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Tiie Jen Sentinel.
Office in the Jesiip House, fronting on Cherry
street, two doors from Broad at.
PUBLISHER EVERY WEDNESDAY,
... by ...
T. ?. LITTLEFIELD.
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TOWN DIRECTORY.
TOWN OFFICERS.
Mayor—W. H. Whaler.
Couneilmen—T. P. Littlefield, H. W.
Whaley, Bryant George, O. F. Littlefield,
Anderson Williams,
Clerk anu Treasurer—O. F. Littlefield.
Marshal—G. W. Williams.
COUNTY OFFCERS.
Ordinary—Richard B. Hopps.
Sheriff—John N. Goodbread.
Clerk Superior Court—Benj. 0. Middleton.
Tax Receiver—J. C. Hatcher.
Tax Collector—W. R. Causey.
County Surveyor—Noah Bennett.
County Treasurer—John Massey.
Coroner—D. McDitha.
County Commissioners—J. E. King, G,
W. Haines, James Knox, J. G. Rich, [sham
Reddish.
COURTS.
Superior Court, Wayne County—Jno. L.
Harris, Judge; Simon W. Hitch, Solicitor-
General. Sessions held on second Monday
in March and September.
CURRENT TAR AG RA PUS.
One steamship recently took out
irom New York lor Liverpool more than
10,000 packages of butter, the largest
ever made from the United States.
The Burlington glass works at Ham
ilton, Can., have been closed on account
of the competition from the United
States, and there is now a free field for
American glassware in Canada.
The southern gold mines are rising
again to prominence, the product of
North Carolina for the fiscal year 1875-6
amounting to $10,335,000, that of [Geor
gia to $7,379,000, and that of South
Carolina to $1,381,000—a total of $19,-
096,000. The product for the year j ust
closed is supposed to be much greater.
Eleven stamp-mills are now running
near Dahlonega, Ga. and Boston capital
is the dominant interest. Labor is 75
cents a day, and wood $1 a cord.
The enormous losses incident, on
farmers and gardeners by the attacks of
insects is every year becoming more
serious, not only in this country, but in
Europe. It is gratifying to learn that in
England the scientific men, especially
entomologists, are taking steps to obtain
accurate records of the habits and con
ditions most favorable to the develop
ment and increase of certain well-known
insects that devastate our crops, with a
view to their extermination.
The constructon of refrigerator cars
is attracting considerable attention in
railroad circles. It has been found by
experience that chill-rooms far the pre
servation of perishable articles have the
standing objection that, at or near the
temperature of freezing, meat and other
like articles may be kept a long time
without goiDg to decay, but when
brought thence into a summer tempera
ture they go almost immediately to
destruction. Forty-five degrees, or there
abouts, with moderate ventilation will,
in a good measure, decrease the objection
to the use of chill-rooms.
The Journal Officiel records the fol
lowing singular accident: M, Gastard, of
Paris, had placed a number of cartridges
on a table. Some solar rays having been
concentrated by an “eye” in the glass
of a window, a terrific explosion took
place. Similar catastrophes are more
common than is generally supposed in
summer, the windows of railroad car
riages igniting sometimes overdried
plants, or even leaves fallen on railway
embankments. It is known also that
fires sometimes occur in Algerian forests
through drops of water suspended to the
leaves and forming lenses.
Virginia aspires to see the James
river become the clyde of the new
world. The state has an abundance of
coal and iron and is not entirely unfa
miliar with the art of ship building, and
some of her people see no reason why the ;
James river should not be lined with i
iron ship yards. Well, the time is com
ing, and is near at hand, when there will
be an imperative need for starting iron
rhip yards on a large scale in this coun
try, and it simply depends on foresight
and energy, whether the yards are opened
on the James, the Delaware or in New
England.
.. An old rail-splitter in Indiana put
the quietus upon a young man who
chafed him upon his bald head in these
word* : . “ Young man, when my head
gets as soft as yours I can raise hair to
sell.'’
VOL. I.
TURNING GRAY,
Life’s sands are running fast away;
The buoyant step of Youth has gone !
The failing hair is turning gray,
And Time seems now to hurry on
More fleetly than in days of yore—
Before the heart bee?me its prey—
Before ’twas saddened to the core—
Before the hair was turning gray.
Yes, turning gray ! Age comes like snow —
As still—and carves each careworn line:
Its wrinkles on the brow will grow ;
The hair with silvery streaks will shine ;
The eyes their brightness lose ; the hand
Grow dry and tremulous and thin; —
For life, alas ! is quickly spanned,
And Death its gates soon closes in.
Ah Ii timing gray ! we rain would hide
The sign how long with Time we’ve beeu —
These deepened wrinkles side by side,
Cut bv the sorrows we have seen,
For feeble beats the heart as years
More thickly cluster on our head—
As Autumn rain-drops hang, like tears,
On some fair flower that’s nearly dead.
Like perished petals from the flower,
Our hopes and wildest joys are laid ;
Born only for a day or hour,
Sweet gambols by the fancy played.
As age comes on, we long for rest,
As saints near shrines will long to pray,
But still we Jove that time the best
Before the hair is turning gray.
AMERICA AHEAD.
The Cause of the Decline of Swiss Exports
to this Country.
A dispatch to the London Times from
Paris says the commissioner-general of
Switzerland, at the late centennial ex
hibition at Philadelphia, in his report
to the federal council, says the decline
in Swiss exports to America is not due
to the commercial crisis there, but to the
development of native industry, and that
Switzerland will never regain her old
level. England, also, is competing
more actively with Switzerland to com
pensate for losses in other maikets. Cot
ton fabrics are likely to cross the Atlan
tic to Europe in increasing quantities:
for water power is cheaper than coal.
Short hours and high wages have disap
peared, and Americans, it may be fore
seen, will compete with Europe, even in
China and Japan. Switzerland must also
be prepared for a warmer rivalry in silk,
watches, and machines, England being
likely to try to make up on the continent
for the decline in her machine exports to
Ameriee. The commissioner attributes
the crisis to excessive production caused
by haste to be rich and by protectionist
duties, the mere hope of a return to pro
tection having stimulated production in
certain countries. He deprecates legis
lative regulations of hours of labor,
stating that in America such enactments
have become a dead letter, and advocates
good materials and workmanship in order
lo recover a reputation for quality.
THIS AMERICAN WOMAN OF TO-DAT.
American women take vastly better
care of themselves than formerly. They
have more acquaintance with hygienic
laws, and hold them in far higher esteem.
The days when they exposed th emselves
to dampness and wintry cold in thin
slippers and silk stockings; when they
abstained from flannels next the skin;
when they pinched their waists to semi
suffocation ; when they sacrificed com
fort and health to what they conceived
to be appearances —those foolish and
unhappy days have gone forever, and
have barely been known to the rising
generation. Our women now have few
mawkish and morbid notions as to them
selves ; they no longer think that to be
unhealthy is to be attractive; that
invalidism and interestingness are syn
onymous ; that pale faces and compressed
lungs are tokens of beauty. They dress
seasonably; they wear thick boots and
warm clothes in bad and cold weather ;
they allow themselves to breathe freely,
and they find their looks improved, not
injured, by the wholesome change. There
are exceptions, many of them doubtless,
but the rule is as we have described, and
the exceptions are constantly diminish
ing. It may be safely said that all sen
sible women are becoming, if they have
not become, converts to nature, and
they heed her behests, recognizing the
great principles that what is not natural
cannot be beautiful.
A HAUNTED UO'lEh .
The Suicides’ Hotel, in the Latin
Quarter, Paris, has been torn down.
Ten years ago a young student, despair
ing and in love, blew out his brains in
the room which he was occupying, and
just one year afterward another student
committed suicide in the same room,
after losing his money in a gamb
ling house. The proprietor of the
hotel was alarmed at the fate of these
unhappy students, and the room was
transformed into a lumber-closet. A \
few months afterward, a waiter, who,
had been accused of theft, crept into
this lumber-room and hanged himself.
The superstitious hotel-keeper was now
in despair. He surrendered the lease
and abandoned the chamber of death.
The hotel was repeatedly sold, but its
reputation was uncanny and nobody
could thrive there. A strong-minded
i druggist took possession of the premises
JESUP, GEORGIA, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 22, 1877.
:ind carried ou his business there, but
finding his wite had deceived him,
retired to the fatal chamber and there
poisoned himself with his own drugs.
The whole quarter was up in arms and
demanded that the room should be
walled up, but the new owner laughed
at the fears of his neighbors, and declared
that he meant to occupy the chamber
himself. At last notice was given that
the place was about to be pulled down to
make room for the Boulevard St. Ger
main. An indemnity of $50,000 was
demanded, but refused, and the jury
having decided that $17,500 was ample
compensation, the owner grew despond
ent, and declared he was a ruined man.
A month ago he asked permission to visit
the old premises before they were pulled
down. His request was granted, and
nothing more was heard ot him until the
workmen found him hanging by the
neck in the fatal room. —Newark Adver
tiser.
A JOURNALISTIC OUTFIT.
The special correspondent of the Paris
Temps communicates to his paper the
following list of articles with which war
correspondents accompanying the Rus
sian army in Asia must be supplied : 1.
A passport from the general staff, with
which, immediately upon his arrival, the
correspondent has to present himself to
the chief of the corps or detachment
which he means to accompany. By
means of it he is, for instance, to have
each letter and telegram acknowledged
by the general staff. 2. A number of
photographs of himself for the chiefs of
the different corps and detachments.
One of them he is to keep, in doubtful
cases of his identity, to compare with
the rest. 3. An emblem in the form of
a shield, in the centre of which the letter
K is affixod to a black and yellow rib
bon. This mark is worn in the button
hole, to serve as a passport, that he may
walk about without being molested.
4. A *' Padorojna,” or march route of
the government, whereby the correspond
ent may secure post horses at each relay,
except in cases of vis major. 5. An
“ Atkoiti List,” entitling him to an
escort, he being obliged to with him
a Cossack or Tshapar for safety’s sake,
6. A private servant, versed, if possible,
in several languages. 7. A double
barreled gun, for casual hunting, the
right barrel for shot, while the left is
rifled, adapted to the shooting of balls,
also a revolver and a dirk-knife. 8. A
European saddle for himself and ono for
his servant, with bridle and bit. 9. A
tent with a Persian carpet and hammock.
10. A “ Bourdonk,” with at least six
“ tunks” of cachetic wine. “ Bourdonk”
is a sort of canteen made out of the whole
skin of a dog, or the hide of a ram or ox,
retaining the shape of the animal. A
“ tunk” holds five bottles. 11. A large
pair of saddle-bags full of provisions,
preserves, tea, sugar, cognac, etc , etc.,
tin plates, table-set and everything
required to sustain life in a perfectly
wild country; cigars, cigarettes and
tobacco. 12. Quinine and extract of
genti. 13. Avery handy portfolio, with
writing material. 14. As little bageage
for himself as possible ; a warm overcoat
and blankets are indispensable in the
mountains and at night. 15. A black
suit of clothes, vest, pantaloons, white
cravat, light-colored gloves, and a hat
fsr wear and tear. 16. A number of
articles impossible to be mentioned. 17.
Money—Russian half imperials, Turkish
medschidjes, which are twenty-franc
pieces; the Russian paper money, if
possible, must be of recent date, being
better current. The Russian arm y passes
but gold coin. The correspondent is
also to be supplied with a goodly quan
tity of Russian silver change. He is to
find room for all of the articles men
tioned in a telega, i. e. a vehicle used in
that part of the world. The most essen
tial is not to be forgotten, which, strange
to say, is Persian insect powder.— Sl.
Louis Globe-Democrat.
JAPANESE FANS.
l
An almost fabulous number of fans are
exported from Japan to all parts of the
world. No fewer than 3,000,0f 0, valued
at $90,000, were, according to Consul
Annesley’s commercial report on Hiogo
and Osaka, issued lately, shipped from
these ports ii 1375. Osaka is the prin
cipal city for the manufacture of the
“ogi,” or folding fans, which are almost
| exclusively those exported, all descrip
i tions of the bamboo kind being made
I there, the figures, writing, etc. being ex
| ecuted in Kiyoto. The sale of fans in
the olden time in Japan seldom exceeded
10,000 for the whole country. Times
have changed, however, for the foreigner
has set foot there, and the old days of se
clusion and limited trade are over. The
nnmber of fans entered for the Philadel
! phia exhibition alone amounted to over
j 800,000, at a cost of about $50,000. —
1 Cassell; 8 Magazine.
ONE OF TDK MOST ItESUKItA TIC CAK
vin u operation:, of this day.
One of the most desperate affrays which
ever occurred in this country took place
in the drug store of Sidney Broadus, at
Stringtown, about five miles from this
place, on Tuesday afternoon last. Billy
Patterson and Joe Hill, the latter a son
of Elba Hill, have been unfriendly for
some time past, and a fight between the
two has been anticipated several months.
Both are desperate men, and
knew them were satisfied t hat when they
met in conflict there would be no child’s
play. Both have boon engaged in a
number of fights, and Patterson has been
cut and shot several times, and so des
perately on more than one occasion that
his life has been despaired of; but by
some miraculous chance it seems he has
recovered. His dangerous wounding
however, has not improved his course of
life. Hill has also been regarded as a
dangerous man, and one not afraid of
fiend or devil. The two men met on
Tuesday evening, both drinking. Per
sons who saw them became satisfied at
once that they infant mischief. It was
but a few minutes after meeting when
they engaged in a quarrel. Maddened
with drink each drew his pocket-knife
and went to work to carve up the other.
One of the most desperate fights of mod
ern times was the result. With true
grit they hacked up each other in the
most terrible manner. The fight lasted
only a few minutes—bystanders having
interfered—but their gashed bodies pre
sented a most terrible and a most sicken
ing sight. At the first onslaught both
throats were cut from ear to ear. The
windpipes were cut but the jugular was
not severed, and they continued their
work. Hill was badly cut across the
nose, and then in the arm, the artery
having been severed Patterson’s nose
was almost separated from the face, the
skin of the forehead just above the eyes
was lifted from the scalp, and a danger
ous wound received in the side, pene
trating to the hollow. Yesterday at noon
both men were still alive, but with no
possible chance for the recovery of either.
—Richmond Register.
UKMARKA HLK CASKS OF ICZBTOREIi
REASON.
A confederate soldier from the valley
of Virginia, in one of the late battles of
the late civil war, was struck in the head
by a Minnie ball. The ball passed through
the skull, and the surgeons, afraid to
probe the wound in search of it, left the
man to die. In the course of time he re
covered, but had lost his reason, and was
sent to the insane asylum at Staunton,
where he remained eleven years. At
length Dr. Fauntlerey, an eminent phy
sician of that city, obtained permission
from the asylum authorities and friendg
of the insane man to make a surgical ex
amination of the head, with the hope of
finding the ball. He was successful, and
found the ball imbedded on the inside of
the skull and pushing against the brain.
Unable to extract it with any instru
ment at hand, he took a chisel and mor
tised it out. As soon as the ball was re
moved, reason resumed its control, and
the deranged one was in his right mind.
He says that he is not conscious of any
thing that occurred during the interval
of eleven years—from the time he was
struck on the battlefield to the moment
the pressure was removed from the brain
all was a blank to him.
Another case in the same county of
Augusta was that of a boy whose gun
bursted while shooting, and drove the
lock into the brain. The piece was taken
out by a skillful surgeon without serious
injury to the patient.
But the most remarkable case that I
hear of was in the same neighborhood. It
was that of a woman subject to fits of
mental derangement, and while in a s]>ell
of lunacy drove an eighteen-penny nail
into the top of her head, penetrating
down into the brain—the nail having
been driven up to its head. The nail
I was drawn out, and the woman has been
jin sound mental condition ever since.—
Wheeling Register.
HINTS FOR RRET HAHTE.
Montana has been a territory only thir
tenn years, but it had a historical society
| for twelve of them, which has just issued
' its first volume. Its chief interest cen
ters in mining adventures, especially of
the remarkable character, James Stuart.
[ His journal of the disastrous Yellow
stone expedition of 1863, annotated by
■two of his surviving comrades, exceeds
in pioneer romance anything like “ Poker
Flat ” has produced. Stuart’s band was
attacked at night by Indians, and several
were killed outright. One man, who was
fatally shot, blew out his brains, so as not
to be a burden to his retreating comrades;
and another, named Geery, who acciden
tally shot himself, insisted on following
his example. Putting the muzzle of his
pistol to liis breast, he was about to
fire the iatal Bhot, when Jim said : “For
God’s sake, Geery, don’t; but, if you w'll
do it, don’t shoot yourself there ; it will
only prolong your agony. If you must
do it, place the pistol to your temple.
To which Geery replied: ' Thanks Jim,
and may God bless you all and take you
safe out of this.’ As ho placed the pistol
to his temple, the men, with weeping
eyes and full hearts, turned to walk
away, as they could not bear to see him
fire. He pressed the trigger, and the cap
only exploded. I then appealed to him,
saying: ‘Geery, for God’s sake, don’t;
this is a warning.’ To which he paid no
attention, nor made any reply, but rather
seemed to be soliloquizing, and said ‘ I
know not what to think of that; it never
snapped before.’ Cocking his pistol
again, he engaged a few seconds in mental
prayer, and again pulled the trigger that
launched him into eternity.”
JEWS IN ENtiI,AND.
Marriages at the bottom of a prodi
gious agitation now going on among
the Jews of this country on the
question of admitting proselytes. The
prohibition against receiving Chris
tian converts to Judaism was passed in
the ages of persecution, when such a
convention was apt to be followed by
atrocities such as it is now the fashion
to call Turkish. Then as nov' the .lews
had considerable amounts of cash, but
it was easy to relieve them of it without
marrying it—namely, in the Bashi-Bo
zouk way. But that is illegal in Eng
land and other parts of Europe, and it
has become a serious problem how to get
at such big fortunes as those of which
the Rothschilds, Erlangers, and others are
the best known examples. The prohibi
tion against proselytes, originally passed
for self-protection, lias long proved to be
the means of keeping Jewisti fortunes
among themselves, and the conservative
party insists on upholding the religion,
pointing to various cases where fortunes
have been got by Christian proselytes
uD’oroe have followed, and the wealth
£ .ated. But the wiser and more ad-
?ed Jews perceive that the old hedge
has become defective. The Catholic
church maintains its anathema against
marriage with Jews (except in Austria),
but there are Protestants in these days.
4 distinguished Jew in Paris has just
married a Catholic lady, and a similar
event has occurred in Dunkerque: in
both cases Rabbi and Archbishop both
refused consent, but Protc-stanism tied
the knot. In this country it is not only
the wealth, but the exceptional beauty
and culture of the Jewesses which have
made some change necessary, and the
ancient race have found that they must
not stand so firmly on the old ways as
did their lathers, who lost them the
Disraeli family. So last week the Jewish
World announced that it was "not the
intention of the ecclesiastical board to
offer any opposition toadrnitproselytes to
our faith, provided the applicants are sin
cere.” It is an important step. We
shall soon have a society for the conver
sion of Christians. But how about this
“sincerity” clauso? Will each convert
be sworn that ho or she is not using the
synagogue as an appendage of the licens
ing office? The Jewish World hears a
new command coming from anew Sinai,
ordaining Israel to be witnesses of the
higher faith and monothemism of the
times, to diffuse their light and become
cosmopolitan, and raise up “a mighty
spirit of peaceful enterprise by which
Christians and all others shall be set free
from the superstitions which now hold
them in bondage, and shall walk hence
forth in the green pastures Imside the
still waters where the God of Israel
shepherds his flock.”— M. I). Conway in
the Cincinnati Commercial.
They had quite an excitement at the
Delaware Water Gap the other day. It
seems that an artist who was out in the
woods trarisferrring nature to canvass
fell asleep, and a cow came along and
licked up the scene as well as the paint
on the palette. This so enraged the ar
tist that he kicked the cow, and the cow
returned the compliment. The artist
is now traveling on crutches, and thirty
seven babies are sick front drinking milk
mixed with all sorts of paints.
The Haratogian tells the following :
“At the Delaware and Hudson depot
yesterday a lady and gentleman climbed
up on either side of the seven-foot picket
fence that extends through the arcade,
to kiss each other good-by. They had
previously attempted to kiss between the
pickets, but space forbade.”
NO. 51.
.. The pebbles in eur path weary us
and make us footsore more than the
rocks, which require only a bold effort to
surmount.
.. “ The man who is curious to see how
the world can get along without him can
find out by sticking a cambric needle
into a mill-pond, and then withdrawing
it and looking at the hole.”
. A man went to a theater in Chicago
the other night. Ho doesn’t remember
what the name of the play was on the
bills, but all that he could hear was,
“Fans? ten cents; fans? ten cents.”
.. The war correspondents are not
allowed lo estimate the number of troops
and guns, or to write news of the move
ments of the troops. Furthermore, all
lotters from the front are subject
to erasures. This is why the astute
correspondents remain in London to do
their bloody work.
.. A child charmed by a black snake in
Jefferson county, Tenn., fed the snake
daily for over a week. The lather dis
covered the snake coiled up in the child’s
lap and killed it, whereupon the little
one went into spasm:: of grief and re
fused to eat food of any kind. She cries
almost continually, except when asleep,
and physicians state that she will live
but n short time.
.. Casabianca, rather than disobey his
father, heroically died upon the burning
deck—but would he have clung to a milk
pail when drowning 7 James Halpin,
age eight, of Waterford, N. Y., did that,
and also had sufficient presence of mind
to wave his left hand. The hand was
the only indication of young Halpin’s
presence in the .anal, but a sharp-eyed
laborer passing saw it, grnsped it, and
hauled the boy and milk pail out of the
water.
..A London correspondent with the
Russian army was lately caught by the
Turks and hauled before a pasha. On
the way he secured au interpreter to ex
plain that he was a neutral. The pasha,
a stout, cheerful fellow in a fez, like any
other Turk listened calmly a (ew mo
ments to the laborious interpreter, and
then observed, as he rolled a freHh cigar
ette : “Ah, now! Hpake English. I
was born in Cork, and haven’t fergot me
native tongue.”
A ROM ANTIC ROVE STOUT.
A delicious love idyl comes from
Wayne county, Ky. A stalwart young
Kentuckian of knightly hearing, passing
through a Monticello street ten years
ago, was noticed by a young girl sitting
at the window of the most aristocratic
house of the town, and she fell in love
with him at first sight. She had wealth,
culture and beauty: he was poor, with
only his splendid phynique and intrepid
spirit, and was then on his way to seek
fortune as a cattle herder in Texas.
There be soon rose to be proprietor of a
ranch, and took his money to California
and hunted for gold. After many ups
and downs, fortune favored him, and he
found himself the owner of a silver mine
at Silver City, New Mexico. The girl,
meanwhile, had bloomed into a rarely
beautiful woman, had developed unusual
literary ability, and become a contribu
tor the to Apostolic Times, the organ of
the Iteformed Church, published at
Islington. Ily some means the girl had
learned who the unconscious object of
her fancy was, and, though he had never
seen her. the two corresponded through
out the ten years. .She never wrote a
word of her pergonal attractions nor
family, nor did he speak of his good for
tune ; he had a mind well stored with
judicious reading, and their correspond
ence was only that of book-loving friends.
A few weeks ago, however, the love she
had always bore him bore ita fruit. He
wrote her, proposing marriage, and soon
followed his letter to her Kentucky
home, where he saw her for the first
I time. Recently they were married, and
Miss Annie Berry, that was, will be sur
i prised to find on reaching Silver City,
that her husband, R. B. Metcalf, is the
greatest capitalist in New Mexico.—
Cleveland Plaiwlealer.
GRAVE AAD GAY.
Vp in a Troe.
BY CLARA C. DOLLIVKB.
Little brow%lady,
Up In a Tree,
Kinoothing her leathers,
looking at me;
Up in the morning
First peep o’ day,
Getting her breakfast,
Workine away;
Htops by the window,
Shaking her head,
Calling me lazy,
Lying in bed.
Little brown husband,
Up in a tree,
Singing the sweetest,
Ever could be;
Sings of the morning,
Sings of the air,
Sings of the sunshine
Everywhere;
Very fine dandy,
Geldeu red—
Never get handsome
Lying in bed.
Four little children
Up in a tree,
Yelling and pining;
Never did see
Babies ho hungry,
Hahieß bo bad,
Mouths so wide open,
All very sad ;
Come, little mother,
They must be fed,
Scold mo no longer
Lying In bed.
Little brown lady,
Would I were thee,
Housework and household,
ITp in a tree!
Little brown husband,
Would I were thee,
Nevermore worried,
Up in a tree I
But, O, brown babies,
You must be fed—
Think I’d rather be
Lying In bed ! H r 4da Atrakt.