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THE CARNESVILiY TRIBUNE.
Established 1875.
As Corbett Knocked Sullivan Out,
So Do HOOD, ANDERSON and CO. Knock Prices Down
Our New Goods Are All in
Prices nnd quality guaranteed. We have a fine line of
Millinery, Dry Goods and Notions.
W# can please anybody who will give us a chance. Our line of SHOES and prees will fit any one.
HOOD, ANDERSON <fc CO.
HARMONY GROVE, GA.
“LITTLE JOE.”
(By Reiss Torroet Grttree.)
The first sharp lrost of the veai
it* scarlet impress on the
wpodad ffaddra mountain side;.tho row of
vines that had screened
C« kitchen window drooped in black the
gfid Sftld raggoil morning from sunshine. its strings
Mary Eddall sighed softly as she
^vjned tho kitchen door And
looked out into the blue air.
“I shan’t seo many more sun-
H»os on these hills,” said she to
Wsolf. St “Well, I suppose it’s all
tho best. minister Everything is for
the best, the says. But
i^cro I guess if the minister was just
I am, he’d look at things
diflforent.”
“Polly!” neatly-clad figure had
A trim, kitchen
come out of the bedroom.
leaning on crutches. Her soft
white hair Avas tucked aAvav under
the frill of her around cap; a gingham
apron imd was tied her waist,
it was not until you were close
her that you discovered how
Tory old sho was—nearly ninety—
gnd wrinkled liko a piece of China
drape, with piercing hazel eyes,
fl£ll. «jd teeth that were nearly perfect
“If* a nice morning, wistfully, Polly,
Itfn't It?’ she asked, “A
fusan Peasant morning for mo to go to
Willis’r
Polly tho set buttery down the shelf stone with cream- sud-
let (an on emphasis.
sudden "Mr*. Cameron,” she said, with
• catch in her throat, “it
Isn't longer right. I” I—I can’t deceive you
*ny Mm. Cameron opened her mild
,
“Eh?” said she. “I don’t un¬
derstand you, Polly. What is it?”
laid Polly. You amt oommg
bhek here any more.
I ain t—coming back here
—any—more? eM “W slowly Polly, repeated I the
woman. hv, Avas
kern m this house, I was married
^ iu fi thl* * house, b° u so. and -oseph little Joe. was that born I
loved the best of all the flook!
Dent cry, ^ ^ Mrs. 0 W, V» Cameron. SaU ^ ^°Tai Ill
•tay happen by what you. I won But t leave you, t
may, we can
Why (ILiestioned. can’t we, the Polly?” old help-
woman,
°^ P^ aye( *
iaul • ID Polly. 11 All a those years folks
ftnd have been taking money out of We
never putting a cent in.
^ thatany So more.
'fo^daSs TO n k g at°tie
well-house, best-room falling into ruin- week, The
chimney fell last
and the porch roof leaks so that no
a raiu
But, Polly, Polly, only think! . 1 ...
'
I can t go away from here! wailed
the old woman.
\p u can stay here, Mrs. Ar ri
® r< 3 J^
Poily, „ what , , . to .
dor are you going
“I've been thinking it all over,
Mrs. Cameron,” said Polly, reso¬
lutely. “I can’t achool got any teach, weaving and
to do, or any to
nobody wants hired help. But
Mrs. Willi* sa vs Lig t.hero's plenty of
room in her house if l m a
mind to take some of the Pellsdal©
factory girls to board, and share
the money with her. And that’ll
make home for ’
a you.
“But, Polly, it’ll be awful hard
work,”
Polly shrugged her shoulders.
“Yes," she said, “it AA’ilL But
Pve got to work hard.”
Once more the poor woman
burst into tears.
Bttle “Oh, Joe—” Polly,” said she, “if only
“And the old curiosity shop man
is coming to-day to look at the fur¬
niture,” Mrs. persisted Polly. “Qomo, ready.
Cameron, breakfast is
George Willis and the old half red
wagon Avill be here for you in
an hour. ”
Mrs. Cameron ate and drank like
one^in she a dream, Once or twice
self surreptitiously pinched her¬
to make sure that she was act¬
ually awake. Had things come
CARNESVILLB FR.aNKL IN COUNTY GA. WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER SO 1892.
to this?
An hour or two later Polly stoo,l
on tho steps watching tho big red
wagou rumble away with old Mrs.
Camerou on the buffalo-robed seat
lieside the driver, and tho little
hair trunk in tho back.
“Poor thing!” murmured Polly.
“If it wasn't for her I could man¬
age ’most any way. But she took
mo in when 1 Avas town-poor, and
gavo me a good home and brought
me up as if, I Avere her own, and I
AVbn’i leave her now—no, not if
wo both starve together!”
“Is tbi * the Cameron farm?”
Polly Yo started violently.
“ s,” she said, recovering her¬
self in an instant. “But 1 don’t
knoAv who you are.”
'y ^ 10 AVils looking at a tall, grace-
ful woman iu deep black, who had
evidently tho align ted from a carriage
at foot of tuo inapb-shad v.l
lane.
“That is not strange,” said the
newcomer Avith a smile. “But f
think i recognize you, Mary Ed-
d«l!, even tiiongh I never haw
seen you before. Hush! I am
Joseph’s “Little Avife!” Joe’s Avife?” gasped
Polly, “But Avhore is ho? “ Why
has he e never—”
Once more tho stranger lifted
her slim forefinger with a gesture
of warning. Polly recoiled,
“Is ho dead?” she whispered.
“You said his wife — not his
widow!”
The lady sat down in one of the
old claAv-footed chairs, holding her
hand over her heart.
“I am his wife,” said she. “I
have been his widow for fifteen
long years. Next month he comes
out.”
“Out* From where?” whispered
Polly.”
“From State’s prison!”
“What!” gasped Polly, rerqcm*
Coring the roseato castles in the
£ “Little Joe,^” the only surviving
descendant <<Qh of have the been family fraud— tree.
^ m ust a
a m istake!”
firmly spoke hard, the woman,
wag hard—cruelly I grant
^ but it was only justice. Hq
} ieen yer’s speculating—he forged
hig 0 mp i 0 name, hoping to re-
place the money before the deed
should be discovered. But he was
d 0 t ec t e d, and for fifteen years h«
be0n 0 xp i H ti n g the crime.”
“For^ne/’* ca^mfy wenf on the
pale woman, “I should have gone
mad if 1 had not set a purpose be-
f or0 me — a y e> and lived up to it,
j } ia ve given myself no time
^ j } ia q always a knack
and^ m y my'pictures fingers, so I turned art-
ist, became the
^g 9 ' r j ^invested it
wouk Y like j ona h’ s gourd.
p le called m0 the ‘Woman in
Black.’ They never dreamed that
the fashionable artist iuherluxuri-
0U9 9 tu di* was one and the same with
the veiled speculator who haunted
Street in business hours.
the task is over at last. 1
kev0 pa j d back every cent of the
fatal sum that threw my husband
into prison, and I have enough left
to settle all the debts on this place
—the heritage that Joseph has al¬
ways sighed for and dreamed of—
and to make it habitable once
more. When he comes back to
the world whence he has been sc
long exiled this Avill bo his home.
Here it is that our uoav life is to
begin. He does not know of it.
I dared not tell him until my plans
should be complete,'’ hands.
Polly clasped her
“You are a heroine,” said she.
“I can t tell you how much l
honor you. Oh, Joe poor Joe.
anil he and I played together ^
tioned the newcomer, timiuiy.
“Joe often spoke of her. His
grandmother. If she should be
--She is not dead!” cried Polly,
“Oh, I am so thankful for that! ’
said the pale stranger. “She will
be the link between past and future
in my husband’s life. For the
present, that has no part m tna
5 programme. It was always Joe s
ream to come back here when avo
should .be rich, ..and make oux
home where the old grandmother
*«• And while he was dead to
Polly started ^Itave up earned the fire, it which out.
was to have died sway forever on
h «,° f hearthstone. She drew
baca the close .,1 paper shades, to
let ill the yellow, October sun-
6 hme; sue made a cup of tea, and
unpacked the thm old silver spoons
r< n r oa » -
Polly n ii sent away the brisk, . busi-
noss-raced ageut of taecity curios-
tty shop, and sent for Mrs. Cam-
er ? l V
t Little •*.,! Joe. t i lie i r s coming • homs> i
again, crooned the old woman,
peaceiulh roc mug back and forth
be Lore tne roaring log Kre. “Anil
38 w \, bere, and the old
place , is a c itted up, even down to
the new carpets on the floor and
ourtains to tne windows. I
knew that little Joe hadn t forgot-
^•B&fTSSTLrl- sho sail
“Joe—little Joe!”
white-haired I;, the.bowel and whostood prematurely before
man
8 or she b ,° saw s f \ onlv 11 /! the 19 onrlv-h-iired 9111 V bailed
ad who had T left I her thirty years
MS 7 hiShatfr0m ‘ he tOP
Was Se not ninety years old
v ihat very day?
“I've come back to you, gran
ny,” he said, faintly smiling, as
ho drooped his head to lay it on
her shoulder.
And for those two the past and
future were alike blotted out.
There remained only the present,
Joe’s faithful wife stood by, hei
ayes “U welling 1 over with tears.
. be iit .6 tnw, *"■»* said she. “* closely 7 ou ! d
arrasping 1 o.ly . s hand. That tne
pages of Ins mm i would bo a
blank as to all those dreadful
years, But perhaps it is better
so. ”
"Yes, s-ud Poily, m - a choked ill
voice, “it is no tier so! — Sat-ur-
day Night/’
More ,tl-----:— T February _ ,
oinus occur in
. other
tnaii in any month. July is
the moil tii of fewest births.
Too Mild.
Jack (sarcastically)—When your
socks come from the laundry do
you darn them yourself?
Frank (promptly)—No I genor-
ally use a stronger expression.—
Truth,
Disappointing 1 .
“How did the election go in
your district?”
bring “Dry. jug The train that was to
the ran of the track and
broke the last on© o* them!”—At¬
lanta Constitution,
Useful Household Hints.
__Milk is better for home kent
arK ® r quan f ity 18 kept over night
n one vessel *
—It is better to keep baked pas¬
frigerator, try in a cupboard it would than be in a re¬
get damp and as heavy in the apt latter to
place.
To keep jellies from molding
cover them over with puUerized
sugar ;o a depth of a quarter of an
inch. They Avill keep for years if
this is tone.
It Refer* to Mc*#poljr.
little Niece—Aunty, you are at
eld maid?
Little Aunt Mary—Yes, Niece—Don't darling. the Bible af
s
ft isn’t good to be alone?
Aunt Mary—It refers darling, only td
men in this respect, ana
does not refer to women. Most of
the women are better off alone.
favorably Impressed by tho Review.
• S^l’a Fditor_Where’s thaf
n0 vel o£ °WifSTn't that I brought
h 8
m, ™t*»
______
£^t jus! Whv ’ri 1
br home after I
viewed it in th» paper three So*
aa ^ s a £ 0,
That Filled the Bill-
“I have here, sir,” said the nelf
^po^er, to the editor, an „ account
c f the wedding of a steamboat ca£
What would be a gowl
cover it?" re pned the editor.
HOUSE AND HOMS.
womon tho Raal Oraamonta |cl
tho Houaohoil.
--
A Trained Nurse’s Valuable Advice—
Is Marriage a Failure
Household Hints—A Few Recipei
for Cooking
It has been said that the orna-
monts of every home are the
friends who visit it. Now,
though callers and more intinfate
acquaintances orative, may be morally dee-
still th a real ornaments of
the home aro t cr e women who live
m it. They are the bits of pretti-
ness that turn even plain sur
5? 0- at
nightfall or sets ‘T out Tf from thit thence
sse u *v— P° a the bread- «*>
winner
“What is home without a
mother?” i, a very much parodied
expression, l yet in it lies ri concise
Bisters, an resonant daughters, truth, thou-h "and wife
each al
ty-xts of home femininity go as
much toward tho making mi of
that one especial nest for manv
who have been deprived of the
tender and loving care of parents
~
years ago.
A sunny faced wife who kisses
her husband goodby in the morn-
ing, follows a bright eyed daughter who
him to the door with gay
little admonitions as to the care of
his health during the day, or a
sister who places his gloves and
hat in readiness for him as an act
Q f affectionate attention, these are
the ornaments of the home ho
leaves behind that a man remem-
bers, though he might not be able,
to save his soul, to recall the es-
P 3 ™ 1 " aI *o of any ware iu his
^Do noTfo^^s busyLvomen.^Make 1 ^litSehomo
circle of yom-
selves brio-ht and ? attractive attra ® tlve to the
men folks r n that belongs u to you and
they —-gagemeuteandlodM- will not invent so manv busi-
l"fu. “ ^ *° 864 aWay fr0 “
--
I® Marriage a Failure?
During divorces the past twenty yearfe
328,000 have been granted
by the courts of the United States,
90 per cent, of them to women,
While this total is large enough to
appear the to give good grounds for
assertion that the perpetuity
of the family is threatened, it
dwi panson . ndbs with 7[ ie the " brought number into of com- mar-
riages One-twenbeth during the same period,
of the total is 16,400,
the number granted each year,
only about 1 per cent of the num-
b-’ r marriages* There is noth-
mg m the world that human be-
mgs undertake to do that can
show so small a percentage of
total failure as marriage. Though
statistics are not at hand to prove
it> there is doubt if divorces much
exceed They golden weddings in number.
do not exceed silver wed-
dings. Investigation of the sub-
jectof improper marriages would
seam to offer s^ietyTanexiimina- more hone of results
beneficial to
tion of divorce statistics.
A Trained Nurse’s Advice.
“It is Aveil known that the skin
is a great absorbent, and nutrition
evon can be conveyed through its
physician agency,” says a trained nurse. “A
once ordered a boef
tea bath for a baby I Ava 3 nursing,
who was apparently dying of some
exhausting admirable boAvel trouble, and
with effect. And I my¬
self have found that rubbing deli¬
cate persons with warm olive oil
is an excellent tonic. If I had
charge of a puny, sickly baby I
should feel inclined to give it oil
baths instead of Avater baths, and
try the effect. The oil is quite as
cleansing, and it stands to reason
that such tiny things, particularly
if they are badly nourished, should
not have the natural oil of tho body
continually washed away.”
Washing Lemons.
“Please put those lemons in a
dish of water and let them stay
there ten or fifteen minutes before
you use them,” said a lady to the
neAv housemaid, Avho Avas getting
ready to girl make lemon pies.
The looked somewhat sur¬
prised and the lady continued;
“I do not suppose that many
people outside stop of to think lemon about it, but
tho a is anvthing
but clean. If you will look at it
you Avill see some tiny black spots
like scales all over it. These are
the eggs of an insect, and if the
lemon is not Avashel iboy aro A r ory
likely to become an ingredient of
whatever dish the lemon is used
for.
“For years I hare made the
practise with of cleaning scrub brush all the lemons
ths 1 use a then dropping kept for
purpose, them
iniw a dish of water, to remain five
or ten minutes before using. It is
a little trouble, but I am very fond
of having things clean, especially
the things I am expected to eat.”
—N. Y. Ledger.
, . , . ..
nXa<i ^ a
lu l cul ’'
A Few Recipes for Cooking 1 .
i Gypsy Pudding. — Cut stale
sponge cako in thin slices; spread
j with sandwich, apple jelly. place Put together deep like
* them in a
bsb, cover with boiled mustard.
^ erv0 uery cold.
Vegetable Soup.— Three
rots, four onions, four potatoes,
one pint of cabbage, cut fine. Put
on to stew with just enough water
tender. to cover, Then until the ingredients are
fill up with boiling
water twenty minutes lief ore serv-
mg. Add one pint of milk, one
beaten. tablespoonful of butter, two eggs,
Stir thick with flour anil
add a little yeast powder. Boil for
a few minutes before serving.
I’aviT Muffin's.—M ix equal
: muffin ; * f t minutes
u r or wen tv
the rings without sticking. While
tlot split iu llalves i on olie half
P X »?f *>!*> linghtly sprinkled
s VS a tj then unmediately
c e'or witli the o.ner halt. When
f "ami “y 10 place ‘ 1113 f for , rul ‘ ten cove mmutes .™>f before »
“J boFT 10 *- Cookies.—
One cup of
molasses, ono cup of sugar, half a
cup of butter, one cup of cold
water, four cups of flour, two
iinaU teaspoons of soda. Drop
w ^h a teaspoon,
Dried Apple Jelly.— Take a
quart bowl of dried apples, wash
nicely, cover them with cold
water, let them soak all night, add
four quarts of cold water, let it
boil without stirring till the taste
is cooked out of the apple; there is
liardlv a quart of syrup; strain and
add 1 1-2 pints of sugar, and boil
a few minutes,
pi^X CJhocolyte Pudding — bre^ One
of
f nbs ’ 5 o£ tllTee eggs ’ tive
&thRXk n ° 7 ,d7°b-eld ,
ocaiu cue mux ana aaa Dieaa
crumbs ana chocolate; take from
tho firp " q
tn ° tlie TvT aii onp oae ' llait pnn cU P of oL
n r
brown and serve with
cream.
________
Brown Bread. —This is usually
steamed, but on this occasion it is
baked. Three cups of Indian meal,
one cup of rye meal, one cup of
flour, one cup of molasses, 3 1-2
cups of warm water, one teaspoon-
fuf of saleratus, one teaspoonful
of salt. Dissolve the saleratus in
the water. Bake four hours.
g 1sgeb Bread.-Mk together
one CU p (l f molasses, one table-
spoonful Lonful of shortening, one teas-
: of salt, two teaspoonfuls "
j( 5 ^ uger * , md two c f flour .
Al 0 6 teaspoonful of soda dis-
so lved in one cup of boiling water.
Mix w ell and bake in rather a
^ nvnT1
Johnny Cake.— Scald Yvhite
Indian meal which has been sifted,
Btir t {t cold thoroughly, add a little salt
an( milk to make it thin
enough to turn into a baking tin,
which must be greased to prevent
it'from sticking. Make it one inch
thick in the pan and bake in a
<I™k oven. It will take about
twenty minutes to cook,
Fashion’s Favors.
Princess coats of ribbed velvel
are worn Avith skirts of silk or
cloth.
Cream-colored, dove-gray, Eng-
lish-pink in and pale-violet the felt hats
ire great favor for moment,
and the trimmings consist of deep-
toned velvets, ecru Irish guipure
lace, and short, fluffv feather tips.
The felt hats are of French make,
and are as soft and delicate to the
couch as velvet.
A dainty garment has a skirt of
shot and pink bengaline, bordered
with tiny frills of moire ribbbon and
narrow passementerie of gold-lined
crystal beads. The bodice made a
charming apple-green contrast, consisting of
silk veiled in Avhite
lisse, embroidered with marguer¬
ites. The draped Sleeves are tied
m the shoulders with white moire
ribbons, and a sash of the same
finished the bodice just below the
waist.
ind High bodices fastened behind,
sleeves, long, with very full Direetoira
rich lace frills droop-
ng over the hands, are a feature
)f some of the very chic and charm¬
ing demi-dress creations of the
moment.
For afternoon wear is shown a
gown of blue and gold changeable
relours, bearing the stamp of
8 avoye. The short waist has a
collar and girdle of Persian em-
troduced Droidery. Blue corded silk is in¬
in the form of butterfly
cuffs over the shoulders, and a
aarrow band bordering tho skirt.
Full front and sleeve* of the ma¬ 1
terial. i
* V r el . vet , . used . ,
is on even tne coar- !
sest cloth. A favorite disposition
cuff 01 AAuth 1S ^ ie a trimming velvet band of the sewed cloth S
down on all edges, and a big but-
to 1 at each end. If the velvet is ]
u-v 1 to face the cuff almost to the I
«x no ll cu&8re buttons are an employed.', tie3
t “ va ™
'
VOL XVII—NO. 48
( MaRICAN COTTON SPINNING
MatUtk< »ti r.ox»nt in the Home Con*
ku nipt Ion l>urln~ Pint T*Hr*.
The Americans are beginning
to work u]> more anti more of their
cotton at ho:Vu. At close of Juno,
1893, there were 293 cotton spin-
mg mills at work in Virginia,
NTorth Carolina. South Carolina,
Georgia, Florida, Alabama, Mis¬
sissippi, Louisiana, Texas, Arkan¬
tucky. sas, Tennessee, Missouri and Ken¬
These mills possessed bo-
tw :en them 1,938,524 spindles and
It). 008 looms. At the clone of June,
1881, the corresponding number of
mills was 283. having between
them 1,750,047 spindles and 38,511
looms. At tho close of Juno, 1890,
the corresponding number of mills
was 1,624,335 271, having spindles between them
and 30,534
looms.
At the close of June, 1839, tho
number of mills was 259, having
between them 1,344,576 spindles
and 31,435 looms. At tho close of
June, 1888, the corresponding
number of mills was 235, having
between them 1,777,991 spindles
and 27,556 looms. Carrying the
comparison back still further, viz.,
to June, 1880, we find that tbs
number of mills was then 164,
having dles between tlioni 544,566 spin¬
and 12,239 looms, it- in u
appears that tho number of ini' s
has nearly doubled during the last-
twelve years, while the number of
spindles has multiplied considera¬
bly more than three-fold.
The consumption of cotton in
American cotton mills has made a
corresponding twelve advance during the
years. In 1801-3 this con¬
sumption bales; in amounted to 681,471
1890-1, to 605,916 bales t
in 1889-90 to 549,478 bales; in
1888-9, 443,373 to 486,603 bales; in 1887-8.
to bales, and in 1879-80,
to 183,748 bales. The extreme
sity cheapness which of cotton and the neces-
American cotton plant¬
ers experience of finding new out¬
lets for their production are, oi
course, calculated to still furthoi
develop the growing cotton manu¬
States. facturing industry of the Southern
In June this year North Caro¬
lina had no fewer than 112 cotton
mills, South Carolina 47, -Georgia
57, Alabama 2u and Tennessee 22.
There were also 12 mills in Vir¬
ginia, Texas, but Arkansas, Mississippi, Missouri Louisiana,
and
Kentucky had only 23 mills be¬
tween them. To estimate still
further the importance attained by
American cotton spinning, wg
must compare tho horn 1 consump
tion of cotton in the United Statea
with the aggregate production.
The crop of 1891-2 am muted to
9,038,707 bales, of wh a 081,471
bales were worked up v homo, or
about 7 1-2 per cent.' of the whole
production. In the American
1879-80 cotton
crop amounted to 5,757,397 bales,
of which 188,748 bales were worked
up at home, or a little more than 3
per cent, of tile whole production.
It follows that the home consump¬
tion has gained on the aggregate
production the during the lasx twelve
years to extent of about 4 per
cent. The growth of cotton in
the United States lias made an ex¬
traordinary advance during the
last fifty years.
In 1840-1 the crop amounted tc
1,639,353 bales; in 1850-1, to 2,415,-
257 bales; in 1860-1, to 3,826,080
bales; in 1870-1, to 4.352,317 bales;
in 1880-1, to 6,589,329 bales, and
in 1890-1, to 8,855,513. h was
thought by some observers that
the abolition of slavery would be
the ruin of the American cotton
interest, but the figures which wo
have just cited show that- predic¬
tions of this kind have bee n A to¬
gether falsified by actual experi¬
ence. —“Engineering. ”
Her Choice.
“Whit do you like me in th • iica-t?”
Ho (jucstione l her :hat a; . hi.
As near the smoldoria? tiro the/ sat
And vratohed its flickering Hjht.
“I think I like you best,” she said,
And tossed aside her hair,
“In—let ma think—O'.:, yes , I know,
That business suit you wear.”
“And why,” he questioned tender!/.
His eyes bent cn her face,
Where now and then a truant blush
Would leaveits teii-ta:e trace.
“Because,” she answered with asi^h.
Her eyes now turned away,
“When you have on your busi .ess suit
Vou aro so far away.”
—Tom uiusson.
The Last Gan
“This, then, Miss Gmssneck, ”
mid tho young man as he started
ior the door, “is your final decis-
on?”
“It is, 31 firmly. r. Wicklugge,” said the
foung girl replied,
“Ttien, ” he hi3 voice be¬
traying an unnatural calmness,
‘there is but one thing more to
Add.”
“What is that?” she asked, toy-
jig absently with the lobe of her
j iQ i]-]iko o ;r.
“j c i s t his,” he muttered—“shall
[ re turn black sati - suspend-
>rR hv > m-ri ' ‘ ’ or 1 Li"
|CW
Fine gold gimp is one of the
fashiwsobi* garnitures, es-
fU! ' trai ‘ mins o£ cU> ‘ b
A PRAYLR.
Our Father iu Hcaveu
\felitt uqto Tho®
A pfaitn of Than’rssriVfajf *
A pm^i# tribe free.
Protect ua, proaerr# us
From Vrcra wile? every that known sn.-tci^
ri 5 sr.il us
Give Free tom from carp.
Assist us with duty
Wherercr it bo.
And add love to louring
Ft- freedom and Thee.
Thr ugh meroy and justice
Sc id thou the light giren
To tl-oae w 10m T'.y radiance
Ti :.asmutes to Thy Genren.
Katiiaiu e C. IIla to, in Uosven Sudani
Random Notrs of Interest
The smallest known quadruped
the pigmy mouse of Siberia.
Chinese control almost tho
tiro shoo-making business in
fornia.
In India tliore is a specios
crow that laughs like a human
ing.
There is but one sudden
among women to every tsn
men.
Tennyson is reported to b<*
1,173(1 -/arson Avhose body has
depositodin Wostmiir/er
Glass in oven doc a is a
contrivance. It enaY >3 e nk >
Avatch the food wit 1 >ut
the doors.
The Dead Sea is nothing
than a small but very old salt
now in an advanced state of
oration.
The longest word in the
Century Dictionary is
mgeolaryngeal. is Tho next
transubstantiatiorialist.
There is a tooth of Buddha,
served and worshipped in
Indian temple, Avhich prob
buy. the gold in the Arorld corrld
Herculile, the new French
plosive, is so powerful that half
placed pound of it, in a recent test,
tons. a stone weighing
Tho smallest inhabited island
the world is that upon Avhich
Eddystone Lighthouse stands.
time of low water it is only 30
in dfanicter.
Tile Czar of Russia is
est individual landowner in ’
world. The area of his
is far greater than that of the
tire Republic of France.
Wedding Bouquets.
bouquets An English Avhat fashion for
is they call *
“spray size bouquet.” It is of
mous and is made to be
pended from the waist at the
leaving tho bride’s hands free
the prayer book, which an
bride inA T ariably carries.
effect of tho beautifully
flat arrangement of flower -
charming against the rich
Batin or brocade of the bride’s
and the decorative effect is
further heightened by long
of Avhite satin ribbon which
with tho flowers and
hair fern and hang in a
cascade down the entire length
the skirt.
Willing to Compromise.
“No,” said tho young
“it can never bo. I wish I
have spared you tho pain of
refusal, but- let mo say—”
“Don’t say you will always b
a howled sister to the me. disappointed Mi * ICerleigh,
“Anything but tliat.”
“No, Mr. Wellalong,” she
For gently, “1 But am hardly I old
that. might bo
niece knoAv.”—Chicago or something -i that
you T;vKine.
A Great Succoss.
Foatherstone—I hear that
have Avrittcn a play, and are your¬
self going Do to take think tho it will
part. you be
success?
Billboard—It ha 3 already been
a success from rich my banker, standpoint. I
appear as a and
manager has already bad to
me a now suit to fill tho part.
ACAL iz r. V £
Immaoulai K C :
86 LOY 10
A 1 LL&
t; xmroing sn«i Jay
und r,»fit direction < i ■
of our l:i.d , of Mere), _
young iadi all the advantv
a thorough English education
Tit RMS PER SESSION, Inch.
boani, tuition and waehinj, $75.
Musi:’, drawing aud painting
extra St idles charges. iviSi
be resumed r t
in September.
For further inform (ion rd
as above.
CLEKEUiia Mi
TOCCOA, GA.
D. L. CLEVELAND, Pkopsiet^.j
£grGc,vtl Rare, Fulite Attr-uticn
^2PER DAY