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A Gtftnc* at tho German Situation.
Many ludicrous mistakes are recorded
of the ignorance of European citizens in
regard to the geography of the l’nited
States, as well as oar habits and poculiar
ilies. Most likely Americans likewise af
ford equal amusement to our neighbors
across the water: but if the daily press
and the marine telegraph become more
active than at present, we may be soon
as well acquainted on the continent of
Europe as Maine with Georgia, or Chica
go with New Orleans.
The royal family of Germany, their nf
{fictions, and domestic infelicities have
been as familiar to us for a period cover
ing many months, as were the (Jarfield
family in the heroic struggle with Gui
teau's fatal bullet. Dr. McKenzie’s bul
letins were watched with increasing in
terest, and we were as much rejoiced to
find the aged Kaiser at the historic win
dow as were the loyal Berliners —who
crowded his palace gates every day for a
sight of the royal veteran’s wrinkled face.
But the end came at last, both to the
old Emperor and to “Fnser Fritz; they
are laid to rest with all the Hohenzol
lerna who preceded them.
There are two of the family, however,
who are still with us in the flesh, in whom
the world at large retains an interest,
and they hold to each other the close re
lation of mother and eldest son. The
public has hitherto been strongly im
pressed with the wifely devotion and self
sacrifice *of the one. and the undutifulness
and ambition of the other, in their con
duct toward the late Emperor Frederick.
This royal son. jieir to the German em
pire and the throne of Prussia, has been
pictured as sneeringly watching the red
blood which trickled from his own cut
finger, and publicly wishing it to be only
the hateful English blood that was thus
getting away from him. This nnfilial ex
pression “capped the climax, so to
speak, aiid the reading public on both
sides of the Atlantic blushed with shame
that so unfeeling a monster should be al
lowed to inherit the German crown. In
the same connection the report comes
also that the widow of Frederick, the
mother of William, declines to live in
Berlin, or Germany, since his accession,
will become a voluntary exile to England
or to the shores of Italy. Nobody won
dered that she should be anxious to go.
All this animosity has been hard to un
derstand. In this day of progress and
Christian civilization it is considered
good form to be respectful to parents, at
least in public, whether the parent be a
thriftless ne’er do well, or the Dowager
Empress of Imperial Germany. It was
inexplicable that a father of four chil
dren of his own should publicly slight his
mother, unless he were an Ishrnaelite or
a lunatic. These considerations created
many forebodings for the future of the
German Confederation, once so powerful.
It was impossible to harmonize this
undutiful character with the old Empe
ror’s pride and interest in this perverse
though warlike young William. Bis
mirk, too, was an admirer, and when,
the aged Kaiser was breathing his last
William stood by him to catch the fond
smiles and blessings of his aged grand
sire. His watch, the pocket companion
of the veteran for a half century, was
pressed into William’s hand as a me
mento of undiminished confidence in the
last hour of his life.
Meantime the public saw that Prussia
was never en rapport with William’s En
glish mother. An contraire, it is, and
has ever been, censorious and antago
nistic. This unpopularity was seemingly
unjust. As soon as Frederick was crown
ed she seized the reins of government in
her eager, firm hands. She left the sick
chamber of her sick husband to visit
submerged districts and dispense royal
bounty, but the son and heir to the
throne took no part in helping her.
When her own royal mother, Queen ol
England and Empress of India, conde
scended to make a neighborly visit, the
German people angrily resented the
house-cleaning and general prepa.rat.ions
of her Empress daughter. It became a
question whether it was safe to invite
guests in such very high life, for fear of
fisticuffs at the palace door. There was
stil'l no solution of the strange enigma
afforded in the public newspapers. The
German people were tearful in their devo
tion to Fuser Fritz. They were tenderly
sensitive to his suffering. They were
eager and prayerful that he should be re
ston'd to health as their ruler and king,
but the antipathy to Victoria continued
unabated. They uniformly declined to
love her or adopt her.
Such reasonable dislike reflected heavi
ly on the refinement and cultivation of a
confessedly intelligent people. It was
considered unwise, if not peurile. Pray
ers ascended from American homes for a
restoration of domestic peace, when it
was chronicled that Frederick joined Ins
wife’s hands with those of Chancellor
Bismark when the damps of death were
on his brow, and his eyes were growing
dim to earth elsewhere. It was hoped
that reconciliation would be complete,
that the widow's tears might be shed on
the breast of her repentant sou Alas!
Frederick's body was hardly straighten
ed in the death*chamber before an angry
collision was reported between mother
and son. She forbade an autopsy, and
he ordered it to be made at once. She
was furious that Dr. McKenzie’s rival in
the treatment of her husband’s case,
whom she had imperiously dismissed,
had been selected to do the work. The
general public cried, Monstrous! that a
son should be so hard and vindictive in
the presence of the dead.
The post mortem being finished and
the report rendered, it was shown that
Frederick had died of an incurable can
cer, which, by the Prussian Constitution,
debarred him from the throne. Light
entered into a dark place, and it revealed
the mother’s ambition for herself—ar
rayed against the son’s personal ambi
tion. The surgeon’s scalpel, when it laid
bare the cancer-destroyed throat, also
laid open the moral cancer which ate out
domestic peace in Victoria’s royal family.
The unnatural son had, perhaps, imbibed
his greed for power with his mother’s
milk, as well as the physical taint from
his father's cancerous body by the nat
ural law of inheritance.
The empires reached the goal of her
ambition, but the sacrifice was a fearful
one. For a short-lived promotion she
gave up what neither money or a crown
can ever purchase. Her devotion to her
husband under the fierce, white light
that beats on a throne, resembles per
sonal ambition. She determined to be
empress, to inherit a dowager’s share in
an emperor’s wealth if she sacrificed the
character of her eldest son, aye and her
own self-respect to make sure of her plan.
Dr. McKenzie, a loyal subject of the
Queen of England, was not welcome in
Prussia, for he came as the employee of
the Crown Princess, who dismissed Prof.
Van Bergman without regard to German
partiality. His emphatic declaration of
an anti-cancer disease, was nevertheless
received as the veracious judgment of a
medical savant of unblemished charac
ter. The old Kaiser William thanked*
him in a substantial way for his advice,
but neither Bismark nor Prince William
accepted it, or relaxed the scrutiny of
motives and measures, Dr. McKenzie
may have been mistaken in his first diag
nosis, and rendered an honest report, but
the fact remains, he was convinced of a
mistake long before the public knew of it,
and lie has admitted that he acted for
the security of the German government.
It is obvious that he carried out the ex
pressed wishes of Frederick’s wife, who
deceived her husband with fallacious
hopes of recovery, and excluded her son
and heir to the throne from her political
plans and policy.
Bismark, the cabinet, Prince William
and all in authority, lost respect for such
a schemer in petticoats, whose ambition
would not tolerate the authority of her
first born, when it conflicted with her i; -
dividual promotion. The affliction was
providential from the hand of an Ove. -
ruling* Power. To evade this iron-clad
law in the Prussian constitution would
only deprive her son of a few days in au
thority, at best. To the dying Freder
lck the unknown in the Great Hereafter
was in too close proximity to make the
German crown a prize of such value, to
be obtained at such a sacrifice, and the
widowed empress must forever sit in the
ashes of desolation, when she sees the
bauble rested on such a dearth of filial
duty and affection. Dr. McKenzie’s part
in the matter reflects no credit upon
himself as an intriguer. His loyalty to
English interests should be carefully con
sidered by the Queen of England, for his
inveracity as a medical practitioner de
grades him forever from his lofty posi
tion as an authority in disease. To do
such a work deserves pecuniary reward
from those who were in position to com
pel compliance.
Young Emperor William’s coarse Teu
ton character will further develop, with
out a doubt. He is his own mother’s
son in greed for power. He will never
sink his ambition below any duty to fam
ily or state. Estranged from his mother
and threatened with inherited disease, he
goes upon the throne of the Hohenzol
lerns with nothing but ambition to sat
isfy its nature. If war will appease the
craving, war he will enter into, unless
Bismark is able to show him an outlet to
greater conquests in peace.
Human nature appears to be the same
in hovel and palace, in the crucial test in
both places it will crop out with intensi
ty under the same favorable conditions.
Royality has its failures, and the greater
the height, the greater the fall.
Mrs. W. H. Felton.
Red Hair
How are we to account for the popular
prejudice against red hair? Is it con
nected with the tradition that Judas Is
cariot was red-haired, or is it of earlier
origin? So strong was the sentiment
against it in the middle ages that one of
the chroniclers denounces it as a “burn
ing brand of infidelity.” It may very
well be that the hatred with which Wil
liam Rufus was regarded owed an extra
dash of intensity to the color of his
tawny locks. Not a few famous person
ages, however, have been endowed by na
ture with hair of this fatal hue (which
their flatterers, no doubt, persisted in de
scribing as auburn,) for instance Anne
Bolyn, (Mr. Froude speaks of her hair
flowing loose over her shoulders’*; Queen
Elizabeth, (Sir Richard Baker describes
hers as “inclining to paleyellow ;” Fuller
uses the convenient epithet, “fair”); Co
lumbus, the poet Camoens, and Marshal
Ney. One does not like to think of red
haired poets; but the reader will find
that auburn, which has at least a warm
tinge on it, has not been uncommon
among “the brotherhood of the tuneful
lyre.” Shakspeare’s hair and beard were
auburn, if we may credit the original col
oring of his bust in Stratford’s church,
and Milton’s “hyacinthine locks” were
of a similar color. But Burns' hair was
black, and Byron’s of a dark brown.
The best Lantern ever sold for 75c. at
Wikle’s Drug Store. tf.
& So invalids.
IS TMLBEST
For Young; Infants it ia a perfect substitute
for mother’s milk, often saving life; for the Invalid
or Dyspeptic it is of the greatest value. It is
THE FINEST BABY FOOD,
THE BEST INVALID FOOD,
THE MOST PALATABLE FOOD,
THE MOST NUTRITIOUS FOOD,
THE MOST ECONOMICAL FOOD.
150 Meals for an Infant for 81.00.
A Cabinet photo, of Mrs. Dart’s Triplets—three
beautiful children—sent to the mother of any baby
born within a year. Also a valuable pamphlet on the
Care of Infants and Invalids.
Sold by Druggists. 25c., 50c., 81.00.
WELLS, RICHARDSON & CO., BURLINGTON,VT.
FEETHj MID
MADE WHITE AS SNOW
r,.c--AAA
.V' A J
■ 'i
s x*
V-A * - ijg&k r?
BY USING.
DE-LEC-TA-LAYE
WHITENS
THE TEETH.
13 E-LE O-T A.-L AYE
i
Dr. Calhoun Endorses Delectaiave.
Atlanta, Ga.. October 17. 1 SST*.— Dr. T.
Brocket: My Dear Sir —It affords me pleasure,
after a careful examination of the formula of
your Delectaiave, to bear testimony to its value,
and to state that its curative qualities are be
yond question. 1 regard it as the name implies,
a delightful wash, and can recommend it to the
public. Yours truly, A. W CALHOUN, M. D.
Get a bottle and try it, and you will be con
vinced to its merits. Its taste is pleasant and
ts aroma delightful. 50 cents a bottle.
TSj CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS. iSP
gkSM Best Cough Syrup. Tastes good. Use )B|
in time. Sold by druggists. ’■
I believe Piso’s Cure ra
P for Consumption saved m
fij my life. — A. H. Dowell,
§} Editor Enquirer. Eden- f|
ton, N. C., April 23, 1887. H
The best Cough Medi- I
cine is Piso’s Cure for
Consumption. Children 9
HI take it Without objection. m
By all druggists. 25c. 0
CURE SW HERE ALL ELSEF AILS.
p* Best Cough Syrup. Tastes good. Use ggj
in time. Sold by druggists.
Tlieir RusL.exs Booming.
Probably no one thing ha3 caused such
a general revival of trade at Wikle’s Drug
Store as their giying away to their custo
mers of so many free trial bottles of Dr.
King’s New Discovery for Consumption.
Their trade is simply enormous in this
very va uable article from the fact that it
always cures and never disappoints.
Coughs, Colds, Asthma,Bronchitis, Croup,
and all throat and lung diseases quickly
curtd. You can test it before buying by
getting a trial bottle free, large siz.n $1
Every bottle warranted. 3
The First Symptom* of Death.
Tired feeling, dull headache, pains in
various parts of the body, sinking at the
pit of the stomach, loss ot appetite, fever
ishness, pimples or sores, are all positive
evidence of poisoned blood. N*> matter
how it become poisoned it must be puri
fied to avoid death Acker’s English
Blood Elixir has never failed to remove
scrofulous or syphilitic poisons. Sold
under positive guarantee by J. R. Wikle
& Cos. e o w
ADVICE TO MOTHERS.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup, for
children teething, is the prescription of
one of the best female nurses and physi
cians in the United States, and has been
used for forty years with never-failing
success by millions of mothers for their
children. During the process of teeth
ing, its value is incalculable. It relieves
the child from pain, cures dysentery and
diarrhuea, griping in the bowels, and
wind-colic. By giving health to the
cM’id it rests the mother. Price 25c. a
bottle. tf
There are many accidents and diseases
which affect Stock and cause serious in
convenience and loss to the farmer in his
work, which may be quickly remedied by
the use of Dr. J. 11. McLean's Yoloanic
Oil Liniment. 6-8-3ra
Three hundred first-class Sewing Ma
chines can be purchased of Wikle A Cos.
during the summer months lor less than
their real value. 12-2 t
< •• ■"">
IST E W~© T Y L E S .
PRICES TO SUIT ALL!
West Main Street, Oartersville, Ga. '
NORTH GEORGIA and ALABAMA
—EXPOSITION.^
* TO BE HELD AT *
Rome, Ga., October Ist to 6th Inclusive.
A grand combination of the rich counties of Cherokee Georgia and North Alabama, to go <
the world some idea of the untold wealth of this section
IN MINERALS AND AGRICULTURE.
A SSOO Premium for the county making the best general display. Liberal premiums in
every departmen. Send your address for premium list, circulars, &c., to
lojuhtd. A. W. WALTON, Sec’y, Home, Ga.
DE-LEG-TA LAVE
DELFEMES
THE BREATH.
I I) ON’T GROCERIES AT JONES 4
MON FOR T J
EAST MAIN STREET
DRY GOODS
Grocery House!
Is the place to go for
BARGAINS
In order to make room for an enormous fall
stock we will sell for the next thirty days goods
at greatly
REDUCED PRICES!
We haveon hand a largelotof Gents’ and Boys’
CLOTHING!
That must be closed out at once. JEANS PANTS
in all Styles. Don’t miss this rare opportunity
to secure GREAT BARGAINS. Yours truly,
GEO. W. SATTERFIELD & SON.
bl7-ly
STILESBORO JPO_THE FRONT!
W. E. Packet, Dealer in Gen
eral Merchandise,
Wishes to announce to his many friends and
customers that he will be in the held for 1888 with
increased facilities for handling a big business.
COTTON AND COUNTRY PRODUCE,
He handles nothing but the best Roods at the
cheapest prices and gives nothing but the best
prices for otton an<l all kindsof country produce.
Guanos and Fertilizers.
I will handle the best grades of Guanos and
will be enabled to give the farmers ol this section
the very best terms.
Thanking the people for their past patronage
and hoping for a continuance of tho same, I am,
Yours to command,
W. £. PUCKETT,
Merchant and Cotto x Buyer of Stilesboro.
dec22-ly
IN ADDITION TO OUR COMPLETE
LINE OF
We carry a good line of
Dry Goods,
Men arid Ladies HATS.
We keep the Gainesville Hand-Made
Shoe, the best Shoe in Oartersville.
All goods delivered free.
JONES & MONFORT.
& & „
a ✓ V
SPECIAL BARGAINS
Farm Machinery!
ENGINES, GULLATT GINS,
McCormick Mowers, Thomas Rakes, Sorghum Mills, One-horse Wheat Driils S2O to $35 Two Hoiv
Drills. All guaranteed.
SECOND-HAND OUTFIT.
Gin. Condenser, Feeder and Engine, Cheap. See me when you want any kind of Farm Machinery.
THOMAS LUMPKIN, Cartersville, Ga.
Office with B. F. Godfrey.
BARTOW LEAKE,
File, Life end Accident lump!
Dwellings, mercantile buildings and stocks, saw, planing, corn and flour mills insured at reas*nabl
rates. Gin houses and contents insured in any portion of the county. Best of companies repre
sented. Office West Main street, 5 doors West of/ lie old N. Gilreath corner, 7-26-tiiu
[I DO ]