more
lloui uiietL hintt^L Vi .his sou un<l heir
that. N .rnH hwl other arid more solid at
tlmn her beauty.
• If, -therefore, any fair oeewiion offered
to sen*l a message to the Ericson farm,
* J »hn Piun«T bail been frttber generally »>y eHrryingJt, quite
jeady ta obligeJii« he hail
and more than once even vehtur
ed on a brief ciill Without any special
errand.
As for. Paul W«nn 1, on the other hand,
either he hivl in* snfficteht enniyng to
invent errnn.tsv“or tris pnde forbade any
subterfuge, for he had positively and
openly braved, more, than once,, even
harsh discourtesy of <>ld Jau, in his un
invitetl, unabaVhcd intrustons.
If Paul did not pretend b> vie with
Johh Pi\mer tudrisH» wealth or apparent
proapiMds, he wan certainly a'fine, manly
Hjiecimen df a young Western
and Imaurk curls an-1 almost swarthy
featuieM the rip- blonde wore a Norse pie* saut loveliness contrast of to Noma even
herself
—strategy it seemed tbat -1 aul
had stooped t.i f..r more than
Norn.i l.ad lH-cn surprised that neighbor- he
been ;; out a hunting m that
, io.i ’nn the very days which old Jan
huVehosflUv for a bit of teaming on the
tort heat.■ »*dg« ofbw - p 5 wsesHu*»a, ■ 01 •»
trfe-tortttff store at th« yiJ&ge.
Noilly ever knows how sueh things
r irm* to wrewwo property; but. snme
hi>w or ’tom. dmlge Hum, aud ins son
were raa-le^awarr lan that M thoy ood, hadrrenwms and he had
.r.hstruHtnig sensibly,
town made to teel the fact very
more than once. •
j::ie.ptt=/-aulumu T . ic l a<l been ui on the^Ue-Almt bitterness John
1 ‘inncrs nomiuationte. : , r tlto gtftte
l iture hail ohjy resulted yn-nhowing the
\ >Uy of the Matos&a valley people, for
t'le st ipul fellows had known no more
t in t. choose I mil W«nl instead ; aud
’T®',’ ^1"“ EtKV " on hil1 TOhl RhB w
J old 3 Jm, . l =s.is himself 353 ^'i
N,.t;; word woiildshe rondisafe
t’i ‘Ugh tie met her a fuU hslf-mde from
the house, aud walked to the very
by her side.
He did not give the matter np,
t yen, bait ao much ter the volly of lut
ter abuse with which the. old miser
^rreetetl Imp, as for the icy liMik of lmlif
i‘mice with which Noma
straight on into the house, and closed
tiled,.u, : '.
riicic was really very little give up ..
in Paul’s composition.; but lie met John
’
-
many ugly -d,oughts to the sore kJt
,t, Thru«f t dav'an t d'
the next and
: T, Dw«s.westtwtolmve 727.2 bred a «v>l
It. 4 « ft 4 iiyS? ,7 ’ i if 1' all^ g the
^ 1 " V«NTta
no
Vftetef, -Wtainw'tn 8 make foliowell■ anv almost
tb..re « cold snap
knfSfl't:hArmnmf>tera. the
oi/th** The
f n-*>ronrT low enoueh
* * anitnu-n we ll Thirtv thirfv
re^n"^ <rii Lfortv desrees
*f r teteljrAWMifA
tb ZnXw miSermn P tbere^frT^xible
of raredtostS here and th*re -i d
^tshonll frost sb 1 1 let go g its hold a little"
. j 4nl
laV ^
’
t’ o tter I -when the abating >
began ofthmkvoi'd to let in the fri«t—‘‘ John
i"kTL'Erireons? letter Vdon’i go and take
the old mm» was ready for Uas.”
Oglethorpe Q Echo.
By T. L. GANTT.
“ What! You ain’t in earnest r
tobwwaatfr 25*s, a t — w.t£
“ * m *- vbft ? OT, ' re n * ht : hnt I
w*«U^ ,, . wnrttoo tong. TBeyH
breakin^ont rephe.1 the judge. the roads in a day or bo,”
But more than “ a day ^ or so” went by
before the Mataska people cared to at
tempt a good deal in the way of mad
roaki and m the meantime the Eric
hi had not lyeen rmidy f ,r this.”
W.oh endless supplies of timber land
close by—that is, within a mile or so.
and haul generally he fine winter weather to
in what might want, old Jan
zszTsssr*’*-**’'
Jan's keen sense of economy. They
| 3 wonKl «nrrl r wa*te what they h»d «>
t»is'afsa»
crmillfiim ut M* pile <if chips
st ruck him with a sadden dismay, With snd
he St once started for the forest .
voRe o oxen.
It was a rash thing to do, for a man of
hie. age; hut he had ccmuted on his
thorough Hrsindinsvian toughness to
carry him through. Add SO it did; for
d r-time he fought h.s way to
house again, through the heaping drifts
and the blinding msh of the storm; bnt
he came alone, for hia team and thmt
load were hopelessly aUUed and snowed
t,.. M M
cbeemi ih,t aastjaw.-e>. Norna with the promise of what
he would do on the morrow. And
tried A<> be cheerful; but the howling,
tempest without- was. ^
well mdrcepmg with the dismal state nf
her own internal feelings and thoughts,
The night went by and the morning
came, and the storm still raged; but old ;
Jau Kriesou did not go out to cut wood.
■ He -lnl not even leave hta lied, forex
posu re and cold and over-exertion had
done their work on his rheumatic"old';
Hmhs, and imprisoned him only too effec
tually. Xorna's sank her,
Poor heart within
for she knew that such attacks were apt
to he tediously long, arid even ffsal
might fail her, a» well as the means of ;
cooking it. !
8 he was a brave bam girl, and she made ou t j
got,, the and the stabtes that ’ I
day, so that the shmk did not suffer; bnt
the few fence-rails ami mid pieces of
timber she was abte'to bring m enabled
her to make but a poor defense against
the fast increasing cold.
Moreover, old Jan was chilly, and
fretted and complaiiml of the absence of
the graud old firt»« he hail l»eeu um-d t».
,,, his yonth-s&ione the distant hills of
Norway. s'terrible NVirns,
That was day for and
when another morning dawned, she
hsikeil out upon the white and more
than Arctic desolation around the house,
with a feeling near akin to despair.
Still, with true courage, the Beauty of
Mataska faced her troubles, wadsd
. through-lhe dro'ts, tol osrefnKr tlm'quernlo her
. fa c M. f i re , att end ed- to- n.
demands of nnresyrmable old Jan, and
| wondered, now and then, if the people
at the village would ever dream of seed
i n g out to looX after them. !
| Then there followed another long,
dark, miserable night, aud Norm, could
not get a wink of sleep till toward morn
ing, for thinking of what might come.
Hlie d'd not even rise at once when
the tardy thickly light frosted began to pome her window, through i
; the jienes of
Why should fire she, when she. • had nothing ^
to make a with ? :
“ Would it not lie better to burn the
\ ; fnniiuvre make than of. coffc^at to freese? >ft Hhe t„ could :
A^up 8
kitchen chairs.”
Just riu-n she hoard a slight sound in ;
■ ...........* y.. r ..wi
I father conld i*e stirring. j
It was an effort .even to rise and dress
in tliuP sTTilging Cihl; biil Noriia whs i
brave, ami in a few minutes more she
was ready to' face the labors and' perils i
of ♦lie day. heavy she
Her heart wiw eubugh when |
i laid her hand on the kitelien-door; but i
.when she oj»ened it ste- fairly started
j hack in . astonishment, for a blast of
warm air, balm.v with the -breath of ;
S ; blazingduue, smote her in the face. |
Not. the ch.*erh.*ss. c.hill, derthly deso
j-lation she but had the expectcl Ibgb-pilcl was the heart!, ample
.1 kitchen,
j44aze*l end . raekted with a ns*et - 1111 -
pro limildy m pote, .«» and
U H -«o r y, -white h~«ped-mi mther snte oi
,t were ample supplies for at least jmght hat be
d tUe^imUteon .y s coBsuraption, of the ^whatever thermometer.
; slie NorBi-d»d-n^-lw‘lieve thonKliI of her lie.ln,l,le;i m .feiraelee, hither but
dsmt to l.e frozen to death butter that
{the j pile of she just sat down by
window lor a good, wholesome cry
; before vhe Bet hersclf to work at getting
i breiikfaatn-ady The tea-kettle had . evidently • filled -
d« lf, and started for a bml on its own
; ac count, an d N a niaw cunosily took her
j the see what Ho
jiuzzle might bfi _ /om i d o n t wi d e ..
Not a sign of human life was t here, but
somebb*^ haul been at work .with a
shovel for there whs a very decent path
, way cut as far as the barn.
l biJ^'tee MiketotSu^
| amiughin *oMm »« %»—- where w.sidenlatoh.*
a region
take tlie-pfaeegfeombmatemiocks, but
| wbocveT the nnHown bane»«*or. wonderfn. tad
been, he mnsthave possessed
fmuiltics ter silence.
There was magic m it, and _ Norna
called to mind the old Norse tales she
ha.1 hesri of good-na.nred denmM rf A.
forest; but, then, nil that belt aged t
- Norway* ami not to Minnesota.
Later in the day as Noraa p^ed here
and Htcreon.^ the drifts she *!».
b.ut, at least, far those broad though
- deep* dents in the surfaceof-the■ snow
° Uy y
; mSSL a S airfea rE g way to ro
stables. Noma saw that her work tuere
(tori^randTat^°eyen imtold .md
Xelv hSr“he mrroW^and stinting
radievof dd Jan tmrttfittesf the current
\<!rn/ mumfd Eriwm mng all dav the ouaint
and eest^ - lmfmother
whtah h&i taught 8
Tears Indore
‘ Bitter StHnl^taion^to bitter cold it was without, but
the l’ttE*
friend left te ask for
the v®rv dancing blaze itself seemed to
lanch in im>ckerv of Nona’s curiosity.
JkS The- lone r «ShSHriftoiTto35£ ni»ht earae a^ain >f course
Nuy tonth^ that flhp id^health^rbmle miirht listen
any .
doings Sing however not J’flud aud Norna woke in
her fire alight,
all .t nreparation l . made JaeL outside, in
j
It was evident moreover, that
Ertawm’s remaining i“ oi-team had
, havtog a night s?d of Well thev July
used nn, forced for, not
i some pititese driver them to
THE ONLY PAPES IN ONE OP THE LARGEST, MOST KtTELLHJEOT AND WEALTHIEST COUNTIES IN GEORGIA.
bin break a road to the timber through
i All that was a later discovery ta
Non.HM, bat tiie firat thing U> greet her
eyes, •* she swung tbe tor open, was
; the carcass of a goodly deer that hung
- against it, and she knew very well how
j much better veni»r»n steaks are than nt
ter better starvation. They are a good deal
!
The next dav and the next went by,
and the terrible cold seemed to have
gnped eveiything with a baud of frozen
steel.
Again and again did Noma Ericson
nhiver anssiswr and torn pale, as she thought of
j,;r..x£rzs.';«s.s: mu^h good wood, just to keep !
so warm
: n r, f -lT t„ Nort>»’* .peenl.tiaM « to
»n eye on a». Thet coffee you a±y *w
left this morning came from Jones a
-toreat the vilUge. I knowed t aoon
as I tastol it. It's what the judge al
ways buys, and it a two cents a ponnil
more than I want to gt»e^_
True enough. Judge Pinner had by
no means forgotten his client, and at
last he succeeded tu stmnng up J<*»a
and hta own, now the roads
f°jtUj.we«iy ^^“^SSadffe- yento teda few pomto
, itt , mjlwiT I
.
SJtffS.aSSHS5S.sS tbem, in ca«e tuey iouna anviouig d»u
had happened, at old Jan ».
Bitter cold yet, but when the double
tormore, closely pacKo .1 siugu in s^ght signi
of Jfan Encson s homestead, the girling
«™>ke pell^l all from their the f<»rs. chimney promptly dis
Hurrah f<»r old Jan . exclaimed ^ the ,
nappin lodge. g. Jack front didu t cateh * him j
■
Great was Dm mi yn a e of both and .
s-m, llowcver.wheu the old man hobbled
out to meet them, to he greeted with
-ncha h.rrentof wliat sm-mel tola
genninegratitade tor the kind illness, attention
they ill they had had shown dunng and Ilia Norua from and
saved him :
during the cold snap.
Jus t at that mom, nt a man on snow
shoes came phsldmg down fher.md, bnt
John nobody thought mustered mnehabont self-possession him, and
Pmner
to answer ;
Well, of oonrse, we were anxmna
about yon and Noma, and were crime
now jrt. to see How’s if there's Noma?” anything else we
«an
“ I’m pretty well, thank you,” said
that young Father, la, 5y herself, should from thank the door- Mr.
way. “ you
tinner for the venison and the coffee.
The man on snow-shoe* had half
halted within hearing distance, and
conld not have lost a word of Jan'Erie-'
sou s thanks, or the dubious protesting
and yet acknowledging acceptance
thereof by the Pinners, Juui'*il“'»gtan . I
“b that you; Mr. in
tomifded NiwOTaddresa.ngfte'-store
keeper, who still sat muffled up in the
sleigh. want.von to 1 sal m glad you ve for eome. " I
; ma
All right ! exclaimed the gallant
merchant, springing ont into the snow
to take a larre slip of brown paper from
Nornas extended baud, ‘where did
that come from r
Re*! it—read it. saiti Noma.
“ Paul Wood ! That’s plain enough Oh, I ;
:ind it’s in my own b»ndwriting.
mraemher, I did np »whole lot of things
that day for one imd another, and I put \
tb« names on ’em, so’s uot to git ’em
uixeii.”
“Olb-thattait,ia it 3ai'.Uh.e beauty.
“I see now. Father, John Pinner got
p»ul Wo m 1 to buy th* coffee for hint and
^ r; . aj ; w „ . ,
fid you pay Paul for working all night
m the storm? Did youteli him nut t*»
forget atvmt the venison and the rest ?
it was real good of. yon. 'Twas good of
him. too. to givoui) his oourting in' thc
village all through the cold simp.”
“What’s that?” suddenly exclaimed
(he man on snow-shoes, untwisting h
linge'inr muffler from his head as he
,p,,ka-.‘ whit’s that about courting in
the village ?” evidently chilly,
John Pinner was
judging by the way his-teeth chattered,
:lll<i it was really a very cold day; bnt
s ,rna Encson’s face was all in a bright
warm glow.
Vml r ^ exclaimed - “Paul
^A 6 d 1 Come right f iu now h -Come
M{1 Wftrln yourflel l)V « ie fire that would
jlJiVe Wn ont f or ever if it hadn't been
for you. Father, John Pinner ami the
j a dge would hwe let us freeze SDitstttrve.
|, waH p^l that sav«I us, Come in,
Pau , iudge Mr J<mH) yoll eome too, and
.(,0 ‘ ^ aiiuJouu may emue il
wimt Ui .
..j„ hn> .. ( j iy iy r( . mftr lie,l the store
keeper, “don’t yon think we’d ta-tter go
i 1<ltne while the sleighing’a good ? TW»
„ ^.j., day . Elcctol 8nre ’s yon
■ — r—
Tl 1PrelM!& no_ihuibt -ab^at- 4E
was Norna Ericaon’s “elected.”
-
-■
A Bite.
j. iwSoiatete f. b :i; »h ere i 8 an - elder! ^iLespeeially r farmer who
ta fond of
the boy 7 w
^ , M he
„ utorw j y lt , kitchen
“ (tone fishing J, ” said the jfJ girl.
<t F bj * ' , tb raaca j. ’ ggj, blm
T , at h bim „
, AnJ tbe aa(?r y old fellow went
a ^
, )r ^ 1)ro )k his Owning hopeful within bailing
distance of son who was
^relled’. eafrcrly over the stream the
. y '
{ a lt ,p- _' .
,, J"“ , , ! -I-, f
; T movement
flTOgAVw m a-ggR however, his hm&> Still
turn
^
” 1 11 learn you to sta y home and work
M
eoole.1 ‘gsea at that announcement, asa.S and, lucky
for the boy, the: latter just then hauled
»F'» '“““Isome perch. Thin was too
touch for the dad, who sprang forward
** helped unhimk tbe fish, and then
“Tom, have you got another hook?’
Victory perched on the br.y’a fish line.
—Rochester (X. Y.) Sunday Herald.
■
The , Leech.
Recent observations bn tbe compare
tive SS anatomr of this ^ little animal, have
to that just within its
rntmth tawtteia^Sv it is fnmishetl with three little
arranged, on each
side of which are inserted a row of very l
minute, sharp-pointed teeth, much Each r
semhling the teeth of a saw.
baa it* appropriate mnscnlar
for plamed’uTe its peculiar action, and thns is
Sbserve.1 constant shape of the
after the application of ot
very nseltxl onirnsL-dnaal,
fry.
GEORG I A* ID AY, MARCH 8- 1878.
! TOWS TlsBSt S COIXTRL
erea tew -
&*rihner'» Monthiy for January con- in
tains an article on the rural comparative population in
crea-*> of urban and
the United States; but it only give* the
chief cities, leaving out the large town
and village population. The Cincinnati
Coramercial has tried to supply this and
omission in the case of ten Staten,
n points \m\ the following among the
eonseqnences of excessive urban growth:
1 . Concentration of population.
2. Concentration of wealth.
3. Breaking down the great middle
5. The increase of the power of re
Wired w.*Uk. _
1 8 . Physical aui moral degeneracy.
9. Increasing peril to free inatitutoons.
Accurate stahati«. carefulL and torn
eetly lmn.lled. are mdmpensaWe toafu 1
understanding of onr etsaiomical, social,
political, moral and eduoittonal Xia.
ttona We *“7®
and oua scruttny separatedthe of tlte enttre State <*JSe» town York,
taon from ^0 tliat of the pnrdyniral, and
tn‘to‘l rn^O, ^ai^t 1 bms, m*.
7“.’“ IH5J ' We ' w "* “° w 0,6 IoUow
«
B 8 » BSS » ' -'~.lfc» ua»i
Inc Rural e«M popnUtion.......... of t fel papulation.....••• 1.537,773 1,415 }‘?S^ J77
iSSS i of^VSS cent.—Total, SSSSi”’. • 43:-nr'feL ’lifijS 71:
Qcreg8e
r ural 8 .
A thorough analysis for the whole
State.of MassachnsetU gives a rural-ifi
crease during the two decades, of but
wven p,, r CPn t, againat an urban in
crease of ninety-two per cent. Were all
t)l( , town population of Pennsylvania would be
U p t ; 1( , riira i mcrewse
to have been about ten per cent.,
and the urban 120 per e»-nt. In Illinois,
,,hi,.Hy , comparatively settle.! dining new the State two that decades, was
we fln j thirteen cities and towns of over
7,000 people in 1870 that can be
pu H rod witii 1850. The aggregates are:
,'WJft. 651,4,0 M50
state Oman............... popnl.'ion.......a.Miimt IS .475 JRW
4
Bnr- potation.......J,t;s7.421 2 uai,416 7M.28S
lBCrn „, ot -
increase of arbsp popalatiun........ SOT, 2*
lwr no et rural popnlatem 5.f ...... cjiit.
Rural, 166 per cent.; city, per
Were attthe towns and village.* of the
State sifted out, the rural increase would
lie fonnd to have (men much less than
Ifi 6 per cent Ohio ia a fair average be
tween the old and the new State*. After
scanning all the townships of Ohio, and
separating population from the village, tlie grand town total asd^rnty of the
State, wre have readied the following re
s uits:
_____ . __
Jl^n Potation ... . -nranon UMg».
» siitaW t ajtaxct
, Jtba 1MCMaw ..........
j ior »j increase 184,931 11 perct
Ttie aggregates for tea «f *. follows: priaoi
^ uOrthwwtora States aro as
1(j 70 . nt50.
Ten States ............20.WS.707 m.lOT.OTS
seventy cities .. 5141,92 c 2,199,137
ciUe. deduct d . » 5 ,»«i, 8 .....8,796,786' ia '9.998,975
Ioafeue »f nuoalation., i !
i !l0r -» e »t urGnu popuUtfo f. .....2,!«3.76H
lucre**# of r,ir .1 popuUtiu •........ 5,852.967
Iner^sso pw cent total popnUtloo, 83.*;
' ; ™ ‘
.
These States are New York, T Maasa
chn^etto, 1 ennsyivania, Mary li»na,Uiiio,
a ” 1 * Mudugan. The RTfat lesson ‘ r
these tacts w tuat enorw w sue
ffjj?® calamities of poverty ^ o r
**> .J* iC SJSSHd.wLsassSBBaxajTopvrn^to increase of concentration. T e
philosophers and- plmanturopisw can
study the the they problem study at the their leisure, taywill ana
more more
bud it necessaryto do m order to coot
teract the unfortunate results ™ 8
tendency of population.
e.»unle^f «h-.kleas Pumnetittei livimr*
A ^ stationers' U aJ-^ide onDosite
^ { VnSaml resort on the
« ^ihe^n receutlv oiSer «ot £ at
One nil
ra o/note ed
iiis “1™ window with shill eievcmUce inn packets
^mornteg SSS i? “l.en arnTpurcba^l oSS* The
^ Jo*Z the man's
n DaVkete the -ante*
wllH ttvied w.th ' bhiUmu of note day’
{J „ mwl . k 1 enrlitDciice Dav by
. j( ,i. S™ ..J^ on one' under
„ nM i.
) u Hiipeuce liveiienoe “X"' four-
1 V l t
»_ k tjl lie tb(> amn am and en
' }o {be T «l theloke • and notwithstanding
efforta ma>ta to keep the sales down,
•’ - liea^s“fferera ^ n tircl>
auTcbild the’ snd every man.
womnn iu town was stocke«i
with en-ugh note paper to last them
» lifetime However "wishing the fight
weut on ea. h man devoutly he
liad J.fJ* stuck to bis nmfiseU legitimate trade and
tri«l t.. hta neighbor.
“^.ppSrito” sa»srs!»“Kr*! had'toto^nteL In
« few f*(SS oduut^tbe P^thToW penny tieketdisap- prST
• to ito
1 one imsterfrering shilling In a twinkling down came
' the the obnokions wonta,
mil an exactly similar placard appeared, a'
iunonucing that •* the prise fs of shitting
I pocket of note paper one shilling.”
I And thus the war of extermination
ended
----- 1 ■ --- --
The English Channel Tunnel.
. taSwdfw ... .. ,
1
”e “reveral pits having been sunk to a
^‘^^ugHsh”^ Lave dlawnl’p
definitely the conditions
' t be dEtance from coast to coast at low
,y e . Each company potto,..: will cover the ex
pe frf nS cs of its The geuerul work
excavation will be done, on the one
band, bv the Great Nortbero of France,
„,d w the other-bv4be Chatham and
Bout eastern companies, the two latter
having D&er. each a direct route from London
to All the material* of the
French and English lines will pass
through the tunnel in order to prevent
unnecesaay shipment,* expenses and delay of France trans
. rmfway companies as in England ioeto, and in line,
other's
ami another goods can pass ?lumging from one hne to
without vans It ta
understood that an arrangement will be
establtaned for a similar exchange of
linesbetween all the English and the oonb
nental railway companies when tun'
nel ia completed. The tnnnel will be-
1 m* &irty to its founders. At the expiration wffl be
j Uto of tAei^ereionof yrers *» govenuneot
to fhetanelupan
; certem conditions.-Minn* Journal
( JlUItteW’-irtrf.
ST lTh.R been badlflp fePremp^iS ff* it cleaned
w*. Millikan* forthe we^
and fixedop wRjch filled ItJKith abund
ghowere ws^r. And an
fknce of nice pore the next
morning £ Mr Mill&Mp- delivered bis
touching feet#* *m the bles
^ ngw y,f water, and tab* beautiful and
Is^fouutain. i m&gerVt he GWt» All surpassed the
r>avi then when he
1 g to Dpe j the car at wjSTn^dlyto jbie street night
before last and iwi bis
baonv home how do ci^ir^ suppose r£t he
f e ft when bis staring him
^^Sn— - *— -
• m. Millikens aJwsv# did that
/K*r~i
kene coopa than there arf*® 111 l®**.
aIU ] many a time ai“ cl*- she bad
fonm , „ infa> «,Hiken»' cellar
„ d filled her bloated form viflt
and sirloil steaka And Mr. Mi tokens
no; remember the number of
times belito aprajue.1 his arm apd
De6r hnrltni jj (h^w hta ahonliltr ont of punt
to bricks at that cat, which
won ld ait Ion the back fence, singing
, te l^e eye, wotiinngwhst **?*&&}
11 tb ® rac ^.* ae #b f“t
culled mre conventions in
kena* back y*rd than it had haiw ovite
i*aciL It hai made the summer litoj nights
a b,, ^ n ^ Mi»»kens all ig» ,nd
now it liail dmwneil itself in hi» cistern
It was a piece of demoniacal spite
work. You couldn't muk. ICiUikena
believe otherwise ; there was a terrible,
fiendish intelligence in that cat, and its
desire to torment MiUikeos had been
greater since Millikens than its had love scalded of the life. hair .Ever
its tail he had been expecting some-
If it had been a decent kind of a cat,
he said, us he pulled off his ooat, tucked
his trousera in hta boots and liegan the
painful labor of emptying the cistern
with a bucket, ha might have stood it to
get the cat out, and go on using n.f-taile.1, the
water: bideona, but serenade that aereeofier. onmeye-d, faugh! The
disgusting thing, be wonld never use the
cistern again; he would fill'-t up as soon
as he got the water out, and would dig
anotheroue Dog gone tie cat, he said,
He teilal manfully on, and the water
etsvt j lower with terrible &ow'n«sa. fl©
fe fc the backet strike the body of tbo
floatiug cat several times, hat he hadn’t
banled it np yet. He kept on tugging
st the bucket rope till hi« arms aehe.1.
And hta back. And his lugs. And hta:
bead
No, he snappishly told Mrs. Mmikaus
i a answer to her tenth summons, that he
WMnt coming to rapper till he had
mootosldhta sfioiliBg. etaterm He didn’t^' ears'
itwas Whst) WG1, hrttho
flies eat everything up he dnhi'tcare
lie could eat the flies, he reckoned (Bar
castieaily), couldn't he ? Hey I Welt,
n» didn't a» if fa .lid take him a week,
he was going to ktaig at it tut is n>
emptied. ^ Dog gone the cat, he wished
jt Mnggridger himself that was in
flie eitteru. Blast a rat, anyhow. splardi
How he did haul water, snd his
clotlies and swi at anj swear, and how
the neighbor’s wives Imng over the
f onc e aud talke<l glibly to Mrs. Milli
kens about the catastrophe, and how he
wiaheil j^ they were all ia. with the cat.
rs Manrider came and hung
ow the fence and wept.-and told won
^ui-itoriee^I ifc*t eatVsagwaty and
i fa affection for ehifdren. "Affection*
formy die chickens,” Millikens muttered,
And ^| womon Jinggrider talked and jahboied, than if and it
rJ} more
one of the children that had
bt?en drowned. .3(i(likens toiled on, bis
^ ;>ce ver y f lot being made the focus of
m man y Dog gone the dog-gonned
cat to thunder, he said, with considera
hie asperity. How he did hate cats, he
gft id.
The cistern was getting pretty low
now. The sun had gone down behind
^ western, hills, in a glory of peaceful the dy
*»P*endor, ing day touched and the the ruddy clouds tints and of sky with
a serene, solemn beauty, almost too
“theraa! to hang over a world tainted
with tlte-^%ht noSy of ailiimd iwe^yed front front fenoe fence feds,
no:sy prattlers nrattlers at at the the the-hour, -hour,
felt the the hallowwl hallowed iuflusnoe influence-of of the
and Silence Silence laid laid her her fingigson fingers on their their lips, lips.
Only OnlyafflHkon’nit:rtoreuahraa Millik n* broke broke tlm buud the
the the plash, plash, plash plash ol of the the bucket bucket the
Oppressive silence. silence. ‘Thanh Thank heaven, heaven, SEHi- ICIfi
kens Mtanow sighed, 1 , it it is is nearly nearly l" empty. empty.
“ - ow - oow —
A weird, nuearthly slinek that curdled
the blood in the bravest heart, and made
Millikans drop bucket, rope and every
thing down into the cistern. Heatocal
«P “»d glared m speechless amasement
at wiucn
winkeJ pleasantly at bun
* ith itfl loue eye, and delegates. went ou catting .There
the names of the
wasn’t a damp hair on it. When Milli
kens conld speak, he called his ehilffiren
aud savagely demanded what they meant
by tolling him that lie ^ abont the cat
r re r* ^ ; j* sas‘a .SSSfif
1 3
place srffJsssas&T*! they conld lie oh without howling,
thevefaa ot Mnggridger» oat was dis
tinctly heard closrag the debate, which
ha .1 been unusually long and stormy, ut
an eloquent argument agamst the ad
mission of violin strrngs wradofit. free ot and duty, he
Millikens heard every
poundedhis pillow and flopped over to a
near position. that cat; he .'. said. > ®?*
** Dog Hatokeye. gone r *
| lington
__——
“ rhe ®
a corrrepondent U the New York
| Times, who dates his letter from Singa
means^C.ty of Lions ”f are not
of tropical growth is well illustrated.
end one sees new and canons trees that
would require much space for a dencrip
tion. Eacli garden has an orang outang,
i one of them the hugest I have ever seem
i and as human itTippearsnre that my
] heart wanned toward him, thonghT kept
it carefully out of bn reaehi There are
pretty drives around and over the island,
ami one may now and tlten meei a tiger
in the portion and of; indulge the jungle nearest the
mainland, in a discussion
with him. The mainland is'infested
. With figere, and they oc^otol, swim
over the channel in search of w|ll>pted. prey, which
| ta plentif^as the island is
Tne number of Mtives and Chinese *n
I nnally eatonby bnt always t. gCTSV snes from
: to year, it ts nntiappily large,
and there aeema noin; of reducing it,
The tigers only attack people on foot,
: and for'that and other reason* (not
eonuected with teatand hrevmre.)
.no ftedertnw enenremfi.
<
I PilOl S SOI THEKS OPELS.
A er«.„i
Over the signature of «&“ tom* one
^ York Sun: the following The Hun letter has recently to the pub, New
»° me intoreeting reminiscences of
no * e ^ duds in the South, but the record
^ <ieM by ® no means the South exhausted. and West A has long made resi
*»
familiar »*th the history of many of
j One of toe xnoMamg
u ^ r * vdiidi happened at New Orleans,
i ! 7** brfore ff°«bt the between public, a m gentleman a suit to recent main
v tain bis commission and
or rooorer
^
;2ig*8aj?5r{aa Bchembe rg*ii hoTae, fine , !a ani
®‘>bres. a
! ■*». «T!*
j .,!?inv Henrr 8 Foote oocorrea Bear
lanre tK£SSk£SSd crowd waa present,
-r^i cadki In
humor were’perched out to some
nfta^a^ „ho on a tree
i/firingverv »'T ake care to-5ay bora- the gov
wild ” Foote
toetooaT^ntoo™S , , and bravest as well Lt as
He ^ 0 “^, thc x tor the de
< fenae to the celebrated WUktnson and
.■m.aiea.'Lx. 6
T • -fj ^ ^ k :iij
- . nff
j ft -_ nprw i When Prentiss arrived at the
* *
.. H warne,!^him Q timwBv to the court feel’
0 nc ol the bitter
J pxi-tinff auaiuwt hia clients remark
| . time- “ Thev will be
ftre^in^th© **• find
: . ^ vou citv M Ah forTis !” said
j, , • hi j* t j,i ‘counter
TO „, *L ? niacisfin uki , . air ,
f, ... „• jc Ie his Docketa
™ ’ T hnnter vUnne mv.elf whenthere
■ ! _- r , nn ,i » ‘ mwest „« mated ® a ftlm him '
'
»» celebrated Thomas wU.~k.ti F. Marehall
of Kentucky, fought sev^l duels; that
with . Gil. James Watson Webb is famd
>»r to most northern readers. Tom once
told the wntet that if Webb had not
stood cross-legged and.disconcerted his
«J he wonld have killed him; that he
had meant to have another fight with
hua. but the colonel, unfortonately, Seward.
took the pledge to Gov. An
other of Toms duels waa with John
Bowan, of Kentucky, a crack shot, but
oueof tkemost tuombleftiiilgeatte«\HHly Tom received
of the old “fire-eaters.”
»bullet m the leg. and, as Bowan, who
did not wish his regret, to kill Marshall, him, walked, lying up to
express on
the pound, exclaimed: ■“ Mr. Rowan,
vtoi shoot a follow sad then apologise
for it with more grace than'any man m
Kentucky.
• With one of these Keutuoky affairs,
m ~W>,'Twaa unfor
tuuately connected, and theoonrse
took may illustrate the state of feeling
on the subject at that time. Thei prints
pals were Dr. T- of Harrodsburg,
and Connselor If—, brothers-m-law.
Tbe eaase of oOlmee was a family affair.
I resided in Lexington at the time, and
was induced to behalf interfere, in T.. the who interest
ut peaee, on of Dr. was
a stranger to me. After severe! the doctors days'
on tiro part of
friends, aud oauvassiug as well as I
could the views of the other party, I
found an amicable adjustment impoasi
ble, ami having gone so far, there clial- was
for me but to a
lenge. The eider brother of the doctor,
himaeif an eminent lawyer, the brother- •
in-law of the iatter, aud even the vener*
able wiotber—the \m\ two strict
be»of the chureh-were consulted by
me. but the relative feeling had among been them grossly al! was
that their iu- ;
suited, aud must vindicate hie honor in .
the usual manner. The meeting was
appointckl to take but_was plS(« at prevented a retired-spot by
tbo Boyie authorities,, county, and remember well'
l we •
had a scamper to get beyond their juris
diction aud avoid arrest.
In the meantime I received a request 1
from a reverend gentleman, whose death
saw noticed last year, to withdraw the
challenge hopSl for an accommodation -which
he to bring about. I gladly agreed
to ^mply t^mded the the without
to arrangement
prejudice prejudice to to piumply piumply my iny friend; friend; bnt bnt the the them, them, over. over
tare tore was was .plaei rejected rejected bv by
The The meeting meeting took took place the the next neit morn- I
ingnt a The The -.»u, romantic luuiauue apot S |wt on oniricas he ibice hill s
river, river. law law officers officers we w ere re on on t t he hill
above above ns, ns, but an old boatman and his
sons, sons, whom wb< we were eompeUed to take
ottr e on fld en ee . and who had ‘he
Kentuckian’s instinctive love of a <• fair
fight,” the kept old-fashioned them at ba>: duelling The pistols,
were
those used by the opposite party being
a pair belonging to HenryjClay.
H : ren, mtHtolly wonndod, at the
first fire, and, sii there was but one boat
to cross the river, the -wmstablea wait
iog for us on- the aide we occupied,
only friends, kept bock by a wholesome fear of
polled the boatmen, wounded we were com
to wait until the man
been transported across. I never
e« 6 ii^ ‘f" ,TT 3 sssartii f** T*
ssfannaar-*-”*'
From what I subsequently learned of
hig history, this affair wrought chapter the most
, ingn r» r change in the ot Dr.
>j- - Prior to the fight I had fonnd
him amiable, inoffensive, and averse to
bloodshed, though truly brave; but
r afte rw8r a I heard that he was frequent
j y engaged in desperate encounters, in
! one of which, I believe, he was killod.
This duel created considerable excite
; ment at the time, ami the Louisville
j 1 Journal having Dr. published T-, Mr. an Geo. account D.
derogatory tS SS S S kV to called to
e-iitOT. was on
' correct it, which he did.
-------
S^ttana.
The superstiteons existing among the
“eas“c.r.K;
Borne, where he has been busy looking His
tor an apartment tor this season.
retnm was delayed after having found a
desirable by an amusing and very circumstance. handsome repdence The mar
ctese from whom YD. Marsh rented contract the
apartment refused to sign tue
on Friday, that day being tabooed in
this country. So -the Cm ted States
minister whs obliged to stay another oLthis day
in Rome to satisfy nobleman. the ecrtiples matter
superstitious TL s is
carried to excess in Rome, where no
will light three readies «r sitrn .~n»
where three candles- thtfd^o-rootodhor; only. are. lighted,
Here in Florence telm
ror of certain numbers a. <1 •>*}.
qmtea comical form. Tn many « reel*
aiod hMfaeea squares vabstituted, there is no!Wj so that the |» lt Bum
beta run 11, I'M, II l n ** u * ingenH*
way dtms the *«*; dread ’.•«>. nnml^risi^gletedy H;»«•.
plucky H rarely told anv Italian tod led
-—
VOL. IV. NO. 22.
: The Stag af «wto»,
!
wUomi5 aaUialr b» tetteof^fhe
King of Smokers.” To nation gain Ibis dis
UncUon in the great of puffer*
must require almost the Indian superhuman weed pow that
er« and a love for
pusses human understanding. But Vaa
Rises was ever superior to the emer
gencv. It took no effort on his part to
gain the smoky crown and wear it while
he lived. He did not even die young,
as we might have anticipated weed, but from both his
; immoderate use of the
enjoyed life and smoking until after he
hftil passed his eighty first birthday.
,^'i^ £ sis .
isiaasssavaass of ale .which he drank, not to mention
:
1 ** *****
arSSgyBjS the earth’s surface was to be fonnd
on
there in the Ill:!.’ ent up c.4ilte. or shredded:
™n^d4S taSSnl aml were
to But,
nltove all Mynheer's pipea thbTchoio* first rivetetl
the visitor's ere. Iu codec
tion every hid branch or variety of the pipe
family tSe th“whoto ita represeutatiw; one conld
Vrolutton of the race,
SSwriLTSSS from the clumsy .!??£ bowl and thick L atom of
to
meerschaum from Trebizond,
In this M&saB temple of tobacoo the veteran
! !«»«»«• i ssw Bam#
{.__-dfi. hETlast . irink 0 f It is said that
refieidinff v^on breath was borne from
his * lifeless bod a cloud of smoke
A few hour* liefore his death Van
Klaes called for a notorv to make his
will ZiJ Puffin? vigorously* hfs and after tak
a null at Schmdam Mvnheer
crave precise directions for the p* r .
formance of his obsequies. wag^to In the first
fined’with . , ; „.|K r be thoroughly
Uie hail* tons bottoms and sides
„# v ulT( . a ,i.„, contained his favorite
' eiears- then a bladder 4. of thc “ finest olSwl drv
hia"«-t/ w be
at Most important of all,
. . helato at hta side
conrietiou that liiB soul was not
_. .* a .. ■ Hioae latitudes where
T"“7 . - jirect h- .'kwe ita^executorto at hand caused pl^e
Mroliwr to torwttoa 1 execute r to
^"uld “ “4 mhkd.Tb? “ that a
be
, j f , occurrence thematolies
, •
might dampen wn hrfore oetim they mey wonld be
.
B 4b? , , , . , -
^ms n tue , nex^ 1 > f Van > KImr Ja*
T’f' neighbor
funeral
7 »> t X" “^1 1 „* ,;.v„ ,f .limaal ' with
f v ftu
'
. .?<*“*» WI S »■"” “V , at " . the donor’s ‘
. ..
monished uionishwl to te keep Ke<p their r „LL pipes lighted
_
the adH Lial, u as it was being . imnsiguftl ig to
tUe vi , iuit y who observed
tbegB faithfully were to be
Xith , . the anniversary of Myn
£dVfl oT w ith foil nomalsof After there
H r gj n ale apmee
^smoked _ „ rrI „i b) breath bis liking Myu
hta hmt «.MtanU»
. &,i . IU1 Ji ,1 ecrtaiulv deserving to be
immuI aa the " greatest smoker
■ a. _ * ..
-
■
_ Tramp.
Genius on a
A wonderful piano-player with n ro
history is exciting the musicians
Bridgeport. About two weeks ago a
tramp fettered a well-known
on Main, street, and asked
V- 1- •- ’• -t.
The proprietor refused at first,
afte rward consent ed- oecause the
manuers were much better than
clothes. The tramp sat down aud
a difficult composition with great
ease and brilliancy. The pity and con
tempt of his listeners were at once -
to.admiraiiou. Friends sprang
around him, and they are trying te get
him once more «.»n his feet. His history,
as told by the titled Fanner (termau is as famdy,
He lielongs to his.godmother a and patrouess , -
and- had for
no less a personage than the Queen of
Wnrtemburg. He rer^eived a nuiversdv
was at one time himmtjpmjer. eoiibul tol ans hom
Wnrtetuburg, aud^^moved aud movea m in the uie highes
circles eircles ofthe of the capital reptta! wb-u wh-n throne. NAptileM
and Engine were on the
estate, estate .01 wi was was uw u» dissipati dissipation mu wu ir *;-s on >m o «u f .the ma' wildest “‘fjj
End. As a result of-his wuld and
lees conrees, he lost his official position
and standing m society and not family only
the luisiineironinis
fast as it came to him, olrntn tot, in
order to raise money, sold his to
what 'Shoald be iwtm *»
“even war* he bad
hansted his resourcea at home _ be «M
tfirn country and engaged iA-«ome inNew
kind of ^ajpesaor oocupato thelwgoafij;
V«*. fiUa jgnorance of
or the dishonesty of his associates, or
both, caused him to IsU, however, It ^ and
left him started J^terh deatttate.- ^ York
that be out front New on
Sd‘th?n tofm&gSt
*“ P 7
Palladium. Palladium. Paitodtom
An . , Inhumau „ „. Esther. (har
Frank Lynch, a would-be suicide, was
re oent!v arrested ou the the Fort Wayne river,
railroad bridge, over Allegheny oomtag
at Pittsburgh, Pa, an officer
upon him while he was preparing to
j nn m Oh being taken to the station
house Lynch confessed to having mur
j e red liis little boy, two-and a half yearn
0 jj bv throwing bint into tbe river one
a gM alwnt six weeks previous. At that
time Mrs. Lynch was living at Glenfield,
a few miles down the river, having sepa
the child with her, wae met at
~-&> 5 S«sas.*U 5
, 1ark auii then started over stroek the river
0a liis way over the thought him
thst now was the time to end .the httle
, )Ue -„ troubles, aud, lifting him in his
armll> dropped him into be stream He
g<)t work on a stoamUmt the next day
and science went troubled down the him, m and * r t lie b “* camed>oroe 2“!®^
^ a iem confessed days ago the He went f®*! to te.wjto
was overcome with the tidingB he again
made murder his was escape. made against Au■ jnfju.ma him, and aa ^
oSrer ff.o* Vommgtoa •» "»
just m me to prevent- sell .mur ter.
----
„ narte'of Maine “the fie® huge flocks of
f^ll^ov with only
“ to attend them. Returning
b _ „ llOT ge in tbe evening,
b j own (b e roads thev drop
pr««Sdsoberly etacba2Pat , without oonfreion,
and ot their own record
Sfet
-------
FAR*. OAROES ASP HOISEHOLI).
l)r. Edward Smith says: It
be possible article to expend* of fcKxiwh^herfrom wie wne ot
<*g» as an
their universal use, or the «®Te“eot
form in which the food m pr^erveu.
presented and cooked, and th n
.
they contain. Again he says: which lnere ia^not is
no egg of a bird known
good for by food, hungry or which woniajuu i&e rx
eaten a man.
egg* consists of nearly pure ai »
oils, considered sulfur the and most water. important AlDumeB *mgi is
element of food. It isfeno a m au emm
sa.'piasJJt
of different egjgs, ** ther e m m tn mr
most persons this ia not the cast, — Dr. —
eggs are not cooked mistake improperly. to
Sm.th thinks it is a gtre a
mixture of raw eggs and milk to in
raliils, such a mixture tending more Dys- to
hinder than to promote digestion.
peptics often think that they cannot tat
Sto eggs stall, and it is the case that deli
stomachs do sometimes suffer
greatly from eating any bnt the freshest
of eg^a. ofthe When we provtitol, iannot be sure of
the age eggs tt
safer to break them before oookmg.
RKS&saiawsas
a shallow diah. A few minutes boilmg
i» 'sufficient, and no dressing is neces
sary, except a trifle of salt for those who
eat Anything ^ty. though, of be oMnse, added, |
good the butter maybe find pepper carefully may laid
or egg upon
toast. For a family of children, it is
often more convenient, in all respects,
serve eggs in scrambled form, or in ome
tela, than to cook notional, them and. separately. will pot
dome children are
eat the white of an egg, others think
they dislike togethe? the yolk, bnt when both are
•'ooked they think nothing
but eat-with pleasure all they
can get. In most receipt hooks, the
directions for scrambling eggs advise a
good piece of butter with which to cook
the eggs, seasoning them with salt and
pepper, and with chopped parsley, if
Butff for any other reaaon
VOH prefer ami it, for yon can nsi milk instoa.1
of bntter, children, this is beet.
The proportions used for an omelet are
very good —a cup of milk for ajx eggs.
increases the quantity. The eggs
broken but uot beaten, and at e
stirred simply to mix well, and to pre
vent burning‘while e<X»binir. ' :
li.e.ih.id him#.
Pasts fob tant Mrtaus. -One
oartof oxalic acid and six of rotten stoue;
mix with eona! parts of whale oil and
snirite of tonentine to a paste
To Cnnas MskbiiE.—T pulverized ake two parts
common sods, one -^Tt-ftwetw part xwwnWrt' pum
.w-e -
Chalk; silt tiie mixture through a fine
stave and then mix with water;
thoroughly over the surface of the mar
ble, aud the stains will be removed; then
wash the marble over with soap and
water.
Mnavmo Soap —The /truguitt*' for fir
sprite , „lnr wives the following TakT formula “ a
'ounces* white ap, four
! dntfaaU snermaett one-half ounce;
olive oil, ounce; melt them to
*;tl nearlw cold • scent
with sneh oils as mav tx> moet agreeable,
•
I T sKrrn lNFOKiUTi , 0 X.~Ihe .... vr , .
*
.
"omen of Holland and Kelgiuni,_ I *
verbially clean, ®nd who get »P „ *
hnen st> oeautually wtnte, use r ni _
.■ *oda, SJ**, in 8 thejprrr^«^t(^oTraia^e *.* bund’
.'J ^
. Ions of boil hall. ng water. Theyiuiwiuspap
neatiy uuc An onier
establishments wdt >pt the. ftanie
' Jf r caml [ n<,, ?» °tc., an extra -1 *
of the i»owtler ls useu, anti ior -
j lines (required to be made very n b
h neutni. salt, doesnot 111 *“**“^ 5 .. •
j degree injure the^ textui^ 01 tiii -
' »ta effect is te^ifteu the lm t tat
- ,
auiltuumoi e 11 sm uia x a -j j
bnlfe tat e. I dfie t wt . -
* t ?Wtif rtee aud m Jnd hot ootmlries
bU^rbdn
* • S n^STlSS^t^S bv’adding
TOter ^ . ^ can of {* b. ^ pnlveruea^mra ^ made ^ soft ^ hy^addir-g . a a tea- tea
k ttb , J wntHf iu ufS w bich it
“,r te wiin'e lit m v.
the nsed least f *uc fifth,
- 4 trirrican
■*
- A Minnesota Hotel.
ju.ient of tie
t OmMn thTfiStd^hSeTit c ? w riter M to»to w« - "I
llarelv was a
f rami . ou Kt iltH and par
tnM 'off inside with lath*. Evcry
jr«tr;
the fare
g Bteak tougher g biscuit;
^ t >e 3 s were mPre boxes on legs, and No
, wittl ( , oarse m eadow hay.
rooms ’ nor nails to hang a
■ chair puts
*' „a * or eV en to
^ on but mine host just the dropped floor,
,.. Jueh- irIfl . r f rom bis dip htatandle, upon and
S»h» he insirtol
Slight midnight iu in bo^uced bounced a a straggler streggl« in *»> ><>”8 long
boots; the landlord i.™BoM lud had sent sent him him nn. np, he he
said, as mine was the only bed with but
^ one in m it. it. In in the me morning “»»'“* had *
f oun( i that abont forty the persons long entry
been lying right across with only here and
between the rooms, they
there a blanket among them, and
gnored qn as I, walked over them. After
breakfast the landlord told us *tt. Jo
eome' out and square the house into
place—it had been moved on it s bed m
the- night bv tbe wind. ‘ Lcnningwti a
bmg weilbt rail as* a lever, we all bore-on* hotel
.pen it. and the first-class
„»mr into place agam. But owe, ^k
will, churches, two new^^rs, and
xS’srprzs.TSb&.j "j=
.
Mamed in Haste.
>' orth Carolina train arrived at
. « ^, Charlotte one Tuesday
. Vnd«d‘ Uy on time, and tbe brake
'' All out lor Charlotte. ”
, ho a seat m the
wm traveling alone, glanced stepped wistfaliy ont ou
a p bitform anti
“J tiirong A man and elbowed joined hta her way
through.the ^ ^ They'shook hands ami
f,tood there with Folded arms. Then
Z, man emerged from them the
.tending in front of on
U 1 ,wer ten^’.He step, said--something .to them iu
-a, uple jnshreof tbepe^, l wife,
and had made the - man an
“All aboard': shonte, tin
us magistrate jumped »«t>K«l IT, the into two
figures on the plUfom the wh «tlc
cur, the bell rang,
and the train-hwf startol on the t«d
round. The weWmg journey
«
_______ - —--
THE OGLETHORPE ECHO.
Advertising Kates
amt.
* ......«-«•- fe*«fe ** fefe few AL4U41LM
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* iitckm. ., «fe 4 .UU Si* *.*> 1C.0» 14 .G 0 *M»
column. 4.MI, t.ft> Me i<j»0tr uws.t« *»<*>
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Local Advertisements. *
Sbmff feiw, p« >»y, ton ilnf*
Exec awn', Adau&mnUon' tad touxrdwuV
Each additional aqwr ........... .......... ^90
JVotic* to Debtor* and Creditor*, thirty dar* .
Notice of Leave to BeK. thirty day*........... 3 SUB
Letter* of A 4 nai»wtr»t!on. thirty d*T* 4.P0
Letter* of Distension. three mcatfci 8.HP
of t»a*r»fa*aship. thirty d*y* ...... «.< i*
Letter* of Du. tvusrdisnsbsp. forty dsyr S ."3
HomrwtMdlfotkw*. tbrre/a««rboa*...... S.i V
Bate NW’i per square, each insert «*j....... l.ca
Items of I ate rest.
What is akwh ? It's snow matter.
The Empire of Japan is made of 3,800
The reare i1,000 „. men An on _ n *h* the London
V^uee force.
The of Missouri . offers
governor
#10,000 for a sure remedy against bog
cuolera.
^he oldest house in New England is
^,1 to be in Guilford, Conn. It was
built in 1639.
A householder in Charleston, S C.,
^ the other ^ day for allowing hi*
cllimQe3r to take
Ti t u. v 0 rUiamph>n fMass.'} bank
«. -
gad yg| J.ha eawm Wr* fey
largely imported into this country, yet
it Is not known to be used in any maun
facture except that of lager.
mu. The beet rat^f pumpkin-pies the • country. and , healtluest , ... Any
girls are m the m.nute he
one can tell to., so
tastes of one. The pies we mean,
Japan haano system of patent laws,
The Japanese, with their native skill and
ingenuity, mKhinti copy very successfully that conitry. many
of the sent to
Living fiftv-tonr years to one village
watehee, for each of which he received
ig the tigt6 ^ of , jeweler of Sandy
uie aMSm«!S%i une ur. VlhtA Sh jui« as iu» *ur. »
Vowel was dead. * l *
u Yowel dead. let ns be thankfil on . it was o
..^erunori Ine princi|>al srncics-exported _ ^ fw from
the United States to Europe bank presidents, are gram,
pork, lard, .savings
meat, butter heiress, weather predic
tions and horses,
The Turk has an immense horror ot
amputation, preferring death. Fora
long while Osman Pasha refused to allow
the surgeons to dress or even examine
the wound to his arm.
The fanners of Santa And, Los
Angeles county, miles Cal., are building a
( . ana ] flftpeD jflgooo long by ten feet wide
at a P4Uit „{ bv which 15,000
acres of land will be irrigated.
. . p, teh , Tennessee UW *t
^“ bi ? n n 5? 1 b ®* “*4, ^YaZd h A, }l u] slmt ^both out lira”‘v This
W' .; ,5 (lff Thp „)‘ ;
, T
B ’T, iaIlstll t ‘"“ ; a j k i ibat the vouth will live '
thus disfigured ami an; u 11 .
Captain Boytoii has achieved another
great feat in swimming, having descend
ed the Loire from Orleans to Santee,
where he was received by an rnthusias.
tic crowd assembled to greet lus arrival,
Ho seemed o.nite worn ont from excess
of fatigue and his wrists were swelled
and painful.
ti.. Tll ^ i.ieat tefl k,-^'.±.r " Turk ish l 'r atrocity-ilia t r-^.
JJ® „f,ire ? a nerinatetie 'carrying vernier of fieimv J
^ ? about a trarful ‘colored
“ {£ ’i ' msde of flesh
ia bbe i ailt ira itatmg, with fright
hrmMdtai,* Uoiuau ear MiVercHrom u
w W t, , at m , A Clenaman in ["
1* u found ftere were ttorty
Hr **°le He'didn’t •• J *>“ >-m
an ornftm * know that the
5* that 1 ?® was merely^wv^ t,i * ^ > ?t).<aJfcnfrv
•
ofthe thing. The C ,
.” . . l '
guishes in the hastile, »<• i ^ ‘
the mysteries of Eng i h o u i? p ..
.% coi-orapo rpitavh.
A fleriml frien.l in Uoioraun sends ns
.. stone
at Fairfax J5 in *^eof that State. dfm^iefiua'ct,' After follow* giving
.. . vrrn r . ——
________
, , , mu . t #, e5
bv * uitchfork t bu«bsnd« n.s heel,
tt *hich wounded uiy i>oor '
And died in six weefo’ time
~/terror * Vagan**
PUuv and Paladiue Hutilius, in their
wr uj u -^ -describe reaping machines to
been nsed by the Gauls. It has
^n. thought by* were:«eqnainte.l some that the with Pha- the
raohs of Egypt motor to ma
Smerv, application of steam as a their
and that they even bad
steam‘carriages; n5»f. Imf But of-this thut the t H fe reaping y wri m
efficient. P other,
-utM'hmt^.iu i*cl some form-^ir ■ - was
used as early as Christianity there mn
little doubt. The identity of the
juackiues 4 lem rii.H'd by the Uo
is manifest. It app*ms that n.tlm lapse lx
of over fourteen hundred years on
wime slight modification of the onginal
has tx-en effeeted.
A ernei outage tree porpetaUid Frauktown, on Cal., two
S3 filnnese gardeners desperolma at attacked
Two cabin, bonn d
them one evening a t their
hands and f eet, dema nded that
”as' thto- Tiliould reveal where then money
secrete. 1 and on refusal cut off the
of , each and his cue. The
right ear then gagged, and the
Chinamen proceeded were to search Tor the
villains Which found, and made off
ntone 'y si 200' which they bod been secreted in
wit-h ’ GhinamenJiad to
a mattress. The poor gagged and mnti
DaR FaUid g the night in their discovered and
condition, bnt were
'sr^w».&sr
§Sy yjjjig^ Hanses Houses sell are are. the itAmta pulled timber dowm and and in thatch thatch every , t
in ,^ ( . r t o get food. Those ordinarily who can need get
^usks busks and and dry ary leaves leave* onuuwuy Mo"! ->—*
for fnd> comideiad well off, sold
0 f (be poor young jddle-aged girls have been and young ,
o!( j meD> m men
n]en anJ ,.bj!J r e u die daUy of «««'
tion and others freeze. The des<l can
not a burial ; they are t*xi many,
M(I none ^ afford into the large expeise pit j*> f h”
tb( , T are ca ^t ,1m ly arescidte .ivmgor s,
' BTiallHi
gJ'JSS b . a( fellow beings wb"
Vvntton. of their
, lj(1 ,< And the strong«x old*..
i} w ,, lk u , r the sake of
tteSflTor flknlr
, w I Wrote.
sas
sanity maimer whittlingt- of writing m wap Amrsnddrek^tl^ a* f
| everythjaK^toe mission in life “'Vf W 1 . “»t“y * 5
fnf.nytl.mgs. When he
out of h.s owni .hemi; ..r
himself enjoytai he tj'®®'_ sat £■ ^ heB : the
one else. As I-wont ■ jj g
funny ..leas struck h;m. ^
with a guffaw heel.^ w*ix,r c .. r
from arm-chair.aWny« his_ : _ k . ft h ,.
. when
the of h- tn*
over ami t; tni.>
Joke with his nst » ^> I ■ i ; ,,,p- g witL H.-d
the . . ,. X!
bmghfer.^ I rfmre
J “„;, •„ tb« •
” i, '.' '.l aeeno'd ffl ,h, as -t" •= - 1
nail been rpat a , ; i
, y ; wrote rather
as nni h He
; rap^JJ. Relaifghed seemed oeariysH to ronu
w&»g. tit
j ^bewre'
-------