Newspaper Page Text
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|RGIA, U. S. A.
flriffin in the bent and moat promising little
ifv in tlio South. Ita record tor the past
bait docade, ita many new enterprises in oper¬ ttaia
ation, building and contemplated, prove
0 i e a business statement and not a hyper-
olieal description.
During that time it has built and put into
most successful operation a $100,000 cotton
n^fcory nnd with thin year started the wheels
of a second of more than twice that capital.
It has put np a large iron and brass foundry,
a fertiliser factory, an Immense ice and bot¬
tling works, a sash and Wind factory, a
broom factory, oponed op the finest granite
quarry in the United States, and now has
our large off mills in more or less advanced
stage* of construction, with an aggregate au¬
thorised capital of over half amilhondollars.
It is putting up the finest system’of dectrie
ighting that ean be procured, and has ap-
plied for o charters for street railways,
has secured another railroad ninety miles long,
and while located on the greatest system in
the South, the Central, has secured connec¬
tion With ita important, nval, the East Ten¬
nessee, Virginia and Georgia. It has obtain¬
ed direct independent connection yith Chat¬
tanooga and the West, and will break ground
na few days fora fourth road, connecting
with a fourth independent system.
With its five white and four colored church¬
es, it lies receifl® completed a #10,000 new
Presbyterian church. Ithas increased itepop-
fllatios by nearly one fifth. It has attracted
around its borders fruit growers from nearly
every State in the Union, until it is now sur¬
rounded on nearly every side by orchards
and vineyards. It has put up the largest
I niit evaporators in the fitate. It is thehome
of thegrape and its winemakingcapacity has
doubled every year. It has successfully in¬
augurated a system of public schools, with a
seven yean* curriculum, second to none.
This is part of the record of a half decade
and simply shows the progress of an already
admirable city, with the natural advantages
of having the finest climate, summer and
winter, in the world.
•IGriffin Is the connty seat of Spalding coun¬
ty, Situated*# »e|it Middle Georgia, with a
healthy, fertile and rolling country, 1150 feet
above Sea level. By the census of 1890, it
will have at alow estimate between6 000 and
7 lolr^Lwake, 000 People, and they are ail of the right
up to the times, ready to
welcome stranger* and anxious to secure de¬
sirable settlers, who will not be any less wel¬
come if the* bring money to help build up the
«. wn. There is about only one thing we
need badly just, now, and that is a big hotel.
We lum several small ones, but their accom¬
modations are entirely too limited for onr
nsine s, pleasure and health seeking guests.
H you see anybody that wants a good locu¬
tion for a hotel in the South, just mention
(i
0rt»dHW’ri>e place whew the Gunrm News
s published—daily and weekly—the beat news-
paper in ttfe Empire State of Georgia. Please
enclose stamps in sending for sample copies,
and descriptive pamphlet of Griffln.l
This brief sketch is written April 12th, 1889,
uml will httv* to be changed in a lew months
o embrace now enterprises commenced and
«npm«E *
PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY.
HENHY C. PEEPLES,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
HAMPTON, UBOBOU.
'* SnSST*
JOHN J. HUNT,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
GB1EFIN, OEOHGU.
Office, 81 Hill Street., Up Stairs, over J. 1
White’s Otnthiw Store. mar22d&wly
rHOS. R. MILLS,
ATTORNEY *AT LAW, '
Will practice In the State and Federal
tiourte. Office over George 4 Hartnetts
corner. nov2tf
flO** n STEWART. BOBT. T. DANIEL.
STEWART & DANIEL
ATTORNEYS' AT LAW
Orel ft s nn w te Ga.
vvm
ourtis. f;«klMi vs!
■
CLeYtLAND & GARLAND,
J)£NTiSTS,
0. L PARMER,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
WOODBIBY, GEOR01A.
Will pprompt practice attention in given to all business
all the Courts, and where
ver business call*.
. 2»~ Collections a specialty.
MOW] SOW! HOW
Honey Wanted for the
Stark Plantation.
707 acres land, well wanted and timbered,
t Ga. Midland RB.
i
THE CIGARS WE SMOKE.
They Are Hade of Tobacco Because Stained
Paper Is Too Dear to Cm.
There is quite a common belief that
the cheap cigars, of which there is an
immense sale in’ this city, are made
tobacco. largely o f Whatever pa per stained foundation to resemble there
may have been foe this allegation
some years ago there it is certain, says the
dealer, kind going that it nothing of the
on now.
The best proof of this, they claim, is
furnished by the fact that there is not
now fuge, any tli« necessity cheapest for straw such a subter¬ the
ad paper,
only kind that could be used, cannot
be bought and put through the neces¬
sary natural chemical leaf tobacco process as be. Cheaply as
can
The cheap cigars are, of course, made
of the domestic tobacco, the and quality the cheaper of
bacco. cigar The the odor poorer of the cheap cigar to¬ is
about the only objection to bo made
against development it, and this comes the from leaf. the im¬ No
perfect of will of the
able process flavor curing of tine leaf impart the inferior agree¬
to
which leaf, because the its essential oils failing from
it gets fragrance to
come with growth, cannot be satisfac¬
torily It supplied true that by various artificial harmless pm###-
erties is impart pleas¬ prop
may be used bo a
ing the flavor, of but good to the cigdr man the who artifice knows is
taste a
at once apparent, and to his taste is
uauseating. Besides, that kind of fra¬
grance is the short natural lived. moisture It lasts only of the as
long leaf, and as dampening the cigar cannot
restore it.
There is a considerable prejudice
among of domestic connoisseurs tobacco. against But all kinds
we are grow¬
ing an excellent quality of leaf in
Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Ohio and
Connecticut. It is true that even the
best domestic tobacco contains at least
10 per cent, of nicotine, while the
Cuban leaf has not more than 5 per
cent. It must be conceded also that
the Caban tobaccos have a-more deli¬
cate when aroma becomes than the accustomed domestic, and
one to
smoking it then nothing else can sat¬
isfy The his acknowledged taste. superiority of the
Cuban goods comes from rather the than peculiar from
soil of that country
able the climate. that the It is particularly from Vuelta notice¬ Abajo
and Semi Vuelta, crops districts lying
two
in the southwest of the island, be are rivaled par¬
anywhere. ticularly fine and cannot
,;.v .' ■' ■
This _
heavier
all the refuse washed in tl
lUUlglCU mingled with tUUl the IUU earth, Ctw tu, and tends teWAAVAAJ to
improve the fertility north, of the the ground. quality
is Receding good, to but the comparatively fine
not so a
product comes from the Mancaraugua,
Remedios that territory. and Partidos The poorest plantations leaf, which in
is thick, strong and ugly, comes from
Tara, in the southeastern part of the
island, but very little of that finds its
way to this Country, and for this we
may be thankful, as smoking it has the
effect of dolling the senses and feel¬
ings.—New York News.
The Gentlemen of America.
There are no class and caste and
rank distinctions and no coat-of-arms
to entitle a man to the name of gen¬
Smith, tleman in Mr. America. Dinkinspeil, Mr. Jones, Mr. orMr. Fla-
or or
of-arms means nothing in this coun¬
try but snobbery. It does not add to
cate’* standing as a gentleman; it ra¬
ther detracts. As there are no “no¬
blemen" by birth in this land, so
there are no “gentlemen” by credit right of
lineage, except as one does in
his own person and character and con¬
duct to his ancestry.
In humble homes can be found men
entitled to the name “gentleman” of in
the best and truest significance the
word, as it enters into the life of the
republic; and in found the most cads sumptuous who claim
mansions can be
the name because their fathers grew
rich in peddling pelts. To be called a
gentleman is the proudest deserve triumph it is a
man “act well can win, and to there all the hon¬ to
lies.’’—Qinsannati your part, Commercial.
or
i The atory told by Sir William Fraser
seems, of satisfactory explanation. It
is incredible that, using the words in
their ordinary sense, as one would
understand should them have said, in England, during Gen.
Grant a pause
m the middle of dinner father “My lord, mili¬ I
have heard that your was a This
tary man. Was that the caset”
....
ignorance' _
____e or
The New York Herald (L ond on ed i ti o n )
points out that there was
S. whrther Dm fern <tak. h.d
1 ti^lny in
commanders, he had learnt the art of
war only intos field. —Loud on Life.
..... by the fiery «!*
menu bufldMg Afterwards was skipped a building, which
was so near it that the two might be
tfa.*« k»i eew «■ G, AUGUST 4, 188R.
Uetul Uuntlnc in the Solomon bland*.
ly Throughout human the skulls group hung one constant¬ either
in sees outside the house, but it up from
or »a
New Georgia and the adjacent islands
that head hunting is carried on to its
fullest extent Among these natives
it appears to be a perfect passion. No
canoe house launched can without be completed head and being no
canoe a
obtained. They make long voyages
in their large tomakos, or head hunt¬
ing canoes, foE the purpose of secur¬
ing the heads, the time ohief being hunting the ground two isl¬
at of present
ands Choiseul and Isabel, ninety to
one hundred miles away, which, how¬
ever, are becoming somewhat ‘‘work¬
ed out” The basest treachery is often
employed. They will at times visit a
village for day as friends, two, and, at after given staying signal
a or a
turn upon their hosts, and either kill
them or take them alive. Such a case
occurred while I was at Rubiana. At
other times they will surprise or cut
off a party fishing on the reef, and jno
matter whether they are men, women
or heads, children, after being the heads slightly count. smoked, The
are stuck np along the rafters of the
roof in the canoe nouses, and I have
myself in house counted Sisieta. thirteen Occasionally recent heads the
a at
head hunters themselves meet with
reverses; and while at Rubiana I in¬
quired fine the reason of some having particularly been cut
cocoanut trees
down. I was told that it was in con¬
sequence of the death of a chief who
wak killed on a head hunting expe¬
dition to Isabel.—0. M. Woodford in
Popular Science Monthly.
The Banshee.
single superstition of hisal- which
banshe
for this wonderful creature,and it lit¬
erally means “the woman of the fairy
mansions." Her office is to announce
a she coming death.. sometimes For several radiant nights
maiden, appears, sometimes as decrepit a old
as a
woman with long flowing hair, and
wails the approaching her plaintive death. lamentations If the death for
is to occur by natural ailment, the
“keening” and of the banshee but is accident simply
measured untoward calamity pathetic; to if be associ¬
or are
ated with it, then her lamentations are
loud and clamorous.
Butshe is easily disturbed and vexed,
and if ever frightened away will never
This return would during be the calamity; same generation. for while
a
the Irish banshee favors no particular
class, caste or religion, long and she only comes
to families of respectable
line. She comes as a friendly spirit to
these, be known not as an family inimical deserving one, and and to
as a
possessing her pathetic guardianship,
der is regarded and sacred as an character. honor of Many a very truly ten¬
believe the banshee to be the spirit of
some former member of the family.
In Munster there is a powerful queen
of the banshee. Her name is Cliodhua
or well well Oleena, known known and her the the powerful spells of of are
to to peasantry peasantry the tin
south,—Cor. New York Commercia
Advertiser.
The Thrill of Moose Hunting.
The few moose yet in Maine’s woods
bring no the inconsiderable I have money told an¬
of nually to who state. has $5,000 been in
Maine one in man trying to kill spent and
ho has neither secured the a moose,
moose nor
given the up benefit the task. of hunters It weuld who he wish greatly
to to
call moose if the law was changed so
as for to only make during September the September an open month,
moon
is there a reasonable prospect of suc¬
cess in calling. It was once my plea¬
sure to meet a sportsman just in from
moose calling. Elis Indian had called
a moose to the water, but was unable
to get him to come out of the bushes,
ana a shot into the shadows was un¬
successful. Said the hunter: “I have
never with this. seen any I could sporting hear to the compare
moose
coming for an hour, hills and the when he
came down off the to water I
could think of nothing bat a locomo¬
tive off the track and running through
the woods I have killed no moose,
but that experience was worth all this
trip cost me. It fairly made my hair
stand on end to hear that moose coma
Yes, sir- money."—Forest it was worth and $150 Stream. of any
man’s
A New Universal Language.
A Scandinavian genius has invent¬
ed a new universal language which he
thinks will take the starch out of Vo-
lapuk and the rest of the crop. His
root words are entirely derived from
without comment,
to him by the inventor written in the
new language. It looks outlandish
moderate snough, out anybody who with has the even Eng¬ a
lish, German, acquaintance French, Spanish and
Italian will find that ne can read it
very well at sight, though at the first
glance his impression is that the type
This new language somewhat re¬
sembles firmly the dentistwno, grasping the with offending the for¬
ceps tooth of his patient, illustrated by
bar- a
series of tremendous twists the
own easy and painl&s method of ex¬
tracting. After one has acquired all
the chief modem tongues he will find
that the proposed universal language
comes quite easy.—New York Sun.
'
Origin of Smith.
Bayard greatly Taylor bored one by the night persistent at a party
was at¬
tempts of a guest to. discuss sun
myths. No matter where the conver¬
sation strayed, this individual was
sura to drag it back to sun myths.
“Did you ever think that the name
Smith, so common in all countries, is
derived lor, mischievously. from sun myths?" “No, asked-Tay¬ indeed
I”
was yth, tbs Bumytb, reply. “Undoubtedly. Smyth, Smith!” Bun-
THE FEAST # CR1CKE*&.
11* Celebrated
Many years ago, n6 one knows
when or how, the custom was insti¬
tuted among the Florentines and con-
tadini round about of celebrating As
cension park day at in the ferfent “Oaacini," adjoining a largo
two miles the
city beautiful on the meadow, west. There, wounded in n a broad,
surround by a
themselves up to full enjoyment of
the day, in toe manner best suited to
their various Early,
in the morning thousands of faces are
turned towards the scene of tl
itv, and a
Piet
in the more lively and „
bers of the liberal _ offered
for diversion. programme
At 10 o’clock a procession of monks
may be seen to start from an old
chapel Before entering and move the towards church they St Vito.
eminence overlooking pause the
upon happy an below, while
blesses the scene throng who participate a priest in it
One of the fieri many amusements is the
...... " ' ' ~
them
leaf wood.
of lettuce or a few blades of grass
veto eat between
y tod well fed he
sing for months. This
particular in importance part of the day’s from programme
grew year to
year, until finally it became
the chief feature of the day,
and now Ascension day is more
commonly the festival called of the cricket by the (la Florentines festa dei
grilli), and dear while all Florentine, festa days of the
year are to the none is
so dear to the children Us “La festa dei
grilli.” to glow and their bright faces they may he
seen with pleasure as re¬
turn home in the evening in possession
of their little black songsters.
tion There to the existed effect fo; that latif rmerly if _ the a pet supersti- grillo
die e before before a a certain certain day day in u the future
•two months from the time of its
capture, I believe—the death was con¬
sidered an omen of misfortune to the
possessor; but if, on the contrary, it
should live its allotted time, then the
reverse was to be expected. This su¬
perstition of the is still strong among certain
contadini. At noon the games
cease and all sit down to the family or
“party the spread,” familiar where, three as quart a center rush
piece, bound flask of Tuscany wine regards
his surrounding of solid food and pic¬
nic delicacies with complacency, and
surround being often the consulted “board,” by those who
brighten enliven he.does his best
to and the occasion.
After a thoroughly appreciative
dinner and welcome rest the order of
the the day remainder is resumed, the and day each occupies
of to his own
liking. Along be the and broad, heard shady av¬
enues may seen the ven¬
ders of the little chirping bestie, and
calling “Eceoli out Signori) their hello various points, as,
baritonie soprani”—New voci; York tenori, Home
Journal.
The Danger* of Hair Washes.
‘the delicate goldei ______
admired by the court circles of Europe
and the best society of the United
States,” of the bottles, to quote all from depend a label on one
for their
action upon the decolorizing and cor¬
rosive influence of nascent oxygen or
nascent chlorine. The bases used in
the various nostrums for this purpose
are and peroxide of hydrogen, aqua regia
bromers’ acid. Peroxide of hy¬
drogen of the is thqmildestand trio named. It most innocu¬
ous is a colorless
of liquid the which destroys the natural color
enough, hair, turns and it which, unnatural if used grayish long
an
white. It is rather expensive, and is,
other therefore, acids. used much less than the two
It
and
resemble _
head. The tetter, t«,., adds . uouu, equally »v<.™ vile.
two are
alike. They attack The former and eat they the partly hair and bleach, skin
and color, partly and burn the to latter a handsome they stain gold to
about the same hue as does a light der¬ ap¬
plication matologic of iodine. Besides they the
troubles named, cause
maladies hardly distinguishable from
eczema and erythema One curious
disease that they cause is inflamma¬
tion of the cells of the hair follicles.
The cellular walls break down, and
ed lymph, in appreciable and often blood, is extravasafc-
<
bases and produce '
Classics. prematur
1 "fr'i r &-
Peasant Proprietor* In RoaUa.
The peasant proprietors ean neither
ment pay tiie for money their land, owing to the govern¬
noreyen toe state
and communal taxes, and are flogged
by hundreds district of for Novgorod, non-payment. In
ants one tons condemned 1,500 in peas¬
were 1887.
Five been flogged, hnndred when and fifty the inspector had already in¬
terceded for the remainder. Wide¬
spread famine is found oyer a great
part of the country; usurers, the bane
of peasant proprietors in all countries,
are in possession of the situation; the
Koulaks mid Jew mir eaters supply
money on mortgage, then foreclose,
and when the land is in their
sion get toe work
interest. These 1
they are called, are in
are nearly starved, often 7
considerable pieces of land are and reunited into
estates, their new
owners consider they have only rights
and no duties Meantime, as forced
labor ia at an end, the free labor is of
the worst possible kind. The old land
owners have tried am get nothing mm&inre, done; bought they
by borrowing to employ from the banks, and
are
now unable to repay the money. The
UyW upper class .tot‘,,1 have been ruined, with no
Chewed l»T * Cult
A well known Washington mer¬
chant telle the following story on him¬
self: He was born clear up in the
mountains near the Tennessee line.
His mother died when he was two
months old and his father and grand¬
mother “raised” him by hand in their
miles lonely from cabin the on a mountain neighbor. clearing, He
nearest
was the clad Mother in a single Hubbard Sowing style, garment made of
on
homespun leu^Uened towcloto, added which length was
as years to
He never saw a girl until he was 10.
That year a terrible drought struck iu
and nis father had to go ten miles
down the “cove” to get his corn
ground. and threw So several he yoked bags up the steers
of corn in the
bottom of toe cart. /The boy, in bis
peculiar tho bags. garment, He climbed m and sat
and on far off country was and going to a sight new
wonder. Arriving at every the null,
was a
he watched with curious interest the
com into toe making heart its of way the from the and hopper then
stone
spurt trough. out in warm white jets and into the the
He went outside saw
water pour over and turn the huge
overehot wheel, and peered with a
sensation into of fear which into the tue dink, wheel mossy
cavern was
forever retreating.
On rising at a littlo distance he spied
a log through cabin, and the shortly brush in wandered ita direc¬
over
tion. A rail fence stopped his prog¬
ress a couple of rods from tho door¬
way, and he leaned over and looked.
There, bench sitting outside girls. the door on spin¬ a
were two One was
They ning wool (he and most the beautiful other knitting. things
were
he had ever seen and ho nearly died
right laughing there. They his saw remarkable him ana burst
out at ap¬
pearance. He didn’t know what to
ao, but thought it was probably the
proper laugh back, thing which to stare he did at with them inter¬ and
est Thri mutual entertainment kept
up for some ten minutes, when one of
the girls laughed so hard she rolled off
the bench. “ He “ was
queer, but just then ’elt something
cold on 1 his his legs. legs.
He turned around. As he did so
both girls shrieked with laughter and
ran into the house. Ho found that
toe co ld i
muzzlo of
away the vigorously of his dress, on what which wi had been
rear
shockingly mutilated W the animal
during the few minutes he was staring
at the girls.
He has seen more girls since and
bears their smiles with greater equa¬
nimity. He is also one of the best
gift I Washington
memory.- - Post.
Starving tho Tooth.
Teeth are just as easily starved to
death as the stomach. In one way it
is a blessing to have been bom of poor
parents. What food tho poor give
their children is pf the variety mat
goes to make strong of bones and teeth.
It is the outside all the grains, of
all the cereal foods, that contains the
carbonate and phosphate of lime and
traces of other earthy salts which
nourish the bony tissues and build the
frame up.
If wo do not furnish to the teeth of
the young that pabulum they require
the they outside cannot possibly be built up. It is
of com, oats, wheat, bar¬
that ley and tho like, or the bran, so called,
\
swine, for their
wisdom of proper has proved his folly,
man
shown in every succeeding generation
of teeth, which become more y fragile
and weak. These flouring mills are
working destruction upori and toe child teeth who of
every partake man, woman
of their fine bolted flour.
They phosphates sift out of lime the carbonates order and the
in that they
may which provide is proving that fine whitened white sepul¬ flour
a
cher to teeth.
Oatmeal is one of the best foods for
supplying It makes the the teeth dentine with nourishment. and
cementum
enamel strong, flintlike and able to
resist all fortnsof decay. If you have
cliildreu never allow any white bread
upon your table. Breadmadeof whole
wheat ground, not bolted, so that the
bran which contains the minute quan¬
tities *of lime is prerent, is best To
make a good, wholesomo, / nourishing
bread take two bowls 0 wheat mem
and one bowl of white or bolted flour,
and make by toe Usual process. Noth¬
ing is superior to brown bread for bone
and of tooth meal building. and This meal. is made Baked out
rye com
of beans, these too, have a considerable and should supply
lime salts boon
your week. table, In brushing hot or cold, the three teeth times always a
brash up and down from the gums From in¬
stead of across. Brush away too
gum and on the grinding surfaee of
toe teeth. t — America can n Analyst .
Praeeaa of Heating Dead Bodlee.
scriber, In reply to would a question that of an Dr. old 0. sub H.
we state
Harvey the explained of dead his dry bodies process at toe for
treatment
International Congress of Medical
Jurisprudence in New York. In his
proposed brought mausoleum about by currents decomposition of dry
is
air which absorb the gases and liquids
of the body. There gases are after
ward destroyed by fire, indefinite but the body
itself dry remains for an preservation. period Dr.
in and perfect
ferred Harvey's to paper the preservation more particularly of medico¬ re¬
legal tins disposition evidence in of criminal the dead. cases Such by
evidence was retained by this method
of burial, he said, more disposition completely of the
than by any other
body. The method also avoids the
loathsome features of earth burial
It is freer from such features than
crematirn. The sepulchers are to be
constructed oa a massive scale, to last
for n»Ly years, and they can be
THE FORMS QF LEAVES.
Even the most cursory observer of
vegetable with life the must Tattoos have been often trf
forms
leaves. formed Why does they not, should however, be so often vari¬
Yor thespecial itself, though shag* there and ia a rea¬ of
texture
every leaf In existence. P! ‘
generally right, narrow not to overshadow leaves growing up
other. so Other as one an¬
have arrangement plants, of of isolated foliage habits, which
an
secures to themselves the space of
d dSiqvuon
or
SS&ri&ran. roots
of marsh plants usually leaves, and of simple leaves
are
outline, SSJt Be, tor, for, * having few competitors,
the mostly tor which is well
reason not very
exposing as large a surface as possible,
tion of carbonj»°ad<f TtesolT^T^a
vast bulk of water.
Leaves on the boughs of trees are
often ily, to much divided, their so being as to fold and eaa-
torn by prevent high winds, while the rent
too surface of leavee are perhaps the
toelid id interesting of of microscope, study of the olL beautiful With
a a
and sj systematic arrangement of these
can bo. i>e easily _________ discerned, , , , and , their u „
understood. irstood. On Oa many many plants plants there there are
glandular creeping insects; hairs to catch others ordeter there small
on are
hairs set so as to act as effectively
sade against against young animals obtrusive as a spike boys; pali¬
on
other, moisture hairs and which fore© wrest them the down drops the of
the leaf stalk, to while moisten others the earth protected about
by roots; series of poisoned are '* “
a
ordinary and the beauty beau' nettle is and an exi
mechanism an is is truly i
nettle hair ir is is armed________
pointed in the wound; siliceous and can, the which poison 1
able to flow out through a tubular
te. teu^s 0 ‘f 1 JSb!rii
specially particular i modified by nature for the some dis-
some purpose, and
pleasant coveryof •yof and this purpose ‘H±ssi&r“ is a source of
naturalists.'
An educated brown bear is occa¬
lage sionally to be where seen in his almost any vil¬
him dance, street, climb master makes
trees and perform
other tricks for the amusement of the
lookers on. But a bear trained like
the one described is a very rare ob¬
ject A California
novel sight not village long witnessed Chlna- a
«i»n galloping alonglho ago—a street the
back of large cm
a black bear. The bear
was bridled and saddled in the regular
fashion, and his rider wore a heavy
pair of spars.
bear The when Chinaman, it it M ems, caught eab.airf the
was a small
took it to his cabin, He cared for it
enough, tenderly, trained and when it draw it was small large
to a
wagon and perform numerous tricks.
tive, Chowchy,” has always os been ho named his cap¬
a great pet It
runs about wherever it pleases, but
always called, returns to its master when
and follows him like a dog.
As soonjre SrSSH: “ -~mr ‘
its master
performance made le anyobjection. to whi<
anyobjectiou. the bear
took it as a
of course; but as will
... be believed, the sight of a man
expedition, starting out mounted on a hunting or fishing
back, always upon a bears
sensation produces the bystanders. something of a
The animal among is well trained that
so
and, it brings taken game all ia as all, well is as a moat retriever, inter¬
esting a
Companion. apecimea of Us kbuL-Youth’s
AnnUag a StaSMI Doe.
The Detroit Free Preas„ says that
show there the is a force policeman what he who can 't.K do „
permits no guilty The man to escape or
sr. other day he call-
sand knocked on (he door
“Do you keepa dog, madam?” he in¬
quired “No in sir; an I official do tone. the
not,” answered
woman, “Then quietly. husband of
your family your do,” argued or the some police¬
man. “I am informed on credible
authority “Oh, that you old own Dont a dog." He
out” you mean never
goes “No
matter, ma'am. Answer my
questions from toe city properly. f" Has he a license
“Why. "Why, no." no," said said the the women, 1
ingtroubled; “w«didn’tthinkit
necessary. “Then it ijayjlttt^to totatoe d
is o g .
ty-fburhou; Bat you eat Ca 6
ra by paying for his license
to WEST the
tst the woman 1
>g where he satin the!
‘ sri
that 1
» and
And the woman sat down 0a tf
floor and gasped between shouts 1
u ^rA., u -M,
AltteMLW.
33 tifS
•Vfflsi
T*j
mixture gastfr L
the same ma
small front wb
speed, crowded of ten r
move as al
fcSSf&J
qwrimt “One
*> afwLingoodh, '•?" ’
“ ‘I have seen J
i, T
tiUIaawpioWi
vv UOf v Viera
82d,T mother di&l
had a
GlgaoU*
It is said ti
the ridges of
some Iteppeeredin parties 1 thei
sSxffl
man when first seen-
two great balls of f
as snow, hair almost
ground. appeared As they nea.--
as a woman c
white pd of giant s
pttritjF became sc*u%(^
tor would tear have of turned being
1
moments’ coumltadui
enerirv criu hm I them to
hadmoved but a few i
ghost all the commenced
time appet
P-SU, whSve^s,
ments ine.,.. “yory ' uirecMt rlinr. if i,-
Every fel 1
. ...... ewtt!
one l never saw
boolc or Dftwfpsp^r.
St Helens. ia*the m
Duke of _
thought ihev ct
stead of en
was constra____
and drained at
nary asm
power la
roof of the tunnel
plcccjt. (La
of “?™d^wito nroDukion lie oq
offtv