Newspaper Page Text
JV
9 ,| v SU^^oolfsiijinjittTf trcmgunf
..»«
The nave of life on golden *a
i ir. «L Lt>ii i ' . T ...
Li if-
trembling buds,
will...
unde.
Stood for n moment still.
wmnmmnmmmm
Sheppard followed hltfa to Fifth Lake,
and, taking
TERRIFIC TORNADO IN’ SICILY.
i .i.t •‘'ll i5*5_y ylimn
TheTo;
* second bait, readied ^0pr,j*fiy ;f f, , (*ra, ^eaf.
“ j and Dumb.
t'liJ i
She read the superscription o* cr,
And broke the careful seal;
The precious burden that it bore
She did not read, but feet.
<•;:» :. ,
O. earth, so green with summer new
, t Q.sky of heaveny blue!
jU' .niated birds on every bough!
Her thoughts arc not for you.
The hum of friendly tones below.
The life of peasant care,
That swayed her soul an hour ago
Now rule no longer there.
Slic knows a love ton pure and high
‘ ■For simple words to speak.
Its glory glistens in her eye,
And blushes on her check.
Its brighter warmth about her lies.
It fills each human need.
Enfolds her life and glorifies
The simple word or ’deed. *'
He ligs no promise to alluro
No fairy tale to tell;
The skill of honest love is snre
To work its purpose well.
It scorns the flatter's subtile art,
The wordling’s acted lies,
But storms the foriress of the heart,
And bears away the prize.
Yet brave as spurred and belted knight,
More tender still than brave,
He lifts his victim into light,
Himself the willing slave.
O, love thy kingdom stnnds secure,
Burn with creation's days;
Thy sweet dominion shall endure
When earth has passed away.
[Fr«m the Utice Herald, November IS.]
SORROWFUL SCENE IN THE ADI*
RON DACES.
An Old and Well-known Gnlde and Hun*
ter Drowned In sight ofhis Son.
From the Boonville Herald we gather
the particulars of the drowning of C.
Sanford Sperry, proprietor of the
Forge House, an excellent guide, a
skilled hunter, and a man generally
known to tourists through the North
Woods. •
Sperry, Jack Sheppard, Samuel
Dunakin and Daniel Sears were en
gaged in running deer. Mr. Sperry,
with Ins mu, aged ten years, were
watching Lime Kiln Lake, John
Brown’s tract, while the rest of the . .
party watched the Fulton chain of| ,ia y in .S
lakes. This. was on Saturday last.
Mr. Sperry had been quite successful,
having shot one deer, recovered it,
hung it to a tree and dressed it. A
second one was shot, and Sperry put
out in a boat after it, leaving his coat
and, gun in charge of his son Willie.
He secured the second deer, tied it to
the boat and was towing it to shore,
New’ York, lltorertiber’SO.—The
London Times of the 8th has the fol
lowing account of a hurricane in Sicily,
which destroyed the, town of Pnlazzo-
There has been no instance of such
a calamity wiibm thd ’ *’■
MEMORY OF tlVtltO MAX.
No earthquake ever caused So much
destruction. Thera are houses ruined,
houses fallen, to the very ground, walls
clyft from end to ^nd,,\yilft hanging
outwards, ns if. to rest on adjoining
ho’isos. There are roofs wholly swept
away, sunken vault*, balconies torn
from their places, windows and shut
ters cither entirely carried off, or hang
ing loose from the walls, lamp poeto
forced from their tickets, uprooted
trees. Along the northeast side of the
town : :i*. .u*i I *'
NOT A SISOLE HOUSE REMAINS,
in which the whole roof and windows
do riwt require thorough, repairs. The
streets are .a,mass of ,fragments and
rubbish. The incidents of the dis
aster-are so strnngfe'hs to be almost .jn?
credible. There : Was a storq with
twenty-five hectolitres of wheat of
which
NOT A TRACE
is anywhere to be seen. The books of
the Lxcise and of the Sand Registry
offices have vanished, and only the ; r
torn leaves have been found here and
there at great distances. In one house
all the copper kitchen utensils were
blown through the roof. In another,
benches and heavy chests flew through
the window. The iron bars of one
balcony are to be seen curled up one
way, those of another twisted up an
other way. There is the pillar of a
palace which has been moved forward
one foot without breaking, and stands
isolated, all in one piece. There is the
wall of another ]>alacc which has fallen
back more than three feet without a
crack. There is a beam of one house
which has thrust itself into another
house. There is half a bedstead, the
other half of which lies ■ t
NO ONE KNOWS WHERE.
All the tiles of one building are hud
died together in one spot ou the roof,
crushed and broken up as small os if
they had been pounded. The rafters
of another building «rd all bare. The
tUes have flown, no one can see where,
lu a stable ou the bare ground men
are
relates the following story:
While I was standing among the
others I was eye-witness to one
most extraordinary events if has bfen
my duty to record. Mass was ' '
on, and diseased people were being
carried to the pool formed, as I have
already explained, by the rush of the
miraculous spring fro pi the Grotto.
Two girls in peasant costume pushed
forward to get near the water, Obi}
Was almost imot-lookidg7 she' Was lean
ing on the arm of the other, whd with
difficulty tried to clear a passage for
her afflicted companion. A gentleman
by my side, perceiving 'it was - her in
tention to make for the pool, spoke to
her and asked what, was the nature of
the disease that her friend or sister wds
suffering from.
“ She is deaf aud dumb,”
.the girl, “ and we hare come
way from Blois to see if.sjje can’t be
. * 1
replied
all the
Office Geogia. Railroad.
XI -1 ATHENS Not. 13th 1872.* -
-I hereby notify all persons having
Fertilizers at thi* depot, tint unless the eame
he removed within a reasonable time after their
names are published In the “ Noktheakt Gf.o*-
GiAX,”.the Fertilizers wil\be sent to a warehouse
and storedjtt^ee fP enre°fConsign^ 1
, u«... ; . A G RANT, A|ctrt*. 1
TONSOfiiAi!
LATINO THE BODIES,
one by one as they are being dug out.
Most of them are in their night dresses,
having been crushed as they were
quietly sleeping. Their features aud
forms ore so disfigured that on$ cannot
look at them without shuddering.
Their nsstrSs, ears and mouths are
stopped atp with earth. The white
dust- pierced through
the skin. Here is a body «f a man
holding close to his heart a.tfluld, pro
bably his own. The skulls .of both
volunteered to clear a way for them,
telling the leader to follow him. I
stood some distance from the pool, and
the pressure of people was so great that
I got divided from the Blots travellers,
and did nob sec the deaf and dumb
orphan immersed, butsoinnton minutto
after the above dialogue had been ex
changed in nay hearing a loud shout of
joy nrose in tho crowded mass of be
holders, and it was followed by a
“ Vive la Notre Dame de Lourdes J”
that ran like wildfire through every
car and mouth present, to be echoed
by the mountains around.
I used all my strength to reach the
pool and stood by the girl from Blois,
whose deaf and dumb charge was no
longer by her side. She was as pale
as death. “ Where is your friend ?”
I asked. “ They have carried her in
the grotto to the bishop.” “ Why
“ She is cured 1” A prelate then
made his way up to our knot of eager
questioners. “ My child, tell me
what you have seen,” he asked kindly.
“ Monseigneur,” replied the poor girl,
governing her emotion, “ we came
from Blois yesterday to ask Notre
Dame de Lourds to cure my friend,
and when we got to the pool I helped
her put her hand under as much water
os I could pour over it, aud made her
drink a glass.
She seemed to hear all at once. A
good gentleman, who noticed she look
ed confused at some noise, understood
she was getting souuds in her ears,
and, taking hold of her said she was
to say after him the words he said ;
Vive Norte Dame de Ijourdes V and
my friend repeated, ‘ Vive Notre Deane
ds Lourds f when presently all the
people standing round us shouted out
same words, and niv friend was fright
ened, but the gentleman carried her
in his arms away from me to the rail
ings of the grotto, which the priests
inside opened, and she is inside now.”
“Iti*a miracle,” said the prelate.
The new* had now spread all over
CHARLEY HILL
At Hie old established
% BARBER-SHOP,
On Broad Slaeet, over tlie store of.Mes-rs. J. K. &
L. C. Matliewa, have the best anil -most attentive
workmen anti all the modem appliances fur
Shay fug, Shampooing, JTair-
, : i dressing, etc.,
Ladle? and children waited on at their residence*,
when desired. Post mortem cases will receive
prompt and careful attention. Oct. 11,1872.
TIN ROOFING
AND GUTTERING
Done'In ttie "beat ‘manner, and repairing of all
kinds ofEUMI’S and BEI-L RANGING.
A11 work warranted and done by
C. B. VEltONEB,
the
vbea Willie called, “ The dogs are are shattered. There .are datojtouug
comeing!” Sperry stood up in the boat | men
to determine from which direction the
third deer would be likely to take the
water.' The lake was very rough, and
the action of the waves, combined with
in' .
*U. 4
fill ‘f
TivO J
the. wc
thrown
Ijt of the deer, which was |
and forth by the water,
W EACH other’s ARMS,
robabiy brothers. The chest* and
aeks of both arc crushed. Near
them is another youth covered with
blood. He was clerk in a government
office. He has his ere glass still stock
made the boat very unsteady, and «-i in Ms right eye. ISfe was probably
periencedas he was, Mr. Sperry failed reading or writing when he was struck.
to preserve his balance and fell into the
lake. As he fell Sperry caught the
side of the boat and upset it. A strop
west wind was blowing, which drifte
the boat parallel with the north share,
. HMfc* The boat
upset abont one-fourth of a mile from
There are some mangled past recogni
tion ; others that seem unhurt end
look • .in; . TT ,t ,
ri if m t -li •• ^
AS IF THEY WERE BLEEPING.
Without exaggeration, one-third of
the town is dismantled and ip ore than
the lauding. The boy on shore began * thousand families literally wfthout a
- - *' - ■ ° v 1 home. About a thousand more have
to cry. and Sperry, who had Aaeured , . ...,, » -, ,, « .
an oar and Simbod astride wp -J one little corner of what Was
turned boat, called cheerily to ^^,1 tlunrhm.seto ahaWthsmsn The
brS. a!
“Don’t cry, Willie, I am coaticg to1 , r ®.
shore all right.” For almost n« hour uair
the father' rattled bravely with death, J
their house to shelter them. The dead
are thirty-two, seriously hurt about
*' a score.
bravely with death,
while hisJittle boy, in an agony of
suspense, watched from the shore. For
some time he made slow progress to-
FRESIDENTML ELECTIONS.
President Washington was cleeted
ward his boy and safety, but the labor in “ I'P? »itbo.ut an
* * * . . ■ I or.nnouu* ivaf/k An.n A rlnruo IiO#i Anlv
necessary was too great even tax his
strength. Several times the relentless
waves washed hint from the boat, but
with unabated courage, though with
failing strength, he regained liis place.
The water carried away his oar aud lie
continued the oneoual fight by pad
dling with Ida hands. When he was
within seven or eight rods of shore the
water swept him from the boat, and he
was too weak to climb back upon k.
Even then he did not give up lus won
derful fight for life, but clinging to the
boat he tried to force it against the
waters to the shore close by. The little
boy waded into the cold water to his
shoulders, braving death himself in a
vain attempt to save bis father. He
says that had he becti at&e to find n
long pole lie could have reached his
opposing vote. John Adams had only
one majority in 1897. In 1801 Jeffer
son and Burr received an equal vote,
and the House of Representatives gave
the decision iu favor of the former. In
1805 Jefferson received 1(>2. electoral
votes over Charles C, Pinckney’s 14
In 1809 Madison got 122 out of 175
electors, and in 1813 he received 128
to DeWitt Clinton’s 89. At the
eighth Presidential election Monroe re
ceived 183 out of 217 electoral votes,
and in 1821 was re-elected by 227 to
1. In 1824, the election of President
devolving upon the House-of Repre
sentatives, John Quincy Adams was,
through the influence of Hcpry Clay,
chosen for the position. In 1828 An
drew Jackson received 178 electoral
votes to John Q. Adams’ 83, and he
wot re-eluetoi iu 1S42 by 219 votes
father ami drawn him to shore. The, . .... -
father’s strength was now coinpletely | ^
gone. lie could only cling to the boat,
with his head harelv above the water,
and drift at the mercy of the wind.
As the boat drifted hy the tandiag ti
approached nearer the shore, and the
, h!l , ( brave little boy again waded into the
lake in another desperate effort to reach
the father. Thu water at the landing
was deeper, and the longest pole the
Floyd, anjd Wirt. In 183(5 Martin
Van Bureh came in by 170 to 114
divided between Harrison, * White.
Webster Mangum. ' In 1840
Harrimn was elected President over
Van Bnreo by a vote of 234 to 69.
In 1844, James K. Polk received 170
to Henry Clay’s 105 votes. Zaelia
Taylor? had 163 votes in the eledtora!
■■ MINTS, OILS,
»w a i , ri ■■
DYE-STUFFS, &.
WE HAVE ON HAND A LAJLlGE ASSORTMENT 07
Perfumery, Fancy Goods ?
jsr: if# UAV&N0W alarge stooa of i i? » , ■ . g
GLASS, ALL SIZES, WHICH WE WILL SELLVEUV LOW
■ i ■ . ■ •’ '
CRIFFETH & CBiJi
BEG
LEAVE TO ANNOUNCE TO THEIR customer
THEY ARE READY TO SERVE THEM ARaiy'^
T . • WITH THE LARGEST STOCK OF
Staple Dry Goods, Boots, %
; Pats and Groceries
•i 1ft-:
IVIAOQ
Livery Stable,
J HAVE A LIVERY STABLE
On Thomas Street,
wIk-tc Horse* will be FEI) aud eared for. Also,
WAGON YARD.
I am prepared to Feed Droves of Horses and
Mules. Parties will do well to call.
j: z. cooper.
no*13-lj • .
THE NORTHEAST GEORGIAN
Is Onfy $2 Per Anuum.
srrsscitiiiu Ton jt.
People came running down
reop]
; to ii
girls. “ Vive Notre Dame de Lortles”
was the universal shout. Others knelt
in silence. , .mu::
I pushed onto the railings and saw
that the scared child was surrounded
by fathers and priests. One of them
said shecould not understand the sense
of what was spoken to her; but she
could bring out the words told her; da
parrot would. This, of course, is a
natural effect of deafness. ,
To aver that the girl could talk
would be a gross imposition, as, never
having heard the human voice, she
could no more understand it than a
new-born babe; but the miracle of
hearing and of uttering souuda bad
taken place for all that. Talking will
be acquired by habit. I will ref raid
from mentioning anything I did not
see. Other miracles were reported by
eye-witness that day at the pool; I will
not mention them. I can but certify
that the incident as told above is us
true as that I am relating it, and as
that those who have fallen on this
column are at this moment reading it,
I was greatly moved, and looked up
to the rocks of Massabiellc with a feel
ing ahm to awe; and, thinking of
these things, I returned to the hospice,
where I shut myself up in the dormi
tory to get through the beginning of
this correspondence. There was no
inducement to go out; the rain re
doubled and came dowH now pouring,
swelling the streamlets on the stopes
around.
LAMAR COBB, A. S. ERWIN, HOWELL COBB
COBB, EllWIN & COBB,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
ATHENS, GEORGIA.
£gT“ Office in the Deupree Ruildiiuj.^p^
•jsp.iv a r iMKiN:i(ia f *h
•xipina»da»a £k>a ' i«»in v
■a-ujo v».i oiis'Ki.io ‘ansaxy aoanoa «<> ‘nu
M -[{no b mi* aiu joasj aboi oi|a |[8 joj paiuaua aaaq SNOOH OXISSaHd
•. F I ! •; ‘
C5T asvard 01 aaauxvHvno hho.w tty ^3
HYTIOa 3.M0 A’lMO 10 i S3dA183I,I3Jf 8
•>!.; .-i - -i.’ > v . if ,
i SHQIBd HVNNVAVS IV SHdVUfflUOHd
aavit tiiav i siiil oa ox asv
YiaNorc xsaLSYaiom -k>j sannxoix xssxsok ^
anx hhvw ox si xoarao ak
; sod tjoo.i.io^j put? sqdtjaSojoijgi
Hioa NEX
mm® t 3ftHi
DXIXVK AT ATIVI03JS3
<LI ®CBIS XHDIH .
HK (IKIJ T1LW SHHKOJSHD
fc NiAAoa Ecacisdcn
asixBtjAqy i nononnv
A. K CHILDS, R. NICKERSON, Y. II. WYNN.
THAT \YE HAVE EVER OFFERED.
We are ready to receive all money clue us
shall be turned away who wishes to pay his ac^uiT"!
have plenty of time to serve them.
etist,.
NEW BOOKS
• - a A v i ai /l t l. *1.1 If. . •
AT 1
BURKE’S BOOK STORE:
The .Poet at the Breakfatt > Table—
. T>y OliTer Wcndell.HolmM. $2 00.
The Marble Prophecy and Other Poem*—
By Dr. i. G. Holland. $1 CO.
Doliinytr't Fable* and- Prophecies of the
Middle Agee. $2 2.1.
The Land, of Charity—An Account of
Traranrore and Ito Detil Worship. $2 25.
Present Issues ; or. Facts Observable in the
Ctmseiotttnest of the Age—By Rev. E. \V. Mem-
mlDSBT, of SoulU Carolina.
Premiums Paid to Eqierienec—
■By Edaard Garrett. Illustrated. $1 73,
Try Craeoirand the Carpathian*—
i)y Aln.-H;-Hutchinson, llluatruted. $2 00.
TJia\End of the 'World—A Lor* Story—
By Kkward Efc-leston. 81 .
Wonders of the Yclloirstoiie—-
- Edtlod »*y Bayard Taylor. $1 0.
Travels in Sooth Africa—
Edllinl l«jr Bayard Taylor. SI SO.
Wonders of the Moon—
45 Illustrations. 81 SO.
Voppee's English Literature—iivic. $2 25.
The Cruise of the Frolic—
By W. U. (S. Kiasxton. Illustratad. $2 60.
The Fire Ships—A Tale of the Natal War.
By Kingston. Illustrated. $2 00.
Kingston library of Adsenture—G rof. |3.
The Eustace Diamonds—
By Anthony Trollope. $1 23.
El/> Tide—By the author of Valeria Ayl
mer, Ac., I J aj,er, $1 00; cloth, $1 SO.
Moyne Reid's Work* Complete^-41 50 pr rol
Elegant Edition* of the Poets, 81.50 to 3.50
Juvenile ant( Toy Hooks, Games, <ye..
In great almmtanee. Fur sale at
BURKE’S BOOK STORE.
Shakes-pcarCs Kundwritiug.
by
Ja
Iw. could get w«s ant long enough
*pan the space between the farthest I Franklm Pierce was elected President
venture be eeuld make and the dying
tnao,
Atore Bpcny gave up hope, mid said
faintly*; “ I mtiri &.* A. frw wds
north of the .lending he lost his hold
on the brat and was drowned.
Willie waited a few minutes to see I by .a. vote of 212. to;2ft., Ahd iu 1868,
turn-1 Grant defeated, fjeympqrby i
jf - , . HI,;, - ,
• if his fiither would rise, aud then __
ed bWfece toward home, risteeil roileei 214 to 80.
:siu' -wi r trey, Fewboysof bis sge haws ever J ; “tit
ai .tried. Alone in the woods,/ ~
-ja t . tbe ground covered with snow, wet to
Li. i ui tbs ntyOa.ltod heart bursting
I M L-UdHtJ ..lost neither spirit nor
•hosqib
-mil to
aroes Buchahnau defeated Fremont
^756, by 175. toTlij' In I860,
iraham Lincoln 180, electoral votes,
Douglas J2, Breckinridge 72, asd
Bell 39; and; iuY864, Diucoln was
re-elected over .George B.'. McClellan
a vote of
■OliiO . 1
Against it.
'pt to Fifth Lake, got a bout,
e, and there found the
its that he could nbt bull
;T -T »rt f •ulf vlT * *
MedfftliAh Shejppard, who had left
J.inie Kiln Lnke in the morning Input
tovtihe dogs, rrturned. auti fiptf his
‘ to Spehy to come
Xn*lU . Hfte as 4 signal - ft -Span
.eAivnSa ncross after Him. As po ■
atnojl madc;dift wallwd.aronnd «>#•
,UiltL
•hmQ
.«-« Y re
-The present absurd fashion of wearing
the front hair, “qanged.’,’.originated in
English riuHcries, the hair of very
young children is cut in 'this fashion to
keep it out of their eyes. '
i r • A ‘ , *esv;”pf talk ft consunfcifl in Te^as
county,ftythi*.State, bf thercceutclope-
ment of a couple, each sixty years of age^
and each leaving bebind Urgc faauiiea of
A family jov lately occurred io Ohio
where the lmsband used atovsiWood and'
(be wife buckshob...Tbe funeral of bath
was uq;ely attomllbj^hailrighbof*,,and
pronounced by ^l.IprbfiaWWi^ “s »
very j .P^
It is nothing less than marrelous
tliat a man who wrote as he wrote—
aud, altogether, no man ever wrote
like him—that a poet, the author of
such plays and such poems; that a
man possessing so many friends and
admirers, with whom his correspond
ence must have been exttmsive, should
not have left a single line behind -him
traced by his own hands. Of all his
poems and plays there does not exist a
page, a line, a single word in manu
scrip. AH Shakcspcaw?* manuscript
plays could not have perished in the
fire which destroyed the Globe theatre.
The author must have made little
account of them himself; but‘how
great would our estimation he of a
single act of any of Shakespeare’s rlays
in his own handwriting J We nave
lust now among us a parallel to'.' thd
tulip mans t. Thousands of pounds
are willingly paid for a picture, which
the same number of shillings would
once hare purchased. Rather let us
say that the shillings were given for
the picture, and that the pounds by
thousands are given for the painters
name. Weil, what would not be
willingly paid (for the sake of Shake
speare, name) for. the original manu
script, say of “Hamlet?”
would be * fierce fight among the
competitors far even a single passage.
We fancy the lines beginning with
“ The qualify of mercy is not strained,"
or those that open with “ She never
told.her love," and hundreds of others,,
could uot be bad for guineas, cover:
ing each 1< tier. What a contention
there would be for the first love-letter,
" J jsed to jmy one. A costly hold
1 Alas !, there are neither Unto
ttol*^ 1?sn saved
isrirn
FREE TO BOOK AGENTS
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S And House-Furuishing Emporium!
ANB SEATirn SimU IN ENBLESS VARIETY
IS road anti Thomas Sts*3 then s, Ga•
e of signatures of hi* i - ^
* ‘ H,
fined to a
name tojoartain deeds, and inrtluMe
sahecriptinuB Vhe—ma is < spelled dift,
feretffty.'. Sveft the fergm. jiave- npt
dared to n:oduc a letter ly Shakes-.
.i.'iwto n: rtu, ihIk idru 1
-AT—
ENGLAND &0BB>
t . -rr ; .. ‘ 1t?vr , ... >
HIGHEST PRICE PAID FOR COTTON, AND
PRODUCE—CHEAPEST PRICE FOR GOO^
•• » *,./ ;•«> *:?>»; ff ' f A ?; » ; ■ i *
Having Bought MR. R. B. HODGSON’S \nt
: THE COAI.
n
to furnish it at TEN DOLLARS PER
and ELEVEN DOLLARS delivered to toy P*
the city. A good supply constantly on hand. ^
a®. Mr. J. 8. ENGLAND wffl furnish WOOD to those
... -. . . ' !
We are now
d:
el
l
phi
J. S. ENGLAND.
i: ttm li'^rss - !
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w.
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