Newspaper Page Text
VOL. IV. NO. 2G.
f«
Be Sure to Cot Hood’s
M«mparU1a, my child. See that they do not
giro yo« anything eli«. Yon remember it is
ttMUwedMa* *Ukh «Ud maoua so much good a
S»MI»
• Sprang Medicine
Keerty eteryliody needa a good spring modi
rtne nice Hood's Senuipanil* to expel irupvrl
Vtee which accumulate in tho blood during tb*
winter, keep up strength m warm WCSther
comes on, create an appctlto and promote
healthy digestion. Try llood'a SaraaporllU
end yon will be convinced of Its peculiar
merits. It Is the ideal spring medicine—ro
liable, beneficial, pleasant to take, and gives
fed value for the money, fie sure to get
Hood's Sarsaparilla
■sMbyandrngglsts. fl;s!sforf& Vrcparfdonly
by C. I. HOOD * VO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Maes.
IOO Doses One Dollar
KEYSTONE STRETCHER CARPET
O BM|| ,
Psrfcct, Cuykit ail KnM* Strrtch»r lull.
jpDRNEinBD JBTBJCB B ®Till with graw Jwidl^wblcb d rtro in
uCIiO *8 lAK^Q O-D »fl© Cft I^ 1
WttaclaMl/anfavof MI MXU>»lwtwd taartuf ylacAy or wing warring. lever It la
IMkaMto ot m a
P In a natUng complete down hammer, enCiclrnt for
yry o aaa a •orpet. Tb* only
Mretcker that draws the carpet close to tho b^w
wo»rf aad Into tha comer*. . J
Hm-afactared titol ot saaltoabto and wrought lwu,
ktog 3 that wuilaat a Bte time.
to InkiiMl wooden SSt
t on rocri
A Roger*, Warren,
\ ^ ^
«to L. J
7 W"... w w...
,
mm“ " 75.x”! v’n‘
) ,
A . . 0 : . - ’
Tin whkson moLYma book case.
WtT? l-utrMbU'T HaiQirr. AnjvcTAOLa to Loom
t? • or a»v ^
i AiCPtRS PRKSKST.],
flawy . *. INVAI.UAlitE TO
'Bdttor*. vs hq ci«rrrin*n, U.nk.rt, rhfiiritMr
I i M*rrit»nU, Stndrnto, T«ncb«t%
t
and aU who read Rook*.
Cheapesti strongesti best!
’ M*d« of I row, finith.il in hlnck, with hcsutiful gilt
Omtwnctitaiton, it cannot warp, chock, tplit, get out of
«>nl«r, »oW or wow out. T.*ch th.lf, 16 in. touar*. will hold
*6 tin of Appl*to«'a Cyclop; .. told* ator*
Moti in law *p*c« than any other • .tic*.
Wo 1. Ror Tahla, to hold I ti«r of «***. » 10.00
* •» »0, - “ * »* *li»r* ** 18.00
floor/ • • ** ”... 18.00
.JfS. Th* m boat w tire w for general» 4 - itK. . X .. 10.00
.
Wtipptd. «nr*fully packed, on t • —f priogv,
RATlSf ACTIOM GVARAKTT.ID.
tUnatrmtod Itoariiptiw* prk* Calalnga* Hat containing of tetUmonialt Front
powolttoo, notrly 800 Stntlonory nntl
pagw.tent on receipt of S3 cu.
ANUKUSON dc KRUM,
I Bond Street, _ New York, N. Y.’
I BOB’S
EXTBACT
Jr m V }
j
,The Inaportance of purifying the blood
not be OTerciUmaied, for without pare blood
yitweannot enjoy good health. .
Althto nearly every one needs a
to purtty, vitalize, and eoricH
wo oik you to try llood’a
Peculiar a vvmmmi gad buimU up tbo system,
The
of
eureo. II foa have made up root mind to
i 1 -SS ■ 5 E
iq Dollar
ms '
I
' t
Mo. 9.
Won ,‘.-.—’»v - - V
.
LIBRARY,
he Advertiser.
THIS
ADVERTISER,
rUBUSIIKD EviCRT FbIDAT.
ms is mss smsim
FORT G A INKS, GA.
Subscription Rates.
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One Adv.rtUing (ten lines Uatta. less bourgeois**)
insertion....................................Sblrtl square, or
ono j
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Editorial notices, where requested per
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Obituaries must be paid for as other ad
vtrtisemento. •
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‘ AdvqruLmenU for Urs a wfttint
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when needed.
_
WILL Ii< GRAHAM ,
Manager <f R Ait or.
DIRECTORY.
CHUXCHES.
+t
Aaptist Clirurn.-Rev. Z.T. AVenVor, Pas¬
tor. Prnu'hiriK tftindny-school 1st and Zrd Sunday- in each
months Supt. On. m,, J. K, Paul
lin Prayer meeting Thursday even¬
ing*.
1 JMirftiolusT CllUltcn.—Rev J.O. Langston
Vn#tor. Preaching Sunday-school 2nd and 4th Sundays in
#»«): month. 9 a.m. \V. A.
Graham Supt. Ladies’ Prayer meeting Tues
Isy afternoon. Younsf mens’ Pmyer meet¬
ing ing Tuesday Wednesday evening. evening. Regular Prayer meet¬
school PRwnvricnrfiN J. P. H. Guracn. Brown ........... Supt. Pundny
9 a. m.
MASONIC DIRECTORY.
Dari.kt Lodge, Saturday No. 17.—Regular moot¬
ing l*t See., and 3rd 1). F. Gunn, W. evenings. M. T. M
(irown,
Uminx OamcaiNo. _12—Regular
meetings 2nd Saturday evening. "NN. A.
Graham, M. P. * *. „
W. A. Graham Council,No. 22—Regular
mcetin ur itli Saturday evening. W. A. Giu
ham, TIG M.
K of H. Guinea Lodge No, 1887—Regular
meeting 2ml and 4th Tuesday night# W. K
Lightfoot, Reporter. T >1 brown, Dictator
COUNTY.
SrrKRion Court.—H on. J T Clarko judg*
J H Guerry, solicitor. J W Sutlive, clerk
J T McAllister, Nhcritf. Regular term, 4th
Mondayd in Marc h- and Soptember.
Court of Ordinary. —R. T.
Foote, Ordinary. Regular meeting let,
Monday in each month
Coukty Coukt—G. G. Lark
Judsre.
COUNTY COMMISSIONERS.
J. E. Paullin, S. D. Coleman, J. F.
Creol, A. L. Foster, J. N. Bigbio,
Countt Trkaburkr, J. P. H. Brown
Tax Collector, W. R. Harrison.
Tax Receiver, T. B. Davis.
Coronhr, J D Owens.
IRWIN & WARWICK,
ATTORNEYS AT LA W.
'JTWlll Practice In Superior Courts of
I’ataula Circuit. if
J. T. MANDEYILLE,
PHYSICIAN and SURGEON
ttSuOrncB at Ckstral Drug £?t«kk.
O. E. CONE,
BARBER.
«N!u Shop under BINDER'S Pict
nre Gallery.
BHRSS
Central Railroad of Georgia,
Jfofice to Traveling Public:
The best anti cheapest pafcscnecr routo to
NEW YORK and BOSTON
i*via Savannah and elegant Steamers thence
Passenger* before purohatirr; tickets via
other routes would do well to inquire first of
the merit* of tho routo via Savannah, 1 >t
which they will avoid dust and a tedious
all-rail ride. Kates include meal and state¬
room on Steamer.
Round trip tickets will until bo p la-'ed on *ale
Sew Tune York l*t, good to return sails trt-weeklv. October Boston Slet.
.teamens For
*t«amer weekly from Savannah. further
information apply to any agent of this com¬
pany, i or to K T. Charlton, G. I*. A. Savan¬
nah Ga. 0. G. Axdkwox, Agt steam era,
tfrt . Savannah, Go.
DON’T SUFFER PAIN!
da Put on a Deanes _ , Rheumatic .
Plaster-Your Druggist keeps
them—If he dent send us 12
send%oucne a MmD!rf?nY W ^
one sample sent to one address,
as the regular price is 25 centsX
mended K by p,a all ^ er * r ? < t 0m *
and are used good the physicians, largest
in
Hospitals For in America.
Rheumatism, Neuralgia,
Pleurisy, Pains in Lungs, Chest*
id ? e i) rS V l £[ er 0r St0fn *
arch thoytake hold at * once and
cure effectually. Plaster. Full Be directions and
on everv sure
Dane's Rheumatic Plasters.
Mfldft Only by
The Dean© Piaster Co.,
21 A 23 Dey St., N. Y., U. S. A.
OOM’T SUFFER PAIRS
J/
FORT JANUARY
A Domestic Homily.
In 1800 Esther ti e daughter of
a wealthy land owner in the western part
of Virgiuia, was sent North for a year or
two of “finishing” at a fashionable
schooL When she returned she couhl
play on the guitar and sing ballads very
sweetly; could parse in “Parudise Lost,”
bound the chief countries of Europe and
name the planets, and she was on expert
in wax and filagree work.
She married af.ei^hreo years, and her
ino.ladge of domwtic .ff.tawo.wch
that she at ouce^ook charge of a large
household 61 white and bl-ck servants,
^h° m B he governed with baill afid tact.
Tho establishment was almost com
plcto within itself. Weaving, spinning,
tailoring, the lna.tmg up of every h»nd
of garment, tho coriug of meat* dairy
work, the preservation of every kind of
food were carried on under her eye. Bhc
w*aa a n expert nurse, and capable of pre
'""Wng for children and sl.vcc in simple
ailments. Without “culture,” as it is
]{no*-n now,, her manners were fine,
*
stately, . . yet . .... lhey those ..
gracious, were
natural to a woman of kindly feeling
who bus long had tho habit <3f anthori
ty.
Her granddslighter, another Esther,
bora fifty years later, came home from
college familiar with countless facts and
lines of thought of which the first Es¬
ther never heard. The younger woman
was skilled in the 'higher mathematics
and in four languages. But her house¬
hold. when she married, was left in the
care of ill trained, paid servants, She
did not know how tho food which they
spoiled should be cooked, Y*’hen her
child whs ill, she could not spread a
plaster or fasten a bandngo, but was
forced to leave him entirely to tho
Her clothing was bought ready made;
nothing in her home boro cvidcnce'of
her skill, taste, or care, With all her
cleterners fltul knowledge, she lacked
some ability, some skill, which gave the
older woman a definite place and power
in her generation.
In how many families would these true
pictures find a place ? lu the days of
our grandmothers education for women
was limited. They found an ontlq£ for
their intelligence and cn&gy in house¬
hold affairs. When the chances of edu¬
cation were given to (he wolneB of the
next generation, they alighted the hum¬
ble domestic arts as menial and nnintel
’4 I 4 ‘
Within the !a4 few years tho mest
U>oHghtiul women aro turning back to
them again. They insist that the train¬
ing of their dauglittrs shall mako them
familiar with the sick room as well as the
laboratory, and teach them to use kitch¬
en utensils at least as skillfully as the
brush and paletto, In the public schools
of some of our largest cities sewing and
cooking aro taught to the girls, and in
several of tho higher class of private
schools courses in nursing are given.
The Companion would not deter any
young girl from taking the highest
course open to her in classical, scientific
or artistic education; she may sometimes
find use for such knowledge. But every
woman sometime in her life requires a
knowledge of home-keeping and the care
of the sick. While she seeks tha kind of
education open to both her and her
btfethei, let her not despise that neces¬
sary to her as a woman only.—Youths’
Companion.
-■> A. v
The Haunted Hole.
4
One night about fiftV years ago a
brute moMer was committed at a lonely
place ou the high road between War
wick and . Stretford . iipoa-Avon, . v^ntes .. a
Loudon T . con-esiiondent. , . The next morn
the murdered , , touudlj.ug ,,....
mg manwes
by the roadside, bis heed much msngled.
resting ma small hole m the biuik. The
ai.sns.sins, two in number, wero shortly
afterwards discovered, and they were
hanged at Warwick for their crimo.
From that day to this tho hole where
in the dead man’s head reposed remains
unchanged, bomu ter bow often,, may
be Wild nivrhctlurby the wash ofbesvy
raius or by stones and leaves that
mAy happen to cast into it as they pass,
it is soon found to l>e again empty. No
one takes care of it. No one knows
whether or by whom it is guarded.
FiU it at nightfall and yon will find it
empty in the morning. That is the lo
cuUselief and allirmatiom The place is
hrtnntffvL
This soot is about two miles out ol
stratfo ^ a ^ notJbtMUromt
of Charlcoie ,r park^ 1 I looked otthis hole
. ,
Ta by the poeto. riAom eomjJictty with tta
concealment of enme, and bn.rnte with
her curse the places that are linked with
the shedding of.bl«*^L You will recall
that strong line m Tom Hood’s poem of
“Eugene Aram": .“For a stiShf rniahty wind
bed siejii tlkiiilrfe, and dkd
wa3 bare.’’-Cincinnati Enquirer.
______________
■
“Girls are no goo*l anyway,” said lit¬
tle Jonnie; they ain’t got any sense.” ,.
“How’s that V asked Merritt.
“Hecaaic,” was the reasonable reply,
— their stockists if” get* Mg,
' R ■ l_ 1-1 j. ... 1 M -v J Ilf 1 *» „ J>
.
haugiugtUem up ’-^wlge.
U. 8. Grant Heat Sam Hill,
Tlio visit of Hr. Samnol Hill to
this city last vreek is an illustration
of what small things may change
tho cuuror.t of a man's whole life.
Mr. Hill is now a resident ot liar*,
rion county, Indiana, but was for
many years a compositor on tho
Courier Journal,land lived in this
city. He was for a long time the
schoolmate of U. S. Grant,-and was
a competitor with him lor tho ea
detahip at West Point, which the
latter won.
Mr. Hill was born in Clermont
county, Ohio. Ho was very inti*
mate with young Grant, and the
two occupied about tho sanio rela¬
tive position in their classes. When
Grant applied for tho West Point
cadetship, Sam Hill also soughtthe
prizu, and was such a strong com*
petitor that it was at first thought
ho would receive tho appointment.
Congiessman Thomas Hamer final¬
ly decided in favor of Ulysses,
howcVer, and that boy became a
great soldier and the other sank
bank into the obscurity from which
he had striven to emerge.
Tho unsuccessful applicant rc
mained at school for u time, and
then became an apprentice in the
offico of a newspaper at Batavia,
Clermont county. He learned the
art thoroughly, and soon bccafuo
one of tho best compositors in tho
stale. Ho also took ehargo of the
circulation, and when the paper
was issued would throw a sack fill
cd with copies of his papers across
his horse’s back, and thus deliver
tho paper to his country subscrib¬
ers. There woro no daily mails
then, and this was a great stroke of
enterprise. office Lalerj Mr. Hill drifted
to office and worked
sevcarl yearn in this city on the
old Courier, and Journal, and the
Democrat. Then he bought a
farm in Northern Michigan, but
the climato was too coJfl, and ho
moved to Indiana, driving all the
with his wife in a *
Mr. Hill retains his love for his
early craft, and nays ho means to
work x month on the Courier Jour¬
nal in the spring, just to recull old
times. lie docs not regret that
Grant beat him for that* cadetship,
for he now thinks he wouldn’t hfiYS;
made so great a soldier,anyhow,~
Louisville Cor. to Now York Sun.
- ^I*S ^
How to Carve,
Poultry rcpuiies moro careful
curving than anything else brought
to the table. A chicken roasted
may be removed from tho dish to
tho carver's plate; and as fowls are
generally served in couples, this
does not disarrange tho economy
of tho table. The fork should be
placed on the centre of tho breast,
and tho knife be carried down
along tho side. Then, inserting
the knife under the leg, cut down¬
ward as far as the tail, and separa¬
ting the.ligature near the point,
when, will jerking the leg back, the
parts give way. Next sepa¬
rate tho wing with the edge of tho
knife, and carry it through the
other side, when tho wing is easily
detached. Separate the other
wing and leg in the same way. The
wishbone is easily removed by in¬
serting the knifo undor it and
bonding it back. Remove the neck
bones bv putting the fork through
them and wrenching them careful¬
ly away so as not to break them.
Tbo breast roast next bo separated
by cutting through the ribs. Turn
tbo fowl back iipurords on the plate
nnd cut it up. ' '' •' , ■
Tnrk.y may be sorted Ih’o same
« b »t th*
breast is the most delicate part and
affords many “ g°°« good alices BGLCS, these tnese
should t!im ,|.t bo cut lenglhwi.se, and with
thin nrnnnrtimvt* S T“nd ita
band a first When
t„ rk c y is lnrge tbo whole ol tho
breast may be served in such sli
CC ^. . > • _ ’ ’The
from eiU tl.e*
leg is removed by cutting, then the
wing.. Ducklings arc carved in the
same as
are • <raracd in
rour.pieces, h dividing each pcco
alf * Many persona cut them
through , theimicdle length.wi&e and
b^lf lhe hira to each person.
c roit rreo ^F rMS.
, .
*»
‘ A Kare Col f* ‘
We have seen a Confederate sil
ver coin belonging to Roberts &
Collins, of this city, that has sev
they r ^ lime8 ^ into cen writtc - n up gUi 8,nco sbv
possoesion It is
era 1 years ^foadLwNf ago. dared 18£1
^e M*
Orleans mint before the mint was
cl<wed The other tr.ree bare been
heard of, one in Meriwether coanty
in this g tatCj ono in Louisiana, and
tbo ether was sold not long since in
Jjfcw York City at suction for $800.
A Brooklyn man coming this w ay
Messrs. Roberts & Collins
5200 for their euriosity, but they
refused to take it. They paid $15
for it. Tho coin is a half dollar.
has the Goddess of Liberty on ono
side, on tho other, the wreath is a
stalk of cane and a cotton stalk, the
bars and Mara of the Confederacy
,nftC ^ 1 4 wi»h a
top P 0 '.‘h"'aqb't«m!.l;b«rt of it. Carfcrsviiio (HaT y . «»P
*«•«»
A Family ofBlectlcrs.
/ *
There is a certain family in Bos
ton which .offers from a mvstorU
ous hercdit.ro corse oflhc sort ono
rends .hoot in hnir-o;ov.t.ng sto.
ries of the supcrnntnral. Tho first
son bofti to every daughter bleeds
to death
The story of the manner in which
tho nfilietien originated cannot, of
course, be vouched for. It has ho do
with a wicked great great-grand
mothel, by opening who murdered. of his veins rich undo
ono with u
poniard tho old in gentleman’s order to gel possession wealth.
of vast
The ghost of the dcec.Sed suhses
qaently lous appeared and to tho nnserupu.
niece annonneed in hoi.
low .tones appropriate to tho tomb
tho dismal prediction that for all
time iioneefortli the eldest male
ehiid of every girl in her fatniiy
should die by bleeding.
So much for tho explanatory fra
dition. Tho lact is that for many
generations tho Crockeit family of
Charlestown—which is a part of
Boston-and viciaity lias been pur
sued by an hemorrngic Nemesis.
Tho first son horn to evary daugh
ter, even to remote cousins, - inva
riably bleeds to death. All other
members of the Crockett tribe are
exempt from the mysterious lroub
lo. lint the method of Ibis' inhevi
ted curse is so well known U,at each
female Crockett is prepared, on the
arrival of her initial boy, for the
that is bound to ensue.
The first little cut, or oven serateb, signal
tho infant experiences is the
,i'or a jinuic. Bundagcs possible, aro applied
as woiiid quickly treated as and the
is with a prepara
tion of iron in tho form of a pow
dor. It is a narrow squeak in such
cases chance always, bat there is a good
of recovery withtn eight
days if tho thing id lakcn in time.
At tho end ol that period Hid pa
tient cither gets well or dies from
loss of blood
t Por such is- the manned of the
(bleeder’s complaint. He is sure lo
he attacked in time preeieely.tho during same
way every his after
life that his skin is seriously
scratched. On occasions ol tho
sort ho must adopt of immediate
measures remedial die. Hy iLry ex
TT
i . » "''f" untoward 1 ';
,accident, which causing physical, a flow of blood
no » art can stop.
So lar not a single .ono ot tho ties
lined victims has escaped the pen>
ulty. Mv. The oldest one now living
is a Surratt, of Melrose, who
has been accustomed whon he
wanted a tooth pulled to revise his
will, visit his relatives, and bid
them all good-bye, as though it
were likely to bo forever. Life is
an extra hazardous task when jou
aro a blocder. Thus it happens
that eldest sons of tho Crockett
family, maternal direct side, and collateral on the
are found lo bo en¬
gaged in gravo^digging and other
harmless avocutions, which aro not
likely to occasion incidental hurts,
i A curious story, is it not? And
yet the Writer begs lo offer his per¬
sonal assurance that it is true in
every respect*—New Orleans B icas
yune. * ^
---»* f — ' -;
A Romance of tlio War.
A . ^ n t cma f ^ from r ... Missouri, . who ,.
. ‘*W b "?=5‘ tells tbo Ba..i.
18 In on >
ta01 ° American correspondent of a
1 omawtie incident Ibat fell under
" s ab W T a‘ oaWas ‘ cra Hisson
About for, y mile, east of Kansas
Oitv , anff ana neer near the uic linle iittio villn. village o nf ox
i Vingsv * ,j| 0 in . Jphnson ' county, V
there #• lived n• a. man named , Harris, n
j'SLfSfc ^ ,® f ‘7® “ le ,‘*
f in ow that people woro Mitsouri. permitted to Mve
part of QuantrcII
rocral 1 “ d P 10 ® 1 of hi S ^'grated
^ 0(^8 . mL _ , fff . 1 Ponl'r
la «|j 8 L-aiai,t athlotic mns man
of. £ quiet demeanor, but | great conr
. Quantrell ^, nt d him one
ofhi8bcst mcn . He al)(J %,■
Hnrrii met and fell in Yove Sh ft
was a determined of
slr0 ng physique, p' and she, resolved
lQ marr y orter and share hin for
tunes ih the saddle* She did go,
ami was a sort of daughter of thc
regiment to Quantrell’s command
during one entire summer of their
filling Kansas and raiding oq the Missou
r< and borders She endur
\ n d d! \ ngciH
of ono of tho most reckless i form*
ofga^rnBa waifaye ever-known,
and b escaped d with her husband un
»'™ - When the war was oxer
‘ b «y »™‘ » eelrfprnis, where
Porter fell.rnto . xS profitable bum
”«*« and a fortune, and today
that same Eliza Harris and Si For
ter are in Paris looking alter the
educates of their children.
ls f n< : of tbe romances ft i
the Quantrell command that has
never been published.
-- ■ *■»«» - . -
TLo Pawnee Indians have be
*
come so civilized , that , most ... of the
bucks "weAf paper collars, the
. ‘
'' b ' and
a 1 .®. estebmg oa to
eon^ 8 ^slang
__ .
Sons Of Presidents.
~
•
The recent visit of Russell Har
. , l ll,,s , , . , h *‘»p" A d . ,
riaon ? °".S ? 8 ."'>"'>»
lnU ' ro!l,, » S™?' 1 ’ *> uoat lhe " on ‘ “*
“ on wb ® wuhtn the , last twenty
- vcara have £con president, ot th.s
. The finyit boys have,
toufltr y*
perhaps Cosiness been moro prominent in
circles than tho ; son. of
other presidents. Jess, is now In¬
Son hrancsco engaged ,n mining
enterprises, making oonsiderahlo and is reported to U. bo S.
money. known
Buuk , ’ A ha 1 ' f c .»“ °mmonly U lad d on-n to farms ns
< IIo
In £" triad , lileraturo in the
mnnagoment of tho Cosmopolitan
divides -tagazino, hin but gavo between it up hia and now
t,me farm
ncaI acar ‘ the ^ aslungton K.ver side and drive ins in homo this
ai -'; Col. hiod Grant is manag
,n . his . mother a cslato and doing
some newspaper lar °' wntnvg-rcmmis- d,C1
aa "* os a 8 '’' J°“'" al
Was h'ngton. President Arthur s
* on t Alan > '= not yet settled down
to b " 51 " ass . hut is a quiet, able
J' oun f Iaan “? d ml1 n, “ ka !l 's mark
on w° Iheso days.
^ °hh C. Ilays and the Gat-hold
, hoys, Harry A, and Jamos It., are
hievolnnd, hvmg p easantly and The qu,oily Gaifields in
Ohio.
have formed a law partnership un
dar tho na ”' a °* Gnrfiold * Gal-field
l lban bo J ^ «™ d a!t o.ng P? 0 i very ad woll-bcttoi- who
fenonUy ied Miss -. Mason, lives ,
man
n plossant house on Wmdsoray
™”“' ' vh,ch run9 -Case Ito
son avcnaa noxt nortb of Ea ’
c 1 Jamca It. lives with Ills
Cleveland ™,°" ,0 , r m , Uaator on the . ; train “ ,,d , in . r the ' ,, do8 morn- lnt0
‘ n S aad f?°f a <>»‘ •» ‘ho afternoon,
r ,a Ga I'"oh‘ 8 wore ■recently assign
ad b y Jad S° N ? bi ,°> t0 dc, ?"l “
man m tho crlmmai . court. At tho
,r ' s, > J a mosputtho questions.to the
*' lne,!l<!8 aad lIa ‘ r >' lodk ,,0 ‘ c8 ;
lh ,° ”? an was oent “over the road,’
, Dat 110 3'. oun h' -twyers claimed
‘hat , , the prisoner deceived them all
"found and^misrepresented h,s
cas “ c V jb c '°l'f Hayes tbo l is !’ ,al a hacliolot. , can ! 0 "P* IIo „
• “croury and treasurer of
Na ‘"; nal C * rb »" tampan)’. "" d
m a steady and substantial huaioess
” an ’ He goes into society about
< a M-'s*
and is a member of llio first .city
t & mounted company, eom
* of 80m0 0 f the best /yo young S
mon in cit T ,, 0 No r
Q ral) hic
Negroes as Soldiers.
»•
I do not think Europeans learn
drill as quickly as the Bausto or
tho Zulu. It is a-tonishifig fo eoc
the zeal, the undisguised interest
and application these savages bring
to bear upon all military lessons
given to them; writes Lord \vol
scley, in tho Fortnightly Boviow.
They take the utmost prido in be-*
ing soldiers and iu acquiring any
art or drill or exorcise connected
with tho management and handliiBg
of arms, or tho movement of armed
bodies. Thero seems to be some¬
thing in the disposition and genius
of tho common sipek from which
they come, some hereditary bias in
their brain, in their very blood
which fits them for tho easy acqui**
sition of a soldier's dutkss. And
yot raony 0 f t ilw0 races who so
drill, qa^'T etc., "cqu.ro cannot an be ycellenco taught any iu
; "
mechanical handicrah; indeed, man
loarn . lo . draw s >
v can never evon a
Iiaa -
' The African in our West India
rogitnciHs has ulwgys displayoti
that childlike Affection for and frm
pHcit reliance upon the officers
wh ° trcatc ' 1 hirn wel, » which is ‘ 80
marked a feature in tho character
of the negro slave. His obedience
to orders, especially ' ’ when a „«try *
'vas remarkable. , Many in
amusing „ mn ,
t 510 **' 08 on this point wero current
at Government House w hen I
was at Coast Ca 3 tlo. A
vious governor, finding that his na
livo serva nts were given to robbing
daily carry ng away, w } . n _ *
d]cs of thin S 8 from hls kitchen, had
orders given to tho sentry before
his door that no ono was to boal
i OW ed out carrying any parcel with
fiirn y erv Tn sbortlv hurry\o afterward consult ih«
governor, I a hbs
llic t justice, put some paper, into
, dispatch box house. ttr.tako with bim tq
tho'judgc's He reckoned
w5l houtbi* host, however for ihe
gentry, sSanding in front of him
with bayonet at tho chartrc would
not allow him to pass with the
offending r dispatch i box. Tho J, govern
or lAons rate and ur Snvcn d Lh t
he himself who had the. 01 -
dcr, but all to no purpose, for in
lhe ^ aaint and car; o a8 Kibbcrish
which these men speak, and empba
sizing his words m a tery deter
mined fashion with hi- bayonet,
the sontry fstid that his “copral”
bait told him not to allow any ono
witlt a bttndio to pass, anti the
wa^ bis law.—Ex.
ONE DOLLAR A YEAR;
Wan' Night Garments*
Whon the air is oold and tho
weather tiiclemeui it is the custom
to wear garments oF v oxtra, thick -
ness and warmth, andMo sit w>uml
wiring takes tiros. But on going to feed,
wnat placo? In nin*>iY-nine
cases out of ono. hundred, p^isopic
pass from the warm living rooinSU*
tho chilly bed roofivs. As if tho\
sudden ch/»ngo from extreme heat-*- V
4
for there Cnn bo littlo doubt that
what with tires, gas and insufficient,
ventilation, broathing people aro in th« habiS
of an atmosphere tU#
temperature ol which is considor*t>.
bly higher than it should bo—to
cxcossiv’o cold is not tuffieientlv
absurd, they proceed to- divest
themselves of their several wariu
garments to garb themselves In
thin linen night-shirts, and to corw
sign their heated bodies to the cool¬
ing influence of uusympfithetio
sheets! Conventionality has hab«i
ituatod ono to tho custom, but a
really serous contemplation of It
cannot fail to mako tbo utter nb*
surdity of the custom clearly apv
parent, Tho
Chinese* from whom many,
usdul lossons have been learnod by
more civilized nhtions, can giVg mi
a wi'inlclo on this subjoct. John
Chinaman Biceps in itc same kind
of clothes that be wears in tho day*
timo, the easy and flowing
to ho is addicted
this without causing inconvouiV
tho Western latter nations respect, arc but not mill iivvojd uM
:
night-shut bo quite possible t>-* rcplaedfl v<J
nt pioscul in
which, ^
some garment a«M uBj
warmth, was equivolant ■'
oral distinct uvlicles ef ol
coDstitutriug the working foreigil
worn by day. Dwellers ili flail*
countiies invariably sleep in
ncl garments, and tbo backwoods^
man wraps himself in u stouLwooM
en blanket and defies the clemoiUiJ
They aro sensible. The hum a
frame should'undoubtcdly bo clothfl YToo®
cd in woolen garments j tiftf
is a bad conductor of boat. , Envoi
oped in flannel the body mantaim*’ o?
a normal tomperuturc, winch is
tho greatest importance. No soon-,
or does tho temperature fall than,
tho action of tho various functions
becomes inpaifed, tho nerves get
out of gear, and tho wholo system
suffers disorganization.—Health.
►»•»
A. Moileru Miracle.
Tho ministor who ought to bo
asked to offer tho prayer at tbo ‘ ItlN
auguralion itev. of Bonjam»n and LoVi,
is Dr. John 13. Cookmam m*
methodist pastor, now atsiion^d
New his father, York Lev. city,- 0* and (E-orgo this becat^B
man, then ehaplmi. <
luted the ptayci nt lUmsonB Urn ifl
tion of Grandpa
century man sailed ago. for Europo Dr. GecrBj ttvfl
ter Harrison’s inangu ioog*lS i utiS <
I ’resident, onc'ot a havo^
lantie vessels which
disajipeared from tho face bohil I S;;.
sea leaving not a trace
will bo remembered by o!« '7L
d.elphians as a remarkable nfl
the His mos’t sons, spiritual Bov. Alfred and saintly CooTPUB^
of
men, and John, of whom I havo
•spojfen, will be remembered
younger Philadelphians as equafqi.
remarkable / each in his. way. Dr,
John Cookmnn wa3 here a week or
two ago Now assisting York Bev. A. B. Simp#*
son ries of of mootings in holding a son
to promote great*,
or conservation to the lilo of faitl*
r among professing Christians. Cooicman/ In
response to a request Dr.
who is now in the ful! flush of n)- ;
bust health, told the story of hi«
diviao healing four years ago this
month, when ho wag a physical,
wreck, having suffered from valvu¬
lar disease of tho heart till his phy-a
sicians hud pronounood him.incui*N.
able, and ho lay at tho very gate
ot death.
One night tho physician then atw
tending him told him that there re-,
mained but ono remedy, tho most
petfcfgoj known to medicine.
that failed hef could do no more for
him. It was tfifed, and it failed.
The physician gavo him up fo* dead
at midnight. In tho gray of tha.
morning, while ho lay all alone iu
his sick room, Dr. Oookman heard
a voice—tbo voice, be firmly believ¬
ed, of Jesus Christ, saying to bim j
“ thy lam thy Healer, thy Sanctifier Frdsa
Saviour and thy Lord."
that moment ho got bdttor, improv¬
ed constantly until he was perfect*,
ly well—-without recourse to medi¬
Christ’s cines or physicians, by simply taking,
delphia Record. healing faith.—Philas
In Patterson, Pa., ono day lasts.
week, the wife of a farmer .fenced
ed m gaming entraneo to a private
p c, n mi«liniy r ^ !ln S' mom room ' her0 her iipr E h wband ikend
^ ,ost several handed dolLars at
cards. Tbo husband, at the mo*,
mentofher entrance was just waV
ererrm? Uvc last of his money haZ Tho
VVOman Up0n learn,n « P in Ht rt how
dollars her out, ,
spouse was
made * demand upon tho bank and
tbo amount was quickly handed
over to her. Sho tbon took her
leave requofted and the follow. husbandpolitely Tne
to argu»,
ratal made by tbo wile with tho
(ramblers was taut they must pay
up or stand* an exitm/e,—E;jfi
: