Newspaper Page Text
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I , vK nr «TBDNK*I>*Y BV
I^i^PLES^OWLES.
L rri s, KATKS:
II ',•» ,v.o«- * l5 ° in *nce
. .75 ill advance.
HH> !> inoh '' r»0 in advance.
|J Enough for Everybody
P<»t: n< y.
% Ol THF» 1 F'fcOT.
I fl , I,o*olll of the river,
I*l. th e -un unbinds it* quiver,
W~Z , tar ii K ht streams forever,
W* S! iled tt vessel lifiht and free.
, tew.lr-.its flung like manna
Br» . t.richt folds of her banner,
zephyrs rose to fan her
to the radiant sea.
l,l r prow a pilot, beaming
youth, stood dreaming,
wa3 in glorious seeming,
H b , an angel from above ;
LL, his hair the breezes sported
B.K. I|U the waves he floated,
lHt pilot, angel throated,
lays of hope and love.
H (| l( i.se looks so brightly flowing
H clt laurel bloom were blowing,
I ,nd m- hands anon were|t hrowing
i Husie from a Iyer of gold.
the stream he glided,
purple waves divided,
rainbow arch abided
! H’er his canvas’ snowy fold.
lab»U' hearts, with fond devotion,
him sailing to the ocean,
that no wild commotion
Midst the elements might rise;
| 1T .1.., seemed some young Apollo,
summer winds to follow,
water flag’s corolla
I ■rembled to his music sigh-.
purple waves enchanted
Hit heside a city haunted
spell that daunted
coiner to her shore;
rank the air encumbered
Ej2>ale marble stat ues numbered
EotjZ-eaters, where they slumbered
■l awoke to life no more.
there rushed) with lightning
I Hqiueknes
face u mortal sickness,
EiAeath dews in fearful thickness
tiered o’er his temples fair ;
Ikajlhere-wepr a mournful murmur
pkJi.di Hie lovely Southern ,rummer
beauteous pilot comer
I Heridird by that city there.
Hulls on the radient river,
sun unbinds its quiver,
starlight
its bosom, as before ;
vessel’s rambow banner
no more the gay savannah,
pilot's lute drops manna
purple waves no more.
IdISOFJ.LANY.
i Liquor Traffic,
ION BYRE V K. tCEKI>.
bed iu ib« nelliudiil
rcti, Lawreueeville, ti»..
July Islb I**3.
, ye know that by this craft we
tr wealth."—Acts 19:25.
text gives n* a starting point
* discussion of the temper
nestion. Men are naturaT
uus for that by which t hey
sir wealth, whether it he
r wrong. The appea l of
rina. the Silver-smith, to
thesinns, in behalf oi the
lo'ldesa Dianna, was only to
eir sympathy, in order tha„
fht save the business by j
he made his money.
this cry of the liquor men
1 the gospel of temperance,
ts explanation in the fact
this our craft is in danger ;
tg set at naught. *'
the temperance reform be
in any community, and
levoiees of the whiskey traf
‘ittg lull of width begin at
i ory out, “Great is Dianna
hphesiuns All this noise
as violated rights, and
rencc with “personal free
voiues from the thousands
JSU vampires who fill their
b ? sucking the life blood
' lfc klready bleeding veins
h 'dos, social and politi
I
'"‘irMit ,»i the liqnoi' sell j
mi. ~Jr ,I^bt to *t he!
L ' u the country grant I
I sell it for the
inhere * IU , t a ,id lo (ei .,|
Wlte a . l( , eblMren
■ ar ffumeni reduces itself' to
®do that which I know to
H ' hfcansc ( make money
II U d aimpie iaw al
' a| u * the crime of Judas
. ** ' to-day and prove thi 8
! T ,,n *« s - Are liar ro,.ms a
l r] 1 n »ur jally, to a coiamuni-
I i uo ‘ iciier* probably bjust
Weekly Gwinnett Herald.
TYLKR M. I'KIiPLES. ,
Ktttroß tun Ekoprirtor. )’
that they pay au immense reve
nue to National, State and Munici
pal governments. I unhesitating
ly make the assertion, that thetraf
io costs ten times more than the
immense revenue realized from
i\
Hear the facts. “In 1869 Penn
sylvania pa ; d in license #329,211-
01). Estimating two thirds of the
crimes to be caused by drink, we
have hi criminal coats dons# 1,000-
000,00. ’
Governor Foster aaya that it
coats Ohio $3,000,000,00 to sup
port its poor, and that $2,500,000
00 of tl at is directly chargeable to
the liquor traffic, while the entire
saloon interest in the state pars
less than $300,000 taxes.
Hear what the Medical Astncia
tion of Georgia have to say in me
moriulizing the Lesiaiature, for an
Inebriate Asylum -A carefnleona
pilatiou of statistics on t he subject
shows that from the vast army of
Inebrutes comes, according to va
rious estimates, from 2f? to 50 pei
cent of the insanity of the world?
from 30 to 80 per cent of idiotoy,
from 60 to 80 per cent of pauper
is ut and from 70 to 90 per cent of
crime My tellow Countrymen?
stand aside ami behold with shame
the appalling picture.
If the truffle was required to pay
all costs and dangers caused to so
ciety, the intolerable'mrden would
crush i* into the grave of eternal
hankrnptsy.
The Medical Association further
eats “How important then to grap
pie wit h ine >riety,the prolific cause
of so largo proportion of insanity,
idiotcy, pauperism und crime
And the obligation would seem to
be imperative on the State, since
its mag practical policy of license
of the sale of liquor makes ?t large
ly resp nsible for the evils and re
ciprocally bound to cure them.”—
All niaise to the Medical Associa
tion of Georgia for ringing
words against this evil.
I ask this question, why license
these manufactories of drunkards,
idiots, lunatics, paupers and eiimi
nals for the mere title of the sum
which it costs to cure and care for
them.
As a matter of economy I ask,
Whence comes Ibis surplus! 1 Let
the answer fall upon your ears in
thunder tones, from the sober
hard working tax payer. If this
be true, what is to be done? Shall
we forever bear this harden.l leave
the answer to the voters and tax
payer of Georgia.
I give you the following statis
tics bused upon our last ceusus:
Iu ’879 there were 153.618 ru
tiil saloons, and 4,497 wholesale,
in the United States. In 1878
there were 2,836 breweries and 4-
537 distilleries. Total 162,653.
/f we allow three persons en
gaged in each saloon and whole
sale store and five in eaeb brewery
and distillery, we have a working
force of 511,210 persons.
it is a fair proposition that the
man or woman not engaged in a
bnsiufiss that builds up the mate
rial wealth, or morality of the na
tion, is so far destroying it. Hence
the lost labor enters into the cal
dilation.
The quantity of fermented liq
uorß, brandv, whiskey &c, in 1878
wa5730,664.676 gallons, kuroimt
paid by consumers $2,610,774,878.
611,210 persons engaged in the
manufacture and sale, at oue dol
lar a dav, a I'iSH of $153,363,000.
1,404.323 tipplers on au average
lose one hour daily, at one dollar
per day, a loss of $42,129,690.
This tippling lores recruits an ar
inv of 600,000 drunkards, who
lose half time, at a cost of $90,000
000. 800,000 paupers demand sup
port at aims houses at a cosi of
twenty live cents ea<4; daily $72,
000,000. Ts they were earning
SSO, annually the nation would be
benefited $4,000,000. 39,000 ina
niacs and idiots, victims of intern
: perance, costing for support and
Lawrence ville, 3-a* Wednesday August, 1 iBB3,
loss of time $4,200,000. 60,000
drunkards die annually who ought
t® earnsLoo, per annum.s6. ooo.ooll
Op same basis 450 suicides and
700 murders a loss of 115,000.
Grand total. $2,982,382,564
My countrymen does it pay? I
care not if it paid its billions into
the nation's treasury; woe to that
land which traffics in human blood
or turns a flood tide of bitter an
dnisb into the lives of its mothers
and daughters, or desolates the
sacred altars of its homes God
will, sooner or later, write JchnhaJ
upon that nation »r people.
One million orphans turned
loose on the cold charities of the
world. 100,000 youths corrupted
at.d brutalised, 600,000 drop annu
ally iuto drunkard s graves.
Figures stand appalled, in the
presence of such tacts, and the
political economist hides his head
in shame Arithmetic can never
calculate the loss ami gain of the
liquor traffic, nor statistics tell the
heart-rending story of ruined
homes, suffering wive* and moth
era, orphaned child? eu and lost
souls.
Is there no remedy* Yes, says
the worshiper at the shrine of al
eohol. Use “moral suasio i. You
can’t legislate morals into the peo
pie.’ says the legislator, who loves
whiskey better than good govern
moot You can’t intertere with
my constitutional rights, says
the bloated liquor st Her
Let us see what the Supreme
Court of the United States has to
say about it
in the sth Howard s Reports
Chief Justice Taney said: “If any
•tate deems the retail and inter
nal traflic in ardent spirits injuri
ous to its citizens and calculated
to produce idleness, vice or do
bauchery, I see nothing in the con
stitution of the U S to prevent it
from regulating or restraining the
traffic, or from prohibiting it alto
gether.’’
Iu 18th Wallace's Reports, the
Supreme Court held unanimously
that prohibition violates no civil
right of any citizen.
In 97 United State's Reports wc
find this: “All rights are held snh
ject. to the police power of the
state; and if the public safety or
public morals require the discon
tinuance of any manufacture or
traffic, the Legislature may pro
vide for its discontinuance, not
withstanding individuals orcorpo
rations may thereby suffer incon
venience. The law ot self priser
vation is applicable to states and
communittiesas well as individu
als.
Every one knows that the liquor
saloon is a more powerful agency
for crime than the gambling sa
loon Yet the same community
legislates against one and grams
license to itie othei. “Oonsisten
cy, thou n> L a jewel.
Ido nn! see that, nay man's lib
erty is ii.l ringed, when a state or
cntnimttn y prohibits men from
d ling 1 i»..i which everyone admits
to be damaging to their political,
social and moral well being.
The right to do as one pleases
is the unbridled freedom of the
savage and barbarian.
But the liquor dealers say, “pro
hibition does not prohibit. Mien
why in the name of common sense
don’t they keep quiet? H'liy gel
frightened at a mere phantom
But prohibition does prohibit, and
they know it, as much as the I tvv*
against theft and m inter prevent
the commission of these crimes.
No one claims that prohibitory
laws will make every man sober
or prevent the sale and nnnufiet
lire altogether.
liut they would drive it mb- the
dens and caves of (lie earth, thus
saving the youth of the country
from the vile influences of these
moral pest-houses, and save our
selves from the red tainted crime
of being partakers with them in
the innumerable evils of the traf
fic.
It is needless to ask where the
responsibility rests, dll are re
sponsible. From the people win*
fail to prohibit it, ami the untimri
ties who grant the license down
to the smallest cross-road grocery
that retails it
The issue is made. The curse
is upon us. The Hvdra headed
mot sler is slaying his thousands.
You cannot be neutral in so great
a conflict Your idle indifference
will cover you with eternal shame
and confusion.
Are you a philanthropist? vonr
enslaved fellow men, the suffering
wives of drunken husbands, the
helpless orphans of the victims of
intemperaiict demand vonr help.
Let woman come with her tears
of moral suasion. Let patriots,
humanitarians and Christians llu'ii
der their condemnation against
Ihe traffic, and shower down iht
ballots for prohibition. Show
your color.- Throw yourself info
the conflict The victory is yours
for tie Lord tioil omnipotent
i signet h.
% II ii in it iuilmtll.
In a small one story frame dwell
iug, situated opposite the freight
depot of the Danbury and Norwalk
Railroad here, the World corres
pondent recently discovered a on
rious example of human deformity
whose existence ha: been preserv
ed a secret for nearly seventeen
years
At the bouse mentioned Thomas
Hanlon, a railroad laborer, and his
wife live with their son Tom This
hoy was born 17 years ago, a mis
hapen mite of humanity. By the
advice of their parish priest the
sorrowing parents have carefully
concealed hiu from the public
gaze.
When the World correspondent
call at the house to-day the un
fortunate boy was found half sit
ling and half-reclining in an inva
lids easy chair.
He is t »tally devoid of shoul
ders, and from the centre of his
back two arms, with well formed
hands, grew from a ringle joint.—
The hands and arms are devoid of
the power of feeling, and are also
iifflicred with a strange, continual
motion, s weeping around in a cir
j cle like a windmill, the arms being
stretched out at full length and
moving in opposite directions.
This motion! never cease* ex
cept when the arms are lied to
gether. and are covered with scars
from contact with the walls, tables,
chairs, etc.
His body is furtiiei deformed by
the jointing of the legs as far as
the knees. Here the light leg is
turned back nnd upward until the
heel strikes the centre of t he hack,
where it is firmly imbedded in the
flesh.
lie is mentally bright, and con
versed freely and intelligently with
| the reporter about the few books
his parents bad been able to pro
’ vide for him and about articles be
had read in the newspapers, which
! are oorasionally supplied to him.
Said his mother: ‘Ho is a great
care to us, being finable to help
himself at all. But he is just as
dear to me as if he was like other
children. 1 suppose lie could be
exhibited, but as long as his father
or myself have life in our bodies
to work tor him he uever shall bo.’
A cave in the Colorado live
over one mile m length, and in
some places thirty feet in width,
is attracting considerable utten
tion nt Lampasas, Texas This
cave is about sixteen miles from
the town all I inis two mall slr-uius
running through it, which are
about two feet deep
A curious Chinese delicacy is
picked eggs that have been buried
for years that tlit.ir flavor uwj,
like wine, be improved. A similar
custom prevails at Manilla, where
ducks’ eggs are brooded until tile
young arc formed, and Ihen are
boiled and sold i“ special stalls,
as are oysters here.
\i w i »,.•♦»» miivm flint t hurt*
.iii *
me not many drivers, and Unit
“here is a vo -ation that is not over
crowded. vVebsh-r used to tell
young men Hint Hole was room
al the top, but Wukeimtu asuuree
j them dial thero is mom at the
bottom.
I.ocnl Option uutl Buu<la> l.\
rurvious
T! ere are tvva measures pend
ing in the Legislature in which
the better class of people of this
state are deeply interested. They
art! the Sunday exsnrsion bill ami
the general 1 >eal option bill. This
latter bill i- t special order tor to
day These bills, if passed, arc
certain to have a beneficial effect
Indeed, we can think of no laws
which could be enacted that would
do a- much for the progress and
prosperity of the state We are
not opposed to Sunday excursion
because of anything in the event
stuns that is wrong. They are
harmless enough in themselves.
In fact, we are prepared to eu
courage everything that pro nises
to afford the people innocent
and legitimate amusement on Sun
day or tiny other day Hut we are
opposed to Sunday excursions be
cause of the -vils which grow out
of them They at e mainly patron
ized by negroes, who make them
the occasion for a wild debauch.
If the excursionists would enjoy
themselves in a lawful way, no oh
jection would be raised to Sunday
excursion- This they do not do.
They have no i lea of enjoyment
without whiskey, and with plenty
whiskey they become little leHH
than deamons. They seek some
quiet town and terrorize the in
habitants with their noise, threats,
excesses and, perhaps, deeds of
violence. Who does not. remein
her tbe Eastman affair? An inno
cent and harmless mar. was made
the victim of a mob of drunken ne
groes. It may be said that the
East nut i r tragedy was exception
al. It was exceptional only in the
extent of its horrors. Such wild
scenes, lacking only the tragical
element, tire common enough.
Murder and other crimes of vio
lence f. re always probable where
there is a crowd of ('rollicking ne
groes soaked with whisky. 'There
is a class of whit- people which
does not. possess much, if any, su
poriority over the negroes This
, lass has little r«»|>ect for law at
any lime, and none at all when
crazed with drink and angered by
real or fancied injuries. Good,
law abiding people may complain
that their privileges are interfered
with by the enaotuier t of Sunday
lawH, but they must, console them
selves with the reflection that while
such laws may worn a hardship to
them they are really in the inter
est of society, and will be product
ive of benefits to all. Besides,
people who want to enjoy a quiet
Sunday in theooiintry can do so
without the Sunday exclusion
trains. The proposed law does
not interfere with regular Sunday
trains or wit h ste unboats
With respect to the general lo
cal option bill we have this to say:
We are in favor of any law which
promises to lessen the evils of
whisky drinking. There are tern
perance laws, relating to a very
large number of counties in (he
state, now on the statute books
It would be better to have a gener
al law. We do not claim that the
Legislature has the right lo say
what, or how much, a man shall
eat or drink, hut we have no
doubt tli it it is not only the right
but the duty of the Legislature,
to protect tin-: t ite against an evil
which is genera 1 , nnd afflicts all
classes I society. The Legisla
ture cannot pass a law ill it. this or
that mull shall not drink whisky,
Iml il cmi prohibit or restrict the
sale of win iky either by a dire t
prohibitory a-l by a system of
high taxa!ion, or by a local option
lav. We air n>t prepired lo say
which is the best, way to reach the
evil. M.oe than two thirds of the
crimes committed in this State are
directly traceable to whisky. To
support courts b* try these crimi
litis, and i > maintain jails iu which
to routine them pending tlnar 1 1 i
als co Js each cmi. ty a very large
y mount of u oney annually. Re
Hirirl the sale ot w hiskey and conn
tics will l>e Hits! this expense.
The earnings of a majority of the
negro s go into the whisky shops
Money that ought, to he used in
improving their social condition
is not only wasted, lull is made to
contribute to then degredilion
if they cannot lic i t the tempta
tion of whisky it is t ic duty of
the stale to remove the tempta
tion Shut up the saloons and
the crorts roiii's whisky shops and
iiitl.H of Georgia homes that
ire now the abodes oi squ hot,
and want, and ignorance, will be
come places of peace, contentment
and comfort. Vic. Morn. .VV c„
The Mormons this year have
sent out 360 missi jnane*.
jVol. XIII. —No. 19.
IVulsid,! lusliltilcs.
We copy the following from ;i
ciicnlar issued from the office nf
State School • Commissioner. Gusts
vus J. Orr:
There will be six Teachers’ In
s'it liter held in Georgia this year
The locations will be Albany, Way
cross, Nai.duraville, Bnrnesvillo.
Dalton and Covington.
The Institutes still b- kept up
just four weeks. 'The one at
Barnesvilie will begin on Monday,
the sixth of August; all the others
on Wednesday, the first of the
same mouth.
The subjects of instruction will
be spelling, reading, penmanship,
geography, grammar m 1 arithrna
tic.
The white and colored teachers
of the Sta'e are invited to be pres
eut. The races will be taught in
separate schools, but by the same
instructors. Tuition will be free
to all teachers who may choose to
attend.
I desire the County School Com
missiouers to meet me for two
(fays' instruction at the several In
statutes. 1 will be present for
the purpose of giving this instruc
tion us follows: At Albany, the
2d and 3d of August; at Waycross
the 6th and 7t,b ; at. Bartlesville,
the 9th and 10th; at Covington,
the 13th and 14; at Dalton, the
16t h and 17th, und at Sandersville
t lie 22ml and 23rd.
I have made application to the
General Passenger Agents, as I
believe, of all the railroads inGeor
gia for a reduction of rates. Many
of them have made very liberal
responses.
'I lie Georgia Railroad, on appli -
cation to tlie office of the Gener
al Passenger Agent., in Augusta,
“will furnish certificates for ilele
to the Conventions, which will be
signed by the Secretaries of Con
ventions and delegates holding the
same, and presented to the ticket
agent, who will sell them return
tickets at one cent per mile, full,*
regular fare to be paid going.”
Persons wishing further infor
ination in reference to the Insti
tale at Dulton will address ‘Exec
utive Committee of Teachers’ fa
stitute at that place.
"Nut UuilLy.
A member of a church congrega
tion in Wis. was last fall charged
with gambling i n stocks and
brought up before a committee f< r
investigation. The trial began by
a deacon usking:
*Bro. Smith, Hi# charge is gaui
blirtg in stocks.
‘Yes, sir.’
•And you plead not guizjy?’
•No, sir; 1 pleady guilty.’
‘Then you do buy and sell stocks,
speculating in wheat and oats,and
sell futures in pork
‘I do, in - . Did nt 1 give 81,000
in cash to help build this church?’
‘Yes.'
•Well. 1 se tone I that in on ,i lit,
tie deal .n pork. Didn't 1 pay n
#SOO on the organ t
‘Yes.
‘T! iii was part of iny profits on
a spec in oa s Didli I I fool adc
tioieiicy of * fOO in the mimM *•)■' <
sal ivy this v ear ?
‘Yes.
• that came tiorn a rise in stock ;
I),• bi I 1 chip ill Tlil l > MI llf |i
son age
Yes.’
•That came from a corner in oats.
Haven t 1 whacked up on the or
plain asylum, the new bridge, the
park and the lire engine *'
‘You have.’
•VVell, that means more corners
and holding on till / lelt my hail
growing gray. G di-men, 1 will
step out for a mom ml and let you
reach a verdict.
He stepped, but it yvas only 30
seconds before he Was call“d in
and congratulated on the verdict
of “not guilty.
A C urious I.mm Suil.
A St >ry of a curious law-suit
comes from liouk Hill, St' A
clerical planter, living m-ar the
town, sends the product of his
c Hon crop i.o be ginned and pick
el. He received from I lie gin
twelve bales in all. but when the
Dili came in In- found himself
charged with the ginning of thir
teem biles He refuse lln pay fic
tile alleged thirteenth bale and
the giuriei sued him for im I il
and won his suit Tie neon the
prtucher returned tin uttuek by a
suit against the ginnfr for the mis
sing thirteenth bale, vvbieli he
proved ue iiad ii -vei u-ri-m.*u lir
won the suit and got judgement
for fifty dollars, the value of a 500
pound brls of cotton It is inti
mated that the giuner will appeal
from this decision to the Supreme
court.
-- | ■ ,
—AS—
.4 nA A rrrt ist ntj Hfcdi u m
Ihi // A//.!/,// is Itilftj lllilsfl ty,j
<■"**>•» <>r il* fHtmivr nmi/atii „ and
rrmarkaltli, low ra/rs. Husntrmi mm
shunh! nmrmhrr thin.
RLANKS! BLANKS! BLANK
fa«.i. Ktvr>*« xiwtt.t PRTvrKt*)
FOR SALE AT THE
n i : ft a /, h jo if oft if b
<'l Minpiniis of woniair* .rights
will not torget, when the Hurry,
incident to ihe threatened ,tel»
graphers strike ts i»t*t. to attar.d
to some statements of officials of
the companies which are in direct
imposition to the basin of woman®
claim for equal wages. Vice Pres
ident Mas. of ihe Kiijhil Ttl-graph
Co., said: ' Equal pay ha women
will do them inure harm than goyd.
A woman ciuuot bens good an oj»
era tor us n man, and when U is ueo
eusury to piv equal wages a man
will a I ways be preferred, thus mv
.ng women out fit the business " -
Supl Miiui.-toue. of the si, Y.offiee
of I lie \\ i stern l nion, said the men
knew very sVel! that women could
not cumin old the same pay n men
Another hi -h official said that to
pay wo nor? men's wn«*es—would be
foolish because a' man ci?nld**do
more ami better work 'Kmkm
should bnantliorifaUvesUteiiwiUs;
yet there are many who will accept
them with hesitation aud doubt,
an I others who will deny them a 1
toge her
Eli Perkins tells of a hotel por
ter he met in Louisville, Ky.: I
hesitated u little about handing
my portmanteau to a seedy look
ing menial to carry, when the land
lord said :
‘Let him carry it, sab; he’s •
geii'leuian He’ll take good car*
of if, sah Perfectly safe, sab ’
‘Yes, resumed the landlord, at
we walked up the hill, 'that man
carry in your bag is a gen'louian,
sah. Why. ah, he was once worth
$200,000 had fifty niggers and
seven hundred acres of the beet
blue grass laud in Ky.
hat became of it, sir ?’ 1 ask
ed.
‘Drank it all up, sah. Fast hor
ses and fast women aud whisky
got away with it all, sah. And po
ker had aheap to do with if, too.
That man lost $4,000 and a 2:20
horse in one night. Oh, sah, h®'e
got gen lemanly instincts; he has,
and dirty,und bloated all over with
whisky—a perfect wreck mentally,
morally ami physically, but he’s a
gen’leman, sah He won't steal
your carpet bag.’
Chicago, July 14 -A train on
the St Paul Road going North
from this c.ty at the rate of thirty
miles an hour, came in view of a
child standing close to the rails.
There was not time to stop. Fire
man Tom King bounded through
the cab window, grasped the rail
firmly, platted his foot in" frent ot
the pilot, and at the right second
toppled the chil 1 softly into the
ditch unhurt. As the brave fel
low turned Ins head, lie saw the
mother wit h In-r hands lifted thank
billy toward heaven.
<1 • B i
.% It tints Vest on n l.oi-ouaofive.
A Rochester robin has built its
nest, on the margin frame of on
gino No 340, of fie' New York
Gentrul railroad, between the left
forward driving spring hangar and
a cross brace. The engine ruus
daily be'ween Rochester and De
witt The bird kept faithfully at
work, as circumstances permitted
an I, having completed the neat
no w occupies it, even when the
cn, in-, is running.
• Be- •
He who sleeps lay day will hun
ger by night. Industry am de
peg on which plenty hangs her hat
Argyment makes three enemies to
one friend, Men who go to law
runs' expec to cat deir taters wid
out sal;. Do biggest balloon can
lie packed in a bar I when de gas
am out. I)c rattle |Jj de empty
wagon can be heard furderdan de
rumble ob de loaded one.—Detroit
Free From.
Somebody put a small mud fur
tic about the size of a silver dollar
in a bed at t New Jersey hotel,
uni the st iauger who was assign
cd to the r,in,ii., on preparing to
retire, caught light of il He at
once resumed hi icl itheu, iciuark
in r ': “I expnoted to have a pretty
lively night of it, hut if Hey re a*
big ii tl.a', l don’t propose to gst
iu with them
A Philadelphia hu-Jmnd gave
his wife three trade dollars to buy
marketing. She r Millin'! pass
them, and the husband got drunk.
I'tien she sarcastically- asked him
it lie got drunk on trade dollars,
riien lie beat her. Then she got
him arrested No marriage can
lie truly h ippy where husband
amt wile un ler'ake to ill sense the
nation's finances.
Mike Del-ill, the Fayetteville.
(Is. wife murderer, lias lieeu sen
tenced to the penitentiary tor 20
years.