The Weekly Sumter republican. (Americus, Ga.) 18??-1889, May 08, 1885, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

L>rv'72>.v^ YY i 'T The Sumter Republican «Etfi-Wncn.T,Ono Year - - -« iA iVkVklt, One Tear - All advertisements ralnaUng from public offices will be ehwtod forin accordance with an net passed by tlm late General Assembly ol Georgia—76 cent’ per hundred words for each of the first tour Insertions, and S5 cents mbwqaent InserUon. FrscUfiual * — hundred are considered one ■ figure and initial, with Advertising Kates - OUB square icrflnserUou, - -fl.oo Each subsequent Insertion, - - - <0 UTTm Limes of Minion type eon* stltnte a square. AU advertisements not contracted for will BY ESTABL.ISHF.D lit 185* C. W. HANCOCK DEMOCRATIC IN POLITICS AND DEVOTED TO NEWS, LITERATURE SCIENCE. AND GENERAL PROGRESS Terms: S2 A TEAR IN ADVANCE nunurea w«««*»,« -- date andfiRnature, is counteAae a word. YOL. 32. AMEBICUS, GEORGIA, FRIDAY, MAY 8, 1885. NO. 11. I will be continued until ordered oat and 'fflwiwiw ■iwmimij. — | Advcitisemcntstooccunyfized places wll be charged 23 per cent, above regular rates -?®8!SS6sr £SSt, “ professional cards. ^ A REMARKABLE CURE! B. B.&E.F.Hinton, fHYSICUSS HKD SDRGEOHS DECIDEB Attorneys at L,ate. j T0 csf. tee KSIFE. tnd Federal VF Ktadin, A B. P. HOLLIS, i ;j •Attorney at Imm>, jE_ A.MERICCS, <i-V. ! J~IS. Office, Fontytb Street, c National Jtonk j iSETmT SIMMONS. j BSSffitlBV ! £S.l5!M, , !5iS •Attorney at tone, j . Macon, Cx B.'h7w"i LKI NSON~ •Attorney at i,aw. AMEI1IOIW :e in Ilawliin. r Street, In looking, ; DAISY’S VISIT. common-place picture—a pretty, slender ycung girl seated under tppy tor too urn ume in Sue weeks went by nil and Daisy was snmmoned to hefc great- aunt’s dressing-room. "Tho limit of your stay has expired," Queretaro is Miss McLean said, looking in greater harmony with her refined arance; but Clement Ashley’s eyes itened as they rested upon it, and —„ yourself?’’ by hills. It was foundod by the Aztecs, fancy work, which would hare been "Very, Terr much! Daisy answered, i and was captured by the Spaniards in — t — • - - her sweet voice choking a little. “Itj 1M1. We went to the Hill of Bells. - invito mol called *“£1 Cooo de las Campaaas.” ! southwest of the city, where Maximil- , . . condition.: ian was captured and shot The view I have learned to love you, but my will from tho hill presents to the eye one o! is made, as I wrote you. It cannot the loveliest panoramas outside the vnl- v “ — J *vcn to please you. The ley of Mexico. The valley Is broad irtunc goes to my half- and full of verdure ana large fields of very worthy young man. j wheat, barley, and alfalfa, and gar- remain as his wife! I j dens of bright blooming flowers are on ago thrill stirred his usually i i-eptiblo heart •Have I traversed the wide world and gone unscathed all these he asked himself, “only t love, at first sight, with a rustic di vinity in tho wilds of Yorkshire?” At the sound of his footsteps tho girl looked up, with a startled air, the lovely peach-bloom color deepening and brightening in her velvety cheeksT Wbat Daisy Wentworth saw was a tall, dark young man. of eight-and- twenty, with a somewhat listless ex pression upon his fine, handsome face. tourist’* dress of slrabby- ill-worn. grey tweed, that initiated would havo known have been cut by a West-end tailor, and carried a small pack slnng across his broad shoulders. “May I trouble you for a drink of iter?" he asked, in a low. mntlenl ► different ita refined accents from the rough northern dialect which sbo was accustomed. Before Daisy could comply with the request, tho door „ open, and a hard, strong-featured face, with beetling black brows and fiery Daisy’s step- Mrs. Wentworth mther- “Don’t come in here!" sho cried, brill, acrid voice, glowering angtrily at the astonished young man. "You have nothing 1 want in that nasty pack. I never buy of hawkers. I*m dis ced with tho whole tribe; and Daisy “ i— —- ’• —* of temper trilling and idling. Just Clement Ashley’s “My pack only co strolling artist lit real Simon rure," a hawker, with a sera tache, climbed the s beg a draught of l freckled-faced Daisy’s chocks wore burning hotly, but sho caught up her print -un-boii- net, and. bringing a tumbler pantry-shelf, led the way to l the rear of the lu Clement di proffered, as though his gazo happened to fall upo brooch that was a cameo of considerable portrait finely and artistically >t look out of place, though her “I beg your pardon!” ho eagerly. “But may I ask where you got that brooch?” “It was my mother’s.” Daisy replied; “that is why I like to wear it.” “Oh—an heirloom? Can you tell le anything of Us history?” “Very little. My mother prized it ighly. Tho likeness is that of some eUtive—a great-aunt, I believe." “Wbat was your mother’s maiden QLEKETARO. ■ of Maxi mill laa'a thousand feet minnicated with him, and he every side. long bills skirt the valley very willing range nienL” Daisy grew very pale. Consent to marry a inau she had never seen? No, that would have been impossible, even heart . fill all her other’s image did be said, sadly. “There “Wait until'you havo met my heir. fait until"yoc. You might change your mind.' t dazzling tho eye. Near At last when the good-byes had been spoken, she groped her way ” * lrm. A gentle * 1 ..... . looked up, a startled cry broke from her lips. “You here! IIow very strange!” Sho blushed furiously, bnt as the Vonng man opened his arms Daisy leaned her beau upon bis shoulder with heavy sigh. “Are you glad to see me, darling?” "Oh, very glad!” “Then you do love mo a little?” ” ‘ wered, unablo to keep the brow of this hill we came to the three monuments marking tho spot where Maximilian, Miramon, and Me jia wero shot The monuments < contained raised letters, in brass, .. citing the names and particulars of tha tragedy, bnt the ruthless hand of the relic seeker or fiend have left bat few of them to tell the tale. An iron rail ing surrounds the monuments. One Mr. Bull took a line sketch of it, and near by wo cut a cane as a memento of our visit We met an old soldier at the spot who was with the Mexicans under General Kscobcdo, and emperor shot He pointed on the place where he was captured, ami rave us a pathetic accour * Iv death. He confirmed r _ ticularthc accepted accounts of his capture and death, and of the treachery i low laugh. face beaming with delight. “You might as well ring for the maid wraps, my dear!” she called Daisy glanced bewildered from the smiling woman to the handsome lover. “What does she mean?” "That you are never going back to bo abused by your shrewish step mother,” Clement answered. “For- trying you so sorely, but Fatty’? wish. I am her heir.’ BILL NYK ON DUU.NKARDS. i the matter of temperance, writes ivil of intemperance will work its owi destruction when the proper time comes. Wo may get pretty wqary waiting for the day of i. but it is certainly unwise to make rape ranee obnoxious by feeding it t ask them if they havo violated their solemn obligation. You may convince ■ reasoning human being, but you ot teach him a great truth by paim ; on any board fence in the civil! world, and then running him into those board fonoes till you ha' despise both you and the causo you rep- that put him in the bands of tho Mexi cans. It was through the treachery of Col. Miguel Lopez that the emperor vas taken and his forces subsequently iurrendered to the liberals. Maximif- tried before a court-martial and sentenced to bo shot. Persistent efforts wero mado to save his life. Tho Princess Salm-Salm is said to have rid- I*onis l’otosi, the scat of the republican government, ICO miles dis- WANTKD TOAD JOUBN. The old capitol nt Tallahassee was i me old capitol at Tallahassee was a picturesque sight. It was built by the federal government In the old territorial unknown. It was of brick, in imitation of stone. Hero and there the angir storms, indignant at tho palpable fraud, had torn off por- garment, leaving thi tions of the oi dingy brick exuded. The bnil stories high, with a basement. and ornameutod with heavy columned '~~u tho floor* of which on a pitch exuded like patrio- hall. Tho legislature « stranger sight been .v of the hall the State sonata was in ses- on. At the other the house of as- imbly was incubating, and in the hall i hold it within arptoeive Seed* and Trees. “Speaking About dynamiters," laid naturalist, H have brought a few specimens to Rhutrate that feature in low life—as there are dynamiters in the lower animal kingdom ns well ns in the Jdfher, and, curiously enough, wo might say tins same of the vegetable kingdom. I remember a few years ago 1 was traveling on a small vessel be tween some of the West India Islands, and atone plaoc had purchased a her of curious seeds, placing them un der my berth for safe-keeping, sitting at the small table, hanging on with both bands, in company with a negro passenger, when there came an explosion that sounded as if a barrel of powder had gone off. Something whizzed by my face so closely that felt tho wind, and another projectile struck mo fall in tho breast. The ne gro was not so fortunate. He uttered progress, tho right those sacred prccim given by solemn vote ol the assembled It was an amusing sighL Upon plain pine tables, grouped around the halls rested huge dishes of chicken 1 stow and chicken pie. Hanked with cake, pic, biscuit and other things cal culated to tempo tho legislative appe tite. Behind those sat jolly, laughing “aunties," dressed in cool calico gar ments, with green Loughs to keep off -•... • juried by lond yell as tho sound came, threw up his hands, and, with tbo blood spurting from his face, went over back ward with a crash that brought the hurry-. Wo pickod him up, and tint he iwore that Iliad shot him, and then that I had hit him with a dob, but in a moment ho recovered from his fright pd we bogan to investigate.. xal hours uefoi orrhago could bo stopped. When I rose from my seat something dropped > show that taat, and begged President Juarez __ pardon the adventurer from Miramar. The government of the United States was appealed to in vain. None of the F.nropcan potei code and Maxii w comrades in arms, (ions." Miramon and Mejia, was shot on June ID, 1867. llis body was subsequently taken to Vienna for interment. Tho uight before the emperor’s execution he wroto the fol lowing letter to his wife, who was then a maniac, confined in one ol the pal aces of her father, the king of tho Bel gians; flies-olive branch, black doves, as it were the journey of tho ark was peace and plenty eonld be bad. Be hind a large tab of lemonade a yellow Venus presidod, and with sednetivo smiles and a tin dipper beguiled dimes and picayunes out of thirsty passers- by. The center of attraction, ltow* ever, was tho watermelon table, behind which a stalwart black, knife in hand, shouted at short intervals: “Yah’s your nice slice oi walormillion; only half dime a slice. Walk up gem’men, an’ try it. Get frum un’er dat table, you triflin’ pot-lickin' boy, or I'll chop dis yer knife.” upon tho cabin floor, and I afterward ■ncked it iip; and wbat do you sappoae was? Nothing bnt a section ol one the seed*, and they were the explo sive*. Iho heat of the cabin had lu some way affectod them so that they went off like cartridges, and, as each i made up of several pieces, it had lewhattho effect of grape-shot. One struck the negro missed my head and shattered a look ing-glass bohiad me, another struck curiously enough, took off the handle Under children, cute lu their blackness, romped and gamboled, and through the halls and out on tbo broad piazzas young girls, with anus around each “»hcr's waists, leisurely sauntered, their ight eyes flashing as they caught the itood on the table. Four of tho i didn't go off, and you may be sure I put them in a strong box. A number admiring glauces of» Jarlotta: If God ill loom the cruelty •To My Belo\ ever permits you theso line*, you v of my fate which ha* notccascd t ... sue me since your departure for Eu rope. You carried witn you my soul and my happiness. Why did I not lis ten to you? So many erents, alaid so many unexpected and unmerited catas trophic* have overwhelmed mo that I have no more hope in my heart, and I await death as a delivering angel. I die without agony. I shall fall with glory, like a soldier, like a conquering king. If yon have not the power to bear so much suffering, if Goa soon re unites us, 1 shall bless the Divine and paternal hand which has so rudely n i ribbon*. casian. Old moth, little group* disc question in theology, while their strong- halves crowded tho legislature m n-mouthed and awesome wonder at eloquence and learning there di- played. _ There was a prolusion joy and laugh u Near the waicrniuion table a quartet of •l'Py yutto* K'ri* '» a low mob ous voice the song of the Method!* convert The song was not loudunough *o disturb the legislature or to be heard cry far away, but to tho young nortli- m invalid, leaning against a huge pil- gazin* stricken u Adieu! adieu! Thy poor Alas, poor Maximilian! .Atho spot where he could not resist the temptation to pity foam and foolishness for the amuse- histliug along thu lane. put together a few sentencosof sense surprise tho public with, he would bo kled to doatb to cooo around after office hours and write me a few without But it was not ou the subject of tem perance itself that I started out to speak. I desired to propound to the readers of tho Inglttidc a conundrum quory. It is this: Why is it that lulling • That dreadful nas ocen scouting you again.- “I deserved it, uo doubt” “Why don’t you leave her? Have yon no relatives to whom you could go?” Daisy shook her pretty head. “There is only the great-aunt of horn I spoke this morning—and I an’t even know where to tiud her.” ipposo y. hunt mo up and converse with mm till The girls' cheeks iir,” she frightened, littl. idden. But I took a likiug to yon i No. i -you lalize what lightly printed a kiss on her right shoulder. Ume. Edmond Adam grew rosy indignation and slapped tho general'! laughing at me!” cried Daisy, running away and hiding herself, wit' tions singularly blended of rap' Daisy face. This did not trouble him in tho least, ne bowed again with inlinite respect and, with a gesture of admirablo 'fa- price?" And of a privilege she arrogated to her self, immediately ilvcmonth. He kissed his helped her into a ricketty vehicle, and away through, the farmhou black- mithy. and a dinner oflialf raw steak ’President Cleveland has perfectly lovely eyea,” remarked a Louisville ao- dety belle rcsterday, who Isjost back umetbiug; of t Tho above solemn chunk of ph by was written for mo by a w ersonal friend, who told me that got tired of writing mere froth and his sad fate, in spito of the fact that be was a usurper. We had seen the gild ed coach in which he and his beloved Carlotta had driven in triumph over the wido pascos of tho City of Cortez; wo bad paced up and down tho marble portico of the grand palace of Chapul- tcpcc, where the eye of tho ea could take in the grandest and magnificent panorama in tho western world; wo had seen his medals and decorations, his plato and his portrai exhibition in a Mexican m , ind wo stood on the spot water ed by hia blood, and where his last ex piring breath had gone np to the Great Others, bolt upright in their scats munched peanut*,* U» the droa- coiu pun intent ol the reading Judin of all n pitied him, had power pitied him, awl we pitied the man who because the idea of hunting me up and associating with me does not man until he is very, very 'Tlowever this may bo, it is Indeed •hilly day when 1 do not spend an hour drunk, politically drunk, orstorically drunk, admirably drunk, critically drunk, disorderly drunk, ornamentally drunk, or just simply drunk. itched the changing Scene. The Her. Scipio Pahua. member from Dug Out, was growing terribly mipa- ftcut. Never to him had tho ression I repeat again: Wi him and send him back to his dear Carlotta, and would not do it. In the language ot Richard McShcrry: “Ho died like hero. He had done Ids best to redeem fallen country, but had failed. the three brow of the hill, think: He but wbat he woi left before ndjou l getting $10 think: He was a usurper, but bad 1 lived, ho might have doue much fi Mexico. Hut God knows best,, and he evolve good from ho dared i illion, < »eo Cor. llaUiinorr Auvrirc Tbo Cossacks of “ he fifteenth and si sore governci l by i instead of occurring i vnl*. took place whei oetorUtically primitive. When the lution to have them concealed about bis person, but in the first stage of his by a “free fight.” betw* bauch. He generally finds and be sails up to where 1 am and be- shield aboru thu heads * in token of his official * inauguration that a great deal of my time Ls taken smearing his face v ip conversing with parties who meet COMPRISES FOUR PREPARATIONS. LIVER, HEART AND KIDNEY TONIC For torpid fiver and Kidneys and !*al- BL00D PCRIFIER. For Scrofula and Dio (j Taints. DRAIN TONIC. Fer Epileptic Fltl and other Convulsions, DIARRHOEA MIXTURE, For Diarrhoea, Dysentery, Ac. Manufactured at K South Broad SL At- Janta,Gx, and sold by Annalists generally. general, but after a very few days they wore a much different appearance un der her management; ana when sum mer came, the old farmhouse had been transformed into a bright little home, all aglow with the tokens of a woman'* presence. To be sore it was lonelv ove the very solitude. ° 'Uncle Angus.” sho said, toiemnlv, like this place. 1 mean to stay here oversaw. They glisten like pearls. SEEDS II kinds. Garden and FlowerSreds and Handle them Fresh and Reliable SEED fOSIPM ’ Call and See Us. J. &-&D.F. DAVENPORT. AMERICUS, CA. ing manner imaginable. Ills cheeks are rosy, too, ana he has a bce-o-tifnl dimple in his chin, to aay nothing ot a superb moustache and a hand aa soft and white as a woman’s. All in all, he is a very handsome man. and just tbo sort of a man to keep the women at his feet lie knows bis powers of fascinations well, and he is as vain _ may go?" she cried, in tin eager, pleading tone. Mrs. Wentworth frowned, bnt eon- Wben Daisy’s preparations were all made, and she was about setting out upon her journey, Mrs. Wentworth said— “That will suit roe well enough." said Uncle Angus. “Hut it ain’t likely, c fellow will coinc and snap you “Now I want yon to speak a good ord for Joanna. She ain’t no rela tion of Miss McLean’s, to be Bare, but tho old miser might send her a few dresses and j#’ might sen w bwoIs, am Take everything tka yon, Daisy, and when you < I'll di ' * I presumo fifteen hundred men have held me by tho hand and swore that everything they had was at my service. Money, clothes, houses, jewelry, anything else they had was none good for me. Then they would wring my hand again and start to go away, trot they would always return and talk some more, and when I would swoon and fall over they would reluctantly go away. When I ventured to remind them the next day of their kind offer to supply me with lands they most gener ally fall to call it to mind. Sometimes they ask me in a* Injured tone of vote* if I expected to hold a man responsible for all the promises be makes to the in- dergynaan. A good story about the Arion ball is told oy a New* York correspondent: A well-known man in tho lieau monde fell a victim early in the ev charm* ol • particularly fascinating about three hours, little siren. Hi* devotion continued all the evening, bnt th numerable common fools he meets while drank. So i desire . _ lie way that on and after this date I MiUiccnt laughed. ’•There are no -fellows’ here." said a. “Unless you count Ostler Jack, at the ‘Eoclofeehan Arms,’ or Daft Sun il v, that goes about playing the bag- ?Jncle Angus said notuing. He only laughed a—* *~ J1 “le he easily impressed by women?". That night s* roused the quiet hou*bold to active life. An accident on the railway which ran by the bouse scarcely a quarter of down.”—Louisville Commercial. An Alabama Judge said: fTho de- sndant Is -net responsible for taking the victim's life, lor be was a peculiar rowd o atcly all but o far uninjured ... ._ be able to resume their - journey next morning, but that one for days lay unconscious of all that was trans piring around him, iu Angus Carlyle's house. And one morning in the yel low glow of early autnmu. bo seemed onco more to emergo out of r - ** led obscurity of fe * real world arain. sort of a fellow and should hare died anyway.” He is almost as bad as tho Arkansaw Judge Who’shlfl! “Gentle- men of the inm 1 am rind to eee tlkl yon find a verdict of net guilty, /nbe dead man in this case playod base-ball and therefore, under tboetatata*, ought to have died.”—Arkansaw Traveler. Well preserved shark’s teeth hare een taken from an artesian woll 1,200 feet deep at ItainbrMgc, Ga. give notice in this pub- . and after this d ' * shall not hold any more open-air : startled by the mag- where Miss Mo- nificeuce of tL> hi Lean resided. Her great-aunt, a wrinkled old lady in bl*ck velvet and lace, welcomed her with a kiss. “Yon have your moth; ••Oh.” cried Daisy, eagerly, “do yon remember my mother?" ••Certainly. I used to wish sho wai a boy. that I might leave her mj money. Bnt girls are not of mud consequence In this world. I had lost all traoe of poor Ethel. And so Silas Wentworth is dead? He was a good »*•» hat sadly wanting la energy. “How did you And me. Aunt r •vThat’a a uwrrt ” chuckled t mnnications with common drunkards, and, as I want to be perfectly fair and just toward all. Iam willing to bind mysstf in a similar way not to try to convene ititb sober people while I may he drunk. Now, If there be anything unfair or unreasonable about this prop- ~ am willing to alter it, so that aa find fanlt with it I want to do exactly what la right and I do not require anything whatever of oth ers that I am not pwieetiy willing my- Aooording to a late decision of tho Illinois Supreme Court a “hoe, in le gal significance, le a deadly t having b [lad wiS a article of that kind. tontrary to the i»r'.c ltuunilic* which, a e Beat the Old Man. upon the presentation $100 bill, to let him know name and address, reque* the same time to make a note ol the number of the bilL Wcdncsdi unfortunate snau received the I Ing epistle: "Rear Papa—I i dreadfully hard up tld* month. I keep your nice new bank uol. * Your aftiectionate dai ’ Signiug S od. man’s >oui nghtcr. I saw t was dispatched, am. — — knowledge doe* not go. but 1 would be and handsome e again. -STrnmi that the larky parent bank If, as the social philosophers insist is aa iatimate coanactioi * i the price of wheat and the generally a provisiou connected with that could be heard nearly a mile; in this case the frost was the cause. There certain insects bore great holes in the bark of trees rain finds Its way in and freezes, and away goes tho tree as if you had placed a torpedo in it theming what the expansivo power of water win I'hiladclphia Timet. his health, and his French physician. Dr. Tholozaa, it ever within call, so that the unfortunate doctor is as great a gadabout as bis roaster. His Majesty irniuri idiotic*: •euibly tin ment. His habits of lifo l__ . ... his diet plain roasts and boiled. The King is an early riser, 4 or 6 a. m. be tas usual time in Summer. This long day, but bo breaks it rives hit by a sics drunk that ho could hardly I ong day, iesta. It is the royal habit when tired to bo shampooed by bis atten dants, and it is thought i —J indignity for a high official to be told to asust in the kneading process. Shampooing is and glossy, he de- * that ilk, and being able was in grave tronble. ; lover of watermelon. whils l.o could bear ■fusion ol the (estival, s though • bis service* nturc. Still -ry. “Wat. leaping t top of h mTdfrei ■e: "Mu tab Out has the floor. whopper. head as ho glanced anxiously at the recogni _ energy. “Mistah Speakab, I moves tall, thin'white ing his long forefinger •Ii’ rTP ‘ , m Scipio, said: sincerely hope that the gentleman r - measure now pending before the house. • Yes; I think that we* will be able to close the contemplated debate ' about three hours. I tee no cause the gentleman’s excessive scitalion. although, of course, he should bo deep ly interested in It, as it is a measure for the amelioration of the condition of his one?" from tbo corridor. The hair on the bead of the Rev. Scipio stood straight up. ••Gorra mighty,” said lie. shaking I iber; “does yon lica’ dat? tj here eff you wante- bat I is gwinter dejoura right now, —* - •edouti and. seizing his hat, he bolted out of ’»# room, and soon was up ’ ’ i a luscious melon.—-V. Y. Something to Think About. At birth tho mean length of boys inches, and of girls, Inches. Growth is most rapid immediately them is aa intimate connection be- until sixteen years ol ago the annual growth is S 1-6'inches; during the next year, 1J inches; and daring the next be more prolific ol matrimony than aay similar period for a long time, for the erep of food grains has been large beyond all precedent, and unless unex pected circumstances intervene price will be correspondingly low.—o*. Le*U UMo-Vemoermt. . A LouisYillo r—11 boot, ol Mm totooroito .id to 1used ln Washington in proportion peare in tho zenith of his glory. I cou ° lr7 - . years 1 inch only. Tka average height ot a man 1ms been estimated at 6 feet 4 incites. A man is taller in the morning than at night by half aa lack, and in tbo variation ~ r down the hatch in a •The man had been struck fairly la blow so powerful that it pitcher, or monkey cooler, that Royalty “at Table." The King of Persia is very careful of real art, and is carried out fic perfection by some of Ills Majesty's more confidential servants. Tbo chisf barber is a man high in office. At 12 o’clock the royal breakfast is served. It is a solitary meal. The King is squatting on the ground; some fifty dishes are set before him. HU Majesty select* tho simplest, and quenches hU thirst with buttermilk or iced sherbets, which are served in delicioas profusion in magnificent china bowls. Dead silenco is observed by tho few favored courtiers who stand around tho wall* of tho apartments. The royal butlers silently hand the •arious dishc*. As tho lung eats he iddrcssc* those whom ho may deirn to lon'or with his notice, and those fortu- late ones bow low and answer in mmble affirmatives, “May 1 bo your Asylum of thu Universe. So ‘It faappeued exactly as Your Majesty ordained,” and so'on. The ‘ ind of language is used by tbo I*rlncos in addressing thoir and they would not |>re»ume to t to hit iu tho royal presence; in Persia no son would sit in bis i pn'senee unless ordered to do i is more due filial respect The Kin On I. lick the platters clcai m-s it.* mouth and wi|*w n golden bowl, and then o uieal is served to the ; them it goes lo stly tliu royal far- litermlly oval din- bout ‘J p. iu.. is n rape it- of tho It alniOhtJnipoWiblv at times to properly regulate the tnui[ierntiira. Frequently the licnt on a particularly cold night would boenmaso unbearable the crowded daucing-hall that iug open thu window*. Tills of ct>ur»e, allowed the wintry draught* to p.ay about the nocks and arm* of the ladies rore decollete eoytiimos. Iu very -room have Inch directly allr vtosure. T ho ladioi of tho p ‘ o physicians say. ifuE to wrap up thoroughly when they step from the healed hall to tho A rido of two blocks on a bail-room costume, with loose wraps. society women wear, has often induced on attack which was soon at- idod with fatal consequences. The sedo it- The frequent changes iu the temjwraluru during a single day make a ebaugo from heavy to tight clothing particular J ilarly dangerous. “JJonel. Sockvlllc West," writes a Washington correspondent, “is of mid dle height, with inconspicuous features, a pair of large, sad bine eyes, and a look so wearied ami ttored that it can >nly jwocecd fi less ennui. He is of middle age. quite bald, and slightly grayi H i* court dress is noted as the most heavily en riched among the legations. It f> e where the doth W visible is in the b«ek. t is an inch, or even t San Francisco gets 900,000 bananas a month from the Sandwich Islands. The number oi bananas on a bunch average 110, and thsy bring in that city at The President’s mouu.-eript is zahVto be positively painful to decipher. -.Tbo ' style is sharp and detdsiVe. and many, ot the Won!* end m’tnnrksTiial are lit tle more than nervous shake* or the hand. He write* with almost a telc- grapuer’* rapidity. - The most delicate watch wheels . -