Newspaper Page Text
TEE OGLETHORPE ECHO.
------iuo
s*» — Ml
M BM
nanal.<ktn«laita
Amj ptmm w%o will mo 4 a* tkt of ire
09M roor # »ab*rr*j*fee fro#. Nodubnt*
r Be Profuse is.
* LUaSTlTJOS WO* THC U*6tf WWC«K
wen. -■
_
Ah * day* ao dark with d«sifc'« ce'iipca!
Wes wre w*! *«» in we*
And (he night* *r» sgM long,—
- — knski&g
hrtru. thro' pslhd Hpe,
Oh, my Ood! wss tj&n:--------------
TVaibLrlh the rootsment' eong
, A bbgbt m falliagouthe frir,
•fed hop* U dytagin dsi y i r;
And terror vAkirfh everywhere-.
AD f nsboor* wt fall of tear*,
Oh* my God ! woe tr* * b *
QtUst keep* wetcb m bngbUwt eye* -
Every heirt i« a rung with fears.
Woe are wo! woe we we!
AH the light h»Xh left the *kic«.
And the living&we-«trook crovtri
See above them cniy akjud*,
And around then only feiroads
A> the temblo fermUe 1
Woe ere they t wee ere they ?
When tat worth* stag fade
While life * trembling veeper-beAle
Oh, my God! woe ere ce !—
Sing thewwfa* uadertosee' —- - —
Ketsewatosnydsy?
Icr the night time at* c r*y ~ ^
Aad the dying pea* %Wf ’
Dark! d*rk shove Klew '
§o *
-
Oh, my God : +r* *r* w? !
Cowereth every henam Sift—
Wild the vclfiaf- in end fto— .
Woe we! woe ere we f
2Jy*th it victor in the *tr»fe -
fn the hat cad is the bell
He w writing on the wa 1
Doom* for many—fesr* for sll.
Thru’ fee cities burns » i reeth.
Woesrethey ' woe'Mffl&^r^---------
Rot with dreed and deadly wroth .
Life end love lock ornia in death.
Woe are they ! woe ure ali!
TictiiiiB strew the epectre** peih .
Shy-eyed children aofUy creep
Where their mother* wiil end weep—
In the grove their father* sleep.
Mothers w*ft their proven on high
Oh; my Ood ! woe ere we !
With their deed child on their breast,
And the alters auk the sky—
. O h, my Christ i woe ere we!
“ Give the deed, ob, Father I re*t!
Spare thy people! mercy! spare !"
Answer will not come to prayer—
And the toropio* mi** tbe prfcwt—
Oh, my God! woe are w* ’
And th® cradle miurtui the child.
Huftband! at your britlal feant
Woo are you! woe are you !
Think how those poor dead eye* amUvd ;
They will nover smile again -
Every tie beat m twain,
AH th® etreogth of love is vaio.
Weop ? but tear* aro weak a* foam—
Woe are we! wo® ar® w®!
They but break upon the shore
Winding between here and bom®—
Woe are ye! woe are we!
. Wailing nev« r—nevermore'
Ah7the dead f they are so iM%
Just a grave aud ju*t a stone.
And tbe memory of » moan.
JPray ? jet, pray; for God i* mreet—
. 0b, my God ! woe are wt'
Tear* will trickle into prayers
When we'kncel down at Hi* feet—
* Wo* are w®! woe are we !
' Wife and
. oar orossee onr cares.
He wifi calm tho tortured breast,
He will give the troubled rest—
And the dead He wateheth beat.
■toJfeMk RM •
The Oondemned Sentinel.
__
A cold, stormy night in the month ot
March, 1807, Marshal Lefebvre, with
27,000 French troops, had
Dantzic. The d|y and was PrassiaB garrisoned aohUera, by
I7,<IM these, Bnaataa together with 20,000 80,000
and or
annsd citizens, presented nearly double :
the lores that could be brought to the
asnanlt. Bo there wan need of the ut
most vigilance on the part of the sen
bnels, for made a desperate sortie might from the
grason, calamitous. nnawares, prove
A4 midnight, Jerome Dubois . . u&*
.
placed urnfa upon one of “stop the most Iwfert important
Sg the^rSyLboinedthc rtf penm‘
ataive pAp
snlA of Kfihrnm? mans than an
SBJSiaiRir*”'**^ Wbo’a there?”'
“
The bJ onlv crttonCTto answer was “nd a moininn Sme sonnd
fOTd=TOm9tSH5re^rSiof feta TdrM be
an? prettyt'mu antobScnTime to q”k! wa r!i
emphatic to-the movement, change, he brought ordfred his
musket and the
intruder to bait.
“Mercy I” exotaimel a childish voice;
“don't shoot me! I mn Natalie I Don't
yonknowme?” “Heaven!” cried Jerome, elevating
the muzzle of his piece. “Is it yon, .
dear child?”
" Yea; and yon are good Jerome, Oh,
regiment, and was with the army in
capacity Why, of how name. is this, ehild ?" said!
“ my
Jerome, taking the litiie one by the arm.
•• What isit about yonr motiier?"
“Oh - nie«»a Harkl Jerome,'jroo
IK'
The sentinel bent his «*£ but eonld
hear only the wind and the ram.
“Mamma ism the dreadful rand.’said
the child, “ and is dying. She Mnot far
away. Oh. I oan hear bear her erying.”
By degrees, Jerome' gaffiemrTroa
Natalie that her fathrar bad taken her
ont with him in the morning, and that
in the evening,when toe storm her. eame The
on her mother oame after
sergeant had offered to send s man back
to the camp with his wife; but she pre
ferred to return alone, feeling sure that
Bhe would meet 'with.no trouble. The
way, however, had -become dark and
uncertain, and she bad lost the, of path,
and wandered off. to the edge the
morose, where she bad sunk into fee soft
madx
ass»£S'rf(iTia and help her I”
come
A»r»Tfisaas What should
woman. .......-.....— -------- he ----- do? IM. —n. .—
—tlis good, the beautiful, the tender
hearted Lisette—was in mortal danger,
and it was in his power to save her. It
was not in his-heart to withstand the
pleadings pleadings and of of the the the child. child. and He He could could go go
rescue nurse, return to his
post withont detection. At all events,
he could not retnse the childish pleader,
“Give me.yonr hand, Natalie. I'll
go with yon.”
With a cry of joy, the child sprung
the Hildiet’s side, and, when she
seenrnl his hand, she harried him
toward the place where she had left
mother. It seemed a long distance
Oglethorpe Echo. __ i
PAPER *^ IN ONE OP 3 THE f LARGEST, MOST INTELLIGENT - AND WEALTHIEST COUNTIES _ IN GEORGIA,
THE ONLY
By T. L GANTT.
Jerome, would »e*J eeee bsck. he stopped did ss though
he tom He not feu
death, but he feared dishonor.
£v;,r
he hastened through fee storm, and
found Liseii* sank to her u nap it* in the
telTud he koeiMUt cottier .entinel
“ iuM boon ^ wUOlS *UiKK«i .t tbepcM lie bad htd
oocm P *Uto be
hem absent f
“Friend* with the estotanugB r*-'be
answered, to the last ball of the new
smjtinol.
He was ordered to advance, snd when
he had given the countersign, he found
himself in the presence of the officer of
the guard. In a few harried words he
told bis story, and had the office l^cen
alone, ho might have allowed fee matter
to rest where it was; bat there were
others present, and when ordered to give
up hia musket, be obeyed accompanied without s
murmur, and silently the
officer to the camp, where he was put in
‘___ irons.
On the following morning, Jerome
tial under charge of having deserted hia
post. He confessed feat lie was guilty,
and then permission was granted him to
toil hi. own Biory.
This he did in fen words; bat the
court could do nothing bnt pass ^ntenoe
of death; yet the memben. thereof eU
signed a petition praying that Jerome
Dubois might 1» jwr,toned; the general and of this
petition briga«le, was and sent thr.ngb to him to the general the
of the division, by whom it was indorsed,
and sent np to the marshal.
Lefebvre was kind and generous to his
soldiers almost to a fault, bnt he eonld
not overlook ao grave an error aa that
■
m*.
The orders given to the sentinel had
very simple, and foremost of very necea
sity T was the orderforbiddi-n him to leave
his postnnt.; certain^eitmt properly relieved. -
To a the safety should!, of the
wlmle armv rested upon the s of
each individual sentinel, amt were*posted eapeciallv
upon those who at night
nearest the linee of the enemy.
“I am sorry ’’ said the gray-haired old
warrior, as he folded np the petition and
handeiit back to the officer who bad
presented it. “I am sure that matt
meant so wrong, and yet a great wrong
wasdone. He knaw what he was doing
ran the risk—he was detected—he
has been tried and condemned. He
maet Snftert ” _
Tfas y as ked Dcfcb r re if he wonld see
the condemned.
••No, no 1?’the marshal cried, quick
ly. •‘Slionld I see him, and listen to
one-half Ilia story, I be might pardon Let him,
and that mnst not done. him
.lie, that thonsands mar be saved,
The time fixed for the execution of
Dnbois was the morning anocoediug the
day of his trial. The rcanit of the in
terview was Marahol Lefebvre was made
known to him, and he was not at all die
appointed. He blamed noone, and was
only sorry that he had-not died on the
battlefield.
‘•I have tried to be a good soldier,"
he said, to hie captain. “I feel that I
have done no-crimethat should leave a
stain upon my name."
The captain took his hand, and unsure
«1 him that his name should be held in
Toward evening, Pierre VaiUaut, with
bia wife ane child, were admitted to see
jero^o tlie prisoner. Thie was a visit which
would gladly have dispensed
with, cs his feelings were
wrought 1d up to a pitch that-almost nn
maun him ; bnt lie braced himself for
*h« Interview, and would have stood it
U ke a hero had not little Natalie, in the
cagemefis herself of her love his and bosom gratitode,
thrown upon end
offered to die-in his stead. This tipped
tUe ! ,rimiDg 0ap ' • nJ h " fl " Wed
, ,r *' y '
Pierre and Lisette . knew L not wuat to
, *-- a - a- - , “
kf'Sffirsa'SM time t,> Jerome's v.yfaood’a rc borne.
return
lb™* tlie oondemned thought of her his
widowed mother, and he rent a
ot love _and devotion. Then
be thought finally, of a brother and
And, bright-eyed maid—whose lie thought vineolad of one-e cot
at ?°' 1 “P 0 ®*® bau ks ^' ««»Seme-one
whom he bad loved , with a love such as
on ‘f^ ea ‘ hwirtsoan feel
? b > ? y deatf^ ‘ e ?; , .
. his head npon his clasped hands,
y < »R® ed ? ofc te11 ,b ®| n a ’al«ebo»i;
bi,t ■ * ba t ! lnl l* lo . P * ^ s ‘ b ®* et tbem *•*'
Ueve I feU I1 m battie!” 1
“J* eompamon - promised . ^tbat Ire
driving Morning sk-et oame, and snow dull and ; suS, gloomy, at an early with
honr, Jerome Dnbois was led forth to
meethiafate. The place of exeentton
had been fixed npon » low, barren spot
waaliiangmareneff fill punilmaat*. ^They io wn-nese had gained tn« tear
more than half the distance when the
sound of some atrange oommotion broke
uram mdeele-camp the wintry camr• air dashing and;very^shortly to t he side an
i of the geneial ol the brigade, with the
cry :
“A sortie! A sortie! rtaemy
are ont in force. Let this thing be stay
ed. The marshal directs that yon face
about and advance npon the peniusnla!”
Iu an instant all was changed general, in that
division; and the brigadier command, thundered who
had temporary
forth his orders for his oonnter-mwch.
The gloom was dissipated; and with glad
hearts the soldiers turned from the
thoughts of the. execution.of a brave
^usjai- the gnard. -
iea ine cuj/thiu.
The The direction direction was was very very simple, simple, bnt bnt
the execution thereof was not to be so
easy, for scarcely had the words escaped
the*captain’s lips when dashing dashing a squadron direct- direct- of
Prneaian cavalry ’The came
ly lv toward toward them. them. The division division was was quick- quick
ly formed in four hollow squares, whi>e
thegaard that held charge of the prisoner
found themselve obliged to flee.
"In heaven’s name,” cried.Jerome,
soldier “ cut my 1” bonds, an i let me die Uke a
, Tbe sergeant quickly cat the oord that
’ bound'his elbows behind him, and then
i dashed toward the point where his own
company was stationed. The rattle of
LEXI5TGT05, f=T: GEORGJA^ FRIDAY* XOYEMBEft .±L 187&.
musketry bad vsinlv HommeTi«d, and the Fro*'
*i*ns were French endeavoring to Jerome break
the square* of troops.
had been wounded. With a Quick bound
be reached the polled the dying
-owwd p!im*d Hvwkbe^ bMtery of Unrr <l.e ouomj bid
. je^menkof^ihuito &ma. Hip
and ported already by two with shot sad shell ;
immense
d«w«e bm been done.
Marshal Lefcbm rode up shortly
after this battery had opened t *ud quick
?y made np his mind that it most be
taken at sH hazards.
“Take that battery,” he said to a
colonel of the calvary, “ and the battle
iaowra.”
Dubois heard fee order, and saw the
necessity. Here was danger enough,
surely; and, determined to be the first
at fee fatal battery, he kept as near to
the leader aa he dared. Half thedia
taooe he had gained, when from the hill
reme a storm of iron that plowed into
r** ?! ”■ The colonel
* exploded against his bosom.
wicked by *be Bp<m assaulting % peninsula now
not ^ flimMe Loadml yard, mde;
»»d it wm literals . psth of death, as
the fire of twelTOhe»Tj gnu. was tamed
■
‘^ree ,^^* other < ff lone , offleerg L had fallp went °. down. * nd . yet 7 Wing 60011 „
|he_ advanoo without a oomminsiou^i
•a* 'VP 11 ■’ *- th P"J w *y *»» *“'* I^Mningbloekr ‘'"adborw-s, an(I 1
theheaa ol the column stopped and
Mamhal . Lefebvre . . —T~ from .. his elevated , ..
place, »aw this rad hia heart throbbed
prtPfnHr If that ooln mn were mated ,
60,1 the penimra!*, ttaBmwian theresnlt infantry charged^ might be over ea
Bnt—see ! A man in the uniform of ,
a Freneh private, monnted upon a
erfnt horm, caparisoned in the trap
pings of a Prnssiau staff officer, with hw
head in his bare, hand and rushes a bright saber the front, .swinging anil
to
"iff 68 tbeoolnmn forward. His words
* r0 flel 7 » n<1 his look is dauntless.
" For; France and Lefebvre!” the
»*™nge horseman ones, waving: his
f word aloft, and pointing toward the
battery. The marshal will weep ’f
wekise this day! thus ... led^by
»» brave troopers one
who feared not to dash forward where
theahotfell thickest, gave an, kUiwet
»qg *<rat, and pwreed on, earmg
“ le r Ma S’ t ,on ffa 8 •“i™
a-living might . leadM toToUow ; .Hoping: and that yet
he take the battery,
courting death, Jereme Dnbois spurred the
on, battery and with finally lrrertsbble the troop force. came upon
Ik wasnot is Ito power of thoeac.
S, 0 ”® 86 * t°,witiist*nd the shook,, and the
Bnstrian infantry ibst came to tlieir sup.
l* 01 * were swept away like chaff. The
wtery was ffewUy captured, and when
the who guns had shortly bad twen before turned been n P™. their t J‘ map- 08e
ten, the fortntt e of the day was decided.
The BtMSiaas and the Prussians—
horse, f<»t and dragoons— nch as were
not taken prisoners, made the best
« their way back into Dantzic, having
lost mneh more than they hml gained
Jerome Dubois returned to the guard
bon*®, and gave hrmself up to the olHi er
•“ 1“ dross several slight * h J°.’S.Su wonuds wiitea ue
“•« reoeiveit. Next, nm colons! was
“““ r2.“ e ",“ _ at ! h ®" 1 bad ”°®^' th
T,rtahdi analol 7 1?ri’
IS - a „ *..^gy t V!’ aiKl
^‘bal ‘of dhrisim, anoU« to ‘"
M ^wh Latobvre shafl
a t w e do with Jeromi
rk n hois?’
. p«JS? criad fee veterar
pLdon who had heard tto whole story,
“ I'll him to-day, and to-morrow
i'll promote him f”
—-——
t'nnatnral Nhewers.
l .' r8 Tradition ? b c h w or ... ®°?, “‘^’•^i®? 8h<1 e 2L ? , ah,> , „n‘ ?:
. , L | ‘i^dilrv , i i T
tod
, theakv f^edtora'good and that snob an event
■tote ™ 8 "™ w a* ahowerofW year
{ s fell near
'oFbSin^^boutoTtoch Tonlonse in 1804. A prodigimia number
in. Pakrcfl, length,
.jesegnjed in a snow-storm at
Rllssia> jn 1327. On one ooessioa in
Norway the !hnwe^ peasant* r,ata were astonished
of neltme down
their heads. Rhowers fishes have
»sJW-3sS5irss oocnnjd a generally be explained
sn oan
by biowing weli-tindereUiod oanses. Stray wind
from sea or river; a waterespout
linkine |in,I nn the fish ont of the water; a
wh i rl sending them hither and
; att these are intelligible. The
• ^ .hnwsr -„J iu Norwavwas an exteamdi
^ . thousands of rats were taking
s the 0I c nr8 i on f rom a billy
|^d r „„; m t „ the lowlands thm^ WhiakS whan
rremWk them up
i dgpoaited ^7a them in a field at Borne
: di a oa bti eMm t K * to the astonish
0 ^ gllo hof the rats as came down
gBu*. Naturrtisto have proved that tbe
6n .cailed showers rf blood are connected
, wijjh some phenomena of insect life.
'
~ ___ m 1 ~
A . ror*ouen P«n#nmh 1 aragrapn.
Testerday afternoon a boy about
twelve years of age caHed at
office and aesired to seenre a^letter whidi
his mother bad 'posted an hour before,
asSRnSi'srsrasas if it of life
: ask«l him was a matter or
*!%*. “That 8 exactly ™», wbftt it shade shade is, replied paler; paler
the the boy boy as as he he turned turned a a ;
“you see, ms writto her sister and for
got to pot down : P. H—-We are all
well; and so my aunt won't know bnt
j , what what half half the the family family are are dead dead Sad and the the
I other half dying!” -
, “ I oan write that on a postal and
; send it along after theletter," suggested
the clerk. tbe
“Igness yon’d better," replied
boy as he tendered a penny, “ cause
as long as we ain't dead there's no nse
in worrying my annt about it. Write
just like ma does, if yon can, and don’t
get it ft. P. instead of P. ft”—
Press.
1 EXPOHITiOS HJKfOSIT5£fe.
-
iw«**fio*cwtoo* Art***** •* lUMMnM
*"*£*•** are ooostantljto *2®!**®* be e^o enn^ 20iM2kt*£ *nd p?*
“
*™» *»“*; ,7 ”? rs tlE5 f ““J U1 ” “ ! "*
‘ ,UrI “ “ d
* tcomnni aaraaoEe
A Florentine satisage maker exhibits in
the Italian section of the present exhxbi
tion, fifty kilos, a sausage and which which weighs no less than
men*tirea more
than two yards in length. down Of course, it
i s impossible to far lay brilliant in these intellect nar
row limits bow the
which evolved fee scheme of this
gage will be able to benefit hia fellow
creatures; bat fee fact remains feat this
intellect is responsible eomk, for an originality
—j| mire be even ridkulons, but
etill it is an originality—which must in
dioate a distinguished, certain ability, and effect this ability,
being must some
good.
------ Y WO _ RAI L
Another curiosity which is exhibited
^ tbe gallery of fee Belgian of
section, X-hi» consifets of two rails, WflVe one
, -ol.d p.ooe of met.l
meters i D length fZ58 feet), .nd the
other, of the same orfrnordmarv length, Tbeee
is coiled up in a apiml roll.
,»il» J, which were mail* areeieeltonS at the Heraing
■ wori of jj, CockeriU,
rree( >pt!itives of the perfection to which
t p„ Belgian metal indnstriee have been
Bl j wd . u d which in recent years has
,, t ,undated mucil Troth euri(»,ty as ami to the
meUrrSonroee, natural
Flem^h which kingdoS are possessed by the
„ m6U
osBEemaotMva is a etresnv stosk.
In one of the Freneh gaUenea fliere is
*• marvel of labor and industry wbicli
-has l«en _iaihodeE«rtaient mannfactnred b jaentl«of
J
dogne. kmves mcloseil It consists in ofJK) aTWinary micrcscop.c e*»d
cherry stone! and They shut have all boxwood
handies open in the ordinary
way, »n<l yet they do not weigh more
than seven grains in all.
thb stums boos,
Again, in the Italian section is a won
,j ei , ii 0 f typography has in the been shape printed of the
amB eB t book that ever
in any language. The extraordinary
nature, however, of this curiosity does
>riaw ?r ,, m i(B n ,j nn re siae, »* bonks
ma joh smaller eonld essily be turned ont;
whu* is so magnitndeo'f espeeialhr tMomAtMe
about it istbe itsoootents,
ootifamhigiMUtdoes the whole of Dante’s
..Divin.Oommedia.” It has been printed
iu Pa< , ns and is Kl 8ms || that, although and sil
b sll a, ( ,„ e v r b<.cnd in red velvet
Ter hanging ; it mHJ ^jy |,„ wora chain. M » charm
from the watch
, _ ^ t post orndt
fhe American » m «>ican aartinn section also also exhibits exlutats a a
^ sprei^nof minn^woric JLn, 5* in tbe.^pe
constracted i on the scale of mie thirty
tains .M,^)pi«-.s. and has brenlnilt 1*551
from plans, occupying the time ofone
man, working in hunts a day, tor six
y* Jr i. abcst«ho».
A bust of M. Leon Bay is done in soap,
BS ft testimony >>t gratitudeto that aiates
man from the soapmakers he of Marseilles, thc
{()r ttip conspicuous part took in
re peal of the soap tax. The bust is cer
taiuly very artistically lm th cut bv M. Barn
abo ' and 60 ■“ * « magnifleent imita
lion marble trophy in soap which is
f lhiblto '’ in ,b « Austrian section ;lmt
their artistic treatment (toes not make
them any more useful.
a clock madr of biusao.
A clock made entirely of bread, has
been sent from Milan to the Italian sec
turn. The maker daring is a three Peruvian, a native
Iudian, who years of his
ass^ffijsssst ly well exeented,kind welL imt
. goes very hard
'eneil people will as little think of naiDg
bread for eloek ernes or oieclMOiem
aa of to hand down to ifene pos
t, ’ rit y graven images of themaelves
;i “ '
otheb cCsions thixos.
It must not, however, lie nsel<4 imagined
from tbis ennmeratton of or j
semi-nselets creations that the expos!
fion does not contain some very notable !
ouriositiee, designed to PccupT an utility, im
portant place large in the nnmlwr world of of ingenions
are a oonldTawiblv
maehines-^morhthan we
deseribe in onr limited epsoe—which dre
^BattBffsSLSffla makes batter in less than minute, a
a
machine which milks cows "mechanic- i
ally, without touching them,” which an are
rangement of cirenlar knives peels
potatoes bnt beautifully, and all the-time
honored still very carious eteam in
cubators and pjSl^S poultry fatteners shift
a r e s o faai rt a o e M s a With Nor
farmyards,
In the tobacco cnrionTShW indnatrv kinsone there
are also some There
is one for the mannfapture of eigarettw,
which Tho is really extremity of exWdinary endless efiioien -
ey. of an coil of
paper is placed of in a certain slit, and
then, by means adieels, the continually turning the
certain cog machine cats
paper, fiile it with tobacco, rolls it,
. gums it, and discharges it into a box in
an ineredjble space of time.
Another machine is still more amus
i n g # Thi« jg designed for packing to
bacco. . The packet ready to be finished
off immediately is placed afterward in aa orifice, vomited, whence beanti- it is
j
, lutie of tobacco, toe packetia,pitilessly
......“a ** 1
j
A Jonse county yoong man got np to
due his window jastasa bolt was'throxni of light
■ing ' struck *.. .... the * house. ” He
^■^tLTaSi
Mrs. Richmond, the mother, lost a strip
of skin an inch wide from head to foot,
and the father had his shoulder burned
to a blister. All will recover, bnt they
can flatter theuselvea that they're tough,
-Sioux aty (lb.) Journal.
H*w * ^ tr Mp4*ret. a
. 4 eommaniflstKra fiwa ft. B. Toiler,
i Q the ScienHfi - American, reads as
\ tirae *» lto ago^Xwas aittrng JJjJ *o»e feaek
-
1 icekee from hAj U»flooif' * » eb ^.ffloTwur The direlion, tmg or h«J mor- no
uedinMion to go in that bnt
he was closely driven side by the spuler,
which ran drat to one and then the
i other, ©ractlyOike a shepherd his dc^; driv*
| ing a sheep; hurry mg vietim up with
an occasional M bid ” or bite at his side.
Ail this was something td the new to me in and the
habits watched and with ways interest spider, I
intense to see what
the result would be.
When the bug had been driven into
the web, corner fee spider at a point changed directly tactics, under and the
i
made a series of mrcles rapidly ssound
the bug, first in one direction and then
in another, occasionally While taking I a ran up
into the web. was unable to
, see fee delicate thread spun by fee
1-swwfeatXhe- hu^Rlten
j became so entangled that but he could not
j nmke any headway, ootkM offly
struggle around in a limited latitucle,
«ul wkioh bwune men *nd mom liimt
hiawork. «i u the Reitig spider compelled antiriogiy to l«ve
»t
thi. monaect, I retained again in about
half an hour. I then found the
turned on his !»ek and hi, feet »l>
parently mofccmlees, quite firmly bound. I He was
dead, <l ni bs he aoa sltowed thought waa
! bat aoon signs of life
: by vigorous kicking, which nearly re
! leased him. najjfaj
The Mder had been up and
down at rhfferent anf pomU. bnt quickly
i left that work, e' dina down to t h e
bng B( . emwl k , attack his ttroat, and in
, manner that the bug gave a few
j spasmodic kicks and seemed'to give np
The spider then returned to
?ml of attaining linea^io thmhng
web. They thtk, Were soon ao nnmerons
| that I eonld **• bertdes «m light
*,*1 become more favorable. The regn- i
larfty of, the lines formed a sort of
f n£m ef t diverging as they did fromibe
from thp bng to the outer parts of the
web above.
After a time attached, the spider seemed to have the
lines work enongh of shortening each and b^ap line, if j
new ss
appeared. He passed from line to line
tnaDy times over, stopping called an instant at j
each. I was again away at this
jnDetnre, and did net- see I he mmosil v
again until the next day. The bng was
then- elevated over an mob above tlie ,
fleer, lodged and in the the renleilr third Mjy th* he was web, safedy some
five tackle iacboa employed f«m mJissting Wfflop*, i and completely all the
cleared away. In the'Aeb were the •«;
easses of two other potato cinght bngs, which I
have no donbt were m Uke man
“**» tho,, f h they may well. have crawled np
(he wall into thc I cannot name
the variety of the rather spider, good bnt it is a very
°° mmon one, size taken
altogether, bnt small as compared with
weighs! bn*. one-eighth The spider much could not the have
bntliis as as bng;
bisly was long and slender, with
spider a (of very brewn oidtmuy auff
cics of house color)
Jong callcla largo spider on account of their
This legs. be habit of
may a very common
the spider, plsoe running out and driving secured to
game to a where it can be
and hoisted, bnt I never hoard of the
like before.
Vanderbilt and Harrison.
I u 1850, or thereabouts. Commodate millions^
, Garrison, Oalifornk, now a New^Tork where lie embsrkei
went to
in .arions enterprises, snd made money
~piay.. He inverted »> banking and
«<«mship ventnres and soon became
Jiiowa as one of the leadmg men of the
Panama to San Francisco. E?«h want-
1 jjd to ?*>»*« bny the other large ont. enm, amonnftug Vanderbilt
i hww tj millions. Garriso n aeoepted,
and'ranJt'rt.tttmttdbinrirr major
I S2 ^ !? M M*t’
8
VTi be^Ravine they ftb^ wSlteTdidS't w^nt
P S>ttle interest thefnl^lmAant «v
ThTwaa 0 ff em r t 0 a^nteA for
cheef for’ths Vatatertolt
« ronn ,t » nrincinal
modore Garrison Bnt it in his nocket Office
an d ^‘!g.°?!lr., walked down to Vanderbilt’s V * a(leri> ‘ lt 8 o9ico '
m„ ‘♦Timft-here^VanderbiU
” said
*%gF& h*
replied Garrison closing the doorand
loridngit. ton^mton^ No one rtte^doSIriOTn knew what passed
‘.^^LiTtoL _ ___ ♦*., „f w„ q i„...
.^d^ntXif^^ the Neithe?™“ MX ramtiiimd the™^
jfc ^ “tJt' ' T- J -i ! ™ to . d “°“® ,
.he secret OTotoiMha of that l interview. to re— —
-
------
A 1 River aad * d Ha Dead
, The Colorado.over , is noted for its
“swirls, socalled. They occnr every
where, babble but only at high the stagre of water,
A rises from bottom and
breaks with a slight sonnd on the snr
face. rotary ^he_water motion, at small that that point begins inverted a
so an
teacup might eever circle, it Larger and
larger grows the till a surface motion, < f
; lor^r .feet roand in diameter fnnuel-shaped is in
; spinning a hole in
the center, two or three feet across
or tskcsnrrs^s. thirty feet while the other passe* un
i M^v^jS Monave, Monave,paB«ngtbro«gb ------ ------,-------- passing STthe^vinTil through the the ...-- ravine ravine in
i a feretf’their'craft skiff, immediately Wrun below tbelork, into'a'swiri snt
-si a««re»caaii? xtssii5S6Jrt--A
heaved in the air, it slowly sank as it re
reived into the forbid bosom of the
river, its human freight to be seen no.
more; for the Colorado mortil river does
give np its dead—no remains
lolge upon its ehorea
FARi, WABBIS 45 D
-
u««ica Bias®.
feat H»v* fronTS* a variety cf seats of differ
hmirhla. low cricket to the
mrr hoooy it mA -rr«« . pint .Wte rf .trong ra anMrUwoTee- vK^t ; »im
ert HU Um warn b««U rieea md when
<»ld bottle it. Apply it often with a
soft swab. Do not pat K in metallic
yesselu, and be sore yon have pore cider
vinegar not made from acids, —
IfjstfBA&bia ahd BasrManaM. —A
very simple relief for neuralgia is to
boil a small handful of lobelia in half a
pint of water tfl] fee strength is out of
the herb, then sriraiu it off aad add a
teaspoonful of flue salt Wring cloths
Qa t of the liquid as hot affected. as possible and
spread over fee part It acts
like a charm. Change the cloths aa
M cold till the pain is all gone; then
cover fee place with a soft dry cohering
till perspiration is ovei, so as to
taking relW^l cold. Bheamatism can often bt
bv a pplication to the painful
parts of cloths wet in a weak sotuliuu ot
wd «oda in water. If there’ia iuflamiaa
fejn in the „£»1„ fee cure lukew«i.-f i» very auick
B ,e mh (.> 1« V,,-.
Country (jmtkman.
j^^TS'a^UiouranReui B. MKI)Y roB FiBOtiCHrne.—Tako plurtlpowder dried
>w j »hh*« tl.wu nottSaceo in a new clay pipe ■, he
that baa in the
jy nw tlie well into the
ocossionaltv > swaliowing some.
p, e it three „ r [„ n ,j meg j a ,|y.
™S?V£%'. forMnMren'saabadin t*. ef foto
{“B SL%-«» l M mS52*S; jJay a g L NL f ed onl ^ y greyr
fonr ponedT j»r annum «*teen, betw^n whde those the
“
milk night and morning This grew
pounds each year. needs
no__cwnmenttogr. The deteriorated
puysiqueTdJea and coffeedSTeEndren
as seen in thmr ledsoued power to resist
disease,^is notorious amidst the medical
men ot factorydistricts.
KaeuraoiK. Fret.—P ersons iron
bled with feet that perspire or smell ol
fensively, by bathing can them effect a night, permanent oftener, cure
solntion every borax, or using
in a strong of a
borax heaping lablesprxmfu! basin ol water of two pulvenaed three
to a ; or
weeks of such tre atment will probably
be shificient to effect a care,— Philadct
T^r/vs
Wresk uraimail wjaMr.
g, father who was an ardent lover of
u,e - XraiVn! the vmo ’ ciwaya reserved
m goodly a supply of grapes for winter
0l at •• we chiUtai ” acarcely regarded did
them aa mere of a luxury than we
apples, .*tiug. as we bad them for almost daily them
t His r. -tbod for keeping
fr efl b 8 nd wholesome, was so simple
that 1 wonder it has not *aen gt*m>raily
adopted, especially grapes^n when I rend recipes
for packing J This bran, method: oats, cotton,
, qc _ etCi was his The
grapes Sorted after being onlv* picked, werocarefnl
unbroken elnsters
bH D g selected for xrinter. In a large
p-oj, spoori b. oswax was melted, and the
end' of The strnn of the elimter which
W aa broken fnim the vine dipped in the
nie it e d i.sswax. forming a seal over the
end, so helping to prevent the escape of
freshness in it As fast as the elnsters
were soSealed they were oarefully laid had
q, a basket tlie inside of which
been lined with paper (newspapers were
freqncnth- used). The bnnclies were
laid side by side in the bottom of the
basket, and when the layer was com
pleted a paper Stayer was laid over the top,
and as on, of grapes and n layer
of paper, nntil the top of the basket was
reachetl, when paper was laid on the
top. So wife all the baaketa, when they
were stored ins cool - welRveiitilated
room until freezing waathm^amc, when
they were removed to the cellar, which
one 1, but cntirelv free..from frost. Isa
b<-lls, Diana, Catawls* and Delaware
grapes were.kept m tins way.-Afar V
W<tger-nth er, Bryn Manor, near
FftffcrtWpAfn.
k w „« wn..« T«m.aW...
After the Tarraer has raised a good
6 reifizl ®tt>ly ®« vegetables fS be often 'fails to
the benefit of hie laborfrom
a lack of knowledge how to keep them,
Thiaespertally i» the ease with Mtushee
and that class of vwretebles comparatively which re
and ffnire dry. to be It kept is quite usual for bim warm to
pat them in a pile in the cellar, and tben
wonder that they rot Sqnasbei, pump
ft® 0 ® 861,1 keepingthem wellinto spring,
by placing them in a cool, dry ohamlier
nnffllteertBgoecnra, and then removing
them to a closet for safe-keeping other over
winter. Thus the Hubbard and
v arie, te» may lie kept nut. until
May and even June. For use
February they will keep tolerably well
m a dr? cellar, pi-iced on shelves, B°f
ton marrow is tlie first to decay. The
turban-to our mind one of tUe best
of tho winter varieties, especially in the <»»*> for
baking-will oft™ Those keep only intended for
until March.
use later need to be Mated to th<* later dry,
eool Closet. It will pay, for at the
! part of winter and early spring there is a
dearth of vegetable food on tfcj iarm
feat makes Prairie; such articles especially vain
able.— Partner.
•
-
! iWme Sentinel Brevities.
; Any printer will aomit T a pun can pi,
j he miXtofipTand q's. ’
erer .ro.iifT.r,, npuntil nn she has finish
.... }jJ5r ' onr j P -- 1 -™ so{ba °- “~ . 11 f h0SB . , ;
Sow, clear the track! Positively the
niogt “V;* r ^ v s: m
i high,” and simply want to -ay we know
fit is. It ha» been there fee- some time,
i is we remesbe-y rightly, and we do. not
print “ original ’’ iambic poetry, exerpt
> on spring, niilees we know who the
• antiior is, •■ Yonug Poet."
VOL. V. NO. 7.
Wimtlfeg wH4 bt*»t Psw4*r.
The sodden ts that oerur from the use
of giant powder, writes a DownieviUe
Senthat , Lra^^Tftai
^Mun and hare the used gfeatsisseit the black fat powder came a
a,
tk« f g ngor. or tt -;. Bye, by ioW-gM
fepfee fei m m e k - -a grot oaf* mth
pin. . loose Mil. .toif eo pockets, r er e. themeronry »«ymj
them m their
warm an decoding with a light
ooncosaion, and portions of the copper
Hag the vital- p a > U .a n d c anm n g
death The appearance of a miner on
otur streets recently, minus two fingers
«*<* * thumb, cleaning through the explosion sawdust from of a
cap he wac the
with a wooden splinter, shows that great
Oaliison caw :• needed A Go., in at hanging Alabama them. Hill, about Tom
to® years ago, were thawing out
the stove one cold bmwu
before daylight, previous to going
to work. The paper wrappers are well
saturated with glycerine and easily take
^ e « A cinder iw spare came in cwitact
with one of the wrappers, and iujfenriy
out s a rh a cftrt blaze ndgg that yns.j&y*ting wemed of the ydji^nng mfernal
regions dil ; they did not explode, but Tom
He shrt op:of the wmdow
^ wtthUiegiaee, and landed bl ?i ent on .J“ the 8 cold, 'ft 1
he»ntdnl imow. He was iame^hn three
5®^. Tbe °ahmwae mablaie, trot
T ll lll n J' V* m8a &* *’rJ l ? t T
?“t.‘S, . , 1 W'• n 'v ,l .JiiS 0 *,™
ln °hhoR)in the bed-rock, about loO
?®® k , 7 > ra the
tluinel “ - T *^ u7
oap on the fuse and a boot e.ght mchre
f emrtndgr^. With tte cap md
.hand, and tamping and
tamping-stick in previpnscanHonsnes^J the other, end,
trary to my candlestick, with lighted
earned the
candle, powder. mdhe The oandle same had hmd_with burned low the
on^ Ef Tight blare
Walking quickly threw back tb« powder.
of the Candle and ignited bnt the had
Ihearda broken through hissing into noise, the old-groom}, we
and I fancied it might be the wind. I
turneil my head to reach for a new can
die, my other 0118 at tnat instant had
gone out; I *aw then, with uorror, my
giant ewtrnige was on fire, and I m
total dltrtaiess, _ but. by great goiw hick
the cartridge projected one inch farther
forward than the cap beside. J turned
it np,and_ looked right into it. They,
the eartndgea, are about “»ncb nfc
* meter bnt that on e loo ked at least a
ifiS 6 -.. 1 ■* B g?.¥i g w 5.*g. t Ay 1 ^
e.rkn^ tmThoS^m ^ndhrid™ litarred
ran In th« darteere, snd held mi
Q 1111 * “"■“*{» T *“? “ w „ JJ* k
etiock “ e t? wonldmake f8r ,L °°.’Su itexplode buti!
the -
not. I heard it basing m dark
,or so ^®1 ime ’Jf n tl ! 1 ?? p Kf®’L b f r ? 6< !
'' a *; . 1 , n
baste, a frightened, bnt, I hope, a wiser
m * n - There are numbers of narrow es
cn r e8 .' ,B ” e Ter 1 iea r 0,< bnt I 11 ® ,atal
ones shock the . whole . , oommunity.
------' ■ "
Wonts cf Wisdom
; Virtue reqnn-cs no other reoompmise
than the tnbnte ol self-approbation and
"“P® 06 - .
The conscience ,, has to do, . not , with
ness or expediency or advantage, bnt
with right and wrofig.
He that doth a base thing iu zeal for
his friend bonis the golden thread that
ties their hearts together.
xlip reputation of a man is like his
shadow- gigantic when itprecedes him,
and pigmy in its proportions when
follows him.
T ^ lbonglltls are wronged it
^ wHh beauty, and they win
^ t ftare i v whea arrayed in
»-.•*-tow- Only they who oarry sincerity ^ - to a the „
highest P<"et, in wumnI there' r ‘
Bot a single hair a breadth of bypoerwy,
can see tha bidden springs of things.
Bcsuics knowl^ige, Hie pleasure d.lilved from ac
q , lir ed there lurks in the
mind of man, and tinged with a shade of
sadness, sn nnsMisfaetory longing for
something beyond the present, a staving
toward regions yet unknown and un
opened., infinenced by
Theeyeis coutinnaJl>
bat it cannot detect; nay, it is not go
ing en^ed too far to nay that it is most mfla,
bv wbat St detects least. Let the
painter defime, if he can. the variations
Sa&ttasassass fight
nRaH a , to starve ourselves or
tom^i desperately for food to be laid on onr
after our death.
— " -
IHwton*.
• tting'^ftoe
, , . __________
1 5 1 ® tKoSrrom^toudarthat^nroveto t* 1 ® gorgeous cionaa^tnM P®
, be_ or.lv
®a?gb* mttreuMhe mtraphtWKn «
; J”® ■iti^erarafrem S-.71*
, F ij^ re™
86 .“‘torljY*™ re J? „Z„ 0TPT fnr J'
if^tooted a^ tiir .^g h , to 6
d . ,
jaeaBor n n .
hem. precvel? ti, ® .*■ '
cominif,, t'other t<> c . or two
lines wik.* n . en in pc*-i
are seat^fe be m mot on mh*n another
atoor J®. , ,
tram. a ‘
i uf e jiggler, or prestidigitato/, which is
i now the favorite title of the professors
j
' ” one sees
and hoog obtms..
; ____
| The IJrtnd pnests . proferoed ■ to be
■
table to grant a happy fntnrehfe to all
1 tb«r followers who feU ra battle.
ffAffA, SA Si* WfilJ A
An Afrbwa Knfsrw’a Pace JaiM the Ks
>lM - rr M ut«i i* p»h*» m* to
i aas fcavekfd , a. ,, gtfug i
j the pleasure of preset ta
fejo t<, the swarthv vonth, who ua
Siida to o.o.tod in co»msr*«tiw»
witeSTntiful ij,,™-ra , »,4<- m^atb, wB^fr ie
while teeth, .nd iete the
words flow oat aa them. if it were He impossible in
fa i* more
teliigent than Kalnln, the boy whom
MmLiNmi ft anJAmarica «l>w dmv»r and
brought to Eagtani Kadu has hem with
some years aince.
m month coming from Zanzibar to Loa¬
Asa bv steamer, and during that rime he
learned and a great cabin-boys deal of pronounced English,
The sailors
j fee words for him^^and he wrote them
owa phonetically in Arabic, which he
hear to write. It is inexpressibly bring
comical to bun trying to out
these words and re establish their oor
prormneiation from his and phonetic should
qqIm, He does it jn time,
he remain some scholar. time in We Europe, wOl
pruyp an apt when _ were that k®
pelled to langh Aown such we wools found high,”
tia4 j as “
.. horee - M<1 - h Mr,” withont theirnre
liminsry Mpirate, beesase he hsd
leej-ne,] their sound from sailors who
(ji^Jain the “ h. ” Snin is, I beiiere,
the first native of Uganda, ho has ever
1 " b upon 1 the European other night wil. to "Wal- Mr,
" "a''
Htai,1, ‘y, “ Waliah ! master, bnt these
white -” people Then he are desertbed always preparing the fortifier for
w< * r
H ™» ot “ Moo-»lta,” as he calli HalU.
aranlev, Won aft e r he had caught
H mp90 of and bad been in
tor a -day, that he soBsidered the
wbito me n gods " to and aaid, not "they men. “At be
mnstet> mart
spirite _.. Tij e young man has nrt^n singnlatly
repnfoivo He i* any
^ type iSatfne^that butontheeon
onewould be had
^ tor , i ong time iQ contact with
Plv ;ii z ation unless he were assured of
thc coutrnry . Hisoyrs are astonishingly
soft and expreseive, and bin face lights
11p M that it j„ q nj te delightful to ob-
8erTe wllen he is pleased. Heisblaeik
^ black oan be. Kadu-is a Mnssnlman,
having become one during his travels,
anj is quite onthusoistic over his now
f onn j religion. Stanley askeil him
qI1 ietly the other day what he would do
qj Emperor Mtosa, who is not a Mnssnl
mgn, „l,onldask him to give np hia re
yigire,. He answered that he eonld not
q 0 it _ "Well, bnt suppose M;1 Wb
should kill yon?” •• BasV' enoogb. kill,
«u*wered Kadu, meaning, let himi
tben - Ttlere “ D ,> d ‘ H K e ' tllBt
will do any Biich thing, . luckily. Kadn
will take back to Uganda a tale which
! make the African emperor open his
eyes wider thaq ever before. Wbentbe
y ont h PS w the'balloon hovering above
the Tuilleries a day after his arrival, he
refused to believe that there were men
m it. He was assured cf the fact that
forty or fifty persons were then in the
h,n' m)I1 h a *L.t, when he broke oat with
his usual exclamation of surprise, “Ma
ma, mama, what a people 1The thing
which chiefly confounded Kadu was
Stanley's answer when he asked him,
“Is this yonr country, then T" “No,''
wag the response ;“ my oonqtry is still
f ar away, across another great^ sea.”
Mama!” aaid Kadn again,
with a certain aocent of despair.
- — '
Poisoning Wearing Apparel.
- l of .
” Itw not ^ ton^ mmm ■ I sev V w w ra aea .
w cL’ a^omeshat re^kubtolS. w^reoed 1 to^a
j * . ] ? i | mt u tliua More recently medic^
either, mil hive German a&£tioL naners
called toAm
goroua gtoves. In the London Torn* a
writer describes the poisonous effect of
” for t p b
teBt t( at ree H e was c m
«.[!,.j b q, carry "pa her hands in a sling, anf
? ,f tn, ’ and of co uree, unable
ri the to fe( or writer's tireas Uerself. triends dlsoovet- Inquire
ieB among “re* the
other ladies similmly afflicted,
-a Germau medical poisoning jonrnrt by report* pair of •
^ of arions a
u „ y blue kids. Dreesgoods of woolen,
s i!k and cotton have been found taeon
tain arsenic in dangerons .onantitwe;
so also gentlemen snaderc'ottmg.ioeks, bo^ and
hat linings and the linings of
shoes. Professor Nichols, of the Massa
ehuaetta Institute of Technology. lady dress W
ports the examination of a s
ssae*" mil bretome
At *his rate it s«m ne
chased eeesary before totest venturing for arsenic to all we«Mthem, 8°"^ V® 6 ;
or else the label— - warranted to eon
tain no pojsonons dye - will have to be
atloptod by all honest and reliable mak
ers. Hitherto, we believe, the retail
deal6r damagedonem uot -**»?- this h ® way. ld Vfe ^ do not *°T
^now that be can be except no
of dispensing poisons withont a
Ucense. Evidently, done pnt however, stop to aoma- the
thing must be to a
fraP^lJ increasing evil. If the obnox
: i°o« tints cannot be secured safe:ly to-be as
as cheaply, tijen they onght of dye
• prohibited, and another process
j D g made imperative. Onr young
chemists will find a fruitful field for the
• exercise 'of their inventive powers in the
pr0tin eii O p <>t fee needed dyes.—iScicn
tifio American.
'
—. . --------
The Origin of “Caucus.'*'
I m, t-Uavrns is all the information
of the Amiran published Berelntioto'' 178^
; vol I, page 240. ,in
.wherein it re said -that “ Sain ne> Adorns
ot ra.lrera. the
, , D g flonraffied ui Boston, ^
l^fc^KLxrord'wSwtty Thgw drifted ..^r.
canons.
not.
IB OOLETHQEPE m
Mwt tmng iht M
■IMP I JOB -"T::- v:
ggg t tereiS&rgggTI
' i**™ 1 «.
:::- *r S £
*UK.»,
s^ssasugg; .......*>*
f
bokL
"i”—- 1 ———*
„ 5“* . *** ******* of (bat
mrcfcsattu*,
litfUly nek«l te tea Mag m>a.
"V ?*■•* Wa aartrtm “igkim*
irtil ‘ :
Daggars and got*! am 1 art otajad P
Ha aavagabr 'round v.cb a baadspika kid
a sort did his aild Mon tan,
For tea night via dark tad to cdaMa't m '
Baafdaa, on teal daek iraa no aaa at a!!
Why aaa this tear ? -
• :4
to
i M the pint# reeled,
X* <*4m sFfet) •
4
--- *f 1 sterc-;:
A tiny thing—A fork.
Gieao and black tea are prodooeff
from the asms plant.
The tie iaca*t with makes its legs. a noise by fiddling
on wings
In Europe them are only forty
tut attain a height ol thirty feet.
If yonr foot to asleep, stake it np
quickly, for tho poet UUa ns that the K&
is dead alnmbsra.
ABoston * cirl at tlie SlTS cireoa. eeeina
«k wwfaX«k^Md „k. nT 1 t u -M bm - ■ ■y ^rt fa Hit
fee
A , ... boiler u . the j Jevuh -. . twtli-bonM ^ *t
Ktrtiineff, Bnasia, serionsly recently rajnring exploded, rtx
killing six and
teen of tbs forty persons then in the hot
room.
A farmer found a potato-bog on his
dinner table the otter day, and thus to
the bng he ejaculated: to have “Goodli potatoes eavene!
have you got yonr
cooked this year f”
A “ bark io distress," may mean dog a with ves¬
sel in tronble, or it may mean a
a candaltin-pan attachment —Shin
news reporters should bo more particu¬
lar. sentinels
At Chinese military o’clock, posts and the 1 not
cell ont, “Twelve am
worthy to kiss the ground my captain much
walks on.” The captain call. sleeps
better after hearing the
It is onr dots to confer all the Where¬ happi¬
ness we can on those about ns.
fore, it is incumbent upon every lather to
give his boy a three-doUar pair of boots,
a twenty-cent knife and a fifty-oent
oirchs ticket.
Glass slippers are to become an every
Jay reality. A Vienna company is
making beautiful Blippers of. entirely woven
glass, Tbe invention is not *U
new, Gonty dippers with pane*
around them are an old story.
“This is Neptaoe,” said ootside tbe professor, brilol
placing ilia finger on the
th* system, •• and we are trow two than
sand, seven hundred and Hftv millions
of miles from the sun.” Rheumatic
student on the back" seat involuntarily
turns np his collar, and shivers percepti¬
Arailroad up Mt. Vesnvras is to be
built by a Naples banker of the name of
pillars, A double yards line, supported wiU on
and 919 long, carry
irsins, which will be hanled up to
month of the crater by wire ropes
with stationary engines,
train will consist of four oar
boldine, fonr passengers apiece,
as one inch train sscends the monn
another wril be oomrng down.
What wae it that Tbaddens of War
j What kind of grab was it that
Henry VIII? What did Darwiaf
Whom did Gladstone? What did Count
? Now, what did Hamlet ?
What did William Tell ? When did
Bonaparte? Why did Marshal Uponwhat Ney ?
did Thscdore Hook ?
ArchbisliopTrermh and what did
Cook ? What did Willtam Pam 1
did Bismarck ? What did Leigh
“Good-bye, sweetheart,” was hi* last
to the beantifnl girl who hung
rcllipsto «>« »««* bek I* jed “ d and her ??f
11U ;
down fee street hejolioqmzed .
too.
The Gincumati Oazrttc copies this
item from an Irish paper: "Pnraefaat
by a poor widow woman whohasaafek
ehnj oonttintnffttnrte«>abiliin(j aada
letter." Andadds: -«• No
child is unwell, The next item down
th.eo»n kOam: fflM Mra. '‘Bobert G«rtte ^Taytor.aged «^wgJ
ts aa u,,li
f*** twmfrfive 1 *? three e£d»ro. jeers, .
awwitiion gLff?® *Kan
rtamldbetnedfor bigamy, tbmf
rtwObwMa Him*
Two Bngtish ^sajlca bonrtt . i «
alayan bear’ai^i brongbt it home on
SS\SS»ftSKttff ot dear_ lde ' cl i a ”* i , ituig a
. M
wisffo*^!^ nttm-ked it when
q w*s killed. *• 7„ ,JL ~tten 5-«t
shillings for the skin, - the sailors : 1 b* J
the operation, naorruM.
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