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CHEROKEE ADVANCE.
"We had rather be riglqt than to be President.*’
VOLUME y.
CANTON, GEORGIA, SATURDAY MORNING. JUNE 2, 1883.
THE CHEROKEE HDVINCE
PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY
By H. N. EDGE, f diior and Manger.
Qi^cr Up Stnii'K corner Guiirtrillr and irrti
Marietta Street oiertfort of V. .)/. MeClurt
Ufllrial Organ ofChiMokce County.
TEAMS:
Single copy, one year $1 2- r
Single copy, six months 61/
Single copy, there months 35
Professional and Business Cards.
B. F. PERRY, == *"
T.ecilj AGENT
I-IRE AM) LIFE INSURANCE CO
Office in bUre of J. M. Mot FEE.
J. W. JARVIS,
JEWELER AND PHOTOGRAPHER,
CANTON, GKORUtA.
Can be found at his Gillcry, at any
time where he ii a'ways naly to do good
work at a low | rice. [JulylO’J
W. A. & G. I. TEASLY,
ATTORNEYS at, LAW,
CANTON, GEORGIA.
Will g v< prlmpt attention to all bin-
i l« s* Intiuitui to tlirne. Wi 1 practice
it a’l the courts o, the w unty, and in
the Superior couitr ot the B’ue Ridgt
circuit. [j .l7 ly
b f. payne, p. p. duprf.e.
PAYNE & DuPREE
Attorneys at Law,
CANTOS, : : GEORGIA.
J OHN n. BELT~
Carpenter,
Having permanently located In Cac-
t >r—He i > now prepared to do all kinda
o' carpenter’s work Building and re
pairing rromply done at satisfactory
P>Ices. Part es contemplating building,
will find it to their interest to get my
prices before closing contacts with oth-
er workmen. J. II. BELL.
TIN SHOP,
J. H. STEADMAN,
Manufacturer ol all Tinware, roofing,
gutterhig, stove pipes, gas pipes, (team
pipes and anything made of tin, etc.
Repairing.—Will repeir any and ev*
try thing from a tin eup to a forty hone
engine at short notice. All charges low
sod work warranted. Marietta street,
Canton, Ga. [msr25 ’82 ly
MEDICAL CARD
DR. N. SEWELL returns thanks to the
citizens of Canton and vicinity, for their lib*
cral patronage.
Being permanently located, will continue
to praotiee medicine, aurgery and midwifery.
Hoping by industry, energy and strict ap
plication to business, to merit an increased
patronage und confidence.
Office in Dr. W. A. Green’s Drug Store.
Residence adjoining W. H. Warlick.[nov9
J. M. BITRTZ,
ITTORM.Y AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW
CANTON, GEORGIA.
Office in the Court House. [mar25 ly
CEO. R. BROWN,
Attorney at Law,
Will practice in the Superior Oourta
nf Cobb, Milton, Forsyth, Pickena and
D.iwson counties, and in the Superior
! nd .Tintice Courts of Cherokee.
Cfli » < v?r Jos M. McAfee’s store.
Special attention given to the collec
tion of claims.
Business rrspect ully solicited.
Jan 13, 1883
NUMBER
uifijtND vnimBUi
G. W. EVANS,
Gainesville Street, : CAN ION, G A
ear the Railroad Depot.
Horses and Buggiea at reasonable
pricea.
Carriagea and Harsea always ready.
Will tend to any pan of the country,
with careful driven and gentle teams,
All kinds of atock fed and well cared
for.
HAULING AND DRAYING
done at low rate*.
Customers will be politely waited on
at all houn, day or night.
G. W. EVANS,
nov26 81 til Proprietor.
THE—
‘CONSTITUTION’
FOB 1882-3.
1* better equipped In every sense than
ever before to maintain Its position
IN THK FRONT RANKS OF SOUTHERN
JOURNALISM.
It calls the attention of the reading
public to the following points that can
be claimed. Namely, that it ia
1. The largest and beat paper in Geor
gia, Alabama, the Carolines, Florida and
Mississippi.
2. More reading matter than any pa
per in the South Atlantic States.
8. The fullest telegraphic service and
latest news.
4. Thq brightest, beet and fullest cor
respondence.
5. The oompletcat election returns,
6. Verbatim Legislature reports.
7. Official Supreme Court reports.
‘The Great Georgia Paper—Better than
Ever. No Intelligent Georgian
can do without it,
Every Georgian should take a paper from
the Capital during the next 8 months.
The Daily Constitution $10 per an
num ; $2 50 8 months; $1 00 1 month.
Weekly $1 50 a year; Club of 10. $1 25,
with free copy to getter up of dub:
Clubs of 20 $1 00, with free copy.
Address Thk Constitution,
Atlanta, Ga.
J. M. HARDIN,
House, Sign, Carriage
—AND—
Omanental Fainter.
FRESCO & SCENIC ARTIST ALSO
Oriental and Grecian"painting. Mi z >
Tinting, Cardo-Tinting, painting Sepei
u d India Ink.
Twenty-five per cent saved by apply
ing to me before contracting with others.
Material lurnished at bottom prices.
Satisfaction given or no charges made.
See or address,
• J. M. HARDIN,
Mar.10’83. Canton, Georgia.
C. £>• MADDOX,
ATTORNEY at LAW,
CANTON, GEORGIA.
Rt fers by Permission to John Silvey &
Co., Thos. M. Clarke & Co., James R.
Wy’ie and Gramhling & Spalding, all
\'Until. Ga. Mar.10 ’83
R. E. CASON.
DENTIST,
Has now located in Cartersville. He
solicits pationage from his old friends
p.nd offers his professional services to ail.
r/eb8 83tf
C OM E
AND
SEE ME.
I HAVE jnst opened a Complete 8tock
direct from the manufactory of Fancy
Candies, Mixed Candies, Plrin Candies,
Crackers ot all Boris, Also Fresh Raisins,
N uts, Oysters, Canned Goods, and every
thing wanted in this line. _ I respectful
ly ask patronage of my friends, both in
the store and job work. Blanks, Deeds,
Ao. always on hand.
3 CLAUDE F, EDGE.
Nit II, IMS. ' «
H. H. McENTYRE,
Uriel?, Plastering,
AND 8TONE WORKMAN,
CANTON, GEORGIA.
I am fully prepared lo do any kind of
Masonry or P.ftRt*rine at the lowest possible
rate-, mad solicit the patronage of Ihore de*
liring work in my line. H. H. McKntyre.
A NEW WORK SHOP.
D W. Bridges bas opened a shop one
oor i b ive Geo. Latbem’s store. He
luiids hornet, mills. Bridges makes and
ep.airs all kinds of furniture, and does
tiytbing that can be dona with wood.
C.tll and see him. [janl883lf
PAINTING!
BRIDGES & F0RRISTER,
House aiii Sip Painters,
Will paint wagoDS, buggiee, furniture,
and all other plain anrt fancy painting,
jiao or address J. W. BRIDGES cr J. B.
FORRESTER, Canton, Ga. [fehlO ’83
h. w. N1*MIN
JNO. T ATT 'W/V
NEWMAN & ATT AWAY,
Attorneys at Law,
CAN ON, : : GEORGIA.
Wi 1 practice in the Superior Court o!
Cber< and adjoining countie s. Prompt
attention nlrm to nil i.usiue-s idaoedin
tbfir hands. Office in the Court Hour?,
A Celebrated Case.
Tho Duehesse do Ohaulnos, who bas
lately died in Paris, wan the wife of the
Into Dnko de Chnulues. She was of a
noblo race, but born to poverty, because
ber branch of the Galitzin family were
converts from the Russian to the Roman
frith.
The Duke mot her and marriod her,
though bis mother, the Duehesse de
Chevrenso, opposed tho nuptials and
looked down npon hor future daughter-
in-law ns a low-bora person, not fit to be
associated with. The Duke and Duchess
wont to Italy, where they disagreed.
Tho Duke came home with his children
and began a suit to retain possession ol
them. Ho obtained a favorable decision.
On his death in tho Chateau do Sable,
on tho rivor Sartlio, iu the Provinoe of
Maii^e, the ohargo of the children was,
by a legal decision, provisionally in
trusted to the Ducbesso do Okevreuse,
bis mother.
On the 22d of March last a desperate
and unsuccessful attempt was made to
carry off tho children from the chateau
from Mine, do Chcvreuse, and it was al
leged that one of tho Duehesse do
Clinulnes’s most ardent admirers was tho
would-be alidnctor. The Duehesse do
Chatlines then instituted a suit before
tho Tribunal of tlio Seine against her
mother-in-law for the reversal of tho
judicial decision which deprived her of
hor children. This suit excited great in
terest in Paris.
The Tribunal confirmed the decision
of tho family council depriving the Ducli-
esso do Clmulues of tho guardianship of
iier children and condemned lior to pay
the costs of tho trial. The judgment
also affirmed all the complaints brought
by tho family council against hor.
Alexis Bouvier wrote a new story found
ed ou tho case, entitled “Les Deux
Duehesse.”
The decision of the Court was given!
on the 0th of June last. Mine, de
Clievrcusc, the mother-iu-law, is fifty-
eight years of age.
Washington Society World. j Introducing Ton to Oleomargarine.
The wedding of Mins Mabel Bayard,
eldest daughter of Senator Baynrd, ol
Delaware, and Mr. Samuel D. Warren,
.fr., of Boston, took place at the Church
of the Asoension Thursday morning in
the presence of a distinguished company
of invited guests. Tho ceremony was
performed by the Rev. Dr. Elliot, There
Were ten ushers and eight brides-maids.
Tho bride, leaning upon tho arm of her
father, entered the church at 11:45, and
was mot at the olmncel-rail by the groom
and his best man, Mr. Wetmoro, of
, Michigan. The bride’s dress was of
heavy white satin, the back of tho train
fulling in long folds and tho front covered
with point loco flounces. Pnuiers were
shirred across tho hips, ami tho-high
corsago was out with squuro neck and
elbow sleoves and finished with point
lace.
Her only ornaments wore a string of
gold bends around hor throat. Her bou-
quet was of white roses, and the long
tulle voil was confined to the head by a
chaplet of orange blossoms. The eight
brides-maids were tho two Misses Bay
nrd, sisters of tho bride, Miss Warren,
Miss Crebbs, Miss Marshall, Miss An
drews, Miss Kiuie, and Miss Lockwood.
The dresses of these bride’s attendants
wero of white mull, over silk, the skirts
demi-trnin, and tho fronts covered with
rutiles of pompadour and Aurillne lace,
i They woro large white Gainsborough
hats, covered with white plumes and
faced with sapphire and ruby velvet,
each bridesmaid carrying a bouquet of
colored roses in her hand.
The reception that followed at the
residence of Senator Bayard was a large
affuir, nnd tho house was crowded until
Oie bride and grocm departed to take the
4 o’clock train for the North. An
elaliorate collation was served in the
dining-room, and souvenirs of wedding
cake wero provided for tho guests.
Many handsome presents were mode,
bat were not displayed.
A Snow-Bound Party.
A Vermont letter sayA: Sourrthing-
liko tho good, old fashioned experience!
of being snow-bound recently happened
to a party of friends who lind assemblid
to celebrate the tenth anniversary of
marriage of a Cambridge couple. The
company was a large one, composed of
old and young, several coming iu sloiglis
from tho adjoining towns. During the
afternoon tho snow began to fall thickly,
driven by a fierce wind. By niglitful)
the roads wero deeply drifted, and the
wind blew a perfect gale.
What was to bn done ? Several of the
guests started out with their sleighs, but
most of them returned, saying that the
roads were impassable and the Btorm so
blinding that the horses could not keep
the trail.
The result was that thirty-four guests
6tayed in tho-liftle liouso all the night,
somo sleeping ou tlio bods and lounges,
ami somo camping out without ceremony
on the floor. Next morning the world
was buried deep in snow, but, after
breakfast, as everything bad been eaten
up by tho small army of guests, it wna
found necessary to do something, so the
men and boys laid bands on all the shov
els and brooms and pieces of board they
could find, and proceeded to make a tun
nel out to tlio road. Then the teams
wero all hitched up, and presently a
long, slow-moving but merry lino of
road breakers went winding across the
wide desolation of snow. It must have
been a pretty expensive and uncomforta
ble anniversary for the ton-years’couple,
but then it wasn’t their fault, at least,
and they had tho satisfaction of knowing
tlint all these good people wero rejoicing
in tlio thought that they bad modo them
happy. I do not doubt though that thoy
and all other married couples, liable to
the same experience, will thank me for
the suggestion to each and every anni
versary guest, that they bring a codfish
apiece and put a pound of butter into
the sleigh.
Divorces. —Vice-Chancellor Simrall,
of Louisville, Ky., took occasion severely
to rebuko an aged couple who appeared
before him as applicants for a divorce on
a trumped-up charge of abandonment,
the wife, tho plaintiff, being seventy
years old and tho husband ninety years
old. Judge Simrall dismissed the
petition, and said lio believed that if the
records of tho courts which alone have
jurisdiction in such eases were searched
they would disclose such a state of facts
as to the number of divorce suits and
the rapidity of their increase in the last
few years as would fill the great mass of
light-tliinkiug people in the State with
amazement and disgust.
“ I have no wealth,” she said; “I can
give you only my hand and heart.” And
then he thought that if her heart was as
big as her hand, she was indeed wealthy.
Nothing lo Do.
~ A man,who (-ins nothing to do is a piti
able object. He is simply a kept man/
He is living on charity. Some amiable
snoozor, now dead, bos left him the
money that he lives on, and all he 1ms to
do is to draw the money and eat, drink
and sleep.
No eyes can brighten with happiness
when ho comes homo, because he only
comes home when the other places are
closed. He cannot como home tired,
nnd bo petted and rested by willing
bands, because it would be a mockery to
pi t a tired man who hod got tirod doing
nothing.
Such a man simply exists and is no
good on earth. If lie would wheel a bar
row and earn a dollar, and get tired, and
buy a beefsteak with the dollar, and
linvo it cooked, and oat it while tho ap
petite was on that ho got wheeling the
barrow, bo would know more eujoymont
than bo had ever known before. That
man with nothing to do on earth no
doubt thinks, as be lays around and
smells frowy, that ho is enjoying lifo,
but he knows no moro about enjoyment
than a tom-cat that sleeps all day and
goes out nights to play short stop to a
lot of bootjacks and beer bottles. Such
a man is a cipher, and does not know
enough to go in when it rains. If there
were less incomes left to lazy young fel
low*, and moro sets of carpenter tools,
there would be more real enjoyment.—
Burlington llawkcye.
The World.
Tho population of the principal civil
ized countries of tho world, according to
the most recent census for each, returns
for but few of them being older than
1879, are as follows, with tlio percent
ages of annual iucrensc appended :
Franco, 37,321,180, 0.22; Prussia, 27,-
279,111, 1.23; Saxony, 2,972,805, 1.54;
Bavaria, 5,284,778,1.04; Austria, 22,144,-
244, 0.78; Hungary, 15,725,710, 0.13;
Belgium, 5,530,054,0.98; Holland, 4,012,-
693, 1.24. Switzerland, 2,846,102, 0.00;
Sweden, 4,565,608, 0.95; Norway, 1,878,-
100, 0.60; Spain, 16,025,800, 0.86; Italy,
28,437,091, 0.70; Russia in^Europo, 83,-
626,590, 1.32; England and Wales, 25,-
908,286, 1.43; Scotland, 3,734,370, 1.11;
Ireland, 5,159,839, 0.47; United States,
50,155,783, 2.96. Russia in Europe is
(he only country, it will lie seen, iu this
list that surpasses tho United States iu
(lie number of its inhabitants, while tho
nearest approach that is made to the
United States in the matter of incrcaso
is Saxony, which shows a percentage of
1.54, as against ours of 2.96, or only
about one-half as great a percentage.
A wise woman will not light the flio
with kerosene, but will iuyite the ser
vant girl to whom she owes throe months
wages to do the same,
Now, no person with a keon sense of
taste can lie deceived aliout oleomargar
ine. Butter is pure oil. Tut a little in
a warm place, and seo how quickly it
liquefies. If the tcnqicriiturn comes
close to boiling, the butter is "oiled,"
and unfit for food. Try tho same exper
iment with oleomargarine. It will not
harm it, and yon will find it difficult to
molt it if yon drop it in boiling water.
It will dissolve like tallow, with a sort of
metallio glint. Oleomargarine, if "fla
vored” with true butter and made into
" print*,’’ always keep the prints in tho
original clonr lines. Yon can handle it
without crushing it. It Booms as if it
had just come off ioe.
The first time I ever fonnd It on a
table I thought it the handsomest butter
I bad ever seen. It, was at tho United
States Hotel in Saratoga, whore board
was $5 a day. I tasted it, could not
swallow it. In two hours my mouth whs
sore, iioisoncd by pyiemio germs in this
pretty butter I I cud not connect tho
two tilings, and continued every morn
ing to touch the butter to my tongue, in
tho vain hope of finding something
eatnblo. After five or six days a woll-
known member of the Boston Board of
Trade paused ltcside my table and said,
" Mrs. Dali, I hope you aro not trying
to eat that poisou?” And then I dis
covered what tlio substitute was. I
ought to add that oleomargarine is
gntty, though the grit is very fine, and
it will not cream smooth with sugar or
without, like true butter.—Caroline H.
Dale, in Boston lYanecript,
A Bashful Clergyman.
The memorial sketch of the lato Rev.
William L. Gaylord, read at tho recent
meeting of the Congregational Club in
Springfield, Mass., stated that ho con
fessed to his friends that he was a very
diffident man, a fact unsuspected by
thoae who know him intimately. In
making such a confession, he ouoa said
that when he was a lxiy his mother used
often to send him aliout the neighbor
hood to invito her friends to tea, ami
that when he reached a house where an
invitation was to be left he never could
look anybody in the face, but with eyes
on the floor, he would repeat these words
which he had said over and over on bis
way there : " Mother sends her compli
meats, and she hopes you will take tea
•with her-this evening.” He wout on^to
say that after ho began to preach lie
could never catch the eyes of his atuli
enee till after he had listened to the
sound of his own voice for a while, and
that at snoh times thoso same words
were sure to eome into his mind. "And
some day,’’said he, "I shall speak them
out, and you will be very much astonished
to hear me remark at the opening of a
sermon: ‘Mother sends her compliments,
and she hopes you will take tea with her
this evening. ’ ”
An Index to Character,
A Boston preacher says that nothing
gives such a complete index to tlio eh ••-
actor of man ns tlio substance ho spro/.’.s
upon tho icy Hidowulk in front of his
hotiso. Ho who uses sifted ashes is a
strict utilitarian, precise and hard in liis
ideas, without much Bcntimcnt, and
prone to look to tho end to lie gained
without milch thought of tho graceful
ness or beauty of the moans employed.
He who takes ashes, half-burned coal
and incombustible slog out of his grnto,
and pitches the whole promiscuously
over his sidewalk, is a man who really
cares nothing for the Bafety of other
people’s limbs. He who covers tho slip-
pory places with sawdust, that seems to
afford a footing, but does not, is cynical
and malevolent. He who strews the
glossy pave with sand so judiciously
heated that it sticks to tho ice without
melting it, is refined and nice in his
tastes, sympathetic in his disposition and
bulging with philanthropy.
The Post Boy.
A correspondent of the Woodstock,
Vt., Standard hail occasion last fall to
nil at flic liouso of A. O. Kendall, who
lives on a farm in Bridgewater, adjoin
ing Barnard. He says :
I knocked at tho door, and, no one
appenving, opened it and looked in. And
tliero I saw a cat sitting up very soberly
in each of tho chairs in tho room and
two ou each window sill. The nnusnal
ight of so many eats in one room led
me to mnkn a precipitate retreat. But I
have often thought of those oats Bince,
and the other day, seeing one of Mr.
Kendall's neighbors, inquired nlmut the
ate nnd how many Mr. Kendall kepi
Ho replied:
"Well, I can’t jnst say bow many cats
Mr. Kendall does keep, but one of my
boys was up there the other day, nnd ho
counted eighteen cats in the house and
hoard several more outside. He thought
there must bo twenty-five cats in all.
But that is not so many ns they some
times have. They aro short of oats now.
I have known them to have thirty-three
eats. They think a great deal of eats,
Mr. KemluH’R folks do, especially Mrs.
Kendall. Hlio always keejm a pot ol
milk for them to go to, and she has a
cushion for each cat. Oh, they like
cats, Mr. Kendall's folks do.”
I agree with him that Mr. Kendall's
folka do like cats, nnd I have no doubt
that tho owner of the celebrated Hart-
land "blue” cat ran sell it to Mr. Ken
dall for a good price, ns ho is at present
"short of cots."
Tho London postman who was found
the other day on duty too drunk to an
swer any questions, and with a large
number of letters and postal cards in his
possession, got off easily with a fine of
$10. The traditions of the English post
offioe preserve the story of a jovial per
son who was the principal letter-carrier
in a provincial town, and who van found
one day by a friend sitting on the curb
stone playing an imaginary game of
whist, and gravely dealing the letters
around to partner and adversaries, one of
whom he conceived to bo sitting in the
overflowing gutter. Fortunately the
game bad only just begun, and the
drunken carrier was iu tho hands of a
friend, who got him out of sight as soon
as possible. Thanks to bis luck lie still
performs bis daily round,
A Messenger.—Mrs. McDonald broke
her legs so badly while alone in her
house at Mineral Point, Wis., that she
could not make her way out.- She lay
helpless for a whole day, and had a pros
pect of starving when a neighbor’s dog
strayed in. She caught him, tied a note
to his tail, and sent him home. He
brought assistance.
Fond of Felines.
An Old Tragedy Revived.
Tlio Princess Caroline, of Denmark,
who recently died in hor eighty-eighth
year, was a second cousin to Queen Vic
toria. The deceased Princess was the
daughter of King Frederick VI., of Den
mark, nnd tho wife of Prince Ferdinand,
of the same house. She had been
widow Bince 1803. Her father's
mother was tho Prinoess Caroline Ma
tilda, of England, and a sister of George
III. She was born in 1751, and married
when only fifteen to Christian VII.,
King of llenmark. In 1708 she lieenme
the mother of the father of the lady who
inis just died. Introduced when very
young into a dissolute court, she was
giddy and imprudent, but, sa she always
lirofckted, not '^Wilty of infidelity to
uer husband. She was very pop
ular, except with the Queen dow
ager and another beldame ol
tlio royal house. They woro abso
lutists in theory, while the young Queen
favored a representative government and
raised Htiuenseo, the Court Physician,
to tho position of Primo Minister. She
showed him many favors and was doubt-
lu is fur from discreet. Finally tho dow
agers and their tools induced the weak-
minded King to believe that his wife lisd
betrayed liim. Hlio was obviously moro
fund of the brilliant young Minister than
of her besotted Hjiouse, but, us she
chained iliey wero only friends. Nover-
tlieless, Htruensee was arrested January
10, 1772, and, with his friend Brandt,
soon after beheaded. Ho died penitent
ly, acknowledging his worldliness and
other follies, though ho made no confes
sion of tlio main charge. Tlio Queen
v us taken into custody at tlio sumo time,
and would have been executed also, bad
not the British Embassador interposed.
As it was, she was kept in captivity dur
ing the remainder of her short and nn-
happy lifo, which onded May 10, 1775.
A pathetic letter addressed by ber to her
brother George 1IL is emphatic in her
assertion of hor innocence. It is gen
erally believed that sho wrote the truth.
— Cincinnati Gazette.
On an Ocean Steamer.
The principal chango I remarked in
tho manners and customs on the voyage
was the marked increase of playing and
betting on board. When I first crossed,
ten years ago, thero was nothing moro
than an occasional game at whist in the
saloon or smoking-room. This voyage
it was not easy to get out of the way of
hard play, except on deck. The best
corner of the smoking-room was occupied
from breakfast till “Out lights” by a
steady poker party, and other smaller and
more casual groups played fitfully at the
other tables. There were always whist
and other games going on in the saloon,
but of a soberer and (in a pecuniary
sense) moro innocent character. Thero
wove “pools” of sovereign or half-sover
eign on every event of the day, the "ran"
being the most exciting issue. The
drawer of tho v/inning number seldom
pocketed less than £40, when it was
posted on the captain’s chart at noon.
I beard that play is rather favored now
than otherwise on all the lineB, as a per
centage is almost always paid to the
funds of the Sailors’ Orphans’ Asylum,
for which excellent charity a collection is
also legitimately made during every
passage. We were good supporters, and
collected nearly £70 at our entertain
ment, which i attribute partly to the
fact that we had on board an American
actor, who most good-naturedly “turned
himself loose” for us, and that the plates
at tho doors were held by the danghtere
of an English Earl and an American Am
bassador of great eminence.—The Spec
tator. _
Journalistic recruit: "Father, I wish
to live so aa to show the world my con
tempt for wealth," remarked a young
philosopher, who was just recovering
from the effects of a fifty-eent cigar
"That’s easy enough,” said the old man
« become an editor."—Brooklyn Eagle^