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A CertainLecture.
li-N p x
trv.»« ^ MmntrT thia nn nixT
^.•tssrJSjrH;
Toni! find ttc«rt»».tiaO!. «U,
Wk«n th^ re left enjn ir h»n-t«
To»;tt Witt, IOC had Brten*d to mo,
And T» now i^ns to BrxnohjiM com* down to ttawa th« to-itax -x-untry! Sjwaigs j
They 11 b© Myiny sii s»*»er <rf thing*
Ha.© yo. thought of the shock to yoor credit ?
Tk.,. ^ctnrn^ta.,, moo^, yon m,
hope Mkt will tkmk ill. mhh.
1 ' ~' And Mt thrfl fdU re^ly cant nay. —
1 ttuck Udon^S^Vih.tmmr Ton UJ V-, »ft*l tt.
TSe nriysbave aiksd Julia to Newport;
I worked hsrrt eooB*h,'lTBW —1
To get bar invited list Whiter:
Must she write now end say she’s too poor
To boy s respectable natftt }
Whet excuse she can make I draft know,
Aad it sever wilt do to offend them :
Indeed, Mr. It., she must go !
They move in the vary beat circle# i
lies ougktnt to iak* :
I'd never have given tkxt party.
If I'd thought it wee coming to this.
Don't tell me tb*t coni share* have fillet }!
Thttl’t the way fith y^w- iff upon •toeks,
Whenever I aak fur a 4oVlkr,
Or tell you the girls want new frocks.
Beems |» mo, to be. riskinc your money
In this vray U very unwise;
And if you will do it, why don’t you
Invest in aomething that irifl ifmr’ •' ^
You know bow wd ell hatte tbe country,
And jnst because board there ia cheap
To ssk u« to go there this summer! —
Mr. B., I believe you’re asleep!
—Baku
THAT lOhl UTTLE hlllldi PLACE Qifluh OF UI BROWN'S UriUWflil.
The x--- mine, and lived
there, plate was little we as
eoaily sod I, birds my wife in and nntil daughter the
aa old friends a nest, of
Blacks, aome mm from
the city, came to live m our neighbor
boat
Wc were at supper 0.16 night when my
wife told me.
“ They re going to take the French
roohvi honse around the corner, said
Sally, with thebig extonmon and con
sorvatory, and as I happened to be walk
couldn t help seeing . that the parlor
furniture is ofemmson satin damask and
ebonv—I think it s ebony, but I won t be
snre, eoutumrel my wife; “bnt st any
aaid T’WeirrTfiSFS I. “If on _______ a comTorf, posft.ve . any it inlaid, way
y re a
Sal!., you can perhaps go on with your
SO preooonpied with
my on; it*« ono of these dieRaiUK
' i UIliCBUt
glass that reaches down to the floor."
“ That’s good.” said I. “Ton can
run around there when yon have yonr
next gown fitted, and see the hang
it.”
“ y I don t expect to run around there,'
said Sally, cranmg her neck np stiffly,
turning np the end of her now, and
drawing her las down, the matter? -- 1 said I.
“Wasn't “Why Jane what friendly? s I’ve done many
a good turn for Black in my day, and 1
hope they're pot going to turn the cold
shouldernow—'
"Oh, she friendly _ onongh,” said
was
Bally; “ living but we in that can’t kind expect, of style Joe, that be
people of intimacy with people can that
upon terms
live as we do. There are certain reetno
tionsm society — ■
“ Bestrictuins bo hxiigedl I ensd.
“Im aa good a man as Black any day
to the week.”
“Ton matter,” re as good said as Sally; the President, “bnt it’s for all
that
like a pair of scales, Joe, when and, one goes
np another look, goes down, from the
...... way things it ’ll take a aide pretty
hmivy bring r thorn weight weight down on on to the the Blacks’ Blacks position. side to to
onr
1 must own thm kmd of logic vexed
mea little. commereiaUv, I knew pretty well how
BaHy Black there stood wasn t a feather .and s weight I told on
his side, so far as the: favors of fertnne
were eonofliaed. “If he has a mmd to
live above his means,’said I, “he can
do it, and take the consequences.”
XSrftiSL a, I
:ime° sharply D ^ that do^Cthe I found Black 1 ^^^ the water of
sn admiring imposing bevy at the depot. and He glib had
quite an wbioh he nsed make-up ia inveighing a
tongue,
plsmedo4 against onr system condition olDaving. He com
the of a good many
gs-m. ..naz-- y . ur . i i g town s h i p, sun
seemed to gmn touraf pormtarity with every
fault and that ho exceedingly At loud test and bawpied effh
me, waa
sive in hia aalutation.
“Hallo, Brown!” he said, shaking
my hand again and again, and declaring
to the people about him I was an old
friend whom he was glad to unearth,
“I’ve run you down you sly fox.
Thats a snng litUeptaoe around the
TwoHto^fav^^'d I woukUvt have believed it {Kjssiblc
I could have been such an ass ss to feel
flattore? by 7 this fuaiiliaritv of Black’s,
butlfonnd mvsolf smirking and nod
least gx.^» half ^tmp^xrx^/vw dozen of the
were at a gentry
about me who lived in big houses in my
neighborhood, that I had bee« for going up
and down to the city with years, yet
scarcely knew them well enough for an
exchange of omhtics, and here was Black
?w y*\ y ■ €iOVe w, r &e °!
- now when
lemembej poor old ,White, that I and turned went my toadying back on
on
with this aristocracy. White lived m
oven a 8malle ^ hr>n f e *b»n nime, and
i hafl n barf enough work to pay for that,
He had failed; in basmess sttaeyMrs
befo.e, nod I ,ion A know what they
woiiM have doi:. without their bo.v Bob.
Rewaswii., me m the city, snd I
that a goodly portion of the lad’s earn
mgt were given over to the support of
h„t but te Lahore e kia I 1 ’ T.” lot with 4 ^ great hard ,0r resigua- ?° b ’'
of bbage tohata
aga me cn and talkover;bnsi
gjgri^ffri^tbe tam^oKimgb et both. WtaTOg. Then he Our had lit- a
bri 8 l ^;n «P "hen Bob
canrain Rlarff^ KOi “ to that kmk
afraut the %
'
here with "th R*al.e, r won
v«ng^WKto. ? W LT^ b r 1 kr >oke , I “ 1 a ,V feIt >
Sal!v cive a v‘
* she bezm ylah^e^y^hr.x abontn^S^” dwor tuftn
-V ..
W^^on^’T^oT'ml^Sht R.ftkWsiV4|: to v l i ‘ row
i n 1 st T-l 53|
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i / ! f 4 :
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= ! i,CHO
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f=* 13
: -
e
By T. L GANTT.
Iw^’b “Why, my child. tot,” Don’t I broke in, “ Bom
x mere her begin to piss
hbent future, 1 be* of you. V“8he's
: Jr.D satin dsmsak noaeoUbres »n<I ebony? Black’, bnt ckil
I were rroira, acre
! preoociona enonA to tike the Umd in
glad when Blade look me M© hi» li
Drey. But gc<^W
mfnsfti a bally qaantity of poiaern was
mto s.yatem mid mice be
wewwt booi. together as dMmged m if
totjehed De« by the said rod of an enchanter.
m* r Bally, “.bat .little
cnbby-hole this ia! I declare ifs
toBoPWhtte.whereanmnmm take
-inefneads. It wooldbe far plwwnter,
for mstonee, if yon and I cooldhate ottr
gam e of ertbbage withont the continual
gabble rrfwoswn in oar ears ’’
“Ob. I don’t th»ka°,'’ said Bob_“X
\ don , t think so at all.
' The lad looked,over at Boaalie nnd
; blushed ingenuously. The eolor deep
' cued in Rosalia’s cheeks till it went far
j ahead of the crimson ia Black's satin
: damask apholstary, and s shy gleam
j shot from her brown eyes that sent a
t flood of light into my obtuse enmium.
I Bob White was all TOy well m his way,
hut no sort of a match for my daughter
Rosalie. »he was my oho ewe lamb—
the bonoiest, -Iw-t m a™-~.
:g(H sides thesanev»«»Ks»-npon^ all thi% Were th,: secret
, was eon
aoious8es* r th4«hc *ak attire c»al4, « she Wanted
: to, dress,; in Ihadnt and sffler hae
! ;all to sparet'.’ f6r lived is a plain way
these years nothing. altbdti^E People
j about me began to realize that
Brown lived in a email house, he
““ »«inconsiderable mernis. Black
had,, mged to convey Bus intelligent
! , to them, and I found no fault with this
friendliness on his part. Old White
j never thought of such a thing aa taking
the seat heside me now on our way down
inthetrain; it-eraa genenffy ftfled by
more take popular parties, and I began to
quite an interest m the social and
political this points of diacusrioji.
All cost me considerable in the
way of time and money. My games
cnbbage were few and far between, and
i they Tpnt chose my name to all bnt the sntweriptions
to get np; I didn't mind
that - the Rosalie - .
: mined .ess , saw of young
| White thebetter. The color grew* little
; less vivid in hrironnded cheeks, and the
light Jess but m^seteevonswndjoyonsin 8nrah sn.d-1 t l maght this her
waa reafiy a more suitable naraa Tor my
wife’e yearn and digmty-that her btenty
was growing more and more refined
j tt^aotimriTMr. ^roirol tteeen, the
mark m the ^a world. I told gllftilWF my wife to
re M l
] meat lack and of happiness, spirit bnt her was part, sorry and to
, see quiet a denfkt to partake npoo of these a
; pleasures new
of popularity.
| One thing was certain—radical maae
moi mn«t be taken to put a gulf be
tween her and Bob White that could
not readily famfly be bridged over. Tho Encifer, whole
were a firond as
and I knew I should have verv little
trouble in convincing them that the old
intimacy honse had bettan Bonlcvsrd be broken began off. My
new on the to
take noble dimensions, ae-1 bad already
[ cost me a mbit of mtaey. Its marble
hells the were bone,and spacious there enongh quite to chill me
to wro * mel
ancholy vicinity. expanse of mud and masonry
toits
It rather surprised me, when I pnt
our snng little place in the handaof the
agent, that my wife was so willing to
part with the fnrmtare too,
; a few of the familiar old time-servers
might be nsed to advantage somewhere
j j feeling n the of new keen house, disappointment and ntmentwhen I confess when to a
she she
j decided that every tiling mg msst_go. *’
don’t don t want want set set . second-hand jnnk
to to up np a a st
shop on the Boulevard,” said Sarah; and
I was ashamed to foster these old-fash
iioned sentiments, till one morning I
found Boeali. crying over my old arm
chair in the sitting-room. It was a
i bungling old trap, revered with a queer
pattern of chintz, where the tail of each
bird-of-paradise hail -gradually faded
'with many u wufliiug. But tbe bulgy
!
with old frieu'iSi I’ll never get another
so •< lenient I'll wi’h part my rickety with it bones.” father,” said
never
Rosalie. Aud I didn’t care to tell her of
her mother's decree.
la the. TEtSmyrironopSw^SSra: moantime, however, I ha.1
, l ii oU ^-a R
kindly as I could, that it would be bet
ferte Ceaae Tub visits at the house. I
think, as weH as I remember, that I did
put tbeWsme upon my wife. I was
glad to see that he took my eommnnica
riou under in a manly, it wonderfully. practical way, It and troubled bore
np that Rosalie seemed take the
me to mat
ter so much more to heart. Young
turn-out was seen quite fro
was qnenriyat tired of onr my door wife that fi apologies wintered about I •
the bouse and its appurtenances. Every
day chwaT that di'ew me nearer to tbe d»u«htv
on the Bontavsnl lent a wimu.'r
ft r m Util * home I was
leaving and I fotin *t I wSanot alone iu
my appreciation. No sooner had it be
come known that ray little place waa in
the market than offers began to pour in
from different quarters. All these offers
were referred to the agent, who told mo
on© morning been as he was passing that the
bouse had rented and the furniture
sold some time since to a young married
couple, Here another in search
“ s pair of a
nuptial nest,” I said, as I propped up an
mgroioasly maple varvad beneath bit of a ci R ar box on
the tree my wmdbw. I
felt a little bine as I Went in to my
breakfast, and had scarcely broken my
egg when the bell rang, and -I found
Black at the door. His face was ashy
pale, and his hand trembled upon his
® ne -
44 No more bad news?” I stammered
trot, for some speculations disastrously of of ours had
turned out very tote.
“I'm a mined mW” said Black, sink
mg into a chair by the parlor door.
Big beads of tenor started to my own
“Green has disappeared, the sconn
drel,” said Black, “ andof conrse Ishall
f**?* 1 <* "«h
fanlter.’
** wretched Naturally," myself I said, dryly, for I
*<» to have any sym
to ftPftta. ’ >
“ Th is 18 a confidential visit, Brown,” {
Black. “ I shall have to fall j
“7 "ito.'snd I’ve oome around here at
THE ONLY PAPER IN ONE OP THE LARGEST, MOST INTELLIGENT AND WEALTHIEST COUNTIES XN GEORGIA
behind /‘My good and gracioaar there stood said Sally, a voice
o»; as
as the feathers in the daster she held
andev^^t^bns
mn.Mlel" I cried, t*«n!e mjaelf
fright mid relation. •• Ton know that
aid s«d S&fljr, my Hoafeang with erfttat ip tm# Extremity aoWrf
“^Te*!! zt{>bilitv t£e A»f
and manner, make sacrifice
onmelree, ^ Joe; ore’ll keep iTlh.. car own lit
old «
dear. Well stay here ourselTes, Joe.'
‘‘Xm obliged madMo/ to yon for yoar ooa
.(deration, hor^Tione, I replied: too’ “bnt
when tbe it’s lste to
“ My furniture sold !” shrieked Sally.
“Oh! oh) oh! my furniture, mv d«M
old oki furniture, fnnntnre, Uto taken from me ! It ain’t tot
yours yours debts. debts.” They They can’t can’t take take my my X things things for for
yonr yonr “Jnst “Jnst said said I, I, “will till
you’re Wre called wait,” wait,” "will you,till yon,
Ton called npon npoa to to pay pay my my debt* debta ! 1
Yon gave gave orders order, for for the thefurniture furniture to to be be
sold gold and and the the house honse to to be bo rented rented your- your¬
aelf. self. The The agent' agent told told me me this this morning morning
that that them." a a young young married married couple couple had had taken taken
them. We’ll Weil have have to to go go to to town town and and
take take a a furnished furnished flat. flat ” ”
*■ ” A A furnished furnished flat flat C f” echoed echoed my my wife, wife,
sinking sinking face with into into a a chair, chair, and and covering covering her her
> Aftfl'«W»«whf«*h.*«^,we»«h*%.a her apron-a ’• a fnrsishedflst!" furnished flat!”
time iurf again field this way of Hiring
to be a domestic felicity, there was an
unspeakable ..L-T*r misery m her view of it
•■ r .....::- -:...-...„
to my grave than to a
funiishad flat—Jnst in tbe lovely swing
HoTel, thntv when the Brahmas ate beginning cfis
and the strawberrv I oM
mssa *ried. of bloom Oh tnv ooor child in I”
she to Mosalm her^mShw’s
TaBd^thtown hetoslf at
knee “ vour Mr Grech has Av^«ar turned ont :
to he couple^have a nasty defaulter.
; ried robbed u's «f house
and home, and your father has
cmeltv to talk to nl« of a furnished flat”
“Re isn't my Mr. Green.” Rosalie
broke in, “nor ever was and the mar
rietf couple won't roll you of anything
ton but-hut a-« lud. nnJlatifnl danghter.
shall stay hare, mother deur, ami
ami Bo-Bob and I wilt go to the eitv *
arid lake the furnished flat"
“AhV I to understand,” said I, ad
vanning to this dear Hashing, weepiug
child, ami feeling a singnlar warmth
and cheer creep abont myfainting heart
* J emI-tebeiieTe that" yrru and tinb
are the married coupletn question
wife Rosalie cried hung her sweethead, with and coolest lily
reft to me, the
uuuno, that she told me how it
; wanldhe oil along, and that ail further
j opporition “Ton’d better on my part would be useless, ,foc,”
. go to the train,
; alia said; “poor old Black has been
‘toi^yoi °«d hring
little dausrfater ♦* we’ll ail b<t happy P
_ ... ......... _
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A Wisconsin Tsrnaite,
The southern portion of Wiscon
sin was visited recently by one of tbe
most terrific and destructive tornadoes
ever known in the West. The day had
duringthep^e beta oppressively still and torSdorerore warm, and
of the
the State there™ no wind blowing ex
cent that whirling actu^width around the storm
center. The of the track
of the toruaiHi was small. being from »
few yards to two or three hundred, bnt
its cycloidal motion from north to sontb
was nearly completed six miles, and the cycles idles
were in atom every six
of forward motion. From thus it will be
that the tornado must have moved
over the conntry hundred at a rate of apeed of
more than one miles an honr,
in addition to its revolving motion, which
wasdonbtlere far of greitter: Tbe torotao
was to the form an inverted none'of.
gigantic size, with its t&is point resting on
the ground, although was not al
ways true; of themonster, fortnnstely for those much to of the the
time the very the
earth from cone point hundred was raised above thousand
one to one
feet In this manner it passed over
several mites at a time and thnswere
many farmers spared from ruin. In
these instances tte country over which
the tornado showeTof passed was treated to a
frightful wood splinters, animals,
twanohea of trees and dead
Whether on the earth or suspended
“Vnm^us’Zm^ofTr^ left
in the track of the tornado with all
the bark peeled off. Two oak post*
eight fef t long, sunk six feet, in the
ground to support the uprights of a
wtodmill over a weU, and utem which
noststhe win.l two^^f^t!sbove^'the^gtt veent
lifted nmin the
out and carried sway without die
tuMiu thesuftmudiog earth Traes
werelftted ntetod earned a mile with
tons of earth adhering eatthf tothemasM (ft
Lemisl r0 ot* Horses, float’as sheen and swine
to lightly forest' in the air as
the leaves of s^n% the The uW&& loss of
htenttlife is
one hundred r >r mas were more or Ire.
injured, and the loss of property ^ is very ^
t —
A 4 Bacin h»r iGr»« s I iMkrht light.
This is from tlic Black Hilta Pioneer:
-A de! verjn .the .mines near Central has
lately had weeks quite a romantic experienee.
A few ago two bright little
cherubs hated him on the street as papa;
np and with joyful acclamation,
each seized a .hand of this nonplussed
bachelor. Never before had such en
dearin'g Nevada terms friend, fell .upon the.ears of our
and his vanity was flat
tered. shop Taking the little ones toa candy
good near things, by, he loaded them down
with and sent them home
with many kind wishes for their moth
cr’s welfare, who, it appoare, conic tiro
Tears ago had a misnnJtistatnlmg with
her husband and who bus since had no
knowledge of his whereabouts. Bnt
npon there italof her children’s story
regarding their (supposed) father’e
munificence and kindnessj her heart
beat with qninkened thtebs as visions of
the old time came before her evea, and,
thinking herself not blameless in regard
to the separation, she resolved that ere
another day should die, the first ml
van res toward a reconciliation should be
made. Vrnrked Urged a-te4r.wheel by this thought she cm
on steamer from
Deadwood to Central, then taking into
her confldence a mntaal friend, sent for
her supposed liege lord. Onr friend
made bis ap p ea ran ce and waa ariH fortt
horrified by being dubbed, “My
fc7anco Dear Husband.” remarkable Although the resem- photo
was (as a
shown afterward proved), sill our hero
by his earnest expo stulation finally con
taken identitf. . “There’s a divinity
teat sh^^onr ends, rough hew them
LEXINGTON, GEORGIA, FRIDAY, JULY 12, 1878.
THE HISTORY OP FIRE
-
Ilow «*• *• Ft*«*bc«* mom
.
j srk£
*r°l H eete«D«l a. ui mnlaabte
acnrMt, bnt when it bnrrt the bonda
j dioald confine it, .ft « ■»
srsaumAs *
»»*««» of kiodiia* it. True, Coamo
dore Wilkes. >» pix narrative of the
United States Exploring ExpinUtion,
£ telU Bg^t* iis that wliec be Tinted Vakaafo,
no signs of fire, and that the native,
w»we ala need when they saw sparks pro
dneed curliig he etriking flint and stetl, bit Md
the smoke from eigsrs; at
| teoo J ” of Are in a, to tried,
««1 beanies, Mr. Sale, the philologiat
ofthe eip.Xto>, gm» th*e u« a vocabulary
tfae language of i*la»<kr« in
which which we we AnSthey find had a name for Are,
aft, and that, *; theyW least, ia pr«rampU»e fact
eridence that it in Ac
oepting this presumption as a literal
troth, and we believe it should be so
accepted, vs dad that all the races and
tribe, of man yet diaeorwed have poo
aessed s knowledge of fire, although
they may have somewhat differect
methods of prodneing it, and it ia of
these that we
»*JP«A. X» all the primitive . . method* ' friction
is _ nsed, and it is probable that the first
- ’„U« Are made by pieces man was of kihdldd wood by rub
two together
’ Darwin, the natnraliat, teHs wsthat Sandwich
oununon practice in the
War ds light is, wood or was, to tM ph>c, gwnnd. B a bk>ck aadto of
very stick u* bariK ^ fortt: flia
run a blunt
movement is applied, rapid and as considerable
pressure is a gmvc is soon worn
m the blook, wd aitnuitaly H apractkEl takm fire,
Mr. Darwin says that though
native would prodne* fUa ip a short
rime, he found it rftihU h»rd Work, hut
succeeded. Thta <4 process .is conwwm In
allfhe South Sea Polynesian Mauds,
Captain Oook gives an aeoonnt of the
Auatrali*n method, asfollows: “They
prohios epreaj if , fire wonderful with greet facility They and
m s manner.
eight take two nine stioks of dry king, antt thetother wood, flat; one
or iuoitea
the first Uiey shape into an obtuse
point at one end, and pressing it on the
other(the flat piece or block) turn
nimbly between their hands, often
mg them up nirf down to luvuveae the
pressure. By this means they get fire
in less than two minutes, and from, the
nmslleat spark- they Mnw4 wHh
great spe«l and dextenty." (The read
er toll obtain:, dear idea of toe process
of bvplaeinga pencil balweeo the palms
be hands, the table, point of the pencil
rearing oil the and robbing the
wirii aome mo d ifl a ariona,
amoiiff tbe Malayau* and the Moxioan*.
of A mtelusl tbo Pampas .emo'iiao.imoiigthe^a«c/,av of Boenoa Ayres is to
take an elastic stick, say half sn inch in
diameter and eighteen.-or twenty indies
in length, with one end pointedand the
against other square; the of soft pointed wood, end and is placed
a piece against
the square end the operator firmly
jwwwes with his breast, the stick
time rapidly tamed.
The Esquimaux had u process similar
to but better than those above de
soribed. Davis, after wham Davis’
RteaR i» name.1, tolls us that, kindle to 1586, a
Greenlander" beganne to a fire
in this manner: He tooke a piece of
board, whereto was a hole lialte throw;
into that holehepnt theende of a(.round''
stioke, like thereof unto a bedde-staffc, tratoe-oil, dipping an5 in
fashion the^ende of a turner, to with apiece ot
lether, by his excellent motion did
ly produce fire. The Esquimaux had
two instenmeate, the other by one op««ted Tlie large by two
•»«“. chine consisted one. spindle, with disk ma
of a a
wd • ««• piece «t top; a.thong
smew was passed around the spindle
‘"joe, one_maiii grasping thecrosspiece wluleia
held the drill firmly in phum,
rapid second motion man pulling was imparted the thong back 'jl and 4l1 ?
forth. The second machine was used not
only for making fires, but w*h the
spindle pointed with stone, for drilling !»“<*?
holes in both wood and atone.
of the large cross piece, it was provided ood ith
wit?, a smal l month -piece of w w
a piece of Btdne imbedded. This, firmly
"ratter S^working the drill
te^d SjSniXStoKiSSS^ o! bow looped
poses); the thong a was the
aronnd the spindle, and aa forth mere
drawing motion of the the bow driU, back by this and gave
to means one
hand did all the work thattwo aocom
olished hythe other method. This bow
rte ra ?c, Hl w rr b j- t ha Siatt r
dians of the Northwest.
Another methoil of operating the drill
was nsed by the Iroquois Indians, of
New York, an.l ia thus described by Mr.
Lewis H. Morgan, the liistorean of the
Five Nations: “It consisteil of an np
right shaft, about four feet in .malTwheel length an
an;inch in diameter, with a
npon the lower part to give it mo
mentam. In a notch at the top of the
*bouUbn>e feet ‘fiSin^lowtatad lonz, Tba lower end
eate l on a piece of dry wood, near
which were When placed for email pieces of
punk. ready use tho string
waa first coiled around the abaft, by
turDing the latter with the hand.
!m>w is then palled downward, thus on
coiling the string and revolving the
shaft toward the wheel the left the By the momentum is
given to string again
coiled up iu a reversed munner, and tbe
bow again drawn, up, etc. This is coo
tinned until'sparks are emitted at the
point of the shaft, which are caught on
the punk, whicn is-ihas need ignited/’ This
apparatus was also on several of
the South. Sea islands for fire making,
ami with the for point of the spindle armrf
with stone drilling. 4rmed with
a steel point ft ia still extensively nsed
in Europe by workers in wood and
metal, and to some extent in this conn
try. The natives of Terra del Fnego (Land
of Free), if Strait we credit Magelieu Magalhaens-from
whom the of derives its
name—made Are by percussion, that is
by striking a flint with iron pyrites, the
spark method being caught on tinder. The
same was in nse among the
Greeks and Romans, and it tasaid
among the tribes of North American In
dians, and it is comparatively bnt a few
years since sny better method was dis
covered^- ’
Lighting fire by means of concave
lenses is not of natoi origin. Pliny
which tells of glass concentrated globes filled with water,
so to produce fire, and therays-ef he the
sun as
that concave mirroro were sncccfnlif
said to have aet’keto the fleet besieging
^ ^ ^
anaaally lighted the fires of hi, nation
tat the winter ftolrtwv' by mexuR of eon
nurrors iseH^n -d fro® masses of
«. k m iTfd by friction.
About the middle of thp seventeenth
oentnry it ™ diMowead that phen
ssa-JsSsJSttt thOyearspftBr its ntilitr
for that tfxe nnrDOse was a^bdnewmetbod* dicovered. thorurh
during of interval derked. Ai! theoe
o-kyiS&-^ uW ft were S^^byctym
ca] „«* were crwde, and none of them
were aoefc nnproreraeats oft the fiint
andiiteel ^ as WetSSmed to eeme into neneralnae Starting^
toe to
5£a2d^SflffSril mBches of thett childhood', SZSZ3Z days. They
were .mall sticks, the rad, of which h3
liven dipped in melted sulphur. Witt
these and a rial containing oxide of
phosphorus, piece produced by paftiaUy
nursing a of phosphorus in'the
confined air of the vial, the more enter
prtring of our fathers prkted ihemselvae
fcTfiremaktog, nam iiiaiiiitoftiiltlnilatml But ininuftciH
they foTOed resortto^edd no: mfreqaeatij
amf were to
ever reliable flint, rice! and tinder
box,
In 1829 an English chemist cUneovered
that chlorate of potash would ignite
by friction, of‘'friction and with makSea”began. this discovery tfae
era Pro
,i,^„ , ■ »i,
since
dered him famoas, suggested that nitre
fthtaSTuf of saUpefrc stioald be nacd in lien 0 f
aiou made bvtha potash ignition to avoid of the tlm latter
SSbeteuco; With while byataftture ofetear
j Be the sulphur theobiectionable
fumes cere lessened '
United States the first patent
for the invention of friction mitehea
w» Spriniilild,. granted Maas., to Alonzo D.* Phillips, Jay of
on the 24th of
Ctetober, 1838, which patent covered the
phosphorus, use of s mixture chalk consisting and of glue, We
Save record of the manufacture snlplmr. of
no
matches in the United States as a tpe
rial industry until after the isawmwftf
this patent, and it was not nntil some
yean later thatthe • new-fangled things'
came into general nse. But factories
processes of manufacture
ware imnw «te.l. .the priffe vrae wnte-e -t,
and about 1840 “looofooo" matches be
came siaethattime quite common. tie
mateheshatebtei uftmetor,. an<|th* bnsl
manufacture has grown to be a
gauernlly tta snppraed, greater msgnitnde Evolving the than, In- is
vestment ofTargo capital and affording
remunerative employment to thousands
aan ^:r^: repreiStiSj °ipd aiw
M
horsepower, fnrniah themotor for driv
employes tbe mrehinery. stated 2,6S6, The of number whom 009 or
aremX is at a^ of’rixteen,
above the and
1,089 females over fifteen years of age,
the balance, 858, being children. The
wages paid amounted to $810,714, the
materiata oonsnmcd were valued at
$1,179,666, and the finished products
ware worth $3,5*0,008.
---—
A French Wife-Poisoning Rase.
^^^^X^broalketoSdurv * n fa, triff ^ yrite : it" : °"n ing te-lli-- rr
i^shis about thirtv-sto utTm veereoH'
Jrodfashamtatry parmitare to
pjft* whaHrtV^yro^Sm“ ^ Left an on-
bo
-.^i his studies linthrough gave himself no to
hirHme ptcarore ihioh snd soon thelfttle
Sf foS he Ser inherited At leOKtb
1 a he teliMtted
nj mge f „ " chemist Zi to the Bne de
Xsrittfmo^v He to look ont for a
got totroduce.1 to
^ { am fl y of a retiied tradesman
y’ daughter Mathilde, then
, mr cantivating/ t ,, toots of age he succeeded
j ^ u P £ His stotwaa accepted
(be arriaf ,,. t<wk place, the
i,ride ^ fet^SS receiving Ste?Te $2,000 Sing, from her father
Daavri
^ro^^StS.UoSFittiehhfw i-jed to induce M Jarrv to launch ont
Hrtori ateiB g^tetaon hieh fte pro
^
• , .i
\fari am n«nval f*»n ilL and AftAr liiurer*
SSSSSSSB
tL d mvfa2if*th*t’th*^nn^Lutv wSod
SE?22?^? [V ,. n A "** ,fiSf infltotasimaMo 1 driiiterltfav
d n After hitorerf
horn
~ i
™ who h ° W “4 remained calm^'hr,«XT,tt
i] 1 "“““l hands tow^dthe tori t!™
l^Htod toSnt^ nanh^vm" 1 S
i Ditv^n
£“‘* r Mav God have tel^th”
SSethesa^^rolsration,^*can«ed tm^nll to tte aSre and
S3* “ril^eut The coart condS
^laborforlife.
---- ; ' ■—- ' —
reeflwf Feeding • a I«Mgww. Menagerie
The' feeding of the animals in a
menagerie their lives is always depend carefully the done be
cause bility of their food. Tlie on Philadelphia adapts
Tlmea&m that the daintiest eaters in
zoological garden there are two
chimpanzees. ^ith plenty They milk breakfast and on weak
tea, of sugar; and
broad thickly spread with honey. They
lunch . at 10 o’clock on bananas and
oranges, dino at 3 on rice or tapioca
served with sugar and sherry, saals’££ and sup
at 7 on ieo and milk. The
leas troublesome to feed, but more ex
pensive for five of them eat daily eighty
pounds of fresh fish. carnivora'were Formerlv the
lions, Ugers and other
costly, bnt oflate they hove been fed on
horse meat, Seer which is very cheap. The St
buffaloes, and elephants grounds. live
on the grass in the The
rhinoceros is the greediest'of the with.’ lot ■
but it is quantity that he craves,
ont much regard to quality. He will
eot 250 of^otatoes pounds of hav toto^l^ltte every day, and “afe a
bushel strawbeVries a
of to a hungry tn»n. His
feod costs ten dollars a week, which is
giraffehas as much as that of an earefuliy. elephant because The
to be fed
he has no andXte regard for his long, uarrow 1ZZ
throat, one mouthful
before the one before it has reached cC his
stomach, thus choking himself. everything
ihqa monkeys eat theosfache/and nearly that
is offered ; m do
have ItoHm
to mitaro
A TOCMi EARS KB’S ROMANCE.
-
*»•» He Com •• New fork u4 Oesp rixota
u*e fifttkm, and ?* ia e^jCTienoc ^1 the more n»d» mtereat- ^17
b f^*°?* ?* “ Doi ** SS4-™* J?
n
* t * r T f ^
“^rtfWydxt&a and mercantile airrrasrs,
to *“ 1 change fan ^ of aod^eaolved basincaa. Bv to bad an *
^mbmnne«hero,»d that nnele <*«u>e<f to Dewar the laDiinwr, wrfe^of
who manages one ofthoee «M
boardinghouse, m which this city of
boarders abounds. To this uncle the
when trodeworfd mrt in more briskly gather ;
merntwhile leawing andget opportnmty to
thesnmmer mope to much more
4S?^._ Sofluflg farther . .. ww heard . ,, frto the ..
nephew.andit waathongh t he had a>
copied tbe adfiee. On the contrarw, he
P^ed his trunk and came ot, without
informing hia relatives of his mtentiOUR.
**• • rri »ed '■> town too months ago.
withUic idea of lookingsbont forlum
•<>».*“*» wh *^ The e ttrng “ *2 be did
pendent to bny way. first « In that
was a morning paper.
°® dcst'ey bad ordained, hi« aunthau
an advertisement calling for a man of all
work, whose ^ief occupation to
vm eb du ihes. Noaooarirdid tbaMxdu
erikt »—■' “»
Wanted Urns he decided to answer
a ‘ onm ’ ttnd l f< *r
. here. Urnt
»e«««7 « say
' omt ber uncle nor annt had Been their
nephew to deceive «no* hia them babyliood, so and that the
wav The was for open servant’s easy.
ncphewapplifHl 1* the
admitte d ttat ha kyw noth
lng about hMmswwk, bnt said hewas
q'«ck fiont to hfs learn. There hdneal was something
thst Jmpetfcd frank, the landlady cojmtiy fo man
?® him, r and he Was immediately installed fry
aa chief diah-waeber- He did hiswork
well ns nnvex rirod when the seven or
eight hundred "Bishew came B ashing
««»»d hun,Am4too»i M*rmm interest
™ He lightening bia mistress burdens,
had desired to.find oatm this way
5*“* *"? of J*°P le relatives were
bsitt to M ichibroi. >If hs chd-bme wonld ^
them '‘ mK ” largely, him su ngut. and himself tvett, becameoi ne uxqft
His cheery ways ted ebte*
cred. flannel shirt were features that
«r®« be noted by every hoardw who
took an oocasumal pocpmto thekitehcn.
Tw dttonto of^aelrnca expired th ®
Whenhewaapaidhis wages
the lad astonished his mistress by roy.
A n »lre immteijlw
Then there was a eceac. aabscqucatly
the landlady took theyontli to her bns
baad’s tailor, fitted him ont with a
Stvhsh suit of clothes, and so trans
formed him that when he took s sent at
] the dinneretebl. nobody reregniz*!
j bteh To day the Michigander ta the in
j-to* figured uncle raorStmtJte s store, getting line. a This start foil in he
j will be sent to alaaiuesa softem, mid.
iflua past does rot belie hmi, he will
some day rank among the large met
chan's of New Tort
lie* a Turk’s —....... llente is _ IMridcd. ,
A Turkish hoose ia divided into two
parts-the BClamlik for toe teen. «>«
hftremlik for the women; and the Utter
h- « msny separate snites of apart
monte as there are ladies. A Turk who
h*“ but onewif. may require a luge
haremlik if hia mother and sisters live
te' th !liln . tor each of these ladies must
have her hSrs^mrate private set «f room* and ser
vante for «
be no crowding and no establishment mixing of domes
tics to a well-ordered ; so
that if there be four wives they need
see one another unless they please.
Th® fl ™t wife to caihst^the hannn, and
' akea rreeedeuoe over the others all her
■ M®- She has a right to the best rooms
“t" 1 *« a fired share of her husband’s to
««»«,• which he must not reduce to
minister to the caprice of his younger
sponsee. As these points have nfemas generally
>» en settled throngh the or
More tteyreddiug, B hsnnn’s
is m. safe as that of a French
woman who has bad a contract drawn up
^lyro^K^rah»4“ Sesame rank the wile in English
a* an
or American house. She visits and en
tertaina the hannna of other gentlemen,
but keeps aloof from wives of the se
cond and other degrees. riSifi bc.inc These ear.-rally are not
canals in her
a lo w e r re c i al - s tatu s , she have
not brooghtany dowry p»«L to their husband.
Time wite whta * teonia take four
wives of an tSotherpaSia equaldegree, all being
i daughterarif or of the
- manners^ave Shlton aud all richly t?is portioned, bnt
• all the altenvlin respect—at of Tur
• events, in European su^sSThoweTer, part
keff.’ It must cherishes not be such jealous
thrt a hannn roy
i !«to ha ‘ red ° l ^*>® r fcllow-witta»is hustamd felt by a
who sees her flirt with
Ptrauee women.. She i* content witix
M, e !«r ff est (there S2$SiEwdItt2SnM*A of her husband's re
devotem^ * ^ d
' qevot'OP.
.
About A Diplomatic Retreat
Uo o'ldook this morning a chap
went into a C street saloon and" devoted
ten minutes in a verv xealmis manner to
the lunch table Bv the time he had~
masticated about a pound of corned beef
the barkeeper stepped iTfor^rmkera un and remarked ^”
“ This mWe
“Then why don’t you bring on your
drinks? IN* been Wc ten'abutes
and haven’t rot 7 a drtm of anything If
it’s a drinkin ifl table fo^ where’s the fluid
“ I mean too na’ron, P ’ rf the
bar, ” said the barkeeper the-'here
“ Then whv ain't mustsmind 9 I a’pose
yon mean thsft a man P money
at the bar before he eats 1"
“Exaetlv”
hetelSsSe?rod“idnW “That takes me in I took a tenth- drink
a
ful aiul if I ain’t entitled to a lunch on
StoriSuSSi drink then this system 7 must be a
”
“ But the piice has changed hands
since then "sanl theharkeener ‘m. nicking
P " Meol
Ah r facias renlied v/tu' the
^dtotplr bnmmer •“ that Mw^aS gesture
SgSE taiaes a in^^our“ embar
P !om*tie
relations froi twill S crito^rf therefore reoede ind as
ftwere anem^lfaur^ tiwn^Otm
awattthe assemblmg of the Pesoe. A/on
gresa. 'He
^ had been ^ S ffradoallv backing to- ^
d
rotoc^- p^«riie°hnri2at him^bv theindi^ilmt (Atarota
P^ato «*
Word, ef Wlsdam.
Deeds are fruit; word* tare bnt
•
___ ___ __ __
3~“-’ - —
pnctioe eooooraT ‘ utd mdcairr kod
j, yoaM .
Beliewe not ill of . brother till it i.
tjassw^”^^
v here '®wJJJtJMgf on earth, and that is death. Jjjjf** *° fe
Have one settled purpose in life, and
jf ft be bonornble it wilt bring yoo «v
b,,nld^ever Temnerk so good « Bring thrt w*
“"“f^ s never loaeit t»e ui an» ftiwaysoom- J 00m
““**• ■,
, „ . . ,
agLnft float with theetrwm, it. while any dead
flab can
Theroi, that in some men. would which, if
not chilled by adeernty, giye to
the world grand tbongbte.
ft u to ^ heart with
1-) n [inrun than a Held with corn * for the
hfMrt h °*y » fl hnrrcnt estispe,. in pei • *L -
Men should not think ^ ^ too much of
themselves, snd yrtn^kn chon-d be
o^ful not to forget biuraelf.
When yon strike oil stop bonng.
Many a man has bored clean through
an,llst fheoil maoni ®** he bott ® n -
Next in point of meanness to doing
^ iajnry is to do a manafavor and
every now and then remind him of it.
“mnmgmthiiworid .-...... L ,___; .. .
but a
m) nroie, . bind leg K springs up « up v spontan- pomau
rater aeaita to w», never never stadv atody to to be be
dive rting w ithout being useful; let n«
l««t latrnde upon good offend manner^ nor
say anything that may modesty,
Kindness does not always prodoea
wlyit we expect; from a band which we
hate they arc regarded as offences ; the
more x»i*vish upon one who may hate
ns, the mbre afffls We grVe him who
wishes to destroy ns.
HumSgtydoea in wtfich not carries depend his upon, Iwflyl; tho
ft ,-uy depends aman what his life is;
upon ilo with ft; npon
what i* means to upon
wbe,*, ],« pots it, and whftrft be ksftps
: it , wlmt ft renders.
„ reliios on onr own tesoaroes we
acqmre mental stnmgtb; bnt when we
j :
iuvalMl. to who, having' accustomed
himself a eruUih. finds it dUHcult to
walk without
H ’“'J’ fuLtaSJS^’JSK _
1 «"B 1”® « taS’^beeLae ?! t?T!. ™
bea>,n f aCnre ybwy jbft thrna m
. >"■ w - ‘ mrahhinirH * 1 **‘ , “^i
i Heteai anft P
.
an^^'^cvmn tenrore^mtelhcettt r md
misgivings' M^Muffl^ s
JPI „ i. aTe ?*d^Hive that mm r
be *ttay«J t,afore Mtore answer r
T «>«d bftjpwta.
ful 4‘-_ I /take 4,',“L o?romo 60m of’em ____J? issnre^o
g “““ ^^ie ™ i—_e “7^1 mvSl f ' .* ,j eiE
ft*** *BS x}” “ i!. K v
mnh/ere^fn r 8 to ^ p T 7 ffn 'the
,7n’i, ?”
“ £ h ’ n m l‘.J l ?'L t d/{to vonne Cr1, man all* say
That would never do at boSdew^ra Yon
8 .. a , L-jP , ,7 . I Pf ]an ,
‘ _
; n ' cm Do you
. f t. Arn y* . ■
}, ^dh , v ' s ., ttw, ;!™ an te« f ,, me, do to gon voii belong belong
.
w he^d 5Sn»d tom«ey nr'osnects Hisftaw
a __ awav^ mv 'Vfeltl^ and t
j} 8 ” - ro send him n" sbtolt
, -as light feeder and
i-VSRl?,I’Thh ' never sing! "WelT
. '“ at .. ?.P nlerwrint l ?“ an ,V I didn’t mnch think
g&.'H’ tL v^i ^ thesafe onThe
““v*“, , H ! J 0U donT J pmcrice p
.
„
1 was almost broken broke n nnhv np fy one one of f
^hctu ., brain-rackors
*ni\ a
^at, wlth b i n ^le^Uing 2 young tin mro
i A n
"hat "J. 0 *. a that viBalnhews* . ‘»" 3oor . , I Bn 'l And *???’.“
«j“ P teW* ot ^ of HkMftta, lfo ty ’.?Ztl HMM.
e n OI 5 ' ! ™. , ‘" n r
, ^ wSt f telt
I"**** >*rd,*nd ^“V^SSL, T 1 M
1 J° a ’, " r y *“ v 5 ,‘"Lm
l ****** many qnretiona wby .? Te I m bohlto.askyonso very gl»d toheiur,
th°»Kh, that you don t waste your rime
that, way, and if yon 11 promise that von
"on t aa mnch as brmg;a
e
*^ . a T® evonrhome'w.h is I
i .^,i EwtteS^all Tt^
“ *° n .\ JJL" a 11
! 8ir ’ a mi &hty big mistake, po far m
i hoarders are concerned, any wey.
j They'll pnt up with a good deal m the
way of haviiif? things warmeo over, but
1 they won’t stand music no way you can
fi» n P. kpd get away from it as quKW
ks they -would from the small-pox.—
- CincinnatiBreakfeut Table.
1 ..... Destructive ■ — Earthquake. ——
* A
* During the recent heavy earthquake of Cm
I she*** in Venezuela, the town
about thirty-fi e miles south-west of
Caracas was entirely suddenly d^troyed. felt A about ter
n’ te shock was at
1 8 30 in the evening. T sea“rove< The ground seemed
to roU like throwing down
! the^waUs of the houses, others crushing in the debns. many,
and eutanelins of light material,
The roofs were made which
which ov^urned, eanglft fire from the tamps eonfla
were and a general
nritioo fortnnates ensued. In vain tbe poor un
who ba.1 escaped the ground, falling
walls endeavored to g in open
The flames aprea-1 rapidly, aud the peo
pteon the ontskirts of the village were
niraiue to offer any assistance.
shrieks ™^the of the dying were to be heard
[he crackling of
flam*. Fully three hundred lives
werelort at Cnatbat night. looked Repetitions and
the earthquake were for,
who bad escaped were in »
stant ^s. state of terror for a number of
Word was sent toCaracas and
anhsoriptiooa were made In all the large
^wns rf the neighborhood to aid the
duiTerers. The President of Venezuela
* °* the scene, and ch the way
the" ronghnewrf dhe road, fbnt was cot
VOL. IV. NO. 40.
FARE. HASHES A.SO HOUSEHOLD,
7~ Ht»u. ____i
..
aaf bat y.Ss'il that of chlorO/ora. ia bni j
common,
little known.
To Tam Otrr Ifnjmw.—Got the dry
SSSarJSS bos fiiteea
mipato^ T*k» it ««*
it ge n tly. acid,*one in«i i wt tmwtiktA aouf i* in*n ■ .wi.
raunaiic part and foar
S'o parts Ration soft water. lime^ For *553be“ delicate Isbraa
„,
wertar: three or four tinm. the
qnantity 1 . of wrier akonld bennt to tbe toe
SS &*>!** * *
£,**$“ ^! “
cXS^r to
,1 J, Haw to 4* a®'
n . R ^ ee k; throw
i n \ paiT jTS? -f 0 !?!
» J J Jill *4 'l boil
th ™ ®°? or
toly^Md^btox^nd borax arnd a s^re very liftfe^® bttle soap,
m not water.
T m Hare .-German womenof fee
t !* re ,^^nmveraslly noted for
“d Inxnnant hair, and thia is the
£*?4® ,t: \ b<mt ,aloe m a
boil for an honr w morea
>, b ^ n in * v *£j l “4
till tepid. i^kSIk . Rab 4 into - it * a r!5’ little D white ’
bead ttoronghly, VT* parting ^ saute the
allover, take so as to-w m* B i a mot s.
the ytttk of an egg, slightly
and with yonr fingers rub it
into the scalp Wt it rest a few
then wash off entirely with a
hair dipped welltiU in pure water, and rinse
the egg has all disap
Afterward wipe and rnb dry,
the hair upward from the bead,
uhgbtly.if , 5* ,fK®^ needed. The „v? moat
® ,r n f*r , ^ y e J”'
l the following formnla;!Pore
.*»» «*•> eolwne-spirit (M
atxtsen o*.; petfmxa aseold-
rirriMi Him.
To Main a MosTaim
htawm*!-.-# tresfleV luiireorlirs, an^
having as desired; stir thick witlf mustard,
spread it on a cloth, apply bliS«r, it
direcuyto kept the skin; it vrill not
even if on for an hour.
Rbmeot von Bon-vs.-Due ounce of
pnlvcraad half toax, S one ofpXerire.1 quart ol teto euSf ink
water, RUaki and iKtte. th^
no intof wril tliuroTroil Wrap P
w»np iSSSre ttftoS'mriiflStawR ke™ oom
* weirraett twowru v f*r tne nair or the
j eye on nusmg the Ud. Ibe operotiem
requires ^mstaatly noeknl, takes but a moment,
; !l cle f dnBt removes ^ withont any eindetorpar- inflaming
° or
To Ohoosb a Phvsjoian.—T D , r o ohoooe ,
: * phy s >e»n, one should be half a. phy
siclsn one’s self; but this is not often
the caec. The best plan which a mother
adopt isto select a man
1 w ' 10Ke oducaU ' jn hu * bcen “ alt abIe io
his profession; whose habits of life , are
“ 40 P ro ™ tl)at h8 *»
aritjuire both prsetical and theoretical
knowlftlge; who is neither a bigot to oM
opmhmknor an riRhiisuBtin new; arid;
for many reasons, not the fashionable
doctor of the day.
Kwock - Kintza. — A correspondent’s folWs: "I
advice and testimony are as
commenced the practice of placing a
so** 11 hook between my knees, and
tying a handkerchief t ight rou nd my
TEisT did two or three times a
day, ^ increasing ^ the substance at every 4
j h0 , d , bri(
with ease lengthways. tb& When I first
commenced practice I was as badly
knoek-kneed as possible, bnt now I am
as straight as anyone. I likewise made
f to® practice of lying on my back to bed,
with ray legs crossed and my knees
fixed rightly g^itferi together. This, I believe,
did me a of good."
_________..... 7 “^ ^
that A wiitor hl8 mw in Inc gives SouSAarn o all tho Fun^r p milk that any, is
^ a fairly i>( and that
rioh ^ryon milk desire # to get a targe yield of
* ive y°« r slightly salted,
water slightly warm and
in which bran has been WWfi at the
rate of one fin\ quart to two gallops of water.
Ton wiU if yen hsye not tne<l this
dji% pesritaer that yonr cow will give
tweuty-flve per oenj. more milk lmmeilir
ately under the effects of it, and she
" iH become so attached to the diet a* to
refuse to dnnk clear water nnlessrenr
ftiraty Bat this mess she will drink
. ask formore. The
any time, snd
; ^unt of this drink necresary is an
ordinary water-pailful at a tune, morn
> iD «’ tt00n mi
—
^ i Inditate. a* ^ ’
Whrt Yelero
There are light, .. ,, ■ quick, . , surface voices vn i M
.
( that j in “i vountariiy won’t do seem to tic to to.’ utter Jhe The
B auf ,
maa ’« words may assure /ou of his
[strength of purpose and reliability, yet
i his tone contradicts his speech/ deep strong
Then there are low, ground
voices, where the words seem
: out, as if the man owed humanity a
grudge, and meant to pay it some day.
That man’s opponeote may well trem
ble, and his friends may trust his
strength There is of purpose the coarse, and boisterousj,dic- ability to act.^
tatorial tone, invariably b ^
vulgar persons, who have not sufficient. .
cultivation to understand their own «*•
.significance. the mrarednloas tone, . that ... is
There » secret
fell of a covert sneer, or a you
can’t-dupe-me-sir intonation.
voice, Then that there says is ^’sycophant the whining, b^eecuing as plainly
flatters as if Stuttered.^ vou; its words say. !
yon; I admire yon; you are everything
thirty.™ .HwiU.be. tarf mmarel,
rhen there is the ro,
compassionate voice, .that ■«*»•
goes merely with sharp feta^
eate bnt
sometimes with blunt fetomos,
always with geonmebenevotame. of aOrotokoi and
If you are fail pro
teneo, your von* proclaims rol ft, .,M«e »$».
If yon are full er:riw y
and purpose, your voice proclaims ft
Ifyou S neooldsnd cs! m and:flrmand
consistent, or fickle and fcoteh «n4-fi«r
^ptmy your v oice wiU.be ^uailY
Yon.tmmot phta^
®«JB»H» HT!j
»« »«*♦»»■ «*•»
gr *-'*- H » V. ~:rrr.r7--,
*'«“• HLillS§I ' 4 -.».- Mu 4.;5 wfv •*J2L****»' Utet
>•■»' rwasaWSr^iaBa*- *‘ 1 *«™aemem.. „ *
$raSaBBSi~:
se
*- c
»5S i ir : 15
Ufa, #f later**.
Oloae quarters—the lanndrw.
a i«a*gooen to mn^n, in „
2wBaaS; wnsthe re
All«pi« Hat got name from the aapDO
ritioo It oontained all .picea.
Waiting to be whipped is the moot
usrftsssasasf-- Algebra taken from
by , to to Arabs, and
them called ai gebr wal mokabaia.
The American rifte team can tell you
wtut’a in an wm, *ZeSSSS it Shakespeare numot
ft.
fort. «.r«i differs* J™ •* Iaa " esa
been Many u found a man lying of troth and Waetly Aath. has
at the point of
P lwt “S ZHTLSTSSL S
Vwntef is many a man “liW,
The^^^ireTtorl. in inttTw™M Journal ra
^ttoae «« ttoae ^0 who C^ have ne4i never w been taught to
A. sunshadeoompoeed entirely of pan
. with solid gold handle, novel
sies a n a
ty exhibited m a New Turk jewcleFc
window.
It has been remarked that the drives
of oxen is the man who most assiduous’/
cnltivatoa the srienrea of Aoui-tieultara
and geology.
This is precisely the time of the year
when the average small boy is seiaad
„in,heT^ to become
Therice crop of this coantrvi.com ^Carolina
iag to the fore again. South
^s?^and towyesr, ana gK» ueorgia 26*000'°“ ao.ooo.
At* wowthditraer or Shoemakers, the
have flowing all tee toast was given: “Msy we
women in the country to
shoe, and all the men boot. ”
When a man feathers his nest y*n
wdl generally find that he also plumes
himaelfmpon fore, Uttt “ riches it. How take true it is. tbere
unto themselves
win •
xulSaftl Xhaaheendecidedtohpldthelnter
^[t^history Oongteas for the inveettgation
of America before the
tl - m8 of Colnmbus in Brussels, during
1979, instead of in soflM Amariomaily.
In 1877 there „ *.909,677 ^ electors , . >
were
T ^ » Great ff 0B8 “ Britmaa’ndLJrelsnd^firi acl, he P 0 !" 1 14 mare *'™'
There are about 9,000,000 voters in . this
< * 5Uatr ?, or one m Ate 01 thcpopula
tern
Ohotriteto was first introduced into
1 England from Mexico,*. JX, 142ft It
w asms dc-froP the fldwcr of fEreiicoS
nut, nnliresaUy and soon Used became lu the very LonJioi popular coffee and
bonteft.
w^lf’Si^it
-
**w the «m B ”fi i.
P iho
StX'ktofl *___ gri.’cLretoStnke t,, n,n> ia
, ’ • fivannah Ifeifr.
Kobir.wvnf otter , a . long whirtt bout at
S? c.liLTTvn » fTr'fw„'
yoo know— .Good JSOnHng.dear, dcar>",u or
0 *»“* “ rt ’ 8h «^ 11 6a 7 the
rest.
“Didn tyou guaranty that that . horse
WoiiMut: sfiy-before said cavalry the .Whsrge offleer to of a
cannonf a a
horse dealer. “Ire. I did. and 111
stiokto it, replied the aealer. He
to™*,***** «“« -Her the camion »
ami -
It ia said that a project is on foot
looking to the management of ra:!way
trains by the nse or mirrors ri> arranged
as to reflect a complete picture of the
road in the President’s office. That’s
the way the lad.es have alwsvs managed
their trams .—Breakjatl Table.
A catfiali was recently caught in the
Mississippi River at New Orleans, which
when opened was found to contain the
skeleton of a baby and a box H shoe
blaaiing. The box was open, bnt when
the blacking was tried it was fonndto
be J aa good aa when first bought
riet ' - <■ •
Thesria . ?*•? ™ r .Z- SkJS.: 1 ,
presidents 0)1. T.A. Hw “«“ ta ^a4’ phil'twlGlnhia* ,
,
OTSMSfeWlK
Alta’s expenses cousidemtum, in the war were when a
pretty senoos even
taken into aooonnt with her rw*o rv.
The war lasted from April 12, 1877, to
March 4,1878-322 day s ; take the froips
the money required stated that toi, Rie expin
home, it is war
amounted to $600,000, W..
, ww|e flowers more frequently colored have
u gproable scent than speoiraeMttere one*
In m hnndrcl white
w . ((C average, fifteen with an agree
^bie smell aad only one disagreeable, colored
wherMUl among a like number of
gowets .only six have an agreeable and
one a disagreeable odor. is^milt
The ritv of Texas^Arkansas Texarkana at the
i .notion i>1 and Loniai
S U ece. red .Is name in 1819, when
a^enthiiBwe stirvevor. : while running.
the lines, bted the ihrp»» three fraemente tra^ . of -
theiiaa ms that
«cd predicted a grew 04 •
.
built there, litre* years ago*, j
town seen-on .wasfo;iinjhw, the old tree, me was nam.,> ;-i< pwu, :
the prediction seems in a mi? ^ . •
verified, as the town now ‘ ,
hubitauts, and is an important r..ur.
crossing. distinguished soldier,
It ifl told of that about
sir philip Sidney, that being to
^ mh bifl ( iav ^ aftnr a hard fougnt bat- and
he had just- tfisen op the *oap
tl3ril€K | on the warm water, when he per
particularly grimy so drer at
his side. Handing the sosp to the sol
flier, with the now histone words, Thy fhr
pehessity is greater than mine,
Philip tamed away, and went,nnwa!,h
w} _. to T irteous conch. Cold and
g3 jndeeil must lie the man who-can
this ta«a*to and euodeumuit withont. a of tears,
admiration a
THsbaentleman PraS Tre^hna:. writes to say that
;,o no^pew_ rerer a who c,chi
*h^j»,e^<fie»isblv ..Tt-imhlerig *to Tfaiste
th^betnevmbly thought thrive
ta“l« hi|(
*h.m. ^ w„ th.«ted
• ,„i thrashed
jSWhirtv-tbree _ 4
^; tlwmsand thistles and
»ES2ihihw.k h i T thinking to thrive
srd y iS-tS thm-by throwing the
• " 1 the
u „ r „,,. pe^le
»X?n n4 .to
or the Englteh fh. But ;r -•«?
f >r an v one wJ-o.is
^ mast' im at oaera d*
. d'without bemg either