Newspaper Page Text
THE WAYCROSS HERALD, SATURDAY, JANUARY 28. 1893.
A FRONTIER FARMER’S WIFE.
tier Burdens An Mnay mod Her Pl«
urn Are Few.
The women who live in cities can form
no estimate of the work done day after ' would have had still more reason to j on the Pacific coast has given rise to the ! Joe ix^SmltS-SchoouSmmtesL
day by the fanner « wife on the frontier, apostrophize the Tiber had he lived in ! rumor that the president will request his ; J. J. Wilkinson—Tax Receiver.
There are no convenient laundries, bak- these days and seen the Tiber embank- j successor that Judge Scott be retained '{*. J ; Tliigpen—Tax Coilector,
cries or stores where she could buy the nient now approaching to completion, in office by the incoming administration. Countv Commissioners—W. A. (
ready made articles she is compelled to | Taken iu conjunction with the series of J Mr- Cleveland made a similar request W Davidson and D. J. Blackburn,
make for herself. It is unceasing work magnificent new bridges which form ! four years ago of Mr. Harrison. The ■ Address, Waycross, Ga,
with her from early sunrise to long after part of the scheme, it is described as 1 former had appointed Benjamin Folsom, 1 '
the hours have grown small at night, decidedly the grandest work undertaken I Mrs. Cleveland’s brother, to the lucra-
Fhe lights the fires for breakfast. f u Rome by the Italian government. The j tive office of United States consul at
Nowhere is a man so completely lord . {onto Margliarita. a fine bridge con- ' Sheffield, England. The salary is $2,500
and master as on the farm. His mother • gtrncted entirely of stone at the upper j per annum and perquisites aggregating
was a farmer’s wife and lightedthe fires; extremity of the Eternal City, is already , another $1,000.
his wife shall do the same. While the completed, as is the Ponte Cestio at the *
CITY OFFICERS, WAYCROSS, GA.
wAg e-Ross
kettle is boiling «ho does the milking, . xiberine isle.
and cases are not rare where a farmer's This latter is a bridge of three noble
wife milks as many as eight or ten cows j arches. A curious fact in relation to it
twice a day. The milk w earned into the j i* that the bt ones of the old Roman
cellar in great heavy pails that wonld try j bridge which was pulled down were used
a man s strength, and she returns to the . j n constructing the new one, and even
work of getting breakfast. During the j placed in the very same order m which
progress of the meal she cannot sit back • they originally stood. The Ponte Um-
and eat and rest, as many do, but is kept berto—a bridge of very greet importance
jumping up mid down waiting on the leading to the center of the new quarter
men folks and children. It is often a ; on the right side of the river, where the
question to strangers who visit on the • courts of law are being erected, is, more-
frontier if she ever gets a chance to eat over, approaching completion,
at aU. Then the children are to be start- To the left of the Corso Vittorio Em-
ed off to school, ana though the credit of on uele, going down, a new and large road
<WaAn~Hm.fcn.fr> *h* f-tw ♦« has been made, leading to another fine
bridge, which is called the Ponte Gari
baldi. Finally, the Ponte Emilio, which
took the place of the famous old Ponte
Rotto, or broken bridge, is also complete.
—Cincinnati Commercial Gazette.
their education falls to the father it is
the mother who does extra work that
they may go, and who pulls them out of
bed and starts them off in time every
"iBbrning.
The milk is to be strained and put
away, crocks scalded, butter chnrned,
and the dishes and chamber work still
wait. Dinner and snpper and afternoon
work take up her day. Then in their
turns throughout the week there is
washing, ironing, baking every other
day, scrubbing, sweeping, sewing and
mending. In harvest time she will have
as many as fourteen to cook for and docs
it all alone. It is seldom that a farmer
feels that he can afford to hire help in
the kitchen. She has the vegetable gar
den to see to. To brighten the dreari
ness of her life she has close to the sel
dom opened front door a bed of half
starved looking fiowers—old fashioned
coxcomb, four-o’clocks, grass pinks and a
few other cheerful looking plants that
will thrive under neglect. She makes
everything that her family wears except
hats and shoes. She has
of rest or seif.
It is in most cases her lot to welcome
a new baby every other year, and the
only time when help is employed to as
sist her is for a period of two or three
Hariug with a \Vat**r*|*out.
When the British steamer Amur, Cai>-
tain Rouse, from Caibarion, dropped
anchor off Gloucester her outward ap
pearance foretold the thrilling experi
ences she had had with the elements.
Dec. 19, when on the southern edge of
the gulf stream, the ship had a narrow
escape from total destruction by a wa
terspout, which fortnuately passed nn-
i der her stem not many yards from the
j ship.
I The first seen of this monstrous dis-
! turbance was in the shape of a heavy
| cloud on tlio horizon direct to windward,
j but as it drew near it appeared as though
j it wonld overtake the ship and send all
on board to the Ixittom. It was a des
perate struggle to get out of its wav,
time to think I a iul with the ship already in a disabled
condition the engineer stood by with the
engines wide oj>en, realizing that it was
a race for life. Nearer and nearer the
dangerous water column, drew to the
slap, but by the time the noise of its ap-
weeks when the little stranger arrives, i proud, ,„et the ears of the crew the ship
The births of the babies are about all had gotten north to a place of safety,
that vary th n monotony ot her life. Oc- ! As it passed under the Amur’s stem the
Arthur M. Knight, Mayor. Aldermen,
\\\ A. McXiel. W. W. 8harp, .1. H. Gillon,
J. G. Justice, R. H. Murphy.
W. D. Hamilton. Clerk of City Council.
5V. K. Parker, City Assessor and Collector.
Warren Lott, City Treasurer.
S. W. Hitch, City Attorney.
John 1‘. Cason. City Marshal.
The Waycross Herald, Official Organ.
When Cleveland retired from office he
requested of his successor to retain
Folsom in office, and President Harrison
evidently considered this proposition in
a favorable manner, for the reason that
Folsom is abont the only Democrat who
is holding a consular office of any im-
portance abroad. Another relation of Secretary;* W
Mr. Cleveland’s, a nephew, has held the
office of special deputy United States
marshal in one of the northwestern
states dnring the last four years.
The salary of the new office held by * sanitary * waterworks com%
Judge Scott is nine dollars ]>er dav and
v-. , ■ 31. Albertson, Lem Johnson,
traveling expenses, all of which is about \y. a. Cason. H. W. Reed
equivalent to Folsom’s remuneration.
The duties of the office require constant
traveling between cities where public ;
buildings are Iteing constructed. The
officer examines the progress of the work
and reports to the head office in Wash
ington city.—Cor. Seattle Post-Intelli- !
gencer.
BOARD OF EQUATION.
H. W. Reed, President; J. M.> Marshall, j
MTctarv; W. J. Carswell, L. Johnson, S.
W. Hitch. |I. IV Brewer. J. L. Walker.
Board meets Second Saturday in month ;
at 2:30 p. m., at High School building.
W. D. Hamilton. Ex. Off. Clerk.
Warren Lott. Ex. Officio Treasu
H. W. Reed. Chief Engineer.
i.vcnw* Lodge. No. :50o F. and A. M.,
' 2d and 4th Wed nodays at 7:30
. A. P. English, W. M.; E. H. Reed.
Music Store.
PIKNOS.
Organs ana sun insinunenis.
Sewing Machines
ALL KINDS OF ATTACHMENTS.
Needles, Oils, etc.
J. *R. KNIGHT, Manager.
casionally death calls and takes from
her tired arms a little life ami leaves in
its place an added pain in her heart. She
is old and tired out at thirty.
When her daughters reach the age at
which they could assist her the dreary
prospect of a frontier life apirails them,
and they seek employment in town.
Nothing in her house is of late improve
ment. Her washboard is of the kind her
mother used, and her churn in its heavy,
clumsy build shows that it belongs to
the same date. Improvement stalks all
over the farm and leaves no trace in the
kitchen. Her pleasures are few. The
satisfaction that she is doing her l>e8t
seems to be all that rewards her. .She
is a heroine in a calico dress, wrinkled
and stoop shouldered—a woman with a
burden, who never complains. Late at
night, when all the members of the
family are in bed, a light will shine out
across the prairie from the family living
room. 11 is by this light the farmer’s wife
is doing her mending and sewing, and it
will shine out long after the occasional
travel that way has stopped, and no
one but the one that blows it out knows
at what hour the patient burden bearer’s
laltors cease. Frances L. Garsidk.
noise was deafening. It quickly passed
and disappeared.—Cor. Baltimore Amer
ican.
The Hair of an Artist.
It may not be known that when Pad
erewski was in this country last season
he was under contract not to ent his
hair. As soon as the London season was
over he was shorn, and his friends say he
was so eager to get to the barber and so
rejoiced to get his hair cut that the
power to have his own way in this mat
ter, in fact, decided him to lie his own
manager. But when Paderewski actually
laid hold of his own affairs it seemed, on
the whole, bettor not to cut loose from
his hair. At the last jierformance in
London one woman feel prostrate on her
face at his fedt. It required the absurd
ity of this woman to bring the rest of
tlio audience to its senses. While it is
undeniable that Paderewski’s hair has
been an interesting feature, it does not
seem an important factor in his career.
Nevertheless Paderewski returned with
his halo.—New York Evening Sun.
MMlriiuoutal ltumiera in Indiana.
“Love will find a way,” says the song.
It has lieen finding its way across the
Ohio river between Kentucky and In
diana at the rate of 500 couples a year
for a long time hack. But the outlook
now is that competition will prove not
the life, but the death of trade in the
matrimonial market of southern Indiana
and northern Kentucky. In the small
towns along tlio Indiana border the fre
quency of elopements from the neigh
boring state has furnished a new occu
pation to certain Kentucky and Indiana
gentlemen—namely, that of •‘matrimo
nial runner.”
These runners watch for runaway lov
ers, accost them and take them to cer
tain civil magistrates in whose pay they
are, anil the officer of the law quickly
unites the pair in marriage, exacting
therefor a fee, part of which becomes
the perquisite of the runner. In spite of
the fact that stringent laws exist for the
government of these magistrates, they
have done a lucrative business, and in i Folk:
the competition that has arisen between i day of each month. Drill
BLAC KSIIEAK CHAPTER NO. 9, II. A.
Meets at Masonic Hall, Plant Avenue. 1st
Friday in each month at 7:30 p. in. Ex.
Comp. \\\ W. Sharpe, H. P.; Rt Ex. Comp.
E. 11. Reed, Secretary.
WAKEFIELD LODGE XO. 517, K. of P.
Meets every Monday night at 7:30 o’clock.
BROTHERHOOD LOCOMOTIVE EN
GINEERS.
Division 429, J. J. Wideman, Chief Engin
eer;.!. \V. Lyon, First Assistant Engineer;
H. A. MeGee. Insurance Agent. Meets
2d and 4th Sundays of each month at 10 a.
in.. Brotherhood hall, Reed block.
31., C. T. X. Syfan, Secretary. Meets 2d and
4th Saturdays each month at B. L. K. hall,
WAYCROSS RIFLES.
Company —, 4th regiment Georgia Volun
teers. Capt. J.McP. Farr; 1st Lieutenant,
J. H. Gillon; 2d Lieutenant, T. O’Brien;
Secretary, John Hogan; Treasurer, W. B.
Regular monthly meeting 3d Tliurs-
ach month. Drill nights Tuesday
il Thursday of each week, 7:30 p. in.
HUDSON,
FOUNDERS AND MACHINISTS,
- WAYCROSS, GEORGIA.
U AVING added all necessary Machinery to our shop, we
11 are now prepared to do all kinds of casting-, repairing
and general work on Locomotives.
We also carry iu stock Stationary and Saw Mills, Piping,
Belting, Pulleys, Hangers and Brass Cocks of all kinds. We
make a specialty of
SYRUP MILLS AND KETTLES.
ALL WORK GUARANTEED. GIVE I S A TRIAL AND BE CONVINCED*
WAYCROSS LODGE I. O. O. F.
Meets every Monday evening at 7:30 o'clock.
J. A. Jones, X. G.; D. Williams, Secretary.
AMONG THE CHURCHES.
3IETHODIST CIIUKCII.
Jf
Walking to Chicago.
Chicago will be the crank center of
the Union during the fair, and the con
vention is already assembling. The lat
est headed that way is a Spokane man.
who, so he says, is going to walk there.
A Dainty Portfolio.
A dainty portfolio is made from heavy
eggshell paper, which can be purchased
— for about fifty t a distance of 1,922 miles. He proposes
cents a sheet. ! *° accomplish the trip in ninety-six days.
The pieces are all i He promises to nail to each of the 70,880
cut and then dec- i or so telegraph jioles along the track a
/ Cv? orated with 1 poster publishing the praises of east-
\/ water colors in I era Washington. He will -wear a long
■/ IV some simple de- ! rubber coat, lead color behind and rose
/ V# sign. The one j color in front, on which he is going to
/ X here illustrated j have painted pieces of the picturesque
1 1 has blue forget- 1 scenery and portraits of the prominent
them and their runners the latter hav<
at times in their wrangles over a dis
tracted Locliinvar and his sweetheart
almost come to bloodshed.—Chicago
Times.
A New Slung Expression.
Besides being very vulgar, a slang ex
pression is undoubtedly the most com
prehensive of language, and especially so _
in its np-to-dateness and its popular nn- Sunday services at 11:00 a. in. and 7:.‘S0 p. m.
derstandableness. “Ah! yer trolley’s • Except the first Sunday of each month,
off!- contemptuously meerefl a scrubby ;
little newsboy on Fulton street, Brook- , Thursday evening, at 7:oo p. m.
lyn, tlio other day to a companion with 1 *** _
whom he was endeavoring to straighten
out some difference of opinion. And
“Your trolley’s off” is getting to be pret
ty generally used to express what Iras
been indicated by “You’re off your base.”
If Macaulev or Charles Lamb offers any
thing more terse or pithy, that would
express to every one just what every one
understands by “Your trolley’s off,” it
wonld be worth quoting.
Slang is perhaps richer in the history
that touches the life and common experi
ence of all the jieople most closely than
most other words. Future generations
may know the exact date when the
trolley car was first used, but if they
could discover just when “Yonr trolley's
off” came into vogue they would know
better when electric trolley cars began
to he in general use and common to the
people.—New York Sun.
front. flowers delicately
painted so that they can be cut ont in re
lief at the upper edges of the pockets
nots and star ’ people of his region.—Exchange.
Dentil of a Famous Bear Dog.
^ Southern Oregon hunters are mourn-
and tb» corneraT* A dainty biottCTtote 1 «>K the death of John Griffin's famous
placed insido thi. portfolio may ba mada : b«* r d°S. Trailer, ivlio died a natural
from delicately tinted blotting paper ; death a day ort™ ago. Trailer eras the
decorated in flowers or butterflies. The j I 18 ™ of moro » h f“ * >»«_fighta
initials of the person for whom the port- m . th « mountains of southern Oregon,
folio is intended msy be placed upon the I pn»ap*«y in theSistayons. Gnffin lias
blotter, as the monogram upon the bock j kept a record of Trailers achievements
of the portfolio itself. ' »» dflnd » that he has. caught 10a hears
- dnnng his lifetime, including those
treed, brought to hay and run into caves,
where they were shot, besides catching
numerous panthers, wildcats, etc.—Cor.
San Francisco Examiner.
/
FALL AND WINTER GOODS
Have arrived. We an* earryiiur a full linVof
Clothing, Dry Goods, Shoes, hats,(Caps, Etc., Etc*
.Which
ill sell at the L«i
I 1 Wihie I'r
;v. l'astor. .
Sabbath { Mei
•,4:30 p.m. '
GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH.
uer Pendleton and Mary Street.
?rvices 11 a. in. and 7:00 p. in. Sin
BAPTIST CHURCH.
Suits, auy size, from $3.50, $4.50, $5.25, $7.0u, $7.75, s;
up. Black Double-Breasted Suits for only $8.00, worth $13.5o. Wc wi!
j Pants from 50c. to $7.00. .Single (’oats in every style from si.50 up.
j all kinds at correspondingly low prices. Men’,s Over Coats from $2.
lay | Boys’ Over Goats from $1.25 up. Youths’ and Boys’ Clothing Double
j Breasted at the lowest price.
j Hats of all kind at the Lowest Prices. Our lii
I °»P“ llnd Astr “ Capes, Wrapper*, and all kinds of
p. in. Sunday School every Sabbath 3 p.m. j Gents’ Rubber Goods and all kinds of Underwear.
Prayer Meeting every Thursday 7:30 p.
of Ladies* • Jackets, Hair
tdics’ Waists. Ladies’ and
RACKET STORE, Plant Avenue, Waycross, Georgia.
J. SILBEKMAN, Proprietor. ’ Neat door to Western Furniture Go.
Carries* Sra Captain*.
Very mysterious are the ways of sea- !
faring men. If Mr. William Ordwav
Partridge is to be credited, and there
appears no reason why he should not be, ;
an ocean steamer recently turned slight- ,
ly out of her course to inspect a lumber ;
laden vessel tliat floated at the mercy of j
wind and wave, torn sails fluttering and ;
with other signs of haring passed through j
a storm in * midocean. There was no 1
sign of life oa deck, thongh no one can j
say what a closer look might have shown, i
But the captain of the great ship saw fit |
to ]«iss on without even getting the
GIVE YOU AS NEAT
HERALD OFFICE
W pus's on niuiuuv gening uw _ . • «
name of the derelict. The indignation j All 3.11V Otlier City 111 Ueorgia,
INSIDE OF PORTFOLIO.
If one does not paint, a very pretty
way of decorating the portfolio is to use
metallic luster bronzes. Small disks or
squares, overlapping in twos and threes,
or even/ours and fives, with occasional
ly a single isolated square, would form
pretty designs. ' Draw the squares also
on the pockets, making two or three on
Freaks at a Wedding.
At a recent marriage iu Englaud the
bridegroom was 6 feet 2 inches tall and
j the bride only 3 feet 21 inches. Thewit-
; nesses were as notable as the bride and
groom. One had no arms and signed
the register with a i>en held in his teeth,
another was a man 7 feet 6 inches tall.
• and another, a woman, who weighed 350
pounds.—Hartford Courant.
Toothpick* Again.
Toothpicks are to be allowed on the
dinner tables, contrary to English rule.
A well known society leader who
of the passengers is of no avail in such i
case. .The vessel was left to drift uu- j
signaled in the path of other steamers,' a
menace for a long time to come to every
voyager who crosses the ocean.—New- ]
port News.
Many Congresses.
The congresses held in Spain during ;
the centennial commemoration almost |
rival in number and variety those that it i
is proposed to hold in this city in 1893. j
They include the congress of American
ists,* pedagogic congress, congress of i
spiritualists, the Catholic congress, geo
graphical congress, congress of free '
thinkers, Hispano-Ainerican-Portugnese ;
mercantile congress, a Spanish-Ameri-
can legal congress and minor congresses
of artisans and others which pass almost !,
unnoticed.—Chicago Herald.
Am Alliance In Spain.
♦The Jesuits of Spain are trying to ar- |
and at as low rates.
We Use The Best of
Anything in the
Printing L
VISITING CARD TO A POSTER
£ ent ; ‘ ,o London says J* j ^ rShtaSl
poiktto, so that th» pockets my be cat hrard her luwteM remark one day that : DonJaime. son of Don Carlos, and In-
down lower
some instances
and occasionally
a square protrude
at the edge in re
lief. The squares
or disks should
be painted in dif
ferent colored
bronzes—red,
pink, bine, green.
she wonld as soou pass around tooth- fenta Mercedes, daughter of the late
brushes and towels as toothpicks to her ] King Alfonso. This alliance, if effected,
guests.—New York Advertiser. ,« WO uld in all probability put an end to ;
r, i , _ -J i the hostility that has long existed be-
Fonr thoittsud new t«stOffice were tween the reigning families in Spain,
established last year, and o.x.646 nn-
mailable letters poured into the boxes.
32,012 of them wholly without any out-
side sign, symbol or address.
A married womairwaa found intoxi- !
cated in the streets of London with $5,out)
An Editor’s Preparation.
On the eve of undergoing a delicate
and exceedingly dangerous surgical op- i
eration George Van Horne, editor of a !
Muscatine paper, wrote an article under 1
silver, gold, etc. SACK. I cmcu in u««««svi uuuuuu wims*,ww I tt
Gilt bows and lacings should ba added I in her pocket. She said she carried the i ***11***? *v e oueiSum and W mm*
I -
Comiai Fill t-|
, a Special. Q
Do You
FEEL SICK?
Disease commonly comes on with slight
symptoms, which when neglected increase
in extent and gradually grow dangerous.
RIPANS TABULES
11 , uS B co«!SSr!* n ?* TE ?’ ,, . to ! Take RIPANS TABULES
take RIPANS TABULES
FM D 0 E^T^I^o T ij5f, ALL D,t “: take RIPANS TABULES
Ripans Tabules Regulate the System and Preserve the Health.
f*~RIPANS TABULES \ EASY TO TAKE, QUICK TO ACT.
I a’coMPLCTC ! SAVE MANY A DOCTOR’S BILL.
I medicine chest;.
: * THE RIPANS CHEMICAL CO.
10 SPRUCE STHEET. - - NEW YORK.
Keep Your Business
BEFORE THE PEOPLE!
And in order to do so
Advertise
HI * Waycross Herald.
Its Circulation Nearly Daakles That of any
Other Paper Published iu This Section.
Sample Copies Free!
nrwpprii! niiiMfii