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foe Terra people
ALmiJi
“flNaa*,* mii *»mpi** w.
A« te OB bc«r4 cte teM cut icx
a» haft and Arj. “Oo*d* mow, te«f»r-,
Waft **& at J hyaaditjr
Fortbmtm nmgb, ami *haj te4 to lug
4adU4*,*iiltte<»pUtociMd««l «EMucks'*
Ttey stopped it Fam. this joCy craw.
And wmt to Parts aai Timhartoo ;
Ao4 after » vkte *fa«y fcmud ite *11*,
And wstchsi the sgorts ot ttecrwxwSU*.
Ttey »te Steb, ami t te ai«2»*y Car,
Ar:i on •£ ite mrowmmi tenia and f*r;
wtte tte OA-4tt*r fte»f di <* ■ *
And laseted on tep of Us* pyratmid :
To Afrte-a strami or northern land.
They steer a%tbe aapttes riTm ooaamad ;
And By so fate that tte tender
Gi=«a^ir»*nij|s4AimtajAB Uutfetet;
i
Leaps Jack—'t waa a merry te t drowned l
t tNM ■ f aaafeot kte te, •
te».*-t*»«te caatrre," _ hi „ email a th.
wia:
ftJ bliiowa taoaad, by
Tet amraiMiw botemiM :
Tbogf h tte tete ba * atow, I do *o*
Xtey aailontbe of *H*te-teteT*."
-Joewktm FoUard im M. Sisheie*.
„ The „ Emperor „ Moneteanma «»i great .
man, and foutomu* have recorded mnch
abont him, bat of hisrarlier life, when
be was plain Master Monteznnm,
pwativelyliltle gentleman. is known of this rising
yonng Master Montexuma commenced h«
earthly career mi a crying lcl> baby, in the
ntTr, a ?* a f , 7r *i W en per y
, | .n m™
^s~.'re »re
sprinkled ing te Out cold bsptisnal wa-eruiteo font in the yar.l,
breast and Ups, presented hie credentials
in the shape of offerings sgn^fine, to Mifio p ropitiate
TEft gods oPwar, tm,
-irfSlt, '«v <,h
Lord w«s implore to wash away rtdnrr the sin
tion that of ws# the given world, him^bctoe so that the child the found*
be born anew, sad told the three little
boys MonUimuma» who t»t near by, what ba Master The
name was to
three httle boys left «0f eating their
parchedcora and boiled beans, repMted
the name, d and the little babywaachns
te “® -
Vr» lf a Lir ... * * ?"y h ... * 1 n
1
girl-whichhe . not-the offenngs ■
a was
w.md have been it mat, a spinning
machme and a broom, all of which
b ?ha «t^« b ^heL^n r
■ a„ itw^ 1 ttori for to?
implemente o* (d wM.Mtmles of metal,
potteiy. u "‘ ,r eto,, ^ these were buried, ®»
mteht aime dire y ^*a*batUe wMi toeh
80 mles '
dier. seemed In all that fists httle, ami wiggling mouth, baby, it that
was tm
possible to foresee the future Emperor
of Mexico, whoso name has since become
familiar to the civilised world.
Young Master Montezuma warned
aloug pretty well, and up to six years of
age had done nothing remarkable. At
tins age he was granted one and one-half
rolls at a meal, and commenced doing,
little errands and picking np scattered
beanE and oorn in the Tianquez, which
is what toe Mexicans called the market
^SSf* The restless ,, ■ spirit of a military chief- M »
taiu now tegau to show itself in the
became necessary to curb hi* »»«hig
inclination to despotism. Ho wa* fast
ht-coming one of that class of boys who
liiuk 'ViU tao bad for hc goodaU ttiO
timo; and, no' doubt, life sometimes i
seemed hard often to him. show for him the at hieroglyphic this period
of picture* his life shedding large
as tears.
Whether Master Montezuma was sorry
that he had done wrong, or whether he
<mly fearol lieing pricked with the ter
n We thorns or the aloe with which onu
drea ot that biutmmn en were aome
times punished, or was crying because
he was oold, who shall tell? It is hard,
sometimes, to tell what eight-vear-old live,
buys are crying for, whether they
m the Duital States or in Mexico.
Master Montezuma may have been
better than moet boys, and it may be
tost his father was a better driver than
leader for his little ones. Some fathers
are. In any event, when Master Monte
zum% was ten ^ears olu there came
another opportunity for weeping aud
wmhng and Maste r M »t <«!!UM was
submitted to the mortification of lying i
on the damp ground all day while he.
liBtened to a parental lecture; and this,
too, after he was twelve years old t
Then Master Maatezuma reformed,
and became an lnitustrioiiH, faithful boy.
I have sometimes questioned whether
he wasnt hungry, and if he had been
better fed whether he-would not have
done better. At fourteen years of age
they gave hun two rolls at a meal, and
he was instructed in the art of fishing
m,® When n v his .« fifteenth ,, year oama, Master .. ,
Moatezuma found he would have plenty
to dri- After tins,. old Mr. Montezuma
had no trouble with him. It is curious
the more we have to do, the less liabl e
and—let ns ““Jornuihiug all study on we mat suould half not, an
hou^ mane ol some it.—.W. day, yichoUu. and see what we can
Watchmakers Abroad and *t. NomCe
Watchmakers are a people who as a
class.-do not make much noise in the
world. Their occupation is essentially
avoided, sedentary—too and requires much so, if it oonld be
of ntreritiui; %Twlicfll An exceptional
ftiatmnt Htndvats
»re known'to be extra buoyant, so that
they the hare tiondon grown fo be halls, too much for
even mnsio and most
trades and professions are often brought
to pabHo notice participants in some
more or less social festivity. Watch¬
makers in this country have very little
esprit de oorpn. If they are German-—
as most of them are—they are Germans
first of all; perhA{»s they "-are Soabians,
or Odd Fellows, but they are only
watchmakers in bnsinesa, and incident¬
ally, and they seldom come together
^regarionsly. The isolated native watch¬
maker most generally has his work done
f«>r him vicariously, and has little of the
knowledge or traditions of the craft he
ostensibly brotherhood belongs watchmakers to. The whole
of in Europe,
especially another footing. on the continent, live on
watchmaker in Geneva, Every second and ad nit is
a the pro¬
portion of. time men in Besaucon, Hfen
chatel, and some other places is so great
that the attraction of craft and the
jealousy of trade lose their power. In
every town in Germany the jewelers
have a union for the transaction of trade,
self-protection and social enjoyment.—
Jeweler, Silversmith aad B atchmaker.
The €eal Bedf of China.
Baron Von Richthofen, in a ct^mmuni
ention to im Austrian journal, calculates
the coal-product of the Chinese empire
at three million tons annnailr. All the
eighteen contain provinces coal, of and the although empire, the he
siyB, extent of the coal fields and the and
age
quality of the coal vary, yet China may
be regarded as one of the first coal coun¬
tries of the world. The area of ite Coal¬
fields exceeds the extent of those of
North America, and with that of Shansi
no other coal region can he compared eon4i- in
the nnion of the most fortunaifo
tiens as swgapla position, quality and
quantity. 300,000^000 With a yearly- output bed of of
ton a * his extensi ve
anthracite alone coul d oovHr *h c whole
present demand of the wsw® for 4,400
yews.
WILLIAM crun BE I AST.
•wr rete* ura **«*• Btateererere Fmm.
William Cullen Hampshire Bryant wa* bora M at
Cammington, From county, hia infancy a w .,
Xorember 3,1794.
he enticed a precocity before that he ripened attained with hia
hi* ream, and
tenth year he communicated lines to the
(i&mty Gazette. which were marked with
the unmistakable rtamp of gta* Nat
orally hi*!»fentt took the greater eare
that a mind, wfoch ao fiE? earty gate ere
$T 2 £&m ^
rlteamveiy, deroted much time to the
culture at his son’s mind. In hi*
teenth year Brvant wrote two poms,
each of considerable length, called
Embargo,” Revolution." a political satvre, These and “The
Spanish attempts length, although were hia
first at any
he had at different time* previous to
this year Composed disconnected hi* friends stan
On this sceonnt
pubhestu®, and the young poet .relay
tantly cOTsented. In &e following
year (180®) * sroond edition was pch
“l 1 “ P^ r V rii 1 ;
skepticism of the public. When only
iehteen years of age Bryant wrote
____psis,” one nineteenth of the literary mon
nments of the centnry—a
which was bailed with delight author by
i t fae ^ DTI blie and which placed its
»k of bring poet*. He
ha ,j „, t ered Williams distingaished College in for 1810,
w > 1( , r( , he became his
. attainmen ts in language bia^ and in polite
; Uterature, ana for Ay, retiring
: jti(m g e 18Hobtained spent only tsto year* honor- in
college, and in an
SSHBSfeStTreSSB* to tte s^te S
pure. Ha inclined
Saxon he used. But taides
him to literature rather thanthelaw
i a iy iin , ...Si
pa t,lishe.l in the North Amticar. Bt
,riew > * r - Hryafit w®* brought in eon
tact with Mr, Richard H. Uaua, who
was „ ue of the club which then con
(j,e ftofetc, and who invited the
y (J , lnff p,^ p, contribute. Bryant periodi- sent
iD aeV( , ra i pr, ia( . arliclSs to that
m1 In 1821 he delivered before the
pjjj Iteta Kappa Society, at Harvard
college, a didactic pueiu on “The
Ages." In that year several of his
poems were collected and published in
a volume at Cambridge. This pnbliea
t , OI1 ,.,t»blidi«l lus Bryant repntation has firmly, always
Bn g ftiu 'ce that time
been regarded as a man of right his belong
ing to the people. Since then
lie actions have been watched keenly,
and * nd e every ™V lme line of of P^try poetry falling falling froui from
b 18 p(ltl pen j,aa baa been been seized seized and and read read with with
avidity... avi<i : ty.-- About Abont tbi* this time time Bryant Bry ant m mar- ar
ried, ried, and and four four years years later, later, in in 1825, 1825, lie he
remov< ^ *? New Jtev York, Toxh, where where he he
snmed his hterary labors aseditor of the
New York Review, which which soon ■con after afte*
sggocisted with Gulian C. Verplanck
an(1 ^, 1 ,^. 0 Hands, from 1827 to 1830,
Highly the odjtorship suacesuful of annual. the Tatieman, This a
wa*
about the busiest time of his life, iuas
muo i, as he was identified with all
],{■ movements, and his word oarried as
mnc h weight received with It fatal then m fall. the Healso day
fo re be his
eontributed at this time the tales of
‘-Med field ” and “The Skeleton’s Cave”
fo» book called “Tales of the Glauber
Hpa '> A complete collection of his
poems JJgj. was WasKtigton published Irving in New York in Lon- in
was
(loQ at tliP t&ae BO ,l rereived a copy..
fop jfogHsh people, .
The first trip he made -was in 1834,
^p when be traveled throagb l ii France, Italy
thoroughly ^^^j.-.......bc,„ with languages a n n g and the
the
countries, and the languages then
leara& } h e has ever continued to eulti
T8te pw i u i 0 uHly. Dptm his return wlitorial to
t h; s country h« resumed his
l8lK ,„ till ffb en he again want
abroad. His visit was brief, however,
„ n ,l j, when he reached America be picked
np fa professional duties for a time,
bnt ro ]j n , lrt i B i 1K f fo em to 3 t«rt on a vov
nf discovery through the United
Htates, from Maine to Florida, and also
to Cub a_ p he resn j t 0 f fo B s 0 incur-i
sioM w&9 miu ] e manifest in a book enti- j
tied “ Letters of a Traveler,” which ap. i
pea red after his return from his third j
yjeit to the old countries—when ho ex
tended hiH j onrney g i nto contained Egv D t and
g-ia-and which also the :
letters written to hie journal during his 1
fto j J OTmi abroad.
Mr _ Brymit wax frequeutty called ;
upon to pay tribute to His the geuius ol de-1
parted Americans. first when service he of:
this kind occurred in 1848, pro
nonneed a funeral oration on Thomas ;
Ootey too artist; and -when James Vcni
more Cooper died, in 1852, Sir. Bryant
Slivered a discourse on his life and
wr jting». But the most painfnl, though ;
perhaps the most ploasant, of all his I
duties transpired in 1860, when
h e W as called upon to pay a last tribute
on a n that remained of his dear friend
Washington Irving. the life Mr. and Bryant made
an address on achievements
of g j. B Morse, on the dedication of I
fo e statue to the great inventor in Gen
tfal Park, and he also delivered address
c: on i Shakspeare and I Soott on similar he
lwca8 ona ; n 187 $. n May, 1877,
^ppazred again of Fits in the Green same Halleck role whim
the was
presented and death to the Park commissioners;,
hia wa* cansed by a fall re
eeivfed while returning from the Park,
where he had delivered, an addTras at i
iteMToaS “ 8 10 MWZlm ' ‘ he ;
S „ .«!. i.
tice of bo g ’ eat a p >t aa the followi
noble lmeaexfeaBfcci irbsn Mb h u “
the *• Thanab psis. ”
art^ttaMolS?brood , „ ,
When thor eaSi on'®, of /-wi
Plodon, .ml as before Mare
TtiBir Hiifa mirth ytophytom; sad their yet employments aa these Shall and shall
And And m*bs make teter their tea bed wftb ruth thA* thee. ‘
By unfaltering Bat, sustained and soothed
an trait Approtoh thy grave
About Like one him, who and'Ties wrap* the down drapery t of his eoucl
A Musical Tramp.
0 manf’wh“-asked i
by a seed^-!ookiug for
•bank ht‘,, the' cup P of water hamlel V-- him
1 U.iki- u int.> Anologizinu^rThe the * - saw in :
onMedriami lie*asked lifo ’
SSHSSaSSSs ertv fe'sssrsrasrB permi-e-io-i toplav on the ■
opened wW with the overture of “ Taneretli ^ ” 1
he followed with half a
gems from grand eh&Dged operas. Without even
a pans© he off into sparkling
ah s from the “Grand Duchess," “ Gir
ofle-Girofla,;’ finally winding and itp other with the comic allegretto operas,
of
Beethoven’s symphony fo A. He
played for nearly an hour, yet, during
that time, Jhe lady of the house, onoea
mnsic teacher in this city, sat amazed
An«l, as t<he says, “ entranced. ” She en
dcavored to le«i him into conversation
••ver lus past history and asked him why
winch he did not practioe i professkm for
ho was so emmentiy fit, but he
ivfused to spaak, and in reply to inqni
rieSmerely said that he was poor and in
starch of work. After partaking of s
good meal, in payment for which he
split a few logs of wood in the yard, he
•KiiSmned On his way down the canon.
— Virginia City Chroniel*.
Werdi ct WlidMb
He ie rwh enough who dure not went.
The eieeere# at onr remth are draft*
upon oor old age, payable after date. with mtereet,
aboat thirty yeara
Insult not miaery, neither deride ia
ftmitv, our ridieaie deformity; the first
is mhmnan. the aeoond afaowa folly, and
me third pn le.
Xbe m^bem^Sat true p.easure* of f?”V^brietr, temperance, and
tLe ^
. imsgined jy,l by thoee who live
fosgjjafod i
j* “SP ^ -«* « Mt^of
bloom
b®" 8 lt ®°fl t * lea -
Bad habits are the thistles of the
1 heart, seed and which every indolgenoe will fearth of them is a
from come a nev
j crop of rank weeds,
No s p e ci e s trf feisehorsi rar more ire
quest than flattery; to which the coward
is betrayed by tear, the dependent by
interest, and the friend by tenderness.
i n eTery house, however humble,
Ao „ m shonl( , be cultivated, for their
anm ,y light, their cfaeejfci! teaching and
for their insensibly ennobling influence,
Thegrerfwt cfconverretion «»»
° apeahtng of feiy ftM ww
kn ow.jBConre n^wft h o thCToa iy on
j which may interest them.
Adhere rigidly and nndevmhngly to
truth; but white you express what m
! true, express it in a pleasing- manner,
! Troth is the pieture, the manner is the
frame that displays it to advantage.
I No great man or woman hss ever been
reared to great usefulness and lasting
distinctioti wbo was unschooled by ad
ver-ity. Noble dee-is areitofw done ia
the aalhi sunshine of tummer’a light
** mdulgmg onr hMm on them; m
thmg like a a mefmici^ly faoeon the wall fancy or sees wainscot, some
b J two ar three touches With a lead
^ 2ni?Sit * whathe he'toctef fancied. 61 *’ *®’ r60 ‘
Menknow how^ thunder and lightning
come from tbeelondsin summer, and
they want So thunder ind lighten some
tiroes themsedves; but it is better tbst
the contents of the clouds shoulddrop
down in gentle rains, and make some
thing grow, than that there should be
flashing and resounding in the hreven,
and that the oak should be crushed to
pieces whieh has been growing for a
hundred years; and it is better, not that
men should produce a great racket in
the would, and vrerk destruction round
about them, but that they should create
happmese among their fellow men.
The voices of the present say “Come!”
Bntthevoicesof Bnt the voices of the the past psst say ssy “Wait!' “Wait!’
With With calm calm and and solemn solemn footsteps footsteps the the ris- ria
ing ing tide tide bears bears against against top the rushing rushing tor- tor
rent rehf tip up strMm, stream, and and pushes pushes back back the the
hurrying footstep, wate^ With no les* calm and
solemn j no no less less certainty, certainty, does does
a , great »ui mind w, bear np ™ against public —wi;»
---
Women Who Pilfer.
“ , It T is . a bard thing to say,” said the
superintendent of one of the largest
f***® porter, ““ America but -stealing to a New Yoto-re
“ seems to eome
natural to a great many women. We
have have known Borne lady for customer.-, whom we
years, with whom we
would not hesitate to leave a tray of nn
eouutol diamonds. Bat we have some
others who Would whisk offs oalioo
•Irosmif they found a good chance, al
though they think would never wear it. We
somebmea that eome people like
-abrewdneto, There and gloat over it in private.
tatefo are b qa*tJto,Lhariemalti some people who do not hesi
ac qtia i c t an
tnred such yesterday and snoh morning thing—people they *cap
a
rbo are not professional thieves, They
are not, of coarse, people who move in
respectable floors against society. »11 But who we do cannot shut
o“ r not move in
respectable society. demand Everyb«ly right wbo
ha* money to pay may the
to buy. Onr honest customers really
are iu very little danger of being falsely
arrested. There may bo women so ab
sent minded as to wifik out with articles
they have not bought—indeed, I think
there are, but they who are not one in 100,
000, and those know themselves to
be subject mild to this disease, (for I think it
is a form of disease.) should guard
themselves carefully. There may lie
such difficult a thing detect as kleptomania, it I hardly bnt it ink is
to t
there iflsnch ft disease, but, undoubted
ly» there is a mania among some peopto
to srcal. A man might go along the
Btreet and see some little smoker’s arti
ele and nothing covet it, although a second hc
fore was further from his
thought*. But he would not be likely
to teke- tt, even if the -enwrtraiVy
offered, unless he wa* a thief. A woman
sees something she would like to wear
iu her hat or around her neck, and her
first idea is to possess herself of it Most
women will pass it by, Baying to them
selves that they cannot afford it. But
others, and they are unfortunate, will
have it m their pooket before, as I be
lieve, they half know what they are do
rag. I have no doubt whatever .that
thousands of articles have been stolen
from this and other Btores,withoutde
teotien, by women who wr" r ”; ’
eat, hut who took what did not belong
f<> them without a moment’s hesitation
and bitterly bitterly regretted they it afterward, did dare ail
the more that not
return thearticles for fear of exposure,
ThP Sew process ef Flour Making.
Almost everybody knows of the flour,
TKcTbest fiTiiir used to he made of winter
wheat. Spring wheat yielded else either much
much less.in quantity ,or so
Of the kran got into the flour in its man
uftetcF .that itc would crior^wsB ground intoto rahlv and
dark. The wheat be
tt.on bolted. In the rofuse-tUe bran
««! middlings--would be included a
large proportom wheat, and of this the would wmght sell of the
spring more
particularly for feed for horses. Now
the best of flour, and the most expen
^STupJn hOTfo^S'siWs!
?P carries off the bran•
^hat'« left w the glutinous portion of
0l ° wh ^*‘ ‘he nutritious and ntost 1
prodflcHve, , and oof of this, purified now
-~issiJV^srsr«£§ss arsats. - “r -
w ^ ie 4 t Minnesota and upper Wifwon
rlarnl/ *
t ie me “ 10 ^* "ortford ( jurant.
-- --—
■■
George Mitchell went on a frolic in
Antioch, Cal,, on the evening before the
d*y appointed for his wedding, and in
the morning iSnrdere.1. lus convivial SuspicimiVSted companion
was found
on Mitchell, and he was placed on trial,
The girl to whom he waa to have been
married sat at bisside in the court room,
and her sympathy and grief were sd at
tractively his charge, exhibited that the'Jadge, in
warned the jurors not to per
mit themselves to be influenced by her. i
They acquitted Mitehelijh-owever, and!
it is impossdbie to determine by the
meagre reports whether the verdict was
caused by the evidence or by the girl,
The pair were married immediately in
the oourt room.
THELI TOPIC*.
There are orer 1,900 .
.in New Tort each week on ainMat
chargee.
Lemons mxteem iochee in
grow abundantly in the mild
borhood of Galveston, Texas.
The demand lor opium ia iscreaaisg all
sv«r the wtwld. .
By ^avthg *_ double rqe, entrance i*
obtained to the Paris Exposition a* esrly
as 6 A. m. The building is not opal to
the general public till 9.
The egg trade of New York amount*
to $10,009,000 » year, and in tbe
to $18,000,000. Besidra
this* probfeblj an equal going amount through is the
ramed without
late Ptrf Henry, of the Smithso
E i» n Institute, was in early life a watch
maker, and ever afterward he was able
to make the to^rimert. most dehcate metraments
with which TO. was an
^l^to -iunre. rely npon others for ms nm
__
Mr. and Mrs, Tyler ,—arated separated in in
be entirely freefrom Tyler interference became ^Mise- hy the
other. Mrs. ®
kresMr for a bachelor, and Tyler, in
stead °f sticking lK H
ld “f,? ^ e . wl > ^ 4 f .
’f days later Tyler was killed.
f
_ • Rn „-. . . *
JSJSSiSSS The letter, do not
w6et average one a
year for each inhabitant.
——*—
.
Ram the rewires of the British Board.
of Trade to the first (JUarter of 1878 it
appearethat the expMts ofbreadstnffs
fromthisoouatry to Great Britain were
$17,000,000 m excess of the amount in
the while corresponding exports of Mnod cotton of decreased teat year,
*7,B00.000in crease m wheat the was same * 1 MOO; tome.^The 000 ; aour> in
$3,006,000; and oorn, 84,000,000.
——
A correspondent in Concordia, Oloud
eounty, Kansas, snake gives den. and the particulars the killing of of
a visit to a
one thouaand nine hundred snakee in
one day. Ho great a curiosity is the
place considered that an excursion party
from Atchison, sixty miles distant,
earn* there tovisi tit. Thousandofs
snakes-were killed there last year and
the one before, but they are apparenUy
«® Hack as ever.
................
*
Huntsville, Samuel Lowery, Ala., has Colored made a great man, sue- of
oes 8 in raising Englishman silkworms and him mdiing
silk. An gave some
silkworm eggs, and the city of Hunts
ville granted him use of a large mul
berry tree in center of town, enabling
him to planted make a beginning. He now has
a field with He mulberry estimates trees, that asd he
100,000 worms. have for from
will Slum sale 4,000,000 to
5,000,000 eggs, worth $1 per hundred.
-
The underground world of Paris is
likely The directors to be fully of the explored sowers this haa summer, organ
ized an exceptional Four visits service during place the
Exnosition. will take
on Wednesday in each week. The
number of persons admitted is fixed at
eighty to each descent. Intending
visitors; of are their requested demand*, to specify the the
nature os cats
combs,, the .reservoirs of Montsoaris,
etc,, belong administration. to entirely different Bee
Hon* of the
The annual crop of eat stories has
been enlarged by &^ ssgseionvSsrtMit. the following full
gmvnupwiiwi observed that two of her kittens
eat saved
were invariably and_ the rest
of the litter thrown into the Muwissippi, mother, she
Again Beooming babies a happy onthonse
hid two of her in au
and carried the rest in a different du-ee
tiou. favt>shgation showed.that she dr
liberately took them to the nver and
threw them in, the evidently preferring to
seleet herSelf two kittens she wished
to rear.
The raising, culture, spinning and
wearing, of silk and its preparation and
introduction into market as a source of
profit to the colored peopled the South
are among the ambitious objects for
which Lowery’s Industrial Academy in
Huntsville, Ala., lute been founded,
Twenty-five acres of land, with build
ings costing originally and the over $100,000,
have been Reuben leased, owner, offered ex
Governor Chapman, has
lo give the entire property to thofc'uh
ders if they wiU secure mi^ endowment l
fund by permanently which the academy established, can be firm
ly ami
The difference Constantinople of longitude between Peters
London, and St
burg give s ri se in these daysottclcgrepfat
to singular embarrassments. There
are three hour* of time between the first
and seoond and third capitals. The 1st
ter can bend telegrams uutil latc in their
day eeivd and must sit Tip late at night to re
those sent in the afternoon from
London Were San Francisco the seat
ot negotiations the diplomatists would Ttics
be obliged to say, received for instance, vonrWedires^ on
day: “We have
dav telegrams," or “We have received
to-day your telegrams dated to-morrow.”
John Votrin was a brakeman aairt<Bt on the
Iron Mountain Bailread, his
left arm at the shonldet by being tun
over at a switchnear Chouteau avenue,
St, Louis. After opening the switch for
the train to pass, he started to run across
the track, but.his foot wss caught in a
frog or under the switch-rod. and he fell
and narrowly escaped with *20,000 lus life He
sued toe company for damages,
holding th that they Thg were responsible hliot bhe. for
e uoc i d acto - c ai H i Was -
but lasting few two minutes, days. and The returned jury were out
a aver
diet for^the togintiff oPfcro ter-$lO,OO0 dama
ges. A day previous, In a case
where * asekadiist boto gn arm-and a
leg from a similar accident, the jury
[ailed to agree.
—
Thn terrible sufferings of a Tenth
Cavalry company on the Staked Plain of
Texamthrough burgeon K^. thirst, are described by
They were four days
gre^teSk and Ttong^andtorir’rig'ht
flI tremely painful. They drank water
gr eeiliiv, imt it did not quench their
5itrBt—-which shows, the surgeon thinks,
tfoij foe sense of thirst resides not m
a tstxrssraissai
^ new mammoth cave has been dis
“ W & K atoSlS’ ne^
t } ozen he !? er8 fl a windlass near 1
the month of , the cavern on Table
mountain* and a man went down with
a lantern, round clinging -dozen to a rope and before spm- he
ning a times |
reached the bottom. There was a sheer
descent of paSage eighty-two feet to the bottom,
where a 100 feet tong led to
subterranean ohambere and vanlts . ol
enormous dimensions. The ceiling was
fully sixty feet from the floor, and was
studded with ooufltless stalactite* of all
sizes, from a few inches to fifteen feet
in length. The floor was covered with
oones and stalagmites, like inverted !
ieiclre. In many places the stela tit«!
were joined of together,' imge having the ap
pmirance number hour-glasses, and
a of pillars from floor
to ooiling, adding to Hie grandeur of
the aeehe. . . '
"4r
— g asws u nt* te toe
fit*™! sane* of oar ooanby nay be
ditioas tbl are *on * phm of
gnad pmportioos. Tkmr ooror <xmU
-• *
sertihi
distribution of forests in prtrne region*,
end even on onr gre*t Western plain*,
cannot f*a to enprt * oontoolling influ
ence of trffeortsnoe wSmatJ md of greater
or leks extent. the local di
mam will be affected by tibe woodlaoda,
which act Ti nnn in the fallo wi n g man
ner:
“First—by chewing the force of toe
rrents at air, woodland* will, in a
_____.. nw^rethusptwmtrted _
ratio^j^ torenm. a the the aofl wii lproye _ asvain
abbs.an eqnal am wmtm rant-fall.
Saaoad
pqwgm the soil by
oration/ haateen
s tei!«i by the long conrinaed eri>en
meJlts Q! - p^, Ebermeyer, of Bavaria.
“Tnird-The Wee* are of great value
. g* t j ieir (^faction agency in the aame direction
h of their leaves, which
| . maf « copions oondenaatton of
thestaiospherie bamidity than willoccnr
in closely admceot lands bare of snch
vegetation- This lact bae been abnn
pr0T e,l by the experimeuts <rf the
same careful oiwarver, whose reeulte
reyJwBreai theteev
a s.
“ *£*£ *» w “ Z>B
cultivated or .Jicable' waste the climate is ren
d , "2. j Trll f.JZ .ce TS!!,
„„ tif imr^utant mat
jgr most be sppsrent the most casual
observer, Tlist the moisture pre
Qa forest lands is in a great
retained and allowed to preco
•j rte . 2nd ao j e ti y into the-loose and mellow
even to reach the subsoil and
^ rocl!8 beneath. It* flow isob
)elLTeg> twigs, branches
and wher«,’the Wga, bv mosses, root* and rain herbage; when
same amount of
f^K u(r upon the eompaot turf of a grassy
nnorettebare surface of
1 land*, wetaall* when the trees
trodden orfroaem wiU at once
e ow 0 g bv every depression, carrying
jt tb e be»t element* of. the soil,
8aii , Jen ]- swelling the streams, and
eventuafly cutting the fields into destroy fright
ft,! gullies andchasms so as to
thett usefulness m ton lands.
“Sixth—**"** esn-etel'V•• “ ™~iri
ant to preserve forest growths upon de
divitous lands, hillsides and river banks,
particularly in those regions where our
streams take their source. Mountain
regions, emphatically those of an Alpine
character, should be largely, nay,
most exclusively, devoted to forests, and
these should be sacredly alone preserved, such tracts for of
i u thi* condition can
country most perfectly fulfill the des
tiny for which thev seem to have been
designed by aud Aii-wiae Creator.”
- ■ ■ —
About Diamonds.
The diamond, as we all know, is com
posed of pure carbon crystallised, and
is the hardest substance known. Like
most other jewels it is found torrents generally of
in granitio gneiss, and in
rivers or in alluvial deposits that are
worked for gold. Distributed more or
less over the whole world, it is this in tropi
cal countries, however, that most
prized of the “flowers of the mineral
kingdom ” (as gems have been calledfis would
principally found. Indeed, shines it with
seem that where the sun
most splendor, where the animal aud
vegetable creation pnt on their most
goreoous colors, there also, bailie depths
in*.a™ a«ui sasimu*. it«l*rs«»t
proportions, and sptfikles wtth ita great
eat brilliancy. loagknoa.-aia.Asia,
The dmmoadwaa
in Hindostan, Borneo, Bumatra, and in
the Ural Mountaini before it was dis
covered elsewhere; the distriot from
OapeComorin to the Bay of Bengal, in
eluding the famous world mines uutil of Goleonda, when
funiishmg the mines the Brazil discovered, 1728,
of were
Recently the Utter region has ceased to
htvpriifitabJerand many of the mihes
are abandoned, and few retain their full
number of laborers. In the United
States diamonds have been discovered
in North Carolina, in Georgia, quantities Virginia, and
California, blit In small Australia they
of little value. have
been met with in the valley of the
Turon, in the bed of Hie Macquarie
river, at Victoria, etc. of South Africa
On the eastern coast
two rivers, the Vaal and the Orange,
take their rise within a few miles of
each othET ia tte- DlSokenjslWl'gJnoim- flowing in opposite
tains, and, at first length gradually
divei'tinns, nt and unite at sweep
around to the west, fifty Wiles from some their
two hundred and
sources. The inclosed jpac e is th e re
-pubiitr-ufthu -Orange Freo Stato. In
1868 a trader and hunter on his way
from the interior, Dutch stopping for the living night
at the hnt of a farmer at
dfae jun c t ion at toe rivera, observed floor the
children playing on the earthen
with some pretty pebbles the that they The had
found long before in nver.
of one of these stoneshaving at
tracted his attention, he picked it up,
and-robserved to the Wherthst .“it
might bo a diamond.” With a smile of
in^tolity the latW j^ented toe peto
“ were plenty more around there." The
proveit. nideedrto be a diamond
of twenty-two and ahalf carats, and was
sold for «3,000, which amonut was di
vidtxl fairly by the trader with his host.
The farmer new remembered that he
had seen au immense stone in the hands
of » native; he therefore sought him
out, purchased the stone- giving him in
exchange that lie 500 sheep, sessed—and horses, sold and neatly it the
all pos for
aame^dajr'to ao diamond experieneedlmyer the famous
$56,000. This was
“ Star of South Africa,”
'
; - 7- « , '
. .
<&<, »fce l>8Ve’* NeMine.
Mosaue Tn Hie «Mfe®^tosaue 6T BtaShoul, toe
h^sSc^^MiTThe of coSt BaiazetH
matered
bieque, by oates«or,'.!cl ^^fidtogly v dewratediu ars
beautiful. In
the center is a marble fonntain under a
mmopy and sheltered bv a cluster of flue
trees An you enter the court you hear
^id* foltowt^h a huge tu“ten rite un'
the dovee for ck«»ty, the latter for fan
While the, fountain » knee-deep with
swarming birds and the teaes ctogged
with them and all the eaves of the olois
a , sac i jsar«^sr«
a tkunder-cioud the whole tribe swoops
2Z. stone* 1 'Tb^J&Te They ertww* '^Xr Id
heap themselves together and stand on
their heads m thmr eagerness to get a
morsel of gram.^ In a^momefo some
one enters the riflbt, and khe birds take
flight; stirmg the wind,m the clomter
and filling A turbaned toe «r greybeard with soft, floating by
down. new
sells roronmi £he fellow and rmfumes, the and who there
is also at gate cries
‘‘Sherbet, and claab-s his brazen cop*
till they ring like evmhris, dawPto aud there
are loungers from dark who
drop in to see the doves of Bajazet
plunge into theopart like as avalanche
of dusky, again impurpled winged snow, cloud and smoke. wheel
snt of it a of
At the mosque of bread on Fndays to dt%s, there is z dis- the
tribution and
fritows^ come portidi, from all parts of
toe city to get thrir
M aad Peaad.
lloKtMNailMV
at - t'.
wPtoA in
1 * 1 .
*S*rkiia*aad broad aa* fpe*» ’
nil It r«*cted Um>
I the ttaj Mad titsl I io*«d
Wttfc mwiT » sf h
kad rafc’j w»si«l t*n»«fe*a0<biae*»d«ei4
k»a« «tey*
And tte nsven om fcugt Us# »va* ariUrtew
Itote tte We ttet gtw fey my
IoYoaaatertt=“ *
And tte* it fe^t me te
&ar I fciow IUUCJ Sod It fartter oa.
r or im eadnv. .sd
gone,
■ ■teiiM.Uf.rxu tor.
note tte notes of tte fece^eaiy
Ttel
Bat I kaow la tte te’la of gtory it torlDa,
_
X.M la b, .s i susSt;
I M-.Mr it OOMipnM. W. its hamcniy SIB
Hj K«! «ltb ».«•! drllgM.
I Iasi the lore thst ms*, Ilfs, ’
my - .
Bve ISM ms ill tor aw;
Oh! naif 1 woghi it wklB» «rtf.
Of me moan, aria* w» ;
B«yosd my wistful tjea;
; I atell tod it again witht* tteg»to«
Of garden o£ paradise.
taaflVowtiA lilt! UvtililwneMr,
Wit* It. MooSwfttl mjmutr,
i Somt iUy it w!H
Bat will tutoh aterilr.
But! Kao. I Will ftsd tt o*aia
Ib » te#«ty b« eeag hath toW;
It will so*et me at tte golden *»r,
Aa* Lfoand me f roU.
COME TOGETHER AT USI.
Mia* Carney walked up the long
green lane ou her way * home from a tea
oartv.
She wore a brown ilk dress and a
brown bonnet, and carried alarge brown
parasol in her hand.
The browns were of different shades,
and ran softly info“achrofeer, like.tfee
tints upon a dove
All the lines of her figure were smooth
and rounded.
She was a very pretty old lady in
deed, and must have been a very pretty
girl, though she waa a spinster, and
neoDle who believed that all unmarried
women were left upon Hie boughs of
aingle blessednes* them, because must they have tempted owned
uobods to pluck
that it could not be so in her case.
Down the lane, oomiug towards her,
walked a gentleman.
He was tall and broad, hia hair was
grey, and his hat was greviaad hia
—- , r= ii -at , , L= rr=
! grey ^e, also;
I oddly enough was shaded off into
another sort of dove.
j j both, The the green trees were beneath all abont their them feet,
green nodded gross the fence.
The roses over
If three had been people, two young people might
instead of two old one
liavefaucie.! it a lover’s rendezvous, but
they*rcre old,
Of oonree there could be no romance
about them.
In the middle of the stood Isue, shaded by
great chestnut trees, an old house,
Honeysuckle draped the porch,
There was an old fashioned sweep in
the well.
It was altogether a thing of the past
—no modern cottage of architectural
mysteries, lt was so old fashioned that
it must have bees the same when those
two people were young. born doubtless Yes, when it
their parents were
stood, by no mean* a new house, jurt aa
itstoodnow.
the The-pretty of this old house lady first in brown reached
She gate latch and stood looking
lifted the
down the road, thinking that; a must be
that KeUTtSfBTway the liandaome old_ and wouM gentleman inqaire in
of her, to the lane wa* no thorough
fare because of a fence and a gab and a
sign, wii.b“All to
-trespass upon these grounds,” nailed
upon it
sign The old day lady’s father the poddler had pnt had up stolen the
the after
all his pears.
did. No neighbor minded it, but strangers
So the old laly waited c-imrtennsly to
YelTthe steanger that he might take the
short cut through the orchard if ho
chose.
“He walks like somebody I know.
Who can it be ?” she asked herself
Then she suddenly blushed, and
looked prettier than ever. Yes, certain
ly, it could not be because no one had
desiredto faded pluck her that she branch—-Miss remained
a rose upon the
Carney, On not Mrs, the old anybody. gentleman in his
came
gray coat, and as he looked at the little
he doffed his gray hat,
Mr. “Madam,” Edward he said, “this is where -I
know. Does Carney he live here used to live,
now
But the old lady looked at him with
a sudden start.
“Ohl she cried, and added, “No,
he does not
“He is -— began the old gentle
man.
“It fs his'tombstone that you can see
under the great willow in the highest
part of Hie churchyard, she said,
pointing through the trees. “He was
eighty when lie died.”
“Time flies fast, said the old ge ntle
IMto _ - ,
“Fearfnlly fast, sighed the old W*f2?'‘ lady.
“Mr. Carney was a widower when_ I
knew him, and had but one child—a
daughter,” said the old gentleman in
gtoY “She is living, is she not?”
‘Yes, said the old lady.
But she cannot be Miss Carney
still, said the gentleman.
“But she is, Bail the old lady, and i
looked him m the face again.
Their eyes met.- Hers were brown
“ "People jri* were riter grey t out ...... of ........... knowledge,
in
forty J***®, said she; “and how on
earth I came to know you I don’t know
tor iron took Uke yonr own grandfather,
MarkTuroex.
then, h Mias Camay, amd tl be, h n8<Hl for he
"?« Utew ‘^ on the more same wea road 7 a T, life-rime ® ago, to
^.° 8 / f memb<r ’
p 3-Ste
mrien-iior to
IU k
™ght book-cMe filled the recess. .
aokhton like a'slice of a fluted column-' tuui 1
fhp ,, j !wi m match “ ch
There had been no ciiitdMD to lwridt ■
.. ^*btae . . f • A c j a t»out her shoulders' ft?Up«
•
girl’s waist. looked at her. and she I
t^ ow l g was :
„ r, M<1 Bton * but Bomehow she
B to be nobody else, bnt Priscy
Carney. ghe
saW him looking from toe from-!
foolfot. fo re to her lace, and interpreted hia i 1
* said almost *Tth« anerilv “is it' !
«> 8-- ar hits ,
““S**** , the"oak i . trees' ttuwused
< nlv
floor SOU Thevery Lt grass and ori!
hovers mi HI; t lie w.
I, old, faded teidtojtc'y, *’““5“®™' ,
1
t»“i bnght-eyed jatner tt^a in nie
grave, and ail 1 care lor go r wi
I were gone also, dtfuna people w
have not seen each ntner lorrorw wws
need not seek each other again. Iwish
they wewld not onrae to me alter t*,ar
all the eetoe ee dead tat forty rear*,
precisely like seeing gboste, the wanted to
She looked re though
"1 Poor old ghoet,” arid he, “whom no
thoae wbo
promised to remember him forever,"
“Fortv years i* much worse than for
said she, “and fifty-six is a ter¬
ribly nsromatic age." “bat is good
“Yes, it i*,” said he ; it ft
age enough for ghosts. By the way , do
you like gboet stone*? Let me tell yon
Ottos there wasn't « a always ghoat—now ghost;
think of it, he a
he was a boy once—toe son of a millet
down by toe water aide. He worked in
the mill and was floury and white as a
ghost should be moat of toe time; bnt
he was happy and gay. and One monytoingm of them
happened as be liked.
waa when a certain rich farmer in toe
neighborhood came to tbe mill. The
grain hi* but servaato be, brought tbe termer, in toe need great to
wagon*, tbe i^to hia Htti* daugh¬
drive to mill
ter in the gig ' ev* -m. She was a
pretty child, with U r earla, and her
eyee were tug ■a’l*- i
• prettv picture m her
whits d r es s e s and bright ribbon*, and
she came when she ■ SO young that
she need to hold her hand* oat to tins
boy and cry. • Com# here, ’ittie boy.
Show me where the flour siffa from.’
“For that was what die liked to see
beat, the flour rifting through toe fine
muslin. Every week she used to come
until the miller sent his boy away to
school. When he came home again
she wa* a girl of remembered sixteen, prettier asking than him
ever, and she
to let her see the Soar rift, and she
talked to him while her father was at¬
tending to hia business; and the days
when toe did not oome the boy cared
nothing for, and the days that brought
her were marked and picked out aa
bkMted dAjs. awhile got the shyness
“ After be over
that kept him from going displeased. tores her, and
went, and she was not She
waa toe mistress of the horse, for her
mother died young. She used to make
tea for him on Sunday would afternoon, hia hand¬ and
after tea ner father put
kerchief over his head and fall into a
n ap. Then they used to whisper to
geth«. Ijong after the poor boy came
to be a when ghost be be remembered bright-cheeked those even
jogs, fellow, the wss s of rich miller,
vpung eon a
sad had -the hope of marrying the girl
he loved before his eye*. ----------
“He thought behoved the girt loved him a*
well as her, and he Tfad no
fears of the future, no thought that
trouble oould come to him in any way
nntil misfortune overtook hia father.
The good old rnta failed. The mill was
gold. There laai was nothing but anxiety father at
home. At worse came—li»
died soon after hia mother. He was
very sad; he was poor, also; but he
had hope, for he was beloved by the
onehetoved. nomforf
“ One dav he maetto her to
“cremembered dlj-faahidnedhouse, the dzy ever after. The
low builC thegrrat
oaks, flower and garden, ribbons the girl who in her
white dress blue came
to greet him. He wss full of life still,
but that night, when he turned away
from the house, )ie of his was old a self, ghost—the for he
miserable had ghost faith in love,
do longer Standing beforeTurn, any pale and sad,
•*
and with tears in her eyce, it is trne, he
had heard her who had made the world
bright to him, say : ‘It is my father’s
will that we slicrnld part. I cannot die
obey my old parent.’
“‘Then she had told him that she
loved him aa well as ever; but he did
not believe her.
“ He thought this poverty had turn
ed her heart from bun, that she and had he
.never felt tenderly towards him,
loft her iu anger, believing all that had
been said and written about the false
hood of women. Yes, he was turned
into a ghost.”
“He might have known she was as
unhappy fromjmhind as he wae,” said Mire Carney,
her handkerchief; father “but
w j 18t ^ ft gi r ] do when her
threatens to curse her, aadMhe the make only
okild Ae b«?--OniT urUimig ciTnM
her ntfcrry any one else—nothing. That
she oohld do at least.”
“Bntthe poor ghost did
RSiJ n 10 , olTman. It
away broken-hearted. O found its way
to the sea firat, and thin into the battle,
p or yeare j t was a wretched ghost,
oreetlv to be pitied, and only wishing
to die; but at last it grew content,
though never happy, and worked in a
great city at a trade it had until it had
made a fortune.
•< ajj a,e same, it was a miserable old
bachelor ghost, and never found a mate;
and used to bst, often and often, over
nn ,j orer again to itself, that women
wereall false, and that the woman he
loved hail been married utterly false to him. else, He
supposed ]i p,is her he to some older one and
a time grew
older, aud long years lay between he him
an ,] the happy time when wss a
boy.” long years,” sic-hed MisR Car¬
“ Long,
ney, “ Long, long year proceedeil ’ the old
“‘Bat one to
gentleman, “one day there came
him out of the past an old familiar face,
and amidst the whirl of the great city
this ghost talked to it of the green lanes
undrippling he born, streams and asked of the of Bpot the where house
waa
under the oaks, and the girl who dwelt
there he thought, once—the false girl to him. who And had been, this old as
friend told him something that made
him feel suddenly that ho might come
to life again. . \ '
“‘She cover ‘She Itfiirried,’she lives in said—it the old
was a woman.
hous e now. Olher men loved her, hnt
sue never loved any other man butyon.
We all know that.'
^
down to the green and country her place to she haunt
his old love, hear say was
sorry to see him.
“Oh, dear! oh, dear!” aighed the
little old lady All in brown, beauty “ How oonld all
she help it? what her could gone, feci but
her youth; and just ghost herself she ?”
sorry, a
She arose and tamed away, Hearose
an ,i followed her, putting his arm about
waist....................—~—--------—-—
“ Priscy," he said, “ you are the only
woman I ever loved. Is not that some
thing for aman to say, when it is ee true
»» gospel Ssa," ?” said she;” and I *liaoetl»
“
you-for I never eared for anyone
else cither.”
“Thenwhynotdoourbestot behap
pT cow , Priscy? why not marry each
other, and be Imugagam, not two poor
° 1< ?.5, h ,'T, t *u ¥»
“ Well, becaue Iks would call ns
. ^ Sj. d ,^ b l’» " ai<, ,f h6 ’,
1 u
whm’the ^villrito toihT*™e°'montoUfor,
G*«(se-Para<MM, *.ptomiiMnt aglieal
pear turkey Bloomington, gobbler Iowa, which has on
farm a not
"“•J • ,k ** tB W8tor ,ik ® * dads * bnt wiU
- —•
for all S>««8e« incident to the period of teeth
io children. It relieves the child from pain,
2»J» wiod.ooUe, the Iwete, u4, by
SSSef'HiaInmd°a^'ie!i-KSd?emSdv '....... ______‘
. : , .
_
Brows Bre«afa«t
„
ke and heated yoli ofiheegg. irons, and in and best qnitjk thoroSjSji
in a oven,
It would seem that iho commouert kind of
u 'sense simpfyteisawi on-hi t. orevm,> a man g“ s^ig from
trate, he raa
for 25 »ot«. 8h«ia«n’s O jvslry Condi
Powders are strictly pare. *nd are worth a
ol eachsteff. : r —'
Frank IasrUo, E*q.. of the "ShRhtod
**vu: “For eome time past I have
uriiog Barnett' s. Ooeoaine, X have and think used for it
pref erable to anything ever
SAMUEL LUMPKIN,
Counselor at Law*
inmNi, &*.
nmnwty e tb. tfosari*, *t *»«
WJkm. Q | W > m »
i b? «p -n i temtna.
WHITSON C. JOHNSON,
ATTORNEY and COUNSELOR AT UW,
LnnsTos, OA.
WO lUdteoa. Is tte LtoaatiaE
WUtaM «bA
latte
PHIL COOK, Jr.,
ATTORNEY A.T LA.W,
LMtiJiaTON, QSOB81A.
•t-au -
promptly «*t «a 4 # d lo.
DR.W. S. MOORE.
I* tte Tow* of
SS t h-GjBM, from fate tnn,
to hia piof ate to mortt •
GflRBAL TICKET AGENCY.
Railroad Tickets
For Stee by ail temtowto te PWate to tte
rtmsviroiu rakfUBi A»fM«a4*«taauiona
CAFT. WM. WILLIAMS,
Ifni Sooltez* Express Go.. Athens. Oa.
Buggy & Wagon
C3TOR’
vyy?V\V ^Lixy Kflyy eoTfitrr ftdteA ttet I tev# Blw-tesato recently
to »S
gfeo? a BrM class Wood Shop, pressed byte*
ot the te*i Wocknftu in Ooorgi*. I teve abto Moor¬
ed toe Berne#® of a fi rainless Trioja*#r sad Flaiteier.
Mr. J#n»e* T. Lloyd, tte teet pteoter »otrth of BtiU
ia my employ. I wt'J mate to order
may Aiad of V te lte # desired Prtett icnr as tte
««* Ctew Of ooto earn be had oaywfecx* in tte
On tod Btotoi. BiartoatUb aaA tepuc Work. *
•ptetoity. Be nn «ud me • trtoL AU
w. O. TUCKER, CrewftoA.
Dental Notice.
yoosig JSSSKra®? mazt of raze x ba ical talent. Ob# <d
nsc a me
wiU remain at tte office all tte time. We wUl keep
a o»ce, good . and anyone wbo ia unable to nait our
«to^wwsftaaaasss at Crawford, we will emit ttem at tbter bomea. We
propoee to do good work at rjtaeonab'c j>- 1 oea. 1 am
tbankfol for pate pte onsge. »- d truat that tte new
ftrmwUl be regarded wtth tayot by all wba deter#
faithful and akiHfal work. Teeth extracted without
pain if deeded.
K. B. THOMAS.
Okawfokli, March nth, I81A
NOTICE.
rjIHE^aadertegcedgiTeanoUcetbat th^SkCTICiof DENTI^TKy! WPHjA
in
kinds of work, Sie 1 ?!^ teepn op hia JEWELRY
ESTABLIHHMENT aa beretofore, and will do ail
manner of work in both profwwona, at moet reaaon
able rate*; refunded. and guarantee# perfect aatiafaction Or
money WiU alao forniab any artk-J# in
nnrehaamd tte Jewelry lin# at aa low rat# aa tbe mine can te
flgewbar#. ■
aty Dental patron* will be attended at their b
desired, when notification by mall or o
wt#a la gteaa me.
B. CHEDEL.
I. E HILL t €0.,
Manufacturer* and Dealer* in
DOORS, SASHES,
Blinds, Scroll Sawing,
AMD
WOOD TURNING.
tured IlutttLng M* era! low, of erery description manufac¬
at price* t* If not lover, than any other
market. We make a aperialty of
PAINTS, OILS,
Bulldo:
SUSS, COi.OUS, me.
Before roe bo, seal for <mr PBICX LIST, or
«lln»t. for «oj M.trrl.l jou m.r M, wstoh
wul-cwtstntypieHs you.
l. II, HALLlA CO,
, Clsmrtmmtmn, m, r.
_
LAKCC a m naa SALE wa m B mb
”
-
--OF
IN ONE WEEK !
84 PAIR GENTS’ HAND-SEWED LOW-<JUAB
TEU SHOES.
7H PAIR LADIES’ HAND-MADE PUMP SPAN¬
ISH TIES.
UO PAIR LADIES’ HAND-TURN PUMP NEW¬
PORT TIES.
1SIO PAIR LADIES’ FINE KID HOUSE SLIP¬
PERS, AT >1 PER PAIR.
On Monday Morning
Wm open about »Op Psin Mch’m
ptMT URL qumm oUMfflta obam daubs,
rnoM thf. aver norsf * m
Philadelphia, Xetcark,
ftaltimmre and New* 5 ark,
Enough to aupply th* great demand for about ten
day*. If convenient, bring the C-A-WII and
get BARGAINS!.
Peter Keenan,
Near Central Hote l. Augusta, Ga.
B, 9. WILUNOJtaM. w. z. -raccT.
Prs. WILLINGHAM & FAUST,
liariog Medicine, formed a their co-partner$hip for serricee the practice of j
off«r professional to tbe
citizen* of Kington and onrrounding coat.tty
wnnr not pvofeen'oiisuj engaged will i*> found »t j
1 '*- , toandHiaaiai*i.aigLt.
Read This I No Humbug!
OATES BROS.,
244 Broad Street, AUGUSTA,
WILL SELL FIRST-CLASS
PIANOS and. ORGANS
not lik# to r#coounca4 tfeem, even to »n enemy, j
Pianos Tuned and Repaired
By Mr. T. HARRY OATES, who s« reg*rded M
being petieci iu the *rt by the first profewoc* in
the city. All order* from city and country punctn
*lly »tteodwl to. *t LOWEST PRICES, and ftATIft
FACTION GUARANTEED.
OATES BROTHERS,
244 Broad Street, Augusta, Ga.
A. K. CHILDS. B. NICKERSON
Y. H. WYNN.
CHILDS, NICKERSON & C0„
No. 15 Franklin House BuiWing, .: „
ATHENS. CA..
WHOI.BKaL'C ASD HF.T * XL DEALERS Jjf
Hardware, .fi __ • Iron, .Steel fl* f
w w
Nails, Horseshoe Naiis,
HORSE AND MULE SHOES,
AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS,
Leads, Oils, Olass, Varnish,
Karaeat Leather. Milbarn Wagons,
Cotton. Maniil* #a<i Jut* Bop«, C*rri*g« »xsd.S»dd
iery Hardware, Feilonw, SpriTig*. Hob*, fipolfff*, Bug«y
Ax!r«, ft<*. Rubber and
L%»thFr H#itlQR. Miii Sawn. Mill Pmd
ing*, Anriig, Hoiiow Beiiown, Vis«i,
Wsxe, etc,
M»nnf*ctar#r*' Agents for th« **i« of
Fairbanks Standard Seales,
Cider mU'.Hvrmp MUU, ■
* n atr.ror,to,.,W.UKo.,.Fa™«.rriraSKoV.
/,.. Cire«I*r S#w*, Pomp#,
Wiaebip ajsd Sawryer’# Celebrated
0 ' Cotton Giai*
Any krtSfln tn onr Utie not in stock
*4 when dewired. wills the po.*«
txnsiUta oar stock *a& ynem. ,
The CeteN j l
M
W ood Teg Phi*
Tsasroo.
T*»
! »:
ite
OU Sew
ft tea I t* wilfcc-at *
* m tetr artsl. Ftwt. 4 0—*- te. P«.
Tomtmm mmir hobse Lcnwwrr, te rsat
Bofltte. te Om Dtelar, ia mawted iwparttete tm
$iionT,tete*«»alO«tetOte.teite»
OM< ats. feUtetel l€l rte*
* Vote
Qtnre iBtaswJagietegK
sspa^sssRzsir&sttr.
$150 aS&sSmvaa. ts
ELECTRIC BELTS.
timwmm
*i2sJSS;^|n.»4§?i s».f ^gg.SaC# !
$ 10 ? $25 wm£LnreS 3 Novelties
Gaietomea A Outfit Froe SLuSSiU ”
J Retofetehod »IS 7«SL rb fifty , 6S£tt&aiir fc
b— man
TftAPB MARK. OR. RECKER’R
CELEBRATED
EYE BALSAM
IS A SUES CURE
Far INFLAMED. WEAK EYES,
-ffiV STV ES »*d SORE tYEUDL
SOLO BY ALL ORUGOISTg.
DEPOT. A BOWERY, B. «•
SENT BY MAIL FOR Mfe
HE THAT JUDfiETH
Without Knowledge £• afnol^ad Wtsdort i» not la fete.
Too ean get koowttoge of tbe $50 Fito-Ton Wagon
Seal#, void on trial, freight paid te n»,oo m<w#y aaked
tUl aatiited, by eendi** tor FREE PRICE LIST.
JOKES OF Rni QMA MYOK. Bmgbamtcn. K. Y_
situations
SSSitBtiSSSWffiSSSU."™
Cowl siunihiy aaiariw
toff to—#<#»#* # a»»» * Pr#*t
Ual. Kot fnll tona*. addiaae
CHASE BBOTHEBS.Rocheater.W.T.
WILK Magnesia OF
Cures Dyspepsia, Indigestion,
Boar S t o mach, Sick Hea dache.
Consumplioa Can Bs Cured.
mum. make* tbs w— IrtroOf.and » pleasant to take.
SSSKdri— to J?#o*o«nPttmany and ffeiTiii—tie— for oaiac «#titt«at— aeeeot
of ACTURAL CURE#,
fmOAR ii 1 MqSferiB OoSj ^dt jfeSot. , WalVorjl^J.
THERMALINE
a s»f. .nj Hsiutb’, Satttltst* for qalBtae
The only 25 cent
AGUE REMEDY
xfer or
- CtJRBfl
CHILLS&FEVER
and all MALARIAL
■ear. Rev st
Yaa«, far ttt«ir tga <«at boass'i r e*—nt
*W» fspsr MU — apFlIaattea.
Who Wants Hacbinery?
We hare for *aia uwer 1,*J<K» naw and aecond hand
b»n— at prior* far below tbeir tr¬ •alao ( comprio
ine riAU.tlll.L and IIEXBB AL #O0D.
U ORKIMi R*(illMKRY of —fd—eriptloo.
P#rtfcfetf> «»d Stationary hTKA.W RNfilMRH
and BOJLEUH iw»* 1.«to OOO fe. p.,WATBK
HHJUUA. OK1NT MILL MAGIWBRV.
MACHINISTS* and BLAUKHMITHO*
TOOI.N of #ff- Tf latiatf. FlMPH, PIKE APPA
RATt'K, (JOTTffN and WOOLKK M U HIN
tiltY, BEI.TIMI1. CiaCULAU HAW#,
KIUPTINO. PULLEYri, etr., rtr., all folly
daaerthed in our printed Uat No- IT, with price* anne»
•d. which wo will mad lo tbe addree* of any party
deair Ids maebiaart up—reoei't of jtpmp.
State ot, plainer aud jn*t aon't #hat bu» machine obI*I or bare maebin— eurwfufty you read are
in w tnt you
TfSsSffsss.
S. F. FOR8AITH A CO.,
Mactiioists nil General Mitinoe Dealers,
MANCHESTER. N. H.
riagee N. B Lnider - Villa#; Tmck* and and Town K.re %» Eqaijifuenta Kaaioe«. a*i>#ci*Jty. Hnt* Car
He rtf-r Fire Engine cir uiars
PJPR^iffS
f&h
Vl
oSJJrMT
har*to^rof ntm*
tlle U UMlav.
!“8# 8o iirufjfhts. rent, ly irfSorTr*'
eelpioffii^f. Bolt* by Quartcr-d£i2NJ»-i*.ty. ot Addrtdn,
BOTANIC MEDICINE CO*,
Proprietors, Buffalo, N. F
A GOOD PLAN.
by «a#r#8 nr* firm iss’ieti, of Mm* »4xieh haatwoee has b*«n *, mad* s- ytaokarn «aric**arui and
tn*
Broker*. E>cks;'e Place. New York, the ?>r-6>* of
Wiiic t ^re dlrid«d pro r»u data’from anto;i* (.ft* » .»«ehoi<t«sira at
tf-* . *iitrc4rt'D i f tn -.if date of c-rt.tuntm,
f* 1 tie profit won i b#INfe. Ao ir.ytKunem' -lif.Uj'wouk
S of
.asking '.i*o u»««* eerf ment :and S&t>i aetsarL w i;<fi p*y 8SJ5M9 profit,
5 tw * »on, s to • tie market.
The am# circular effjrUin* every: lueg. Se»4 ’’Te# for ie.
Ti e Kdisor of the -Brosktys Jmtm'it -uje; very
8,vti#iectory r-valt* arimi jtr from inresttneers 3fishares. ms-de n
i.Imm coBB'.'.’.rtotion* by ftfendk; >•- u# to order
t‘. tn ioe oeed a car fl&itm itloMte rrprea*‘iUttg in rlt .r a Wo
t*jl« cett and d khtsi*? fer^epan. fife
n, tor a-ietM. «•}. date, wfem *.y.atVot-t 'wtpwady * »d»c#
Sr , 'i? xt s»; i’»'i a tarn
b$4“ * ! combmerfidn -.h'.which *»••- wk-.« •i#r#^ew#*i
D*,' 1 *s». I.icifonwirw & cent. and
ttg lit»%. Shu.' ■ .sabstos 6 a pr-fi' <.t.<-en Mr pe . ip ft* o*!#g
riij't v*krt.: f- t •> rating ;*rd t m «*■*;a saa <-» anti! cjwi- rius
b «3f .on. . :• %hr-. it m v-mo u> t-as* '.miUf.
upffat-^n ' f 'he. <-■ •ohi' -r-ttiji',. - : i fea*'r©*.>.ilt
to'itMMi v i rtheral -ek*. sr.*l .*t tb
w* tec# wl t f- ;m Lwii •.! tV’’ fc*ff-A.-i-tetiny. * l
coimn-rett‘00* *ao **ar or*«? » - v--.#>$• : . i-ar.tg
a ; >.t p n t to ed ii if at s‘r..»ed-st Sifrl S> -.Co, i-L rAor.n* ine.ory eii« -IBAil
aro tir.T avea i >>n4
tion. sad *»--■ onir «■•*.: ret that • ngirai »•<! mw
tsroieT a* tb» resolti tt-G tur*.»«d * fc**- «*» ur*4»t#Lle.
“Tbi# oew :•:»« ‘ot r.p,TVi-o# a-rickehid* **»rtoh#
dims the ttt'io* •-oysu *r * I arytn «be V *• Bo»r i • ? Broker*,
The euet r«»«3 #sr- riven with “ t;-r core, *od w*»
ehmrtuU y *«»’ rt tfesf-• feet*' i* no re «* n - ? y t-fc# -Una. of
Lawrence A ff». should avl b* reo^rasr-. ‘•orhdmae’ tided h> as asm
weary r*#i«cf wovtby omraspandm of thenim'** f *li nsriuw hav
Tony shoo kind «o of test, Wnfl* cf stock for re im Hand f'*r tbeir
m# soy m #
explanatory circcisr.
Iks "Ho*.* aud «W«." Mo y, !«C* ,
" l. Z\^ ' ” K ’ ’ ' !
Tte ■ core,^in - d d? n '■< ^wrcr.ee * «>/ * <;«•*{ • .v«,
“ d t: WAf^nKR 1 MARTIN P lsf^ V... > V
J At Tab
A *xwre*poofi“t»fc m fcottaMn; Y •;*•» rewit
tot my proht* IKfi 71, i* * »*i* w mJ that
5sb-jki.i is sre ovWamed iri airt ?•
ITU S K4