Newspaper Page Text
it Southwest With
MbeO..C. to
i Built.
(1 fever i» fast taking hold
l ot Athens.
t excitement in this line,
i in a proposed plan to con-
i with the GeorgiuMidland
h,Ga.,atid there Watmueh
' on yesterday among jiromi-
. about the scheme,
fl plan isnot anew one. It is
the original proposition made several
years ago, while the Georgia Midland
was In course of construction, but it
is meeting with much more enthusiasm
now than then.
At presentMcDonpugh ia the terminus
of the Georgia Midland. It is only
about sixty nliies distant from Athens
and a line between the two points could
be easily built. The territory through
which the road would run is ono of .the
richest in agricultural resources that can
nnd anywhere, and not only that,
the abundant watercourses make it
ppiied with woder/ull manufacturing
There is not a better section
' country in Georgia than this, and
the road aa proposed would develop
it beyond all conception.
The line could be made to run through
Conyers and Monroe,'two of the most
prosperous little cities in Georgia, and
we are informed that these towns would
be heard from right manfully as soon
as the plans for building' the road as
sume definite shape. We are told that
Mr. IV, h. Peek, a prominentcltiacn of
t'onyerB Is mucli interested in the
scheme of building the line, and that
he states that double aid could he ob
tained all along tho line,
not only in the matter
of obtaining the right of way, but also
Iu the material building of the road.
The people arc all anxious for the road
nnd will subscribe liberally to its stock
whenever might be opened.”
What would the road do for Atta-
IVhl it would connect the G., C. A
X. with Columbus and there afford con-
ucetoin with the shortest lines leading to
the great southwest via New Orleans.
It would connect Atlieps witli the Kast
Tennessee, Virginia ami Georgia Kail-
road at McDonough and thus put us in
rapid schedule to Brunswick and the
Georgia coast, opening Up the great
umber districts to us and to the North
{through tile G., C. & X. road.
The fact Is, this line extending
the Georgia Midland to. Athene, aside
from being a splendid local line, would
be the best connecting lino we know of
now that could be built to Athens.
The people of Athens should Interest
themselves in the building of this road.
The people all along the proposed route
are anxious to aee the plans taken up,
and will be heard from when the stocks
arc called for. They are ready not
only with [.their encouragement, but
with their money, to aid in the work of
buildiogtbe road and ail they want is
to he called on.
Col, Gunby Jordan who has had in
band tlie construction of the Georgia
Midland should take up the matter.
There is not the remotest shadow of a
doubt but that he would with all ease
raise sufficient subscriptions at an ear
ly date to begin the building of the line.
We predict that Athens will do its part,
and from the way the matter was being
discussed yesterday on the streets, we
believe that the stockholders of the
Georgia Carolina and Northern Bailway
will go into the matter quite
largely.
There can be no doubt but that the
road can be built and built whenever
the proper leading spirits . take hold,
and it behooves the citizens of Athens
to be among the leaden in the enter
prise. No one can doubt the incalcula
ble advantagee of this* rood to our city,
which when the Georgias Carolina and
Northern is completed will become ne
cessities.
Tn* Baxxzb has much faith in this
move, and we verily believe that the
day is not far distant when with this
line opening up the great southwest;
with the G. C. A N. opening up the
great .markets of the North and East,
and leading on to the West, Athens
will become the trunkline center of tills
ecctiou of tho South and take the name
she justly deserves, “The Gate City of
Georgia.
The young ladies of Athens will de
sert our city entirely, if the ratio of de
parture* continue In the proportions
they have began during the past few
eeks.
SB*
SSL.
of
, from the
. thinking unm frill
to duty of the State
Government fir Htrtta branches to do all
stock to t
uud the whole foi
wild and destructive 1
upon Its head. Itis not
direct sale,in its venonioiis 1
that is lawful and proper to preveut the somebody’s vitals it declares
MB. E. G. HARRIS, •
AGER, ARRIVE
Kc Is Interviewed bra E
His Future Plans-Tho Electric
Motor Seems to bo tho "
Favored Flan.
wrong. This duty rests upon the legis
lature as much as, hut no inure tlmn,
upon sny one of Ihe other departments
of the government. Before steps arc
taken liowevcr, aimed nt an anticipated
evil, two things should concur, first it
-liottKI appear with raua'Bablo eertuiiity
that there Is a mischief to be remedied;
second the remedy should tic appro
priate and adequate. Taking the Olive
bill ns a measure intended to protect the
people against stieli a wrong from tho
railroads, let us examine for a moment
the nature of the evil it purports to
remedy and the character of the
remedy.
It is said that the leading lines of rail
roads in Georgia have almost all fallen
into the control of one company. This
is the evil.. The remedy proposed is to
forfeit the charters of the Georgia com
panies engsged in this scheme of com
bination. Wo have then as a mischief
which needs correction a contract which
unites the control of several roads; we
have as a remedy a hill which proposes
to forfeit the charters of the contracting
companies.
Is it not strange that no complaint
cornea from any quarter of any Increase
of rates? bit not strange that some
advocate of Mr.Olive’s measure docs not
point to some wrong that lias been done
to some citizen of Geoigla in conse
quence of this consolidation? Not a
word of this sort is heard. Not a com
plaint is made of extortion or discrimi
nation. We Imve-then nothing but tlie
hare fact of the contract between these
companies ns tlie'cnuse of complaint.
A contract which so far lias injured no
body is set up ns a reason for forfeiting
their charter.
But they say they will hurt some-
i body. How? They cannot discrimi
nate. The commission prevents that.
. They eannot increase the rates. How
can this contract injide any citizen?
The ingenuity of the friends of the.
Olive bill has been exerted in vain.
They cannot point out to the Legisla
ture a single S'liing which this consoli
dation can do that is iitjurious to any
citizen of Georgia.
But look at the remedy. Tlie charters
are to be forfeited. Does it not strike
tlie mind of the average citizen Unit
this is a harsh and violent treatment of
n corjioratioii. It is Uie severest iieniilty
tliat can be inflicted. It is capital pun
ishment for it inflicts the death penalty
upon the corporation. And all this
simply because it lias bought stock in
another company. This nnd tills atone
is the sinew of the offense. Nobody lias
been injured. No rate of fare or freight
has been or can be issued. No discrim
ination has been or can he practiced.
That is clear. All that lias been done
is to make a contract of sale or purchase
of stock,a harmless trade which is des
titute of every element of danger, and
yet the corjioratioii must be killed dead.
The legislature of this State will never
take that step. It Is a wild, passionate,
dangerous movement, and lias not a
feature of wisdom or statcnienship.
Take the Georgia, Carolina and
Northern Railroad Company, as an ex-
ainjile. It Is chartered to enter Geor
gia on the line of Klbcrt county. It
traverses tho counties of Klbert, Ogle-
tliorjMi, Madison, Clarke, Jackson,
Gwinnett, DeKalb and Fulton to At
lanta. It Is about to be built. It will be
a great advantage to the jieople of those
counties to have it. Tho company lias
sold a majority of its stock to another
company, tlie Seaboard aud Koanokc
Railroad Company, to & Virginia cor
poration. It had to do this to procure
means to build its read. For this foil-
tract the Olive bill forfeits its charter.
The company will be killed dead. It
lias hurt nobody by tills contract; on
the contrary the contract was necessary
to evoke the company to secure aid from
tlie Seaboard and Roanoke.
Yet Mu Ouvxand his suppo-ters go
blindly forward striking down a great
enterprise and strangling a great public
improvement in wich the jieople of this
whole section of the State are vitally
Interested.
The strangest feature in their whole
mad program is the cool assurance they
give that they Intend to amend by say-
ing that bis bill shall not apply to con
tinuous lilies. The trouble about this
»that when once itis shown that a buy
ing or wiling of stock has takes place,
courts, some of them at least, will hold
that the contract is committed. This
act alone ia held to be prohibited. It is
not necessary to show that It effects
competition. These gentlemen are
playing very carelessly with the
sharpest edged tools and setting in mo
tion machinery they do not understand
anil cannot control.
The wicked injustice of the bill ia no
where more glaringly shown than in
its cruel destruction of the Georgia,
Carolinaand Northern Railroad. That
camjmny stands alone as a seller of its
stock to another company. All the
stock in the other companies which is
owned by another company was bought
from individuals. The Central stock
forexample owned by the Terminal Co.,
by individual holders. This bill would
’‘Indirect” transactions of i
shall be punished by death.
.But, says Mr. Olive,
must ho carried out. last Mr. Olive
first read tho Constitution, 'flic para
graph ho relies upon cannot be violated
by a corjioratioii. It call only he viola
ted by a Legislature. Its prohibition
is upon tho Legislature. If any Legit*
lature should pass such a Mil as is there
in prohibited, stieli a legislature will be
a violator, but tho corporation would
not. The corporation would lmvc the
act <0 the Legislature as Its warrant,
The Legislative sanction it would have,
would Ixi just us high, and proceeding
from tlie same authority precisely as
Mr. Olive’* bill itself- If Mr. Ouve
must be a reformer letbim aim Ills bolts
as future Legislators .if lie thinks tills
or any other Legislature can hind or
punish future ones.
thegTcT&n.
Engineers art Busily Engaged Planting
their grading Stakes-The Work will
be Rapidly Pushed to Completion.
On last Saturday, at Chester, 8. C.,
the contracts for tlie grading of the
Georgia, Carolina and Northern Rail
road from Chester for fifty miles
were let.
Tlie engineers are now busily engaged
planting out their grading stakes along
tlie line, and the work of grading will
lie commenced nj once. A large force
of hands will he put on tlie road, and
tlie grading will ho pushed right
through to an early completion.
Tlie next division to bo taken up is
between Athens and the river, and this
will he entered upon as soon as the pres
ent work is finished. It is believed that
tlie ••me old survey will he followed.
A Painful Accident.
Wo are pained to chronicle a very
painful uccident-whlch liefell Mr. Harry
Norris [out at l’rinccton yesterday.
While at work in the picker rooms, he
had his left hand caught, in the machin
ery and badly cut. Tlie aeeldent Is very
painful and will disable Mr. Norris for
several days from attending 'to his du
ties. " • "
A Barbecue In Madison.
On Tuesday last Mr. Bill Hardeman
gave a barbecue at his bar in Madison
county to a small party of frieuds,
several gentlemen from Athens being
present. 'They report, a splendid time,
The ’cue was given In honr of Col. Zeko
Edge.
Those chronic growlers, who aro op
posed to nay progress or improvement
In Athens.should exodnst to some rural
village. Our city is outgrowing them.
HARMONY IS VIRGINIA.
One of the Mahone Appointees Tlilnk
It lias Been Secured.
Spools! to tlie Banner.
Wahiiinotox, 1). C.)August L—State
Senator Oee, who represents tlie Peters
burg district In tint Virginia legislature'
nnd who lias been ajipointed lumber
agent at Sitka, Alasku, was in Washing
ton yesterday.
“General Mahone," he said to a re
porter, “will be the nominee of his
party for governor, and those who have
been opposed to him will do as much to
elect him as anybody else. The state
is just rljie to fall into the hands of the
republican party, and if we are suc
cessful the state debt question will bo
settled satisfactorily both to creditors
and the jmcple.”
Mr. Gee left for home yesterday. He
will, in a few days, send his resignation
as senator to Governor Lee, and dejinrt
his new post of duty.
A Mad Horse.
Special to the Banner.
Chicago, August L—Ole Erickson, a
butcher, made an attempt yesterday
afternoon to hitch his big sorrel horse to
a wagon. The animal bit him on the
leg and then dashed up the street. The
hone was foaming at the mouth and
evidently mad. It ran at every peraon
It met. It bit eight horses and ran over
and serioualy injured a little child. A
street car conductor sprang from Ills
car and made • grab at the horse’s
bridle. The animal sprang at him and
bit a piece from his right hand. The
horse waa Anally killed by a police
man.
No Fever In Brunswick.
Special to The Banner.
Savannah, Gb., August 1.—Tele
grams from Surgeon General Hamilton
and from Brunswick’s health authori
ties declare that there has not been a
case of yellow fever and that the health
of the town is all right.
The steamer David Clark, from there
was detained only a few hours by the
Savannah authorities until the reports
which were belngclrculated could be
investigated.
Savannah has not put on any quaran
tine and does not contemplate it, (
Mr. E. O.JIarrU, tho new manager
of tlie Classic City Street Railway, ar
rived In tins,city yesterday, from Mu-
eon. A IlAXKKX reporter met him and
Inquired a trout the plans of his com
pany In the j'mmlng.of tlie line.'
“I can only answer in u general
way,” said ho, “and say that wo nre
ready for Iny emergency. . Wq will
meet tho demands of Athens in just
whatever shape the encouragement ot
tho people will justify. The object of
my trip to Athens now la to pay over to
the receiver of the road tlie six thous
and seven hundred dollars that we have
offered for it, and I shall do that
promptly to-morrow morning. I shall
also arrange to it run by horse power
until wo have fairly settled here.”
“What will you do, then ?" we in
quired.
“The first thing to bg done it to tear
iiji the old track and lay down a new
one over the entire line. We will do
this at once after we have fairly gotten
started with die management. We will
put down a @k>U substantia', track that
will be suited to either the electric sys
tem or tlie dummy engine.”
“If you adopt either of these, which
do you tiling now more probablo?”
arkedtlie reporter.
“The company lias been considering
both,” said Mr, Harris, “and have aa
yet come to nodefinlte conclusion in tho
matter. The electric system, however,
is more favored at present, and I think
it will he tlie decision to adopt it, when
ever tho situation warrants It. Wo are
determined to furnish Athens with as
good a street car lino as can beToiuid in
the South, no matter what system we
have to adopt. The jieople of Athens
can rest easy with the nssnrunce that
they Will be furnished with a thorough
line, a regular and quick schedule and
comfortable cars.”
"How do you stand lu regard to the
■yity jiark?” we asked.
“We must have it by all means,” he
replied, “and I am authorized to say
that my company Is in sympathy wkh
the move and will be heard from at the
projier time. Yes, wo are in for tho city
park."
"Will you extend your line to tho
park?”
“Moat certainly. We will extend
tlie line wherever the pock 1- established;
and will run a regular schedule to it all
through tho summer months. We will
do our part in establishing it, and will
give tho citizens a rapid transpotation
to it w hen it is finished.”
Tim Hannkii isglud to welcome Mr.
Harris to our midst, and bespeaks all
manner of encouragement from tho pco-
ple of Athens to his company in what
ever enterprise they may enter hare.
. TWOPETmONS
One Asks for Local Option While the
Other Appeal* for the Peasant
Laws,
There are two petitions being circula
ted in tlie city hearing upon tho situa
tion in Clarke eounty as regards tlie
question of prohibition. Tlie first is a
petition which will ha sent to Mr.Tuck,
our representative, asking that lie make
an effort to plaeo Athena under the
original option law. It was rejxirtcd on
the streets that Mr. Tuck had said that
if a petition to tills effect was qpnt him,
signed by one hundred responsible vo
ters, he would procure the local option
law for Clarke.
A Banner representative lias seen a
letter from Mr. Tuck, addressed to a
private liarty hi which he denies this
statement. But lie lays that If be Is
assured that a majority of the jieople of
the connty aro In favor of it ho will ob
tain the local option.
Wo are Inforniod that If Mr. Tuck re
futes to obtain the local option privi
lege, that Mr, Clarke Howell, of Fulton
will be asked to lay the matter before
the Legislature.
The other petition ia one taking that
tho laws remain as they are, which ia
to tay that a majority of legal voters
be necessary to sign apetltlonjforanclec
tior. on the prohibition question.
Wc do not know bow many names
are signed to these petitions, nor can
we predict the outcome ot them, but
from wbat be cen learn they are, both
being widely circulated, and have a
great many names signed to them.'’
The Q., O. * V. Contraots.
Mr. A. I.. Hull tills us that he lias
not aa yet learned whether the con tracts
to grade a 30-ir.ilc section on tho Geor
gia, Carolina A Northern road was let
oj the 27th or not, but presumes that
they were.
Dr. Norvtn Green, President of the
Western Union Telegraph Company,
has written a letter to Poetmae’er
General Wanamaker,in which he goes
into details regarding the expense of
transmitting messages, and saye that
it will be impossible for the company
to accept Government messages at a
lese rate than that now received.
■1111*1 CdU Uv tho (iwevil ~
■ (Looking blankly at the clouds)
Of tils rain/ season!
Llf* lx very xweat because-,
Because—why not assist met
Sweet to spite of rain nr clouds
Just hecauso you kissed me
•Abide 0. SIcKecver In Pittsburg Bulletin.
DUST.
It wun the year 8003, The Stanford uni
versity was holding Its twelve hundredth an
niversary. For thro* centuries and more tho
great sto'ue wall and bridge aero* the bay at
Ravenswood had been completed, to that
most of tbs professors from tho elder univer
sity at Berkeley camo by this routs, looking
down oa tbs upper bay, changed into fields,
with orchards of two hundred and fifty years
establishmant growing where tho Nineteenth
century sloops and oyster boats eauia to the
prehistoric) eiabarcadercs of Howry's Land
ing and Alvlto. A great industrial univer
sity. Workshops reaching for mile* along
the beautiful elopes of San Uatoo, training
schools, art school*, language schools, seta-
tlSc schools. Berkeley for the classics and
th* humanities, Stanford university for an
unparalleled grouping of tht grout industrial
and scientific activities of tho race. For mils
beyond mils ran the gardens, the grata houses,
the intensive horticulture which for more
than a thousand yaarshad made tho valley
regions of California the richest and moat
tblokly populated district In the world.
Statistics from th* census of th* year H90;
"Population of California, forty-sovon mil
lions; population of tha valleys which Impinge
upon Ban Francisco, including tha valleys
caused by the drainage of Sutoon bay, San
Pablo bay, and the upper half of San Frau-
cisco bay, twenty-eight millions. Oao-half of
these are in th* Sacramento San Joaquin
valley, th* other half within fifty mile* of
Ban Eranclsco city,*
Tho president of the university, Inland
Stanford Ainsworth, a descendant of one of
the Oregon Alnswortha of the Nineteenth
century, delivered his address: “Science is
endless," he sold; "the race goes on, ever im
proving. Those ware foolish tears of the
men of the dark ages, now almost prehistoric,
when this stats was founded, this Institution
established. Tbs social order has changed.
What they celled revolution, and vainly
(ought, has proved evolution. W* bavo
como together, on this twelvo hundredth an-
nlvereary, under these ancient stone arches,
lees to celebrate the post than to plan for
the new conquests of nature. Whtopera hare
gone forth to the world that In our chemical
laboratory strango discoveries hare been
mads Then discoveries wo give to you to
day, whether for human hnpplnesa or human
misery will depend upon yourselves”
The audience Ustenod with tomo bewilder
ment In that great bail, with Ite arches of
weather beaten stone, more than 40,000 peo
ple were tietmbled, but delicate -‘ocL-lcal
machinery made tha speaker’s voice audible
and the speaker's fans clearly visible to evory.
one In the building, and even to tha thou-
sands who sat beneath the stately oaksonb-ido.
What wlS thto new dtocovcryf Wouklit 271-.
make life better worth llvhigl Would It give “,\ftc
a nufn longer life! At least It waa evident Tho ntoi
that the discovery was oue of thrilling Im
portance In tha mind of the president. He
•poke with the utmost earnestness "For
more than 100 years this university has held
as a sacred trust a group of scientific discov
eries made by one of Its student*. Be wrote
bis formulas down and sealed them for this
twelve hundredth anniversary. Three days
before ite celebration the faculty of this uni
versity was to assemble, break tho seels, test
tus formulas and decide whether to reveal
the secrets or to destroy them forever. We
met; we have decided; w* create a new pro
feeeorshlp, more important, perhape, than
any other in exbtcnoe on tha face of the
earth. Wehavecheen a lineal descendant
of tha diaoovererof this group of secrets, Pro-
fnsor Lcmhel Jones Carey, and, going back
to one of tho almost forgotten writers of the
Nineteenth century, we name bla chair the
chair of The Ethics of Duet"’
A ripple of half annoyed amusement ran
over the audience. Was that sill Only an
other of tlioso interminable modern subdivis
ions of biology, or psychology, or both!
But the president went on: "Professor
Cany was on tha right track when this -vent
occurred. It It raraarlublo that til his to-
veettgetlon* have fitted him to utilize cad de
velop this group of new facts Without him
the Ethlce of Dust would have had to wait
fifty yean for an Interpreter. With him
you oan oatch a glimpee or Ite scope today. It
to nothing that you Imagine It to not long
life; it Is not money, or happiness, except in
cidentally. But, par hap*, it means all the
things which any of you, or all of you, have
over dreamed about” And Uw president rat
down. The wall at tho back of tho stag*
optnod and revealed a laboratory, strange
evso to the ayes of ohamlstsfhars Professor
Carey cams toward, and art a curious micro
scope oa the stand. Then be looked over tbs
audience tod spoke of the great subject;
"What we hare done to to conquer thouh
I lust !
by the (■
this r
cavo bcaro
robber barons
depths of the 0
earth, these da
after myriad w
now reveal the
Tim professor h
microscope,
be said, “wW
on tho plate just n
Ho threw a magnified
till the flake of f*
aerose, he i’
Mo
it bad drawn t
Agaiif-thof
yet you etiatl s
reflection of a
heart of the 4 , _
desert edge, near a’
clock struck the ret
ears of tht 0
blood was tlie (inti
In tho world from n
“It. to , an atom,”
makes dlscaso who
wonder forth no h
of bis vials and
wanton with dust n
the air about him, muds
pictures of the heart atoms of
there, Tho aaeombly
They jleldid to hie t"
cepted tho stupendous
atom was no more a 1
a creature to be 1
end Imprisoned by star e
Then the profeesor wa
magutllod reflection of an atom on
without first examining It himself. Rak
at the audieure again with thakii ’
sad expression.
"Not yet; perhaps -mover,", hos
more than I aro ablo to toll yo
any man, with tho heart of a n
scribe. I read your hearts, I
thoughts, I SCO the record of your 1
look upon theso atoms which fl '
atmosphere. Now my oh
each 000 of tfao diMAwd cl
so much I lessen tho tolly, tho (1
evil ot all aorta that fills every
oven boro, even now, It to our I
the sad heritage of the whole bnmau >
through ages of wretchedness end crlmo,
will only ehowyou whnt you can bear; ‘
rest 1 will carry alone." He closed his 1:'
story and left tho stage.
The audience rose with a i
went out; sorao few were
were oppressed with the \
forces thus newly given t
The professor, wrnppod h
ness, sat tlono In bla 1'
president of. the univ<
hours later, with hist
“ had written
■After ail, I t
The atoms will 1
othor. My old i
but to-morrow I a
another fifty year
in Tho Argonaut
Spoiling Children.
The mother’s t
should begin at on early age, or
the child will bo the victor.. A strlli
tration of thl* was noticed on ono of tl
streets of a cortaln city, r
wh- bad evidently bean''
tag in front of them a e
bright eyi
years It
can-logo was headed I
once began to fuss to go bock. Its n
not complying, Its fare, a moment I *
sunshine, assumed u look ot p
cries could be heard far i
After ona or two trifling 1
cries, tho mother Laughing
companion that perhaps
whore baby wanted to, which wax d
xmilox once more covered tho little o
They wore icon lost hem tight III t
tag throng, but already tbo li
learned her power and wlllc
it, Oue lady wa* heard to remark, *
mother can't manage her child at tn
can tbs expect to have any Influence 0
at sUteenr— Lewiston J01
A Complicated
Tho following account of
a hidden treasure to somewhat
the strango manner In which
“Me
may U
cum bit system. That to what
tnakxx nx die too soon; emnetlmee that to
what makes us do wrong. When wo find the
dlseeeed atom, we eannot destroy 1L Noth
ing can. But we can now Isolate it ao that It
can do no harm—at toast, not for ages to
COOS; perhaps sever again. We can tone
each atom ranh duet mote which floats
about the world—to teD Ite story; candle-
cover where it has been, and what it has
done; and whether it to helpful or bnrtfnL
Sine# the number of atoms In the atmosphere
01 the earth to now definitely ascertained, it
only remains fertile human met to Isolate
from further evil the dies*sad atoms a* Cut
a* possible Then, a few centuries from now,
only healthy atoms wili remain. This, aa I
Dead not explain to you, most mean perfect
health, and a gnat many other thtage which
the nowipapert wfil tell you ebook"
: A greet hush tell 00 the audience, at they
understood thle stupendous claim. Then mur
murs and cries began to break forth, at
pieeuddenlytpoketo each other, ‘
alleles lathe presence of the fact
mate atom had bean conquered. That waa
what science and theology for thousands of
yean bad said oould never bo dooe. Did It
maan wiping out th* rwet sins, taking sway
tha dally temptation from each onaf A wo
man, rich, beautiful, fashionable, rose fa the
audience and reached out her hands to Pro
testor Carey. "Taka away my aaUtohnesat*
the cried. A man .in the prime of life;
famous over the continent, rots and called
with deep voice of poasioc, “Take away that
which one* mode me falsa to my oathl” The
profamor reached hia hands out, and laid in a
teas which stilled the tempest!
V?9!»m 3X&SS***
roots of a tree, found t
nearly four hundred ton
ed tho money among t
than taken aback by the
claiming i w Before this
veetlgatod a tradesman came forward
stated that one night, *'
delusion, he bad gone
money; but when he 1 .
time afterward, be tried In vail
th* locality bo bod setoeted. It
be beard a rumor of th* flndii
elgna that be obtained a clew
transaction was reealiad to''
was aids to bring forward
tasapportof bis
great rellof, tht
stored to him.-St
stances which art of I
tho odd elraunntancee rather 1
money value of the articles tact
A tew yean ago a pa
Poole’s great "Index t
tag the material f
printer*. Th* state of mind
can well be imagined, for "
L over 4,1
^odkrnto might,
owned, furnish an
while the editor*
could best
W
ends