The Oglethorpe echo. (Crawford, Ga.) 1874-current, June 07, 1878, Image 1

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THE 06LETH0BFE ECHO. Subscription Sates t Dele. mM .............. M l ftrea etc* •utesrtfear 1 of fete S tesei r s ie l,tUw«rliSoet>S m «ftn “• «•**«**•■•, wttfc tie «m VfB be te e»« y«»r • eetaorlpttee fr^. sreetab , tfc* world iuL^y* ^ ftto? . ssgsSSaS- ______- ), Mh rt^r AndtaemeUruniied. sssssst&a. a. UwThlTand’rMa - r -,ssa. a»5B5sas=r And he opened for it the heanuly *7. door. , Jio . _ With the ewerr laQgheameatbemoumrnlwail: I bet tarry aehile till the rammom come To pitany hdored m our heavenly home." CALLED TO ACCOUNT. A dkteotite’s stobt. 8om« years sgo, when I was quite Max.'.-«rAWiSs3 tracted bv a pretty girl I n«ed to see at the hotel where I stopped. Nobody could help noticing her, she wa* such a beauty. Her hair and eyes were very dark, but her dash skin was aa that fair as a lily, with just a of red came and went in her eheeks. Her Her form form was was slender, but well ronnded, and her hand was sa white and finely formed as any lady's Wynne, in the land. Her she name was Rote and of coarse had plenty of admirers, However hat ahe coquetted with them all. theie were two who were, a long way ahead of tbe others. I used to wonder which she liked the best, but Ioonldnevcr gness, for while she smiled sweetly on one, she would fling a merry word at the other; anti so on. Both young men were good looking —one fair, the other dark—and both wore carpen ters. One was called Andrew Davis, and the other Mark Sheldon. Sheldon waa a jealous fellow, and showedit. Davis was jealous, too, but didn’t show it so plain. Sheldon was always in a quarrel with her. Davis, I! fancuHi, was angry enough at her coquet kt“"“ ‘isss&aste W h,C h &■**$}"* or Sheldon. • » But * ahe would never ■ -s-. r W* ss^UT.ag P wGi? “ Which ass* ?’’I asked, laughiug — too: one ww isss!s - ;s “Sr “ ‘ !/”i 1 liteCed Bho„l<lu:t like to be in your skin CT 1 ’ emv'nrf i.BSfl&LifrrtaL 9” .he a«ked iTyonr ..but if von evermrito beaide^Xndy mind to don't' marry wh&> body Davia, do it w tj,2.r„\2,2!l he's aronnd—that’s „i‘ all.” SSS^AK sta^tou^at^hc^therend 4„ sthXh of the ve^ hXd hepe bU£ tended T~ not. Then die at IH ______ __________ — — “Well, yon‘re solemn enough about it,” she said; “any one would think y too meant it ” Ji,„2i We both laughed, bnt I said, shaking know that I do mean - _-iu &si=eg"y£$2jSins hnnt'iiimdown yo\i mast for it' ' you promise me that ?” -* Ss sSf ssttitfvrs sonas Bose^Wyom. r . r i ! "didn't ..... ant one and^’I wart*'it'known I ‘ was around afLmer at all So I bad diwniised kind of T have* m™in. -mv Awr, ThJrtop^TTt'a TOGthw wnnM Iraovni cheaD loaning honse at the end of the SrSSiSHtH - Mdrtbonght of nerBinoel got there, myhead waa so full ot business. thf I ii^w^ 0 oTSf P , wifSowtow the window was open. It Tt was growing dusk. It wasn t a very nice part of the town—lota of roughs abont, yon know ; ao when I saw a woman standing all at once there under my window-alone too : —I though it was veyy f queer ; but when she looked up, snd saw it was Rose Wvnne, fehe I thought that was queerer yet. was allin black, even her head wxa-wonnd. wbout_. wit]i thick fol ds of 1 btok, and never hail I seen her ao md and solemn. She came close to the window ^Hooked up at me. J Mr. Sharpe? shesaid. X lumped; for you sec I did not Hunk any one would know me, fixed up as 1 was, and I said m a whisper; 1b it really you, Bose? Don’t sprak be known loud, please, for I don't to hers.” : She went right on without seeming to have heard me. Harm has come to me, she said, “and it was. Andy Davis. Remember your promise.” and And I then, all in a flash, she was gone, conldn't have told where, ap, down, or 'ronnd the corner of the honse; only she’d gone, and I hadn't seen her go- As - I sat . stanng out. with her words . going I began through and through my head, to feel kind of creepy and odd. Now, I don t beheve>ny onewho knows me would call me .superrtitious. But ou ai once, as I sat there,it came over me that may be I had seen Rose Wynne’s tainlysjxiken attest instead of herself. She had cer and lookeil very strangely (aaralmBgwmum. ** 1 luegliesl at mysed for the know Starpe, there old fallow said -I, “you are 110 snob thrngs as ghosts, What m-tite ««gof common sense ore *yo« dreamiuff off 7 pul on my emt and Imi Ru(l want out into the town to aae if I oonld Oglethorpe Echo. By T. L. GANTT. ^®* rB tetj-hing about the business I had «>“»'ioTO there upon. fdlow whom I recognized aa one ‘of qsS&S^i; Who did it. I ached, turning "Ttiil ,11, ...fir ZZBETlJ.IS'S i innnrai , „„„ heard of any one erne being endued of k “ flh^ A^iW^t^rav .'_^' t iT ever no lone ... r STgh^^^K^ j be aad that waa why she drowned her ’*“■... I did not , continue .. ,. the couvereitiou ,. brrt left the store and went buck to my ’Tat night I dreamed that Bose came to my bedside* and stood looking at me S’** “ -»««-« Will, I made some genera! more inquiries round and I found the imprest sion was that Bose had drowned herself, just as the clerk bad told me. The body had never been found, but she waa minsing, missing, and sod her ber handkerchief handkerchief «Ve and and gloves, gloves, anti and tbe the hat ha, she she wore the the night night she disappeared, were picked np on the river bank. Hie water was very swift here, and it was generally, believed the body Well, had drifted had out to tho lake, carious I some pretty thoughts. W as Rose dead or wasn’t she? At all events there was a mystery, and 1 was jiint tbe fellow to ferret it out. j The first thing was to find Hi.,AU...m.K Andy Davis, So, just I ‘ as soon as w the business I was on, I started on his track, I r was w obliged IExpected; to hunt for him much longer than but I found him „t last. The longer I looked for him tbe more I suspected itol. he had something U gjv on hr, People with cle« consciences ,i ain’t, Well, as a asl general said, thing, I found so b#r to flnd. a t inat, working cm jv farm, and he 8tood ftnd watched him through the kitchen window some minutes. He’d ; igoaro £E".S,r v B1 & «- 3 41 How do von do Mr Davis?” said “Tf m -V 118 “T ? ta T n tn 7 »” J^mlS ToutThffi^S if £&%£$ . ! ' h. Zr ' me a “oMv i a •itofaS^ , V ™ e ato’t s»id he f ? me with eves like t»als" * ,i ( ,,.'i k ow ’i« H ; r ■• <‘Y.™r onr l™,: 18 Davis, Onvis and and I 1 know know y° n ., 7 on d°“ ‘ , *ff2S 1 ^nVme ^?lveslh^t h;r,Jtev^u r° ? ?P iumiied out of hta head 2 Kj amt his teeth would clmtter ehatb-r m in ' P 0 ..Rose Wvnne S°? sent me m ’ ” I wont on- ’ ^When°I When I Taid said that that, the the wretch wretch fell fell on on “■«“» he . feC ftook T" L *“ 1 ack t Frans Corners i sgs ”5“ A J. h J. rrnr.lf fhrwtr.., .. ® tir amon f the crowd behmd him. , and chalky. something he saw ■ ‘b«e‘nrae.1 hisfoee ® e ^ TO a sort of gasp, staggered ‘ Start'd , ° n !mS?L.!£S toll tiJTw and was^t to^mWthatbediTn^ ceod. I had been engaged to marry. Mr. ; Sieldim a long tinm, but because, my f»*bet»M opposed to him and fav e re< J Mr. Davis, we had kept the engagement a secret from every one. I had gone out, that promised nigh^ husband, by appointment, I to meet crossing my i P aud as was river! Andrew n the railroad Davis bridge, from over the other the side j came andmetrae. He told me if I did not j promise to marry him then and there he’d throw me oyer the bridge into the X was always afraid of him.: he had Snch a savage look in his eves some- . times, and I tow him to’bh terribly waulll S jealous of Mark Sheldon. But I not promise him anything of the kind. amid not believe he would really cany i out his threat, and I expected JIark would come every minnte. « When he took hold of me, and I saw in earnest, and really will intended to drown me, I struggled him, and : told him if he did harm me, I'd have him hnng tor it, if I had to come <mt of my grave to do it. And I also told him I was going to marry Mark Sheldon, and that I had come out there to meet-him. For I thought perhaps it would scare him if he thought Mark was anywhere around. But he suddenly snatched niy shawl off me and wound it round my to keep my screams from being ; heard, and the next moment he lifted me in his arms and threw me over into the j.ri-rer. He did not know that 1 was an expert myself swimmer from ; but before I coaid free the folds of toe shawl I had j gone under tbe water twice. The second : time I rose to the surface I swam toward the bank, but the current was so swift I woulJ inevitably have been drowned if Mark had not come jnst then, in time to ! save me. Davis had run away as fast as he conld, and he did not know that he had failed in killing me, after aU. j The shock was a dreadful one tome, and my te»r _of Jktttly-lteTte W»- » great l,; that .1 begged Mark to bide me . > ni cr.,1 from every one. and let > it be supposed that I was dead. So THE ONLY PAPER IN ONE OP THE LARGEST, MOST INTELLIGENT AND WEALTHIEST COUNTIES IN GEORGIA. then we were married, and went away from this part of the country for several along i™ rairf^ irifh LTn.hf? didn’twsnt gssaSSrSSd the man buagjjaf course. d bntl £“£' hope *S he 5 ?" won so t be ” flowed T* to w “‘ max- to hie sin had certainly oJnnTMm found him out. ^ The ZZ^TT^niem Anhllee, is aboutthirty . . mil<» ),j , ^ SSTiZZ J iu generallv is of tbe most vaned an«i ulan^tot > ;- f r ‘lg llr " aeverat large m-n iqi the its interior » still h*tle known, although nearly 400 years have elauaed since the d.scove-y of the island by Columbus A correspondent of th^e Vluitrated Lm*™ felates the discove^ -Jh. Wta««-.-» ‘he markabte nla^ ? sb^tflf^ccJS We stood noon a large plateau of W^e^Wnlpto^HUr Hem blow-holes, ejecting steam The water, colleeting from all sides, * orm e< ?. 1D Wl ® °®®J er °* uus 8Ce “® 01 desolation 1 a milk-white, l impetuous stream, discharging itself overtlie e<lge ot the phdeim into tlie precipice be neath Picking .mr way over this volcanic bed of soon*, pumice, and.mlphur.and jumping and from protruded rook to rock* which here there colored boiling water, inclosed in a cir c ^hw basin of about 150 yards m width, SHHrtS^is s.’sjs.'ss.s’a.r.r&s-.'r.s; nothing bnt clouds of steam rising ***** iSf Cta T MwwW st SieTfeet The sctually boffin* portion of the l»ke S^dtameter! *£? the ttliV shouldwiv alwnt three ZSS or four X feet into towLs snrro/ndinq to tailing break lave the the sulphur-coated shorenntil thev stones evun at ”. the “ water's edge. The bgg water . . r* * the hap«r;,meTrt™tXnntotor shore a circular motion which thfl akeThwin; toe f or~T hbeeed “i«t » small log thrown ^ into the water pttggiuR and rep»»emg the spot at which it had enter «1 the water. The only apparent exit to " the 5- lake is on the sonthwesiem side, ^nt ^“f . . jk ~d& ., 7 SS tH »t to ihrongb tbis«tit is ^ Water,a "' ———i---- The Story or *»j-Day. 's &L’ zsAz:±r. > _ r (from’ later a irood als^to Driest Convert Grefforv Se o Rome n t i JtoaJtorfest^als vee fi e w ise!v took advantace * andMttiT _■ jujnwjrgog them, he sinmlv altered games, by snbstitnUng the names of SlSSSsSe Earn K st^ *?_»£» ^^efera Jmters, who made notes of every he^ay^r _ _ he .iiay-aay ^ames nave isstea taateil^nearly newiy 10 our day, and some r ^iee.ofsurrtve n ° ar y° nn 8 conntry. Wheniyoa crown * May qneen, or following go with a May party, that joeere Bomans simply that a custom remote ‘be began, and onr anc^tora m England ordinary earned to peopl sn ?b bnt lengths, lords that and not ladies, only and king imd e even queen laid aside their sta te and went » a Maymg early m the morning ST wash ‘heir f^s in May dew, Eowera and bnngho^ the £*h May-pole, boughs which^reared and its to deck’ flowery grown u every vill^e.-At. NvcMae. A , Kultlfarious , Title. The Czar of Russia is a much-titled monarch. The treaty of San Stefano, the full text o! which has come to light, has the following We, Alexander II., by the grace of God Emperor and A'lsdimirianNovgoradian,Czar Autocrat Panrnssian, Moscovite.Kicvian, of Kazan, Czar of Astrakhan, Polish Czar, giber ian Czar, Czar Goeudar of Chersonesns,. Pskoff Geor gian Czar. of and Grand Prince of Smolensk, Lithuania, Vol hynia, Podolinand Finland ; Prince of Livonia, Gurlond, etc., of the whole northern Gosndar of Iberia, Kardalima, t be Kabardian and the Armenian Bnlerof territory; Circassian hereditary Goeadnr and the and Highland Princes aud others ; Norwe gian Heir. Apparent^ iDuke of Schles wig-Holstein and Oldenburg, etc., hereby declare that in consequence of a mutnal agreement between us and his Majesty the Emperor of the Ottomans, onr signed plenipotentaries Stefano, concluded February and 19. J&eh'Sof at San this year 1878, the prelimi nary conditions of peace between two emCireg- wIiidi word f or word ra n tints " Wonder if f: :»1I that to be cut into bis monument !—Syracuee COwter. LEXINGTON, GEORGIA, FRIDAY, JUNE 7, 1878. ' DOWJi TWO THOUSAND FEET. - • todJ co «‘ ro1 . “ nowhere can the „„ ontlilled sharp and clear againrt the wHd blue of the morning aky have Though grand beyond anything we the mind eeeu is in eatent no respnl nlmoet *ngrily tlie apparent t absence. A half-down steps from the \ resentment of aiidViOT diaappointment and absolute cha grin » vanish. err of , ^ canyon^notfaer ng _ At our won*7 very feet i* , the step hnri us ^ D ^% n} tJd^cnmventa ft litt]e nearer very ; aiu ‘ t i n , |b T et to na a mere riblmu of niolten «Uv^ ’ ‘ Thoneiisurg- A m |1 i t jt kv : ££ ■ * hoariielv nns’ ■ J inunrarinr no^do aoainst its fear ( , Th^ltnsbl^i we ofdeath pervades the scene; the waters w « •**' ‘hem are as mighty if polished, anti as the walls that h^ht^F “ly.Wtato -TmvSf» promo n t o ry , bwttdo. wh i c h the apex of mi«iITe 1 ** < ^as ^ “ a ' k »»aarts HaDiimr 3‘^,wkl in heicht ” We t home "ZTJZe^d we wonld hardly hardlv „fthe of telescope, and in with the , excitement ^brinks the hour tread *"«. » b “ i '.’ n ™hL JZr £™*bt n ^ I f Ak of whw* ra «‘b»4“™‘ .ur nk <*>£' rif 1 tssaa&s&'itass ssfrasWesiie l po/nt l^came of tho J most abject ; ...------..... a rAc t s i stone from ehle to aide the easiest tf .^2£tsilSaSSaE *»“*. but other*- rn.ee venturesome Pf d * nd "**f? *'H « to the chasm * n ' 1 a * w ® hav0 to ‘' onie to see it all, the &*'»* f °'L aome ‘‘mtanoe must wesernmble *“ over and between monstrous boulders, aud then real, b‘be narrow and almost absolutely perpendienlar of rock, down crevice which of a gigantic mass we must let onr jd** 6 shetf 100 or feetor iedge of more rock As npm. we which rtaoh £**?*** I °i k been Jered we glrnice back, hat onlj-fora : feceed-rtbethoiight of onr danng task i'“8 n * "e* an ‘ l ' i,zz ?- But a step or ‘®e “i?' 1 t in di«eent just made sinks ■what into ntter insignifloanee, Then eompaml hil the is before ,,s. we walls of the parted rock as the could never be discovered with human eye. Behind ns the precipitous ssAass at-.sls beyond the roeka toflatch one awful the eternity of space. Few dwre more than onee, and one glance snffl e @ " f ‘>r a comprehension of the mea,1 i n K the word depth never before forgotten. The gorge is 2,008 SSSSU feet sheer SrotMsr^i^ ^kanflSrf ^”8 brb!t ii a „ XtaXunX with stark and gnarled h^te! pines, w bile lower P down ntiSii mte au-eaten tonDle and carry to destrnc ^ anv J c ji mber w ho would Teb * nr upon ^, them ' Among all the ^ bo bave visited the Grand Respite Wm to b>oPa jj en nonp j or the seeming borror 0 { tbp —Z<rgeA situati™ the fiZination appalling . danger-'appears , paths the Z Zn to rafyon give birth ^-p to f, atort h>77V>fWinter tim Th e iT^nnroaehto cx ^‘be^‘ef™‘«to t ^ HwrT^h a PPr^tol. Sto? f, 1 defy all access When frozen fOTbriefperiodsduring ttoeoldest t„n months ai^implisheii, to wav uptoe cam risked may be Comfort but oulv at u danger’ personal and not a hWe uttle danKe r :----- * _ Barisal Rarisal t.nns. (inns. On a distant land in the Bay of Ben gal, journal, according there is to a phenomenon German scientific a known as the Barisal Gun, which is often heard ; at tbe beginning <rf a rainstorm, and is like the sonnd of distant cannonading, It seems to have no connection with the season, and sometimes comes from the i north, sometimes from the south or southwest. A writer who has collected some data on the subject, comes to the conclusion that these sounds are atmos phene and connected in some way with , electricity. A tourist, in his letters from the villages of the Himalayas, describes exceedingly early powerful noises heard in the morning, that can explained neither he j ascribed to avalanches nrr by the natives. Above the town of Koim- 1 hater, in Madras, on an elevation of 40,000 feet, is a pond from which Liri i vani river springs, unTbeeaUse and which the natives carefully ah frightful noises ^ rise out of it and roil awav «mong the i hills. Some of the phenonipua mavhe i of eleotric, some of volcanic nature.' I I The Last * »• P»« Mr. D. Conway write*laa follow* , tare, who sits , “ e !!" w T | ‘„; T onoa diebagnishoi family It of that name : (Kite) in Wanrick. used to be the faehion for famUiea to chooee emblem. which »huh puuae punned d upgr ihs ir name. Of the wealthy and unleea it.be found m« plww some miles away called the “ Burnt House, where U ricmTrt perched did over the iloor of a family man not prevent dSta liRhfanng of a ' 1 more horrible kind npoTthst than from any cloud from falling house. lovely S SS^* bat/every °n£ 1 ried a wife md proa ss-sasfff.?tsi8 , si:“ alienated tlie beet friends offhe family became dissipated and worthleTa, and at Sraf^teShhlrife j ut becoming unendurable at home Malone went off to at a house some few uulea i" out of Stratford “tosoluta One evening 'S" he in and ;.to vagabond parasites, banquet. from They far all snd near, a grand All came. the The feast was uwMtamt line’s tt?SSL ThTi flow^l Z ^_ : aptal ooked round upon tea retiuuc, rom iaej ± .or for ______ _______he had de graded STS an honored name given a^ up the wifTlorttoSrail^f^w. ^tetHs">lte«; toert fmreat preapect,. iridoircJ ^ofhisW a luiautiful lieauhful nv-liired SS children soter^ Amid tlie Heim orgies he ^ toSTs^dle p^g ftr^Ttoe ^the spS cSdelstTram „ n ssfjsvaBr.'Sta’Stfia mnm doliWr&bdv fired the cnrtaini ami aaesag^vi who bore the name of Kite. a p«iroei>t.- ® were4ii«charg.u. < Iheee were *»,<»■ srreeta »»i urtaigD “H^o srraigments for violation of the liquor Uw are excluded we find a re dnetiod m offences of ten and one-third percent, in 1877 as compared with 1874 and a rwlnction of six per cent Moom pared with each of the years 1875 and Tuero were S.029 persona held to answer under charge of felony, 799 of bnrgto. twenty-one of carrying emtaxle- eon eealed w^pouMittyeight of ment, 199 of false pretence, 840 of -domous^assaultj. 813 of £>tod 1™, 130 of ro^bbery, 411 of larceny from^ the per90 u, ten of homioide, and 2,798 of petit larceny. the honor law . Violation of imprison- 1.592 person, were22,(k;9persons arraigned There "The numta'r° of” venders of obscene literature has been rrtlaeed ■ws* a— : z.^’as-ss. there jJSBSSFSSK is neithnladdeir nor trellis ***dj tobe scaled ; Mid tte old gentleman w There was Ho, the lal.es twiglit «- \r of SOti' Hang ohow, who lived by odd jobs, and never Z°l nignr, o i’gt wmie ne wm annamg rea ai a sad Tstang’s ing. balk Poor Ho went to sleep in yard, and v«7 mournful w M be. &iddanly. a.great bundle of etoths_w«a thrown out of a-window. Thinking there weretbieves in the^Eouse, andnot in a mood to protect the farmer’s household, and^’trudged he put the bundle on bis back, down the road with it. Soon he heard steps behind him. The infuriated farmer? Notso. Itwas only a pretty 'his girl. side She joined him, and walked by without saying a ~“rd at him. On through the dark night, wia mite npon mile, just as the day breaking they «h£ reached the viUage inn. Then looked at him, and shrieked. It was not the young cousin who had wooed her midi^ht. to pack np her elothesmid meet him at It was only poor lazy Ho. 4 * Well, well,” she said ; “ there is no - help for poifible.” it We must get married as soon aa . behaved”ody; Mamedthev were ; the old gentleman dowiy, immense. - _ A . terrespetwent _ Answered. i "Mabel Clare writes us the follow ing flattering inquiry; “Are yon The anthor of that tender little ballad, ‘Darling; ?^Pe Kiss My such Eyelids Down! ' : We write staff aa that! Kiss our eyelids down ? Mabel, art beside thyself ; “Darling, “J?ch readmg kiss .made thee mad eyelids down.” Now isn't that a thingto aoense ns of saying? Are that devoid of intelhgence? Mabel, don’t you trouble our eyelids when ; have a :ancy to perform and tender any natiira operations We of that delicate comfortable, have a large, roomy, flexi ble gash eo4ty jnst below onr nose that ( bought rights for all business of that nature tteit oomes within the of onr face, and any will eyelid be fonud interfering or infriuging bm t of the pr cut^d to the extreme : No, We di-' , n't write \t.~Rnrlinytoti i Hawkeye. J j ODE RIVERS ASD HARBORS. - Kanawha rieer, Weet Virginia, Teetraait *75 000• tfc MbaMMiand £“^5|^ gg-"g; *SSS«? 1 £“2r£’ tooSJSS the V^uri 000; White Jnd St. Francis riversTAr v.n.., tea non- Miaweiri river " Her T ®j r'^a.ni'aLnf'^aW) ; 000■ removing H.v.f SS^Suta nnn rsoOOMiSia^’^W “tetween^e 29°^^ S^TSinm : "‘‘c.! 000; Bed ^ tT0 ’ of the Nor..i. river * 30,000; I, e ?5oo C T Tenues (aboT ? Ch^unoogj,) . , *15,000; 1 nver.fbelow^UiftUauooga.) *-W0, S2’n£? Ki^h^arboT^^aWn ™ < ’'ir r | Te i’ ■ 0 ? or 8 l * T ,I l4 Alabama, j ; ““.i-S Swo'- ” Jj. h e Ohio , ^o^New ^ j Pittsburgh oSha^v.r to its *50,000’; month : v£ f^ip —- 1 ■ ^ TT..1.„. ... T> 1 Wtm , Huron, sss *100'0uu; xaetruia Sltl* nw*. JJ ga* Michigan lc { 1 !^ ® ftn » fiOO^W; as? Jl^nnn^ taS OOOp tv!wA as Toledo tmrbo 5 arbo % obi 0b,0 ’J%'%$ ’*200.000;’ g Wi(XX l; ! Raritan river. and New r channel Jersey, at $200*000, Memphis, ]jbarf,laiidmg wharf, •f.OOp^"? landing I ^' ul ll arb ‘’ r and breakwater, *100.000 S n S h , ^* P TS‘T^ S'**: 5 uffftI , ° harbor, New York, Iga.ii^fegi&s ■»«» **? York,_$lo0,000, Btwton Harbor, g,jagaaagsae y a as»2 FaSISlS: s^“SL£ass; js . p»«ic T>*>i»war« Boy, n*»«r = M g 0 0 0; UiA M '‘faM L B^3, : SS^Ir$4I $£?Sf i* fveA P Sob l " ? “ * e it discretional with the ; Secretary Z o£ of War whether extract he shall have w done by or hired ; ulxir# It also appropriates *160,000 harbors for BarTeyg n f other rivers and designated 8 in tlie bill. Shop-Lifting in Paris. Th<1 crimo guuaraUy characterized as .. gh „p.Uftiug,” says a Paris letter j, very b4ars common here, the great ghopg an d offering; hear of temptations. for petit Every larcenies, week and we in ar^ts many eases the criminals are ladies of family , nosition I am sorry to say that a arre8tod bore an(J j rem embcr two Kbs^^Du” had ng** bases that week *we have three were very "a sfs KAw ^ SaS^Sl.5 b<xlv. Bhe lived recnlar life everT ^of -money,' a ; plenty ami seemed to spend ^;™ her “Lneinwith time in nun.'-nnis shopping. Every e bnndlw. Y * | detected stealing e s ^ n a y wft8 on gearehmg ber otber ^“tta^n^S/to’Try felt bound to pro” they erample. oondi *7% creatureis anneals in a pitifnV for a - ^’j „ n ,i 1 mr Alfthe mercy ‘ , b r ,8“ ioe jS, great shops ||*** F ? P^’. •, t Counters j Tes aad ,T oZ . ^e <Sfingi ,u * b in - Slreeeth * of the Bedouins. Acpraeopondent i,„*,# ‘ tn»,iand Water V writing «w », tram possessing gTMtstreugtb.^ ^ »7»: -IhawoaeenalMpwpntuttetete. of.wbrat^upon tos tojd bushe saeh bis own1 ta with't, but, of <to“rse» bja ™' ann- “ oeptaon. The same man, howeveni® and his. broker, regulariy hP(two thrw hushei their months, *j^ 8 *, cm J h. ^ haclf ■ of a cam<*l j -SSfGSl ^of S&^women | u ( b m4v tew TJ 7 *±Z» if , t m^xtSn i mmense caries lo-i.ls Ihw one girl “ J 11 who , . . on her back three jars of , w ig mg forty pounds each, up P - ■ • flbont a quarter of a mile, ■ baud’s hut The Bedouin women haa very hard lrvea, indeed. J 1 be*an t . »»e tbww *“• The of which each^c p oattle and donkeys, generally -1 spjugkiing poesesses a go of sorry specimens. The °WCT^es draw water and bnng it of ■ ••« taneeson «»eir tatel®, and W baketh_ com, they make • look bake the all pots the ^Lpons food, 92“?I?5 that , thehtarm t ? a is cooked ■in; they milk “**• ' ' cess, make that the butter «to snaking *>? the mUt \ a roof goatskin, of the which hut, and is suspended under which, from m cold toe ; weather, a fl« of_dry e®** deI1 ^ light^ to raise the men frequently «t and skin eight or ten hours before n - icomee. VOL. IY. NO. 35. j AacieBt Festal Cocacetteas. In our modern speed of railroad EjSSlSJS wor ‘. 1 f»* waa »ppl'«l to a oonner or i agSg ub,i from fisSS to another F ® «*"»"»»» one witka very loud and ehrill voice, by i whict “*• *» transmitted torn one ertremilyofthe kta^om to «oth« qnaintedwith, J!«^v?^^notahSl^Slem' Cyrnsypointedoonriera, ™ i of the ,y ' nr ' e^, ' »h ere they were to de ^' ! iiTCT Th'" th? ir ‘bey did night *]*” f elt and > .*»“* day, ” on - I »V »» ****3% of , f <^ons expedition 'ainst Oreeoe, afatiou, to convey his packets, at well f rom ,-ach other as ahorse might eaailv f travel. Tlie regularity like and , wj#B admirable. 0 th( , Bomsn Gibbon ^ observes were : , . ^ advantage of receiving the earli «f “-eidngtheir the ord ® ra 1 ndaced mnpeg ors *? **^hhah Hartm^iout th | n > ^XZTwe're^wt^TX at »* ?«**" ^ *£ ‘tTv^rortdS t In the fe°e M ■ Theodosmu, Cetaroak, by a high «nk, itant po^ 7 SrzraasrursftSK f rom rom Antioch Antioch to Uonstentmople. Cap- Hu began J his ^ journey ^ at night, and was mxty.flve m | g ,^ Mj(l 1 h dred £Z 5gf ™iles SLSWltaSlSSSSSe from Antioch) the ensuing eve *he n ing, and arrived at Constantinople whole dis- the stato day about noon. The ; taDOO w#s mwn Uundred and twenty five Boman, or six hundred andsixty five English, miles. This service seems :S. 1 *jL. h 3'3.'‘Sfir3|: las^raa gags Throughout given for period their regulation. poets only used • B |\ tbia were on laaffawa^aig sisraj* breakin* a ?c^3 of Y rom-Bwi om with the up 2ia=58&wsssEis - -- • — - HespltaUty. True hospitality is »thing that touch ! rtr^leof es the heart and never impnfses. goes beyond Entertain- the ! with generous hospitable meut the true man means more than the mere feeding of , the body; it means an interchange Taws, of m.nl alT —ft* things still it should have its as govern good V must have taws to thenn The obligation to be hospitable moral is a sacred one, emphasized the world, by and every practical known to a outcome of theseoond great command ment. There should noyer be a guest in the honse whose oreseuce requires any economy. g&tryas.-.rgs^ worthy''.'rtljat rim" mnctoZim sum i d | Hocialllife ; but when once a man is ad ! "tz;^ ^ ®iS«Kir 'self as when -he entertains a friend. - To stay at a friend’s bouse invited beyond is tbe time for which one is to. per prtrate a social robbery. * To abide uninvited in friend’s house ««-S-o, a as borrowing big ;oat without his permission. It is qstas’saa.'aM “They who go into the .country ill sum! mer teenX as uninvited I>f guest* of their farmer sleai!,! rahrt as soc.al brig ; suds, and treated accordingly. bv These few social maxims are no ; to lie taken as a complete code of moans important will . i aW s. Others o? quite personal as experience ! snring no Scr out the j of evera of to article, and the justice iy and equity of all may he tested that infallible'standard of society— the golden rule. There can lie no true 1 hosiiitalitv Tto that in practice is a violation rnto auil ^ ymi may safely rest t^SntostMrfert , , t given the fullest and m. ^pe measure of entertain ^ , f ^ hm (IoDe exactly as you would-be done dav Afternoon. _------ -- ------- A Letter’s Remarkable Journey-. A letter was mailed in the New York j» Sng wt office on February 0, 1876, directed con M:frv ton gffid wvereigns, and to The^ SetW Button, Aschneha, Sai Australia, sent to Francisco, . , returned to New York. Thence ., g t > j>, ndon , to Australia, and to - - dead-letter - office at Sydney, sender, thui®e“ request J ‘DemtanquiUen, of the arded V , delivered there, it a.—,. ‘ w„i “ 8Q ' Not SSJgS a t nP j t to “.em-e the dead-letter offioe at i to London, thence to ’ at Washington, and • „.j j p ttPr Turk, . f™s ^ ^ftor New more it started. Itat the is.vereigns were 'missing. Inquiry at the foraign !-as<- office clieite.lthe response the was closed. It was after wards found from marks occurred on the envelope between at t Ee loss must have g-i ^lain PP v ami Melbourne. The case was JW ‘onened aud the result was that the sovere-'ens sovereigns were were found ■ in the Mel jv“nte^» . kiQOOTering reoeivrf . the sender, has 4oncv from Poetmaeter James, of J fj. than forte onl the New York UfBoe tioruing V-1;„« *he me matter mstw . I A SILENT CITE. - -“aas- n,je of about forty minotee' duration, sgsttM js^kssmssis eaatf SSsKSSms aleo amount visitas u» fanriahed ^taewwy with ^ oompehmt X£h yS e^taTta gnidea The STSnnS X(^>m Ssmto^d^T only. arSTyou ss^zzrez m Wearty jKMMO eopl promenaded anditwaea p e itestreeta, serae ..... re sort lor the wealthy rtomane, ana me i EmiKTOrClandins had his pleasure honse , there and the great orator Cicero a re » a commercial St^SS^S Bi^n^A of p. 7 g t Vesuvius belched forth a mass ass.'asas.'ttsiiSisa site of the city, and for nearly seventeen centuries Pompeii remained dead to the world. About one hundred discovered, years ago : entombed city was ®d immediately notion was taken to eioa j ; ya t e as mnch of tbe ruins going as possible, & Th( , work hafl ^ on, bnt not than one-half the c.ty has . yet beeneiiramed. Still, many acres Te have ^ hJSXtoTe ^ b^'trf'dlf buried “ *«“ covered -mth tons ig exceedingly prodnetive and covered with trees The government employs every winter about two hundred people, comprising excarating Sta men , women and children, in rart . The men dig; the women and children carry /hume<l away the rubbish in bMketg . Tbe e bright portion of and the city ? ^mewhat lieg open to the elevatSl sun slightly above the level of the surrounding country. 4ri‘ ^%“,r , isa r nm , m08 aics, frescoes and drawings, dining-rooms; bedrooms and kitchens, aasassss.ii?=aa JsAssjasa®S5i5 u j?ht feet across, 1 nt they “fepitug aAzs5r.g stones forTEe to^he*lJ£" use o! pedestri ; «l«mt muj^E^W^ and ’deathlike. There were wte no human enaders beings in the streets; in the houses, allwereteerted no prom The dwelling one-stoned. houses Ihev are generaUysmaU ®[ »nd m stone and bnck,plastered oourt <m the . outside the with mortar. An open is in center, and the different rooms are ar ^st tanged of the^fs mound in we the totroyed Rental havrng style. been crashed down by the weight of he «h^. In the d.mng-^ms the ered **blesare with of petrified j t o ne and^monv fowl. Beds are cot- and couches are in the sleeping rooms. In one of the kitchens was found a fowl put in the skillet, and a stow pan a small pig for roasting, all ttmaata sa f ytars. “toie frescoes, pirtnres, mosaics andsculpturesand even jewelry discov sssasttort. , r«s; ; still have the signs over the doorways, ! In one there is some marble partly sculptured, with the artists’ tools lying aronnd ; in another, mclicines and snr gical instruments ; in a third, a marble it, andthe stains made by the wet gta^ glasses toop had been a batch in of the ioa'y* ov^ since »»fonna^efi ^eMth of August, A. D. ’79. The mill was turned The vanons temples tanmton that that nave^oeei exhumed contain idols made of marble, silver and gold. The Temple of Isis is eighiv-four feet long and seventy-five found broad. The ashes of skeleton victims of were priest, . on its alters. ■ The a : sitting meal is at here, a table while On wliioh^^was near the door sprees was (another priest holding in his skeleton itod a hatehet, with which he had toed to cut his way out of the temple. Three hundred the temple aketoms of Juno ah were crowded 'dented together m and toined braeath the ashes. At the (very-hour of their <te«trocboo ‘b® priestess was offering sacriflowto the queen of the gods. The forum oocupn* the central portion of the city. On each j side are rows of columns and long por ; ticoea which Pedestek show the which outline.of formerly mood spot. famous statues on dotted(hoeaad are there. The public meetings were held in the forum, and a notice of mioh a meeting called for the very night when the city was destroyed. _____ *; H#w p a8 t Coral Grows. '^ ■ A remarkable c „ piece - of 4 coral, taken off ‘he submarine cable near Port Darwin, i »spoken of m a Melbourne paper. It is of the ordinary speara, atvmt five inches in height, six inches in diameter at the top and about two inches at the base. It is perfectly formed, ami the base-bears the distinct impression ot the cable and a few fibres of^thecoi. rate used is 1 Bheath for the telegraphic cable wires still adhering to it.-. As the has been laid only four years,, ituievi dent that this specimen moat have grown to its present height in that time, wbicliseems to prove that ** g*®* 44 * of eorsl » more, rapid than h»« been, supposed. THE OGLETHORPE ECHO. Advertising Hetee 4 a 5 1 « Advertisements * an’, ******’F'l k&m tn Mnioa '*****•■ sad uasrdh ... 4dt«MHuy ......... ... „ U» ...... ..... Ut<rr,*A ^sSSaSS^r: *v.laMrvni ii , mic, -fay. "j Lsttsn Sotiflw, £ thrse in*ertteM......... |S &o!« KW% per square, eeci uuertioa ;.4 { A boy's Are* Items bet—Alphabet. of luterest, ssassssaa “Admittance free, as the goat laid •»«,*» nessum—. -Mata-.——‘ necessarily A letter carrier i* wot one?of a lighting man beanie he wear, a mad. A recent phihuopber baa dtaoewred a “ir: *"* only drat flight alittte of a SedgifugT wiar. -IS---. Mrs. Jane Higgins, of Shel byyflle, Ind., has attained fame by sow whidiDg her fatber-m-law. in Tbirty-sevcn New York men have been New hanged Turk ip four years. is the Hempire State.—Boston Pott, - Governor Van Zandt, ot Rhode Island, is over six feet in height, weight, 200 pounds, and is the largest man in the Lives of great men all remind u We can make our lives sublime. And, departing, leave behind na Creditor! to grieve and pine. —OOCity Derridfc. A woman caught the railroad high French heels of her shoes in a track in Meriden. Minn., and was held fast while a train cat off her legs. The English language is inadequate to express the forlorn feelings of the bey wha thinks he has stolen a dime aovel and finds it to be a cook book. A Weet Hill boy wandered into a Jefferson street bay drag store yesterday worth of and fly wanted to ten cents' paper “ to make kites of Burlington h^,. Mr. ctrmuc-.. y otl Well sre You fooWag know well. that Whiff." “ ? r r we}1 Jast as soon as I stop j ^ -j^ “ c ‘L“iT’ f or a ,^ av j f feel ee i wor8 ,r0 ” © e for it ___, . 5mn]a Lppws nHn ciple and he whole secret of of suc ces s, n •“ g control of ^ a mighty mtabta nation. ia«„n JssKWgWia.sfB rsaaisx: added Thirty years more should be for hunting up the collar button. _ -rrsssrt "8a;.“is: ^ j) 43, It is certain that assurance '^X.taSlywho 5ssss5su ’ -onlt beqneitE '^SrSdtefpISfta SS^mSUxa uou, miHt »l»n. .*Wh*»*pt A Detroit boy stood aa umbrella with a cord tied to it in a public doorway. the j,i even _5, persons thought carried that with um . thoire and it SdroppediT, tb e„ t h<rt<*ugth of the string. off without They % and went ; once look g bgck or gto p piB gto pick i j, up again .—Detroit Free Free,. j a mother to her hoop son, ; ab( , yof eigbt , who was trundling a ont‘ , •• Edward, yon mnstn't go of that gate into the Jg* ‘ r ^, n ,,-4 " vu tin ™Pf- ^ A 'f" (“ hta ■■ ■ t r^-^iairaag Little A^^HtemOTtKWefolks A few n^hte ntphw ythw says — te*?*ssj eight L;pjrauSS I may not. heb last let-tub. “ Sew dsueit Tort, November seventeen. dsfigM. My Charles, mysoal’s looaid not Bee you venter e en i !o t? a ta *. wills it. Alltao’sr no more, P . g -Charles, come to-morre-w. anytov ; 1 jh, Itoiapimpleonmyiissr doctors«.[tt 1 . i \ Erzeronm, in Asia Minor, in the recen j w ar seems to have been a vast cbariia , house. soldiers During died.in three the .month* von 9,500 Turkish probably at oug bogp jt a ls there, aud total i eagt t ag hty of nearly riyilians^makiM 20,000 m Stateroom a m , )r a In Jaime a j one j n about twelve weeks. the * e »therJiei«8:thon very sent severe, deta( . bm ent of 800 troops was ovei the m(mn tains to Erzingham. Only ; ^ reMhe ,, their destination. The, we re overtaken by a fearful unowatorm The oolonel hod his wife and thtes ebiJdren w jth him m a coveralarabs ., he and they all perished. The b.wpitato frqrt a( Erzeyoum were full of cases of bd<> g^e 0 f them ns severe as any cases ^ ^ T w en ty.seven s-bberswith ou t f Pe t were under the cliarge of one m b ;tt ^ gtoa and ^ their ^ feet }iad had beenjdl. to: be ampu- feort e n, vonneCanalion eight-year-old takes miRrCbarlte the nuhn for cruelty She is the child ’ Frost of Berlin, Out. nn,l heino beclme left with the care of a sister „* fl „ angered becanfw vriS it in her ’ tradered oom ■* .iptprmjneil to rid herself cdkhs, ncnm.rance^^^.ZSh . . d , to ab usir &'?**! fln«l“te manner. Firat eh month with snow, next dji 1 i„to ” a ouantity of water “2** 1 ‘ dyowned . Then it wos p la, il l , | ie ,.ven .f the stove and horned m aod i‘ Be xt thrust — ’ these devieea nodet t v A1 jts failing, 1 bJ • j , d b ;t upon the »*e%aa'en^^te dragging - ttolx^tei • when the wLF^rtoker, agemeot retornad. Of horror-» naitber jooiuae, the _ ^ jun