The Paulding new era. (Dallas, Ga.) 1882-189?, March 01, 1883, Image 1

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THE LSl-■■■■• Wm. A. BRECKENRIDGE, Poblisher, “Onward nncl Upward.” SUBSCRIPTION: $1.50 Per Aninlm. VOLUME I; DALLAS, PAULDING COUNTY, GA., MARCH 1. 1883. NUMBER 13. PHOITFIRSTMTSTA1, (-'ARDS. CASON R dentist. be 1,1 P»H»» on th« fouith Taes-Tai wnTh , m<m , h ’ 10 I 1 " «>* kimis of .lent.) “I 1 * “* tothspioVnos. He Hill remain only one week iu iach momh. D R S. ROBERTSON, PHYSICIAN &8URG‘ON, Tend r« hts rroLssi nil s rvhes n the pract.ce o f medicine iu a’l it.s »r«incl.e«< »o the cit /.:aa n D JUs and surroutitJin country. -etrOfll .c No. 5 Ac.vor;h st.eet, near c nr h use. ” K PlRLDER, gko h roiikrt GUELDER & ROBERTS, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Deltas. Paulding Crantv, G«irgta Praolioe in ell the o>nr «. Pruinpt ntten- Hon giv n tj lo,.kiu* nicer wild land chin b. Col ections a ppecin ty. i ly J M fcPiNKd, . ‘attqhney at law, Balia,, Paulding County, G lorgia. Pro opt attention given to c-filict ons in anv part of III-* Stale. Wil I lands looked aftir and intruders ejected.. THOMPSON & SPINKS, Attorney and Cou<-se'tor at Law, Ba'las, Paulding C>., G». "Will pr dire in all the cour s of thi- Stale, from t;:c jo tice <o'irs up* Prompt attfn'i- p Riveo to oo'lacti »o-. I, >oking u’ter wild lands, removing intruders, no,, made a sne* oialty. D ALLtS JEWELRY STORE, N id Hoot 10 H-.tel, Watches, Clock, and Jewell y repairs t at short notice HIS ALtla-iid It with U fir pt n Statu no Abil ru will aend on* intbiila ait »>!6 nt v ntj) Myrtle ’ trip'o platei l«a p.mns. Co • w j,* Ulna no >ra «•, waro-nt*! iiMiutoe, rqu nil T . ***’••«<* to tlree dol.ar *p»uu UU I 'fmiAotaid to p’ewr, oi money itlun <m*. Oa<y ona net not to Int oduco gputa wan id an* uoodpn*’. ) irni nra f /• «l Irms the m nu f i»3 - urerr, dll » WMUTSil.VlCr PLATE CO., 83 Brouiu- tijldrteit, Bantor, v aii YOU CAN HAVE ANY KIND OF Sewing Machine Repaired. All Kinds of Needles, Attachments, Parts, He., Etc. — OF— I*. McCOKMACK, 51 S. Broad 81., Atlanta, Gi. BQSfSend Machines by Express. NEWS GLEANINGS. #37 33 Full Al. Mnsiu for the III lion.—Vienna Kollan Labial Oiguiu / Sweetest «n l most delLnUul inusit? know. Popular in Europe Any fun** ran b* played on it, from Old Hundred io Yankee Docd r Even these “with no e«r” whil* away de lightful houis with thin in truiuent. Any one can play it Children piny it in one evening. Costa but ouo*tenth as much as the O g nette, OrgnniuH, eto, and is fa sweeter and needs oaiy common music. T - introduce our newmun c ve will tend a sam pie Organ, with bound b >ok emuining fu 1 woids and mu*ic of 96 new ai»d p p • far songs, which iu *heit form pell for $36.3.3, prepaid to any address f >r O V LY $1. C. O D.—-As a guarantee that every o e will receive all they pay for, we will k nd on> sample book and ororan by expre s C. O. D„ $100; two for $i 60; three. $2 30, . r more at the rate of *9 per doz^n. We « an* not prepay goods sent « O D. Circulars free. Addrer s MONADNO It MUSIC CO, Loc’< Box 780, II ns lale, N. II. eTsmuh &^ca! . Datlan, G r rgU, Dealers in Family Groceries, Plain and l'Ancy Confectioneries a specialty. Ev ry thing fresh and nic-; just from the factory ! We desire to say to our friends and ihc public io general that having opened out u ■took of groceries and c nfectioneriei*, w« propose Io sell them os cheap ta the cheap est- ‘ Sm >1! Profits and Quick Bales 11 sha be our motto. Come and tee us and e >1 convinced. THE “ORIGINAL” STAR SPANGLED BANNER. The oldest, most popular, bast and cheap est Family paper, begins tfo 214 yea- with 1883. It is a large 8 page, 40 co'ttmu iilus frated literary paper, rize of the * Ledger.’' Cram full of splendid storied, sketches, p »- eras, wit humor aud genertl fun. Il ciest •nd most popular paper i uMished. Estab lished 20 years, read by 60.000 persons. It is solid, tubstant al, reliable. Only 50 cent- • year, 5 copies, $2; or 75 cents a year wi h choice of set of sit triple plat-d silver spoons, no bra.*s, new style, retail price $1. 50; or Am Dictionery, 700 pa^es, illustrated defines '30,000 word*, numerous tabbs bound in cloth, gilt, better than u ual $1.50 books, or wonderful “Mu’tuni- n Parvo” knife, a doz jn tools in one hand e, sells at one to three dollar?, buck handle, name plate, etc., or superb bell h&rznoafca, swrc ? - est musical instrument known, price r 1.60 Either of above premium? and Banna one year sent free, for 25 green stamps. Sub scribe now. Satisfactio • guor nteed or money refunded. Trial tr’p 3 month for only 10 cents Specimens free. Address STAR SPANGLED DINNER, Hinsdale, N. □. by 11 m agent for the C i.tine tal Insurant* Con.- piny, wnlch is oonfintd to the insuring of farm r > opaity, dwellings, ciurcbet, und rcb«.ol h u> s. or one, three ana fire year* Ercry piudentm n feels*afe wuen he knovs thit If he she u a be e«- uy- lortunata aa io get his propeity d^troytd bj fire heaiUbave the greater pert on of bia losse-< re p at* d This it a reliable company, and l. eur-s for a I w rate. Call ou mr, and l wd • rnn full •zpian'ttoca T. A. FQOTE. Ornniro trees nro lipin* bbipi-ed to South Florida. X perfect gold fever is raging in Po k county, North Carolina. There is a negro boy in Nath county, V. C., that is nevon fo t high. Freight trains are prohibited from running on Sunday in Alabama. West Virginia contains 52.000 persons over ten years of age who cannot read. There were 1,851 arrivals at’the Cedsi Keys hotels during the month of Janu ary. About $5,000,000 is the amount now invested in the manufacture of pig iroi ! n Alabama. A bill making It a criminal oflenre to deal in futures has pasted the Alabama State Senate. Sixteen very lurgo whales drifted ashore on the sea beach nenr CanAneral Florida, recently. A negro in Newberry county, South Oar^ linn, has forty-two children and 824 grandchildren. A man living in Polk county, Tenn., had six acres in tobacco last year, and ii made him *76 per acre. A remarkable rich vein of ore has been 'truck in the Gold Valley mine, in Row an county, North Carolina. Frederick county, Vn., has fine cloth manufactories, turfyimr out over 300,000 yards of cloth per annum. Only four miles of iron has got to be laid to complete tlie railroad from Pen sacola to the Apalachicola riv^r. Over 52,000,000 cans of tomatoes were packed last year. Nearly half of it wa» done in Maryland and Virginia. Tlie horse trade of Texas is rapidly growing iu importance, and assuming proportions only surpassed by its cattle trade. The grand jury of Mobile has been in session two weeks, during which time it 1ms examined 250 witnesses and found 148 indictments. There are 40,000 square miles of al most unbroken forests in North Caroli na, comprising pine, chestnut, oak, ma ple, beech and hickory timber, Land at Gaffney City, Spartanburg county, S C., which was worth nboui f2 an acre ten or fifteen years ago, now finds ready sale at from $20 to $50. The North Carolina Legislature is fa- vnrbly disposed towaid a bill which makes null and void all contracts for cotton futures. Tlie measure lias passed firHt reading In Anderson county, Tenn., there is a well which emits a perpetual stream of illuminating gas, and it is said that crude petroleum may he found in the same locality. Perhaps the rarest curiosities over brought to Jacksonville, Fla., are two monkey-faced owls, recently captured in one of the caverns in Fort Marion, at St. Augustine, It is very probable that (lie city of Atlanta will get a special appropriation of $75,000 to buy land and begin the erection of permanent United States barracks in that city. A rich vein of gold quarts, over seven feet thicli, lias been struck in the Mor row gold mine, Virginia. It yields now $00 a day. The new machinery, now being added, will greatly increase the yield. The Alabama Legislature recently re fused to grant a charter for the Rome, (Ga.) nnd Decatur railroad, saying it was against the policy of the State to grant charters to roads leading out of t lie State. t; [7’ Tlie Alabama Legislature has passed an appropriation bill in favor of the Mo bile Medical College. An appropriation of #900,000 in favor cf the University nnd Agricultural College of that State has also been passed. Maj. A. V. Hitt, who, in ante-bellum days, was one of the largest cotton buy ere in Columbia, B, C., .and possessed a fortune estimated at $200,000, died in the alm»-house of that city on Saturday last, aged seventy-eight years. He was never married. The salaries of the city officials, in tituling tlie Police force of Pensacola were paid in cash last Saturday, for the first time in many years, and the city administration will hereafter be run on n cash basis. The salaries of city officials have been reduced about onc-lialf, tif the <80 murders recorded for tlie country last yenr, 212 wore committed in the Southern Suites nnd 131 were com- uitted in the State of New York alone. I’liis is rather severe on Northern sta tisticians who would locale all lhc mur ders in the South. It appears moreover hat, of the executions for murder, half if them took place in the South. The City Council of Dalton, Ga., has unanimously reitised to grant licenso to veil intoxicating liquors in that city. It is not to bo sold in drug stores under the name of bitters nor from any other place, nor in any quantity. Great re joicing among the people. Out of a vot ing .population of 400, 835 signed the petition asking the Council not to grant licenses. New Orleans formerly took 2,000,000 bushels of Pittsburgh coni nnnunlly. Now she receives less than half that amount, the remainder coming from the coal fields near Birmingham, Alabama, Si ill the Pittsburgh miners standout for their four cents, and one largo oper- itor ha* made up his mind to go to the mountain, and' lias already tnken up 5,000 acres in Alabama. Tlie United States Government lias purchased the Gummun property, ad joining the site of tlie former custom house, at Pensacola. The lnnd purclios ed by the Government has a front of seventy feet on Government street, nnd i hey paid for it $18,000. This is llio first move in a tangible shape to render nviiilablo the. appropriation of $200,000 innde by the last Congress to replace tlie custom house that was destroyed by lire in December, 188\ One of the most noted housekeepers in Talbotton, Ga., lias not bought a pound of store lard in forty five years. She al si has never failed to plant her Irish po tato crop during the dark nights of Feb ruary in forty-five years, an'd this year is the fust year in forty-five that she lias failed to put hog hair on her potatoes. She maintains tlint nothing helps Irish potatoes like n smnll bunch of hog hair put on top of each seed potato placed in the ground. Sweeping Them Out. “ How do I get rid of gossips ?” asked Miss Hopkins, with n twinkle of amuse ment in her bright eyes. “ Easily enough. I found out the way long ago. Tho llrst thing I did was ty) gut the bruBli and dust-pan, and lay them handy 'gaiuBt. my neighbor camo in. Soon in r ps Mrs. Smith. ‘Mrs. Smith,’says ‘yon won’t mind my doing a bit of dusting, will you, wbilu you’re talk ing?’ Of course slio couldn’t but be agreealdo to that. So down on my kneoB I goes, and begins to dust with all my might. But somehow it was a very curious thing that tho dust alius would gather just under tho chair my neighbor was u-sittin’ on. She’d shift and shift, but I’d nllus bo arter her with my old dust-pan; and tho dust 'ud get up in her nose, and she’d begin to sneeze—aud soon she’d Say, ‘Well, I think—ketcherl—I’ll call in another day, as I see you are—ketoher t—busy. ’ And so, in less than a week, I had dust ed all my neighbors out of the houso. ” Wise Mrs. Hopkins I Pointed Shoes. A grentbeauof the time of Wm. Rufus, called Robert the Horned, wore shoos with long points, stuffed with tow, and twisted in a special form. This fashion took tho fancy of tho people of that day immensely, and the jioint.s increased yearly until tho reign of Richard If., when they had to be tied on the knees of tho wearer, that lie might not bo encum bered in walking. This tying was, in tho . TOPICS OP THE DAT. Tub latest Washington real estate olaimaut iu one who asserts a title to the arsenal grouuda. A BEounin branch of the "crook” profession in New York now, is tho steal ing of valuable pet dogs. The land claims in Huron District, Dakota, during the last quarter of 1882, amounted to 745,893 sores, A iovn'O lady of B.miberg, Germany, lias been puuished by a Ano and costs for tho offeuse of playing the piano at night by an open window. Mannirr H, Dbmicnt, a Chicago man, olaima to have invented a machine witli wbioh a person can beat fifteen av erage oompositors in setting type. The customs officers at Now York seized u Diblo a fow days ago, bcoansn set iu a spneo neatly out in one of the Ihiok tucks was a diamond ring valued at $150. Tho package was addressed to a lady iu San Francisoo. Tint Asiatio Sooi ity is about to erect a monument on tho site of tho Iilack Hole of Calcutta, the duligoou in wbicli 14G British prisonois were ooiiflned on the night of June 20, 175(1, and from whloli only twenty-three wore taken out nlivo the next looming. The fooling ou the lower Mississippi m donscquuuco of the fiood is one of dread and oxpuotaney. Tho terrlblo dis asters of Inst yenr are still fresh in mind nnd their repetition is feared. At various points the population is abandoning tho low lands. Jay Gould expresses tho opinion that there nro no good grounds to fear a corny meroial and financial panic in this ooun try. He thinks a largo percentage of tlie new railways being built are usolosa, and tho building of parollcl competing linos simply to sell is ruinous. Last spring two women wero elected school 'directors iu Philadelphia. Their services have been so satisfactory that eight or ten more prominent ladios liavo beon put forwnrd by their friends as can didates for similar positions soon to bo vacant. They will, it is expooted, stand u good chance of success. W. W. Story has expressed his will ingness to make a bronzo statue of Dan iel Wobster, to bo orcetod on Boston Common, his reward to bo cither #15,000 or #10,000, according to r.izo. About #5,000 liavo been subscribed, and it is likely that Mr. Story will bo commission ed to undertako the work. Swindling practices by Brooklyn un dertakers have been exposed by the Commissioners of King's Oaunty, Now York. The law requires expense* of burying. soldier* and tailors who die in destitution to be paid by the Commis sioners. The board repot t thst many bills presented to it by Brooklyn under takers have already been paid by friends of tho dooeased. Rumor now denies any intention on the part of Hon. David Davie to marrv. A rodent Bloomington, III., dispatoli says George P. Davis, who, with his wifo, went to Washington with the intention of proceeding to North Carolina to wit- ness bis father's wedding, has returned to his home. Tho Vine President’s half brother, Mr. Lyman Betts, omphationlly denies all reports nonoerning Mr. Davis' matrimonial intention. A phyhioian rented his stable in Chicago to some men who had said thoy desired to roost over again some coffee that had beon damaged by wetting; but he soon discovered that they were on- gaged, in treating worthies coffee with poisonous chemicals, so that it oouhl be deceptively sold for the very liesl Java. He informed the Board of Health, and one of tho largest grooery firms in the city has boou exposed ns the real pro moter of the fraud. Scarlatina surpasses diphtheria in its ravages in Bussia. Iu 1882 there were 1,823 deaths from tlie formor, and 1,14(1 from the latter in 8t. Petersburg, nnd during five yean there have been 15flJt2Lfatal oases ont of 468.018 persona attacked by those two diseases in the empire. Tho Ooloe remarks that no war lias over been so disastrous, and that, considering the largo proportion of young podplo among tho victims, it is really the future of the country that is in qnestion. Tho great difficulty is tho lack of competent physicians. The ltev. W. C. Winslow fans loaned to tho Boston 8 iciety the ancient door knocker, once in use on the door of his famous ancestor, Governor Winslow of tho Plymouth Colony. Tho venerable relic is of solid yellow brass, and is ap propriately mounted upon a pieco of English ouk tlint might have accompan ied the knocker over in tho Mayflower, An apple in porfect preservation, al though ninety-six years old, is in posses sion of a gontleman in Ulster County, Now York. As it rounded up from tho blossom ol' tho parent stem iu the early summer of 1787, a bottlo was drawn over it and uttaolied to tho branch, and alter tho apple had ripened tlie stem was severed and tho bottle sealed tightly. Vandeudilt tins sold the bioak on which tho Madison Square Garden stands to Edward S. Stokes and Wil liam Mackey, the bonanza king, for $950,000. It is iutendod by tho pur chasers to erect a handsome and costly theater aud to cover tho rest of tho block with a series of Bplundid compart ment houses. The question of the adoption of tho wliipping-poat for wife-beateraand other despicable criminals is one npon which opinion is muoli divided, and also ono regarding whioli many men’s opin ions froquontly change. To-day a man thinks n whipping-]>ost law would be a disgrace upon the statute books of a State; to-morrow a miserable crimo is brought to his attention, and appcsls to his wrath, and ho thiulu the lash too light a punishment for the culprit. Cal ifornia is the State that has mast recent ly refused to add a whipping-post amend ment to its Constitution. A man named Peter Wendling, living in Bismarck, Penn., was recently exam ined by tbo Philadelphia County Medi cal Society and pronounced a wonderful medical enriosity. He has neither hair nor teeth, does not possess the sense of smell, and lias no pores in his skin. The latter foot is the cause of muoli wonder, ns it has been held that no person could live without a porous skin. Wendling axperionoes great discomfort from his incapacity for perspiration, and his body grows so hot that his clothing has to be kept wet in order to mitigate his discomfort. He lias al ways boon in good health, aud has a wife and eight ohildren. None of tho children partake of their father's pecu liarities, exoept that non* of them have perfect teeth. The Executive Committee of the Trunk lines and managers of Western roads have signed the following agree ment: "We hereby pledge ourselves (bat we will not allow any variations to lie made from the established castbound rates, by an officer, agent, or employe of tho roads controlled by us; and that upon the request of the Commissioner, when evidence satisfactory to him has beon presented, that the established 'IT'D 1717 S nd '( MOORE’S Jj Ik, Pi ID Business University, Atlanta, (ieoigiu, For Illustrated Xtiroulnr A live ac’usl bos inees school. EstabM-hcfi twenty yoirf. , his profession and refunded it When Gov. Stephens, of Georgia, was a lad the ladies of the Presbyterian church, appreciating the great capabili ties and fine promise, aided in having him educated for a minister; but ho, be- An eccentric New Hampshire man re- ,, .. nuested that after death he should be case of a gentleman, hy chains of silver | bnried 8tal)(iiDg in bis coffin and a pipe orsilvcr.(nlt. In Chaucer strain the upper ^ ^ month; a , BO> that beshould be hauled to tho grave in a hay-rack, or silver-gilt. In Chaucer’s timotheupper part of these shoes was cut to imitate a church window. Tlie rank of the wearer in those days was known by tho lengtii of bis poulaines. “ The men,” says l’ara- din, “wore them with a point before half a foot long; the richer and more eminent personages wore them a foot, and Princes two feet long.” By an act of the reign of Edward IV.. the absurd length to which tho points attained, was limited; aud no ono under tho rank of Lord waa to wear shoes more than ten inches long, and all cobblers making them were to lie fined and cursed by tho clergy. —The climate of Japan is mild and g len emit, resembling that of the Atlantic tates of America from New .Jersey to Florida. It is a land of fruit aud flowers. Among tho latter is the chrysanthemum, with its scarlet and pink blossoms, and the lotas, with its crown-like bead; the first tbo national and tbo second tho sacred flower of the empire. Most of American fruits and vegetables grow in Jupan. They have small but delicious millions on millions of acres of rice. He died tlie other day, and his nnsym- pathizing relatives planted him in a horizontal position, and were glad to get him under in any shape. A vast amount of cheap fish is an nually wasted in England because the people ignorantly suppose it is not fit to eat and won’t buy it. One of tlie useful features of tho coming International Fisheries Exhibition at London will be daily demonstrations by the School of Cookery that these so-called inferior Borts of fish are savory and nutritions. A Massachusetts man is owing him self of dyspepsia by a ten-days fast. At the end of five days he said he felt full of energy, had no sense of hnDger, and expected to taste nothing until his time was up. There is no manner of doubt that fasting will cure dyspepsia, or any other disease, if tlie sufferer will only refrain from eating long enough. PITH AUD POINT. —One lawyer In Dm MoIom, Iowa, has put through 189 dlvorooeasM within a yoar. The faro to Des Moines is about Sevan dollars.—^.Chicago Tribum. —Tho Now York Commercial A/lver- - tint suddenly remarks that! "Theman ,vho bangs his hair hasn’t enough sense to blow out hi* brains, even If ho pos sessed any." —Highly sugar-coated: A New York divoroo lawyer's advertisement rends; "Ilymanoal incompatibilities as a spe cialty, carefully adjusted. ’Tie slavery to dot-uln ttio hand after tho heart hatll fiod.” —A Pennsylvania paper tells of a family which has been poisoned by eat- ihi! plo containing arsenic. It seems like a work of supererogation to put ar- sonlc into plo. A pie that can not kill a family without the help of arsenic is a very * weak pie Indeed.—Durlini/ton Bawkei/c. —An African travelor gives a thrilling account, of a "vegetable vampire"—a tree wliloh onvelops a per on with tto branches' and strangles him to doath. The nearest approach wo have jn this country to a vegetable vampire Is the "dead beat," who also lives upon oth ers.—Norristown J/erahl. —"Mv motlior’s awful fiukle,” said little Edith to Mrs. Smith, who was ' making a call. "When she saw you earning up tho street, she said; "There's that horrid Mis' Smith; I hope she Isn't coming here; ’ and a minute after she told . yon she was real glad to see you. Mother says I'm floklo, but I guess I don’t uliango my mind at quick as that."— N. Y. Graphic, —It took me four years Vg save my first thou-anil dollars. It was saved from a soldier's pay Irf the army, and the boys often said: "Charlie, you might ns well spoud yonr money, for you may no'vor got homo to nte H." It required courage to resist tho Influence to spend all, but the schooling ol thosn four years was worth more than the thousand dollars, for 1 learned to save money.—Charles IF. Black. —An old man would not believe bn could hoar his wifi\ talk a distance ot five miles by telephone. His better hall was In a country store several miles away, where there was a telephone, amt' tho skeptic'was also In a plaoo wherh there was a similar instrument, and, on being told how to operate it, he walked boldly up and siiouted, “Hullo, Jane!” At that instant lightning'struck the telephone-wire and knocked the man down, nnd as lie scrambled to Ills feet he excitedly dried, "That's Jane' every time."—Modern Aryo. —“James, dear, Reginald desires n now sled. I think you had better get him one." ** What’s a sled good for to hlmP You'vo brought him up to stay in tho house and look pretty. Ho wouldn’t know what to do with ono.*' “Oh, 1 don't mean one ot those grant big out-door sled*. I mean n little houso sled that ho can play with in the front hall, dear, just to get him accus tomed to the Idea, you know."’ Lota ol littlo Reginalds are being cultivated in doors, and they will either go to early graves or grow up to be flat*.—Boston (Jlube. —If wo must talk about the weather, why not vary the formula, "It,.j* a pleasant day." Every one is tlrea ol admitting that It Is. Why not lie Scien tifically accurate when one inedtt a friend P Tho following is submitted as n specimen dialogue: Jones—“Ah, Mr. Smith, I see we havo cloudy weather with light rains." Smith (wlthachoor- ful smile)—“Yes, and variable winds shifting to colder northeasterly, station ary or higher pressure.” Jonps— “Quite so; but it is gratifying to know that tlie rivers will remain nearly sta tionary and that *tho temperature has fallon thirty degrees in the llio Grando Valley. Good-morning, sir."—Boston AUrerliser. In One Lifetime, Homo ono has recently written : 1 am not un old man; yet in material things I have seen tho creation of a new world. I am contemporary with the railroad, the telegraph, tlie steamship, the photo graph, tho sewing-machine,'tho steam- plow, tlie friction-mutch, gaslight, chlo roform, nitro-glycerino, tho monitor, the caloric engine, tho California gold , f w _ discoveries, tho oil-well discoveries, rates have been out by a connecting road I gutta percha, canned fruits, the electric or ito connections, even though reduo- ! ii e llfc * ‘ h “ JSJST" .. . , • *a ?, . i Homo of tlie footprints of material prog- tion may be made in its or their own r(>|)H 0 j jp 0 present generation. Do yon proportion of rate, we will withdraw nil think the moral world will remain tlie prorating arrangements and will not ac- same us before ? That society will ro- cept from soeh oonnoctingroads through main unaffected by these changes? -If bills or through cars, but will cause a , do - let me call your attention ,to , , , , .■ . , „ | the fact that the same generation lias transfer aud rebillmg of property at full | H „ (m th(| nbolitiou of K , liv b y „„ n grand tariff rates from tbe junction point, nnd we further agree, that any agent under oar control who may be shown to lie quoting less than, or instrumental in cutting established rates, either by re bate or otherwise, shall bo discharged. ” " Wlial’s In a Name! ’ acalc, tlie opening of China and Japan, tho institution of world’s fairs. Black Costa. * Tlie late famous Bev. Dr. Macdonald was crossing at Kessook on ono of his A good deal,"especially if it’s a bad one. 1 frequent journeys. Tho day was very Eugene Sue, l'nlus “Mysteries of Paris.” stormy, and there was (bfflculty m get- happenod to cliooso a very respectable tmg tlm boat across. Au old woman, street us tho scene of some of the worst ono of the paesengere, quoted the saying families moved to other streets, and grout Ho atmwered, witli hubitual quickness, wns tho grief of the inhabitants that, for that “ministers are at war with Satan, no fault of their own, their neighborhood a Q(1 that ho supposed tbe latter, as prince was regarded as little better than infara- ol tho power of the air, was at the-hottom ons At hist it occurred to somo clover of the matter.” Coming back some time fellow to have tbe name of the street after, the day being fine, tlie eld woman changed. It was done, and all was soon was there again, and this time quietly right again I The novelist was couqurred, -remarked, to tho discomfiture of Die and tlie residents were us respectable as doctor, “I sec you have made yonr peace „„ | with tho prince of the power of the air.”