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GLORIES OF Vt-NICE.
imon* Them That ol Dreamln* the Daye
iray la a Gondola.
If Home in these day is too warm for
comfort, if Florence is an oven perfectly
unbearable, there is one spot in Italy which
is as near perfection as one can hope to
find in this world. Venice, Venice the
golden, is in the height of its glory in
these warm, summer days, when one can
float about all day and half through the
night in a poetic but at the same time
admirably comfortable gondola, when the
sun deepens the tints of sky and water and
gilds the fairylike palaces, when the man
dolin and guitar tinkle until dawn under
the window of some fair Inamorata, when
the Lido is a long strip of gold laved by
the refreshing sea, and the harshest sound
to be heard is the human voice—when, in
fact, life in Venice is the apotheosis of the
dolce. far niente.
However, if one be energetic there are
other ways of amusing oneself In the
Queen City of the Adriatic than by lotus
eating. The cases, chantants and other
wise, are in full swing, the theaters are
open, the social world still lingers, the
usual attractions to sightseers are open,
and there is the International Art exhibi
tion, which quite merits more than one
visit Take, for example, the Japanese
exhibits, those delicious landscapes with a
blending of colors all their own; fascinat
ing, tender little women, and gems of
bronzes in which the Japanese have reach
ed such perfection, reproducing animals
and flowers with the most scrupulous ex
actness. There are examples of Japanese
art of the end of the eighteenth and be
ginning of the nineteenth century, espe
cially of the well known artists, Hokosal
and Otamaro. In utter contrast are the
British painters represented, and especially
the Scotch group, while the Russians, and
under some aspects the Austrians, have
distinguished themselves. Connoisseurs
in Italy, who until lately clung to old
prejudices, have been obliged to cast them
aside and acknowledge the pre-eminence *
of these schools. In April there were 80,-
000 visitors to the exhibition, about 8,300
a day, and from all sources, sales of cata
logues, etc., 323,230 have been gathered in
during that month. The municipality of
Venice has bought 83 pictures in oils,
three statues and one water color for a
sum of 320,000. So far the Italian gov
ernment has made no purchases, much to
the indignation of the Venetians.—Pall
Mall Gazette.
The African Cook.
The A coras, who are employed right
down the whole west coast of Africa,
thanks to the valuable education given by
the Basel mission, as cooks, carpenters
and coopers, cannot resist fishing, let their
other avocations be what they may. A
friend of mine the other day had a new
Accra cook. The man cooked well, and
my friend vaunted himself, and was con
tent for the first week. At the beginning
of the second week the cooking was still
good, but somehow or another there was
just a suspicion of a smell of fish about the
house. The next day the suspicion merged
into certainty. The third day the smell
was insupportable and the atmosphere un
fit to support human life, but obviously
healthy for flies.
The cook was summoned and asked by
her Britannic majesty’s representative
where the smell came from. He said he
could not smell it and he did not know.
Fourth day, thorough investigation of the
premises revealed the fact that in the
back yard there was a large clotheshorso
which had been sjnt out by my friend’s
wife so that he could have his clothes
aired. This was literally-converted into a
screen by strings of fish in the process of
drying—L e., decomposing in the sun.
The affair was eliminated from the do
mestic circle and cast into the ocean by
seasoned natives, and awful torture in this
world and the .next promised to the cook
if he should ever again embark in the fish
trade. The smell gradually faded from the
bouse, but the poor cook, bereft of his
beloved pursuit, burst out all over in boils
and took to religious mania and drink
and so had to be sent back to Accra, where
I hope he lives happily, surrounded by his
beloved objects.—Miss Kingsley in Na
tional Review.
Netting the Natives.
Here is a good yarn explaining how
whalers get native crews:
“When a whaler is fitted outfrom home,
she takes her officers, boatswains and a
few foremast hands and steers for the
western islands (Azores). Arrived there,
a boat is lowered and a box of new boots
put in it. The crew pull ashore into some
convenient little bay surrounded by woods,
and, landing, they open the box of boots
and stand them all along in a row. Then
one man begins at one end of the row and
pulls all the boots on and off again one
after the other. They then board their
boats and pull off around the point out of
sight, and the natives, who have been
watching ‘ them from the wooejs, come
down and try the boots on. When the offi
cer in charge of the boat thinks they have
had time enough to be fitted, he cpmet
back, and the poor ’Gees, being unable to
run with the boots on, are easily captured
and carried off whaling. I know this to
be a fact, for the wijaiefg told me of it
themselves.”—"On by Fred
erick Benton Williams.
Foul Breath and How to Treat It.
Foul breath comes from several causes
—viz, digestive disturbances, bad teeth anti
certain forms of catarrh. If foul diges
tion, it comes from the stomach, and in
that case ths stomach should be washed
out or otherwise sweetened and a mild
diet adopted until the stomach clears it
self. If from the teeth, it usually comes
from a cavity in which food lodges and
decomposes. This Is deleterious to health,
aside from being disagreeable, and should
be remedied by consulting a good dentist.
If from catarrh, it Sa generally the atropio
kind, in which there is usually a good
deal of dryness to the throat. The seore
' tions become morbid and cling to the mu
cous membrane, decomposing and form
ing a crust, usually tn the posterior nares,
or vault, of the pharynx. This Is a vesy
troublesome form of catarrh and should
lead to a consultation with a specialist. A
spray of peroxide of ; hydrogen mixed with
water, equal portions, will destroy all
odors. An application of carbolized vase
line has also been found to be of great
service.—Home Doctor.
Golden Silence.
On one occasion Mr. J. M. Barrie found
himself sitting at dinner beside a literary
celebrity with whom he was well acquaint
ed. After the conventional salutation,
Mr. Barrie turned to his companion and
asked:
“Do you feel like talking!”
“No, I do not,” was the prompt reply.
“No more do I,” answered Barrie. And
it Is told of the twain that neither ex
changed a word with the other during the
whole progress of ttie dinner.
DUTY OF PARENTS.
I Wise Guidance Needed For the Youth Who
* Is Leaving Childhood Behind.
?■ “There is something pathetic in the
’ struggle of the child to cast aside its
child nature and put on the nature of
J manhood and womanhood, ” writes Flor
, ence Hull Winterburn in The Woman’s
j Home‘Companion. “He is beset inter -
, nally by misgivings even while he is
i urged on by ambition. Ho wants he
i scarce knows what, but something new
' and never before possessed. Perhaps, in
a nutshell, the great desire of his soul
is to be left somewhat to himself, yet
with sympathy within call, and to be
trusted. It is a great evidence of tact
now’ for the mother or father to say,
with a kind smile: ‘Do what you think
best about this matter, my son. You
are old enough to judge what is right. ’
Happy responsibility I Delightful confi
dence! Influence is never stronger than
when it withdraws slightly into the
background, leaving its object apparent
ly free. A good deal is said nowadays
about the extraordinary freedom our
children have. Seemingly it is so, but
looking here and there an observer
notes little real change among the aver
age people.
“A young friend of mine whose
happy married life lias not yet driven
from her memory a cramped and im
bittered youth confided to me that the
one idea that haunted her from 8 to 18
was that of running away from home.
If she had been less conscientious, a lit
tle more reckless, what a gulf of ruin
her innocent feet might have plunged
into to escape the intolerable nagging
and interference she was subject to in
her father’s house!
“We little know what effect our
thoughtless and meaningless words of
comment and chiding for every small
matter that goes wrong produce upon
the half grown girl and boy. They are
apt to be reserved and to become sullen
under restraints they dislike, and when
this sullen attitude once sets in we may
say farewell to all confidential inter
course between parent and child. To
avert such an evil we will do well to
apply all our powers of tact and kind
ness. Let us avoid arousing the spirit
of perverseness that stirs in every young
creature at this period of life, and, by
enlarging his opportunities for action
as his ambition extends, soothe any bud
ding revolutionary ideas and inspire in
him the trust and confidence in parental
benevolence that will be his safeguard
when he needs advice and assistance,
■for youth never stands in deeper need
of wise guidance than at this time when
there is a desire to dispense with it
But the guidance must be so wise, so
tactful, so gentle, that even the most*
independent young soul will feel that
love, and not force, is thq motive power
that draws him toward what is best,
and that he is restrained by nothing ex
cept his own honor and trained sense
of right ”
POLITENESS NOT WANTED.
In the Case of the Elevator Man It
Should Be Discouraged.
In view of the fact that the various
petty employees of large corporations
are usually not overburdened with po
liteness or consideration for the public,
the complaint recently made against a
passenger elevator man seems remark
able. It was alleged that the man was
“too polite for safety. ” The man who
was the subject of the complaint did
what hundreds of elevator men da
When the elevator gets to the ground
floor, the conductor usually steps out of
the car to get a whiff of fresh air, to
say a word to the hallman or possibly
make inquiry about the ball game.
The hallmanor starter shouts “Go
ing up!” to the people coming into the
hall, and the elevator man stands in
front of the cage and politely asks his
passengers to “step in,” while he re
mains on the outside until the starter
shouts ”’L right!” Then he cuts his
sentence short, steps into the cage,
starts the elevator and slams the door
after the ascent has begun.
Most persons “step in” when asked
to do scr, but occasionally a man with
an eye to self preservation refuses to do
so, and one of that class made the com
plaint The man who insists on the ele--
vator man being in the car before he
will go in is usually looked upon by the
man of many ups and downs as foolish
ly careful, but owners of buildings who
are held responsible for the safety of
their tenants while riding in the eleva
tors are pleased to see them firm on
that point It may look well for a uni
formed man to step aside and ask the
passengers to precede him into the ele
vator cage, but many persons will agree
with the man who made the complaint
that it is a case of politeness which
should be discouraged in the interest of
safety.—New York Tribune.
Horse Model Makers.
“Making full sized models of horses
is quite a distinct and well paid busi
ness, the models for the whole world
almost being made in London,” said
the manager of a great firm of carriage
builders in Long Aera
“There is scarcely a considerable car
riage builder or dealer anywhere who
has not in' his shop or warehouse one
or more full sized models of horses (we
and some other firms have respectively
several such models always), which are
not only used as a mere attraction, but
are also, being movable, put into differ
ent sets of shafts, so as to show custom
ers how a complete turnout will look.
“Then, again, extra good models are
made for exhibitions, shows and the
like, and many of the best harness mak
ers in all countries keep them in their
shops for trying on purposes.
“I have given as mttoh as 60 and 70
guineas for a good model, but of course
the general run of these things costs far
less, except for. exhibition purposes. I
have seen models made of the skin of
a real horse, but the imitation variety
is the rule. The men who make the
models—quite artists in their way,
some of them—are also the sellers, as a
rule ” —Pearson’s Weekly.
HE NEVER LOVED A LORD.
» Bat Hla Fir. Girls Married All
the S*uae.
l it was evident that he was not only
r pretty well satisfied with himself, but
f that he didn’t care who knew it.
- “Five daughters, ”ho said, “and ev-
R ery one of them married to a title.
• That’s a pretty good record for a man
s Who wouldn’t be considered rich enongh
s to buy more than one high grade title. *’
r “I don’t see how you did it,” sug
i gested the man who knew nothing ex
-1 cept that the husband with a title was
t ordinarily quoted at a pretty stiff figure.
5 “Oh, it’s easy when you know how, ’’
t replied the self satisfied man. “So far
, as lam concerned I would have prefer
e red to marry the girls to enterprising
i yotmg Americans with no titles, but
’ their mother insisted upon getting them
• something more fashionable, and when
i their mother insists I have to hump
> myself and see that things come the
■ way she wants them. 1 confess it was
i something of a problem at first, but
r when I got it figured out in my mind
t and began playing the cards it was so
t easy that I was inclined to be ashamed
■ of myself for not trying something
harder.”
i The self satisfied man stopped long
i enough for the listener to suggest that
■ he would be glad to hear the story, and
i then, in view of the fact that they were
I all married and publicity could do no
harm, he told it
'“I took all my available assets” he
i explained, “and made them a dowry
I for my eldest daughter. Naturally there
! was a rush for her, and she was able to
i take her pick of five. I rushed matters
as much as possible, got her married,
■ gave up the dowry I had promised, and
■ then steered her titled husband against
i the Stock Exchange, where I gave him
i soxna had tips, took his trades myself
> through a broker and won book all the
1 dowry and part of his ancestral estates,
i Then I gave the dowry to my second
daughter, got her married and played
the same game with her husband. I
• worked the scheme right through the
1 family, until I finally married my
youngest to a baronet yesterday. I got
1 them to postpone their wedding trip fox
’ a few days, so as to give me a chance to
win back the dowry before they had
spent any of it, and by day after tomor
row I expect to be on Easy street again,
without a care in the world. If girls
must have titles, why, I am in favor of
giving them to them, but I don’t believe
in contributing large fortunes to the
support of the tottering monarchies ol
the old world, and, what*s more, 1
don’t intend to do it ” —Chicago Post
• ■ ---
ARMORED PLANTS.
Thorns and Spies That Protect Plant*
From Their Enemies.
“Plants and Their Enemies” is the
title of an article by Thomas H. Kear
ney. Jr., in St Nicholas. Mr Kearney
says:
There are a thousand things that
threaten the well being and even the
life of every tree and shrub and lowly
herb. Too much heat or too little works
great harm to plants. Then there are
all manner of wasting diseases caused
by other tiny plants called fungi and
bacteria. Many largo animals, as horses
and cows and sheep, live by grazing the
herbage and grass or browsing the foli
age of trees and shrubs. Os course they
greatly injure the plants they feed upon
and therefore many plants are in one
way or another protected against such
attacks.
Did you ever stop to think why this
tles are so well armed with sharp prick
les or why the ugly roadside nettles are
furnished with stinging hairs? Notice
cattle grazing in a field where thistles
or nettles grow. See how careful they
are to let those disagreeable plants
alona That is the reason for the stings
and the spines. See this honey locust
tree bristling with its horrid array of
three pointed thorns. What animal is
brave enough to try to rob it of its
leaves or great pods? Hawthorns, too,
and rosebushes and blackberry briers
all have their sharp little swords and
daggers to defend themselves against
browsing animals.
Out on the wide, hot deserts of Ari
zona and New Mexico those odd plants,
the cactuses, grow in great numbers.
Some of them take strange shapes—tall,
fluted columns, branching candelabra oX
mere round balls, like the melon cactus.
They are almost the only plants that grow
in some parts of that country, and there is
always plenty of sap inside their tough
skins. To the hungry and thirsty crea
tures that roam those dreary wastes in
search of food and water they are very
tempting. Were they not in some way
protected these cactuses would soon be
entirely destroyed, but nature has made
them to be like strong forts or great
armored battleships among plants. They
are guarded by all sorts of sharp spines
and prickles and fine hairs that burn
when they get into the flesh.
Negation.
This was overheard on the Bangor
boat:
First Woman— ls I married a man
what drinked and I knowed he drinked
when I married him I wouldn’t never
say nothing about it
Second Woman—l wouldn’t neither.
He’s got so bad now that she don't
never expect nothing different—Shoe
and Leather Reporter.
There are more ants to the square
mile in Florida than in any other coun
try in the world. There are anta that
measure more than half an inch in
length, and then there are ants so small
that they can scarcely be seen to move
With the unaided eye.
Raw eggs, milk and plenty of fruit
are recommended for brain workers.
The fruit corrects the bilious tendency
of the milk and eggs.
In some portions of Abyssinia the
men mark the ears of their women as
if they were so many hogs.
■ ■ - ■ ■' ■ ■■—
The Two Clean Cities.
The two cleanest cities on the continent
today are Toronto and New York, and they
are both cleaned by direct labor.
New York not only employs and that
direct* all Its street cleaning and garbage
dispatch forces, but it has an organized
department, with an adequate and proper
ly adjusted equipment of hones, carte,
brooms, stables and stations, and it pays
Its men 33 a day and upward for eight
hours’ work. To be sure, it has had a
Colonel Waring, but had Colonel Waring
been a contractor or a contractor’s super
intendent the metropolis would not have
been the clean city it Is today. It la by
the method of direct labor, under mode)
conditions of employment, that this first
worthy result of the kind In a largo Amer
ican city has been achieved
Toronto, the other of those two exem
plary cities, has gone even further than
New York in eliminating the contractor
In this enterprising Canadian town, with
its 100,000 people, Street Commissioner
Jones has during the lust seven years en
tirely revolutionized the care of tho street*
of the city. He has not only organized the
execution of this work under a distinct
department, but out of the margin thru
saved from the annual appropriations foi
caring for the streets ho has actually built
and equipped a modest but complete sei
of workshops, where the entire construe
tion and repair work of the department ii
executed.
Not only are the sprinklers, rotary
■weepers, automatic loading carta and
snow scrapers, each after a special pattern
devised by the commissioner or under hii
direction, built in these shops, but even
the harnesses aro mado there, the horaoi
are shod there, and it is tho truthful boast
of the commissioner that every article oi
manufacture used by tho department if
produced from the raw material in these
shops. It is exceedingly refreshing to find
there inventive genius constantly brought
to bear to produce appliances not for sal*
in the general market, and hence of that
crude adjustment which can be used any
where, but appliances precisely adapted
to the particular needs of Toronto, with
its own climate, soil, street mileage and
pavements.—Review of Reviews.
Magnetic Sentinel.
Lieutenant F. B. Badt has patented an
electro magnetic sentinel, which is de
signed to give warning at a distant post ol
the approach of a hostile warship to a sub
marine mlno, or to explode the mine auto
matically, says tho Pittsburg Dispatch.
Such a device was badly needed. Th*
usual method employed for coast protec
tion by means oLexplosive mines has been
to sink them in the waterway to bo pro
tected, ordinarily in a narrow channel,
.and form two observatories on shore, con
nected by telephone and telegraph, the offi
cers on duty following, by means of rang*
finders, the movements of any hostile ves
sel. When the instruments indicate that
the vessel is directly above the hidden
mine, a switch is thrown which sets fre<
an electric current and explodes the mine.
This method is expensive, as it entails
keeping up two observatories, two sets oi
instruments and two or more operators.
Moreover, tho apparatus cannot always b«
relied upon. It may get out of order just
at the moment it is needed. It can follow
the movements of only one vessel at a
time, and at night, in fogs or storms, it if
of little or no use.
Lieutenant Badt’s device is automatic
in its action and gives warning by night
as well as by day. It is simple and direct
in its operations, and requires but one ob
servatory, ono set of instruments and one
attendant. When arrangements are mad*
to explode the mine automatically, tho at
tendant can be dispensed with. An in
duction coil, suitably connected, Is secured
to the mine or torpedo, the fuse of which
is fired by a powerful electrio current
switched on either automatically or at th*
observatory. When the modern war vessel,
heavily protected by Iron or steel armor,
approaches the induction coll, there will
boa magnetic disturbance, which is in
stantly indicated to the officer on duty ai
the observatory. He watches the vessel,
and at the proper moment closes the fust
circuit and explodes the mine. In caso as
automatic device is employed, tho arm oi
an indicator is deflected until contact if
made,which causes the explosion.
A Peculiar Case of the Pacca Edict.
An arrangement has been finally com*
to between tho Impecunious Prince Sclarra
and the Italian government in regard t*
the masterpieces of art in his gallery.
Prince Sclarra wanted to sell some of hit
pictures, but under an Italian law known
as the Pacca edict, he could not dispose ol
them to any one living outside of Italy.
Some time ago, however, he succeeded in
smuggling certain canvases out of th*
country, among these being Raphael’*
“Violinist,” which he sold to Baron Al
phonse de Rothschild for 750,000 francs;
Titian’s“ Belle,” sold to the samefor 600,-
000 francs; Leonardo da Vinci’s “Vanity"
and “Modesty,” also purchased by Baron
Alphonse for 600,000 francs; a Peruginf
sold to the Louvre for 150,000 francs, and
Caravaggio’s “Gamblers,” for which M.
Schneider paid 60,000 francs. Now th*
Italian government will permit Prine*
Sclarra to dispose as he pleases of all th*
works of art in his possession excepting th<
following 15, which become the property
of the government: Guido Reni’s “Made
leine,” Giotto's “Life of Jesus,” Sche
done’s “Arcadian Pastors,” Andrea del
Sarto’s “Virgin,” “St. Joseph” and “St.
Peter;” De Carpi’s “Pico Transformed,"
the same painter’s Vestal, with the statu*
of Cybele; the painting, “Church of th*
Gesu at the Canonization of St Ignatius,"
by Gagliardi and Andrea Saochl; Bellini'i
“Virgin and Sleeping Child,” Bronzini’f
portrait of Stephen Colonna, the “Vision
of Friar Thomas,” artist unknown, and
five pieces of statuary.—Collector.
Hawthorne’s Writing.
Rose Hawthorne Lathrop, In her “Mem
cries of Hawthorne,” gives this descrip
tion of her father’s methods at writing:
“He had none of the frantic reconsldera
tions of Soott or Balzac. If he made a
change in a word, it was while it wat
fresh, and no one could obliterate what h*
had written with a more fearless blot oi
the finger or one which looked more ear
nest and Interesting. There was no scratch
ing nor quiddling in the manner with
which he fought for his art. Each day he
thought out the problems he had set him
self before beginning to write, and if a
word offended him, as he recorded the re
sult he thrust it back into chaos before
the ink had dried. I think that tho manu
script of ‘Dr. Grimsbawe’s Secret’ Is an
exception to acme extent. There are many
Written self communings and changes 1b
it. lam notsure but that my father some
times destroyed first drafts, of which hi*
family knew nothing. Indeed we have hi*
own word for it that ’he passed the day in
writing stories and the night in burning
them. ’ Neverthless, his tendency we know
to have been that of thinking out his plot*
and scenes and characters and transcrib
ing them rapidly without further change. ”
—A
r that the
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—GET YOUH H
■ - Xr,.- ‘.9>
JOB PRINTING
DONE JLT
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GEBfflL OF CEOfiGPIIW CL
■
Schedule In Effect Jan. 9, 1898.
l*i'iy. Daily! n2uy. wtarxona- * n2iiy. PaiiyF ftnito
TsOpm 406 pm 760 Atlanta .—..Ar 7 Bpm 11 to am
Bfa pm 447 pm BSBam LvJonesboroAr SBpm lOSOsm
915 pm 5 30pm 907 am Lv..Griffln-. Ar 613 pm
946 pm 606 pm 940smAr Barnesville LV 643 pan 917 am 6<7am
+7 40 pm +Mo6pm ArThomaston. Lv tSOOpm rite am
Wbpm 6Bpm 10 12am Ar Fourth Lv 614 pm 8 60am »gam
1110 pm 720 pm 1110 am Ar. Macon ...Lv 415 pm 8 00am *»•»
1219 am 810 pm 1208 pm Ar Gordon.. Lv 804 pm !»*■ 3»aa»
+8 60 pm +lls pm Ar MlßedfevUle Lv *6 80 am
130 am HTpmAr Teanflta .Lv lMpn
315 am 32s pmAr....... Mf115n...............••Lv 113*am i to*
686 am OfepraAr .Augusta Lv B»am
600 am 6 00pm Ar : BavaMah. Lv »*6am 800 pm
•Daily, texcept Sunday. ’
Train for Newman and CarroUton leaves Griffin at 9ss am. and 1 pwdally except
Sunday. Returning, arrives In Griffin 6 M p m and 12 40p m dally erato Benday. For
further Information apply to
C. & WHITB, TMtetLpst,&tla,fc-
THBO. D. KLINK, GjiPlSpU Savamah. Ga..
J. C. HAILE. Gen. PMS*m«er Aitaist. fls*
B. H. HINTON, Traffic Mdnaaer. asvannakda.
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