Newspaper Page Text
PAULDING NEW
—
■:
•" “Onward and Upward.”
SUBS0R r PTI0N: 11.00 Per Annum.
1 a 1VI Pj ;
DALLAS, PAULDING CtitINTY, GA., FEBRUARY 15. 1883.
NUMBER 11.
PROFF18StC)NAli FiATtDS.
R
0A80N,
DENTIST.
Will be in Dallas en the fonith Tuesday
in csch mon'h, to do ell kinds of UenUl
work belonging to the pio’etson. He will
remain only one week in inch month.
NEWS GLEANINGS.
J)U 8. ROBERTSON,
PHYSICIAN A8URQ-0N,
Tend*re hie proffssimil e*rviiea in the
practice of medicine in n l l ite I ranches to
the oitizrne o* Dill is nnd surrounding
country. -MTOffiie No. 6 Aeworih street,
near o uri h >us»*.
W. K FlHI.DKIl. (IKO. II ROL’KRTe
■j^IELDER & ROBERTS,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
Ddlas. PsilMIng CjuntT, O -orgi*
Praa ioe la all fie oiur«. Prsnipt atten
tlon given to looking atier wild land ol.iaia.
Colleation. a .pecia tjf. lip
J M SPIJiK-i,
‘attorney at law,
Dill.i, Paulding County, Osorgla.
Prompt attention given to oollfct : ons in
•nv part of th* State. Will lands looked
after and intruders ejected.
THOMSON & SPINKS,
Attorney and Con n pel tor at Law,
Da’las, Paulding C Ga.
Will practice in all the conr s of tbi* State,
from the ju tioe • our* un* Prompt attention
piven to collection*. Looking after wild
lands, removing intruders, etc., mnde a spe*
cialty. 1
D vllas jewelry store,
N- xt door to Hotel,
Watches, Clock* and Jeweliy repaired
at short notice
ltd »«*ml ii with i9 (Im li Stamp* end
*n will wild one bxidi la ait id G new nty 1
* "Myrtle ’ tilplo pUtm tie p.ionr. Co •
I lama no *»ra varrmtfnt jtcnutnc, mind
In apputiatico to th «o dcllar op Hina,
tu oantoed to p'eiac, oi money rifuu ird.
On y one aet *cnt to Int oduce • h-hib wnn-rd mid
Rood par, » lr#*u nr* f p**. mMhu the m -ru'ac -
ursra, SH »WMUTrt.|.V15ttPLATECO.,asBrouia-
fljld »teet, Biator, V a .««.
ro -JR — •
All Kinds of Needles,
■Attachinenta, Part*, Etc., Etc.
-OF—
**• McCOHMACK,
51 S. Broad Si., Atlanta, Oi.
*g-8qnd Msohines by Express.
#37.30
There are 60,000 colored Baptists In
Tonne«e#I with 160 churches.
West Virginia contains 52,000 persona
over ten years of age who cannot read.
According to the official statistics
there were in Arkansas on June 30,
1882, 1,415 school-houses.
Ex-Gov. Warmoth, of Louisiana, lias
been in Mnino buying machinery 'or a
beet-root factory on his plantation.
Two years ago Wesson, Miss., was on
ly a pine forest. It has now a cotton
mill employing 1,000 hands, and nearly
3,000 inhabitants.
The .new city hall at Home, Qa., has
just been completed at a cost of *15,000.
The street enr companies of New Or
leans altogether collect about 70,000
litres daily*
The Texas cattle drive for the coming
spring is ci timated at 220,000 head. Of
these not more than 120,000 will reach
the open market. The rest will bo re
served for ranch purposes.
Convict labor is being utilised upon
plantations in Arkansas. One hundred
are now employed upon the plantation
of Mr. Veil, below Little Rock. They
profess to like working there better than
staying in prison.
The question of a canning factory is
beginning to be agitated in Greenville,
8. O. Practical men are figuring on the
subject, nnd have demonstrated that
such a factory will pay large profits on
the small cnpital required.
Northern manufacturers arc exploring
the Virginia mineral lands. Recently a
purchase of 13.T100 acres was made by n
Pennsylvania company. A superior
quality of- oro baa been found, nnd it
will be shipped to Pennsylvania fur
naces
prices, one ecstatic bachelor bidding
•‘beuvrtl nnd earth” for the girl of his
choice. As barter was not tnken, lio was
required to make his hid in dollars nnd
cents, which he did in n handsome price
nnd got his prizo. The safe resulted in
plenty of money and lota of fun.
paper on thiH
Union, by Miss
w“.h
e?®'??" , Children , lay it |„ one
D»i U n** C ^ lts /£ ut 0De *tenth as muchaa
route for quail hunters. The other day T , .
i^or, m.
Mnslc for the Million—Vienna Eolhin
Labial Organ*
*&:I Z:
r V o fl ' Uati t °. n) . in . |he baggage car"on'that bowl of water, afeg iU^tandZ ,1
‘ ■ ' road, attended by *6,000 worth of nc- few minutes until tho coirraeat p^Udes
groes (old valuation.) On the return , faUe ? 40010 bottom, pouring off tlio
trip they had *5.80 worth of birds, which rB P < ? at , 1I1 B tliia onco or twice,
they counted while eating * 20 w'orth of
1 nch - persona understand properly tlio
Jim Chang, a Chinese merchant wlio shnnhl 1 1 ? m ° I ' lulc - The lemon
n"’ ■«““*«• i-
Burke county, Ga., was visited by a a *harp knife, and every pfo ex
party of men who proceeded to break up fo?®,, ’ .,1 len ?°P bl i "K hold over a
his show eases and otherwise abuse his oZration 0 "ThJ' in 4 ’' 0
ssfy^-.pw«. «**«...
thoroughly mixed with it. Last of
which he did. Tho indignation seems nH?w <1U !£ to nmo l lnt ,,f water should he
duo to the fact that a Burke countv bhIIuvS' 11 '' T y b ,° in "'<>
white girl had sometime before married They should bo i°oed.°’ Imp,*ianwR
a Chinaman, and indiscriminate ven- miu * e ”y adding a small tcasiioonl'ul <,f
genre was considered in order. ? I ‘ c ' im , ut tartar dissolved in boiling wide
„. An „ ' to each puit of lemonade,
there are 40,000 square miie3ofal-l , In “o iliseaaos it ia impoasihlo to
most unbroken forests in North Caroli- K 1 ™ “ything containing arid, mid then
intrari'n, 81111 needl1 0aly eoiu "“ 0 “ niusio. To
tatrodues our now mus e vye will read a sara-
wnr?. , ** n l wlt h bound book containing fu'l
ȣ! i mUsi0 K 0( new l,u< ' popular
nrSS"'ia !" C ^ h “ ?hof t form sell for *36.35,
P r *Pj!'l to auy ad,Iren fir ONLY *1
» iK««r*n»ee that every one
fllednmnta k ‘ h «f,P»y for, we will's.n-l
ne ample book and organ Ly expre-s C.
f 1 .® 0, for *160; three, *2 30, ur
not prepay goods ^sen/'Wo*]?' cTroufsra I "“'=■>' oracrea li __
hi “ «* *ki. I* »> nil
II.
E. SMITH & CO.,
n , , Dallw. G-waia,
Fenny ol; n J*"' 11 / «r°ceriee, Plata and
ihta^r 0 '““t'ot'oneriea a specialty. Every-
d.‘.ta a ? d Diot: l'" 1 !rnm th* factory!
tmhHn In lr * 10 "y., 10 our friend* and ltie
Itack'nf I'' 1 "'*. 1 th »t,>»vtag opened out u
atock of groceries nad cinfectioneris*, wc
lt P °’Sn\°u» ttb S ma ‘ che »o ««th. cheap
be otir 8 ^ L Pr0 n" and Qnlok 8al « 9 ” “'‘O i
conv!noed?“ 0, C °“ e a “ d tee us 1 * ud 8)1
TUB "ORIGINAL
ST R SMNGLEO BUHNER.
,r.,.a n, “ Wg0 8 P“ ge - i0 column Ulus-
r?«« tan . ry P a P? r ' Mze "f ‘he ‘ Ledger.”
ems wn V., " |,len,) 1 " 1 “hiriei, sketches, po-
22d , mi*s hUm0 . r,Bd seoc, ' il fun - P-ule.t
R^hed on r pUlar P *! ,f!r rublished. E.tah.
Ji .„lM y JLV*’ . r ‘s<i hj SO,000 persons. I|
5 o°P' ei . or 7o cents a yeir wi:h
° f L et of 8,x tr ta l8 plated silver
fiS- « Am° n ra f*’ " eW ,tyle ' re ' ail l ,ri «® *!•-
defined i?m r ^ 700 illustrated.
f'SS'i 3J /°°® words, numer.ins tablee,
bound in cloth, gilt, better thao u ua! *1.50
books, or wonderful “Multum-in Parvo”
^ni f rA a .h MSn i , n 01 * *? one handle, sell*at
one to three dollars, buck handle, name
plate, etc., or anperb bell harmonica, eweet-
eat musical instrument known, price 1.60
Eitlur of above premiums and Banne r ono
year sent free, for 25 green stamps. Sub
scribe now. Sslisfactios guaroteed or
ta 0 n. e /ta rCf « nded - Tri “' trip 3 ruonth f" r only
SPA WOT Address S TAR
ePAtsGLED B4NNER, irinsdn'e, M. jj.
Insnrc Your Properly A*nni7l Lows
conflmd'tS'jhi 1
Pied Thla is « Vail.Kii niai08«e*re*
esplen. lions. T. A. F«*TE.
TTRPTTT „Send to MOORE’S
X lliJJiJli Business University,
p To . Atlanta, Georgia,
For Illustrated Circular, a live actual bus
iuess school. Established twenty years.
The Sick Room.
From an interesting
subject in tho Christian
E. It. Scoyil, of tho Massachusetts Gen
eral Hospital, wo cull tho following hints
and recipes:
The pure juice may l>e extracted from
hoof in two ways: First, by cutting tho
moat in small ptooes, putting them in n
tightly corked taittlo, immersing it in
hot water, and hoiliug for several hours.
Second, by taking a thick piece of juicy
steuk, broiling it on n gridiron over u
clour fire for a few moments, then cutting
it iu strips and pressing it hi a lemon
squeezer. The juice thus obtained may
bo given either cold or hot. It may lie
frozen, broken into lumps, and given
like cracked ico^ A litup uult should bo
added beforo using it.
Ail invalid who is tired of hot hoof tea
will sometimes drink it cold or iced with
grent relish. Enough isinglass or gelatine
may bo added to tho juieo to make a
jelly, which can be flavored with sherry,
essenoo of celery, or anything tho patient
may fancy
Raw meat is very nutritious, and may
lio prepared by shredding tlio beef ex
tremely fine, removing every particle of
skin or fat. and mixing it with cracker
crumbs, A little salt and popper may be
added, and tho mixture rolled into tiny
balls.
In convaloBcenco after typhoid fever
the greatest care is necessary with regard
to the food, and no now artiolo of diet
should bo given without tlio express per
mission of tlio doctor. Even so slight an
imprudence ns eating a raw apple has
lieen known to enuso death.
While roast, boiled nnd lu-oilod chicken,
mutton chop nnd beef steuk have long
held n roeogtiized position in tlio invalid s
bill of faro, the merits of a veal sweet
bread havo been sndly overlooked.
When properly cooked it is n delicious
dish, and may tempt a capricious ap
petite that 1ms grown weary of other
viands. AjwveetJ^ o fit,
llitc Knnn,, * to ft
Tub ynited Statos Qovernment pays
k i. f'<?Rgn steamers an average of two oonts
;poriaUor forpostngo. During the past
’** T ° °° Bt $30,204,-
ne over ninety live millions. This gives .. —
Promise of a total reduction in a year of
“S"—: "'..•"i.......i, f-»EtiK,r4K , ar".’«£
1,600 millions, about one half of which dl "S™t. Dissolve half an owico of
amount is now redeemable, but one half tliroo tiililes|j(Hiiifuls of water-
of the redeemahie debt does notbear
„ • °}’ er ? ? er i; heat, put in five wine-
Memphis Avalanche: The Atlanta £,„„!•/ 1,ort -“"l 1 "br constanllv for
Constitution states that tho Marietta moisSwi'tl, coM water “*A taec“° ld
and North Georgia road is the great '" r «° <“ an egg sliould bo eaten two
"* — three times a day.
TOPICS OP THE OAT.
. Tin? French army ia reported noi to
liko the expulsion bill adopted by the
caliinot, and an intimation to that efieot
has boon carried to President Qrovy.
imm P. Stonb, who lias for
yen. cr" ^Jfi officer in high Command
in tho itiJmve’a army, lias left Egypt,
and will roturn to live iu the United
Statos.
Walcott, tho thirty-day quail eater,
finished his task, said ho never felt bet
ter in his life, and pocketed tho *600,
besides winning any number of bots
from silly peoplo.
MoNTaostnRy Blair is reported to be
Miiously ill at his pour.by plaoc, Silver
Spring, a few miles from Washington.
Mr. Ilorndon, tho Alabama Oongiesa-
man, is now on the road to full reoovery.
Tin? scandal about tho faiinro of Mr.
Julian lfnwthorno to finish ‘‘Fortune’s
l’ool," is incronsod by the announce
ment that he had received pay ill full in
advnnco. Mr. Hnwthorno is thus far si
lent on tlio subject.
William Galloway, tho oldest loco-
motivo engineer in this country, rooout-
ly guided n train at tlio speed of n milo
a minute ovei a portion of the Baltimore
nnd Ohio railrond. Mr. Oalloway is
sovonty'foup years old.
Mn. W. O. Caiiiunoton, a Richmond
(Va.) attorney, lias roocivcd from Lon
don the certificate of marriogo of Mr.
and Mrs. Pigoon (Labourolicro). It was
intended to bo used in tlio divoroe suit
of Mrs. Pigeon vs. Mr. Pigeon.
A nrw protesiton, that, of nooompany
ported to have ‘fioW 1 ’stallJ"
lUirJrussnra. advgrtiwf kh^ttfnn—scoVl
thorn to thoir place of destination,
In some parts of Germany the pollen
have lately had the now duty iustruoted
to them of prohibiting hoy* under six
teen from smoking in tlio streets or
from entering nlono establishments
wliure intoxicating liquors nro sold,
Mn. Holman Hunt spent fivo years in
the Holy Land in painting “The Flight
mto'Egypt,” and, when ho had finished
it, found that the Hyrinn canvas, wiiioh
lie had UHod, was too rotten to boar the
strain of travel. Tho picture fell to
pieces nnd was patched, but is now an
irretrievable ruin.
Cait. R. B. Founss, of Boston, makes
the scnsiblo suggestion that there is al
together too much signaling in naviga
tion rules, which loads to confusion. He
says “on the ocean it ia enough to indi
cate northerly, southerly, easterly and
westerly. In narrow watora whero maqy
steamers aro apt to congregate the less
tootiDg the hotter.”
hcoamo totally blind, and has ao remain
ed over since. His ease hss been pend
ing for sixteen years. Tho aggregate
sum accruing to date, and which he re-
oeived, was *9,063.47. He will hereafter
receivo duiing his life *72 por month.
Tna Metropolitan Horse Oar Com
pany, of Boston, has recently introduced
tlio registering clock for rooording fares.
The other day an elderly lady desired to
get off the oar. She rose energetically
and pulled the atrap which rang in tlio
(area. Before the oonduotor could make
her desist n’.o had not only been carried
a couple of blocks beyond hor destina
tion, lint had regiatered not loss than
twenty fares, for which, according tothe
company’s rules, tho oonduotor was re
sponsible.
Tna robust health of the English in
general ia said to be dne to their diel
They aro good and substantial eaters.
They like plain, aolid food, well oooked,
and do pot, aa a rule, demand variety.
Meat, vegetables, and paddings are
their ateple dishes, and thin soaps sad
foreign kiokahsws find no favor in their
eyes. They despise alike Freneh dishes
as rioh and unwholesome, and German
oookery as coarse and unpalatable. The
roast beef of Old England is their staff
of life, and ham and eggs oome next in
their good graces. Ioe water is a rarity
among the masa of the population, who
look on it almost as poison.
Evidbnos of the extent of the butl-
ness done by Fleming and Meriam and
other profeafional grain brokers at Chi
cago, the delivery oi money letters to
whom was stopped by the Postal De
partment a low daya ago, accumulates
from dsy to day. It appears they not
only received money from farms, towns
and villages all over the country, but
also from Canada, and oven from some
pointe in England and Scotland. The
sums transmitted to them, for invest
ment in grain futures, are estimated to
roaoh into the millions, and it is inti
mated that oertein respected and highly
ounj v-nwai joined hand* with the
the scheme.
FiTtLADRLrmA^lawyeni have • question
which stumps them at last. The Con-
trollership of that city booatno vacant
by resignation. The Common Council
elected a now man. The person left in
clisrgo by the resigning Controller re
fuses to give up tho offloo, and the Court
sustains him. Lawyers are divided upon
the point whether the office is a county
or a city ono, to bo flllod by the State
Governor or oity govermont in case of
vacancy. The mo«t serious feature hf
the whole troublo is that all the polioo-
mon, sohool teachers, department clerk*
and laborer* are kept out of thoir pay,
hocaiwo no bill* can bo cashed beforo
they are approved by the Controller,
and there is no rooognixed Controller to
do it.
na, comprising pine, chestnut, oak, ma
ple, beach and hickory limber in their
finest growth. It is estimated that in
ten years the timbei^lone in North Car
olina will exceed in value the present
total valuation of all the property in tbe
State, including land. The Slate grows
nineteen varieties of oak, and its pine
forests i r i of the heaviest, The build
ing of new railroad* will rapidly open
this region to the Northern and Eastern
lumber market*.
An inebriated citizen of Butts county,
Ga., got in front of an approaching
train on the new road not long since, and
by wildly waving the tattered remain*
of a sanguinary-looking kerchief *uc-
ceeded in stopping it. The conductor
alighted and inquired the object of the
danger signal, when tho inebriated citi
zen solemnly drew a* bottle from the
depth* of his inner pocket and remarked
that he merely wanted to “set ’em up.”
It ia recorded of the ungrateful official
that he acknowledger] the kind invita
tion by the vigorous application of a
box-toed number 10.
There wa* a new departure a few
nights since at McMinnville, Tenn to
raise money to buy a church organ. The
plan devised was a sale of the voung la
dies to the highest bidder. The y 0un „
men were out en masse, and one by one
the fair ladies were knocked down by
the auctioneer to the highest bidder
Many of the belles brought fabulous
tho ingenuity of tlio uimio is tested to
provide some beverage at onco cooling
MS 1 f ,lll ! lta J J ’ 0 - Ic ‘-d tea and coflce are
, " nt wl *°, n they aro liked, and may
bo taken.either with or without milk
Barley water is made by boiling two
ounces of pearl barley, previously well
washed for twenty minutes hi u pint and
flavored^ U ” l<m Btriull<, 'l and
taLto l ‘n l h rmo ", P oe ] “"‘1 HI *R»r to
teste. This may be alternated with
bnfo°e fo| te “' ^ ep lmlf 1111 of un-
bnnsed flaxseed in a pmtof boiling.water.
-Let it stand ui a covered jur near a fire for
three or four hours; then strain and flavor.
Detecting a Witch.
A singular instance of belief in witch
craft, a superstition supposed to bo cx-
tmet, Ls reported from Norristown i'a
Some days ago u young married woman
trihiteten ' an i d ‘.° r sickne «’ was at-
Ihe s^H !f r i 1Ua i , ‘ U1 ' 1 40 tl,e ffl0 ‘ that
she is bewitched. Anxious to discover
B J Illt y P art y. be procured a new
horseshoe from a blacksmith shop, pre-
amWbei" .T m ° w -‘l y - to “ ctliku charm,
and then throw it into the fire. Not
long afterward ho heard ono of bis
neighbors complain of a burning pain in
fonnf^ at ’H belieV(!cT that lm had
f”™* 1 the witch. To make sure he placed
some salt under the carpet at tlio
rcsidt^S^ bis honso and awaited the
result Several neighbors came to see
the sick woman and crossed tho thresh-
onlltnmTl ^ C,,Uy ’- but t! “ J - "USJH et, ,1
•me stumbled in passing over it. H< in-
tends to try further experiments iv-
40 >0 effcc,ivo in discovering
Tim Emperor of Anstro-nungary lias
decorated Hon. Chari Gibson, of St.
Louis, his counsel in the case against
Baron Von Bechtolsheim, late Austro-
IIangary consul at St. Lonis, who em
bezzled funds of hi* office, a* Knight
Copimauder of tho Order of Franz
Joseph. Tho order itself ia aa high a*
any ia the empire or in Europe.
Tnr. practicability of photographing
landscapes from the window* of trains
running at a rate of forty miles an hour,
has been recently proved by Dr. Can-
dize, who uses what he calls a gyrograph
for the purpose. An exposure of only
ono ono-huudredth of a second was
needed, and after a little practice won
derfully distinct views were obtained.
John W. Barron, Treasurer of the
Dexter (Me.) Savings Bank, was found
in the vault of the bank on February 22,
1878, dying from wounds wiiioh lie re’
ceived during tlio night. Many will
recall the thrill of admiration that swept
over the country, when tho nows was
published of Barron’s lioroio death in
defense of tho treasure in bia keoping,
and tbe painful reaction when the
charge was mado that the wounds were
self-inflicted to hide a defalcation. Suit
brought by tho bank against Barren’s
estate led to an examination. For four
years the trial has been postponed, and
ia now about to be resumed. New evi
dence is said to have been found to
prove that Cashier Barron was really
murdered at bis post of duty. It is
worth much to have this almost solitary
instanoe of fidelity in a wide waste of
banking treachery and criminality.
Ross, the shotgun messenger of Wells,
Farg ic Co.’s Express, who savod tho
treasure when tho recent effort was made
to rob tlio east-bound express .of the
Central Pacific, in California, stands six
feet four in his stockings, and began
life as a gambler. This is the fourth
time that ho has beaten off the road-
agents.
Edwin Forrest’s costumes and silver
ware, loft by him to the Forest Home,
Philadelphia, aro soon to be sold at pub
lic auction. Among the costumes are
tho3o worn by tho characters of Coriola-
nus, Lear, Tell and Spartacus, and the
silverware includes fifteen pieces besides
a dozen knives, fonr dozen forks, and
four doz«n spoons.
What is claimed to be the largest pen-
8. A. D^—Tea, we“STSfor iongen.l“ 0 “ pai . <1 t ° 1 one th °
gagements, say sixty or seventy years, Htates iias becn Bottled in St. Lonis.
and if you are not enred by that timo: T )l0 pensioner was honorably discharged
nn( l repent at leisure,—Bos-1 from tlio army in 1864 on account of
injuries, and in fonr days thereafter he
Ion Qlobe.
Secretary Foloer has sent aletter to
Congress recommending the oonsoli-
dation of customs districts in many in
stances, in order to effect a saving in the
salaries of officers at ports where the
busines* is very small and does not in
crease from year to year. The Secre-
tary’s recommendations would in effect
not lessen tho number of collection dis
tricts, but in gome eases rbduce tbe
number of officers at the port which,
after the reorganization, would comprise
all the consolidated ports, and reduce the
aggregate cost for salaries *494,295. The
Western ports which would bo affected
by the proposed consolidations aro the
following: It i* proposed to oousohdate
with the distrust of Chicago, the districts
of Galena, Omaha, Dubnque, and Bur
lington; to increase the number of officers
land employe* from seventy-six to ninety-
one, and tbe cost for salaries from *94 .
418 to $111,880. It is proposed to con
solidate with the Minnesota District,
at Ht. Paol, the districts of Duluth’
Montana und Idaho, to increase the
number of officers and employes
from twenty-five to thirty-two, and
the cost for salariss from *32.902 to
(88,8001 The greatest red notion of
officer* and employs* will taka pises si
the chief eastern ports.
Easndam Windmills.
Zaandara is rathor an important
place. Many sliiri* ami boats are built
there, many winumills thresh the air
with their white arms. And grind every
sort of tiling that can ho ground, and
whon they don’t do that thoy saw wood
and inimp water. Its hiliabitanta are
fonriully riehj at story jaunty villa we
came to our guide stopped ns to impress
on us somo notion of its owner’s
wealth. "All llieso rich ueope are wind-
millers;" he coulil speak lolerable En
glish, so we were spared tlio wild panto
mime which, when expressive of four
hundred windmill*, taker some consid
erable room In a vllhigo street. Wo
wore ferrlod ovor the watery nvenuo
which scorns to bo roallv tlio main thor
oughfare of tlio town. There were tlio
mills, sure enough, miles of them—somo
four, I think—on each s'do of (ho way,
as far Into tho dim distnnee a* tho oyo
could reach. It looked like a lesion In
• « • • - •
If any one desires to see Hollsadfrom
its winilniilly side, lot that person ny all
moans come to Zamulam, and ha sur
feited forever after. They all scorned
to * e thriving and nourishing, too; and
when a windinilly town doe* flourish, it
i* (from n flourishing point of view) a
tiling to icmomhur. It soems to lack
ropovufulnass. If one cares for it, but for
one of nn notive temperament it ia high
ly stimulating. It Is not the place for a
moony or ulisont-mimled parson, n*
there i* always a c hance of being brained
by the morry wind-sail, unless ono la
somewhat alert. There seoms to ho an
unfathomable varioly of individualuwto
in the matter of adorning nnd duo-
orating somo of these mills. Thoy wero
nearly nil as bright ns pa nt or wash
of every known hue could make them.
None of the lesthotio. fndod-lonl rones
here either, blit good, -riotous, roaring
rods, greens and liluoH, llmt soemod to
sit nt once on any mild talk of “broken
tints" or “melting combinations."
Somehow they seemed to got tho right
tone undor that dolioiousgray-bluo haze
that hangs so often over the landscape
in Holland. Many m ils had thoir littlu
llower-gardens running down to the
Inevitable little motto expressive of tho
owners sweet con lent, llko “Lust in
/irs ‘ Hlffht looks liko
bad and hnpropor Engfisli. ft only
means Rustic folioity. Hero sit Van
Dunk and friends In tho shades of even
ing. smoking thoir plpos, sipping their
bovornges, and listening to tlio frog* —
rnZi": Dou,Jhlon ' in Ha ^
The tireat Mogul.
Many years ago,at tlio t'rne of a groat
ceremony, Windsor ( astlo was honored
with the piosonco of threo sovereigns.
After breakfast tlio throe potentates
walked nnd tiilkod on Ilia eolobrated
Nope*. nnd wero, of courso, In
•mufti. Thoy wero delighted with
the grounds, and presently entered into
conversation with n gardener, who evi
dently took them for a party of "goiitlo-
nion s gentlomen”out for a stroll. After
some little nflablc talk ho could not re
sist the query: “Now, who may you
gouts bo?" “Well." sahl tho spokes
man, “ this gentleman here happens to
ho the King of I’nissia; that i ne stnn l-
' n P fiy ycur side is the Emperor of Aus
tria; and as for myself, I am tho Em
peror of Russ a,” ‘j hi* wns carrying
tho joke too far, thought tho giir-.'onor.
“i vo Boon a lot of (iiioor furrin gcnU
hero lately, but this heats me;" so he
'I 1 .? 4 . out ’ n a ra| l*°r redo guffaw.
-Tcil’ ni -' f r, °nd,” said tlio Emperor
■Nicholas, “you scorn amused; perhaps
you will tell us who you nro.” “Oh,
certainly;" so tnking up the skirt of Ids
coat with tlio action of a groat cnglo
spreading out his wings, and spinn ng
round on his heel-, he said: “If you
nro all what you say you aro—why, I
fill ‘he Groat Mogul!" Tho three
Majesties roared with laughter, and.
returning to the ( astlo,told the storv at
tho luncheon table to tho immense
amusement of tho Queon and Prince
Albert.—London Sonic/,n.
Oiiarleh Perrault, a French writer
was tho anthor of “Cinderella’s Slipper ”
story. At the accession of Francis IL
Omsband of Mary Queen of Scots),
Pans wns involved in continued broils
by tho struggles for precedency between
tho confraternities of the draper*, the
mercers and the furriers, in which the
furriers finally triumphed. Two cent
uries ago furs were so rare, and there
fore so highly valued, that the wearing
of them was restricted by several sumpt
uary laws to Kings and Prinoes. Sable,
in those Jaws colled vair, was the subject
of countless regulations. The exact
quality permitted; o be worn by persons
of different grades, and the articles of
dress to which it might bo applied, were
defined most strictly. Porrault’s tale of
Cinderella originally marked the dig
nity conferred on her by the fairy, by
her wearing a slipper of vair, a privilege
then confined to the highest rank of
Fnnoesses. An error of the press, now
become inveterate changed vair into
verre, and the slipper of sable was sud
denly converted into a glass slipper.
A Detroiter enred a long and severe
attack of neuralgia by.fallingdown stair*.
I hat's nothing. So'mo years ago a Norris
town youth wus cured of u bad habit of
sweating by falling off a cherry tree.
Not a single oath has escaped his lips
since. The.fall broke his neck.—Norris
town Herald.