Cuthbert enterprise and appeal. (Cuthbert, Ga.) 18??-1888, November 24, 1887, Image 1

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Enterprise and Appeal. IT MS. W. STANFORD. “Independent hi All Things—Neutral in Nettling.” --- TERMS $1.00 IN ADVANCE. VOL. VII. KlSE^^'-^i^lcoxsocmArznlSSL ♦ CUTHBERT, GA.. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1887. NO. 45 BMrprise & Appeal. SUBSCRIPTION PRICK : OMCopy one year .... $1.00 “ Six months . . . . 5t> “ Three months ... 2"> Mall Road Nrhodalc. **T CAMIKKOKB. GOISU WEST. Ani«e Arrive fiOIMi EAST. 3:10 r. sc. 12 sc. rLoaiea a westers farsesoee. CJOISU WEST. Arrive 3:15 a. «. eonco east. Arrive 11:11 P. w. 8:op> at Union Springs. Eufaula, Cuthbcrt. Damon, between Montgom ery and Sroithvllle. Pert Heines trehc makes close con- nection with the Montgomery A Macon Passsengerat Cuthbcrt. D, 1‘HF.LFH. Agents DR WESTMORELAND, DE1TIST, Offers hi* services to the public in all the branches of Dentistry.— Work warranted. Office over Use Postofflee. Rooms formerly ocen pied by Dr. Worsham. He will spend the first week of each MMth in Fort Gaines, comment ing the first Monday. Rooms at the Light foot House, mat-ill ct V. EL THORNTON, DENTIST. CUTHBKRT, GA. O rriCR Wc*»t Si<le I**.blic Square, over L. E. Kev’w store. fehIT-lv 10 MORE EYE GLASSES, mum] Redaction of Prices in Each Department Another Arrival of New and Handsome Goods. Ladies and Misses Wraps. MOST ELEGANT LINE OF DRESS GOODS. 25 Pieces Of Black and Colored Silk. Will be sold at a Reduced Price. Our Second Stock was Bought after the Decline of Dry Goods in the Eastern Markets—hence we give Customers the Benefit of our Purchases. An Weak Eyes! onth and Boys Clothing. Each day adds New Gooes to this Department. Everybody can be suited and fitted in Quality and Price, .at miTCHELL3 gSALVE A Certain. Safe and i&frec> ive Remedy f*»r SORE, WEAL AND INFLAMED EYES. rrodneinx lAing-Sightedncss. and tte- • taring Ike Sight of the Old. Cares Tear Drops, Granulation. Stye Ta mara. Red Eves. Matted Eye hashes. AND PROnUCIN'C.QUICK RELIEF AND PERMANENT CURE. Also equally efficacious when used in •other imiladies, such as 1 leers, 1-cvcr Ware*. Tumors. Salt Rheum. Rums. Piles j wr wherever inHamatinn exists, MITt'll-; XI.L’B SAI.VF, may he used to advan-1 Sage. Sold by all Druggists at 25 cents. aug251y SPRING VALE SEMINARY.; Spring Vale, Ga. A SCHOOL of High standard for Bovs and Girls. Location healthy and ! attractive. Water cold and pure. Build ing large and comfortable. Grounds ample and Ijeautiful. Tuition—*2 00, *2 and $3 00 per Month. ... , r Hoa«d—In the best Families, at from 45 00 to $7 no per Month. Daily mail, excellent Clinn-h facilities, moral surroundings equal to the best. mm- For further information, apply -to 'V. B. HINTON. Ladies and Misses Shoes, Children Shoes, Hand Sewed, every Pair guaranteed, and money refunded if satisfactory wear is not obtained. A great reduction in prices. An early call, while the stock is still complete, is solictied. HARRIS’ POPULAR DRY GOODS HOUSE. T BI ili JJ C y-tv wm - /c*\ •- r- —-. r—nj —-» .v iiu ~.ini (iiititcai ' *• fajt? It g « a (i Life Sul | V\ as lent it by the daisies, V,^.U..5l3. 1 - A t I 1 he daisies on the farm. Dai>i«‘»on Ihr Farm. She painted them on canvass \\ jih a rapt, artLtic air. ! Sin* wuit* tmm in her bodice, i A lid in her raven hail. She thought farm life idyllic. And >ui«l its greatest ehuriu lent it by the daisies, •eplG-ct Principal. HSr gutes i. Most economical and durable Cheap- e.t in the market, nnalitv considered. Tlwi'elebrated FarqaharNuw Mill.nnrt Kaginr. sad Ktnn. 4ar<l ■mplemeals Gcai-rnllj. Bend lor catalogue. A. B. FARQUIIAll. Pennsvlvania Agricultural Works, Iy21-2m York, I'a. a a Bs « cog ui § 1 o . tn os i ii GO © OS <£ £■3 td. a § 9 C2 -* a E3 9 -E Mm „ a B 2 u UJ Ld U. mart' O Ol © oW Sf% ■g so S-S2 M eQ Se* «^|3 •S SC Paapu iig S*-3 £<& Do you not love the daisies?” , ”*■**'} To the farmer’s son she saith, • Ih.t all the praise he uttered j \\ as underneath his breath, j It sounded energetic, h j JiutShe felt a vague alarm x * 1 That he did not love »lie daisies. The daisies on the farm. About twontv years rgo I flJfiwwrHj a little* «ort* on mv c*!Pflc, nnd Jhf'doftorN pronounc**! •t rancor. I have trIM a nranborof phrstclnr.p, hut without rrc. iv'.n^ any jn*rxnaiici'.t benefit. Amor" ihenirnbrr were ore* rr twoBiierlalista. The mrdlt J:ie t!>. y npp’.lc.: v.n< like fir.- to the son*, earsliijj !n*. nse pain. I sr.w a statement in the pipers tcll!n:r whatft n. Iiad «!one f«>* others blmilarly niHictrd. I pmcuivd soninat onre. P. r >rt* I ha 1 urril the rcrond l>o!tle the nr!;_-hbors e« tile] notice tl.nt my canc'-r was healing up. 71/general h. :d;li had boon l-.~d for two or t"'.ree ? ears— I l et; a SsacUtfg eoupti nn«l spit blood coat-ianally. I ha I a severe pain In my l»;« a*t. A'ti r ti.Mng six bottles of S. 55. fL my cough left rro rn.l I grew s: vtor thnu I had Invn for several y ars. JTy c *ncor Ims Utah d over rll but n llrt’.e F»*ot about the size of a half dime, and It Is rapidly dlsapjM*ar- Ing. 1 would ndvb-c every oue vltli ccuccr to gives. S. S. afuirtrl. !. sins, sancy j. :iecc:r.vuc::r.v. Ashe Crcve, Tippecanoe fo„ lad. Feb. 1«, iSo-'i. Swift’s Sptelflc !•• entirely vegetable, and seems to cure veneers by forcing out the Impa rities fror.1 tlie blood. Treatise on dood and Sfcla D : srasc-. mail, d free, THE SWIFT SFECiFiO CO, DRAV.T2 2. .‘.TLANTA, CA. She read to him a poem. A pastoral complete; He seemed unsympathetic, I hough her voice was very "sweet. With some repressed emotion llis face grew dark and warm, For its burden was the daisies. Soon the charming summer boarder To her city home returned. For a soul of higher longing Her a’sthctic nature yearned. And the farmer’s son, undaunted, \\ itli his scythe upon his arm, Went to bet tie with the daisies, The daisies on the farm. — Texas Siftings. What Makes the Noath Paar. Daniel Bennett, editor of tbc Agricultural Dc| trtment of tlx Near Orleans Picayune, in <ii» i-usting Lite condition of farmers, points out two causes for their want of prosperity. The South, lie says, is rich in resources but poor in parse. She may be rich in purse and be able to develo) whisky traffic or say that South ern farmers can thrive while they are fed by -the farmers of ‘.he West and vole in favor of the whisky traffic? Mississippi has silenced the liquor traffic in about half of the counties in tha State, and Georgia has crushed the monster in about one ha ad red counties and in the city of Allan her vast resources with her own 1 is. sml in tbeas States prohibi means. Diversified fanning wilt j lion severely prohibits, and the probably in time bring these Gulf : friends of progress anil reform Slates out of the cotton rut and i bold all the forts they have cap- horticulture will implant a new j lured. You can bet on this stale- ami more intense interest in the'ment. cultivation of the soil and will! — give a new interest to Southern! Spread of the English Language. ; homes. More paint, whitewash. : fruits and (lowers will make homes i more atli active and the farmers j aad their families more ambitious ! and more hopeful anti industri ' otis, and the country more pros perons. But the people must re move two great evils before pros l>erity will come. Let us bring out the quadrant and the chronometer and take a reckoning and find out where we Poverty In Europe. An inquiry recently instituted into the condition of the Vienna poor attending the elementary schools resulted in appalling dis closures. Upward of 4,000 chil dren weresuflering flout the pangs ol hunger, some ot them being on j are _ , DI | then examine the barom- ' Headquarters ioi\ PIANOS AND ORGANS! 1 Can Sell Yoil an ORGAN OR PIANO Cheaper THAN Any House within 500 Miles of this Point. to: When yon want any Instrument, confer with me in regard to price before buying, and I will save you mon ey. I also sell Piano and Organ Stools separate. J. W. STANFORD. the verge of starvation. A long list of heartrending cases came to light, and no doubt was left that not a few of the unfortunate little ones had died ot inanition. The intelligence, heralded abroad through the local press, at once became sensational, and the starv ing school children are now the idols of the hour. The children, cross examined by a relief committee, corrobora ted the evidence already taken. It transpired that their principal food consisted oi dry bread ami occasionally a little weak soup or coffee. It is quite true that some of them affirmed that they were habitually given a glass of spirits to slifie the cravings of their ap- etor and ace if any storm is blow ing. I If we remember correctly the Commissioner of Agriculture of Georgia estimates that that State usually spends about $8,000,000 annually for Western corn and |K>rk. That Slate has 1,542.180 inhabitants. Alabama. Georgia, Florida. Looisana, Arkansas, Mis sissippi, South Carolina, Tennes see and Texas in 1880 contained i about 10,077,931, inhabitants. ' If each of these nine Slates con sumes as much Western corn anil poik as Georgia, according to their population, it would aaonnt in the aggregate to about $50, 000,000 fur the nine Slates. And this is perhaps not more than half petite and to keep out the cold. .... , . „ . • • , . . i . I that these Mates purchase from One boy positively slated that: , „ ■ , . . .. ‘ , . the \t ost and North that mi}>hl We in.-iy fairly rejoice, too, with our fiieutU [some visiting Eng tishmen] in the rapid spread of the English language over the I world. I had a little evidence of that io Nwitzeiland. I sat down to dinner one stormy night in a Swiss inn with sixteen people. Six different national tics were represented by these sixteen peo pic, and Die only language that they could all apeak waa Eug lish. One may travel now, ns 1 have just traveled, through Sooth ern Spain, through Northern Af rica, tli rough Greece and Con stantinople, and back by Vienna and the more usual routes, with nothing but English. I do not mean to nay that yon may not oc caaionally feel the need of some French words; but. yon can trav el comfortably through all of those countries with no language hut English. That, I am sure, could not have been said twenty-five years ago. The spread of the language within that lime for purposes of commerce is most noticeable, as is also the increas ed knowledge of the language and literature among educated people on the continent of Europe.— President Elliut, of Harvard. 'Tbwt fills Wire s wonderful discovery. Ko others like them in the world. Will positively .care er relieve ill of disease. The Information around each box is worth ten times -.the cost of e box of pills Find ost about theta, tad yon wtil always be thankful. Cue pill tadeee. Parsons’ mn mmo RW blood and cure fills eontaim B9H ehronieilihealth nothinghanafU, HH H HOB than $5 worth of are essyta take, H| H LB| tgsSM&w ary and eanse ns in- HM VI MB diseov- eonvemsnee. 0a< ^ EJfl {S__ fgt jCy! rrd. If people hex will de were MW BM MBHR OBW could be made Xe purify the OB EM DMBO SaEU realize the mar- vtlons power of these pills, they would walk 190 Biles to gat a box if they could not be bad without. Scat by Bail for 2*c. in stamps. Illustrated pamphlet free, postpaid. Send for it; -ths i-o—p-«— b very valuable. L S. J0HXSC5 t CO., 22 Custom House St., Boston, Mass. Make New Rich Blood I uctlaly k Cure fur Rheumatism. The English Mechanic prints his father was a good man, anil that when lie could not give him anything to cnl he let him drink jus much gin as he liked. “Ja, ja,” exclaimed his school fellows, l, and that is why you oflen come drunk to school." The parents of the starving children are for the most part day liquor chiefly to the for laborers, though some nndoubt- n,er » of Brook 00 .. . ...... etily belong to a less respectable! havrn bc,orc rrMtif .it i'.n co«t the-^fJ* 1'Ot, and.mfler bathing,put As soon as the work of re- j consumers annually about $100, be produced on Southern farms i And the Southern farmers are the chief consumers cf iftese articles j the following ns a speedy curt foi purchased from those States. ; rheumatism: One quart of milk, j Judge Chrisman, of Lincoln' f l uile bnt . into wb *c h * tir onP county. Miss., lately sUteil in .jounce of alum; this will make speech made at Brookhaven lb si! curds and whey. Bathe the part 1 affected with the whey until too In the meantime keep the Mew U id at a Fire. Mr. A. W C. Sbean recently gave the following simple direc lions how to ai t on the occur renee of fires, before the Society of Arts: “Fire requires air; there fare, on its appearance every ef fort sbonld be made to exclude air. abut all doors and windows. By this means fire may be con fined to a single room for a suf IMent period to enable all the in males to be aroused and esca|ie; but if the doors and windows arc thrown open,-the fanning uf the wiml and the draught will instant ly increase with extraordinary rapidity. It must never he for gotten that the most precious mo menta are at the commencement of a fire, and not a single second of time should be lost in tackling it. In a room a tablecloth can be so used as to smother a large sheet of flame,\nd a cushion may- serve to beat it out; a coat or anything similar may be used with an equally successful result. The great point is presence ol mind, calmness in danger, action gntded by reason and thought. In ail large booses buckets ot wa ter should be placed on every landing, • little salt being pat in to the water. Always endeavor to attack the bed of a fire; if you cannot extinguish a fire, shat the window, and be sore to ahnl the door when making good your rc treat. A wet silk handkerchief tied over the eyes and nose will make breathing possible in the midst ef much smoke, end e blank at wetted end wrapped round the body will enable a person to pns9 through a sheet of flame in cum parative safely. Should a lady's dress catch fire, let the wearer a> once lie down; rolling may ex linguisb the fire, bat if not, any thing woolen preferred, wrapped tightly round will effect the de xired pur|mse. A burn becomes less painful the moment air is ex eluded from it. For simple burns, i oil or the white of egg can be Taxing Farmers. “How much do the farmers pay the Slate for the fertilizers which they use?'' inquired a Journal man ol Commissioner Henderson yesterday. ‘-Eighty three thousand and thirty five iloUara.’’ “And bow tnuclt.ia that sum in excess of the cost of inspection?" “Sixty eight thousand anti one hundred and seven dollars and thirty five cents.” ‘•Then the fanner pays the Stale that large special lax with out other return than $14,939 worth of inspection?” “Not exactly. The State sup ports the agricultural department tor the former’s benefit. That josts at present $14,200. This department and the ins|iectioDS are the two benefits which the farmers get from the Slate. To gelher they cost $29,128. Take that sum troiu the gross amount paid by the farmer and yon have $57,807 as the special tax on farmers for which they get no »l>ecial return. This surplus goes to the support of public schools, and you and 1 and all men of all clnsseB can get at least as much advantage from it as the forming class, which, unassisted pays it.” “Do you think this large sur plus is disposed of properly?” “Indeed I do not 1 think it should lie set apart for the bene fit of the class from whose pocket it comes.” “In what way?'. “It ought to be appropriated to enlarging and extending the use- fulness of the agricultursl de parlmcnt. As it is we are woeful ly handicapped. We are pinched and cramped until we have scarce ly breathing room. Georgia is wanting in almost every facility- fur the enlightenment and encour agement of the farmer. Experi mental forma are needed. Ex hibits at ini|mrlant fairs ought to lie provided to call attention to the Strung points of Georgia agri class, as soon as me wort oi re-1 lieving the children was taken in °°°- or Uie value of *bool hand subscriptions were opened, 2 ’ 000 bll «* of Li< l uor at the editorial offices of the met ! con?l,me,Mn U,e ® an,e P ro P° rti, ' n ro| olitan press. Seldom has an appeal to public charity been more : readily and more generously re sponded to. The poorer classes have largely contributed. The popular newspapersare full of advertisements from people who cannot spare much money, liul who offer to give one or two chil dren their dailr food. Almost all these advertisements add that ap plications can be made withont distinction ot religion. All the hotel and restaurant keepers arc feeding a certain number of hun gry children every day. in the nine States would cost $84,300,000. nr the value of 486.- 000 bales of cotton. These nine States would consume, according to our estimates, liquors, corn, and pork annually that would coat them over $120,000,000. If Judge Cbrisinan's estimates are correct, ours are not for from the truth. Can these nine Slates thrive before they have in a great measure removed these millstones and stumbling blocks? Who can answer? Who can defend them on a poultice, wrap in dan nei and go to sleep (yon can). Three applications should be a perfect cure, even in aggravated cases. used. One part of carbolic acid 1 culture. We were hardly able to to six parts of olive oil is found ! beg enough material to make a to be invaluable in most cases, slight or severe, and the first lay creditable display at our own home t*X|iosition here ia 1881. North A Very Particular CHri. A young man in Brunswick, Ga., sent bis photogrsgh, hand somely framed, tn a girl whose favor he wished to win. The next day the frame came back with a note, in which she thanked him for the picture, bat begged to re turn the frame, aa abe made it a rale never to accept anything val uable from s gentleman.—Ckarles- the ton ATern and Courier, er of lint should not be removed till the cure is complete, but sat urated by the application of fresh outer layers from time to lime Linen rags soaked in a mixture of equal parts of lime water and linseed oil also form n good dress ing. Common whiting is very gooif, applied wet and continually damped with s sponge. Gen. Sir Frederick Middleton, the hero of the Riel rebellion, who waa rewarded for bis heroism by knighthood and a grant of $20,000. has reached the age of sixty two and will be retired on n pension of $3,700. It ie thought that he will lie succeeded by- Col. Cameron, a son in.lsw ef Sir Charles Tupper, the Canadian minister of Finance, and chief representative of Cana da in the fisheries commission. and Suath Carolina, in which Slates the surplus from inspection of fertilizers is devoted to the State’s agricultural interests, beat us in sonic depailincnts out of our hoots here on our own ground. We are so pinched for lack of money that we can do nothing. “Then we need more printing. Any infoi malion which we mav accumulate cannot now lie d»i tnbuled widely enough to benefit any considerable number. Our reports ought la go to every farmer in the Stale, whereas we now resell only a few dozen in each county— in all only seven thousand copies are scut out. Information should be supplied to immigrants, show ing the resources of the State and its various advantages as a place to settle. We need about ten l imes as many seeds tn distribut< as we now handle. There are many ways in which we could he of im- •nense usefulness to the class that pays this money, il' the money were only given to relnrn them in iiencfils.—Atlanta Journal. The Heals Mauta. In the eastern extremity of tin spacious piazza in front of the Basilica San Giovanni Lalerano. ■lays a letter from Rome, stands a building not in itself particularly attractive, hut containing the most interesting of all Roman rel ics—interesting especially to the Christian and antiquarian, and to every intelligent traveler. A part o! this building is a convent, nccu pied by Ta s : onist fathers, but the portion best known to the public is that containing the Seals Santa, or holy stairs, being a flight of twenty eight mat Me steps rc moved from the house ol Pilate, at Jerusalem, and understood to hare been trodden by Christ when going to and from the judgment hall. The stairs were brought to Romp in the year 326 by- the cm prcM sometimes culled St. Helena mother of Constantine the Great, and have been held in great vene raiisti over 1,500 years. At one lime they stood in the old Laleran palaee!<$|aving been removed there from a building that suffered from an earthquake in 897. Since the •lemolilion of the old palace they have occupied their present quar ters. These sacred steps may not lie trodden liy the foot of mau; they arc only reverently ascended on the knees. By order of Clem ent XII, they were covered with wood for preservation, leaving the front of each step visible and openings in the boards so as to allow the marble sle|is to lie seen in places where they are supposed to show marks of the Saviour’s tilood. The top step only is left uncovered, and consequently is nearly worn away by the knees uf! t 9 one or the best read men in the faithful devotees. On all occa | United Stales, and he |>ossesses a xions these may be seen slowly and 1 curious combination of diffidence lUrifix. Even on this occasion none ol' the huty are allowed to enter. The interior !• gnrgcova in the extreme. The altar fills is recess, and is supported on |>or- pliyry pillata. The edifice con tains many precious relies, mostly of St. Andrew and St. Luke. The relic of most importance, a por trait. of Christ, said to have been began by St. Uuke, whom tradi tion says was a painter as well as a physician, and miraculously com pleted in colors by an angel, lichee its name. “Archeiro 0,>eton,” or picture painted without hands. Is reserved in a silver tabernacle above the altar. This painting is held in great reverence. On the Feast of the Assiimption it was carried in great Slate through the streets of the city, the procession halting on the steps ol a church ttt the forum, where the ceremony of washing the feet of the Pope was performed in perfumed water. On another celebration the same office was jierformed by the Pope on the feet of twelve sub deacons in the -ant-la sanctorum. Among the relics preserved there are sandals supposed to have belonged to the Savior, and some wood of the true cross. The latter, or something representing it, is to be found among most collections of the kind in Rome. There is also a fine rep resentation of Christ in mosaic in the style of the ninth century. Indiana's New Senator. Washington, Oct. 24.—I am told by prominent Indianians that the new senator, David Turpie, will be the Ingulls of the Demo cratic side of the senate chamber, and that he may lake the laurels of sarcasm from the sharp longii- ed Kansas slateman. “Dave Turpie,” said one of these gen tlemen, '-will be one of the strong est men in the senate, and lie will be the ablest S|«eaker on the Dem ocratic side ot the chain Ivor. He reverently ascending—some kiss ing the steps as they go—but es pecially on Fridays in Lent, and and cltcek. He is at home in no place more than upon his feet -leaking, and he docs not im- more particularly Good Friday, | press strangers us being a great the stairs arc thronged with pious j man. lie is backward and rood- pilgrims; some whose actions de note adoration for the Savior; uth ers, no doubt, who make the as cent only in the hojie of securing the promised boon of 1.000 years' respite from the pains of purgalo. ry. At sll events il is one of the most impressive religious exercis es the writer has witnessed. est in private life, and he does not indulge to any extent in convivial society. He makes friends slow ly, lull, he slicks to his Irienifs to the last and lights for them. He hales his euciuies, loo, and he be lieves, I think, in the philosophy of revenge. He is a great reader, and is a fine classical scholar. Il is rc[«»rtcd of Marlin Luther | He can speak French, German that he once attempted the ascent uf IheScala Santa, and that, hat ing reached midway to the top, he turned and walked down under what he supposed to he Hcaveuly guidance. At one |ieriod these stairs were used as a place for the performance of public pen- nance, when |ienitents in sackcloth and ashes might be seen ascend ing. A heterogeneous mingling of humanity may- oDen lie seen with in these sacred precincts; the |ieas- ant woman of the Campagna, dus ty and travel stained, though pic turesque in costume; the misera ble object branded with the men dicant mein, sueh aa guard the entranve of churches in Rome and extract a soldo for drawing back the greasy upholstery doing duty for a curtain on the entrance of visitors, rubbing his tattered gar menls against the velvet and furs of some noble lady of patrician blood; again, a soldier showing marks of having seen seivicc, bear ing his plumed bat, adds his dark costume to tlie group, while little innocents are led l»y their mothers unconscious of the solemnity of the environment. and Italian, and lie Iim ouch « good accent to each of these that he is often mistaken for a foreign er. I don't think he has traveled to any extent abroad, and he had acquired his culture by private study-. He is a widower, but he will not cut any figure in Wash ington society. He has not been seen much about the hotels, and he will spend much of bis time at home and in the senate. He is very plain in his dress and in his manners, and lie cares very little for style. He is a giant, however, upon the stump."—Courier Jour' na I. Early’s Cbampfon Farmer. Mr. L. D. Gay, familiarly known as “Pat Gay,” is certainly entitled to the oobriquet of the champion farmer of Early county. From what we deem reliable authority we learn he has this year raised on his farm something near one h nnd red bales of cotton, besides an immense quantity of corn, and from this production will clear above all ex|ienscs near fifty bales of cotton. Pat, though young in years, with such licks aa this, in destined to be one of the wealthy planters of our county. Would At the footsf tne stairs on the that we had many more such men light is a fine gronp in marble by giving their attention to Early’s Giacometti, representing Christ i fertile fields.— It lake!y Sears. being betrayed by Judas; on the I other side another by the same sculptor—the subject, EcccHomo. These statues were purchased and placed by Pius IX On each side of the Seals Santa are flights ol stairs which the pilgrims descend on fool, and at the top, by looking through a grating, tome of tlie glories of the sancla sanctorum mar be seen. This chai«i is the only remaining part of the old Laleran palace, of such antiquity I Southern |ia|iers and speakers have done entirely too much ex plaining since the war. It is |K»or |mirey nod in wretched taste to be everlastingly making pro testations of loyalty to the old flag. When a gentleman's word is doubted there ts an end of ar gument. The South is in the Union, on a fooling of absolute equality with alt the other sec tions, and site acknowledges no censorship over her sentiments in tiist its origin is veiled in mystery....... _ . the 1 any buu ’ 8eet,on or l»ny; and ' tlie man who puts himself in the Il is known to have existed sixth century, dedicated to St. Lawrence, and was the private chapel cf the Medseval Propus, and is held so sacred that only a Pope emu officiate at the altar. The ehapel -ia only open once a year, the morning before Palm Sunday, when the canons of Lntcran go there in solemn procession lo wor ship, bearing-torches and a veiled allilnde of an apology for bee past, her present or her futnre, does her a grievous wrong.—.la- gusta Gazette. mom. An Albany man went around the city borrowing aprons under the pies that liis wife wanted them for patterns. He ia locked np now.