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ENGLISH INNKEEPERS.
Bald to Be Mainly Boors Who Treat P>-
trona a* Intruder*.
If your pocketbook allows or fa e or
the desire to see the country con pels
you to remain in England, there are
parts where you can ride on your Wheel
With groat at ex
pense. Nothing could be more beautiful
than the midlands, lovelier than the
conntie* that surround London, but
westward go no farther than Bristol or
Truro, northward than Chester, avoid
ing Manchester —that is, unless you
mean to go still farther north into Scot
land, which at times will repay your
enterprise. The southwest is largely to
be avoided. Cornwall and Devon have
the worst roadadn civilized Europe—in
.fact, the roads and inns explain that
tho country is not and never has been
civilized. In the inns yon are often
treated as an intruder, and sometimes
cheated in a fashion that would bring
a blush to the cheek of a Swiss landlord,
for the emptiness of the larder the bill
makes up in lavishness. There is hard
ly anything to eat save cream, but for
that and salt bacon and ancient eggs
you are asked to pay as much aa for a
good dinner at the Case RoyaL The inn
keepers are mainly boors.
As for the roads, they go straight to
the top of all the hills, as uncompro
misingly as the roads of Bohemia, then
drop down the other side and are unrid
able in both directions. When not
climbing precipitately, they lie buried
at the bottom of a ditch. They are
shadeless and uninteresting, rarely ap
proaching the seacoast or passing near
anything that is worth looking at, and
yet we know Englishmen who are pro
foundly impressed with tho belief that
they are the best in England, and there
fore in the world. The roads, inns and
innkeepers of Scotland are in everyway
better, but the fact that the average
Briton spends his holiday on the conti
nent when he can proves not only that
he wants to get there, but also that he
is driven from his own country by the
shortsightedness of the people who keep
its inns and look after its roads.—Mro
and Mrs. Pennell in Fprtnightly Review.
ANCIENT MEDICAL METHODS
The Maimer of Doctors’ Consultations In
the Fourteenth Century.
Coming to Mondeville’s exposition of
tho method of holding a discussion, we
find his description almost a story of
what might take place today. “First, ’ ’
he says, “we should inquire into the
nature of the disease, examining care
fully add feeling, because the diagnosis
is made by touching with the hand and
observing with the eye. All the consult
ants engage in turn in the examination.
Then, if the case demands it, they make
a new examination all together, point
ing out to one another the symptoms of
disease and the special or remarkable
features either in the patient or tho dis
ease. Then one of them, the highest in
rank, says to the patient, ‘Sir, we per
„ ceive very clearly what is the matter
with you, and you ought to have full
confidence in and be glad that there
are so many of us here and such doctors—
enough for a king—and to believe that
the youngest of us is competent to pre
scribe and carry on your treatment and
bring it to a good result.’ Then he in
terrogates the patient about the circum
stances of his attack, ‘Sir, do not be
displeased or take it ill, but when did
your illness begin?’ following this with
many other questions, the answers to
which are recorded as indications fur
nished by the patient.
“When all the questions called for
by the case have been asked, the con
sultants retire to another room, where
they will be alone, for in all consulta
tions the masters dispute with one an
other in order the better to discuss the
truth, and sometimes they come to a
pass in the heat of discussion which
would cause strangers witnessing their
proceeding to suppose there were discord
and strife among them. This is some
times the case. ” —"Fourteenth Century
Doctors,” by M. E. Nicaise, in Popular
Science Monthly.
Mozart’* Method.
Mozart’s method of composition was
such as could only have been pursued
by a child of genius. He would rise
early, eat a hearty breakfast and then
stroll for several hours in a forest near
his home, where, inspired by nature’s
beauties, heavenly melodies came troop
ing through his brain. Repairing to his
cottage, he would summon his wife,
a very witty woman, and bid her tell
him stories. He would then mount his
high stool and proceed to commit these
inspirations to paper, his wife telling
him jokes and funny stories while he
wrote. These he enjoyed immensely,
frequently interrupting her with hearty
bursts of laughter and sometimes even
falling from the stool and rolling on the
floor. But amid all this hilarity and
uproar the flow of music which was to
move the world went steadily on. His
productions were wrought without the
least thought or study, but came almost
unbidden “direct from heaven.” Like
Shakespeare, he wa; purely tho creature
of inspiration, a genius of the highest
order.—C. C. Hieatt in Housekeeper.
Remote Ancestry.
“It has long been supposed,” says
The Outlook, “that the most startling
genealogical claim is that of the negus
of Abyssinia, who insists that his de
scent has been in a straight line from
the union of Solomon with the queen of
Sheba, but some one has discovered a
noble family in France, the counts of
Noe, who not only claim Noah as their
remote ancestor, but show on their fam
ily blazon that veteran seaman in the
ark.” ■ -• '■
Laying Brick*. •
A bricklayer can lay about 1,500 or
1,600 bricks in a day of 10 hours where
the joints are left rough, about 1,000
per day when both faces have to be
worked fair and not more than 500 a
day when carefully jointed and faced
with picked bricks of a uniform color.
—Exchange.
ALLIGATORS AS MASCOTS.
. Stuffed. They Mow Outrank the Rabbit’*
Left II Ind Foot.
■ The newest thing in tho way of a luck
I bringer or fetich for Chicago people is the
( small stuffed alligator, which may also be
made to serve a useful purpose.. Why
lucky nobody knows.
’ One man, whose stock in trade is al
-1 ways an infallible indication of popular
1 taste, says that he is selling upward of
> three dozen a day and that his supply of
■ tiny alligators is frequently far from equal
to the demands made upon it. Ho re
ceives orders, too, for small alligators ar
ranged in a variety of original ways and
has sent no small number of tho baby rep
tiles to the various suipmer resorts, where
• the summer girl ami man are trying' to
i beat their previous records in the way of
i golf and tennis. As a maecot or fetich
; the alligator is considered far superior to
L the old time rabbit’s foot, and he or she
t who finds and captures one personally is
indeed lucky.
All sorts and sizes of the infant saurians
’ are liked, and the fad is by no means an
Inexpensive one. .Two dollars and a half
I is the sum required to purchase oven the
■ smallest representatives of alligatorship,
• with an ascending scale which reaches the
l |ls mark for specimens 154 or 2 feet long
b Tho very large or very tiny ones are best
liked, and these are mounted with the
greatest care. The ‘ ‘ seconds’ ’ —those spec
imens which are less perfect or have been
• marred in the killing or mounting—com
mand but slightly smaller prices, how-
i ever, and even those which show marks of
shot or other wounds are anything but
; hard to dispose of. “ Anything so long as
it is an alligator, ” seems to be the watch
word of superstitious people just now.
The conventional way of mounting the
precious creatures is by bending the tail
backward in such away as to support the
L body in an upright position with the as-
■ sistanep of the hind legs. The front feet
; are extended to serve as a support on
which to place the painted seashell, small
I saucer, match safe or othLr trinket which
r is to render the ugly thjrig useful. In
some cases the body is fantastically draped
s with bright colored silk or cheesecloth,
and the addition of a gaudy cap is of fre
» quent occurrence. Thus decorated or
) merely in a state of nature, the quaintly
j traced figure is placed in the entrance hall
> to receive cards, upon the smoking table
with matches, cigars or tobacco, or, if the
owner is a summer girl, in her room,
where it acts as a file upon which to pin
all sorts of scores, records or memoranda
’ of the season’s games.—Chicago Times-
Herald.
i
How the Phonograph Was Discovered.
f Possibly the most widely known of all
j Edison’s Inventions are the telephone and
j phonograph, and the latter was discovered
, by the merest accident—namely, an acci
dent happening to the right man.
• “I was singing,” says Mr. Edison, “to
the mouthpiece of a telephone when tho
I vibration of the voice sent the fine steel
L point into my finger. That set me think -
. ing. If I could record the actions of the
point and send the point over the same
surface afterward, I saw no reason why
the thing would not talk. I tried the ex
’ periment first on a strip of telegraph paper
and found that the point made an alpha-
• bet. I shouted the words,‘Halloa, halloa!’
Into the mouthpiece, ran the paper back
i over the steel point and heard a faint ‘ Hal
. loa, halloa!’ in return. I determined to
. make a machine that would work accu-
L rately and gave my assistants instructions,
telling them what I had discovered. They
• laughed at me. That’s the, whole story.
The phonograph is tho result of the prick
t ing of a finger. ”
All this sounds remarkably simple, and
L Mr. Edison has a habit of speaking of his
inventions as though they had dropped
. from the clouds, but needless to say, after
j the principle Os the phonograph had been
. discovered, thpre were days and nights of
anxious thought and experiment before
1 the famous talking machine, with which
> even the nursery is familiar today, had
• reached its present perfection.
' Barbarism In Africa.
It is satisfactory to note that there is
> considerable Indignation at the Gape re
garding the mutilation of the remains of
the Bcchuanaland chief, Luke Jantje.
, The statement is that the head was cut off
k and boiled in order that the skull might
bo pretorved, presumably as a curio.
, However this may be, there seems to be
■ no doubt that a volunteer was found in
1 the laager ‘ ‘ endeavoring with all his might
to sever the dead chief’s head from tho
’ trunk, ’ ’ and that when he was spoken to
■ on the subject he replied that ho was
“merely acting under orders.” Aboard
of inquiry has been appointed, and it is to
be hoped that tho matter will be probed
l to the bottom. There has been some ugly
work in South Africa during the past
year or two, but that is no reason why
’ barbarous inhumanity on the part of vol
-1 unteers or any others should be tolerated
‘ for one moment. Surely, even a Bcchu
-1 analand chief’s bones “cost more tho
. breeding than to play at loggats with
; them.”—Westminster Gazette.
[ A Fault of Young Men.
I “A grave fault with a goodly number of
j young men is a disposition to quarrel with
, their surroundings, whereas the real fault
is not there,” writes Edward W. Bok, in
’ “Problems of Young Men,” in The La-
■ dies’ Home Journal. “Young men do not
’ seem clearly to realize that where they are
i they were intended to be, and for some
) mighty good purpose too. The place
L where a young man finds himself is exact
, ly where his Creator meant that he should
] be. Therefore he is capable of filling it.
God makes no mistakes. But it is meant
J that we should grow of our own efforts;
’ get strong through the conquering of diffi-
> cutties. When a young man starts out to
) live a useful life, and starts out with a
; right determination, an adherence to hon
orable principles and a faith in God, no
power on earth can retard him long, seri
ously interrupt his career or effectively
I stop him. He is bound to win. Our fail
, ures are always due to ourselves; never to
• other people nor to our environments. ”
Maddened Him.
, Ex-Governor Stone of Missouri recently
told this story of Colonel John T. Crisp:
[ When Colonel Crisp was running for con
gress, he proposed to use the same speech
all over the state. An old man who heard
it tho first night was so delighted that he
t asked Crisp where he was to speak the
next. When the colonel saw the old man
in his next audience, he was forced to
• change his speech to give it a semblance
■ of originality and so delighted the old man
( that he insisted on knowing the colonel’s
( next engagement. He followed Mr. Crisp
all over the state and so worried him by
' forcing him to constantly alter his speech
' that the colonel at last in despair cried,
> “1 speak in shool tomorrow night, in
sheol, be gad, sir, and I hope you will b*
the first man 1 see when 1 get there!’’
MRS. BLACK’S CHURCH.
Ker CoMhmiui Thongtit It Too Humtelo
For a Cabinet la ly.
Daring Mrs. Jeremiah Black’s life in
Washington, when her distinguished
husband was in the cab.net, she was
one of the most efficient helpers in the
early struggles of the Vermont Avenue
Christian church. With the little hand- ’
tul of that faith who “broke bread”
in some private house or obscure hall,
she went regularly. A well remember
ed anoedote of that time illustrates her
fidelity and at the some time her gen
tle, kindly nature. The church was
meeting in Temperance hall. Judge
Black’s driver, Peter,'sensitive for the
honor of the family, or more so for his
carriage, felt it to be something of a
dlsgrance to stand before such a build-
Ihg on Sunday. One day ho touched up
on the subject as gently as he oould by
saying:
“Mrs. Black, that ain’t a very fine
church you and the judge go to. ”
‘•No, Peter,” said the lady, “it is not
a very grand one. ”
“Mrs. Black, do you ’spec’ to ’tend
that church every Sunday?”
“Yes, Peter, until they get abetter
one.,”
“‘Well, Mrs. Black, I wanted to ax
you somethin, though I don’t much like
to say it, marm. ”
“What is it, Peter?”
“ Well, marm, I wanted to tell you
de drivers of de other members of de
cabinet kinder makes fun of me ’bout
Stand in ’fore dat meetin house, and I
wanted to ax you if you hadn’t no ob
jection to let me drive down to dat fine
Presbyterian church where de other big
men go and stand dere wid my carriage
until your meetin is out, an den drive
back for you and de judge. ’ ’
“All right, Peter, if you’ll be on
time,” said Mrs. Black, and Peter satis
fied his mind that he saved the credit of
the family and of his horses and car
riage afterward by standing regularly
With the fine turnouts of the other cab
inet officers.—Washington Post.
WOMEN AND JEWELS.
The Combination I* a* Old a* Time and
Not a New Fad.
The critic who finds much to blame
in modern women in the number of
jewels they wear on both this and the
other side of the Atlantic will find that
history had set the fashion long before
the fair creatures of today had opened
their lovely eyes. . According to Pliny,
Lollia Paulina, the wife of Caligula,
wore on her hands, arms, neck, head
and waist pearls and diamonds to the
value of 11,680,000. Faustina had a
ring worth $200,000, Domitia possessed
one worth $300,000, and Csesonia had
a bracelet worth $400,000. Seneca cried
out that one pearl would no longer do
for a lady, but she must insist on at
least three for each shell-like ear. The'
weight of these, it is hard to believe,
could ever be endured by even the vain
est of fair maids and matrons.
There were women in ancient Rome
whose sole occupation was healing the
torn ears of ladies whose ornaments
had proved too heavy for the pretty
lobes. Poppaea’s earrings were worth
$750,000, and Calpurnia, the wife of
the mighty Julius Csesar, had a pair
valued at twice that sum. Later on the
extravagance had not seemed -to have
died out. Marie de’ Medici had a dress
prepared for the baptism of her chil
dren, and when she attempted to wear
the marvelous creation she found that
it Was so heavy that she could not stand
in it- It was trimmed with 82,000
pearls and 8,000 diamonds.
Men, however, excelled in costly ap
parel in the middle ages, and Philip
the Good of Burgundy frequently wore
jewels valued at $200,000. When he
walked along the streets, people climb
ed over each other to get a peep at him.
The Duke of Buckingham once wore at
the court of St. James a costume cost
ing $400,000. The dress of the nobles
of the middle ages was literally covered
with gold and .precious stones.—Chica
go News.
A Good Sally Lunn.
A good Sally Lunn, made according
to the original Sarah Lunn’s recipe,
without yeast, is this: Mix 3 cups of
flour, 3 tablespoonfuls sugar, 3 table
spoonfuls melted butter, a cup of milk,
8 teaspoonfuls baking powder and 3
eggs together and bake in a loaf. If a
“raised” bread is desired, nothing is
better than this often tested recipe. Add
2 tablespoonfuls melted butter to a large
pint of warmed milk, then 2 well beaten
eggs and half a yeast cake dissolved in
8 tablespoonfuls cold water. Pour grad
ually over a quart of flour and beat to a
smooth batter. Add a teaspoonful salt
and a teaspoonful of sugar. Set to rise
for 2 hours in a warm place and bake.
To those who like the hop taste a whole
yeast cake may be used with these pro
portions and will, of course, accelerate
considerably the rising process.—New
York Post.
A Fearful Duel.
The most terrible duel fought at any
time in Paris was the one between Colo
nel D , an old Bonapartist officer,
and M. de G of the Gardes du
Corps, a mere youth, but of herculean
strength. The two men, lashed togeth
er se as to leave their right arms free,
were armed with short knives, placed
in a hackney coach, and driven at a
tearing gallop around the Place de la
Concorde. They were taken out of the
coach dead. The colonel had 18 stabs,
the youth only 4, but one of these had
pierced his heart —San Francisco Ar
jonaut.
Lady Dufferin, in her amusing book,
“Viceregal Life In India,” gives some
good examples of “baboo” English.
One of the natives was -told to write an
essay on the horse in an examination,
and this was the result: “The horse is
a very noble animal, but when irritated
ceases to do so. ”
The nest and eggs of Pallas’ gray
shrike (Lauius major) are said to ba
still unknown to science.
~ ’» !■«—S
> 1 ' ' “ w ■’ I , . 1 ’
BEATING THE BOUNDS.
A Quaint Old Ceremonial Performed Tri
•nr ially In London.
Only once to three years does the quaint
old ceremonial of the beating of the tower
bounds (duly observed on Ascension day
this year) take ptece. In the quiet, tree
planted quadrangle against the white tow
er a posse of yeoman warders assembled
in their full uniform of scarlet, decorated
with the Tudor devloe of the rose, sham
rock and thistle united, with ruffs and
rosettes, and being joined by Lieutenant
General Godfrey Clerk, lieutenant of the
tower, they filed into the historic chapel
of St. Peter ad Vincula, where Anne Bo
leyn and Catherine Howard lie buried.
Here a short service was held, and then a
procession was formed, led by the chief
yarder, bearing his staff of office, on which
is mounted a silver model of the white
tower, and the high constable of the lib
erties of the tower. Then came the chil
dren of the garrison school-boys and
girls—all armed with white peeled rods
wherewith to beat the bounds.
Among the escort of warden yras Veo
man Jailer Sweeney, bearing the axe of
state. This hale old beefeater enjoys the
distinction of being the oldest servant of
her majesty in the diamond jubilee year.
He entered tho service in February, 1887,
and so came In for duty at the proclama
tion, the coronation, the reception of
Prince Albert and the marriage of her maj
esty.
Leaving the tower the eastern draw
bridge, the procession went up Tower hill
and round Trinity square, and tho beat
ing of the stones was done with much
merriment. One boundary stone happens
to be situated on the premises of a firm of
wine merchants, whose hospitable custom
it is to regale the children with buns and
lemonade and the warders with strong
waters. In the early years of thq.elght
eenth century it was provided that the
children were to be rewarded with half
penny rolls and ale and the adults with
“wine, bread, butter, sage and radioes.”
Subsequently the procession divided in
order to beat the bounds and the outer
liberties of the tower, which stretch as far
as Bishopgate street without and Wellolose
square, where up to a year or so ago the
Tower liberty had its separate magisterial
jurisdiction, and there the courthouse still
stands.—St. James Budget.
While Yow Wait.
“Block your hat while you wait,” was
the first of the! “white you wait”, sigqs. It
was once familiar, it is now nothjjo often
seen. Then came the sign, “Yow. shoes
repaired while you wait. 1 ’ The first of
these signs appeared in the Bowery. Tiro
expert Workmen sat in the window of the
shoemaker’s shop, working busily. More
men at work were seen ihslde. There
were comfortable chairs for waiting cus
tomers and newspapers for them to read.
Tho shop filled a long felt want. There is
now a considerable number of places in
the city where shoes are mended white you
wait. On the Signs es some of them a
schedule of time required is given, so
many minutes for heeling and so many
for soling.
In some tailor shops nowadays clothes
are pressed while you wait, and there are
dentists’ offices In which you may how
have your artificial teeth repaired while
you wait.
In summer there are to be found nows-'
days establishments where they clean and
press your straw hat while you wait. They
are usually set up In some vacant store in
a busy street.
In some of these places one may see half
a dozen men sitting batlew, waiting, redo
ing newspapers or looking on at the men
at work, who have, in the different stages,
three hats in hand at once.
The modern “while you wait” signs
show the enterprise that is all the time on
the lookout for new ways of making
money, and they show also the modern
tendency to do things and get them out of
the way.—New York Sun. ,
f ■■■'l- I. ■—■■■■., I— I
Superstition of Miners.
In the gold mining districts of this coun
try there is a superstition that the discov
erers of great mines always come to vio
lent ends. It is said the belief is founded
on the fact that the finders of 40 of the
richest mines in the world have died in
this way, 12 being shot, 3 entombed Ufthelr
mines amd the rest unaccountably disap
pearing.
George H. Fryer of the Fryer Hjll mtoe,
Leadville, comniltted suicide. Two ftors
before bls death be was worth a million,
yet the authorities burled him. The dis
coverer of tbe Standard mine in Califonjp
was killed by tbe Indians. William FJJf
weatber of tbe Alder Gulch mines oamejto
bls death through riotous living. The
owner of the Homestake mine turfied bltn
wayman. He was shot dead.
John Horner of the Horner mine, find
ing himself penniless, shot himself.
Doughnut Bill, Old Eureka and Nine Mlle
Clarks were killed in barroom rows, and
MontanatPltamber, who found one of tho
richest mines in tbe world, died ontbe gal
lows. Dutch William, tbe discoverer of
gold in Caribou, British Columbia, after
whom tbe famous William creek was
named, died a pauper, and Marshall, tbe
discoverer i gold In California, was a
pensioner oi the state some time before
his death.—Atlanta Constitution.
How Snail* Make Love.
A scientist has been patiently watching
the snails in one of the large London gar
dens, and has discovered the means by
which they show their affection for each
other.
“Tbe snail,says this scientist,“carries
its eyes in telescopic watch towers. They
are in the extreme tips of its horns, and
as soon as another snail approaches these
horns are drawn In, and tbe little animal
awaits for his ladylove to get close by be
fore surprising her.
“Tbe emotional natures of snails, so far
as love and affection are concerned, seem
to be highly developed, and they show
plainly by their actions when courting the
tenderness they feel for one another. If
another snail comes along, they imme
diately retire to the shelter of a dead leaf
or hide behind a paling. I have noticed,
too, a lovesick snail fetching dainty bits
of green for his sweetheart from different
parts of the garden.”
This scientist also declares that snails
have a manner of putting their heads to
gether that is not unlike tho general mode
of kissing.—London Answers.
Admiral Brown.
Admiral Brpwn, who will soon retire
from tbe navy, gives the following reason
for preferring Indianapolis for his home.
“I’ll be tbe only admiral in Indianapolis,”
be says, “whereas if I settle In Washing
ton I’d be one of 40. When a man goes
into tbe club at Indianapolis and inquires
If any one has seen the admiral, they will
know that he means Brown, but when
such a question is asked in Washington 40
old coves will rush up and answer, ‘l’m
here.’”
•*—• —adi
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Doily. Daily. Daily. runon. Dally- Daily- Daily-
1 750 pm 406 pm TMamWi. 7. .Atlanta Ar ISpmllSun T«ani
SMpm 446 pm 888 am Lv. Jonesboro. Ar SJSpm »»am
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1110 pm 7SO pm 1110 am Ar Dy 415 pm B®am
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636 am SfapmAr -Auguste Lv 8 20am »«Pm
SOO am 400 pm Ar...... Savannah.. Lv 645 am 9® pat
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| E. H. HINTON, Traffic Manager, Savannah. G«.