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SELECT MISCELLANY.
THE FISHERS' GRAVE.
I' ally two hundred and fifty wen and hoys were
drowned on that stormy night.”—Datfji payer.
WjH roars the storm upon the sea,
'ild sorrow on the shore >
iiie women weeping woefttlly
F’or those that never more
ihhall bring their boats up to the land,
These stalwart men and brave;
J lie women weeping, waiting stand,
The boats sink in the wave.
A ery comes from the raging deep,
The women Wring their hands ;
ihey shriek and ery and madly weep—
Mad waves beat on the sands*
And faraway, beyond our ken,
_ There, vanquished in the light,
full five times fifty boys and men
Went down that stormy nigtil,
A dreary night to those bereft
Lone loved ones by the shore ;
V et sound the little children slept
Amid the wild wind’s roar.
And when the morning sun uprose
O’er sandy shore and les,
Ao message came to tell of those
That lie deep i. Ms Sea.
From Judy.
CAPITAL PUNISHMENT.
ANCIENT AND MODETtV.
In olden times punishment was in
flicted on the offender corresponding
to the arnouut of pain or suffering
which he had inflicted on others.
Hence arose the retaliatory principle
of punishment, which demanded an
eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth, etc.
But now it is consiuered a vindictive
proceeding, couprary to the spirit of
the age, and that it a person is to be
deprived. y>f life, it should he done in
the tnaliner which will cause the least
pain.
Blackstonc has enumerated one hun
dred and sixty offences for which, only
a century back, the law provided the
punishment of death. Four-fifths of
these excluded the “benefitof clergy,”
as it was called. It no longer exists,
unit the death punishment in England,
sis with us, is now narrowed down
almost to the two crimes of murder
and treason.
Crucifixion was a very ancient pun
ishment. The Syrians, Jews, Egyp
tians, and especially the Carthaginians,
used it. But in no part of the ancient
world was this punishment so generally
resorted to as in the Roman empire,
w'aere it was regarded as the most in
famous of deaths. By the Roman law,
the culprit was scourged previously to
the crucifixion, either in the prtoto
riutn or on the way to the place of
execution. On his arrival there he
wtis stripped of his garments, and then
either nailed or tied by the hands and
feet to the cross, or, as sometimes hap
pened, only [fastened to it by ropes.
In order to hasten death, it was the
practice to break the legs or to pierce
the body of the sufferer with a spear.
By the Jewish law, it was ordained
that the body of the culprit should he
removed from the cross on the day of
his execution; hut the Romans fre
quently allowed it to hang until it
dropped piece-meal to the ground.
Among the Greeks capital punish
m.ent was inflicted by regular killing,
or, as in the case of Socrates, by or
dering that the victim should drink a
howl of hemlock, which is poisonous.
The ancient Israelites stoned their cul
prits to death, and in Rome certain
criminals were destroyed by throwing
them from the Tarpeiau rock.
In England during the middle ages
death was the ordinary punishment
for all felonies; but, if the culprit
could read, he escaped with life, on a
first conviction. In the British army
and navy, within the present century,
soldiers and sailors have been literally
flogged to death with a cat-o-nine-tails.
Sometimes 1,000 lashes were ordered.
The i'jtliction, though much mitigated,
is s,iill continued in the British mili
tary and naval service. In the Amer
ican it has been humanely abolished
within the last thirty years.
During the first French revolution
what was facetiously called “republi
can marriages ” (where two persons of
different sexes, bound together by j
strong cords, were cast into the river j
Rhone at Lyons and left to drown) j
were outrages upon humanity.
Formerly, in Scotland, culprits’
heads were chopped off by the maiden.
It was an old contrivance revived, ;
having been used in Persia in early
times. In Italy its name was mannaja, ,
and culprit-nobles had the privilege of i
being decapitated by it, and a similar j
instrument had been previously used I
in Germany. In France, in 1{532, a j
Due de Montmorenci had been exe i
cuted by a similar instrument at Tou- j
louse, and a century back the Dutch
employed if, in executions. There
fore in October, 17!J0, when Joseph
Ignace f tuillotin, a physician of Paris,
proposed to the national assembly
there the u i of the beheading instru
ment wh' a perpetuates his name, he
only i' proved on an old idea. The
guillotine consists of two upright
pieces of wood fixed in a horizontal
frame; a sharp blade of steel moves
up and down by means of a pulley in
grooves in the two uprights; the edge
is oblique instead of horizontal. The
criminal is laid on his face, his neck
immediately under the blade, which
severs it at a blow from his body.
Louis XVI. perished by it. Guiilotin
was imprisoned during the reign of
terror, hut was released at the revolu
tion of July, 17!*4, and died in March.
I*l4, at the age of seventy six.
Throughout'Europe, with the excep
tion of Spain, barging and beheading
are the onlv methods of execution.
In England there was a punishment
called “pressing to death.” When
®)c Jlconi) Sentinel.
VOL. I.
the accused refused to confess his guilt
| lie was made to die by the netnc .fbrf:
ct dure. In the reign Of Elizabeth
I Tudor, one Mrs. Margaret Middleton,
j wife of A rich citizen of York, accused
] of harboring a schoolmaster, refused
j to plead guilty, because she considered
| that such a plea would be equivalent
to a falsehood. She was divested of
! all her clothes and robed In a long
| linen habit. She lay doWn oil the
| ground, her face covered with A hamt
j kerchief. Then ft doOr Ms placed
upon her, ahd her extended hands
I were botmd to two posts, her feet being
1 recurred to two others. A .Sharp strike
| Was placed under hFt hack. Then
upon the doo’r were heaped iron
j weights, which broke her ribs, while the
| stone under her back broke her spine.
The poor woman uttered only one ex-
I clamation and was soon dead. Trai
tors were usually beheaded or put to
the rack, but those of a lower class
were “hanged, drawn and quartered,”
literally cut in pieces while life yet re
mained in the body, It need scarcely
bo mentioned that for “heresy,” a
great tnnny persons have been burnt
alive at the stake. The, last instance,
of burning alive in England occurred
in 1612, when Bartholomew Legate
was burned at' Smithfield for holding
opinions similar to those of the Unita
rians Of Otlr day.
In Spain and in her colonies capital
punishment is inflicted by the garrotte,
which is a species of violent strangu
lation, which is instantaneous and is
said to be painless.
The punishment by the knout, which
formerly was general throughout Rus
sia for almost every variety of crime,
and which barbarously murdered
many persons by slow and prolonged,
and most horrible torture, was abol
ished by the present czar, Alexander
11. The Culprit was bound to two
stakes, and received on his hare back
(he specified number of lashes from a
whip of plaited thongs interwoven
with wire. From one hundred to two
hundred and twenty lashes were the
highest number inflicted, and were
considered equivalent to a sentence of
death. It the criminal survived ho
was banished for life to Siberia. For
merly. the nose was slit, the ears cut
off and the letter V (for var, rogue)
branded on the forehead.
In China, simple beheading is the
mode of capital punishment, and the
unfortunate victim is usually half
starved before his execution, besides
being exposed in view of the whole
community, who taunt him with the
vilest and most abusive epithets, some
times alternated by blows and the
pelting of stones, sticks and mud.
Sometimes the bastinado (a baton or
cudgel) is used, and the punishment
often destroys life. Another Chinese
mode of legal life-taking is horrible.
The. culprit is placed between two
planks, around which a rope is firmly
bound, and the executioner saws tim
ber and man through the middle.
A singular mode of execution pre
vails in the empire of Japan. It was
called liara-kari, liara-kiru (which
means “belly-cut”), and was a rccog
pointed knife. It was often done by
the person himself, hut there were
professional performers in most of the
large cities of Japan. The tycoon
would intimate to such or such per
sons that he was dissatisfied with them,
whereupon, taking the hint , they made
way with themselves. The Japanese
have little fear of death, and endure
the most cruel tortures with a passive
fortitude.
Punishment on the wheel was first
employed in Germany on the mur
derers of Leopold, Duke of Austr'a,
in the fourteenth century. Accord
ing to the German mode of this sav
age execution, the criminal was laid
on a wheel with his arms and legs ex
tended, and his limbs, in that posture
fractured with an iron bar.
Between the years of BJO to !00, !
the laws of Scotland was barbarous. !
The following are some of the laws :
That all persons convicted of theft
shall be bang’d and all convicted of
manslaughter shall lose his head, and
any woman convicted of a capital
crime, shall he drewn”d or buried
alive.
He that blasphemeth God or his
saints, shall want his tongue.
If a son injure his parent, by word
: or deed, he shall first lose either tongue,
hand or foot whereby he offended
his par ent and then be bang’d and his
body remain unburied.
Jugglers, wizzards or any person
known to use familiarity with the
devil or evil spirit shall he burnt to
death.
All oppressors and invaders of other
, men’s lands shall he beheaded.
In Turkey, when the sultan was dis
! satisfied with any pasha or other supe
; rior officer, or wished to obtain his
! wealth, it was usual for him to send
a messenger to the doomed man, who
, politely communicated to him the im
perial desire that hi- death should
take place and produced a warrant to
JEJsITP, GEORGIA, WEDNESDAY, MAY 1(> 187?.
that effect., taijctiler With a tough bow
string (made of cat-gut), which —the
action being instantly suited to the
Word—was thereupon placed ar ntnd
the neck to produce strangulation.
At one time great culprits were
fastened to four horse;, a limb to each
horse, and the horses being urged dif
ferent Ways, [Milled limb ffom limb.
The-last persdit wild sb suffered in Eu
rope was Robert Francisco Damiens,
for an attempt on the life of Louis
XV., in 17y7. _ ___
A iM;i.uiati's Scheme of Salvation.
The New York Times says that a
man who calls himself Martin Hig
gins, after preliminary negotiations,
bought out part of a small Yankee
notion concern in Chatham street on
Saturday, paying three hundred dol
lars. He betrayed no strange charac
teristics until last evening, when, in
the presence of his new partner, the
old otie whose interest he had pur
chased, and three others, he suddenly
produced a hook and planked it upon
the counter, exhibiting a vast number
of bank notes varying in Value from
ten dollars to live hundred dollars.
He looked at his auditors intently for
a moment, and then, informing them
of their sinful character, proceeded to
preach to them. He had come to re
deem them, and he would pay them
ten dollars each to listen to him an
hour. His auditors became wearied,
and lie increased his bid to one hun
dred dollars each, and then to one
thousand dollars. He had locked the
door, but two of his hearers escaped.
It was after midnight, and the light
went out. The maniac collected waste
paper and fired it, and, this being ex
hausted, he drew out his pocket-book
and threw hill after hill into the flames
before ho could be secured. He as
sured one of the men that ho must he
damned, though he could ave the
others, and he sprang for some kuives
on the shelf. A long struggle ensued,
and the madman was finally hound.
He was given over to the oflicers and
taken to the Toombs. (Several thou
sand dollars were still found in his
pocket-book, and hank notes repre
senting upward of' fifty thousand dol
lars. He has for some time made
large amounts of money in sugar
raising in the south. It is one theory
that In: was robbed by his associates,
and the police arc now at work on
llie case.
Impaired Sight of School Children.
It has been a matter of comment that
the sight of many school children is
becoming impared, and in some cities
medical men made examinations into
the matter. Recently Dr. Spaudling,
of' Portland, Me., looked into the eyes
of the school children of that city.
The examination proved that twenty
per cent, were of defective vision.
Many of these were very slightly
affected, yet ten per emit, were short
sighted enough to need glasses. Dr.
Spaudling’s deductions are that the
defective lighting of school rooms is
one cause of the trouble, and that the
habit of holding the hook too close to
the eyes is another. He advises ciiil
dren not to study with their eyes to a
bright light, to rest their eyes fre
quently, and when it is necessary to
use glasses not to use the stronger
ones than is needed. He adds: They
should he taught that the light shosid
always come from the side, or even
over the shoulder; that the book
should be held up, if possible, and
never in the lap; they should always
have a shade over a lamp standing on
a table at a level witli the eyes, and
especially if they have to lace the
light, as in writing ; and that all bend
ing positions, and reading in the twi
light, or with the sunlight pouring
over the book, are very harmful to
the eyes.”
High Foreheads.
The notion that high foreheads, in
women as well as men, are indispensa
ble to beauty, came into vogue with
phrenology, and is going out with the
deciine of that pretentious and plaus
ible “ science.” Not long ago, more
than one “ fine lady” shaved her I ead
to give it an “ intellectual ” appear
ance ; and the custom of combing the
hair hack from the forehead probably
j originated in the same mistaken am
bition. When it is considered that a
erreat expanse of forehead gives a bold
masculine look—lhat from from (fore
head) comes the word “ effrontery,” it
will not he wondered that the ancie - t
painters, sculptors and poets considered
j a low forehead “a charming thing in
woman,” and, indeed, indispensable to ;
female beauty. Horace praises Lycori? ,
for her low forehead [tenuix frou/\ ;
and Martial commends the same grace ]
as decidedly as he praises the arched
eyebrow.
A WKJ.I. moulded arm is prettier
without bracelets; besides they are
li hie io scratch a fellow’s ear. —
Jitih'n'd.
, in
NEXT EUROPEAN EViLH^.
All who can Escape from the Burdens
of a Great European War will
Come to America if We only
Make a Bid for Them.
A table dispatch received In this
City Saturday by it shipping agent
states that “over twenty thousand
Russians may he expected at this port
during the summer; and that nearly
tile saftic iiutfllifef ha Vo decided ft poo
going tt) Australia.'’ This piece Of
news points directly to’ buy Vofiy iiif
portant advantage which this cofintry
is quite sure to derive from the im
pending war in Europe, provided only
we have common sense and practical
capacity enough left in us to avail our
selves of it. The emigration from
Europe to tlii.s country to which we
have been so enormously indebted in
the past) has been steadily falling off
for the last fotlr or five years, until it
has shrunk from a river to a rivulet.
Within the last twelvemonth, indeed,
we have actually begun to lose popu
lation instead of steadily acquiring it.
A small hut otninous drift has set in
of skilled and enterprising emigrants
from this country to the Antipodes,
not as yet of sufficient importance to
startle the general public, hut signifi
cant enough to set cooler and longer
heads thinking as to the causes and
tendency of so novel a phenomenon.
The approach of a great war on the
other side of the Atlantic cannot fail
to disturb and alarm the industrious
classes in all the countries which arc al
ready within or are likely soon to he
.drawn within its vortex. Great wars
call for great armies, and great armies
mean the sacrifice by great numbers of
the leoplo of their property, their
prospects in life, and their lives them
selvi . All who can contrive to escape
from the burdens of a great war will
natu ally set about it, not only in
Rus- i, over which empire the cloud
now mugs, low and black and ready
to a ret., hut in eastern and central
ami "western Europe. Austria is on
the very edge of the approaching con
flict;- the German empire within its
immediate influence; Great Britain
more than likely to be involved in it.
at no distant day. If so large an emi
gration as the dispatch upon which
wc are now commenting states, has
already been organized in Russia, it is
only reasonable to expect a still more
important revival of the European
exodus from other countries. Whether
this new exodus, when it fairly begins,
shall turn westward to us, orsouthward
to the Australian world, will depend
mainly on the evidences which we may
he able to give, within the next few
months, that industry may look for
remunerative employment once more
among us. To exchange the pleasures
of unproductive tax-paying is the old
world for the pleasures of i uproductive
tax-paying in the new world, is not ex
actly the sort of prospect which can
he thought likely to allure the small
capitalists and hard-working farmers,
mechanics and laborers of Europe to
our shores.
Danger of Sleeping in Moonlight.
'file evil consequences liable to re
sult from exposure to a burning sun
are only too well understood, hut it is
j perhaps not so generally known that
j in many parts of the world, notably in
India, there is a strong and very :cn
i oral prejudice against sleeping in full
moonshine, as it is supposed to pro
duce “ rnoocstroke.” An old Indian
resident has recently been devoting his
attention to the subject, and comes to
the conclusion that, any ill effects
arising from sleeping in the n oonlight
are not due to any direct influence of
the moon itself. His explanation of
the origin ot tins prevalent belief in
the baleful qualities of the goddess of
| night is very rational, and may be
I summarized as follows: A clear sky
admits of rapid radiation, and any
person exposed to such radiation is
sure to he chilled by rapid loss of heat.
There,,is reason to believe that under
the circumstances paralysis of ore side
of the face is sometimes likely to oc
cur when the sky is perfectly clear and
in full moon. The whole matter thus
comes clear on this explanation. Pro
longed exposure to cold is almost cer
tain to produce headache, neuralgia, or
even paralysis, owing to the retarda
tion of the circulation and these or
-imilar injuries have been attributed
to the moon, when the proximate cause
may really have been the chill, which
will always be the greatest on the very
i clear nights.
When Russia, in 1827, declared
war against Turkey, cattle-plague be
came rapidly diffused through Bes
sarabia, and extended thence with the
greatest virulence and mortality into
Wallachia and Moldavia, and Goon
entered Podolia, and Volbynia. From
these countries, Poland, Hungary,
i Prussia, Saxony, and finally the Aus-
Itrian states were infected, and nofc-
NO, 37.
withstanding the most energetic meas
ures, ttlle lors 4 ”* were immense. Even
in 1860 the nuiied} not suppress
ed, hut smoldered along 1 ffffi hanks of
the Danube as far as Illyria. Pat the
Imvoc is wrought during the opera
tions of the Kusso-Turkish war, the
works of Von Moltke and Chesney
alibi'd evidence, and it is shown that
among other thiltg.fi, the rotting car
casses of the cattle which perish from
the disease, and were left unburied,
gave rise to human typhus in its most
frtallgttfi.nt form.
A Senathtial Jokffi
A amUsing incident occurred id the
senate over the appropriation for the
school of mines. Senator Seay had set
his heart on securing an increase of
SIO,OOO for that institution, find had
been bending all his energies to the
accomplishment of' that end. Realiz
ing his anxiety about the matter, Sen
ators Voting, Mayor, Parish, Wilson
and others, quietly slipped around the
ehatnb r and made arrangement with
all the senators to vote “no” on
first vote taken on Seay's amendment
to add SIO,OOO to the appropriation
for his pet. Seay made a really good
speech m behalf of his amendment,
and sat down to tremblingly await the
result.
“Those in favor of tli * amend
ment offered by the senator from
I ’helps will say aye,” said Senator Phe
lan, who occupied the clmir.
“ Aye!” rang out Seay’s voice, soli
tary and alone.
“Those who are opposed say no,”
said the chair.
“ No-o-o!” responded the entire sen
ate in chorus.
A deadly pallor overspread Seay’s
face as he sank hack in his chair with a
sad realization that his cherished dream
had lied.
“The lines appear to have it,” said
Phelan.
“ Division! division!’ came up from
all parts of the chamber.
“Those in favor of the amendment
will rise and stand until they arc
counted," said the chair, and up stood
every senator except Seay, who had
not yet sufficiently recoved from the
shock to have strength enough to rise
to his feet.
“ How does the senator from Phelps
vote?” innocently inq"h and the ei.a r.
“ Why —why—of course I vote aye,
Mr. President!” said Seay, in a bewil
dered sort of way, as if lie could
scarcely believe the ovidedee of his
own senses at the sudden turn of
alfitirs.
Learn the Value of Money.
A silver dollar represents a day’s
work of the laborer. It it is given to
n hoy, he lias no idea of what it has
cost, or of what it is wort h. He would
he as iikely to give a dollar as a dime
for a top or any ot her toy. But if the
hoy has learned to earn his dimes and
dollars by the sweat of his face, he
knows the dillerence. Hard work is
to him a measure of values that can
never he rubbed out of his mind. Bet
him learn by experience that a hun
dred dollars represents a hundred
weary days’ labor, and if seems a great
sum of money. A thousand dollars is
a great fortune, and ten thousand is
almost inconceivable, for it is far more
than he ever expects to possess. When
he has earned a dollar he thinks twice
before he spends it. He wants to in
vest it so as to get the full value of a
day’s work for it. It is a great wrong
to society and to a boy to bring him
up to man’s estate without this knowl
edge. A tortune at twenty-one, with
out it, is almost inevitably thrown
away. With it, and a little capital
to start on, he will make his own for
tune better than anyone can make it
for him.
A Pose fora “Wounded Amazon.”
When Gibson modeled the “Wound
ed Amazon” he said to a friend of
mine who went to his studio to see the
statue in the clay, “ Yes, that is my
‘Wounded Amazon.’” You may haye
doubtless heard Gibson’s pecular, dry,
crisp mode of talking imitated, and can
imagine how he spoke. “Yes, I call
it a ‘Wounded 'Amazon ; ’ but that
statue is a proof of how useful it is for
an artist to keep his eyes open. Now,
how do you think I found that pose?
I,was just going along the street, and I
saw a girl catching a Ilea! I -topped
and said to myself, ‘That’s a pretty pose
—a very pretty pose indeed: ’ and I
took it flown. Bo I thought it over. I
I set up and worked it out, and there it
stands as rnv ‘Wounded Amazon.’
But it is the very pose of the girl
catching the flea, nevertheless. A
pretty pose it is, you see ; and, as I
said, it shows that an artist must not
fail to keep his eyes always open. ”
A MINISTER who had twice married
the same couple —a divorce ensuing
between the two marriages—remarked
that he didn’t wish to add a repairing
department to his business.
ODD NOTES.
THE HOME OF MY HEART.
Not here in the populous town,
lu Ibe pla7boN.se or mart,
Not here in the ways gray anil brown,
But afar on the green swelling down,
Is the home of my heart.
There the hillside slopes down to a dell
Whence a streamlet has start
There are woods and sweetgrass on the swell,
And the south winds and west know it well;
’Tis the home of my heart.
There’s a cottage o’ershowed by leaves
Growing fairer than ait,
When finder the low sloping eaves
No false hand the swallow bereaves,
’Tis the home of my heart.
And there as you gaze down the lea,
Where the trees stand npart,
Over grassland and woodland may be
Yolt will catch the faint gleam of the sea
Frptn the home of my heart.
And there irt the rapturous spring,
When the mornlNX rays dart
O’er the plain, and the morning birds sing,
You may see the most beautiful thing
In the home of my hear?:
For there at the casement above,
Where the rose bushes pait,
Will blush the fair face of my love
All, yes! it is this that will prove
’Tis the home of my heart
“ When Mr. Phillips calls you a
liaf, ft villian and a scoundrel,” says
General Devens, “he merely means
that he does not agree with you.”
“Gath” says that the humorous
paragranher is a moral and mental
dwarf, that his mind is an ash heap
and liis language poppycock.
A daughter wept bitterly while
witnessing the opera of “Paul and Vir
ginia.” “ Don’t cry,” sail her father;
“ they earn 3,000 francs every night.”
If Mrs. Myra Clark Gaines’ law
suits should he decided in her favor
many times more, perhaps her grand
children may be able to get possession
of a portion of the property.
Cauuion often averts danger. An
uptown man who heard burglars in the
house the other night, woke up his
wife and sent her down stairs for a
drink of water, and then crawled un
der Ihe bed and wasn’t injured in the
least. — Norwie/i Bulletin.
When a good many people get to
heaven their greatest surprise will be
t<>> learn that the recording angel had
credited the occasional dollar given
for a subscription to a country news
paper to the a count of a just debt,
and not to charity.
A haying by the lamented Cho
quart, duelist: 'They were speaking of
someone not present, tor whom he did
not appear to entertain much affection.
“ Unless 1 am seriously mistaken,” said
Choquart.. “ I’ll have to pull his nose
sonic of these fine days.” “But what
for?” “What for? If I knew what
for I’d go and do it now.”
An insurance agent was subjected to
spectrum analysis the other day, and
the brass lines so completely tilled the
spectrum, from end to end, and over
laid the others that the liner elements
ol his composition could not ho at all
detected, save the suggestion of a dia
mond sparkle from the shirt-besom
section. —Holton .\dnertieer
A Hykauuhk undertaker advances
the novel theory that the steady de
crease in deaths which has been for
some time noticed throughout the
country is due to the hard times.
There is more force in this than at first
appears, since people are now com
pelled by force of circumstances to in
dulge in fewer luxuries and live upon
rational diet.
Tut: latest chemical notion is to fell
trees by electricity. The two ends ot
the copper wires of a galvanic battery
are connected with a platinum wire,
which, of course, instantly becomes
red h<t, and while so is gently see
sawed across the trunk of the tree to
he felled, until it burns its way through.
It is calculated that a tree which would
require two hours’ hard chopping to
bring down, can he cut through by this
process in fifteen minutes.
A correspondent of the Paris
Figaro lately strolling about the Lon
don streets, noticed a large crowd hur
rying into a woodeti booth. Having
paid his shilling he entered also, and
found the great attraction to consist
of a sailor sitting quietly smoking and
drinking beer. Over his head was
the following inscription: “This is
the only sailor in the Artie expedition
who succeeded in perspiring at the
north pole.”
Coffee as an Invigorator.
A correspondent of the London Lan
cet, who owns a water-power mill says:
I am frequently compelled, at this sea
son of the year, to have men working
in water even in frosty weather. I find
the following allowance gives great
satisfaction to the men, and we never
have a case of cold or injury to the
men in any way. Kettle of coffee,
made with hall sweet-milk, half water,
three or four eggs whipped poured into
it when off the boil; hot toasted bread
with plenty of butter of finest quality.
Serve up this every two and a half
hours. The expense is much less than
the usual allowance of whisky, and the
men work far better, and if care is
taken to have the coffee, milk (cream
is still better), bread and butter of the
very finest quality, the men are de
lighted with it. 'I am persuaded it
would lie worth while to try this allow
ance instead of grog. Giving extra
grog mves the men a notion that it is
good "for them, and perpetuates tho
belief in stimulants among workmen.