Newspaper Page Text
VOL. V.
AiUertiains !(ntes.
One square, first iosc-tion $ 75
Eaah subsequent insertion 50
One square three t’.iunths 5 00
Oue square six months 10 00
One square twelve months 15 00
Quarter column twelve months... 30 00
Half column six months 40 t>o
Half.column twelve months 00 00
Ou*: column twelve months 100 00
Wfijr'lVn lines or less considered a sqnare,
A II fractions of squares are counted as full
squares,
gtfWSPXPHR OSOISTOMS.
t. Any person who takes n paper resrti
iarlv from the post office—whether directed
ta his nams or another's, or whether he fin?
Subscribed o* not—is responsible for the
pavaient.
2. If a person orders bis paper disenntin
sedjjte must pay all art enrages, or <he pub
lisher (jontinae to send it until payment
is inane, and collect the whole amount,
whether the paper is taken from the office or
rut.
3. 'ilie courts have decided that refusimr
to take newspapers and periodicals from the
posfofiiee, or removing and leaving them un
called for, is prtmci facie evidence of inten
tion*! fraud.
7’OfF.V Din i'('TgRY.
Wayor—Thomas G. Harnett.
OomxuistoyVrs—n 14 Bivins, F<; it.
J.mes, (1. I’ Bivins \V. R. Bierce.
Clers *-*•! P. Bivins,
Treasurer —W, id. Shell.
Marshal—S. A Be'ding, Marshal.
JUDICIARY.
A. V. Spkrr, Judge.
b\ D. Dtsmi-kk, - - Solicitor General.
Butts—Second Mondays in March and
September
Meary—Second Mondays in January and
July.
Monroe —fourth Mondays in February,
and August.
Newton—Third Mondays in March and
September.
Pike—First Mondays in April and Octo
ber.
Rsckdalc —T hird Mondays in February and
ar.d An* ust.
Spalding—First Mondays in February
and August.
Upson—First Mondays in May and No
▼ember.
CHURCH DIRECTORY.
Mkthobist Episcopal Ujiproh, (South.)
Ifev. Wester F. Smith, * Pastor Fourth
Sabbath in each month Sundav-school 3
p. m. Prayer meeting Wednesday evening.
Mhthobtst Protestant Ourrsoa. First
Sabbath in each month. Sunday-school 9
A. M.
tlHßiiTu*! CVtrnofi, W. 8. Fears, Pastor.
S rond S.'.bb ith io each month.
Baptist I.'uurcu, Rev. ,T. P. I.von, Pas
tor. Third Sabbath in each month.
CIVIC SOCIETIES
Pin* Grots Lodge, No. 177. F. A. M
Stat°d communications, fourth Saturdays in
each month.
DOCTORS
DR. J. 0 TURNIPSEEI) will attend to
nil calls day or night. Office r resi
dence, Hampton. Ga.
I\R. W H PEEBLES treats s! 1 dis-
I > eases, and will attend to ail calls day
awd night. Office at the Drug Stop,
Broad Street. Hampton, Ga.
»R. N. T. B ARNETT fenders bi° profes
sional service-i 'o the citizens of Henrv
and adjoining counties, and will answer calls
day or night. Treats all discuses. of what
ever nature. Office at Nipper’s Drug Store,
Hampton. Ga. Nirht calls can be made at
mv residence, opposite B rea rhnrcb. apr2fi
JF PONDER, Dentist, hes located in
• Hampton, Ga.. and invites the pnblic to
call at his room upstairs in the Bivins
House, where he will t found at all hours.
Warrants all work for twelve months.
LAWYERS.
CW. HODNETT, A'torupv and Goun
• sellor at Law, Jonesboro, Ga. Prompt
attention given toe'l business.
GEORGE P BIVINS. Attorney at Law.
Wit! practice in the State and Federal
Courts. Colbctioos promptly attended
Office up stairs in the Mclntosh building.
Hampton, Ga. rnail2lf
rn O. NOLAN Attorney at Lnw. Me
lt Donough, Geoiiia. Will practice in
the counties composing the Flint Circuit;
the Supreme Court of Georgia, and the
Uuited States District Court.
WM. T. DICKE.N, AHorney at Luw, Lo
oust Grove, Ga Will practice in the
Sounties composing the Flint Judicial Cir
cait, the Supreme Court of Georgia, and the
[. ailed States District Court. apr27-ly
BEO. M NOLAN. Attorkry a: Law,
McDonough.Ga. (Officein Court house)
WiH practice in Henry and adjoining conn
tits, and io the Supreme and District Courts
*' Georgia. Prompt attention giv«n to col
lections. raeh23-6m
JF. WALL. Attorney at Law. W>mp>-
ton.Ga Will practice in the counties
composing the Flint Judicial Circuit, and
t"" Soprome and District Courts of Georgia.
, aipt aUeution given to collections. ocs
in',fWARD J. REAGAN. Attorney at
Al aw. Office sp stairs in the Mclntosh
•j -4nig. Hampton. Ga. Special attention
- r»s i gr and other collections.
. •"I ■ 1 ■ rnnlc
f'i_a r . r< cent book", drafts. &c., lor sale
a; h- Wki-kit ffice.
• , ;e for Tub Wbjaly.
■ FAREWELL, HI A HUE, SINCE FAR l
WE MUST."
FaiewtT, ma tnie. since part we must,
And with Irom each must sever 1
Hew t riel the word—how long the pain—
To part, and part forever I
i ’Twrre bootless now to question why,
Or lan ihe dying ember—
Enough I the wr.thful moons have merged
Our May into December 1
I saw you first when early Spring
Had touched with green the l eather,
'I he robin piped upon the’ tree,
All nature came together ;
The tight of love was in your eyes
And you were happy-hearted—
The brown leaves lie beneath ns now,
And we, ma rr.ic are parted I
We diunk Love's teeming goblet diy—
To love’s sweet rule no treason—
And shamed the fervor of the days
Through all a Summer’s season 1
We drained ihe gonlet to the dregs.
Through lips cur spirits blending—
How str.'iige that that should cease to be
Which once- we thought un tiding !
Bat why should love like your’s survive
Tbc (uding of the pansy ?
An April blossom of the heart.
’lVas but a Sum net’s fancy 1
And if the thought of it should chance
To cross my mind hereafter,
How like an April day ’twill seem—
A thiug of tears and laughter I
Fatewell, ma mirl Since part we must,
We’ll part in quiet fashion !
For ns no idle later tears,
For as no foolish passion ;
You sometimes wished that you bad died
Etc you had ever met me—
The future years ate all your own
Wherein to quite foiget mo. :
But back, ma mie, sometinns you'll go,
Yv-ur thoughtful vigils beeping,
i’o o her days where,early slain,
Our buied lore lies sleeping ;
And haply, tlnn, you’ll learn to feel,
Win n Memory stirs the emfur.
Howled the In-art which uov.ld forget,
But vmtt the past remember !
A Charles Dimitry
... . -LJ—i -L'js —■—am
Sleep JVortSi nu«l South.
A learned German says : ‘ln sleep any
position except north and south is disagree
able. but from east to west almost intolera
ble ; at least is our hemisphere it is other
wise. The* cause of this phenomenon c n
obviously be found only in that great magnet
which is foimed by the earth with its utmos
phere, i. e., terrestrial magnetism. This
magnetism ex-rts on certain persons, both
hearty and otherwise, who are sensitive, a
peculiar i> fluence wonderful enough to dis
turb their rest, or in the cose of diseased
persons disturbing the circulation, the ner
vous functions, and the equilibrium of the
mental powers. There are persons whom I
know, the head of whose bed is to the north,
and who, in order to wake early, reverse
their usual position in bed, from that of
north to south, but without ri derstanding
the reason why, beyond that tiev could
always awoke earlier, the sleep being mo r e
broken. 1 l ave had it related to me that,
at a military hospital in Russia, there were
patients of highly sensitive natures who
were rnpully recovering. V.’hvu necessity
compelled them to be removed to another
wirg ol the bunding thev did not g t on so
well ; in fact, prostration seemed to be set
ti g in, and it wss found advisable to got
them buck to their former wards as soon as
possible, where the heads of the bed w> re to
the no'th. 1 have heard of horses going
b'ind through changing their position from
north to booth to that of wi st to ea-t.
Tub reporter of the Kansas City Times
thus glowingly describes a kt??, given by
Jd is? Emma Abbott, in a notice about “Paul
and V rginiaV’ kiss: "Aha! that kiss—
that long, h>w, languishing, limpid, lingering
kiss! It was the ea'm, holy, estatic out
breathing of two fend trusting hearts, an
intermingling of two souls sanctified by love,
a ci mmunion of the intangible by tangible
meaD?, a blending of earth with heuveu, by
which the latter had a manifest preponder
ance. 'l'was snch a kiss as Troilus, stealing
by night into the Trojan camp, might fain
have breathed on Ciessida's maiden lips, to
the melody of the nigbtengale that sang of
love in the sheen of the round red moon, and
stars that see but never tell.”
An Indian enme to an agent in the north
ern part ot lowa to procure some whisky for
a Manger brother, who be said had been
bitten bv a rattle-uake. ‘ Four quarts F re
peated the agent, with surprise; "much as
that?” Yes,” replied the Indian, "fonr
quarts; snake very big.”
HAMPTON, GA., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1880.
An Unwelcome Arrival.
When ihe young King of Sp<in, in defrrj
ence to the wi hes of his counselors, import!
id, at a large expense, a valuable German
wilc.it was wi h the express nnderstandiw
that Spain should he furnished wd'h an beji
to the throne. That unhappy country
suffered for so many year? under the rule
a woman that public opinion imperativeit
demanded n t only a present King, boNH
series of future King? If Alfonso had re
mained a widow,er u.,til the nex' attempt ft
assassinate him, he would have been t'uerl
corded by his sister, who, although she is dm
estimable young person, is conceded to b<v»
woman. It v.as, therefore, plainly his du»f
to provide .Spain with a male heir to hi?
throne, and he then upon sent to Vienna for
au Aicbduchess of conspicuous merit.
It was annour.cid some time ago that the
di sired bcir would soon make his nppeiw
auce. There was immense excitement
throughout Spain, and especially in Madrid
That the anticipated baby was to be o
Piince wa? univcisahy understood, and |»fce
etiquette of the Spanish Court forbade toy
onc-to in' mate in the most distant wanner
the possibility that it would be a.Princfss
Long discussions were held ns to the paV
of the little stranger. The K'ng Insisted
that the heir should be named after all His
relatives, the proposed names umountipgfin
ibe aggrega'e to thirty-seven. The Queen
consented, but ou the condition thut (he
Prince should also be Called Rudolph, Al
bercht, Fnuz, Wilhelm, Josel, Karl, ipul
eigk'.eeti other assorted German named. For
a long time it seemed probable that a per
manent domestic quarrel would be the remit
of this discussion, lor the King majntii'ncd
with much show of j dice, that no Spaa uid
could over pronounce tie Gurmatt names of
the Prince, and thut his loyal Minsters
would probably be strangled oil the I’uuipt
to pronounce them. Finally a
was agreed to, and t> telt-cti u of forty!-five*
Spanish mimes was decided upon un iSduly
entered in the King’s uu moras.dum book.
In the meantime the loyal Spaniards were
making eluboiate preparations for Vf *".■ p
tion of (ne Prince. E ghty-ecv n 'in vy'.VrS
of the Cortts handed in pin-cushions with
the J--vice, “Welcome, little stranger,”
thongh, of eotiree, the motto was couched in
the* best Costihiati The Prime M oister
gave a bicycle, the Minister of Foreign Af
fairs s nt in a pnir of skates, and the com
mandant of the Madrid garrison gave a
beautifully ornamented base ball club. All
the Spanish ladies cf any eminence sat up
all night wetk alter wt < k to embroider J
juvenile shirts, trousers, and jackets, and
eveiy shoemaker of any enterprise made a
special pair of boots for the Prince, and
th n put over his door a sign bearing the
legend, 15.-oL maker to his Royal Highness
the Prince of the Auetries ” It is esliinuted
that Btver.ly five thousand doilurs worth ©f
presents of a distinctively masculine type
have been sent to the Palace since the Is
ol Jure last, and these presents were received
by the King aid the Queen with ihe great
est g-atilude and enthusiasm.
The eventful day at last arrived. Th
Prime Minister, who hid been sleeping for
a week in the back kitchen, so t.s lo be
handv in case of an emergency, was aroused
at 2:30 a x , and. mounting bis horse, rode
at a terrific pace to enntmou the doctor
Sixty-four Cabinet Ministers and eminent
grandees were summoned by the D stiict
Telegraph mew-vngers, and rushed to Ibe
Palace in hot haste, and they were assem
bled in the front pat lor, whore they were
supplied with gingerbread and lemonade
and passed six consecutive arid very tedious
hours, etiquette forbidding tli.m to read
newspapers or to employ their time in any
way except by looking at the family photo
graph album and tbe Spanish Patent Office
reports. At length u joyful blast on tbe
corr.el—which was played by the Queen’?
private chaplain—announced that the happy
moment I,ad arrive. l , and that Spiin Lad an
heir to the ibrone of the Bourbons.
Twenty minutes later the King entered
the room, carrying a gold platter in his
bands, on which wus laid tbe new Priuce,
carefully wrapped up in un afgkan made for
the purpose by his grandmother Isabella.
Tbe sixty four Cabinet Ministers and
grandees sp up. bowed in that coartly
manner with which tbe artists of tbe opera
bouffe have familiariz d us, a- d nhoo'ed with
•ne accord, "Long live the Prince.” They
then crowded un nod the plattnr and re
maiked wbat a maefy little fellow the Prince
wa?, and bow strikingly he re-*-mh!ed bis
father, and swore that be bad the same ex
pression of mouth us the l&te Charles V
<.• d that, on the whole, he was jo?t such a
P, inee as they hail expected. What w,e»
their di may when the King, with many
blushes and much hesitation, managed to
buy, "Thank you very irmch, but it's a gir
J*U know ”
An awful silence fell on the assembl'
One by ore they solemnly climbed out of th<
window—as Spanish etiquette forbids a sub
ject to go out of a door when the Sovereign
is piescnt—end went home. The now?
spread rapidly, and as the Spaniards learned
that the expected Prince wasagii), Their
discontent ff>und exproggion in fond mur
.'Mira, and half a th zen lcediug a«Rn?»in:'
went hom * to clean their guns and make
i-veody to relieve their fcqjings by a shot at
v -“e Kina'. A
It has certainly been n uiosl unfortunate
afTtir. True, It is a ruNfnko which enn be
•.remedied at n comparatively e»rH date, but
the obstinacy of the German mind i? pro
verbial and no one can feel sure w hat course
tbe Queen will ace fit to adopt. In the
m amime, seventy-five thousand dollars
worth of presents, suited only for a Prince,
are to be sold for what they will bring, ami
tbe K ng is understood to huve taken t<»
smoking the strongest cigars and to be
plunged in melancholy.— N. F. ’Tunes
A Land of IVoudeis.
Nevada is a land ol curious t atom! phe
nomena, pays the Eureka (Ni v.) Leader.
Her rivers have no visible outlet to the
ocean. She has no lak' Sof any magnitude
She has vast stretches of alkali deccrts how
ever, that give every todica'i 'n of having
been the beds or bottoms cf either soas or
lakes. Down in Lincoln county there is n
spring of ice cold water that bubbles up
orer a rock i.nd disappears on tbemth'T nido.
anil no cne has been able to find where the
wafer goes, At another point in the rime
county is a large spring ahotit twenty feet
sqnare, that is, apparently, only some eigh
teen or twenty inches in depth, with u sandy
bottom. The surd can be plainly seen, but
ou looking closer it is perceived that this
sand is in a perpetual state cf unrest. No
bottom has ever been le.und to this spring.
It is said that a tcam?ter, on reaching this
spring ©ne day, deceived by it* appuren'
shallowness, concluded to soak one of hi
wagpu wheels to cure the loos<ie?3 o r its tire.
Us then for# took it oiT nms idled it into
the water. He never laid hi? eyes on that
wagon wheel uj.dn. The ct 'uutainti aro full
of c-ves and cuvi rn», many of which have
been explored to a great distance. Speak
ing of c > veg, o rodeo was field last spring
over in Huntington Volley. Daring its
progress quite n number of cattle were tni>s
ed, and tor a time unavailing gctucb was
made for them. At lust they were traced
to tlic raoctb of a natural tunnel er cave in
the piountain. Ti..': hertiers euteied the cuv ,
and following It for a long distance, at lost
found the cattle. It appears that they had
probably entered tbe cava, which was very
narrow, in search of water, it t;J finally
nurtowid so that they could proceed no fur
ther. N Either c old they turn arourd to j t
out. Liny bad been ui?wd some days, and,
if they had not been found, kuA inevitably
huve perished io a short ttme. Ao it was
they wore extricated from 'b ir predicament
with difficulty by the herder? sqaeeziue past
and getting in front of them and scaring
them into a retrograde movement by Hap
ping their La'a into tLe faces of the stupid
bovines.
A Dai whtful Ed CH. —For six months
before marriage a w< man is perfectly happy
She has lore newly awakened daily growing
as the wiik? run on. She is locked upon
at home as a much mote important person
than any of the other daughters. She en
joys all tbe freedom of a married woman,
while responsible for none of a married wo
man's dut its. She is acknowlcdgi d almost
ho equal by her father end noother. She Is
from under the control of father and rjother,
and not under the control of her future hus
band. »h 6 enjoys for the first time the in
timate confidence of a man, vbo treats h r
as a superior, and who defers to her. She,
for the Grot time, catches a glimpse of dis
posing of un income, and huvtcg ber iadi
videal taste held paramount. For tbe first
time she feels she b#3 e lifelong stake : n the
career ol a man. And under all. and around
all, and over ull, is her love for him.
“Whin I was once io danger from a
tig' r,” said an old East Incl ; aa veteran, “I
trial sitting down and staring at him, as 1
Lad no wcap*n.”
“How did it work I” tski d a by-stander
"Perfectly ; the tiger didn’t even <fier to
torch me.”
• Strange, very string* I How did you
account for it ?”
“Well, sometimes I’ve thought that it was
because l sat on such a high Linb.”
Wuen you clravu to any one you stick
\V|,t* veu cleave anything yon cut it into
Confound the old E. glisb language, anyhow.
Yeun; Men.
Almost dally there arrive by *ll the va
rioua roads which lead into Leadville young
men who btive left home ami friend*, and
with no ex;i*rience or rr.opvy to back them
come here to ‘ make a liring.” as they cull
it. Poor. Vain, deluded youths 1 Not that
there is not ample work b- re for the willing
not thit those who c mo here fail to obtain
employment—but, *lo* ! it is not vlway* that
which causes the •,onng man who u week
before cam hero with hones brightly burn
ing. to return home dejected and discourag
ed. It i* u fact vfciah h** been p»«*c
again and agdn. that tbc ra jarity of the vas'
army of young men c me lo Leadvilfe in the
delusion that a lax stale of society prevails
hi re, which will enable them lo live in u rn»
manfic sort of way without working.
Mining I What n sense of novelty the
word conveys to an adventurous Ensti rner.
To lead the free and easy life of a minor, lo
sleep io a log eabin, to work wiib a rovolv
er strapped uroond your waist, to spend u
eouplp of boars ''ne!) day hunting among the
the mountains for e!k and hear mid deer ;
perchance go through an Indian fight—and
all that sort of thiog which is sopp isud to
make up the tile of a miner ; what j lynuu
-cenes of exciton ent the word minst c ills
up 1 A’as, when the stern reality presents
itseif to the deladed mortal, what tumbling
down of mr-cartlcs is there, mv countrymen,
when the young man finds what in all the
brief years ©I his existence he lm?uever
found oat that It is work—and the hardest
kind of work st that—which makes the
money that makes ibe inara go.
The qxick, active workers are thoao who
make it a snecess here. The first ease of a
failure by one of these so gifted yet remains
to t>o recur>d. Hunt IF se mountains high
and low and you caa’l find a wotk' r who
has fail d in L adville.
This is the class of people who, though
they may not have more than what they
have earned by hard labor when thf 5 week
is past, see millions within their pruip, and
who give you their solemn pledge that they
will strike it three weeks hence. They are
never discouraged, and take things just a
they cone, whether ill of good,
Lcadville is compound exclusively of u
working class of people, in the practical
sense of the word. These mines about a«
»re filled with clerk?, professors, lawyers
and doctors. Don’t fora morm nt iinogiue
that they nra there as oraaments, receiving
large salaries and doing nothing. No, is
deed. In their rough at aer's gatb you
would take them never for what they are
They are workers. e7en though their early
years were spent u collages, batiks aud ol
Sees. Th*y dig and delve side by side with
your common laborer, who vodoratands
neither Latin nor French, amJ know only
cue thir.g, and thr,t is that they must ‘.cork
jest us bard us their ill ferule ccmpsaious
“to the manor born" if they expect to tuuae
the same wages.
These arc tbe men who compose the ac
five element which Las given Loadvilie it?
reputation for pu h and enterprise, and
those who huve not tbe means ta build up a
business litre nor wi»b to do some bard work
bad better not come. —Leadvdh CltromJe
Thk Galveston News givis this us an
illustration of rrrl hemi-m : Quits a num
ber of darkieg, young and old, w< re fishing
down on Kbun’e wautf, when a bey about
twelve fell off and would have met with u
watery grave hud it not b«.ci) for the energy
and presence of raiud of old Uncle Muse.
After tbe boy was ra’ely lsadid a bystander
took occa-i.iu to praise old Mosc for the
hi-toi cb" bod displayed. •Is the boy your
son ?” asked tbe sympathetic spectator.
“No, boss, hut be taout as well a been ; be
bad ali de bolt in bis pocket.”
lie was lying tu (root of the store door
when 'be B3‘*rebaat came oat, aou stirring
him up with the too of bis boot, said :
•‘Arc you drunk?”
“Yoo bet."
"Tneo you move off from here ”
"Arc you drunk ?” querrbd tho inebri
ate.
"No; I am sober,” was the indignant re
sponse.
••Then you can move off from hete a d—d
sight Pettier than 1 cau.”
Wht is it tbit wlii-ky straight will make
a man walk crooked ?—BWon Globe. Why
is it ? YYby.it is because you drink it.
Did yao never think of that? Yeu leave
the whisky in tbe jug, and it will not make
you walk crooked.
A Haooe fixld (Cu|ie Muy) sign re .ds :
“Is cream salon cakes prettzcils and ctnddy
and cigars oisters and lodging and horses
watteied constantly on hand. ’
It is well enough to say, "Take things as
I they come,” but suppose they aon t come?
Rt lcf ('ormpondfact*.
Many people object to postal cards on
account of their iff ct on | ersonal corres
pondence. It is oe of the natural tenden
cies of hom«n nntore to nvoiil tionble as fur
as pf taiblr ; and h is t o much easier to
write a nurd tin n a le'ter that it is often
eiiri n the prefer, nee. So that in fact the
close intimac es tl at once Might exist be
tween persons who tired far away from each
other, fdl and foeiced by long letters which
were really an are no longer a
part at oor social it to »1 they were t« those
of uur ttfanamoUicrs. U stance now sepa
rates divided friends more really than it did
fifty years ago. ft is a pity to lo j e the
chriso ol so many private letters, writtsu
from the hear', and giving to ifie absent,
frank, e mple pictures a! the even's o( the
pissing hoar. It is difficult to see from
what malaria! the memoirs of the present
snd coming generation* will be made. A
file ni curr-apnndcnce cards, a drawer full of
“postuls,” will i fiord bnt scanty substancu
nut of wflich to build op the fabric of (into
ry. No tender reminiscences can be glean
ed from theao barten moJKortgi Ts ; no glimpse
given of borne fl otion ; for of course no
one writes “Dear -—. " or •‘uffi'ctionately
yours,' 1 for 'ear of exposing this wave of
emotion to the obrervation of the po-drsnn.
No one like* to write anything fitner afl «-
tionate or important on so public a tn di
urn ; theiefore thesweetness of the sentimeu
al detux) in which our amtstora
di lighted is fast changing to the bitter
brevity of hard fact.
Hetiothal Kings.
The betrothal ring par excellence is the
solitnre diamond. These betrothal rings
had their origin am mg the dews, who wore
engagements rings from time immemorial.
The custom was adopted by the Romans,
but they were not used by Christ ian* ■util
the ninth century. Wedding rings are al
ways the plain, unostentatious bond of pore
gold In Busman marriages the ring is ex
changed three times during the ceremony—
once by the groom, once by the priest, and
once by groom and piiest together. Y uag
ho*itiates ure riceWod into the church with
a r»Bg in sign of their betrothal to Christ.
I The betrothal ling was first worn on the
fourth finger, because lb" ancients supposed
a vein to concent this finger directly with
the heart. The clergy of the Episcopal
church wear amethyst rings. The I’ope,
like the novitiates of the ,11'man cliurch j
wears a ring to indicate his damage to the
church It is worn like ihe man isge ring
of a bride, an the fourth finger, the first
three IVlt g dedicated to tint Triully Bish
ops aretibishops, cardinals and all the priest
hood of the Human Catholic ehurcti wear
jewehd rings, which form part of their in
signia of office New Hoik Sun.
An Iwi'jan IlMitc a Ekvotiok—Thera
arc few h stances of devotion that prove the
existmee of love in a higher dtgrie than
that giv< n by Kit Carson's Indian wife to
her brave and manly lover. While mining
in the West he atari ifd sa Indian girl with
whom b« !iv>d very happily. When he was
taken iil, a long way from home, word was
sent to hia wife, who mounted a fleet mustang
pony «ad travCsd hnndr.da of miles to
reach him. Night and day eke continued her
jnumay, rsstiag only for a few bout* on tho
op n p>airh, 3 ng ou her w*> derful little
steed üßßK’it»» site fou’d gether up her
fweea aaew. S e lorded r ; v rs, she scaled
rocky passes, she waded through morasses,
and finally arrived, jud alive, to find her
huubaod better. But the exposure and ex
eition kil'ud her, She was seised with pnea-
Eonia aud died vsi*bin a brief g|iaee in her
arms. The ab<«U killed Kit (Jar
gon, the reirjp d miner, fie broke a blood
vessel, and both are buried in one giave.
Buttzk f You re<u moer the story of the
guest who was satifig t»>t« butter than bis
cuit, while the Itodlady looked on and fidg*
cud and hinted until she fairly went into a
nervous fit. Finally she aatd, ‘Do you knew
bolter is opto sixty-five outs n pound V*
The hungry guest teuehtl uni and took
What there was left. “Well,” ho said, “good
butter is wutb it.”
tjr usb vi wants to know why we do not
go to Europe. Well, the lact is it tbe rest
at Europe its tables the part that has come
over here, we've seen enough oi it.
lr has beta said that poverty (reads upon
tba be*ls of greut and unexpected riches ;
but I ben a newspaper awn never has corns
on his heels, and he 'uan siand it.
j A *an dying lull SI 000 to an individual
! who, years tief'jre, ran with his wife.
He said iu bis will that he never forgot *
favor.
Tin -nan who c n live on himself, like Dr,
s 1 «uu£r, needs oo lieu reistioi**
NO. 13