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WHAT TO EAT. 'j
Some Sensible Suggeatlons That tartUM
Be Ported In Every Household.
Aralstonite, writing in that excel*
lent gastronomic journal. What to Eat,
makes a few sensible suggestions in re
gard to the diet that ought to be posted
in every household. He says that the
healthiest and purest lives come from
those who do not eat meat before the
age of 15.
Potatoes, sliced thin and fried, are in
digestible. While tasting delicious, they
afford no real nourishment and cause a
derangement of the liver.
Cake clogs the stomach. All rich
pastry is poison to the liver. Soft cara
mels and creams are also bad for any
one with a liver at all rebellious.
When you get old, look out for your
food. Do you every notice that grand
father’s face is not as jolly'as it used
to be? His strength of mind also seems
slowly disappearing, though he is get
ting fleshier every day. He needs a
change of food. Probably be has been
eating buckwheat cakes and sirup, white
bread and butter,, sugar, fat meats, eta.
Give him lean meat and fish, cracked
wheat and potatoes, barley cakes, rye
bread or southern corn cakes. Try it,
and instead of mopihg and sitting round
the house all day you will find him run
ning around lively as a cricket
Maybe, on the contrary, he is growing
thin and pale. Then he needs buck
wheat and molasses, fat meats, mashed
potatoes in milk, northern corn, cracked
wheat and fish, oatmeal porridge and
fruits every morning.
All rules have their exceptions, and
the diet described for the mass may not
answer for exceptional cases, but the
following directions are good for the
majority:
Milk is the simplest and most natural
food. If you cannot drink it, your stom
ach is in a diseased condition. Cheese is
a good substitute, if mild, fresh and
made from pure milk and cream. Per
sons who live mostly on vegetables have
the best nerves and the best complex
ions. Bed pepper is an excellent condi
ment Its effect upon the liver is re
markable. Malaria, intermittent fever
or congestive chills cannot endure the
presence of red pepper. Pure red pepper
(known as cayenne) should be on every
table.
11l health is caused largely by im
proper food or I y food which is in a bad
condition when it is eaten.
* AlO CENT QUEEN.
Ono Who la Shipped All Over the World
In b Box.
Imagine a queen traveling around the
world on 10 cents! It seems preposter
ous, and yet it is a fact. There is a cer
tain man, according to the St Louis Re
public, who will do this for any one
whojwill send him an order, whether it
comes from England, China or any oth
er foreign country, ahd he says:
“I have frequent demands from all
parts of the world. You see, I send
these queens as follows: You will notice
that there are two little circular apart
ments in this royal carriage, ” and he
produced a little wooden box, “one in
which the queen is kept and the other
for her suit. The little plug in the cen
ter of the box is solidified, candied
honey, which will furnish food to the
regal party until they arrive at their
destination.
“The compartments are covered with
a fine wire gauze to prevent the escape
of the insects.
“This large one in the first compart
ment, the one with the delicately shaped,
long body and beautiful markings, is an
Italian queen bee, and she is valued at
$lO. I have queens valued all the way
from $2 to $25.
“The others, in the second compart
ment, are the suit or worker bees, that
will accompany her on the trip, not only
for company, but also for the heat they
will produce to keep her comfortable on
the stormy voyage over the great, cold
seas.
‘ ‘After we have the bees safely stow
ed away in their proper compartments,
we switch the little lid around and
fasten it with a tiny screw at the ends,
and on its top surface the address of the
consignee is written, the stamp is affix
ed, and away goes her majesty, a queen
sold into slavery for the trifling sum of
$lO and sent to her destination on a 10
cent stamp.
“Bee culture has grown so rapidly in
the United States that there are few
farmers now who have not a substantial
apiary and who do not net a handsome
income each year from the honey the
bees yield, and besides the farmers there
are thousands of gentlemen and ladies
who are apiarists purely from the fas
cination the hobby affords.”
A Peculiar Accident.
That one cannot be too careful in
handling anything belonging to elec
trical plants is demonstrated by the
fire that consumed one of the power
houses of the Union Traction company
in Philadelphia. At the hour of closing
an employee swung an enoromus crane
to which was attached a very heavy
chain. The chain struck a generator
and shivered it to fragments. A terrific
explosion followed every circuit, and
all the dynamos which were muning
were blown out Fixe immediately fol
lowed the explosion, and the dynamos,
of which there were eight, were either
destroyed or disabled, and the entire in
side of the building was cleared out
The loss was something like $500,000,
largely on the valuable machinery in
the building.—New York Ledger.
Doing Well.
“How long have you been patroniz
ing that new laundry, Moley?”
“Can’t be over a month. I’ve only
had to buy three new outfits of linen.”
—Detroit Free Press.
I have always thought that what was
good was only what was beautiful pot
in action.—Rousseau.
Every man is a king in his own back
yard.—Ram’s Horn.
=S.
AGURAI IN MAROCCO.H
The Whole Population of the TUwu/la
Descended From Ronegndeo.
Agura is a small town surrounded
with walls of from 40 to 50 feet in
height and built of tabla, or con
solidated rubble. It owes its existence
to Mulai Ismail, who held the throne
Os Marocco from 1722-1747. One gate
Slone gives entrance to the place, and
in this respect, as well as in its archi
tecture within and without, it much
resembles the “ksor” of the Sahara de
scribed in the writer’s “Tafllet” But
it own/one feature of curiosity which
was lacking in the desert, for almost
without exception the entire population
are descendants of the renegades and
Christian slaves of the time of Mulai
Ismail, with the addition of stray rene
gades who have been sent there since.
Probably no such cosmopolitan place
exists in the world, for its 800 or 400
inhabitants are representative of no less
than 18 nationalities. Each family re
members and is proud of its origin, the
Arab equivalent being applied as sur
names.
The family in whose home the writer
spent the few days of his visit wew
Flemish, while the next door neighbor
on one aide was an elderly female,
whose father, an Englishman, had be
come a renegade some 80 years since,
and who quickly tired of it, leaving a
wife and daughter, the neighbor in
question. The other neighbors were the
descendants of Spanish gypsies, the
head of the family being “Absalom ben
Mohammed el Gitano el Espanoli. ”
They were particularly proud of the
“Gitano” (gypsy) part of the surname
and begged me not to confound them
with the ordinary Spaniards, of whom
there were many descendants in Agurai.
The ancestor of this gypsy family was
two generations back. He had left his
country, they naively told the writer,
because he wasnot on good terms with
his sultan, who Wanted to imprison
him, being afraid of his influence. Prob
ably it was more of an affair of the po
lioeoourts than political intrigue.
The "Ulad el Aluj” (“sons of the
converts”), as the inhabitants of Agurai
are called, have entirely, except in one'
or two cases, lost the type of their Eu
ropean ancestry, and through marriage,
no doubt, are as largely Berber in ap
pearance as the wild tribes that sur
round them. The/ speak among them
selves both Arabic and Berber, and
both, curiously enough, with a strong
foreign accent, easily distinguishable.
They are exempt from all taxation, but
have to serve in the sultan’s army, where
they perform the duties of cooks and
butchers.—Geographical Journal.
COURIERS BACK NUMBERS.
Ko Longer Any Need to Go Through Eu
rope With Them.
Up to times within tfce memory of
living men almost no one of means
traveled through Europe without a
courier. Before railroads were built
and before good guidebooks were print
ed he was almost indispensable. His
tribe survives, but in greatly dimin
ished numbers. To the self reliant trav
eler he is of no use whatever. Indeed
he is frequently a positive incumbrance,
and worse. To my mind one of the
great pleasures of travel is in learning
to travel by myself. There are satisfac
tion, pleasure and education in plan
ning routes, deciphering time tables,
making bargains, learning by observa
tion the lay of the land.
The time may have been when a
courier could save a traveler more than
his cost. Most certainly that is not the
case now. On the contrary, as he gets a
percentage on every purchase his party
makes, which, of course, comes out of
the purchaser in increased price, and
as it is often for his interest to advise
the more costly route, the more costly
hotel or the more costly excursion, he
eats up much more than his wages,
while saving positively nothing. Bean
declares that in a two weeks’ trip in
southern Spain, which he made side by
side with a couple having a courier, he'
invariably reached the hotel first, got
better rooms and saw all the sights to as
good advantage, yet the courier was, of
his kind, an expert The fact is that
travel has become so general, tourist
companies, railroads and landlords have
so well studied its needs, books are so
plentiful, that you couldn’t very well
get off the track or have a mishap if
you tried. —Herbert Luce in “Going
Abroad.”
Whkt He Played.
A member of a military band at a
certain barrack came to the surgeon re
cently with a long face and a plaintive
story about a sore throat
“Sore throat eh,” said the surgeon
pleasantly. “Let me see. Oh, that’s
not so bad. A slight irritation; nothing
more. You’ll be all right in a day or
two. I think you had better take no
risk in renewing the trouble by using
your throat, though, so I will recom
mend you for a fortnight’s sick leave. V
Armed with the surgeon’tf certificate,
the bandman obtained his two weeks’
sick leave. The two weeks had just
come to an end when he met the sur
geon on the parade ground. The band
man saluted. The surgeon recognized
the face and stopped.
“How’s the throat?” he asked pleas
antly.
“It’s quite well, sir,” was the reply.
“That’s good,” said the surgeon.
“You can get back to your duty with
out fear. By the way, what instrument
do you handle in the band?”
‘ ‘The small dram, sir, ” said the mu
sician. —Chicago News.
From the top of the cathedral spire in
Mexico you can see the entire city, and
the most striking feature of the view is
theabsence of chimneys. There is not
a chimney in all Mexico, not a grate
nor a stove nor a furnace. All the cook
ing is done with charcoal in Dutch
ovens. 1
Bowling, billiards and card playing
are unlawful in Michigan, according to
some dead letter statutes.
• I
THE CZAR’S CURIOSITY.
He Destroyed Bis Daochter's Doll to See
Hew the Mechanism Worked.
The heavy burden of autocracy has not
destroyed all the boyish instincts in Nich
olas Il’s disposition, as the following an
ecdote, heard at a dinner party given in
honor of a gentleman of M. Fame's escort
in his late journey, proves: The president,
after having searched all the best Parisian
shops to find some toys worthy of the two
little grand duchesses’ acceptance, and,
having bought the everlasting golden rattle
for Miss Tatiana, was in despair for some
thing out of the common to give Miss
Olga. He at last chose two wonderful
dolls, ono got up as an elegant lady, the
other as an overdressed little girl, and,
after much difficulty a most complicated
piece of machinery was inserted, thanks
to which, when wound up, the lady nnd
her daughter begin a ludicrous bit of con
versation, which is finished by the little
girl crying because she is not allowed to
ride a donkey on account of her gauze
dress.
The baby grand duchess was delighted,
but not more so than her father, who, it
appears, spent an hour on the floor with
the child listening to the squeaky dia
logue between the dolls. But the time
came when the princess had to go to bed,
which she did very reluctantly. As for
the emperor, he remained an instant in
the boudoir after her departure with the
two clever artificial ladles who had taken
his fancy, while the empress, M. Fauro
and some ladies and gentlemen of the
court were talking in the next room. Sud
denly a strange noise like that of an infer
nal machine was heard, followed by a loud
cry of dismay, and everybody rushed to
see what it was.
There was the emperor safe and sound,
but with a dismal face, looking at the
dolls, which he had partly undressed to
find out the secret hidden in their bosoms,
while the doll? were chattering away as if
they would never stop. The empress, un
able to restrain her temper, snatched up
the carpeted board on which were stand-,
ing and shaking the two precious ladies,
and after having crushed her husband
with a withering eye she said to a gentle
man near her: “Please send this away.
It is too bad indeed. The emperor spoils
everything he touches.” But Nicholas
looked so penitent and the mishap was so
funny that she could not help laughing.—
Philadelphia Times.
When Was the Bible Completed?
Scholars differ in opinion as to the date
at which the books now found in the Now
Testament were completed, but it is prob
able that this was accomplished not later
than 180. Many centuries had passed in
the formation of the Old Testament, but
the New was all written within a single 100
years. The decision as to which books
should be received into the new canon was
not so quickly reached, for the earliest fa
thers of the church frequently quote from
other gospels, such as one “according to
the Egyptians,” or “according to the He
brews, ” and the Syrian church accepted
some books not received by that'of north
Africa or the western church and vice
versa. There is a legend that at the first
ecumenoial council of Nicaea, 825, copies
of all the Christian literature then current
were laid beneath the altar and the gen
uine books leaped out of the mass and
ranged themselves on the altar. It prob- -
ably contains a germ of the trutb*-that at
this convocation it was decided that the
books now received were apostolic or writ
ten under apostolic direction, and the oth
ers were spurious. Be this as it may, the
judgment of several generations of Chris
tians certainly decided upon the value of
these books as distinguished from many
others written at about that later,
and the council of Carthage (397) is said
to have fixed the canon. The word “can
on” was first used by Athanasius, in the
fourth century, in the sense of “accepted”
or “authorized,” and Jerome and Augus
tine held the present New Testament as
canonical.—Clifton Harby Levy in Ameri
can Monthly Review of Reviews.
The Evil of Trade Unionism.
We are not disputing here the right of
workmen to combine for the advancement
and protection of their craft. Nor is it to
be denied that such right carries with it
the right for each trade union to make
such rules and regulations aS it deems fit
for its own members. Where the mischief
begins is when trade unions seek to make
rules which fetter other workmen and
which tie the hands of employers. And
where trade unionism begins to be abso
lutely destructive in its effects on industry
is where, on the one hand, it endeavors to
make a close corporation by limiting the
number and restricting the employment of
apprentices, and where, on the other hand,
It restricts the labor of the most competent
to the capacity of the most idle and least
efficient.
All this trade unionism does. Overtime
is objected to because, it is alleged, it di
minishes the number that may be employ
ed. But if overtime is not worked orders
cannot be executed within the time in
which they are required. Therefore, the
orders will cease to come, and because Bill
was not allowed to work extra hours Jack,
Tom and Jim will not be able to get work
at all.—Benjamin Taylor in Cassler’s
Magazine.
Bothschild’s Error.
It may require as much Imagination to
draw pleasure out of an unspent dollar as
it does to get it from an unsmelled flower,
or an unkissed love, or any of the unexist
ing realities that poets deal in.
Many a laborious and ascetic financier
must live in a world of Imagination, a
commercial dream, as little tangible as
that of the poet. “My food and lodging
are all I get for my wealth, ” said the elder
Rothschild. He was mistaken; he forgot
his dream of wealth. He, too, was one of
the poets of a financial age. Nor, lastly,
can it be that the delight of giving one
self up to an impassioned thought, of
which one is as sure as death and for
which one is willing to die, is not still,
as it always has been, the keenest pleas
ure of a human soul.—H. G. Chapman in
Atlantic.
St. Paul and Minneapolis.
Fifteen years ago Chicago was the great'
central wheat market of the west Even as
late as four years ago its wheat receipts
were over 50,000,000 bushels, but in 1890
they had declined to 19,101,152 bushels,
while the wheat receipts of Minneapolis
were 69,568,870 bushels and those of Dq
luth and Superior 56,607,897—the total of
the two cities being 126,176,267 bushels, or
six times and a half the Chicago receipts.
These figures tell their own story of the
shifting of the trade currents of
west to their natural channels and go far
to explain the remarkable growth of St.
Paul and Minneapolis from a population
of 88,000 in 1870 to more than ten times
that number in 1897.—“ The New North
west,’’ by J. A Wheelock, in Harper’s
Magazine.
-y-ri—'"msanraeasi ’
Tho Classics and Sciences.
It is easy for those who have never had
a true university training, who have bad
their ideas of culture shaped by the com
mercial fashion of this particular country
and the whirl of turmoil In which our peo
ple are carried along, to persuade them
selves that wo are now quite beyond the
need of Latin and Greek; that the places
of the classic languages can be and ought
to be supplied by the more practical study
of French and German. This demand for
practical and useful things is just as
erroneous as the one previously mention
ed. It loses sight of the fundamental
principle in education—vis, that the Solo
purpose of education is discipline in think
ing and the cultivation of attachment to
the noble and the ideal. That classic
languages afford a better discipline to tho
mind than any other is generally conceded
by the best authorities and proved by tbs
experience of every ago.
In our own time wo find the most emi
nent savans of Germany of this opinion,
and in England Lord Kelvin, tho ex-pres
ident of thrf Royal society, who for 50
years has engaged in physical research and
is easily the greatest man of science since
Laplace, comes out squarely against the
making of Greek optional in the Universi
ty of Cambridge, and the proposition is
voted down in the senate by an over
whelming majority. Is it likely that on
this groat question such mature and intel
ligent judgment can be wrong and that
of the Inexperienced and tho unclassio
teacher right? Training in the classic
languages Affords tho desired mental dis
cipline and stimulates a careful and ac
curate use of language and of thought,
which, as has been said txsfore, is the es
sential condition of scientific progress.
I advocate therefore a return to the
study of the classics as the best and safest
basis for the advancement of science; be
sides, the Ideals and the philosophy and
the poetry of tho ancients, far removed
from the corrupting clamors of our time,
exert the most noble influence upon the
mind, and from that point of view alone
Latin and Greek should be maintained as
the basis of linguistic study.—Dr. T, J. J.
Lee in Popular Astronomy.
Tactics That Won.
“I’ll never forget when we had old
Bluntly at the bead of our campaign com
mittee, ” said tho ex-congressman who re
cently retired from politics. “All we put
him there for was as a figurehead. He
was honest, straightforward and univer
sally trusted by the people. We simply
wanted the benefit of his reputation, in
tending to make the fight without any of
his help.
“But the old chap fooled us. Retook
the thing in deadly earnest and watched
things with the care of a locomotive en
gineer hauling a fast passenger train. He
believed in doing everything aboveboard
and was a bonanza to reporters. When a
man of some prominence on the other side
pretended to be converted to ours and
made a dramatic demonstration at a big
mass meeting of his change of heart,
Bluntly gave it out that the fellow had
been hired to play the part and was a rank
hypocrite. When we had made terms with
a lot of repeaters to come in and help us
out, Bluntly exposed the scheme and call
ed the attention of the authorities to it in
away they could not ignore. When we
bought up the leaders of a certain organi
zation, promising so much for each vote
delivered from that source, Bluntly called
attention to the conspiracy and declared
that he would prosecute bribersand bribed
if it were carried out.”
‘ ‘ Whew I Did the fellows on your ticket
know they were running?”
“Did they? We swept the board. Not
an office got away. Bluntly’s honesty was
so novel and refreshing that the people
were tickled beyond expression. They
couldn’t believe that a man of his nerve
and integrity oould be indorsing tho
wrong ticket, and it went with a whoop.”
—Detroit Free Pess.
It Made All the Difference.
“Oh!” exclaimed Mrs. Midgen. She
had been shopping and visiting and had
just arrived home when a thought struck
her. She clasped her hands together in
dismay, and in her agitation sat flat down
on the cat. “Whatever shall I do?”
“I expect you will get over it.” said
Mr. Midgen testily. He was waiting for
his tea. “What is it?”
“I took my diary out with me Instead
of that little pricebook, and if 1 haven’t
been and left it somewhere! Suppose
somebody should get hold of it and read
it?”
“Ha, ha!” laughed her husband. “That
will bo fine sport. How I should like. to
see them reading nil the rubbish you have
written in it I What’s the good of going
back? You’ll never get it. ”
“Oh, I remember now!” suddenly cried
Mrs. Midgen. “It is my old one. So it
doesn’t matter at all. I feel quite re
lieved.”
“What was in it?” said he, feeling dis
appointed.
“I used to amuse myself by copying
your love letters in it, and I imitated your
signature at the bottom of them. ’’
“What?” yelled Midgen, jumping to his
feet and grabbing at his hair. “Do you
want people to know what an idiot I am
and make me tho laughing stock of the
parish just when I’m putting up for the
Vestry? Go and look for it, quick! And
offer 4810 reward for it!”
Ahd if it hadn’t been found in Mrs.
Midgen’s bag at that very moment there
Is no telling what would have happened
to that household.—Pearson’s Weekly.
What Is Public Opinion?
It is obvious that there are two kinds of
public opinion. One is the popular belief
in the fitness or rightness of something,
Which Mr. Balfour calls “climate,” a be
lief that certain lines of conduct should
be followed or a certain belief held by
good citizens or right thinking persons.
Such a belief does not impose any duty on
anybody beyond outward conformity to
the received standards. The one lam now
talking of is the public opinion, or con
sensus of opinion among large bodies of
persons, which acts as a political force,
imposing on those in authority certain en
actments or certain lines of policy. The
first of these does not change and is not
seriously modified in much less than 50
years. The second is being incessantly
modified by the events of the day.— E. L.
Godkin in Atlantic.
Episcopal Church Statistics.
„ Whittaker’s “Protestant Episcopal Al
manac” for 1898, which is out, is a care
ful and comprehensive digest of Episcopal
church statistics and growth. Then are
at present in that church 4,776 clergymen,
an Increase of 53 over the previous year;
6,882 churches, an increase of 46; 664,088
communicants, an increase at 22,988, and
483,600 Sunday school scholars, an in
crease of 10,077. Its contributions for all
purposes during the last year were $12,-
696,818.06, being an increase of $10,938.65
( over the previous year.
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Schedule in Effect Jan. 9, 1898.
» 'K O-rNo.B I Mo. S ' ~~ jo-i 2*0?»
’ P* l1 *- Dally- Dally. statiows. Dally. Daily. Daily.
TjOpw 4 06pm 756 am LvAtlanta 1 35 pm UWam
Sfepm 447 pm 8 28am LvJonesboroAr 852 pm 1080 am
»15pm »30pm OWamLv Griffin Ar snpm Ogam «»*»
• 45pm 6 05pm »40am Ar BarnesvilleLv S42pm 017 am *47am
» 40 pm tisnopm ArThomastonLvtaOOpSnoOam
lOUpm 631 pm 1012 am ArForsyth....Lv 514 pm »Mam »««■
SOOam 6(gpm Ax.SavannahLv 845 am >o6pm
' *Dally. texoept Bunday.
t Train for Newnan and Carrollton leaves Griffin at »f 5 am, and 1 p w_ dally exqgp*
Sunday. Baturnlnir, arrives in Griffin 520 p m and 12 40 p m dally except Bunday. For
, further information apply to
C. B. WHITS, Ticket Aueat. Griffin. Ga.
FHBO. D. KLINE, Genlfcpt.. Savannah.
J. C. HAILS. Gen. PaaaeßuurAuuut. Bev«aaa*Jße<
E. H. HINTON. Traffic Manager, GaT