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EPISODE OF THE LATE W/ R.
Lwt Night of • Souther a Soldier on she
Battleflelcl.
“Don’t leave me, capsainl Oh, d< n’t
leave me I "were the words that cam to
me with an agonized shriek from a bleed
ing and dying Confederate soldier on
the evening of the great battle of Mal
vern Hill, July 1, 1802. He, a mere
youth of 17 years, lay in a heap, gasp
ing for the breath which was fast leav
ing him, along with the rays of .sun
light, on that sad and memorable day.
I, for whom that piteous cry was meant,
was a staff officer of the brigade to
which the Louisiana regiment, the sol
dier boy’s regiment, was attached.
Well fnounted, I was galloping back
across that bloody field to report the
duty I had performed when suddenly
arrested in my course by the voice of
despair and woe, coming from my
stricken comrade. The day was fast
passing away into darkness, a darkness
that seemed to enshroud this valley of
death. The terrific cannonading on both
sides that had lasted for hours from the
surrounding hills (Malvern hill being
the central point of attack by the Con
federates) was supplemented by the
booming of artillery and bursting of
shells from the gunboats on the adja
cent James river.
Nature seemed to revolt at this scene
of blood and carnage. Thunder and
lightning and an avalanche of rain came
in quick succession with such great
force as to cause the stoutest heart to
quake. This great battle was the sev
enth day’s fight to capture the city of
Richmond. It was not an ordinary bat
tle, but a demons’ fight and the final
encounter between those two giants of
War Robert E. Lee and George B. Mc-
Clellan. It gave the laurels of victory
to the southern chieftain, bedewed with
the tears of broken hearts.
« Without stopping to consider what I
alone could do for the dying youth
amid the chaos and increasing darkness
of the night that prevailed, I turned
back and dismounted to keep a lonely
vigil with the dead. My horse, which,
strange to say, had seemed frenzied with
fear, became quiet and tractable as
though he knew there was safety with
his master. I called the boy, who had
swooned away from loss of blood, and
was glad to know he was not dead.
Giving him the bridle of my horse to
hold, I tore the sash from around my
waist to bandage his torn and bleeding
limb.
The’boy was praying and called down
God’s blessing on me. His petition to
heaven seemed to be heard. The storm
of wind and rain, although still high,
was abating. Naught but the mournful
wail of the wind through the surround
ing forest could now be heard. The
great armies that had so lately confront
ed each other in battle array had seem
ingly vanished from the scene. I was
alone on a battlefield with the dead.
Wet and dripping, with the chill of
night upon me, I waited for morning,
and he, too, the brave soldier boy, was
waiting for morning. Oh, God, will it
ever come?
He clasped my hand with hope and
confidence and seemed to be happy and
without pain. I believed he had gone to
sleep. Morning came, and he was still
asleep—asleep to wake no more.—Daw
son A. Blanchard in Washington Post.
ANCIENT WARFARE.'
How an English Castle Was Attacked In
the Fifteenth Century.
Sir John Fastolf had by his will de
vised his castle, called Cais ter, to John
Paston. As a fortification, it was an
excellent defense against foreign invad
ers, and as a residence it was worthy of
royalty itself. In fact, the Duke of
Gloster, afterward Richard IH, at one
time contemplated making it his abode.
While Paston was trying to establish
his title in the courts the Duke of Nor
folk purchased a pretended claim to it,
and sought to gain possession by force.
The Pastons did not propose to y ield,
though the duke was then probably the
most powerful noble in England, and
John Paston was his liveried servant.
Four professional soldiers were sent up
from London to aid in the defense.
They are described as “provyd men,
conning in werr and can wel schote
both gonnes and crossbowes and devyse
bolwerkys and keep wacche and warde.
They be sadde and wel advysed, saving
on of them, whyehe is ballyd (bald) but
yit he is no brawler. Ye shall fynd them
gentylmanly comfortable fellowes, and
that they dare abyde by ther taklyng. ”
Young John Paston, aided by these
four and by a handful of personal friends
and followers, held the oastle for several
weeks against a siege conducted by the
duke’s army of 3,000 men. By ttye
terms of the final surrender the besieged
were allowed their lives and goods,
horses and harness, and a respite for 15
days, in which to go where they pleased.
They reported that they were forced to
surrender by “lak of vitayl, gonepow
dyr, menys herts and surete of rescue. ”
Edward IV had refrained from interfer
ing in this extraordinary contest, be
cause the troubles with Warwick were
gathering thickly about him, and the
Mowbrays were too necessary to be safe
ly offended.—Sewanee Review.
Smoke and Lightning.
“On the approach of a thunderstorm
French peasants often make up a very
smoky fire,” says Industries and Iron,
“in the belief that safety from light
ning is thus assured. By some this is
deemed superstition, but Schaster shows
that the custom is based on reason inas
much as the smoke acts as a good con
ductor for carrying away the electricity
slowly and safely. Ha points out that
in 1,000 cases of damage by lightning
6.3 churches and 8.5 mills have been
struck, while the number of factory
chimneys has only been .3. ”
“It’s so seldom,” said Uncle Eben,
“data man jes’ puhceeds along, tryin
ter do ’is hones’ duty, dat when he does
folks goes ter guessin an ’spinionin dat
he’s playin a mighty sly game.”*—
Washington Star.
I*
COST OF SABLES.
Hew the Price Advances After the Skin
Leaves Siberia.
Up in the great watershed dividing
Siberia and- Mongolia lives a peculiar
race of people, half Chinese, half Tib
etans. Few Europeans have ever seen
them. In fact, with the exception of one
or two enterprising explorers or geo
graphical enthusiasts who have crossed
the Altai range, European eyes have
never gazed upon the aboriginal Syota
of northern Mongolia.
Sable hunting in the Siberian moun
tains and northern Mongolia is confined
almost exclusively to the Syots and oth
er native races, and it would surprise a
good many fur dealers in England to
know the prices which are paid by the
Siberian traders to these poor aborigines
for the skins they collect
The Siberian trader, knowing his
market, makes periodical journeys into
Mongolia. It is safe to say he does not
take a kopek of money with him, but he
drags behind him a well stuffed caravan
loaded with tea, tobacco, gunpowder
and shot, strings of beads for the wom
en and roughly made moccasins for the
men. In due course he will come across
a Syot encampment.
The trader sits on his wagon and bar
ters cheerfully. With the eye of a con
noisseur and with fingers rendered deft
by long practice he sees and feels the
smooth, warm skins of the little ani
mals?
This small black one—well, a twp
ounce packet of tobacco is enough for
that ; that large black one—a handful
of shot and an equal quantity of gun
powder; a packet of tea for a lovely
skin with a long black stripe down the
center; this one, a fine skin, but a lit
tle bit hurt by the shot entering the
back—well, say a string of beads for
that.
In their original undressed state it is
safe to say that the skins do not cost
the Siberian trader much more than a
few pence each on the average. As the
poor sable travels farther westward,
however, he gets dearer and dearer. In
Tomsk one can buy a very good sable
for something like 5 or 6 rubles, about
13s. In Omsk few are sold under 10 ru
bles—£l Is. In Moscow 100 per cent
goes on. In. St. Petersburg no one ex
cept the middle class or a functionary
would wear a sable under £5. In Paris
and London a real Siberian sable skin
will fetch anything up to £2O, but the
imitation sables of the present day have
done much to depreciate this wonderful
trade. —London Mail.
HIS HIGH PRICED EYE.
How a Clever Bunko Game Was Played
on a Son of Sunny Italy.
A well planned scheme was worked
on a down town Italian confectioner
the other night whereby he lost SSO.
About 2 p. m. a man who had one good
eye and one glass eye came wandering
along the street and stopped at this
Italian’s fruit stand. He stooped over
to look at some of the fruit, when un
expectedly his glass eye fell from its
socket down among the bananas and
oranges.
The pretending purchaser at once be
gan a diligent search for the missing
glass eye. With both hands he clawed
into the fruit, scattering it in all di
rections. The Italian came forward and
told the stranger to stop. The one eyed
man explained that his glass eye had
dropped down there and that he wanted
to get it.
The Italian became enraged and told
the stranger to come around in the even
ing and he could get the other eye. The
man explained he was a stranger and
would not be here in the evening, but
if he (the Italian) found the eye he
should bring it to his hotel, where SIOO
would be paid to him.
An hour later another man came
along, pretended to make a purchase,
and while fingering around in the fruit
suddenly espied the wonderful glass eye.
The man from Italy made a grab for it,
but was too late, as his would be cus
tomer already had it. Both claimed the
eye, and a quarrel ensued. The Italian
patched matters up by giving the stran
ger SSO for the eye, thinking he would
get SIOO upon returning It and he
would have SSO clear.
He went to the hotel with the eye to
get the SIOO that he was told awaited
him there. He found that na such man
had been there and no SIOO was left
there for him. He then saw how he was
worked and notified the police.—Pitts
burg Commercial-Gazette.
Sheep Tick*.
Every one who has sheep knows the
tick, the worst pest of this animal, that
does serious harm to the young lambs
without suspicion of the cause to the
shepherd. This reddish Brown creature
is a wingless fly and a very greedy blood
sucker. A dozen of them on a lamb will
quickly suck the little one dry. It is to
be looked after at the time of shearing,
when these insects go for shelter to the
lambs. It is found mostly where the
animal cannot reach it—on its head,
buried in the skin, sucking the blood.
Its skin is tough, and it is not easily
crushed with less than a blow of a ham
mer. In small flocks it is not much of a
job to go through, with a pair of
small scissors to cut the ticks in two,
but where the flock is over a score it
will be necessary to dip the lambs.—
Exchange.
The Count's Mistake.
“So Gwendolyn is not to marry the
count after all?”
"No, poor man. He tried to tell her
that her singing was something that
made one glad to live, and his pronun
ciation was so broken that she thought
be said it made one glad to leave, and
then she requested him to leave. ’ ’—ln
dianapolis Journal.
Testinc Him.
Bagley—Do you recollect that $5 I
let you have about a year ago? J
Brace —Perfectly. i
Bagley—That’s good. I see your
memory is all right. How’s your eya- 1
sight?—Harlem Life.
Marvelous Musical Meiory.
When Mandelaachn nUyed c 3 the piano
or the organ, the listener fc t the great
mulcian and composer inert y bar. The
man’s magical memory was marvelous.
Sir Charles Halle, who in 18 3 spent aev-'
oral weeks with Mendelssohn t .Frankfurt,
describes, in his “Autoblog, iphy,” three
instances of the composer’s memory. Ho
writes:
The greatest treat was to elt with him
at the piano and listen to innumerable
fragments from half forgotten, beautiful
works by Cherubini, Gluck, Bach, Pales
trina and Marcello. It was only necessary
to mention one of them to hear it played
to perfection, until I came to the conclu
sion -that he knew every bar of music ever
written, and what was more, could produce
It immediately.
One morning Hiller and I were playing
together one of Bach’s organ pieces on the
piano—one of no particular Interest, but
which we wished to know better. When
wc were in the middle of it—a part hardly
to be distinguished from many other simi
lar ones—the door opened, Mendelssohn
entered, and without interrupting us, rose
on tiptoes, and with bls uplifted finger
pointed significantly at the next bar which
was coming and contained an unexpected
and striking modulation.
So, from heating through the door a bar
or two of a—for Bach—somewhat com
monplace piece, he not only recognized it
at once, but knew the exact place we had
arrived at and what was to follow in the
next bar. His memory was prodigious
and his knowledge intimate.
It is well known that when be revived
Bach’s “Passion Music” and conducted
the first performance he found, on stepping
to the conductor’s desk, that u eoore simi
lar in binding and thickness, but of an
other work, had been brought by mistake.
He conducted this amazingly complicated
work by heart, turning leaf after leaf of
the book he had before him in order not to
create any feeling of uneasiness on the part
of the musicians and singers.
Some Induction Problem*.
In one of his lectures on “Electricity and
Electrical Vibrations,’’ given at the Royal
institution, London, Lord Rayleigh gave
one or two illustrations of the use of the
telephone and sensitive flame in induction
problems and performed an experiment
which was remarkable for the paradoxical
character of the conclusion to be drawn
from it. A circuit carrying an induced
current was made to branch into two parts,
one of which passed through one wire of a
ooil carrying three windings, while the
other passed through the other two wires
of the same coil. Owing to mutual induc
tion and self induction the telephone
showed that the current in one of the
branches was greater than that in the main
before it separated into two parts. So far
Lord Rayleigh in these.telephone experi
ments had been dealing with vibrations
whose frequency was mainly determined
by the ear, and was in the neighborhood
of 1,000 a second. He now turned .to the
currents of still higher frequency obtained
by the discharge of a Leyden jar. The fre
quency depended on circumstances, but
1,000,000 a second was not out of the way,
and 10,000,000 might be reached.
For purposes of experimental investiga
tion it was desirable to have some means
of slowing down these vibrations, and this
might be done by using a source of elec
tricity of large capacity and making the
discharge pass through a coil with great
eels Induction. This was equivalent to in
creasing the Inertia of mechanical system.
The interposition of the coll reduced the
frequency of the vibrations to perhaps 1,000
a second, and its effect was apparent by
the changed character of the spark, the
snapping, noise of which was exchanged for
a sound possessing a more definite musical
character.
Napoleonic Feeling In Corsica.
Napoleon, “le grandempereur,”lives in
the hearts of the people as vividly as
though he had died but yesterday. I was
present at a curious scene at the theater at
Ajaccio, where an intolerable drama en
titled “Napoleon” was performed by as
villainous a company as ever trod provin
cial boards. The house was crammed, and
the enthusiasm so great, with cries of
“Vive I’empereur!” that I thought it well
to retire before Sir Hudson Lowe came on
the scene, to be followed possibly by “A
bas les Anglais!” The vudionoe seemed
really to be moved as one man by the
frenzy of imperialism. I was not sur
prised to hear after this that the Empress
Eugenie, who wished to revisit Corsica,
had decided, on advice, that it would be
unwise to do so.
To the same fear of arousing popular
feeling may be attributed the fact that the
directions left in his will by the late
prince, generally known as “Plon-Plon,”
that he should be buried at the “Isles San
guinaires,” have never been carried out.
The tenacity to the "Napoleonic idea”
may be further illustrated by the fact that
the hostility of a great Corsican house to
the Bonapartes has never been forgiven.
Its present representative isjregarded with
a hereditary resentment. An Ajacclan
gentleman who was calling on an English
lady rose and left the room on the entrance
of a fellow townsman whose greatuncle
had been Napoleon I’s opponent.—Fort
nightly Review.
explosive* as Medicine*.
Professor A lonel says that we often swal
low or apply substances which, If incau
tiously treated or used in any but the mi
nutest quantities, would blow us to atoms.
What is more, these substances, so destruc
tive in large quantities, are of the most
beneficial nature when used in the form of
medicine. One of the best remedies for
heart trouble, neuralgia, asthma and head
ache is nitroglycerin, which is the only ex
plosive ingredient in dynamite. The dose
is only one two hundredth of a grain, dis
solved in spirits of wine or combined in
gelatin tablets. Collodion, a slrupy look
ing liquid that is used to form a false skin
over abrasions of the cuticle, is nothing
but gun cotton dissolved in alcohol. In
its natural form it is one of the most dan
gerous of explosives, and yet, as a medi
cine, it has no equal for the purpose for
which it is used. Another explosive used
as a drug is picric acid. This is prepared
from carbolic acid, and is administered in
ternally in very small doses for ague and
headache. This acid is one of the explo
sives used in the preparation of bombs.
These and many other dangerous drugs are
perfectly safe when used as ordered by phy
sicians.—London Standard.
A Windfall For Faure.
President Felix Faure was agreeably sur
prised the other day by a visit from an old
lady to whom, after urgent solicitation, he
had granted an audience. Her motive,
which she had concealed, was to inform
I him that her admiratioif of his policy was
so great that she intended to leave him
1,000,000 francs. The president tried to
dissuade her, but seeing that she was re
solved he thanked and embraced bar.
~’neaHan
-
SUICIDE AND THE SEXES.
It I* More Freqneat ••’;tu Men nnd la
Peatiaad to taenaao Vita* Women.
At the present day o.n is much more
prone to suicide than wc can. This is true
of man in regard to epilepsy, crime and
other marked signs of degeneration. Bui
it has been observed that as woman ap
proaches man in bar modb of life she also
becomes more familiar with those abnor
mal conditions which have previously
been peculiar to man. The comparative
immunity of woman from self destruction
tn the past has depended greatly upon the
relatively leaa harassing part she bas taken
in the struggle for life. Today it la differ
ent Now woman occupies the fields of
art, literature, finance and even politics,
and, as she goes deeper Into these voca
tions, she must expect to suffer the conse
quences. Already it is noticeable that
feminine suicide is not now entirely due
to the sentimental causes of disappointed
love, desertion and jealousy, but to those
trials of a more material order such as
have led men to the act of self destruction.
Imitation far exceeds any other of what
are called trivial causes of suicide and
asserts itself more in woman than in man.
It is much more common than is supposed.
When self destruction becomes epidemic,
as it sometimes does, its prevalence very
largely dependa upon imitation. It to said
that many years ago the wail of Thomas
Hood over "tbe one more unfortunate"
brought many a sentimental person to a
watery grave in the Thames, and in our
own day tbe vivid representation of sui
cide upon tbe stage under conditions ap
pealing forcibly to tbe imagination bas
been known to bo followed by tbe self im
posed death of persons whose conditions
resembled closely those of the suicide in
the drama.
Attempts have been made to prove that
climate bas an effect upon the rate of rai
olde, but these attempts have never done
more than show that the temperate regions
have the highest ratio. This, of course, io
not due to the climate, but to the more
complicated civilization, the greater physi
cal and mental wear and tbe more exten
sive interference with natural laws met
with in the temperate regions. While it
is true that climate exerts but little influ
ence over the rate of suicide, the seasons,
on the contrary, do strongly affect it. Tbe
popular belief is that suicide is more fre
quent during the months of winter and
spring. This, however, is incorrect. Cold,
wet, damp weather does not, as so many
people suppose, promote despondency and
suicide. Strange as it may seem, at that
period of the year when the sufferings of
the poor and the sick are least, when em
ployment is most readily obtained, when
the pleasure of living should be at its
highest, suicide is most frequent May,
June and July, the months of song and
sunshine in all countries, give the greatest
number of self murders. For this there is
no satisfactory explanation, unless we ac
cept that of the medical fraternity, which
is that during the period of early summer
the organism is working at a higher ten
sion, every function of mind and body is
more active than at any other period of
the year, and consequently there is greater
liability to sudden physical and mental
collapse.—Popular Science Monthly.
Warning Not to Overexercise.
In a lecture on “Pedagogical Aspects of
Physiological Psychology," delivered at
the University Extension school, Philadel
phia, Professor Halleck said:
, "In tbe case of tbe vast majority the
brain attains its maximum weight by the
age of 15. Examination of sections of tbe
spinal cord have shown that between the
time of birth and the age of 15 there bas
been 100 per cent increase in the number
of developed nerve cells, while an increase
of only 4.6 per cent has been shown
after 15. The brain also shows, with ad
vancing age, a decline in actual weight
and in the number of connective fibers,
which afford the physical substrate for
thinking and for association. Roughly
speaking, nerve cells are plastio in inverse
proportion to their ages. These facts point
to the conclusion that few people save
geniuses ever get an absolutely new idea
into their heads after tbe age of 38. They
generally build upper stories on founda
tions already acquired.
“Nerve cells have been shown to de
crease in volume 50 per cent as a result of
fatiguing exercise. In tbe case of deer In
an English park, hunted with dogs for
sport, but not killed, the deer frequently
never recovered from the effects of fa
tigue. The nerve cells of those collegians
who fall overexhausted after a boat raoe
may never again recover their full vigor.
Exercise of every sensory and motor brain
tract is very beneficial when not carried
beyond the proper point, for this exercise
puts the nerve cell in the best possible con
dition for assimilating more nutriment
and developing more fully. Inaction in
any tract tends to an undeveloped spot'and
to atrophy."
How the Queen Stopped Grog.
There is an amusing story told in con
nection with one of the queen’s cruises
along the Cornish coast while Lord
Adolphus Fitz Clarence was still in com
mand of the royal yacht. One day her
majesty and several ladies of the royal
party seated themselves on deck in a shel
tered place protected by tbe vessel’s paddle
box. Some time later the men were seen
to gather in little knots and talk together
in whispers. Presently Mn officer approach
ed tbe queen, but his courage forsook him,
and he retired A little later another offi
cer also approached and then walked away.
The queen was amused and mystified, and
when Lord Adolphus Fitz Clarence came
on deck she Inquired if anything was the
matter, adding, with a smile, that she
hoped there was not going to be a mutiny.
Lord Adolphus laughed and replied that
he did not know what might happen un
less her majesty would be graciously pleas
ed to move her seat, a camp stool.
“Move my seat?" replied the queen.
“Why should I? What possible harm can
I be doing here?” “Well, ma’am,” re
plied the captain, “the fact is your maj
esty is unwittingly closing up the door
where the grog tube are kept, and so the
men cannot have their grog." “Oh, very
well," responded tbe queen, much amus
ed, “I will move on one condition—that
you bring roe a glass of grog.” This was
accordingly done, and after tasting it her
majesty remarked, “I am afraid loan only
make tbe same remark I did onoe before
that I think it would be very good if it
were stronger!” It is almost nnnwnssssry
to add that “The queen, God bless her!”
was drunk with enthusiasm that day.—
Sketch.
Fellah For the Furniture.
A little turpentine and oil applied to
furniture with a flannel cloth, the furni
ture then thoroughly rubbed, wUI give it
a bright, elean appearance. If your rose
wood refuses to polish, have' your furni
ture man repolish it for you. He will rub
it down with sandpaper and varnish it so
it will last tor years.—Ladies' Homo
Journal.
AN OPEN LETTER
To MOTHERS. * I
WE ARE ASSERTING IN THE COURTS OUR RIGHT TO THE
EXCLUSIVE USE OF THE WORD ‘‘CASTORIA,” AND
M PITCHER’S CASTORIA,” AS OUR TRADE MARK.
7, DR. SAMUEL PITCHER, Hyannis, Massachusetts,
was the originator of “PITCHER’S CASTORIA,” the same
that has borne and does now y/f&s z 7 — ’
bear the facsimile signature of wrapper.
This is the original “PITCHER’S CASTORIA,” which has been
used in the homes of the Mothers of America for over thirty
years. LOOK CAREFULLY at the wrapper and see that it is
the kind you have always bought 071
and has the signature of wrap-
per. No one has authority from me to use my name ex
cept The Centaur Company of which Chas. H. Fletcher is
President. a
March 8,1897.
Do Not Be Deceived.
Do not endanger the life of your child by accepting
a cheap substitute which some druggist may offer yo”
(because he makes a few more pennies on it), the in
gredients of which even he docs not know.
“The Kind You Have Always Bought”
BEARS THE FAC-SIMILE SIGNATURE OF
Insist on Having
The Kind That Never Failed ’You.
TMS OR MT AU II COW MANY, TT MUNAAV sT»t<|, RAW VUAA wIW.
' 11 A"' 1 ~ ■■ . . . T —»■■■■>
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CEMTHAL OF GEORGI* MllW CO.
Schedule in Effect Jan. 9, 1898*
'No. No. iF~i<b. > —=====lto, i . U Ms.r
Dally. Pally. Daily. wanoirs. Dally. Daily. Daily.
7<opn> 4OS pa 780 am Lv .Atlanta Ar 736 pm 11 Wain T4«au>
J2e:.!£"l£ SSSSS!
BSS ISEpS SSS
1119*0 810 pm UMpto Ar ...Gvrdon.. Lv SMpm 71o*n> SMaat
—————— — ■ 1 1— 111 - 7
QsrroUton leave*Grifin at Sts a■», and IjO par daily excM
Sunday. Returning, arrives in OrtMn S » p ■* and IS 40 p m dally except Jtanday. JMtafcg
further information apply to |
J. C. HAI r.B. Gen. Pueraeer Ajrent. Bar«<iD*h.o*i
M. H. HINTON. Tmffle Mantorer. tovaanab, Os.