The Summerville gazette. (Summerville, Ga.) 1874-1889, October 18, 1877, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

VOLUME IV. GET THE IJKST. Webster’s Unabridged Dictionary 10,000 Word a and Meanings not In other Dic tionaries. 3000 Engravings: 1840 pages quarto. Price #l‘4 UHe commend it us a splendid specimen of !• aru *■ iug. taste, and labor. V- / F ver >' scholar, and especially everv minister •- should have it . UVxf l.ouixrilh . D st book forevert body that the press 1 ,-.s pro u din ed in tin pretent century . Superior, incomparably, to all ot hers, in its defi nitions--/?. H. McDonald, /',<. i'umb.l'nir'y The reputation of this wirk is not confined to 1 America. Uichn..-tht Whig. Cvery family in the Putted States should have this work tin do Hr i D■ pository of useful information; ns such it 11 stands without a rival A"</> - “Tarbest practical EnoußH Dictionary extant.”— London Quarterly Hecinc, Oct. lS.h. /. A NEW FEATURE. To the 3000 Illustrations heretofore in Web ster’s Unabridged we have recently added four pages of COLORED ILLUSTRATIONS. engraved expressly for the work at large expense. ALSO Webster** National Pictorial Dictionary 1010 Page* OcUtvo. 000 Engrarings, Price $5. o The National Standard. PROOF 20 to 1. The sales of Webster’s Dictionaries throughou, the country in 1573 were 30 times as large us the sales of any other Dictionaries. In proof, we will send to any person, on application the statements of more than 100 booksellers, from every section of the country. Published by G. XV. MEKRIAM, Springfield, Mass. “A Complete Pictorial History of the Times." “The best, cheapest, and most successful Family Paper in the Union." Harper's weekly. ILLUSTRATED. Xotice* of the Pre*x. Harper V Weekly is the ablest and most power ful illustrated periodicals published in this coun try. Its editorials ai t* scholarly ami convincing, and carry much weight. Its illustrations of cur rent events are full and frest. and are prepared by our designers. With a circulation of 150,000, the Weekly is read by at least half a million per sons, and its influence as an organ of opinion is simply tremendous. The Weekly maintains a positive position, and expresses decided views on political and social problems. Louisville Cos urier-Jonmt /•/. Its articles are models of high-toned discus sion, and its pictorial illustration -; are often cor mhorativo arguments of no small force. V. Y Examiner and Chronicle. Its papers upon existent questions and its inimitable cartoons help to mould the sentiments of the country. Pitl*burgk < 'ommeroial. Harper'* 11 et-'uly stands at the head of illus- , rrate 1 journals in the, United States, in circula tion. editorial ability, and pictorial illustration. -Ladic* Utponll.ru. Cincinnati TERMS: p, , i;t Free to all Subscribers in the United States. IT.vii'Er’s Weekly, one year $4.00 $ 1.00 includes prepayment of U. S. postage by the publishers Sulwripit, Harper’s Magazine, Weekly, j or Babah, to one add re** for one year $10.00; or, \ too if Harper'* Period lad*, to one add res* for one Am Extra (\py of eitle-r the Magazine , Weekly, (vr Bazar will be supplied gratis for every club of Five .Sms*-tilers at, SI.OO each, In one remit tance: or Six Copied for $30.00. without extra copy: postage free. Hack Xuni be/ii can be. supplied at any time. The Annual Volumes of Harper's Weekly, in neat cloth binding, will be sent by express, free of expense, for $ COO each. .1 Complete Set, cum prising Xin-rtetn Yohuru *. scut, on • ij>t of easb at the rate of $.5.35 per vol., freight at expense ol yu rchn-.se r. Prominent attention will be given m Harper'* Weekly, to the illustration of tin Centennial In ternal naml Exposition. Xev'Hpajier* arc not to copy Ihi* advertise; rent trithout the e.xpn.r order ofliar per .• Brother*. Address HARPER tie BROTHI.It. New York. TII E SU IST. 1877. NEW YORK. The different if Thi Si durin; the next year will be the same during lie- 3 • •;.i that bus just passed. The daily edition will on week days be a sheet of 5 our pages, ami on Sun days be a sheet of eight pages, orfifty-six broad columns; while the weekly edition will be a sheet of eight pages of the same line n.-n as and ehar actor that are already familiar to our friends. The S:/:> will continue to In* the strenuous ad voeate of reform and retrenchment, any of the substitution of statesmanship, wisdom, and in tegrity for hollow pretense, imbecility, and fraud in the’ administration of public affairs. It will contend for the government of tic- p ople by the people and for the people, as opposed to govern ment by frauds in the ballot-box and in the counting of votes, enforced bymiiitar> violence, it will endeavor to supply its readers--a body now not fir from a million of aouis with the most careful, complete and trust.worthy accounts of current events, and w ill employ for this pur pose ,1 numerous and ear. fully select'd stall of reporters and correspondents. 't,s reports from "Washington, espe.-i-ily. will be full, accurate, and Lari'-ss; and it will doubtless eonti-iue to deserve and enjoy the hut red of thus * who thrive by plundering the Treasury or hy usurping what the law does not give them, while it, will endeavor to merit the confidence of the pufdio by defend ing the rights of the people against the encroach ments of unjustified power. Til.- price of the daily bus will be 55 rent-/ a month or *•:<.."<> a y- ar. postpaid, or with the Sunday edit ion #7.70 a year. The Sunday edition alone, eight pages. #1.20 a year postpaid. The Weekly Sun. eight pages of fifty-six broad columns. w :ii* be furnished during 1877 at the rat of #1 a year, postpaid. Tue benefit of this large reduction from the previous rate for The Weekly can be enjoy- i by individual subscribers without the necessity of making up clubs. At lie* same time, jf any of our friends choose to aid in extending our circu lation. we shall be grateful to them, and every such person who semis us ten or more subscrib ers from otic* place- will },<• entitled to one copy of the paper for himself without charge. At, one dollar a year, postage paid, the expenses of pa per and printing are bandy repaid: and consid ering the size of ike sheet and the quality of its contents, we are confident the people will con side- The Weekly Sunt,be oh. .p*.- 1 newspaper published in the world, and we trust also one of the very best. Address. THE SUN, New York City, N. Y. getter than any other to ! .LJ i . • y : • . , from all parts 01 tin; world. The Gazette has a i peculiar value ;o every citizen q[ the county <r K Oil r"-'-: > - r.hs j ir-.-e. St;n . X Cos., PuiTUu i, 31 • HURRAH! jT' 1 1 1: <jr A X ETTE. NOW IS THE TIME TO SI’IISCHIUE! I TEN CORIES ONE YEAR FOR Fifteen Rollers U. I.S’ ll. Single copy One year One Dollar and Seven ty-five (\n ts. TARE YOUY COUNTY FAI ER AND FAY FOR IT. \ 3'amiit supplies taken in (laymciit tor flic Paper. .S’ UF. S CRIH E! SI 7 IS CR ID E!! I IURIiA ii! Ayer’s Hair Vigor, For restoring Gray Hair lo its natural Vitality and Color. once agrec ' is soon ~'W' restored to its original color, with the gloss and freshness of youth. Thin hair is thickened, falling hair checked, and baldness often, though not always, cured by its use. Nothing can re store the Lair where the follicles are destroyed, or the glands atrophied and decayed. But such as remain can be saved for usefulness hy tins application. Instead of fouling the hair with a pasty sediment, it will keep it clean and vigorous. Its occasional use will prevent the hair from turning gray or falling off, and consequently prevent baldness. Free from those deleterious sub stances which make some prepara tions dangerous and injurious to the hair, the Vigor can only benefit but not harm it. If wanted merely for a HAIR DRESSING, nothing else can be found so desir able. Containing neither oil nor dye, it does not soil white cam bric, and yet lasts long on the hair, giving it a rich glossy lustre and a grateful perfume. PREPARED RY Dr. J. C. AYER & CO., Lowell, Mass. Practical and Analytical Che mints . SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE. JOHN S. ( LEGHORN, Agent YICK’S Flov/er and Vegetable Seed ARE PLANTED IJY A MILLION PEOPLE IN AMERICA. I See Vick** Catalogue- SIX) illustration*, only 3 I cents. Vick’s Floral Guide, Quarterly, 25 cents a | year. Vick’s Flower & Vegetable Garden, 50 cts. ! with elegant cloth covers One dollar. All my publications are printed in Kugllsh and German. Address-; JAMES VICK, Rochester. N. V. SUMMERVILLE, GEORGIA, OCTOBER 18, 1877. r rie MOIINING NEWS, FOR 1877. - j -4k A f m %&:. '''‘TN ISlfl •; *• •• k] ■ .■: A ftfjl ■*-' V i I IK € •. • /• ' ';(U v y d * „ > *'v "W”';' t . ’v* '>’ *■' . T '/ -J- 's l. j On tlie Ist of January, 1877, the Morning News enters upon its twenty-seventh volume, and, it Is hoped by its conductors, upon a prosperous year. Every returning anniversary has witness- I ed Its ext ending influence, and to-day it is the . text of t he political faith of t housands of readers. ! Its uniform consistency and steadfast, devotion to principle has gained for it the confidence of the public, thus enabling it to contribute largely to the triumph of the Democratic party. In the future, as iu the past, no pains will be spared *o make the Morning News in every re spect, still more deserving of t he confidence and patronage which has been so liberally extended to it by tin* people of Georgia and Foiida. The ample means of the establishment will bo devoted to the improvement of the paper in all its depart ments, and to making it a comprehensive. In structive and reliable medium of the current news. Its staff of special correspondents—-at Washington, Atlanta, Jacksonville, Tallahassee, ami other points of interest has been reorgan ized with a view of meeting every possible emer gency that may arise, and pains will he taken to make its commercial nows, foreign and domestic, ; complete and reliable. As we an; about entering upon the new year j we desire to call special attention to our club I rat-s of suhscri t ion. POSTAGE FREE. We will pay postage on all our papers going to mail su l srribers, thus making tin; Moßmno N kwh I lie cheapest newspaper of its size and character iu the South. SUBSCRIPTION.' Daily, 1 year $lO W) “ :> moat hs - - - 2 r>c Tri-Weekly, 1 year <) “ L months - - * - 300 " 3 months - 1 &() Weekly, 1 year ** ' mouths - 1 h f * “ 3 months * r >o Specimen copies sent free on receipt of 5 cents. t ’ Money can be. sent by Uostofliee Order, Registered Letter, or Express at. our risk. J. I!. IM ILL, Savannah, (la. MAKE HOWIE HAPPY. t " A Plentiful Supply of h ; Good Reading and Beautiful Pictures ; WILL DO IT. k : THE CINCINNATI 8 ; WEEKLY STAR,; A fine paper, with 48 full col- J* •< limns, •<►*( only HI.OO j*t*r year Q gjf' (we [>ny postage), anti is tne largest, '• , S brightest, and best paper published (or Q .. 7 the money. It is independent iu politics, Em , gives all the news, and, besides much nl , other good reading, every number has >. *** m • three or four excellent original or te- tccte.d stories. Every subscriber als>. M ” receives a copy ot the beautiful engrav- ; yi W!] mg, “The Poor lln; I’oer Man’ll m .. Friend,” size 24x34 inches, and a copy , w I, of 'J HE STAR ILLUSTRATED ALMA . u 5 NAC. 25 i'tn. extra must be sent to • K w pay expeiAo* -.f packing and mailing pre- Omiurns. FtTOur Imluoemenls to ; m A;;efiU, always the most liberal in the : K! held, are now' greater than ever. We , . want every club agent in the country to HI communicate with us before commencing "J ’ work. To any person desiring to get up • ; a club, we will send a sample copy ol ; !; the picture and a canvassers outfit foi ; J ! 25 <*tu. ,'ipccimen copy of paper fi re. , jJ **<><! for one before *ubarrio- m . Ini; for any oilier. J! Q iTie Btar, though in no sons© a party 1 . ” paper, has always been a vigorous advo ** M !' cate of the rights of all the States, and ] U r ] was among the first to urge the justice . 4 ’ of local gtjvernme.nl in the South. . 3 H Persons to whom we have already sent the picture, “The Poor the Poor M U ’ .Han’s Friend,’* by savin:' SO can ; H j 4 ; have in its stead another excellent on- ;; M . graving, of same sire, which we have , H ffi ••cured for this pm (-.He. yu 1 u Jhiper wittvmt picture, One Dollar. *4 g THU CTAIn 230 Walnut 8t. t Cincinnati, O. \ ■( -1 ■■ y irw '-'■> . MAKE HOME PLEASANT. VICK’S ILL! KTJLVTi:i> I*KILLII CATALOG! K Fifty pages --30 J iilunt rations, wit h <D■ - criptfon of thoii.-aii'ix of 1 in- Ic .ft Flowers a i;d ' • y 1 u|,]i in tii• world, and ‘fin* way to grow tJiem al for a Two Cent post age Btamp. Printed in Ger man and i-Jiplisn. VirkN t loi’itJ Guido, Quarterly, 25 contn a year. Violi’s f lower A Vogotahlo Ganion, 50 chi. in pa.pt'r; in elegant cloth covers. Bj. Address. JAMKS VH.’K, Rochester, N. Y Dr. W. C. BAILEY, Plusician and Murgeon, 1 Offers his Prof' : ion.-IS- rvlees to the citizens of Suhlignu and vicinity at large, and hopes by dose ! attention lo business and moderate charges to j share a liberal practicing patronage. Special j | attention given to the treatment of Calipers anrl Ffmale diseases. Patients treated in any ' portion of the Country. All letters of inquiry | promptly answered, and Medicines sent by mail when desired. Address Dr. W. C, DAILEY, marf-ly Subligua, Georgia. ERRORS OF YOUTH. \ GENTLEMAN who suffered for years from . Nervous Debility. Premature Decay, and all . the effects of youthful indiscretion will, for the Hid;c of suffering hurnanii v, send free to ail who need it, ti: • jvcip • urul oir-'ctiou for mailing the simple rtunedy hy which he was cured. Sufferers wishing to profit by the adversiser’s experience can do so bj’ addres-ing iri perfect conilnerice. JOHN ii. OurDEX, 12 Cedar St, New’York. Gems of Thought. To deliberate on useful things is a pru dent delaj^ lie who speedily gives to the needy gives twice. A suspicious man would search a pin cushion lor treason, and see daggers in a needle case. Whatever he your outward lot in life, your condition is truly pitiable if you are guilty of neglecting moments. Silence never shows itself to so great an advantage as when it is made the re ply to calumny and defamation. One sot uld ho careful not to carry any of the lollies of youth into old age; lor | old age has lollies enough ot its own. lie that would reprove the worid must ho one that the world cannot reprove. Get net entangled in the meshes of the law; avoid it. as the sure gate to rum. Misfortune does not always wait on vice, nor is success the constant guest of virtue. To speak harshly to a person of sensi bility, is like striking a harpsichord with your list. Alter all, our worst misfortunes never happen, and most miseries lie m antici pation. The host society and conversation iu the world is that in which the heart inis a gro; ter share than the beau. Absence destroys small passions, and im-reas.es great ones; as the wind extin guishes tapers and kindles tires. A man is apt to think that his personal freedom involves i lie light lo make ins iehow men do just as he pleases. A head properly constituted can ac commodate itself to whatever pillows the vicissitudes ol fortune may place under it. Biains and muscles should share equally all laborious occupations. Am llie Plain should direct the muscle and utilize and economize its powers. A looking glass is kinder to us than the wine glass, because it reveals our de tects to ource.vus only, while the latter reveals them to our friends. I or,severance is one ot the primitive impulses ot the huiiiun heart—oi.e ol the indivisible primary faculties or sent intents winch gives direction to the character of man. Manner are the root, laws only the trunk and brunches. Manners uro the archetypes el laws. Manners are laws in their mlaney; laws are manners full grown —or, manners arc children, which, when they spring up, become laws. Rev. li. 11. Blackwell, formerly a I’iestiyterian preacher in good standing in the Leavenworth (Indiana) district, wa,s arrested in Luuisvilic (Saturday night at the instance ol a woman named Lou j Graves, for stealing from her a lot of | jewels, worth about eight hundred dol lars. Two weeks ago the parties were man ied under very peculiar circumstances in Jeflersonvil'e. One day alter the mar riage the husband was denied access to the house of his wife. A low da, s Jater lie began to make sundry vis t - to her house, asserting the right of a husband to go there, notwithstanding he was firm ly opposed in all Lis claims upon her. A few days ago she missed a lotof valuables embracing a solitaire diamond, jewelry ot various descriptions, and a line opera glass. Saturday she placed the matter in the hands of Detective Gave. Black well was arrested, and all tlic articles ex cept the diamond ling were found in his possession. -a. + .v- —- A western paper has this obituary of Brigham Yeung: “Our telegraph dis patches contain notices of the death of the old Mormon prophet and reprobate, Brigham Young. While many of the papers will print columns of eulogy and List ;.y, mostly taken from some encyclo pedia, we shall di miss the subject sim ply exulting that our country and civiliza liavc bc'‘n relieved of its worst and most di go-ting blotch, and hell received a dose that will make it bubble with de li lit for months Lo e one.” ■> ♦ 'B~ A Singular Accident. A cst sin :al:ir fatal accident occurred at 1 n Piwnei Gioton, near New Castle, ti:e other day. Ann Eliza Wcisner, a young Miss of eleven years, started to go to tie: spring house at her mother’s resi dence for butter and milk for supi <*r. S lie did not mlarn as soon as expected and her modi- r folio-,vcl to see what detained tier. Anivirig near the spring house, Mrs. W i t. iv..: surprised to find her daugh ter lying 11 l on the ground, with her face hm ied in a crock of water, and was ter ribly shocked when on raising her up the young girl was found to be dead. Miss Wei-m-r v, is m perfect health, never had a hiding fit of any kind, and iLo only manner in which the sad aeei 1. lit <an he auco..u'xd for is that .-he stumbled and fell, her head striking the crock with such force that the blow rendered her in sensible and powerless, and that her face being buried in the water, she drowned. The wound or mark of violence was a bruise on the nose, which, while not sufficient to cause her death, might have stunned her so that she was unah'e to help herself. The crock in which Miss Wcisner was drowned was an ordinary flat two gallon crock, and had been sot under the cave of the spring hou e roof to catch .-oft water, — Filtshurg lender. Some sheep belonging to a farmer named Smith havhig been stolen in the neighborhood of a village, while the thief was undiscovered, a local preacher, hav irga collection to make, thought, lie would turn the event to good account, so lie said: “We have a collection to make this morning, and tor the glory of heaven, whichever of yousto e Mr. Smith's sheep don't put anything on the plate.” 01' course everybody joined in the collection. It was a little hard on the boy, for he meant well and had a sincere admiration for the girl. They wore sitiing .-it the tea table with a company of others, and as ho passed her the sugar lie murmured in au undertone: “Here it is, sweet, just like you.” The compliment was a little awkward, to be sure, hut he meant it, and j it seemed more than cruel when, in a moment later she had occasion to pass the butter to him, she drawled: “Here it is, soft, just like ytu-” —T~ There was an exhibition in a store in ! Dupont street, San Francisco, last week, a mammoth hunch of grapes from the great grape vine of Santa Barbara (a cutting from the u ouster sent to the cen cennial). This cluster weighs one hum dred and twenty-live pounds, is six feet in circumference, and three loot long. The vine from which this was cut is six teen years old, and produces annually 10,000 to 12,000 pounds of grapes- This is probably too largest Lunch of grapes ever grown. —-- —♦ •*<— A Chicago paper tells us that ‘‘Darwin says that a woman's loot may blush in stead of her face.” Certainly they may. Why, one night last winter the feet of a Chicago woman, sta"ding barefooted on a six-story verandah, suddenly took it into their heads to b u.di at their own size and hanged if people loity miles south of there didn't mistake it for an aurora borealis. Fourier ./. itrnal. - ♦ #■. — —— Friendship, love -and piety ought to he handled with a sort ul mysterious secrecy; they ought to Le spoken ot' only in the rare moments of perfect conlidencu, to he mutually uii.Jeistood in silence. Many things are too a- licate to be tin ught, many more to be spoken. ♦ *V— I'crimps the summary of good breed ing may be reduced to this rule: “Be have unto all men as you would they should behave unto you.” This will most certainly oblige us to treat all man kind with the most civility and respect, there being nothing that we desire more than to he treated so by them. -a. ♦ A stone cutter once received from a German the following epitaph, to he en graved on (lie tomb stone of his deceased wife: “My vile - usaii is dead; if she bad lii till next Friday, she’d been dead youst two weeks. Asa tree fall, so she must stand. All dings is impossible mit God.” “1 tellyod,” said a Wisconsin man to a neighbor the next day after burying his wile, “when 1 came to get into bed, and lay that', and not hear Lucinda jawing around for an hour and a half, it just made nlo feel us if I'd moved into a strange country.'’ -Ot -V * *— A little girl in Clinton, 111., was teach ing her little brother the Lord’s prayer the other night, and when she said, “Give us this dny our daily bread,” lie suddenly nailed out, “Bray for syrup, too sister, pray for syrup, too!” -ot. • V- CO*”" Mamma if we cries tin: bridge at light must we pay toll?" “Oi course, my dear; why do you a.-k?” “Why, because the river will have gone to sleep.” “O , the river never goes l> sleep.” “Then why has it a bed, mamma?'' "What is the annual corn ciop of Ken tucky?’' asked a foreign tourist of a Ken tuckian. “I can't exactly say,” replied the Ki ntucl.iaii, “hut I know it’s enough to 1.1 all the wlii-key we want; besides what i.s wasted for bread. NUMBER 42. * Justice Asleep. Last night the wife of Justice Moses was aroused from a sound sleep hy a stern voice: “Are you ready for trial, I say?” “Hnsh —don’t make a noise or else you’ll wake the baby,” she replied, en deavoring to soothe him. “Don’t talk back to tnis court,” he vociferated; “if you’ve got any witnesses bring 'em on, hut let your lawyer do the talking.” “Why, Tom, how you take on. What is the matter?” “I send you up for sixty days—that’s what's the matter. Here, Enders, take her away. Now I’ui ready for that petit larceny case —bring up the prisoner,” and jumping out of bed lie started toward the next room to summon a jury, hut fell over a rocking chair, barked his shins, woke up, and asked his wife what was the mat ter, anyhow. “My dear,” said a Harris county man the other day to his wife, “see here, the Bogari hm of 10—1, of I—o.1 —0. Isn’t that nice.” “Pshaw!” replied the better half, “I used to study that stuff when I was a college girl, hut I had rather raise a family of children and get up at, night with them, than go over it.” “Far he it from us to doubt the word of a brother editor,” says the La Crosse Sun. “We bedew them all to he truth ful men; but when the Durand Times says that the water is so low at the mouth of the Cllippawa river that catfish have to employ inud-turtles to tow them over the bar, we feel us though the editor must ho away and some local minister | tilling Lis place. The representive of the masculine gen ! dor under sixteen is looked upon with disgust hy young ladies, hut they culti -1 vatoa taste for him as he grows older until, like old wine, lie is priceless. If he is eovered with cobwebs and molil of years, and worth his weight in gold, he is all the. j dearer to the feminine heart. A tramp applied to a lady in Dos Moines l for something to eat, and to the inquiry why lie didn’t go to work, said there was not any chance to work at his trade now.. The lady asked him what Lis trade “Shoveling snow,” was the conlideut an.- swor. Ho got his dinner' Nearly all the “marbles,” with which’ hoys me so fond of amusing themselves, are made at Oburstein, Germany, it Lakes fifteen minutes to make a half bushel of good marbles, ready for use. One mill will turn out 160.00 U marbles iu one week. Curing Bkkp Without Brine- Take seven pounds, each, of sugar and salt, and four ounces id saltpetre. Back your beef in a jar or barrel, according to the quantity of meat you have, and sprin kle the mixture on it. Be caretul to pack solid. Southern Farmer. lie that never changed any of his opin ions, never corrected any of his mistakes; and he who was never wise enough to find out any mistakes in liiuf vjf, will not be charitable enough to excuse what ho reckons mistakes in others. A teacher after reading to her scholars a story of a generous child, asked them wlmt generosity was. One little hoy raised his hand and said, “I know; F’n giving to others what you don’t want yourself.” “Oh, George, I’m ashamed of you— nibbing your lips like that, after that dear little French girl lias given you a kiss!” “Fin not rubbing it out, mammy—l’m rubbing it Uil” “Do they ring two bells for school?” asked a father o r his ten-year-old daugh ter, who attends high school. “No, pa, they ring one bell twice,” she replied. A man in Ohio, who attempted to hang himself recently, was out down hy his mothor-in law. She was not through with him yet. Josh Billings has truly said, that “it’s easier for you to luv a gal than uiako a gal luv you.” “I’m told, Mr. Paine, that you are a hard drinker.” “Not a bit,” cried Paine “Not a hit; no man over drank easier.” A western sheriff wrote it: “By vir chew of a writ of lirey fakas.”