North Georgia times. (Spring Place, Ga.) 1879-1891, June 09, 1887, Image 1
*& ; » GEORGIA TIMES. ■ ®■ mmm ! ~:«8 W9g& pass ~*3p| i . ‘ I :: . af . >' ' - . ** ; Is, m loungers and fev ... Ucreasiag the tax have at com- 2 r f ..h.tirta.to* ■ ■* wear 6nd ------ ■Mf or private displays, may go free, ’t!a as sure as can - *:<■ •pays T oreuit they freely obtain, rhich they’re exempt, favors received, it is plain iont to remain dobt^th, rorid with a niggardly J. mhwl „ nrB --V with liberal mal. do their part, 4, ielavs.' ’ ' ’ r wasteful isweU to reflect y pays. : BEAD i ! It was n warm day in April „ Cl.nr.es I. .fieu -miir-nv.. took and rode ■, a car out to t he end of the line, then he walked Tl ! ; st! T 8B A! urn< 1 up h ! hHi to " eft r and took the road which m leads . , down . through Dead Man’s Canon. i As he walked down the rough road 4 little child playing around a md which her father had ^ ,0 8- 1 lown he saw two girls at a d as - the younger drank from a . ud to her sister, ‘What that is.” 10 were drawing stone left went to tho girls for a ..; 4 were laugiung and d a rough house on the Muff. ung, Loften noticed ns he *--!» noticed two men, who sat on a stone in ; ■ ug iu low ' tones ho came .........v — - ~ nt on through the canon and crossed the track, to tho brewery, where he was going to look at some now ma Afrer'h Id • d , n : . '*-* , i 3* r . . - • • im .-.•At..;. 7 1', ..-.A •, J derricks tiga was - [MR|jiH|RMMiP Kh||mmih pWf kmi N'j.'-VJsfc.l’jiM Aij,; 8* mn J ■ ■ MpjMjn iffiS a?. 'Jir SPRING . GEORGIA . JUNE 9, 1887. Aa they entered tho canon tho piling of the moon indicated that the sttn Would be up and the sky was already floated among tho tops of the sycamore trees on the flats. Suddenly tho men stopped; Right before them on tho road lay a ntan. His clothes were soaked by the rain, which had fallen in torrents, and ____ his white collar and cuffs were soiled with mud. His head was covered with mud and blood, and au ugly gosh iu his throat showed how ho had died, Oneoi them at once started for the t. wi to notify the authorities. The coroner came aud took charge of the body, and men were set at work to land discover the murderer. Inquiry at the brewery brought out the fact that a strange man had been seen there Into tho previous afternoon, and an old negro testified to having soon him going up the canon. A conductor on one of the cars said that a man answering the description given by the men at the brewery and the old hegro had ridden on his car. A grocer’s man who happened to be driving by had seen this man and identified him as Loften. When tho officers came to his house Loften was writi “g. upon being told that ha ™ wanted went at once, think ing there was some mistake which could’ be easily explained, audit waa not until brought before the magistrate that he learned that he was charged With mur der. He told his story, as we have already done above, and pleaded his innocence, - - - but the evidence against against him him seemed seemed t0 ° S !? n ^ aad he was was sent 8ent to ,0 prison prison to t0 await trial. No one else had seen the two tramps, nor could any traces of them be found, Loften lay awake all night in hia cell, He knew that he was innocent, but how was ho to prove it! He had always had a stainless reputation, and now he was in prison accused of murder I He thought of the grief and shame it Would cause to his friends. Then he broke down and cried like a child. After that he remembered nothing. When the jailer came with hi* break fast he found him staring at the blank wall of his cell. He spoke to him, but the prisoner did not move. Loften was mad. He was committed to an insane asylum, but he judge made a stipulation that if ho should ever recover his reason he should be tried for murder. For seven years Charles Loften was in ’ho asylum. Ho nte aud slept and was taken out to walk by a nurse with some of the other patients, but ho never spoke ,md ^ a PP 9ared “» notica “I' learup to the night of his imprison- 1 bis . trial a robbery was attempted in a neigh boring town. “.‘tsrcrca oul rts of the town was awakened nt ne h h neara d some one inovni, . 4V i .ffatTo^onTwast door and 4^4 % of tant every 80 , T £■ Quitted, He had afterwards learned that the man, whose name was Charles Loften, had become insane and had been placed The toad who listened to the story, ktfdwmg that Loften was now on trial for this crime, had sent fora justico and had tho man make an affidavit, which he had sent at once to the court. When tho judge had read tho note the affidavitwas sworn to, and Charles Lof teu, after seven years’ imprisonment for a crime he had never Committed, Was once mote at liberty.—[Now York Graphic, i I’retty Cttstouh it Was a pretty custom long ago for lovers to exchange rings; The gentle¬ man did not have to spend a month’s in¬ come for a pretty trinket for which he got no return, but he also wore and cherished a souvenir from his sweetheart. Chaucer describes a heroine as giving her lover a ring on which were engraved suitable love mottoes and receiving a like one in return. Shakcspere makes more than one allusion to this custom. Iu tho “Two Gentlemen of Verona” Julia gives Porteus a ring, snyingt “Keep you this remembranco for thy Julia’s sake.” To which he replies: “Why, then we’ll make exchange; hero, take you this,’’ A “gimmal” or linked ring Was then invented which gnVo still greater fores and significance to tho custom, it was made of a double and often triple link, which turned upon a pivot. It could be opened, showing three rings. A small hand was attached to each outer ring, which, when closed, caused the hand to clasp, inclosing a heart which was affixed f0 the central notched rln g* u wag cus - tomary to break these rings asunder in a solemn manner over the bible, It was always done in the presence of a witness, who kept the Center rink, the betrothed cottple reserving the two outside link* When the marriage contract was fulfilled at tho altar tho three portions were united and the ring used in tho ceremony.-[Jewelers’Weekly. Tho Rat’s Weapons. The rat is finely equipped for the pe culiar life he is ordained to load, lie has strong weapons in the shape of four long and very sharp teoth-two in the upper jaw and two in the lower. These teeth are wedge-shaped, and by a won derful provision of nature have always a fine, sharp, cutting edge. Onexamining them carefully, the inner part ia found to be of a soft, ivory-like composition, which can easily bo worn away, and the outside is composed of a glass-like on ame!, which is exceedingly hard. The upper teeth work into the under so that the centres of the opposed teeth moot r worn chisel-like sharp, edge a at the my it as idy. ■ by ■ - ject O be turned upon it uder tooth it will ' BO Id netrate the skulk 3 nt " r ter: “Tho salt has beon tried in this , rithout much ' the sea water varies a good It will deposit one oa i island and another it, even to the pye, ou another island, forty miles awn ,, , n an i immense trade wit ----- -» ces that tof salt, and_ 1 its One very fine and easily is used in the flavoring ---- Not J; “ ' mm a HH m-i ' ' _ “ "A '" • '€ CHINOOK WIND. A phenomenal Aerial Clurhent of the Northwest; Its Sudden Coming a Blessing to Blizzard Btrioken Cattle Bangea. Hon. Joseph Nimmo, Jr., who has ex¬ plored the “arid region” of the interior, fvith the view of writing a book in re¬ gard to it, gives the following descrip¬ tion of the Chinook Wind! The name “Chinook Wind” ia applied to an aerial current from the great Suro-Siwo of the faoifle Ocean. During the winter months this current of air occasionally debouches oVer the crest of the Rocky Mountains into the British Northwestern Provinces, Montana and Wyoming. Sometimes it extends far south into Col¬ orado, but seldom much further east than tho western boundary of Dakota. It is the result of simultaneous low ba¬ rometer east and high barometer west of the Rockies, The atmospheric change which It produces is about as marked as that which one would experience during the month of January in passing from Quebec to Key West The coming of the Chinook Wind is always sudden, and somewhat phenomenal. In the course of two hours the thermometer tnay rise from 45 4 below to 489 above Zero, Occasionally, when the snow is deep, and the Chinook Wind has an extensive range and is long continued, the waters of tho melting snows pour down in torrents into tho Upper Missouri. The river is broken up and rlse3 above its banks. But as the swelling flood reaches Dakota, it arrives at a point beyond which the influence of the Chinook Wind has not been felt. Here thrice is from tbreo to four feet thick, and as solid as a rock. Rut the superincumbent waters tear the ice from its fastenings to the shores, and is^ “war of the elements” .fensues of imrrjiHssing grandeur. A ’gorge is soon ~ /great Vmed, which increases in height Until t ice-dam gives way; when thc.y;frolo mass moving on, again rips up the solid ice, which is piled in enormous /masses, fifty to one hundred feet in height, at points along the bends of tho river, until an¬ other gorge is formed, in its turn to be burst asunder by the force of the rising Waters. No railroad bridge, Siowevcr strong, could resist the force of one of these masses of ico. But the Chinook Wind comes always as a blessing to the far northwestern cattle ranges. Usually it is the “break up” of a blizzard. During these dread¬ ful Arctic blasts tho cattlo retire to the coulees and sheltered valleys. After they have cropped tho grasses which rear'their heads above the snow, and have exhausted tho supply of sage-brush, and other varieties of the Artemisia family, tho internal source of heat giving but » th ® P 00r brutes are forced to tramp {or life - Gathering in bands, they list l e “ly wander over tho vast ranges, drifting withrthe bitter blast. Some of them have their tails frozen, which drop off, and their logs become reddoned with frozen blood. The horns of others freeze, and in time fall off. The dia tressed animals bellow with agony ns they i n. Cows which have dropped late ,nd were in no condition to . “go into the winter,” usually succumb, One by one, cow and calf and weak steer fall by the way. and speedily be he prey of wolvea and bears ■ untaia lions, which all the time ha’ an the flanka of the re . . i waiting for “one who dre ■ •:>: res. The weary cattlo snuff it come to a halt. Then, as envelopes them, they lie igsof hi a, they t| v lart at 01 _j “Wint. : ' i - - r '\\* - . »4-r4: s< *%*&& »sr ■ f thu ;-4 ®te» ace -'.to the aric MH ft B23Eia3B^i E , H- V '" # ,m^ A Strange Race. Prof, Miguel Manzta, soys Nature; has made what seems a curious anthropo¬ logical discovery in the Valley of the flebas (Gertma), «t the end of the Eastern Pyrenees, ’there exists in this district a somewhat numerous group of people, who are called Nanos (dwarfs) by the other inhabitants, and as a matter of fact, are not more than four feet in height. Their bodies are fairly well built, hands and feet small, shoulders and hips broad, making them appear more robust than they really are. Their features are so peculiar that there is no mistaking them among others. All have red hair} the face ia as broad aa long with high Cheek-bones, strongly-de¬ veloped jaws and flat nose. The eyes are not horizontal, but some what oblique, like those of Tartars and Chinese. A few straggling, weak hairs are found in place of beard. The skin is pale and flabby. Though the mouth is large, the lips do not quite cover the large pro¬ jecting incisors. The Nanos, who are the butt of the other inhabitants, live entirely by themselves in Rebus, They intermarry only among themselves, so that their peculiarities continue to be reproduced. Entirely without educa* tion, and without any chance of improv¬ ing their condition, they lead the life of pariahs. They know their own names, but rarely remember those of their patents; can hardly tell where they live, and have no idea of numbers. Treasure-Trove. The holding an inquest upon treasure troveis among the most ancient duties of the coroner. By a statue of Edward I the coroner was required, on being cer¬ tified by the king’s bailiffs or other “honest men of tho country," to go to the places where treasure was said to be found and to inquire who were the finders. It Is quaintly suggested that it may well be perceived who is to bo sus¬ pected of finding it, “where one liveth riotously, haunting taverns and hath done so a long time.” Moreover, the individual might be apprehended upon this suspicion. But the new regulations will probably supercede all thesis old processes. In the future there will bo little temptation to conceal treasure trove, because tho finder will be quite a^substantially It to tho afllhoritlos. rewarded In by discovering a recent case the trensury gave a practical illustration of this. A number of old English gold coins of various date wore found by a workman in some old oak beam which was taken from a farmhouse near Luton. Of these many proved of such rarity that they were sent to tho national collections, but the treasury gave orders that the finder should be paid for them at the rate of their value as old gold, while the remainder were returned to him.—[Cham¬ ber’s Journal. t m __ A Talking Machine, A new invention, called the grapho phone, soema likely to overshadow the utility of its predecessor with the re vised name of phonograph. Its con struction is the work of Mr. Sumner Tain tor, Prof. Alexander G. BelL the inventor of the Bell telephone, and Dr. Chichester A. Bell, a prominent chemist. The graphopone is very simple, recciv ing the sound waves from the voice on a small preparation of wax and painffino by means of a small point attached to the diaphragm of tho machmo. This wax and paraffine cylinder can then be utilized at'any time to grind out a repo tition of the songs, laughs, whistles, or speeches stamped upon it. It is re will work a revolution in their business by doing away with the need of amanu enses. Two people miles apart, in busi ness or social connection, by possessing each a machine, can send the wax cylin der^through the mail, and the so , “ 56 .sSSip. . corps of old . .. at the din- 4 4 ! “ «:•> s . :i, ^mpM(j«iMKp^|^R #i i MBili^ lT m ipiij ■ I ! , p NO. 18 . Brave aud Hopeful. 9h, Jttisaify to be brave when the world is am your side; And ft* easy to be hopeful when allgoes well. j But to laugh, and keep a stout heart tho* trouble does betide •or hearts and homes, that’s harder far to do than ’tit to tell. For’tie indeed a hero’s heart that eaobe brave and gay. With sorrow knocking at the door, fires dead on hearth-stone, cold And hopeful eyes in truth are those which look beyond the gray, ■rim skies of Winter, seeing Summer’s blue sun-washod with gold. —[Boston Budget. \ HUMOROUS. A smoke stack—A bunch of cigars. One acre is enough—especially if it be • tender corn. A man bom at sea cannot be proud of his native land. Oyclones, like politicians, are notorious for laying wires. A photographer’s negative—His refusal to give sittings on credit One thing about these cyclones ji that they always seem to be ia a hurry. The king of Denmark wants soldiers with large noses. Recruiting a bugle corps, probably. A little burn makes a big smart some¬ times But even' a big bum could not make some people smart. Donkey parties are all the rage out West. It is tacitly understood that tho dudes furnish the donkeys. It is not the biggest things that make the greatest commotion. Take a mouse in prayer meetfng for instance. The ideal wife gets out of bod, lights the fire and has the breakfast prepared before she calls the ideal husband. A devoted swain declares ho is so fond of his girl that he ho6 rubbed tho skin * from his nose by kissing her shadow on the wall. Jenny Lind was at Cannes during the earthquake, but as she had brought down many houses in her time she waa not disturbed. A person may be a very pdor pedes¬ trian; nevertheless, go as slow as he will, and without any effort, he can always catch a cold. "Madam,” said a gentleman to a lady, "pardon me, but your hair is coming down.” “And yours, sir," replied the lsdy Indignantly, “is coming out.” The economy of nature made a bad break when it supplied pigs with tails. A pig’s tail is of no more use to tho pig than the letter “p” is to pneumonia. "This is one of the silent watchea of the night,” remarked Fangio, as he looked at his time-piece on arising this morning and found it had stopped at eleven p. m. "A drop of ink may make a million . think," mike says Byron. Yes, and it is apt to one woman think euough for the other 999,999 when that eamo drop ornaments her carpet. Mrs. Honpeck: „ “I see that one of tho conyicted anarchists wants to get mar ried ‘" Mr - Hen peck: “I wonder why ll >ey don’t let him. It would be much cllea P er than han 8 in 8 him -" "Indeed, it happened in less time than I take to tell it,” said the lady who was considered somewhat of a bore. “Ob, 1 haven’t the least doubt of it,” replied P aticnt and truthful listener. A magazine writer says that blue eyes indicate u mild and even disposition. their wearer tackled the wromr man. The Dr ed Cnmnfa Industry. One would hardly think that a sin¬ gle industry would support vastnura ^ erS * 1 •p ■ £ m •, .... . ■ in n a in ......I - . . HBiS p, mm Sff! n.,i, !SwB W „ ... •,