Newspaper Page Text
COtTNTY « Vtemwmnni
.A-'* ’ THE DODGE JOURNAL.
VOLUME V.
PROFESSIONAL CAROS.
O. C. SMITH,
ATTOB NEY AT LAW,
McVILLE. U\.
S|>r29- 85 ly
E. D. GRAHAM, JR.
ATTORNEY AT LAW
AND
HQI.ICITOli IS EQUITY,
BAXLEY. GA.
apiilH-tW ly
DR. J. B. MITCHELC,
PHYSICIAN tad SURGEON,
Offer* his proftMCnn d a.-vi.-.-s to th pe.tpit
of Do in* oonn'v. OWc.- at, t| M i-i-hi m «• of
B II. Harielt. C’d'a p umptl.’ auetnWd to, il.y
or night. Jt»ly27-ly
DR. J. 111. BUCHAN & SON.
pii Klims m mam
EAST si AN, GEORGIA,
/iFI’EB Ihtcr profe«*eonal lerviae* to the p‘ t>*
»* >niith"t, phi of -li* immediate md mirroiinling
o o i if th* other fin 11* fuun 1 *t
thetr cfll e a; a ,r ilm ■, AI a dl« promptly st
ten td ' ay or ti ght. I’dti ii(r nt a uisianon
Vis All it'd chron hy p-e kI contract.
n un I p iValu dl*i'u*u», el>her of
mule or fclinic, a ,pecUlty. No chaigv for
tviiiKiil'atinii. It I,.- lattio, *rn I vamp for 1m
tn*d ate reply. A 1 oomnltation* nnd h tti r*
pr.va e. A good .upplv i.f drn.'«an* kept con
Mmly on h ii 1, Inc.inlliif ail of the n w reni >
dl(*. H»lil2-tf
W.F. FAIN,
Fashionable Barber,
KASTMAN, (JEOROIA.
Hsvinz run v' l my ft-ck '»the front room*
of llie t*» 1 'ill . k ii iwn ** (} ny'* -how nil >p, I
s»k * coii'ni'i of tlie pui.lii' patron tgc.
E»»y ehiir-, c> n towvD, *li*ip ii/.tk ami
pnr'trulsi 1 HlOaitii.U B*»H '('l. Ill r • lifting Hi
th* I it«,r *( 1 . I II'. 1 Inx'lin^ *hop < f the t iwu.
OivonwftCRl. W. F. F»i3.
melt 28 C.
1*1 JTII Kit A. II \ LU
ATTORNEY AT LAW 5
KASTMAN, GA.
PrzetUw* in du Mint* and Fed rid Comt*.
Half f'»C III id, voice.
Office dll 2 I II o ' i n my Isic.'l building* on
Will Ra 1 o id A vi ii i n iv 17.('nio,
DR. J. D. HZRRMAN
IMtACTITIoNKIt OF
Medicine and Surgery.
OOlufl at. th" (Mv In'll t S! ire of U-rimni ,V
Htrrman. lie* d- n ■ u nder I* A\"line . n I
County lin 'h7-:i i *tr.* t. K i- r ii i k ii i i
*pri 1,
HARRIS FISHER, IA. D.
I’liysiriiu, Vuv”-o.i m\ An-.whrr.
0.11;* at "L i*‘m 11 D"tig Sinro" nn lUihnal
Av i mi '. It '*i I ii • v irii r Cliiti'ch S' r and
Fifth Are II I K mm I'l, < i t l.eti
DR. J.C MONTGOMERY »
1
J
CUAUNCKY, GA.
Chronic Diseases of Women, Impo
tency, Sterility, and nil private diseases,
•wered nil hours, day or night.
MONEY LOANED
On Farms and Town Property,
IN BIHH AND AUJOl.VtNO (’Ot’NTtF.8.
ELLIOTT ESTES.
fiO’J Cherry St., Macon, Gn.
July 13-ly
EHT-A.BL*ISIi ED.
OLD and RELIABLE
--SALE AND LIVERY STABLES.-
A Ur|;« Stook of p’orsas and Mulos
Kopt Constantly on Ucnd. From tho
’ Chtap to Tho £-7 High'Priced.
& M. WATERMAN ^
Hawkinsville, Ga.
-As w« procure furnish our supply diicct from the West in Carload lots, we are prepared
nt nil times to saw-mill ami turpmUino firms with first-class Mules at tho
lowest Market Rate*. WE MAKE A SPECIALTY IN THIS TU \1)E. Informa
tion, or orders by mail will receive prompt attention.
—
HENRY COLEMAN.
Dry Goods, Clothing, Boots & Shoes.
HATS AND CAPS,
SADDLES, BRIDLES, CROCKERY WARE
Highest Market Price Paid ior «
/ Country Produce.
P Hides a Specialty.
HFRAILtlOAI) AVENUE, July 13th, 1887.
SAW MllL, CORN MILL, FLOUR HILL,
t
I’ *
II
rJf
f
"Vater Wheel,Steam Engine or Mill
i
V •Fir T FO )l|OET WK Supplies CAN TO BEND SAVI of FOR YOU Any OUR LARGE MONEY Kind. CATALOGUE !
* Mill tn America and Prices ow. Now is the time to buy Let u
A. A. BeLOACfA Founders and Machinists, Atlanta, til
■ t 2 -KM jiW-tCTi
V '
tayannali, Florida and Western
RAILWAY.
WAYCROSS SHORT LINE.
Standard (All trains of this rood are rnn by Central
Time.]
TIME CABO IN EFFECT NOV. 13, 1887.
Passenger follows: trains on tins road will run daily
an
Woil India Fast Mail.
ar.A!> now*. ltEAii vp,
7 (SI am I.v.....Havamialt.....Ar 12 23 i> m
12 30 pm Lv.,. ..hicksa , villa.... Lv 7 30 a in
4 40 p m Lv......haii for I......I.v 1 15 n in
9 10 p m Ar.......Tampa.......Lv 8 10 p iu
Plant Steamship Lina.
Timm. Monday and 1 ( -.Janipa.. T .. BID . ,Ar jg Thun, and
Ttnsidsv ...pm and • un pln
( Ar ... .Key v ... West..Lv , (Wed and
Friday, VVednes.aiid .p m f -, s , t <p)n
Hat.....a ( f A Havana. „__ Lv . ( Wed. and
m ”
Pullman Buffet Car-, to «nd from Now York i
and Tampa. |
New Orleans Express. i i
7 0(1 am I.v...... . .Ha v;u mail......Ar 7 54 pm j
8 42 am Lv........... Jump.. .Ar H 1C pm
9 SO .
am Ar .......W» ven »ws. ..I.v 505 pm ! .
)1 28 aiu Ar.... ..Callahan,.. fJ P m I
12 noon Ar ... . JuekHonville. L v 4 00 pm |
7 8') am i.v,... .Jacksonville. _Ar 7 45 pm
10 10 mn Lv.......\Vuy ero.-t*......Ar 4 iiTJuu
12 04 pm Lv.......Vald kmta.. i ;*v oral <6 **0 pin
12 84 (till Lv..... (JuitniHii.,. |‘ v i !2 plM
1 22 pin Ar.....Tlcniaevillo. -------M., 1
-------
' ' ,m >Ar......»‘‘"bridge......Lv 11 25 am i
4U4 tV.!^3i 1 I
Fill
vill* mid New York. («> O ami from .Tseksonv lie I
and New Oil *n* via iVnsueda.
East Florida Express.
4 3 40 20 pm A l!V.'.'.'.V... WayuroMi....... Jcl'iip. .'...'..Lv Lv 10 9 53 74 am
pm r...... rui
7 45 pin Ar.....JaekiMxivl la.....Lv 7 :v> bid
T»rS 4 15 pm Lv......Jacksonville.....Ar 9 45 am
30 Lv\7.:~Vay,;r Ar.......Dupont....... 1 m.Tr~Ar« 35ii5
8 pm J.v 5 3d am
‘3 25pmL^‘...."Lake Citv.~.. .Ar tiMSam
746 pin Lv.:'.':'. OahTcsviii;... “AMO WUm
0lk -•■■Ar 7 10am
8 40 urn Ar.'.'... Lv .. Ditiiont i.v \r 5 25 am
i0 55 pm Thoniasvi'l ..... 8 25 am
1 22 an. Ar........A I .any....... Lv 125 am
Montgomery ami Nasl.v,!...
Albany E< ? ren.
pm V ...... H 'vam.ah......Ar (i jo nn.
,nn* t
_7 90 »m Ar...... ..Alanui.!!!!! !Lv 7 05pm
12 in am Ar..... W.ivcio-h ......Lv 12 Id am
7 25 am A.-........Inckwuiviuu. ...I.v 7 (id pm
7 00pm Lv.......I.,ek-.mvi'h.....Ar 7 25km
1 05 am I.v.......M’aycr h*. 7 'Aril 3 *lo .pin
2 30 mn Ar Jk . .. . Put out -i ’.” ..I*v 10 pm
7 1 (I II 111 A 1 . . Liv~OifeT” ■
IIM an Ar.....0*iucavlll>*,
io 45 mu Ai .,.Lake Citv......Lv 3 25pm
2 55 inn Lv.. Dupont .........Ar « 45 pm
(1 30 am Ar.., ...Th"in asv: ille......I.v 700pm
VI 40 am Ar... -----Alb any... ...Lv 4 00 pm
Hi op* at all retcnlur stations. I'ullman sleep¬
ing nah car* to and from Jacksonville and (Savan¬
.
Jssup Express.
3 45 pm Lv......8ivatinuh......Ar 8 30 am
ti 10 pm Ar....... .Jeanp........Lv 5 25 am
Hto ( w at all regular and ting atatioim.
Fallmsii Buffet (’or* Jieksonville to Coneln
nati and through coach.-* Jacksonville to t'lmt
'“X «'"l'».v.lm.h. „ ......... ' "
*111.. Ttciod*
Tin oiigt. sold to r 11 point* hy rail ami
M'eamship .......•«}*. ...................... cum , n I Ikui,checked
r th* and section*
sconmd at p««ng..r station.
p
Gc’i. Pa*uA,t
B. O. FLEMING, Nnpat iutendent.
HOLME’S SURE CURE,
MoDtb Ylash and Dentifrice.
Mouth, Cures Bleeding Throat, Gums, Ulcers, Sore
Hnre Cleanses the Teeth
and Purifies the Breath; used and rec
bv otmncndcd Drs. J. P. by leading A W. dentists. Prepared
R. Holmes, Dentists
Ma 'on, G«. For stile by all druggists
a;id dentist*.
EASTMAN. DODGE COUNTY. GA.. THURSDAY. DECEMBER 15, 1887.
iR/crisrewic
AND WE8TERN
RAILROAD. _ _
TY TY ROUTE.
:
Fifty Mil** Shorter Than any Oiher
Route Between Waycroe*
and Albany. I
!
On and after Sunday, S pt. 4th, 18S7, pass - 1
Mifc’ir trains will run as follows :
cbjctaal standard ms.
FOB THE WEST, -SOUTH AND SOUTH.
Mail Express, j
gran-wick- Pvie.’Marsh. via BA \V.. 4SB
Ismaiea..... Wavmsavlil*.. ..iv iSff 2 15 p.a SSSi 7 83 pm |
,Iot 'eblat * , >!‘*ii..... villa. :S
lot ..lv 4 to pm *‘J 27 pm 1
*»v*nnali. via ~ H. ______ F AW ~ar~7S pSam I
CUailtalon............ ar J2 25 run 10 40 am
"allahan.... • hr ®®®pui
Jackson ville . av 7 43 pm 5 SO am 1
“
f«<~loi'Vnvia 8. V. -.V Iv 2 05 p ii 7«opia
allahan...............lv 2 47.au 7 4<» piu
"aai'lesion..............1. (i 10 mn
Savminnh..
Peaiion................. v 015pm 1150p;ni
\iapFh*................lv T ^.................. 7 80 liu 12 40 mu
? lv t* 03 pm 2 23 am
°‘>nuior.................lv 0 13 pm 2 45 .m
Albany.'.‘.'.‘.'.‘.'.'.'■'.'.'.'.‘.'.sr hhngham.............3 in on om ........
10 25 pm 4 20am
Onlumhu*..............ar Montgomery...........ar 7 25 am 7 J2 pm
...... 2 45pm
Ad ant*.l 05 pm
W ' ^ ......
\ia m -705 pm
Louuvillo L *fc N... ar 6 30 *ni
Cincinnati, via Cm. Ho. ar ......, 6 40 am
=r~--•rr^r-x-.r.-r.t
FROM HIE WEST, NORTH AND SOUTH.
Mail. Express,
^"7".m” .““anooga, , vliVV viiw 1 N S '’' A.', ...... ...... jj<"» 1""
0 A lv 8 05 am
Marieta ... ......lv ...... 1253 pm
Muom...................Iv Atlanta, viaC. It. B.......lv ...... 2 20 pm
...... 6 50 pm
Holumou*...............lv.......... 12 45 pm
Davie................iv 1123 am .......
Ty Ty.................. lv 12 IlSj: 38 12 85
phmmlv pm 104 am
3 34 pm 7m
Wayoross...............ar 4 4*J pui 418 am
Ravauiuh, viaH. l’AW.. ar 7 58 95km pui 12 »)6 sin
Charleston..............ar 12 3 43 pm
Callahan.. via 8 F A W. .ar « 59 pm fl 80 urn
J^'kHonville............. nr 7 45 pm 7 25 am
=r--- tj-
Charle.t' n..............lv 6 10am 3 00am
—
Waycroan.via Bchlalterville.......... ltA W......lv lv 6 05 pin 10 U0 am
5 32 pm*10 25 *m
Hotiokeii................lv 5 51 pm 10 40 am
Waynt-HVllle.............lv o 53 pm 1139 am
Jamaica................lv 7 83 pm 1219 pm
Brun*“c”k “stou onBignM....... ,h ............ il 8 28^
purchase tickets at (he station, and save
j extra fare collected up.m the train
The mail train stop* at all B. A W. station*.
Connections made at 15aycroas to and fuun
°"
l-.HinanP.Uo.Bl.-.pma Jackaoim.le and Cincinnati aad_U»n» Express, Boa.lotr
F.rst-cl»*i upon through Cnuttanooga.
car to
*°
via Queen and Cre^ntBou^
^ q p ^
J- A MoDUFFlE O. P,A
A. A. GADDia V. 1*. 4 O. M.
East Tennessee, Virginia &
Georgia Railway.
GEORGIA DIVISION.
The Quickest aud Shortest Line.
To Atlanta nnd the North tnd West. Sched
ule in effect Nept. 18th, 1887.
No. 10. No 14.
Lv Bavannah 7 06 am 7 35 pm
Ar Jetsup 8 42 am 9 55 pm
Lv Brunswick 6 40 am 8 90 pm
Ar JiHiip 8 40 am 10 80 pm
Lv Jt-Hiip h 50 »m 11 07 pm
Ar Cochrane 1 o^n ,nu ,? a,n
Ar H ovkiiisville H
Ar Macon 2 2(i pm 7^*(» 55 am
Ar Atlanta 5 45 pm am
THE GREAT KENNE8AW ROUTE.
Lv Atlinta 100 pm 7 35aiu 6 00 pm
Ar Borne 4 10pm K) 40 am 9 0 ; pm
Lv Romo 4 15 pm 10 45am 9 00pm
Ar Dalton 5 80 pm 12 00 m 10 22 pm
Ar Chattanooga 7 00 pm
Lv Chat tun ogo 9 30 am
Ar Kn ‘XVille 1 50 pm 2 00 am
Ar Bristol 7 10 pm 6 20 am
Ar Roanoke 130 am 1157 pm
Av Lvnchburg Washington 3 45 am 2 35 pm
Ar 10 45 am 9.40 pm
■} r jf l * t ." I . u> . ri \ ni 1 i« 5 1 p “
Ar N wY.uk 4 50 pm 6 20 .m
Lv Ar Lynchburg Biirkville 8 9 50 20am am 2 5 85 17pm pm
Ar Petersburg 1130 am 7 00«ui
Ar Norfolk 2 25 pm 9 55pm
SHENANDOAH VALI.EV BOL1E.
Lv Roanoke
Ar Natural Bridge
Ar 1 uray 7 20 am 6 40 pm
Ar Bh<n*ndt.ah Junction 10 29 am 9 25 pm
Ar Hagerstown 11 25 am 10 00 pm
Ar Harrisburg S15pm 12 50 pm
Ar Philadelphia York 6 9 50 85 pm 4 7 25 10 am
Ar New pm am
Lv Ha get atown 11 45 am
Ar Baltin lore 2 40 pm
Ar N> Philadelphia York 6 9 09 20 pm
Ar w pm
Lv Chattanooga M. A C. By 9 25 IS am 7 10 1<) pm
Av Memphis “ 9 am 6 am
Ar Little Rook M. A I.. Rv 12 55 m
Lv Memphis K. C. F. S’ & Q. 10 30 am
Ar Kansas City 7 40 am
VIA CINCINNATI SOUTHERN RAILWAY.
Lv Chattanooga 5 00 am 7 10 pm
Ar Louisville 6 15 pm 6 05 am
Ar Ciuciimati ■ 6 42 pm 6 40 am
Lv C lattanoogaN. C.AS. L. 1 40 pm 11 50 pm
Ar Nashville 7 00 pui 6 20 am
Pullman Bivffet ears leave Jaanp daily at
11.-07pm for L’liattims.ga sithont change.
Pumusn Buffet ear* bar* Borne daily at 4:1«
pm lor Washington \uihonl change.
Local 81 *«per between AOauta and Bruns
W
For schedule* and other information call on
A. B. QLTNKER, T. A., Macon, Oc
L.J. ELLIS, AMutam-HWn. Si Pmr. Agent,
Atlanta. Ga. G.ii I’*** lTa-ke? Agent
J0B PRINTING.
We am prspared to do all kinds of
JOB WORK
-WITH
NEATNESS
-AND-
DISP ATCH
Ing anything in that line.
Prices and material to euit yqptr poofcet
and taste* Gallon ns and haw M at
jwjob wm* tew u
“Justice To A.11 Malice For None.”
Europe, outside of Iltusia, crowds
244,000,000 of people upon a surface
much smaller than that held by our
60,000,000, turn a writer in Frank J*»
'«•*•. Russia, I» the 11 of popuiatfon elusive .1 to
average
the *quare mile is UK), and in the Uni
ted States it is 15). j For every loaf of
_
bread tint a man nets in Europe, there
is ten times as much struggling as for a
-
i ‘ oa , * . ,n ... country. „ Bread , is . dear, ,
and humanity is cheap, ‘ in
Eurojie. t- Humanity is . more highly ,,
rated here, and bread is cheaper.
1
.______
The wheat reserves of Europe in 1887 „
.r..«11.r th.nl..., of th, h.t five
years, especially so on the continent.
Britdn will need .« import »«,
year about 140,000,000 bushels wheat
F ™° Ce > 1Iollan<1 nnd BeI - h,m - 0 - 0n0 -'
600 each, Italy 18,000,000, Germany
10,000,001). ’ The Dominion of Canada, ’
with a deficient wheat crop ia Ontario
and Quebec, will re quirt; all the surplus
of Manitoba. Besides this country,
««»»**». Au-tria, Hungary, Roumania,
Hritish India, Australia, Ejjypt, Chili
a ‘ ^ Ar „ )f c:, tino 4 : i> Repub.ic it* will n each i
have an export surplus of wheat to sell
in the markets of the world.
--- 1 —
In a loading editorial the London
Tit»f* remarks; “When an American
deVolc » t0 * bisk of practical
' W ' d l 10 '* " l ' t 1 ° b ‘‘ to Heat in it.
Amcftrans have not so many outdoor
pursuits ns wo have, but such *as they
M ' c 1 f ftV ,ak fli ». ; , ' r > Sl 1 °" sl > r ’ T T,M » *y
have given us the best IMung-rnds and
their ski.l in easting the fly would put
our best angler* on their mettle. They
cnH shoot and they can ride in their
own wn y »* w< ,, 11 as Mic , beat , . of , us, as
’
j|,,. ‘Wild West' has show”. We can
u* in sailing. Thev a-e beginning tc
■» .....
in t rotting matches thy have no rivals,
T,i ■' ar< ' uo ' v!l ' ri ' U ' M l »*» 114 in cricket,
j but tlieir skill in base bail, a game
whiib !t;s a science of its own, is
* nmrvi>lloil ••
nmr 1
__
Western ^ towns v.-J.ivli have boom
a
The people ....... of "v fn Arizona, liuy
! s:u,
8,000 copies of (!, ir loci paper every
, m llont 11 i 1 1 f or r t t.. ‘ h of f stuffing j; it it
’
abroad, and in addition pnv ' it .$200 a
mo|llh mouul f „, r .. )win , .‘ W "-itcup-. s;, 1H -w Ti the . c
^ ’ recently.,mid the
lwcal i 1 '!"'’ f 'ir a “wntc-up,” and
H»c citiz tis of Fort Scott, Kansas, have
’ just siient ^7 000 in advertising tho
to . A **• < I"‘( . , hinson, • .. Kansas, claims , to .
e lve ila .oral |» P !, » l.onni o( *10.000
« >”' (nr.mmLing nlivo nn.l ktckinj.,
while N'-wton, Kansas, 1 avs its paper
'
V*'"™ “ ’' , '. 1 Tb i - nothin '“’"“"r •* nt #t «11
".prope, tin* as the , money .« paid
for legiliiuat; advertising. On the con
trary.it is v.-rv .rditable to ti.e citi
zens of the towns towns that that thev t h. y thus thus en- en
cm ms, , I p.|H>r, and at the
s: roc time ben. fit them-ches.
Workers iu French Vineyards.
8 e tbu lme of pea-ants winding • v
j, down among the low growing vines.
[They come from a long distance back in
the country, and will stand at the.corner
of a highroad, as we read of their
standing 1800 years ago. waiting “for
some man to hire them.” Old men and
women, young men and children, in
i charming faded blouses and handker
chiefs; in great wooden sabots, or with
| no shoes at all. Glad enough they are
to earn thc forty or thirty or even
i twenty their labor. cents a day which is paid for
' Before daylight they begin
to ns
' seml>1 °. a, «l «t >«• the patron
a - np
pear*. He engages them iu order,
tosses them a pruning ki ifc and hotte
(high wooden basket, carried ou the
back), telling them, none too kindly,
to “Go! serve!” and they arc off to the
I day’s J labor.—A ct York Star.
A Simple Barometer.
< ... )ne of . ,lle Niiujuest . . . barometers
is a
spider’s web. Nature says that when
’ j spider there is shortens a prospect tiu of rain or wind the
ti aments from which
! J 1 **™ bU 'l”“ 1 ,l - “'^leaves things
j in this state as long as the weather is
, variable. If the insect elongates its
! ' thread, it is a sign of fine, calm weather,
,i u . duration of which nitty be judged of
py the length to which the threads are
I let out. If the spidt r remains inactive,
!<i a " f r,un > ,alt oa th «
Gary, it will keeps at work during a ram,the
j latter not last long, and will be fol*
j lowed by flue weather. Other observa-
1 tions have taught that
the spider makes
ch«"e*> i» il. ««b cv.rj- went,.four
liours and that if Mich changes are
made in the evening, just before sunset,
the night will lw clear and beautiful.
Be Kuen It.
“Well,” he remark' d, as ho met a
i Woodward-avenue grocer, “so poor II.
| has gone to thc wall.’'
“You don’t tell me!
\es; he cant pay tan cents on the
do f!;‘ r '
. .. .
whl h satl »» e(l '»« ‘bit he would
eventually , bring up with a suddert
jerk
\V hat \\*vs
“Why, he bought a horse rignt here
« Dont of my store with ,ut even ask
tag n.c to look at the amnml s teeth and
tell his age .-Iktnnt free , res*.
--------
Thc Origin or n qnak.-r Custonp
j George Fox used at one time to at
tend public worshin in the established
would most solemnly put oa his broad
brimmed hat, and only take it off when
a welcome strain of doctrin* recurred.
If he had sat with his hat on for very
long, and the sermon was still distaste
ful to him, he would slowly orurUiallv rise and
silently walk out It was for
on. From the rise of Quakeri*m there
i ha* always been a di-like to dimlav or
j show snow in marts*, dress — CVrWf# laaetl, Magaum. I fnanzm
Had Fate ot a Joke.
An American joke sometimes laces it¬
self through translation into another
language. A native humorist wrote:
“Notwithstanding tKat a lady should
always be quiet and self-contained she
cannot even enter a place of worship
without a tremendous bustle.” A
French writer reproduces it in tbiaform:
“According to an American author, tho
ladiaa of that country are so greedy of
notoriety that they cannot enter the
holy saactuiry without disturbing the
and kneeling worshippers with their vulgar
unseemly ado. ’ —Binghompton Be
mfiffrf' - r”
Dreams.
As aS?^ I came through the Valley Sleep
“I am the mfwelghSd’sftSlik; Fear thou would’st not brook
My Now whisper ^^Thy^rltFw"- from thine ear;
And I foreshadow fate!” ’
As I came through the Valley Sleep,
Where singing waters hidden creep,
A dream aroao and kissed my brow;
“I am the Heart's Desire, whom thou
Wouldst lift no voice to greet,
Aor A mounting own me conquering-sweet, cordial Are;
laiqthy losom-mate—
And I foreshadow Deep Heart s Desire -
fate!"’
Meets with no herald from afar,
*> ’"SSSEgfiH?
And with no ma-kiug face,
Unboodwinkedand unbought.
Most pure, inviolate.
The lord of th ought,
The Soul foreshadows fate
A DETECTIVE’S STORIES.
In my profession as a detective I have
® been nske<i if I believed in the
virtue of circumdantml evidence. In
eV ery instance I have replied in the
affirmative. While the profession may
make a man hard-hearted and anxious
to convict, it is nevertheless
* tertam fact that a complete
c “* ,n o* circumstantial evidence
JSJic* 1 thm^half 4 a'' 1 1 o/*m tl , S (ase
<l n's m ctable
1 witnesses. Lawyers browbeat and
can
confuse witnesses, and the veracity of a
^^ nc8 w ! ca you strike chirred against or impeached,
" circu in¬
! stance it is not so easy to step over it
| or interested explain it away. 1 have been an
j party iu two eases where
| «**um«a n ti.l evidence convicted, the
| "K ’ f j,, ry
; where circumstances were against the .
prisoner, I should not hesitate to weigh
everything against him.
I iightecn 1 ran away from niy
'
Medina
county, Ohio, and lie was a man who
; had not one jot of pity for or mcrev on
ff** 11 or animal. Ills wife lived in mor
wmilrfm t V- ? ' l** ** "o rom bin
I would make h.s-ch | blren i i tremMe. Our
family lived a hundred nnlus away, and
we knew little <r nothing of L’nclc
Jabez. lie came out on a visit, seemed
&K««I"*"* lather v 10.) to appientue me for three
Jabez was . . l ‘* oa w his ‘f go »l bth.iuor ^ a, ‘] while ^ncle j
visiting us, Iwos by no means opposed to :
the arrangement. No sooner had :
we ,
arrived at his home than he became 1 a i
f J . |
w orked u !f fed, scoblcl, and mal
treated, nnd one uigbt.after the promise I
of a “good licking” in tlie morning, I
Bed up my few persomd, !T. cts. dropp d ;
from mv chamber window and set out '
.ho.-onlddijj f ( ., -. , a V ;.«•!.• i.U J pS.J .bv/ v.-.- “£ ma i j
!
ami more, it I retittno.. in,me he .......
follow on and make me a captive. A*
won as he mb-sed me lie would raise a
great hue and cry „v r the country, and
( felt thnt mv o:ilj safe c-mrso was to
reach some large city and lose mys.df iu
the mass. ;
I clevolnud The farm was , couid twentv-tive ,’ walked miles from
mve tho
i„ K „„
autumn night, and the roads were good, dari
but for the first ten miles 1 did not
■
T(£mi We, C C0 * ,,iD ff ]
» n «‘ g olI 'g « »' farmers moving - about,
and I wanted to cover my tracks from
j Jabez. With the'MiffienUi™ in :
1 Gil ,:ct enter Cleveland until ,
about 0 o uo<k next morning. I had
not vet reached the business portion, I
and was waking in tho mid.lie of the i
rllVrV Jr hi0 M} '-!!• * !
rich find. In tne dust , lav tluc • dm
mond rings, two ladi s watch el. u-is, J
and several charm* and locket*. They
were scattered •.)•<>•.t ' V -i- if i...... *’ t . 1..., :
, from some e.uc.c p as--iig the .1 road.
over )
I picked them up ol cour-e, and there i
being no one near me I eontimied on my 1
S& vaiuo in my n.e nciort, anu 4'Hd not
know exactly hovv to proceed. I knew, j
°f course, that had 11-. right to the, j
propeyty, nor did 1 have the remotest
intp-ition intention ot of fonx-crti. conxtrtn. fr it it to my use. j i
I fne trouble was that l did not know ex- j
aetly what course to take, being Lnt a
young, green boy. At home 1 would !
nave gone to my father or a neighbor,
but under present circumstances I was j
puzzled. Lever 1 had heard .bully’ of policemen, but !
saw one. I made up my
mind to si ccs. the fird one l met and j
ask him wdmt to <lo
About four squares beyond where I
had found the jewelry 1 stoppe.l at a
German grocery to u*k f«-r a drink of i
water, I here was a boy about 14 years i
old in the store, a id he told me to go
around the side w .v t. a pen-stock. I
\m was di anukm inkin'* when when n a <Io.T <io rn-bcl ru.hed at -.t me
and determined 0
was so to bite me that I
had to keep him off with my feet. The
. German ar.d bis wee rushed out and at
tacked me and as I got out of tha gate a
I,*™.. „p , i, ,1 mo.
! There hud been row enough ti collect
quite officer a crowd, and all were aai-ist me.
The asked v.ho I wa-, where 1
came frxmi, a..d where I was g-ing. If
I had returned him prompt answers he
might have let me go, 1 ut I did not dare
tell him that 1 was a runaway for fear
he woul.l m. to I
therefore refuse 1 to answer him, and he |
naturally corc’u led I was a suspicion*
character, and took me to the station
As I was registered they Matched me,
j 0 icing. and the charge of grand larceny '
was at once ee.teml again-t me.
On tho night •.ucvi..u* » jewelry store :
I 0 n Superior strict haul I cu n robbed of a
i ar ^ f e ^niouat o jewelry aud the robber
ha( pf ,t awav, leaving np clue for
. the detectives. This was some of
the .,h„k 1, r. 1 told them where 1
found it. Imt as I would not tell them
win, I wa*. or anything about myself,
my find was declared too thin. Tndcr •
the same cuenui-tances to-day I would
the occasion, a> l tin newspapers pu
me down ns one of the sharpest and
shrewdest thieves in the country. Every j
inducement was held out to me to give ,
confederates, who were sup
P? 8 ^ to be older men and tougher
characters, and my inability to do it
city when thd captured, 1 w 18 ®“ W and that I tho !
was ,
showing ^ myself (^,4,. e.p.uly and boldly. 4 It | |
^ ha t « , hHt » robber 0u i d
hangalxiut toxvn with his pockets full of
plunder, but they got over this by say
ug it was a shrewd move on my part to
throw them off the scent.
Had I acknowledged my identity,
Uncle Jabez would have come on to de
fend and clear me, but would have also
taken me back and thrashed me within
an inch of my life. I dreaded him more
than state prison, and, therefore, when
the trial came on I had nothing to say,
and Was sentenced to state prison for
three years. I I was glad of it. and I would
be of age wbea came out, as no
ana would hear of me ia the interval, I
ft *
The fact that I served only four
months of my sentence was due to the
efforts of one old detective in another
case. I had forgotten to tell you that
the jeweler and two of his clerks had
“fully identified" me as “a person who
had been in the store several times just
previous to the robbery.” The proprie¬
tor swore that he sold mo a ring for $2,
and one of the clerks testified on the
stand that I stood for half an hour and
bartered with him about a silver watch.
“Then you positively swear he is the
person?” asked my counsel in each
case.
“I do,” was the decided answer.
I could have shown that I was twenty
five miles away at the time, and that I
had never stepped foot in Cleveland be¬
fore the morning of my arrest, but, for
reasons which I have stated, I made no
effort in my own defence. I went off to
prison with a comparatively light heart,
knowing my own innocence. 1 had been
a convict for four months when one day,
I was called into the Warden’s office.
There were several- gentlemen present,
and among them I recognized the Cuya¬
hoga county Prosecuting Attorney and
two Cleveland detectives. The Prosecu¬
tor began by declaring that I was an in¬
nocent man, and then asked for my
story. Under promise that they would
not betray that me, I gave it to them. It
seems the detective, ill working on
another case, had fallen upon the jew¬
elry robbers and secured most of the
plunder. There were three of them, all
okl hands, and the stuff I found had
been lost by them as they drove out of
the city. Robbers though they were,
they did me a good turn by denying that
I had any hand in the affair. Indeed,
after the ease was opened, the
detectives saw that a blun
dor had been made in arrest
ing me. Thc gentlemen had come with
a pardon from the Governor, and I re¬
turned to Cleveland with them on tho
promise of employment. To test the
value of thc people at the jewelry store
a* witnesses the detective took me in
there and asked if they had ever seen me
before. Four months could not have
changed mo much, and yet those who
had sworn so boldly i against mo on thc
stand denied r
noxv h.avi ng ever seen me
before. I have been a detective for
year.*, but that circumstance has always
been uppermost in my mind when I had
a ease where thc identity of a prisoner
was to be sxvorn to, I have always cau¬
tioned my witnesses not to testify unless
satisfied beyond all doubt. My caution
lms several times operated to let a bad
man escape the clutches of the law, but
that wa* better titan to swear an innocent
man’s life or liberty away.
The other instance occurred iu Ten
ne-see just before the breaking out of
the war. I bought of the inventor the
State right of Tennessee of a certain
1 °" t ° c f * h,ch , . , J expected to
’
lvalue a 1 large ioi (.me, I secured as
^ "f? 1 *" Ohio man
M ' 'T 1 known him
“ ? ^ " v 0l, ‘d have staked
.; r i Vnnii -, i voraclt y
u ; Kuoxxille,
-p' ' ,in,{an °oga,
^ v a ' i J l lvl ^‘ e ’ « a ‘ l . «H»cr **M<ofl*a. towns, and II. I
,, 'j.,'"
, . ■ r “ ,
’
, «, ^ " car a t n le Jfe had
^ d “ , that
t o I, -'oout 1 ! seven 1 or ei 'ht “miles* into^hJ
•
\ u \ >c .
of f • bin • ng As he was leaving the bote
.T„,i K “j t ™"Sfh“him ’° ' 11 hun ’,
1 S 1mU , ,, ,, ‘ Uu V%l TT °
the drove ^ “
two nwa\q
Several incident oecurr, d d.irino. ih»t
• ^ ti...*- 10
! ' r c 1,0 U ,n ! ,°' jt o{ *
„ 3
£i a e a„d almostupu tthe
Bweet i„ savin.* himself from”' f«l linn
suddenly clev-.tcd hi* ,.ih„w c w nna nnd
, blCeH. . 7, led’ . ‘sh/rt .
Several d rops stai hk
j,,,.,.,,, ' : . m l oth-r* Ic’l unon the \he bu<*cv l.oi^o
, ■ \ mile further on 10 ‘ “
, balked at a lull, and Miller descended ,
from the bugry and coaxed him until ho
start-.l 01 lu wheel’of -ta'tin" Tho lie threw Miller
d and a *,, *,V, buL^v nassed S e !
"Vi'S.hw.it.'ti’ . d ami dirt n f AS Z
,nu from his clothes v and fok
j oWed to t f „ ,. n(]
li J '1 r 1' u-.if V I a mile V from A the farm 1 m
mi Mi ler ha 1 started * , to visit, • the two * men
• Jlt ((f (ino . j
c cg n
j- tdd Hwcet decide 1 to ston and sec
Hie the owner ow ner while w mn .uu.tr Mil'c-,lr.,vc drove cm alone. tone
for j ot tn 1 «’“JJ ,n a !' cyery-day ho,,r unc*s oecurreneos remembered are
-; t Miller tho
!*" H,ns a l*>>soner. saw
. 'T
.' noticed' that 1 l.i* \ cloth'* " r0 1
, l . , . there
was
i' ,. 0 ®?,®" J - ? JJ» rt ‘ 1 , b ' ,t nnd'mwnnf h '« expiation
that ‘ he u wis mb 1- - fared ac.land nervous. As
a rioudy .", i* C T hurt "L , but, T mm like, 'l did l, ! t0 not se *
want to own it. When ho drove back ’
K . ‘ . . , 1 ond an I f fttlin,,
that , . he must take of his injuries
care ns
»* P ossl ; ilc , Miller drove into
Llarksvil.e 1 aud sent the rig back by a
*'*»><•* »*«■’. Tl» Umo, not to
*>e Ihiim. xso one find s en him since
,K * Ieft tlic 1 u ^7 at the roadsi<le.
There was no excitement u itil next day,
U'*hc missi. g man or furnish ai clue iT, as
,0 ,u * bite, Miller, who was in bed, was
I ,!acc ' 1 u:,,|< r arrest . charged with
'Vke. I ** dome
th£ T' J “? m Boston the ease
"fr'inst him tail been worked
up until no one doubted his guilt, and
there were threats of lynching. My first
bad arrived at the hor3e owner’s alone.
aad that he had not passed that point.
1 'b cn ,w <> n, S ro wood-choppers
and a wlute man who had seen tlb* |wq
,nen ffHe together from where in the buggy 'got only ^lalf j*
Sweet out. H
n-urder thcre was, it iuyl t^ken pl»oe in
)bat be coucealed half-mbe near rule, the and roadside. tho body A search must
» a J bciU “ ow made \»“ c of ^ the *° whole d »‘» DC ®.
R atlou - M Miller was a slim, light-built
.
could ,, dra ’ the . ’ p ‘ ‘ f
g body . i auy distance, ,
We wen* over the ground foot by
foot, taking in a breadth of a mile each
aide of the highway and examining
every bareq strawstack, thicket, fence
corner and depression. Not the slight
f oro that wa » ncpd vd to clear him.
It wa* strange, everybody said, why
Sweet had not gone to the house to see
the owncrof the mules; why he had not
been seen on the road or in the fields;
Why if alive, he had not shown a
since. It was evident that there
bee i foul play. Miller was the last per
son in his company. His disordered
clothing, the blood spots, his pallor and
mental anxiety. Why when I went
ell over it in my owe mind
it almost seemed to me
as if he vraa guilty. I aay almost,
for I could not quite believe it of him.
While the prosecution could not produce
the body as a proof of the murder, they
had plenty of circumstantial evidence,,
and Miller was held to the higher court,
vrith^ ev e r ybody believing influx guilt.
fore his trial as a novelist could imagine.
I was in a small town fifty miles frotn
Clarksville, and had stepped into a
plug grocery of kept by an old woman, to get a
taincer, tobacco, when her son, a moun
came in from his place, thir¬
teen miles away. The two exchanged
salutations in my presence, ard the
mother asked:
“Has the stranger gone yet?”
“No,” replied the son.
“And do you think he is daft ?’’
“'Pears that way.”
“llow is his hurt ?”
“Better, I guess.”
Then their conversation turned into
other channels, ami I went out. In ten
minutes I went back again. An in¬
fluence which I cannot explain any more
than I could resist sent me back to ask;
“You were talking about a stranger.
Have you some unknown man at your
house?
“Yes, sir. lie came six or eight
weeks ago. I think he has been hurt
and has lost his mind. I have told him
he must go, but he erics and begs to
stay, and he has paid us very well for
his keen."
He described Sweet to a dot, nnd
three hours later I had identified the
man who was supposed to liavo been
murdered by Miller. Iu three days I
had him at Clarksville. That knocked
flic murder theory in the head, of
course, but the prosecution then de¬
clared Miller had assaulted him with in¬
tent to kill and rob. A medical exami¬
nation showed that Sweet had been
struck on the head and his brail) in¬
jured. I took him to Nashville,' put
him in the care of a surgeon, and in four
weeks he had his mind hack. The very
lirst words lie uttered on coming to
were;
“And you can stop for me as you
come back. u
Four months’ time hail gone out of his
mind, and ho began just where ho had
left off as he got out of the buggy. In
climbing thc roadside fence ho fell and
struck his head against the log. He re¬
membered falling, but nothing further.
A pressure of the skull upon his brain
had produced an hallucination. He im¬
agined that he was hunted by robbers,
and had made his way through forest
and swamp to the cabin where l found
him. His weight hail run down to 125
pounds, hair and whiskers had grown
long, and only some lucky accident
cot tld have identified him. t * 10
82,000 *o mm he i i had i with -.i i him • when i . lie drove
out ot Clarksville every dollar was rc
counted for, and he was eventually re
stored to health aud strength.
Ini* has been my personal experience
with circumstantial evidence, and yet I
dare declare my belief that it is thc
best evidence in the world to convict
the guilty on. It may have worked
injustice in rare instances, but it has
hung dozens of guilty wretches who
xvould otherwise have escaped. —iVeia
i ark- Sun.
Millionaires in a Chicago Restaurant,
The restaurants in the business dis
, * r j c ,, J." -w’hicli 1lc “ V® are f nntroni/-d atl ““ alike h® by |, v
' „,V ," o.„me."foj'& ip ,
obactvotijn. r of oslrom •« in tl.o
commercial world. The merchant who
draw* S'mUlions tho urotit* 1 WtcJ on an ann.nl I bn iness !
i i»th^ seen muncSi *
^10-a- oc kclerk tlur<r s.m.1
wiches - The other day was a
remarkable gatherin'* of millionaire* at
noon in one of thaserest&urnut* alo'' ount'rb which
arc pr o V l,lcel vi. room' (
"iJcs tahlos place* ip atott*e
was mirelv an accidental mp. iino- cap>h
man had dmimed P * in for a
bite to eat, Scattered about,
so ‘ ,ie elevated on stools at the
eoimter. lJnn, some seated at tables (leopo-Cham,,: were XV
H. Ham Albrton "iteam,
lin - Juhu Cudahy, Norman E.
Eardridge, Hams, Nelson Morris, John Wil
Charles Cyunselman, while
Marshall k Field SSJHdt walked throuch tho
£>»- -d V.
There were, besides, a dozen men pres
cnt " ,1OT e wealth is expressed iu six
fifjures h '■ An observer r rourdilv °ug“‘J estimate. estimates
that the wealth , . of . the twenty men ex
ceeded $ 40,000.000. Its owner*, instead
of lunching mmptuously on the rarest
and costliest viands the menu provided
food and spent time »<*"■.>«
no unnecessary over
it .—CkhyoXrn. '
____ “ - ----
««rcm Ilnrem I Lire in. in in Tnri«„ Turkey.
The principal divert ions of harem life
consist in the vi-its of friends aud of a
perniciou8 ha wk about c1mb articles of tr!U ]i n g women who
of dress nnd gew
gaws from ono house to another retail
^irw.res! tho latest InTZJtog go*sin and th“ scandal with
to
' nto manner of scrapes. Wise
women who tell fo. tunes by cards and
incantations are also iu great demand,
and their vaticinations arc as a rule be
Bcved in by the ladies with much the
same delightful nnd blind confidence as
is given by farmers’ daughters to the
mysterious prophecies ! ' of the Ult krypsies. evnsics
^°'Y K-,,, .ait8 a these ' ,1 1 ’ 1 tlu;n hags, cont i.-i Hgn the punishment of the
aw as case
notoriou , Avesha, who, several years
a „ 0 was ca |f ed )or one ni , dlt j lu ; t i e l
j ,Km.r.i ato a carr i a ^ P un( (e :ImlmZiooS r pretense of visitino
h car d of. But as a rule are’ their sorceries
€V U eyesand charm* Perfect lv hi rm
^ les ^ty^cMUd , and when there S is nothia-r TtegA better
heavy hours. Nor must the mem singers
| (e |, dt out Ul t | ie cn , i 0 ^. of do i- dlt .
of the harem—a £ bj? deliirht tod.^d"n neverthefess S
„l,i ch .p ,ri
harem’s can only be enjoyed to the full when the
lord is awav J -r-London Saturday y
2ievie>r '-----*■*«,
A« E ^ ra «..^r.. w
The interior of the palaco of wie
Ameer of Bokhara, xxr.te* a correspond
ent, w \«ry simple, luxur.ousness lacing
only shown ^n costly carpets and the
presence of a large staff of servants.
The walls aro not decorated. la the
audienee hall there are two wardrobes,
with mirror*, and mono corner a marble
sbitue of Pajcho. A long table occn
tovered ° witlT'a turhan^serv.al nrt^ilk 'Thl.eTth’ thi
Lackey* “ e ^ 9 la in turbans wtved the Bok* tok
.
tea !!„ diuner !!! was ! served eonsistino- “J 1 g of
*3’ 4 “ „
S.J,T C a S .n
f^ he H^ ! d t T^^ciaac” a ^esent* from w‘(Tw the Uiis
rrS.j P urc S**«™ were rich nen
t( > see v,atches vatc helsttia set m diamon^andparU diamonds and parts
of cnamel * tl s ^ rvl ^5* * he b #za ' tr and
. ^ ands ffcrcd for 8alc at
w P". va e ? com "
P^Hvely low prices,
Dangers of Foul Air.
If the condensed breath collected on
the cool window panes of a room where
a number of persons has been assembled
be burned, a smell as of singed hair will
show the presence of organic matter, and
if the condensed breath be allowed to
remain on the windows for a few days,
it will be found, on examination by the
microscope, It is that it is alive with animal
culse. the inhalation of air con¬
taining half such of putrescent matter which which
causes the aick headaches,
be a by a circulation of
fra* air. —A m teie m
WISE WORDS.
He who can surpass a moment’s anger
may prevent day of '
a sorrow.
A * child vsu it • the brightest ray in the .*
sunshine of a parent’s heart.
Mind is power. - Educated mind is
intelligent, intensified power.
The seeds of love can never grow but
under the warm, genial influence of kind
feelings and affectionate manners.
The proper function of a government
is to make it easy for the people to do
good, and difficult for them to do evil.
The most influential parents aru those
who know how to share the enjoyments
of their children.
w :£= r»r,
* lies at doors doing
to invite our her own in. in nothing
keeps Experience is a good schoqL but it
us too long, and the tuition bills
are too costly for a fellow who is in a
hurry for a diploma.
A moderate understanding, with dili¬ -
gent and well-directed application, will
go much farther than a more iivn.j
genius and attended with that impatience
inattention which too often accom
pany quick parts.
dom, Though years bring with them wis¬
yet there is one lesson the aged
seldom ever learn, namely, the manage¬
ment of youthful feelings. Age is all
head, youth all heart; age reasons, youth
is under the dominion of hope.
Kind words produce their own imago
in men’s souls, and a beautiful image it
is. They soothe and comfort the hearer.
They ings. shame him out of his unkind feel¬
We have not yet begun to use
them in such abundance as they ought
to be used.
An African Nero.
been King Ja Ja, of Opobo, who has lately
arrested by tho British authorities
on the West Coast, is a monarch who
believes iu a vigorous system of gover
meut. He is said to have lately be¬
headed 150 of his subjects to encourage
the remainder and to warn them that it
was advisal le to obey his orders. How¬
ever, as this act was probably sanc¬
tioned by the constitution of Opobo,
he was not deposed on account
of “iffbt have gone on be
heading puuity, the Opobo nobles with im
or at any rate till tho next re¬
ing; but tho West African Nero came
to grief when he began to interfere with
the palm-oil trader*. He had agreed to
allow free access to these merchants;
whereas, it is alleged, ho secretly in¬
structed his well-drilled people not to
sell oil to anybody but his own agents,
But the King’s attempt at a “corner” iu
oil was promptly suppressed by the Con
sul, and now he languishes in a British
dungeon, to the great relief of his wives,
his loyal subjects and the palm-oil in¬
terests.—i St. Janie* Gazette,
The Land of the Midnight Stilt.
Tho inhabitant ot a aouthorn couatr,
5““ * uh eomprohent. how
fully the shortness , of tho winter day in
the far north is compensated by tho
.extreme duration of daylight in summer.
As we steamed up the harbor of Christi
ana »eemod at noon on a bright June day, it
hkc the entrance into dream
‘ an d. The sensation of seeing the sun
low on tho horizon at mid-day, and
*•«•* # “““G fur * owcr « I * «h.
evening, is more easily remembered
than described. Tho towers of Christi
»na always cast long shadows and the
( the \ reftm sun y feeling persists is for only hours intensified in staying when
above the horizon until, at 10 o’clock,
f 0 ™ ca n still see themen and.boys play
‘“K games m the fields. Bedtime is a
movable feast to tho native in the sum
mcr season, and comes not at all to tho
visitor unUss ho darken, h» windows
an£ i persuades himself that it ought to
b c ni ght if it ts not.— ticnhnrr* Magn
.
,——--------
mi o . , Ganges. ,,
One of tho most sacred objects to the
Hindoo mind is the river Ganges,
;:“<**» them from «w.” the far off *•» snowfields of the
Himalayas, nourish in the form of water to
their crops, writes Thomas
Steveus 0 eu8 in la the Philadclnlua * nuaucipnia Press 1 ress, I 1
once overtook . , a wretched devotee
crawling his along tho Grand Trunk Road
on stomach to Benares. Bv wav of
penance for his sin lie was making his
way in this painful manner day after
day and week after week, literally twirl
ing alSut along iS) like a snake lie doXuS" was then
mdes from l.is
and not improbnbly had already come
other hundreds. Arriving in due course
of time at Benares he would wash his
sins away by making offerings to ono or
more of tho ug'y wooden monsters
erected in the sacred city representing
the particular god whom hi* besetting
sin had wuonuuu, offended and anu bv uy plunging plunging head neau
and v heels in the Ganges.
• .
Locomotive .1 Hay .* lever.
“Don’t suppose in W, you people -t». will be
li.*« U,” en e » loco
motive is human in many respects. You
caa bright clean an dollar, engine up, have she her ns
as a new and tlfere yet won’t
make steam, especially if has been
Locomotives a change in the weather at the time,
take hay fever just as quick
as n.eudo, 'Oh., and clog theM'.r.h up and can’t breathe,
» h»d Am. the,.
1* another singular thing about them,
Take tho locomotives turned out at the
same possible, Rhop and and if made as nearly alike as
ono is a flyer the other
Why, they tell me that there have been a
half-dozen boats built for the Hudson
after the plan of the Mary Powell, and
not one of them was last. C^ueer, isn’t
it? •
-—--
A Uruguay Dairyman.
0qc of <he curi u , tDmi is thc
manu f actU ae of Imtter The dairyman
V° ur » thc milk warm Bom the cow' into
*n inflated pig or goat skin, hitches it to
his saddle bv a Ion" lasso and gallops
^hc'i he reaches the city his
churning peddles is over, the butter is made, and
he it from door to door, dipping
out the quantity desired by each -Harper*, family
with a lon K 5°° dcn N»oon.
The Most Patient Man.
“Who was thc most jwitieut man?”
asked a teacher in one of Pittsburg's
Sundsy-schools None small yesterday. scholars seemed
of the to
know until a little chap, who had been
in a brown study for a few minutes, held
ud his hand.
“Who was it, Johnny?”
“It was the man who had tho awful
poor turkey .”—PitUburg Chronicle.
Books Bound In Unman Skins.
The recent utilization of Prauzani’s
skin to cover card cases has reminded
the Parisians of the old human-skin
tanneries at Strassburg and Mention,
where the skins of the victims of the
guillotine were made into book leather.
Work* ia this binding may still be seen
intl£j«Mtakgaes of book sales.—Zen-
NUMBER 29.
TEMPERANCE.
Playing Drunkard
Jon** Jones WAS was a „ kind, good-natured _ , man as on«
might wish to soe,
“ e ti(ly wifo and bright-eyed
But Jones w"s w«sk’in one respect- be had a
love for rum,
stoggerlnghonu.'ward 11118 Sh ° !> woul<i
coma
Hi * to ** hini thul but
’
And prayed and hoped that in some way he
would reformed be, J
Che nn ever waver’d in her faith, but toiled
with hand and brain.
And in the end with joy she found her pray¬
ers were not in vain.
Thus it occurred, One Sunday morn, while
-
His wife had gone to church to pray that his
T reform might come,
leaving, with much regret, her ill-clad little
cues at home.
When hMlowinJwf 0 i0th0rgy cau8ed b y
t
Jones K<0 mi nround and saw a sight which
hot ked his very tonl.
His el ost child, ahoy of six, with frowzy,
Was staggering unkept hair,
around the room with idiotic
The while stare,
his other little ones laughed loudly
in their glee,
His grimaces, and flounderings, and antics
queer to see.
“I’m °uly playing drank,” ho said, “to imi¬
tate papa,
But ‘‘ l find some liquor, I could do it better,
f
Butehfidreuaua allowed to drink, so I know
I’ll xvait till I grow up and then I’ll be a
drunkard too.”
‘1 reckon not,” Jones muttered, “with heav¬
To do ens duty help I’ll try
my after this in strict sobriety.
My eyes sad shall ne’er again behold a scene so
Come hero as this;
my kiss'.” precious little ones, and give
papa a
5V hen Mrs. Jones came home from church he
metharat th.i door,
And tenderly embracing her, said: “Wife,
I’ll drink no more!”
She saw ; tho truth shine in his eyes and wept
for very joy, ;
But nev r Knew the change was wrought by
W unthinking boy.
—Funds 8. Smith.
A Famous Bicycler on Temperance,
The following letter to the Voice from
Thomas Steveus, the famous bicyclist, xvlio
wheeled his way round the world lust year,
adds another testimonial from the great
travelers in favor of total abstinence:
I incidentally learned the other day that my
article, “The Drinks of All Nations,” that ap¬
peared impression in the Sun the October fi, has created the
upon minds of some that I
personally beverages. advocate I therefore tho iieg us; that id' alcoholic ill give
mo sufficient to “stand yon w
hat the space corrected.”
.S'un rightly entitled mv "curious
observations” must not lie mistaken as a per
sonal advocacy of liquor-drinking, as aga in*t
temperance, "nation” even when viexve 1 from the
readers who standpoint. For the benefit nt those
caning, be expected to know any¬
thing about a newspa[>er writer’s jsisition, I
uld point out that he 1ms small choice of
subjects. He b is to sink bis personality out
of sight entirely. Like the man who raises
vegetables for the market, it is imperative
upon him to produce varieties tiiat meet with
the readiest sale.
oppoaito“a'i'.fc'ot rticlc miglit Ik; written on
tho the -tin.. proOnoing
points quite as plausihlo as my observation*
that “nations who drink tho most aleohol do
SSted As the ChineaH philoso
tL* ^heffilit7™f cstabfU the f^oim’Lvd!
to fight doesn’t their suivriority
nohow
fro1 ,” V U 1 "national observations ’
* »r '“m
fully believes, verified by my 1,"that own alcoQ experiences. He
and so do a* a lK,ve,
evening, “ga^ rf°32£ Ut o? T ‘'iSHfiuSi
after a fatiguing day, is not a bad
thing. proper'sphere Its use in this manner relegates it to
as.a mea.cnc, distinct
sometimes
I 8U pposo,
would care to dispute. It is also nil excellent
thing for preserving tarantulas and freaks of
ua J, uro -
0 f thoughttul and retlccting cranks,’"oven, temperance peo
—would phi- 1 “Prohibition be if you will
a vast improvement upon the
heterogeneous elements that now abound nl
most every where in our country,
AVhile 1 am not quite prepared to take the
extreme viewsthat some take, I am in strong
Kj’mpathv with themi^i,,.. of such men as
that 1 am a
strong advocate immunity of temperance. I attribute
my remarkable from sickness un
the most trying climatic conditions to
t*»e fact that I have, all my life, been proc
tically—though abstainer. As not professedly of fact, so—a l total
a matter was a
“blue ribbon wearer” for over ten years, and
might ^ew just as well City. bo one now as then,
York Thomas Stevens.
A Gr ‘* at Cha "«° 1,1 Pcogrcsa.
No T .person past middle age, says T. W.
„ h# ' P ^
j the hood; drinking usages of society afeal since come his child- over
that moderation is far more general
a "d total abstinence less rare. It is a matur
w now Jbm^lthout wi^ itTs
far less common to see it set forth ou tide
boards; a man fhay f'ore.-o it entirely dealIi. and
lose no social caste No doubt a good
| * till use ! 1; itis the stereolyped phrase to
sent)® , champague as “flowing like water” on
I festive occasions; but the change Isundoubt-
1 edly great. Nor is this confined to our
branch of the Anglo-Saxon race; been during dls- the
last twenty-five years there has a
gffSitfJJE* *- 1 ,! t „nfL I | I “" u , l< k Q of eSSSS* -f™ C ,. a . 5^0. Iwf *»
lish thought now visit us who, like Canon
Farrar aiul Mr. James Hryee, are total ab
stainer*; am|I even at the uuiventtaj MMtto
^ SS
is the change. undeniably In this country the prohibitory and
party is gradual growing being accepted stronger, into
its i»licy is y JSSSS* 2MS
one— instead of having his career rewarded
by a peerage, as in England-^but the wine
merchant himself, once »t the bead of all
^d.7a fai^ F wav*^
dinary social habit it might pas* as th*'row*
5 Sj^nution m?» h«iuin,Sn«nt th" o , f n the°indiS^mce*thM o/bonnete *
in size of hat*
diets a final preference for bare heads. But
tho transformation now voin^ on is some
eonA^'l -d im' by tL the .ffinking of Imb.ts of
H*hmen our race ‘ When that the traffic greatest in Intoxicating livingEng
^wlrT^S* says J
ffilsdston’el anTfami^e eom“fn
s,*« h of March 5, 1881 in the
House of Common*), and when even the Lon
rS-SS^i ou is the outcome of a moral conviction. Tin
der its influences these evils are diminishing
~—
A Huggestivo r Increase,
jSTiiTy re , ir»r*' 7 C.“sr£
creased fifty perewnt., thcconaumptionof and of bear wins 700
has increased Iorty per cant.,
per cent. It is suggestive of the social harm
fulness of ardent drinks, and of the compara¬
tive hai mlew re s of beer and wLe, that the
arrests for drunkenness in New York during
forty years have decreased in a ratio aimon
exactly corresponding with the ■b° v # noted
decrease in whisky drinking —MilwaukM
Wisconsin
Temperance Nows and Notes.
The drunkard’s thread of lifo is wound on
a reek Wyoming, writes;
Mrs. E. H Boyd, of will be mostly wo¬
“Our Prohibition party difference here,
men, but that makes no much
where a woman’s vote counts as as a
man’s.” meeting to
Canon Wllberforoe, in a recent caught
London, said: “In Maine when they
Lords.”
jgj agJygq