Georgia weekly telegraph, journal & messenger. (Macon, Ga.) 1880-188?, January 14, 1881, Image 1

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JOURNAL AND MESSENGER. CLISBY &|JONES, Proprietors. THE FAMILY JOURNAL-NEWS-rOLITIUS- LITERATURE—AGRICULTURE—DOMESTIC NEWS, Ire.—PRICE $2.00 FEB ANNUM. GEORGIA TELEGRAPH BUILDING A BUSHED 1826- MACON, FRIDAY. JANUARY 14. 1881 VOLUME LV-NO. 2 B.1RKIM n wimso. fora "accounting for tbs property sold I Grant and the Panama tell U' A*t~rto Thursday. Oct 23.1880.1 ajpeare.l^on. Chicago, January 11.—Tho Tribune My thoughts u LUUe Jockeya” are riding, stead, the year’s support and the dower l to *'- a l’ publishes a three-column article, And “Time” can in no way efface, vere j n dispute I written by General Grant, and containing The great “weight” of sorrow abiding ( Held. That there was no error In grant- his Y iews »P° n *he proposed Nicaragua From not knowing my Queen of “the ing an injunction, with leave to amend «■“•» lo 8,low tfce importance of water race.” the bill so as to settle any questions aris- communication across the American isth- Among the tortures of inquisition, ! £§ “» dower aud 1 mUS ’ H? "' S ^ the tr#da ** Strange Father Dominic hadn’t the . tbe J~* 8 support. CO Ga. 52o, sense To construct and place in position Some machine like the rack of suspense. Having long felt its terrible power, I’m most eager now to confess Myself her slave every hour, And pray that she will relieve my dis tress. Barkis. THE SUPREME COURT. tween points on the Pacific and points on i I the Atlantic ocean, and estimates the Tucker vs. Cox. Distress warrant, from amoun ‘ ° r freight which would pass Washington. I “ ,c proposed canal. He summa- , Where there :s an express contract for I r **! d lbe objections to the Panama route, rent payable in specifics, a distress war- a " d P? 11 ! 18 °“‘ 1“ detail the advantages rant lies; and where the value of the spe- I °® sre d by the route through Nica- cific is subject to fluctuation, and must be I ra ° ua ‘ Be ‘h en contrasts the rights of established by proor on trial, the state- I under the administration and ment in the distress warrant of the amount | J nana g e m° nt of the I anama canal in the of the specific due, and that it is supposed j ] ian r. s °* att '"dependent company, deriv- to be of a particular value, is sufficient. I * D S lt8 powers from a foreign government, __ ’ j organized on the plan ol the Suez canal, Blackwell vs. Pennington & Sons. Cer- i ?, nd lbe Nicara S uan „ cana! . protected by Horan, from Morgan. government of that country against , „ 1. One may claim property levied upon a oxtortlon. That there are other ad- * by himself, his ageut or kttoraey. Where , v £ nt ^ contai,,cd in the concession of ■’ i there are partnere or persons jointly in- lhe Nicaraguan government and the pro- . terested anyone may make affidavit and P^ed administration a “ d management of Dawson vs. Pennaraan. Certiorari, from execute tho bond on behalf of all bnt the } be Nicaragua canal, there should Putnam. character In which these rights are exer-P* “ d a °“ b L * a i' 10 “ ,nd cised, and this liability assumed should I ,. 8 ^T *^':“- ncan " !0 believes flnru.,1- in .ftTlfnrTtilll. In flw, lanl. f n 1116 pOWCT SIUl Decision* Rendered Dee. 7. ISM. Abridged for the Telegraph and Messenger Mill <£ Harris, Attorneys at Law, Macon Oeoraia. Where there is a breach of warranty unmixed with fraud, the remedy is by suit on the warranter; but where there has beeu actual fraud mixed with deceit and corruption in au exchange of person alty, the party defrauded has his election to sue on the warranty or to bring trover for the property sold by biin. (a). There being evidence to show such fraud, that question should have been left to the jury in a trover suit In a justice’s court; and the granting of a non-suit was good grouud for a certiorari. Johnson, administrator, vs. Flanders et a). Equity, from Johuson. A bill filed by au administrator against creditors of the estate, alleged, in brief, as follows: The intestate died in possession of both real and personal property. The administrator advertised some of the real ty for sale, but claims were interposed and sustained. Tim balance, the title to which is in litigation, lias been set apart as a homestead u> the family. Tho ad ministrator lias sold llie peiishabie prop erty, and collected some of Use ac counts due the estate; some others can be collected and some cannot. . A year’s support lias beeu allowed the family. Supposing the estate solved, he paid some debts, but it lias turned out to be insol vent. There are numerous debts press ing against the estate and claiming priori ties ami liens, some of which are very doubtful. One debt has been reduced to judgment and the li. fa. levied on the laud iu litigation, as above stated. Other suits and complications will follow. The object of the bill was to marshal tho as sets, to ciijoin the creditors from proceed ing against him, and to obtain direction as to the mode of payment and of adiniu- isteriug the assets. Held, that there was equity in the bill, and it should not have been dismissed ou demurrer. a. In all suits by partner or persons «"“° ath j 8 c A °“ l ‘M«' u ’ con “ 3 ’ jointly interested, where the name of any °" ™ ad ®» .P 18 80cic ‘ y one who ought to have been joined is I j s raade “P of.Amer;leans, al 1 thecorpora- omitted, it maybe inserted instanter on a ™ and l a 8iK } t i ?, cor * motion. Bnt a suit brought by one in his I P 01 * 1 * 0 "* 8 tasked of an Americau Con- individual name cannot bo changed intoa S” 588 - E VC, T step of this project recog- suit in the name of a partnership. I nixes the right of the United States to (a) A claim affidavit is the foundation of I w . ith zealous care the Americau a legal proceeding, and cannot be amend- 5°“ l . neut against the encroachment of ed, there being no express provision au- | for8, S n powers. He concludes thus: I thorizing the same. commend an Americau canal on Ameri- can soil to the American people, feeling I Beesraan vs. Giradey et at. Equity, from added «" ■»" act . of . T lif ? Richmond J l hose I have already recorded, if I shall 1. Under section 3839 of the code any 8 J»fceed in impressing upon Gougress and witness is competent to testify to his j tbe , I >00 P! e the high value, as a commer- belief of the genmueness or falsify of the and industrial enterprise, of this work signature to an instrument who will I !,rt no if c ??“ p ,!l slied by A ,‘? l ? ri< ; a, ? s ’ swear that he knew or would recognize J Wl1 undoubtedly be accomplished by the handwriting of the person purporting I * ome ,f^ our r,va 3 m P° wer aud lullu- to have signed. The source of his know!- ence ’ edge to go entirely to his credit and tlio TannessPft Affairs weight of his evidence. „ • l ® n:a , ei1860 2. Wiiere an affidavit was used on a Nashville, January 11.—The govem- not cover tho issues made by the plead ings without specifying wherein it is in sufficient. Harper vs. Grambling, Spalding & Co. Il legality, from M irgan. and clothed with such powers as may be necessary to enable it to enforce justice and equality in the regulation of their freight and passenger rates.” In regard to tho Slate debt he says: “a bill was adopted by the General Assent- had. some upon the people than the one pro- posed by it will fail to command popular Brown vs. Chatham. Equitable petition, I a PP rova '. fhich to the only sure rock from Morgan 1 1 U P° U which public credit can be built. Where petitiouer, upon the common law The f )n ?; 8 1 31on “f lhe .extraordinary de side of th5court, sho^s by his pleadings mands " fl,,ese I 1 -* ous,ltuted bondholders that under a written agreement his right ®? m ‘"' t ‘ ee ? vould » in “ ,y opinion, involve to redeem certain lands expired at a given I ~ 18 ^i 8 ^, 1 !? *f re ^ r,evealj J e embarrass- tirae, bnt sets up that it was also agreed I Tlie btate has no income except that if he did not redeem it defendant was f', ie P recarIou3 , al “ inconsidera te pay to hhn the difference between the J?! 8 S n?„ Whe™. ^ °(? „ 1 -'? amount advanced and what the property ,i,? r S2* }' , , late ' e f, P a,d brought at sheriff’s sale, and, also, that ^f iJe , from t,le defendant had sold to L bona fide pur- I a ' nount contributed ^by railroa.1 ^ compa- chaser for an amount largely more than taxat,< ? n ’, ll * tlie the sura advanced, and prayed that he may I a ^J us J™ ent . practical states- be allowed to redeem tlie land, or if this I ma P slll P will recognize the fact that the could not be effected on account of the lattSTI*!^ T." U,9 . bas,i ?f, sale, that defendant may bo required to tu« bill adopted at the last session, will account to him for the difference between rLH l ui , r0 tho l ,a >'. mcat ° f a larger annual the amount advauced, etc., and that at I 3l , 1 ^ 11 n proportion to tlie value of the tax- wliicli the properly was sold. able property of the btate than fa paid by Held, 1. That if the purpose ofplair.tin Syl ,^i.te y .i f A ni8 “ was to redeem the land, the present owner t ?“i’,° r " 'lim. 8 f ? Ct be was a necessary party, aud ho could not ^ 8 f?i 3 8 P“ 88lbllit J’» t0 8a y be made a party to this proceeding at law !? att u of t tb8 0Utstandil jS issue of by amendment 1 I the Bank of Tennewee may become an 2. That in the absence of any averment | embarrassing charge upon the treasury.” that the agreement as to tho payment to petitioner of the difference, etc., was in writing, so that it was omitted from the How tie Pyramids Were Built. Brug3cli Bey, the eminent Egyptologist, Georgia Railroad vs. Fisk. Certiorari, from Columbia. Where tlie error assigned fa that the court below should have grauted a certio rari to the judgment ot a justice against a railroad lor the killing of a cow, ou the ground that the presumption against the railroad itad beeu rebutted, the an swer of the justice is necessary to make such error appear to this court. Norrington vs. Thilly, executor. Com plaint, from Richmond. Where suit was brought in 1870 on due bills made prior to 1805, the allegations that they represented certain deposits made by an uneducated person wlib the maker, who received aud held the fund as a deposit and not as a loan; that if the due bills conveyed any other meaning they were fraudulent; that in IS72 the plaintiff demanded liis money, but defen dant put him off by saying it was best for plaintiff to let him hold the money as it would be lost if plainliffheld it, and that in 1870 lie admitted the making of the de posit, but claimed that it Mad beeu paid, was not sufficient to relieve it from the bar of the statute, and the case was prop erly dismissed ou demurrer. Park vs. Park. Equity, from Greene. A court of equity has jurisdiction to set tle a trust estate at the time provided for the termination of the trust. That a court of law may have concurrent jurisdiction will not oust that of a court of equity. Especially so where fraud in the manage ment of the trust fa charged. (a) Where % will provided a legacy for amioortobepaid to her upon her arri val at a majority, and that until then the executor should keep the property aud money so bequeathed free from liability to account for hire or interest^ hill by the legatee after she became or age to compel an account and settlement of the legacy itself, aud charging fraudulent use of the funds by the executor, was not de murrable for want of cqnlly. Judgment affirmed. Cross va. Johnson, etc. Com plaint, from Emanuel. If suit be brought on an account which fa not transferrable by parol iu the name of the original owner for the use of the equitable owuer, it fa no ground for a new suit that tho latter could not sue in their own names. It fa a matter of no conse quence to the defendant, who cannot be hurt by the additim of the use clause to the name of the original owner. Where a letter ol credit under which goods were delivered to the bearer aud charged to the writer, was lost, it was not necessary to establish a copy in a sepa rate proceeding. Tbo contents could be proved by parol, was suit for the price of the goods. iTall, administrator, vs. Spivey. Claim, from Greene. H., administrator, obtained leave to sell certain laud as belonging to the es tate. Mrs. S. claimed. In her affidavit she set out that the deceased, who was her father, had made a deed to her of 1,000 acres of the land sought to be sold; that, inconsequence of dissatisfaction on the part of other members of tho family, she agreed to accept 200 acres of another tract of laud to which her sisters claimed a ti tle; tliat in consideration also that her mother, the widow, would relinquish all claims to an interest In the two tracts, she was to make a deed to her mother to tlie' tract conveyed by her father; that sbeliad 1 ------ „— . _ ^ ..... .. ,— . complied with her part of the contract but ! the common law docket on the ground the master of all the buildings ofthe laud, her mother had claimed dower in both that^they fail to describe the trust estate in to plan the work and cut the stone. Tho places. She prayed that her mother b> [such a manner as to support a valid exe- kernel of the future edifice was raised on made a party aud be compelled to deliver ! cution against the same, and the defect I the limestone soil of ti e desert,in the form up the deed’made to bar by the claimant i oouldnot be cured by amendment. of a small pyramid built iu steps,of which for cancellation. The jury found aver- * 1 *' " ing of a king of whom it was at once the tomb and monument. Had not the great er number of these sepulchers of the Pha- rohs been destroyed almost to the founda tion, and had tlie names of the builders of those which still stand been accurately preserved, it would have beeu easy for the Inquirer to prove and make clear by calculation what was originally, and of uecessity, the proportion between the masses of the pyramids and the years of tho reigns of their respective lodgers. Grant u a Humorist. General Gran% in a speech delivered at the Press dinner, on the 6th, hit off the self-sufficient editors very cleverly, as follows: - I have been somewhat of a reader of newspapers for forty years. I could read very well when I was eight years of age, and it has given me forty years of obser vation of the press, and there Is oue pe culiarity that £ have observed, aud that fa in all ol the walks of life outside of the press, people have entirely mistaken their profession—their occupation. [Laugh ter.] I never knew a mayor of a city or even a councilman of any city, apy pub lic officer, any government official, I never knew a member of Congress, Senator or a President of Annual Conference of the A. X. E. Church. The annual conference of the African Methodist Episcopal Church convened at Wheat street church, in this city, on Wed nesday, at 10:30 o’clock. The attendance was very large, and Bishop Dixon,ot New HHL.IV _ York, presided during the opeuiug exer-1 l ^ e United States who could not be en- cises. j lightened in hfa duties by the youngest The following secretaries were elected: memherof the press. [Laughter.] I never J. B. Warner, Marietta; A. L. Lowe and h ne w a general to coinmaud a brigade, a P. B. Peters, Atlanta. division, a corps, an army, who could bo- After devotional exercises the confer- S* u to do it as well as men far away in ence was announced ready for work, and I tIie ' r sanctums, and I often wondered. I the bounds of the conference defined. J. I was ver J’ glad to hear that tho newspaper B. Lofton, reporter of tho Christian Re- I fraternity were ready to take, with perfect carder, the organ of tho iliurcb, was in confidence, any office that might bo ten- attendance, I dered to them, from President to mayor; In the absence of tho bishop’s predeces- I atld 1 have often been astonished that the sor, he was introduced by Bov. J. A. I c 'Hzens have not done so, because they Wood, of Wood’s chapel, in this city. know 8,1 these offices would havo been The bishop spoke briefly, defining hfa po-1 we N aiI( l properly filled. Well, gcntle- sition and intentions. After the address I ln . en > I am ver y happy to havo been here the various committees were appointed j w ^h you, and! hope when anew genera- and the conference was organized ready I l * on t about twelve yoars hence, comes up, for the dispatch of business. I that I will a^ain dine with tho Press Wednesday at 1 o’clock p. m., Rev. D. Club of New York City, and that I. will J. McGhee, presiding elder of Marietta I see that those of this generation who are circuit, preached from the text: St- Luke, 80 we N fitted to fill all the civil offices, 10th chapter and 17th verse: “Even tho I have all been chosen aud that there will very devils are subject unto us tbroueli I he nothing left them to criticise, Thy name.” Lg Rev. John W. Hamilton preached agood | Sensible Words sermon at Wood’s chapel. " , Thursday, conference was called to I 1 ho Romo Tribune, alter copying our The Bearings of this Observation Lie iii the Application of It." Bronson Alcott, ot Boston, told Joseph Cook, and Joseph Cook told everybody he met, that he made a regulation in hfa school that if a pupil violated a rule, “the master should substitute hfa own volun Ury sacrificial chastisement for that pu pil’s punishment; and this regulation a!- most Christianized his school.” “Oue day,” Mr. Alcott said, “I called up be fore me a pupil who had vio lated an important rule. I put the ruler into the offender’s hand; I extended my own hand; I told him to strike. In stantiy I saw a struggle begin in his face. A new light sprang up in hfa countenauce. A now set of shuttles seem ,'d to be weav ing a new nature within him. I kept my hand extended, aud the school was in tears. The boy struck once and burst into tears. He seemed transformed by the idea that I should suffer chastisement in place of hfa punishment, and ever after was the most docilo fellow in the school, though be had at first been the rudest.” The incident came to the knowledge of Willis E. Stoddard, who for years past, has been teacnlng a district school In Flint river township, in Iowa. He read this extract in one of Joseph Cook’s lectures, and never forgot the great moral lesson it conveyed. Young Mr. Stoddard had some very hard boys in hfa school. They were big and noisy and rough and turbu lent. He had reasoned with them; he had expostulated; ho had begged and wept. He had whipped them till bis arms ached, and the directors threatened to dismiss him for unnecessary severity and absolute cruelty; aud tho boys grew worse and worse every day. But when ho was!at his wits’ end, aud was seriously thinking of running away and losing all of hfa back salary, rather than stay at the school an other day, he read this incident and it gave his troubled mind new light. He had treasured it up probably half a day when, one bright June afternoon, Samuel Jobn- order by Rev. J. B. Lofton, of Sparta. I short article on “Why we remain poor,” SsjiVirwuwnuhsue -*■ *• *5h ceeaeu.j jiiio statistical tables were taken 1 tions: 8 I all the hi? bad hovs vinintPii nil »iio mioa upland occupied the greater portion of the The aboye from ^ Macon Tklkqbaph of the school, one after another, as waVpreaSbyUev^S. H^RobbSS Imfafftbavf^elnufa I anJ “°und “p by‘"tearing serai motio’n Vor Vnew TrYal " weaken! r,”'*the I or ’ d n,eS8a 3° was «u the House of presiding elder of the Cuthbert district! , furtber !nt0 the subject. For instance, 1 SiMi«S U fnra , liie , so , bo force of the testimony of the vvitnass as u .fP re3entat ‘ ves yesterday- In It lie says: Snbject—“Eternal Punishment.” I ho \ v . can \ va purchaso homo manufactured | , ™° uth ’ an . d ’ ’T ben be At Wood’s chapel there was preaching article8 "'hen there are few, if any, who Jiff A : f h, P, *P° ? pu ! p ’ he by Rev. H. H. Hollowav. and at Shiloh I make them in the South ? Nor fa there , l , be 'f 8 ! 1 into hfa band and propelled by Rev. J. II. Kin-. ' al, y evidence to show tliat there is any , l ! ie wbt,le w Jth great violence into Friday conference was called to order h'kelihood of this state of affairs being I | bn ear of Lllis IlasKell, who signified by Bishop E. A. Sheppard of Centerville chan 8 ed f °r some years to come. Wo hear ! ds vel 7 nat,, ra* dismay aud astonishment After devotional exercises the reports or ° r but TtiW J' oun 3 men who are learning b J.. a , tremendous howl. Mr. Stoddard the different comni't'ees were cabled for tradts and fe "' w h° have any faith in tlie 8a ! cd i5a,nue J Johnson up to» his desk, and clisiioseJof I hammer, the chisel or the lathe. and more calmly than was his custom Lost night at Wheat Street Church the They prefer some more “respectable” I s ,"ph circumstances, told him to go ss discussed I mode of making a living—an easier out and bring in a switch. Tlieboyprcs- A Zulu With a Taxte for Bomanca. Tho Battle of the Cabinet. The Washington correspondent of the Courier-Journal explains at length the struggle now going on between the two Republican factions for the control of Garfield’s cabinet. Usikali, a Zulu with a forbidding face but an amiable disposition, capers around in Bunnell's museum in very scam at tire. He says be fa one of the Zulu party who killed the Prince Imperial. A Trib une reporter saw him recently in all hfa native loveliness. Usikali wore little i Mr. Blaine is to m . bouquets in bis ears, his dusky arms were lbat lg "* “! toM f. U>a C8binet .' adorned with bracelets, aud his head was , 8eUIed “J 0 "' 1 Viestion. He has encased in a foathery gear that baffles de- deci( led to take the office of aecretary of scription. His chocolate-colored skin state. The struggle, however, between the two wings of the stalwarts has not shone with a high polish; and equipped with sh’eld and spear be was altogether a very singular object. With the aid of William Stone, an Interpreter, who says he lived seventeen years in Natal, on the borders of Zululand, the reporter con versed with the warrior. Usikall’s story was told with many grimaces and contortions. Jjle said he was out skirmishing with a party of Zulus when the leaders came upon the Prince and Ids men. The Prince’s horse shied, come to an end. Thus far tba Blaine men are triumphant; their leader has won the firet battle by hlntself. Taking a cabinet position, with hfa recognized ability and liis weli-knof n influence over men, it is fair to presume that he will dictate the atmplexion of the rest ofthe cabinet; still he has not everythin- nfa own way. Although the Grant men and he was thrown from his seat. On liis fHahlenprl ,t, ,fa r . m ? n ara badly remounting Chief Us I hay o killed 1dm. Tlfeyare’ sinl making ^VhHor^he treasury department. As would natural! v IlH hllimmPft flirt RlaSna •«». a . * Two of the Prince’s followers were also killed by the Zulus. Usikali says he wit nessed the affray from a short distance. The reporter’asked the Zulu, through the interpreter, if he might not as well confess to killing the Prince himself. Usikali replied mysleiiousiy that he wouldn’t say he killed hint if he did; but if he were in his own country he wouldn’t be afraid to admit it. The chief was en titled to the honor of the killing, and was ;iven the handsome clothes tliat the Prince wore. Nobody in the party knew a 'Gram ■jg.’S who the Prince was, although from hfa at- that ft wii^be ,inw?5f A 1wdl Z * u ,S« e8t tire he was sunnosed to lie an Imnmtant I. • . “ . UIllv 13L I° r the admitiistra- be supposed, the Blaine man are bent upon keeping the Grant men out of those Cabi net offices which command large patron age. They have singled out throe places, any two of which can be safely given to the Grant elemeut.- These three places are tho war and navy departments and the attorney generalship. The trouble about the last-named office fa, that it U about impossible to name a lawyer distinguished enough to be attornoy general who fa also tire he was supposed to be an important I ^“ 0 “a t ‘o anJJohuto‘n^nfni 11 , 8 adm!,,i «ra- 2222* H —• achW8Srippedop *°ISS^StSt used on the trial in answer to interroga- I I h® administration of the btate for the tones, and before the second trial the | P 8 *? *, br f 8 ^ cars ao3t * ess ‘-hail any witness died, aud her answers to such iu- J?^ od tW , 8 -f 8 ^f 0r »ty years. He terrogatories were again introduced, the ?Jf? sa ? 3; i >‘-' era ' “ftlie Mates of the affidavit was inadmissible for tlie purpose I ^“ioa have created, with most satisfactory of showing contradictory statements and I Y** 11 i?’*?? ,nmiss , ons charged with the of explaining her testimony. investigation and regulation of freight and 3. Where, upon the trial of a compli- £“ ea * er «*S» of their railroads, and I cated equity caus-*, distinct issues of fact I re f°? u,,en jJ lba J - create a like com- •».“»»•'"■»'awlS’SSSXJ" 1 b “a’L» t SSS,S?S!S f»?s»» i»««.VSalSK- I clerks, with a constaut and steady de- , **““)• „ ,, , The Sociam.E Boorpiov—An Afri raand for their services, and yet it fa rare I 8a >d Mr. Stotldard,with a gentle, can traveler, speakiu-of H e ‘•cornions I that wo bear of a J° un o man who ha3 I ““PASS'onate iutonatioiij 'fatrike me.” there, says: 2TdurinK th4e Tr I starled in lbl ' regular way to learn a I ^'““^h'* 89 ". "ho had already bc- inouths they haunted Sur tents so tlmv L 1 r acle; few of them are ready or willing to f’V 1110 ut jh ul tou his o»ui jacket, opened did our thouslIS Thelr btJdles’^re Z P 8110 bo,d « folloW in ‘ho footsteps of il- ®°“ u ‘ ^,“ d ‘ho whole school broad and almost as full as a finzer* their I lu strious men, learn a trade, and after- J \ n 8 Peeo»iless amazemetit. Mr. fangs as broad and plum? wards if tbc y can - m * ke themselves rich, X repeslal Ins order. He small crawfishes, and 1 tisuailv measured iu,lu ential and good citizens. Parents, J* 8 . 808 , 1 ** 880 , ll ¥ “J) e . lv se ‘ of s,i ut- with their snake of a tail fronulireo to five 1001 we foar » do not look upon these things J^ 8 . beginning to work. “Borne one,” ho Inches. They found out almost everv in tbelr Proper »«ht. There is nothiiTg r^.^'^y-^ome one must suffer for and we found them usuallv when st-m’ I mor<! elevating or ennobling than labor; I ‘i 18 Infraction of the rules. ^ i will suffer ing in the morning under ^be nicka-ec" !10tbi,1 g fa a better recommendation than 8bast se .! nen ‘ 1 . tl 1 3 ,°, ur st cad. The teacher saddles t-Sre I ffi ei 88 ,'! «*• I £f£B& 1. That a claim 1-as been filed to ner- I bly at )ts las ‘ le guiar SMsion providing for nalty levied on under a mortgage fi.^., 8 ““J 1 i m8nt ,® f L i lu Stat0 1 d “ bt ’ lbal bil * and the property found subject, does not I '[“‘J 1 ® ?J" 1 ! l h ut ,“, a concessions ou prevent tlie claimant’s filing an affidavit I tbe - part °(‘l >0 bondholders, railroad com- ot illegality to the execution presenting ?i 8 r!^l t and i tb 4 e ,® lat ?l a } ld was adopted by issues other than those passed upon in the j 118 ^, enera . Assembly iu a spirit of corn- claim case. I promise. I gave that bill my approval. I 2. Tbe affidavit, which is the basis of 8 ‘»I b«l*0vo that any settlement to be fair, m?st dfacll^Thaf tim defend an t °reffifes **'^^roiST^uTprindplesTf tected"by a" ^feague^a ^cke" “ Xn- I sctwork a " d ke P‘ constantly at it. “ j J—t gssvsy; upon which public credit can be built, uiug the ground to see whether'any were con ' mcr c ial sale; when we shall be able to bettercoomt andrat Ablmor s'Jrire’" » 1 -• about. My servant more than once turn- n > ake a ''>‘hing at borne from a pinup to b0 “' }r &» °-»‘ a «d gel a bigger switch?” ed tliem out of my bed, usuallv before I i l ! oco T‘,l v . e: " hen Southern intellect and The teacher softly told him he might do turned in, but once at least from under I , or sha l l b .® e 'l ual t0 evcr y emergency; so it he wished, and Samuel Johnson went my pillow immediatelv after I bad ‘hen we shall be able to live within our- °u‘ and was gone ten minutes. When he risen. A special short pair of tou» how-1 so } vcs and he really independent. This fa 1 returned the school smiled. He carried ever, was at these times aiwavs with Vnv a levcr mora powerftal than politics. Shalt 1" hfa hand a switch that looked like a ready sereant, m.d ho ?s?d ^rimlv to w u U£e it! ' I ba ‘’ s ‘he question. Kuss.an peace commission. It was about exhibit lo us with a grin, while we were — EEaSS l ? n ,?' “k !i‘ Ch , and ‘hree-quar- at table, any remarkable specimen which The New York canals, for tho fiscal , k a 5 ‘ bl “, buU » and nas hmber atnl fe£ PI Tte‘smallo^t’idTeudlr ’ Septera , ber 3 °> 18 f’ PaI<i d0 ' V,1 <t8 ‘he PMnL^The faiy’s ftccshon" with narrow fan-s of -all and blle°yel-1 t ie i> ta ‘e treasury the sum of $2,091,979,1 with a bright glow of conscientious satis- low—which warns us when seen in the tbeir "’ orkln 3 expenses during tho same faction as he balanced the. switch and ribs of deleterious mushrooms and iu the period being $1,500,370. The shipments dr S' r v . bis bard muscular hands. flowers of poisonous plants—I found to be I 0 f grain from Buffalo durin- the year a -ms ro ' dedb, ? more numerous on the main stream mull f-® 3 - inenhe said, with a sad, sweet in the Delta of tho Nile. These crawl £8RS8? , * d 72,000,000 bushels, being 18,- look at tho culprit, “Nowstrike me.” with tail curled up ?n all reasons When , tban Samuel Johnsondidnotactin greedy and wo asked our Nubian frienda about the I F > ? a thaa hU878, the ahl]Knaote ft>r this | unteamly haste. He conducted himself, mansiaughtering power of the dark, hard a “°. r y ear being in excess of those of atiy 11 ike a boy who had a painful duty to par- ones, we got the indirect answer that they £!S?{? U lr P8l ii 0< E JF 1 ? a S5 rc gate of ship-1 farm, hut impelled by conscientious r will kill a camel. y “J" 18 a11 S0 P rt3 by , lbo r ““ al8 . was lives to perform it thoroughly. He pul I 0,402,290 tons, of which l,oC7,744 tons I off his jacket: he rolled un Ids dsami ........ a , — w - ——. mm wmimvu • s VUV I UqJI.I1 j IUU GUUUUU5 written contract by fraud, accident or I i.i, v . nr i. nn T?, r .. r , . mistake, tho latter will be taken as cover- ??’ ““ T ™ **** * ing the entire agreement between the I - * roni r « c ^ ar “* 3ta . nce y° u seethe giant parties, and the demurrer to the proceed-1 forn ^ oilhQ pyramids, as if they were ing was properly sustained. I re 3 u i a rly crystallized mountains, which I the ever-creating nature lias called forth EJenQcItl «... Ewlw.ta. | S3 £ SSl offW When . puich^S-nt,««•„ S,SKSeSttS >» <"-• “ *?- tom.hmeut ,Hl. ot .ho “no",.I o,.d“ S mlnistrator, and he is subsequently I era W orld. Perfectly adjusted to the car- ejeccert by the defendant in D. fa. because I diuat points of tho horizon, they differ in mm execution, I breadLli and height, as is shown by the ■ ^ 8 bil ®, in e q" l ‘y I measurements of the three oldest, as fol- against the holder of a second execution, low3 . j. The PyramId of khufa- to which tho money was applied, tho de- J height, 430.75 feet; breadth, 746 feet. 2. fendant In execution and the sheriff for Py ran iid of Khafra—height, 447-5 feet, the purpose of compelling them to reftind breadth, 060-75 feet. 3. Pyramid of Med- the amounts they respectively received of kara—height, 203 feet; breadth, 352-78 the proceeds ofthe sale, bv simply alleg-I f eet> Ing fraud and co.lusion in withdrawing The construction of these rononnous l ?°_,2. de f d ’ **•‘ rom , ‘ho hands of the I mosses has long been an -insoluble mys- sbenff prior to the saio thus resu tmg in tery, but later generations have succeeded a sale under the junior process, which was i„ solving the problem. Accotding to vn '' , 1 their ancient usa-es and customs, the n ....... „ „ . . , Egyptiaus, while they still sojourned in Branch & Smith vs. Carswell, trustee. I health auu spirits, were ever mindful to Motion, from Jefier&n. (turn their looks to the regiou where the Where complaint was brought against I departing Ra took leave of life, where the C, trustee for T, aud the only allegation d oor ofthe grave opened, where tho body, as to the nature of tho claim was “that we n concealed, at length, found rest, to this is a debt for which said trust estate is rfse ogain to a new existence, alter an liable, the articles contained in said ac- appointed time oflong, long years, while count being furnished to and used by said lhe soul, though bound to the body, was _ s* . 1 u vwwv* *“ ouwi* a ucuci| lb ft tO vUc year 1S74, that r was a life benehw.ary I custom betimes to dig the grave in tho under said trust, and that tho articles fornl 0 f a deep shaft iu the rock, and were furnished her through her trustee, a bo Ve the eternal dwelling to raise a su- C, to enable her to make a crop on her I perstructure of sacrificial chambers some- life estate, and a verdict was rendered | Limes in a hall, sometimes several apart- against defendant for $547.79, with Inter-1 ments, and to adorn them richly with col- est and cost, and judgment entered aceor- I ored writings and painted sculptures, as dingly. ! was becoming a house ol pleasure andjoy. Held, that the court will not, on mo- The king began his work from hfa acces- tions ofplalntifls, set aside the verdict I sion. As soon as he mounted the throne, aud judgment, aud reinstate tho case on I the sovereign gave orders to a nobleman, diet for the claimant, reserving dower for the widow and requiring her to deliver up the deed for cancellation. Held, that the verdict was contrary to law, and inconsistent within itself. And further the widow neither was nor could have been made a party so as to litigate •couccming her title on the trial ofthe claim case between the administrator and tho claimant. J the well constructed and finished interior A touhq lady in Friuighar, Minnesota, formed the kiog’s eternal dwelling, with who was made a convert to the Baptist I hi* stone sarcophagus lying on tbe rocky faith, was led to the chilly waters of the ^oor. Let us suppose that this first bulld- AVaterman to be baptized just after the in _ was finished w hile the Pharaoh still holidays. The water had scarcely moist- I | a tl, a bright sunlight. A second cued her stockings before she nervously j covering was added, stone by stone, ou snatched her hand from that of the elder lbe outside of the kerne); a third to this who was leading her and exclaimed: “It’s I gecond, and to this even a fourth; and the too cold; I’ll wait till spring.” I mass of the giant building grew greater | A curious hook in P^Tertbe Seers, administrator, J^Odell. Injunc- ^ii^a^Examinatte? of the Alteged I S^rt^aS^t h^°stonTO r\nl iCt .?" S ^ t ®. tb ®r whSIE “bed like glass, and fitted accurately into the angles of the steps, covered the vast mass ofthe sepulcher, representing a gi gantic triangle ou each of its four faces. More thau seventy such pyramids once rose on the margin oi the desert, each tell- A /iV' J i D ! fro , II !,? a l I - , . . , Lianna OI vjueen v iciona w too iu.u.™ Widow fi ed her hill alleging that her of David of t h Q Reasons for Fixing r, b - dh r dl , ak ? n a , , !°m 8 ‘oed for herself t h e End of tbe World in 1882. ana cliild; tliat after his death liis admin- , strator entered on the laud, sold tbe Mr. Tilden must bo going back on his and applied for leave to sell the ags. He fa said to look ten years younger ana, that he was Insolvent; she prayed than he did two years ago. _ w ■ | pulled , , off his jacket; he rolled up liis sleeves; he Biscuit for Houses.—The London wer p products of the lorcst, 11,013 tons I spat ou hfa hands and took a two-haudod News says a singular experiment is at | products of animals, S^it.^Oltuns vegela-1 grasp on tho switch. Twice he chanced present under trial in the French army. I h* 0 fo °d, 278,200 manufactures, 35o,-lJ 1 the position of his feet to get a beuer The Minister of War, anxious to reduce ‘°" 8l ? e |' c handtsc, 659,151 tons coal and I brace. Then he drew a long, deep breath, flw* Vinllr nf rtrAi'iaiAii* f a im j .i.._ I q03.i)i‘,6 tons misonllanonns ifloti I .. i « .« .... * sss-jffjjaa afstras I ss s?*s sr s&^ssn I'! ». m minister diieots all the details, and ordere uusueis, or -ra per traiis , )!re(1 that a commission composed of four offi-1 “ nt y came by canal, and during the perl- | j^eed, aft cers and a veterinary surgeon shouh MH f * **"" * that tlie instructions are completely re^iT’ t b8ir p,0sre “ a ' ld I ftiess^savs tlut “U^larae I ,ocal:ty ’ Stoddard is not teaching results. The selected horses are to be in ess, saysinat ilia large tonnage move- anvw ) lere t hi 3 summer Haloid li'slaid- tveighed and measured across tho shoul- ,nen ‘ of the past season lias been due to , d y that hen?etolrest.andtliecood- ders before the experiment commences, sev ? raI fortnitous circumstauces. The hearted old i??MtUatfoc commi tef d and two other squadrons ofcavaliy 3|*«l y openi«* of lake and canal naviga- d 8 d i S cOTer aC ^r stolar.t a battery of artillery are to be selected, ‘ io "> our hountcoia harvests and the d and even went to bed bv lean?n- composed as nearly as can bo of animals ^ «P° rt demand, all contributed to f “ 8 ‘° t h e mant e-i ec? of tho same weight and size. The latter makethopastycar one of the golden Tb™ P are to be placed under the war allowance yc *«- Gov. Cornell proposes to contln-1 ,u 1118 room ’ ’ tYgw xorK lvne *‘ of fodder, and both at once subjected to ue ‘ be80 “golden years” by making the — — - 1 canals practically free. the estimated average fatigues of a cam paign. During twelve days tlie experi ments will be followed out, while the offi cers charged with its conduct will con- A Cup of Tea. In a recent lecture by Mr. G. R. Twee- dle, F. O. S., London, on “A Gap of Patrick Henry’j great-grandson, in the I Tea,” the speaker divided hfa subject into person of W. H. Goodwell, now berates | fo ,lr sections—the tea, the water, the milk transition or preparation for the change. The biscuits are to be broken np, hut not moistened, and the horses are to be wa tered before each meal. principal compo nents of tea were theiue aud tlie essential Mrs. Garfield having sent a dozen bar-1 OR of tannin, which latter possessed astrin- rels of cider to market the other day, the I S en ‘ properties. He Informed the au- l’hiladelphla Press warns her that the { dience that the best time to take tea was temperance people will bo after her. But I about three hours after dinner or any oth- A Sad Christmas ix England A fa was for vinegar, you know. I heavy meal, and deprecated in the dispatch from Dublin to tho Times says: I strongest terms the excess to which tea “It is generally said that so dull and sad One Recipe for Happiness.—Curtis dnnhmg fa carried "by some people, as- a Christmas has never been experienced Andrews, living in Caroliuo county, Mis. setting that such a practice iuduced a hero. Sullen depression marks the spirit Js now eighty-two years old. His wlfed nervous disorganization and impeded di- of the people, and traders who have for I nearly tlio samo age, and they have lived I g’stion., some time been feeling very acutely the together for sixty years. Their life has I He showed that tho sole difference be- effects of the disturbed state ofthe coun- been plain and laborious, but their faces I ‘ween black and green tea was one of try are beginning to exhibit signs of great wear a look of smiling content. Wnen preparation, and that both kinds could bo embarrassment. But tho agitation which j asked the secret of hfa happiness, Andrews I obtained from the leaves of the same fa paralyzing trade, putting capital to flight replied: “Well, sir, I have always no-1 plant- After asserting that the adultera- and poisoning commercial life still ex-1 ticed that there fa more trouble be- j ‘*° n of tea had very much decreased of tends its deadly influence, while tho suf- j tween man and wife over making I late years, which the tea-drinking public ferers look on its progress In helpless dfa- the fire In the morning than anything will be glad to know, the lecturer pro- mav.” I e ise. If they can get aloug smoothly I eeeded to treat of the various kinds of w about that everythin else fa smooth. My shrubs grown In different paits of tlie a, , , r wife and I wont to housekeeping together world and the countries where tlie dif- Alr. Waldo M. Glsflin, a manufacturer of i n our log cabin nigh fifty years zgo. We 1 fereut kinds of teas were consumed, the Philadelphia, gives this written testirnony have got only one fireplace, but that’s a | lecturer came to the consideration of to tho value of Compound Oxygen: “Two b ig one. When wo moved in I said to I ‘he milk, its value as a nutritive agent, years ago 1 was sick wi.h what was called her: ‘Sally, I’ll make the fire and I’ll ’tend 4! *d, referring to Its adulteration, he made Consumption. I was too sick lo attend to tQ f gQ ado that fire, and it's been I ‘he astouudiug assertion that iu London business—even lo write a letter. My pby- I burning ever since. For nigh fifty ears I »fone eveiy year no less than X70,000 sician got discouraged, and took me al- I p Te covered that fire before gaing t^bed, were spent on water which was sold as most by force to your office. I began to I ^jj d P y a fixed it up in the morning. I’ve j milk. Passing on to regard the sugar, improve very soon, so that all my friends | na ye|. had any matches in the house, and j ‘h® lecturer denied the common error that were surprised. In two months I was there are neTer any su ]ph ur sme lUi in the ,u 3»/ was Iqjunous to to the teeth, bring- ableto resume business, Increasing In household, while that fire burns, sir, I in S forward as an example the negroes ot weight, strength and comfort. there is peace in Curtis Andrews’ home.'* | Jamaica, who, be said, though they after delth aud his throat cut, in acror- LZl to TSS ° r f 8ny e, ?™ eD ‘ •lance with a cheerful Zulu custom. Usi- 1 tbo re ‘® lccUon ° r ^ooral Gar- kali illustrated the operation by cesticula- Th« rti.i„ a „i ... , . lion, exploding hfa words violently in an favor keeuin? ’ - W,l Ji l8 .* der » extravagant waste of language. His ?faht P S ^ ln tb f, *n*Umcr ofler to operate on the reporter tbevsav that .ft ^ U * e ii he f do ‘ hl8 to make hfa meaning clearer was m ,Li f should give them gently hut firmly declined. Usikali con- u Ua r fleIti tinued by saying tliat tho chief had given , le ii thinkthatlit win^r i de,but !. ba , fl,aine orders to kill every thing that came in their to see u m ihil* “ a J* 5 m° u S ht way, whether ineu or animals. 'Vhan Jhe m’u 118 ^ the Prince’s party approached the Zulus i.fa’ ailvamaire d 'n,« e M^ b i nks T 1 1 bo 10 sprang from ambush and attacked htm. •temoctare The Prince fought bravely and killed one f u ? 6 “ , out ° f of ids assailants. Usikali said that he was Jrr ii^ ’in. i d , in , terlor , d8 * captured by the English troops, and after of i b ,T J 8 » his release lie was taken to England and £2h!?JLSL2S2*2: G ? rfla [ d , how- exhibited at the Westminster Iquarimu ^onle ™ r . eco Sni« the Grant and then brought to America. Ou uk- itmu ^,'~?, w , an ‘ 8 do os Blaine tells ing hfa leave, the reporter was told by ii ( ! be ou ° bt ’ bu ‘ ls a question of conr- Usikall that the Zulus could “wipe out ti.« , ..... . the United States.—Xcw York Tribune. p0op L° insl8t tbat - ftV mint I have the treasury department. Theques- lion fa, can they get it, with Garfield’s Engluh Kisses. secretary of state opposing them ? Gar- Tlie women of England, says Polydore crowd ^Ivith^wo Virgil in the Parisian, not only salute i c ^ tn * Jt K > ,ltto gr their relations with a kiss, but all persons dare^do m v® W , 1 promiscuously; aud this ceremony ti.ey b^ bv Bfaine m’l ! 1 £ ba w l1 repeat, gently touching them with tlml 5.S .5!^.. PH?..*? «^8 lips, not only with grace, but without the dent mi confereicw betwe^GarfilldTud least Immodesty, fsuch, however, as are nubile m-»n who a 8Utt oi the blood-royal do not kiss their iafe- S'^ nl riors, but offer the back ofthe hand. 001 tn HrSmS^ M 5lS B> s«— , Men ‘°5* Erasmuses In'raptu^to a friend {£“ Faustus 8 ,” si?’ he^qffif pkuum whkb ,* P ^}“ tmen * you you .Si. yourself . SSljwJ ,«dU. Dmdalns. To mention to voti one arnornr I J insny tbiugs,here are uyuiphs oftlis lovc-li- t,..,. , r " 1 - T _ est looks,good-bumorcil, easy of acces3 and I ‘ tC!x Velt Nervous.—The Bismarck Vert wto.n you would prefer even to your I Courier-Journal says the Czar Alexander favorite tnuses. Here also prevails a j is erroneously supposed to lead the most custom never enough to bo commended, painful existence of anv “boss” lu Eurone tbat whenever you come every one re- .. , . ceives you witli a kiss, and when you take tn . accol n ‘ °f ‘h- Nihilistic plotter*, but your leave every one gives you a kiss; I Prince Bismarck travels an equally thorny when you return, kisses again meet you. way, as appears from 'the following ex- If anyqno leaves you .hey leave you with tract from a foreign letter: • a kiss; in short, wherever you go, kisses , , , * , everywhere about; which, my Faustus, I Uelays of his body-gu*rd of fourteen did you ouce taste how very sweet and I ™ etl ? r ® "’“h him day aud night, while bow very fragrant they are, you would Mastiff which came so near not, like 8olon, wish for ten years I ‘‘“.S, Goifachakoff is seldom from bia of exile in England, hut would de- lna f le Ef, 8lt t?* Friedriehruhe, the country sue there to spend the whole ofl ?“* GcrmaziChanceBpr, has been your life.” Autonio Perez, secretary ‘ Dl eluded iu those places which nave been to tlie embassy from Philip H of i dec ^l a red in a ‘state of siege.’ All atran- Spain, writes thus to the Earl of Essex: “I I ® ers ,. j 3° a PP roac h that locality are have this day, according to the custom of trac ^ ed by spies, and often harmless citi- your country, kissed, at an entertainment, zeil , s are coud ucted to the railway Motion seven females, all of them accomplished in ?, requested not to approach too near to mind and beautiful iu person.” Dr. Fieri- Chancellor. When he fa iu Berlin us Winsemius', historiographer to their “‘sntarck has, besides, twelve of the ablest mo _ mightinesses the States or Friezlar.d, in I n 'f] oftbe secret police to care for hi* his CUronijk tan. Freislandt, printed In “W* khn }° promenade in 1602, informs us that the pleasant custom I P ul, “ c he has the use of one ot the royal was utterly unpracticed and unknown in I Screens, "here he daily rides of walks, Euglaud (just as ft is this day iu New fccompanied by hfa guards. Over-work Zealand, where sweethearts ouly know lHS u ‘ terI )' unstrung his nerves, and often how to touch noses when they wish to l>e ?’.* , ? urd suspicion of some plot against kind) until the fair Princess Rouix, the b,s hfo so haunts him that sleep is im- daughter of King Uengist of Friezlaud, P° 33 ,‘ ble * Cate in one night of last Octo- “pressed the beaker with her link I ns’’ hefbo was seized with tbe suspicion that (little lips) and saluted the amorous j 0 . mo "' ou , be Hartmann bad placed Vortigcru with a huslen (little kiss). dy ‘ n h“ railway carriage. In- > structions were immediately sent to the 2-ip; worthy wifo of forty years s.anding, and , u i( e waj found, however, aud sleep then whose life was not all made of sunshine eame to the anxious Chancellor.” aud peace, gave the following iiuoresstve t advice to a newly-married pair of her ac- The Mav ivn n! nTDI . quaintance. The advice fa so good and 1IIE Bu0TH “ “ TH * Co well suited to all married people, as well n*® 1, —* he Baltimore Sun’s Washington as tliose entering that state, that wo here correspondent says: publish it lor tbe benefit of such persons: uti,. n.., c „ . Preserve sacred the privacies of your L n ^ Sena ‘°^, B ™ ce » vii house, your married state *nd your lbe Cabinet of heart. Let no father, mother, sister or p 8 ”, lf d h t ^‘ ad8 ,. t °^ brother ever presume to come between J . • 8 “ d b ? ‘ bil ^ t, w f B you or share the joy or sorrow thatbe- b !‘ tl8 "K > r‘^ f “ *5^* tb V. u b *^ long to you alone. With mutual help Hf?. fo .^,^* d>ctl< y' “ h* 8 ****" build your quiet world, not allowing I , Bru « Uiot hfa your dearest friend to be the confidant of fn.vlfu 10 a ‘ be . “binet aught that becomes your domestic 'peace. J i b ° ,?° tub and in * Let raomeuts of alienation, if they''occur, J“^. tb , e fifl 17 c tb8r f ** 8 ste P be healed at once. Never, no never, 8 ^"‘hly. Senator Brue* speak of it outside, but to each other con- I ' 111 ! 03 lb . 3 vei 7 unm J l n y "’j tf ‘ are ; that he fess, aud all will come out right. Never b *f *“”5 J 1 p i{P c * fe ’, “ d . n *IS r let the morrow's sun still find youatva- y8t !* reilta ^?! b8 '^l be , wa * tovited. He riauce. Renew and renew your vow; it W13b ff however, between will do you good, and thereby your minds ®q ua h*y beforo the law and tocial equali- will grow together, contented in that love ‘ y ' ,J‘‘* a s '“f ular / ac ‘> “ d Illustrate* which is strouger than death, aud you will tb J. b ^ b ^“•‘or Bruce, that a become truly one. uffjoi ity of tbe Mississippi delegation say J 1 they would prefer Bruce in the cabinet to any white Republican from tbat State. Senator Lamar fa reported as saying that As this ques.iou is frequently asked, we I tbe white people of his State would rather will simply say tliat she fa a lady who for see Bmce in the cabinet than any white upwards of thirty years has untiringly de-j Republican in all Mississippi. Bruce Who to Mrs. Wlaslow T If there be any disease about me for the last year there fa no evidence of It.” Full information about tbe new Testament for AWsidsi aonalMrioa . Those who contemplate speculating in Chronic Diseases will be found in our I stocks will do well to correspond with the Treatise ou Compound Oxygen, which fa reputable and trustworthy house of John were the greatest eaters of susar in the world, were proverbial for their’beautiful teeth. |5slsisiWtlnwTErlatoa,E. P.. Drs. "Starkey A Palen, 1109 I A.*Dodge A Co., No.12 Wall Street,New I Baltimore, writes: “1 have used Coldou’s 1111 Girard Street, Philadelphia, Pa. York. This firm have the reputation of Liebig's Liquid Extract of Beef iu my giving unusually sound advice to tbeir j practice. In consumption, debility, weak- out-of-town customers, many of whom j ness, anemia, chlorosis, etc., it cannot be Six inches uf rain and snow in Texas have reaped large returns from small in-. surpassed.” Sold by all druggists and la notable. ' \ vestments. 1 grocers. voted her time and talents as a female physician and nurse, principally among children. She lias especially studied the constitution aud wants ol this numerous class, and, as a result of this effort and practical knowledge, obtained in a life time spent as a nurse and physician, she has compounded a soothing syrup for chil dren teething, it operates like magic- giving rest and health, aud fa moreover sure to regulate tlie bowels. In conse quent of this article Mrs. Winslow fa be coming world renowned as a benefactor of her race; cbiiureu .certainly do rise up and bless her; especially is this the case in this city. Vast quantities of the sooth ing syrup are dally sold and used here. We thiuk Mr*. Winslow has immortalized her Dame by this invaluable article, and we sincerely believe thousands of children have been saved from au early grave by its timely use, and that millions yet un born will share its benefits aud uuite in calling her blessed. No mother lias dis charged her duty to her suffering little onr, in our opinion, until she has given it the benefit of Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Synip. Try it, mother, try it now.—La dies’ Visitor, New York City. Sold by all druggists. 25 cents a bottle, tf (2) Texas papers are speaking of the late “George Eliot” as a “very gifted, but very immoral man.” stands well, aud is on good terms with all the Democrats iu tbe delegation.” Garfield has given tbe colored people a promise that shall be remembered, and tf hb is going to shade bis cabinet a little he certainly could get no better man than Bruce, ot Mississippi. What Becomes of Bora.—Senator Ingalls, of Kansas, put a whole volume of truth into a few seutences when he said iu the Senate, duriug tbe discussion ofthe educational bill, "that tbe sickly colleges scattered around the land w«re responsi ble tor the very large number offaiinrea in life. Boys had been taken from the plow, plane and anvil, and sent to tbe greet cities to be poor lawyers, miserable doctors and wretched ministers, until, failing in tiiess pursuits, they degenerate into lightning-rod peddlers and book agents, to finalip disappear beneath Use eaath they had encumbereA.IttaP above ft.” “For several yean I have Liver. A year tap I tried, as ment, Tutt’s PiUa, and was surprised to find that they. acqattBfahed oil the re- sulqtefcalomel witSEmr'onj of its bad efieMr. X nu ahnf^a dd- unbeliever In patent medi lines, bat am now convinced that there fa some good in Nazareth,” £. H. Gray, Augusta, G*.