Newspaper Page Text
—PUBLISHED WEEKLV AT—
HAMILTON, GEORGIA.
The study of the science of physical
culture is receiving more public atten¬
tion thau ever before in this country.
Harvard l Diversity lias spent $110,000
for lhe advancement of it; Amherst,$55,
000; Cornell, $40,000; Princeton, $3P,
000; Johns Hopkins, $10,000; Yale,
since 1860, $13,000, and Yas-ar pioposes
to spend $20,000. The preparatory
schools and athletic associations arc also
spending large amounts for the same
purpose._
The New York (fiapfiic mentious the
fact that the Pacific coast is moving for
the purchase by this Government of
Lower California,, which it is said ti.e
Mexican Government will sell for $20,
000,000. The large lands in Lower Cali¬
fornia are nearly all owned by the citi¬
zens of the United States. Senator
Hearst, of California, owns millions qf
acres there. Isut it is nearly all a moun¬
tainous region. 'The peninsula is 750
miles in length and from 50 to 120 miles
in width, and by far the greater portion
is barren and desolate. The only excuse
for its purchase is that the mountains
arc full of gold and silver deposits of
great richness.
The grave question of shipping live
stock is one, states the New York Sun,
which is agitating the minds of our
Western cattle growers. It has been re¬
peatedly demonstrated that no matter
how tljev ure transported they are sub¬
jected to the extremes of hot and cold
weather, and through the medium of in¬
sufficient water anil feed are rendered in
numerous cases unfit for food on arrival
at destination. While the cattle grow¬
ers still adhere to the idea of killing as
near as possibj to where the cattle are
raised, they are still obliged to ship
Kast and are therefore directing their
attention to the lines which use power
brakes and close couplers on cattle ears,
which they regard as the best and easiest
riding for all purposes.
The foreign population of Chicago at
this time, according to the Chicago
Clribc., is less than thirty per cent, of the
total population. The proportion of the
foreign population of Chicago is actually
less than that of most of the large West¬
ern cities, anti probably less than that of
New York city. It is less than that of
St. I.ouis, than that of Kansas City, than
that t probably) of Cincinnati, and u
great deal less than that of Milwaukee
and many smaller cit es of the North¬
west. An erroneous notion concerning
tiie forc’gn population of Chicago which
prevails in some parts of t,h# country
makes it u turbulent and dangerous so¬
cial factor. 'Hie bulk of the foreign
section of this population is composed
of industriouj, hard-working, orderly
and law-abiding people.
t Has a photographer any right to sell
photographs of one of his customers
without the consent of the customer:
That is an interesting question which
has lust been decided for the first time
in England by the High Court of Jus¬
tice. Mrs. Pollard sat for her photo¬
graph at the gallery of the Photographic
Company. feubsequently she learned
that the company had prepared copies
for Christmas cards and were offering
them for sale, rlie thereupon applied
for an injunction to restrain this liberty
The company contended that the neg¬
ative was their property and that they
had a right to print copies from it
for sale. Mr. Justice North decides
that a photographer lia< no such right
unless he is expresdy or by clear impli¬
cation authorized to do so by the sitter,
lie accordingly granted the injunction.
The mania for the construction of ship
canals seems to be spreading, or rather
reviving. Russia is the latest to enter
the arena of designs of this character. It
seems that as far back as the time of
l’eter the Great a plan was suggested for
connecting the Baltic and White Seas
by a canal. The project has been kept
alive all these years ami recently experi¬
enced engineers have been sent out to
survey the country and report on the
difficulties and the cost of construction,
but they have already finished their work
•uid handed in their report. They assert
that the difficulties are practically nil
and the project quite feasible, and they
sstimate the cost of the canal, which will
be 210 Russiau versts 120 miles) long.at
f5,000,000. There is practically no
>-;poeition to the carrying out of the
s heme and the prospect is that tho
t erprise will soon be commauced.
The Woman’s Christian Temperanca
Union of West Virginia is pushing the work
of establishing a State Industrial School.
valentine verses.
CUPID TRIUMPHANT.
“Taira heed! Take heed! I come with speed,
lor I’ve just new-strung my bow;
My quiver is full; if the s&aft I pull,
Some arrow may hit, you know.
“Oh, pull away:’ did the maiden say;
“For who’d I e the coward to mind
A bow that is strung by a coward so young,
Who in both of his eyes is bhnd?”
_ bow he drew, flew,
.e and the shaft it
Am! th- maiden was heard to cry,
‘On ! take this dart from my wounded heart,
Lear Cupid, or'.-i-w I die!”
Hesaid, as he smiled, “I am hut a child
And could have no power to find
With both of my eyes where thedartnow lies,
And you know, dearest maid, I am blind,”
—-Wrs. J. Shepherd.
A HUSBAND TO HIS WIFE.
’Twas not the moonlight and the rose,
The days of June in old lang syne;
Tbat brought me suppliant to your fcot,
* Truying to be your Valentine.
Tbe.se soberer days th i blossoms blow
As fragrant as in old lang syne,
• And still in spirit anil in truth
I pray to be your Valentine.
~Mn. T. IV. Dewing.
i.ove’s RESUME.
The Sun, the Hose, the Lily, the Dove—
I loved them all in my eorly love,
I love them no longer, but her alone—
The Pure, tho Tender, the Only, the One;
For she herself, my Queen of Love,
Is Hose, and Lily, and Pun, and Dove!
— Heine .
EROS.
The s-?nse of the world is short—
Long and various tho report—
To love and be beloved;
Men and gods have not outiearned it;
And, how oft soe er they’ve turned it,
’’I is not to bo improved.
—Emerson.
chandsiamma’s valentine.
Two little birdies after one fly!
Wonder if maybe they mean you and I—
Wil -IIoy und Jim!
Two little b’uddors, that you can see;
And if one of ’erii s you and the other is me,
Wonder who’s him!
Butter.'!ies is such ex-culiar things!
Nothing at all but. just two little wings.
Guess they must be
Quick winkia tbinkies! Wonder if this
Isn’t a think, or a dear flying kiss,
F’ein g annie to we!
S’pose we can catch it ! And than if wo do
Is one half for I and the other for you?
Or-s’pose wo just look—
A 4 fly ny doesn’t aoisn c want want to to be oe tored torea into into two two,
And a kiss is as good, when you know it has
As it it was took. ,
— Mrs. A. D. T. Whitney.
Tins whole WIDE world.
Not from the whole wide world I choose thee,
Sweetheart, light of the land on i the s;«!
The wide, wide world could not inclose the >,
For thou art the whole wide world to me.
—Richard Uilder.
TRirMFH OF CIIARIS.
£oo the chariot at ban 1 here of Love,
Wherein my lady rideth!
Each that draws is a swan, or a dove,
And well the ear Love guideth.
As she goes, all hearts do duty unto her
beauty.
And, enamored, do wish, so they might but
enjoy such a sight.
That they still were to run by her side
Through swor Is, through seas, whither she
would rule.
—Ben Johnson*
HER CERTIFICATE.
BY EMMA A. UPPER.
The monthly teachers’ examination of
Black County was about to begin.
Milly sat in a corner of the big room,
biting her pencil and gazing and at the mot
asplrantTcertificates—-i^antique lev assemblage of teachers tremblincr
shawls dresses and hats in voraie tive vears atro thal
and Millv had not known
l d wore j •
Millv was -»n as i rant for a first certi
ficate but she \ was V not trembling ^ Mm
sat erect and bnght-cyed j - v and j charmingly v, i
and and 1 a a 'wicked' w .eked- little*cap^o^iimtch little cap natch. "it It
th'A 1G ' tr!
' m VA VBiv iy sh« was ;“ « , J t Tonmi nLw L BUrrir
desert p of - Black R c ounty n styles
lhe young man in he next seat ap
peared to think so. He ookod at her
•with quite lrank approval, Milly could
not help knowing it. the looked down
at her snug graves and pulled a petal and
from the yellow asters she wore, picked
finally dropped her haste. pencil. He
k ! ‘ ax, m ,s
“Thaira you!’ she satd He looked
at her still, but rather bashfully. “What
a lot of them!” she said, taking pity
upon him.
“Yes. MThat do you think of them?"
he responded. hair curled
She noticed that his l’ght
thickly, and that he had a fine chin.
“1 — I —don’t you thmk they’re rather
frumpy? ’she said, seriously.
lie laughed explosively, bringing his
hand down on his knee.
“The word was made for them!’’ he
declared. “You see I'm not of Black
County, though I intend teaching here.
and 1 don't feel traitorous. They are
funnv.” incredulity. He looked at her going with puzzled teach?”
“Are you to
he murmured. “I beg your pardon,
*" *
_»
“Oh, no, don't,” cried Milly. Was he
too tall No. indeed! And his nose
was bke Napoleon's. ‘Til* tell you
about it. I like to tell people; it’s bo
funny. Yes, I’m going to teach if I
can pass the examinations. You see, I’ve
been staying this summer at my Uncle
Ridgley’s, out on a farm. Well, the
teacher in that district was taken sick
the other day, and what did my Uncle
Ridgiey do but hire me for the fall term
—me! He’s one of the school directors,
you see. He said it would do me good
deplored to ‘.spunk up’and do it. He's always
my not being able to make pie
crust and weed onions, and he worte
home himseif and got permission 1 or
me. I know I’ll enby it—it’ll be such a
new experience—but I’m full of awful
qualms. I’ve never taught, and I don’t
^ ear uow aad h ?w. ‘"smbhug. A ,J<1 J’ve certificate—I’m been at board- in
f"f.'f ^ 1 m dread '
fully rusty in the common branches.” ,
bhe finished breathlessly and laugh
ing, and he laughed too.
“As for me,” lie said, in pleased re
turn of her confidence, “it’s merely a
means to an end. my teaching. I want
to st udy law, and I want to do it by my
own exertions. That sounds rather
goody goody, doesn’t it? But I do.
I’ve taught a few terms in my own
county, and now I’ve a school engaged
in yours. I’ve-”
But the a platform formidably fat examiner rapped
on desic, and sent a thinner,
but equally awe-inspiring, colleague in
and out among the seats with the arith
inetic questions in purple type-writing;
and the Black Comity applicants sharp
ened their pencils and wrinkled their
brows stud ion-ly and went to work.
Milly opened her lunch-basket, three
hours later, in the small room provided
for the purpose.
There was enough for three men, she
mused, as she attacked a sandwich.
A bony young woman—in red and
lavender hat—just shaking off the
crumbs of her ascetic repast of soda -
her crackers with and pickled pears, regarded
stern amaijement as she with
drew.
Through the door she passed through
came the young man who sat next to
Milly
“Oh, am you here?” he said, with a
shallow pretense to surprise. kerf
lie sat down near with an expres
sion of very frank pleasure.
What was it that made him look * 9
handsome when he smiled, she wondered
—-his merry eyes or his white teeth?
“How have you got on?” he ques
tioned, sympathetically, opening 1 ° his
lunch ‘
. •Horridly, she admitted. ... , I m worse
that I thought I ve forgotten every
Hung.” bhe looked at his scanty Dread
and butter “Please have one of my sand
wiches, she said, shyly forcing it upon
V 11 ck ’ f ‘Everything,. positively. frald * 1m
f, lls ° s ut “ a11 m and -' 8 f U th ?P« “ ™li L ncle *
’
Bidgley , , say? I made terrible work of
those cube-root and brokerage problems,
1 know I did. How I envied you, you
looked so perfectly unflusteied ov ? r
them! And now the geography ! Good
ness me * J think I did pretty well with
the Hebrides and ) ucatan and the Ot>i
liiver; but, oh^ dear! what are the
is °thermal zones?”
bhe raade ber ll P 3 and ber fira0 ^ b
, fjoked . ,. 1 at°him i PUCker ** h
° meekly ^ up .
He , atlghed w , th tbat enjoying, boy¬
ish slap of his hand on his kaee.
“Don’t you know, honor bright?” he
ejaculated. shook her head solemnly, “I
She
haven’t the faintest idea. I never did
care for physical geography, and it’s gone
right out of my head.”
She bit a tart ruefully. “Won’t you
take one of these? You see how much
of this I could never eat! No, I don't
believe I’ll get a certificate at all!”
He gazed at her with poignant regret
iu his eyes.
“Oh, 1 hope so”’ he said, sincerely,
“You’ve handed in your papers, haven’t
you?” he added, vaguely.
She shook her head.
“No; I was floundering through the
end of it when I got hungry.”
They looked at each other with wido
eves, startled bv a common idea.
' mustn’t! It would nT
“Ob. no.no! you
I* right or honest!” she gasped, half
lauglutur, “AblVractly half awed.
it wouldn’t,” the young
man responded, reflectively. “Ordlnar
i*. I Wouldn’t dream of doing ado it iu
deed > but ’ D >u see ’ y° u aren 1 Pf'
mg teaching as a profession-you’re that not
going to teach but one term, and
lor ,be sake of it? being a uncle—and ‘new experi
ence, ’ and to please your it
£ would ou ‘“ be * a pity ! ^ for a / paltry J certilicato
ye t yo and Ai t fcel that r
should violate my conscience by helping
vou to i t a little, and —and — theisother
mal zones are spaces on opposite sides of
'he e.iuator having the same mean tern
perature and bounded by corresponding
isothermal lines.” .
*
Mflly sprang -L om l ncle Ridgley’s
buggy, two weeks later and rushed up
the walk like a small cyclone
She had been to the Postoffice and
ghe held a blue envelope in her hand, or
clutched it.
‘Tvegotit!” she cried
Aunt Kidgley was sweeping off- the
front porch. it! My-per were’nt
“I’ve got cents,
very good, Uncle you John know, be glad? but I Where passed, is
Won t
he?”
“land alive!” said Aunt Ridgley,
weakly- “What you got? He’s ia the
barn, likely.” ad. studied
Uncle Uujgely was g with He
the small document, interspersed
remarks.
“I knew you hadn’t no call to worry.”
“Frotty good .” “Hain't never be’a a
bettor teacher in this deestr.ct than
you’d make—warrant ye!”
Ho took off his spectacles as he handed
it back.
“There was a young man here igst
now.” he observed, “about the scho*L
Seems he had one engaged over to Bev
ecly. and scarlet fever broke out over
there, and they ain’t goin’ to have no
school yet awhile, and he come over to
see about getiin’ this one. Dave Han
ley told him about it: seems he’s a
cousin of Dave’s. Took examination
two weeks ago, same as you did. Wal.
I told him mv niece had got the school
promised to her,” said Uncle Ridgely,
serenely.
‘‘What did he look like?” said Milly,
with sudden interest.
“Oh, you needn’t spunk up! He’s
goin’ home on Doon train,” said Uncle
Ridgely, winking. “W’y, good lookin’
feller he was; taller'n most, and hair
color o’ that cream colored nag and
curly, and a good, strong lookin’--”
Milly crushed her certificate in her ex
cited hand.
^ W’y, ere over 1S \ to e: l Dave she demanded. Hanley s. I s po c e,
Dave’s his cousin. What are you goin'
to—”
But whatever Miily was going to do
she already doing. ' bhe gone,
was was
and she had dropped her certificate on
the barn floor.
Dave Hanley's front door was open,
and reasonably full of small Hanleys,but
Milly stepped could over them, back
She look through to the
porch, where through Dave sat with hi3 visitor,
and she ran the house,
The visitor rose,
“Why—why—” he stammered,
He was bewildered, but his delight
was mote than his bewilderment. He
took her hand, in his agitation, and
then rendered that he had small right
to, and blushed.
Dave Hanley, whether from confusion
or superfine delicacy, wandered into
the yard.
Milly shook hands. If she had looked
pretty in a cloth gown and cap, she was
irresistible m a blue blouse and striped
skirt, and no hat at all, and the young
man devoured her with bright eye3.
“I’ve come to tell you,” she panted—
she was out of breath—“that it’s me thf
school is promised to; it’s here my Uncle
Ridgely lives—don’t you see? And
1 to it for _
ni going give up you, in youl
favor. I have no right to it, don’t yon
understand? I don’t believe I’d ever gol
my certificate if it hadn’t been for you.
I hrtd b ee ? a blt low ® r “ S eo K^phy,
1 Wouldn’t , have passed. It was really
you that got it for me, you unscrupulous
p er8on - And I don t need the school it
”** ^ only for Lncle Ridgely-and you do.
ou ^nnt tostuay law.una well, you ve
to take
She was not to be moved , ,, the fraction , .
of an inch. She stood there, flushing
aa( j prettily smiling, and twisting an
ead ] ier iui ue gas h but she was firm.
haven - t any right * to it and j don -,
*
nced jt< and ant to 8tady i aw> «
wa3 ad s g e would say, though he argued
and earnestly Ridgely pleaded disappointed. for an hour. Bui
Uncle was
there were gratifying recompenses. The
drst was that Milly was persuaded to
t r .„ r )„ ,,11 w : nt „ r though she didn’l
take the school, and learned to make pie
crust after all; and the second, that thal
Bg schoolteacher she married, that
s he’d never have known if she hadn’l
s t a y e d, and if he hadn’t taught in the
“deestriet” that fall, turned out within
four years to be the smartest lawyer in
Black County and a notable honor t«
the famHy .—Saturday Nijht.
A Congressman’s Ocean Terror.
The Board of Bureau C hiefs, to whicl
Secretary Whitney referred Kepresenta
tive Thomas’s plans for a coast defens*
vessel, has agreed to report the plans
back to the Secretary with a reeommen
dation that they be adopted by the De
partment. The Board believes the de
«ign has great merit,
Mr. Thomas has had no more experi
euce in naval affairs than he do u Id get
as Chairman of the House Committee,
His business is that of a stock raiser, and
his home is in the part of Illinois called
Egypt, where the only water is in wells
and sloughs and not much of that.
Nevertheless, he has designed what ex
perts say will be the finest, fleetest and
most She powerful will be war single-turreted vessel afloat. monitor,
a
a heavy armored cruiser, and the only
war ship in the world of variable dis
placement. In peace she will stand seven
and a-half feet out of water,with upper
works of wood wh:ch can be removed,
on going into action.
When trouble comes she takes in water
and increases her draft three ieet, -eav
ing but four feet and^
ret above water. this lour feet is iha
segment of a circle vising from tha
water's edge and presenting a target at
which the enemy is welcome to. ure as
rauch as he pleases. He he can’t hit it once
in fifty shots, and if does hit it no
body cares. lier steel armor will be five
inches thick. Her guns will be able to
pierce the armor of the best man-of-war
low on the water. Her two ten-inch
breech-loading guns, turret-protected,
6 nd having an all-round range, will
throw a 800-pound projectile tea miles,
xhe dynamite Ratine gun iuthe bow will throw
n5tro equal to 1000 pounds bave*a of
dynamite two miles. She will
- and
^ d of seventeen knots an hour,
nam0 wjll be the I[lin ois. Experts
say she will probablv 'ironclad be able to destroy
England’s ^ biggest in fifteen
mi utea.—Atlanta Constitution.
Propagation ot Oysters.
The French method of propagation
consists in suspending tiles in the watei
during the spawning season. The young
oysters cling very closely to these tiles,
The tiles are coated with plaster, and
after the young oysters have set upon tht
plaster the tiles are taken up, the plastei
is separated from the tiles wish knives,
and the tiles are used lor the next spawn
ing season. Vue plaster holding the se1
cultivated. is then planted, The and the method young is oysters mud
French
more troublesome and expensiveand ex
pensile than that in use in Long Inland
r-ound. Our refuse oyster shells, cm
ders, etc., serve as collectors instead oi
t ies, and the results are splendid .—Nett
Tori Ton*.
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■ that mode
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fan
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j A i,i the world does—without shrinking—leaving
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: nr sm
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r I a wholesale spot cash mi as
2'a 1 system tOt> us. The m dm
Hj i co-operation of the
r!jiikYu club members sells us
" , ; i! 38: watches in each PMiLA.
§38 Watch Club, and we get before cash from j SI i
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ond prices are .Our S SilvcrWatuIi get sec
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is a m
a ny £zW'|Stem-\V ind American Lever ‘i
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Our 92&00 Watcli is a 1
[(OpenFac^, I AmericarrLever first W quality, atch ,guaranteed stiffened Gold to
I j wear 20 sold wars. for $38 It is by fully others. equal We to find any , pi:
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a.first-class Stiffened Gold Case much
more satisfactory and serviceable than |j
any Solid'Gold Case that can be sold at S
less than double the money, as cheap ?! :
[| 1 solid cases are invariably thin, weak, I
oi' low. quality, and worthless after l
short use. Our $38 Watch contains
ift&SS-iMal provements.,of fc un * er ous important vital importance patented to accur-l||;!flit||i ^-(Upiiiir
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9 ., we
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I CD i THAT FIGHT
10
The Original Wins.
C. F. Simmons, Liver St. Medicine, Louis, Prop’r Est’d
M. A. Sim mons
1S40, in the U. S. Court defeats J*
^ H. Zeilin, Prop’r Est’d A. Q, Simmons i86§L Liv¬
* er Regulator, A. S. M. has by Zeilin for
M. L. 47 years
W cured Indigestion, Biliousness,
Dyspepsia,Sick Headache,Lost
Appetzte, Sock Stomach, Etc*
* A J Rev. T. B. Reams, Pastor M. E*
q Church, Adams, Tenn., writes: “1
® ithink 1 I should have been dead but
^ for your Genuine M. A. Sim
mons Liver Medicine. I have
f I sometimes had for to substitute Medi
<rr T #r “Zeilin’s stuff” your
fCtJUPTm / I cine, purpose.” but it don’t answer the
Dr * J* R * Graves » The
Baftist, Memphis, Tenn. says?
| 1 I received a package of vour Liver
1 o\ Medicine, and have used half of ii.
A It works like a charm. I want no
better Liver Regulator and cer¬
tainly no more of Zeffin’s mixture.
% s
S93 Sewing-Machine establish
To at gec€ by
a i trade in all part?,
‘ placing our machines
Cana poods where the people can see
them, we will send t ree to one
•^person in each locality,the very
* best sewing-machine made in
fi the w orld,with all the attachments.
We will also send Tree a complete
line of our costly and valuable, art
samples. In return we ask that you
m show what we seud. to those who
may ceil at your home, and after 2
.months all shall bee ome your own
Iproperty. Imnde after This Singe errand machine patents. is
th«* r
L which ha ave ran out; before patents
V. run ou tit sold for *93. with the
attachments, and n*w sells for
S.*0. Best, atronpest, moat use
ful machine in the w orid. All is
. No capi ital required. Plain.
G r >f infraction* ciw- Thoae who write to cs at or.ee can *e
tr.- tr**e :he r»eat s-^winfir-roachiae in the werid. and the
. }1 «*t »f“ »*u« of hich a never shown toeerherin America.
Util. All), I!uj ffS. Auswca, Maju«*