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TIE BLACKSHIAR NEWS.
PUBLISHED WEEKLY BY
E. Z. BYED,
EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR,
BLACKSHEAR, GJA.
INSCRIPTION, $1.00 P^R YEAR.
Special Rates to Advertisers on application.
<X PROFESSIONAL CARDS.
R. PHILLIPS, *
t i ATTORNEY AT LAW,
au£4-tf Blackshear, Ga.
A. K COCHRAN,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Blackshear, Qa.
Praetiee regularly in tbe counties composing
the Brunswick Circuit and in the District aud
Circuit courts of the United .States at Savannah
or the Southern District of Georgia. my!6-6:n
Q B. MABRY,
ATTORNEY AT LAW, .
Brunswick, Ga.
Practice regularly in the counties of Glynn
Pierce, Ware, Wayne, Camden, Coffee, Appling and
of tho Brunswick Circuit, and Tel I air,
ot the Oconee Circuit. augl-tf
s. W. HITCH,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Blackshear, Ga. ,
Practice regularly in tho Brunswick Circuit
aug4-tf
A> . ESTES, JR.,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Blackshear, Pierce Co., Ga.
Practice regularly in the Brunswick Circuit,
I'eb28-ly
COUNTY DIRECTORY.
Ordinary.— A. J. Strickland. 4
Clerk.—J. W. Strickland.
Sheriff. —E. Z. Byrd.
County Treasurer.— B. D. Brantley.
County Surveyor. —Davis Thornton.
Tax Receiver.— John J. Smith.
Tax Collector.— Alfred Davis.
COUBT CALENDER.
Clinch County.— First Mondays in March
and October.
Appxuno County.—S econd Mondays in March
and October.
Wayne County.— Third Mondays in March
and October.
Pierce County.—F ourth Mondays in March
and October.
Ware County.— First Mondays in April and
November.
Coffee County.—F irst Tuesday after second
Monday in April and November.
Charlton County.— First Tuesday after
third Monday in April and November.
Camden County.— Fourth Mondays in April
and November.
Gi.ynn County.—C ommencing on the first
Monday in May and December, and to continue
two weeks, or so long as the business may
require. M. L. Mershon, Judge, Brunswick, Ga., ami
G. B. Mabry, Solicitor-General, Bniuswick. Ga.
TOWN DIREC TORY._
_
Mayor.— Wm. B. Phillips.
Aldermen.—D r. C. H. Smith, T. J. Fuller,
J. M. Shaw ancj J. W. Strickland.
SECRET SOCIETIES. .
A blackshear Regular lodge no. 270, f. this & lodge a. at.
communications of
will tie held on the first and third Fri¬
day nights in each month.
C. T. Latimer, W. M.
A. J. Strickland, Secretary. aug-tf
PHYSICIANS.
J~^R A. M. MOORE,
PRACTICING PHYSICIAN,
Blackshear, Ga.
Call* promptly attended to day or night.
aug4-tf_
lyjEDICAL AND SUBGICAL NOTICE.
DR. C. H. SMITH
Offers his professional services to the citizens
of Pierce and adjoining counties.
Blackshear, Ga., March 1, 1880-tf.
DENTIST.
|^R. pr WM. NOBLE,
53 b
DENTIST,
Blackshear, Ga.
Office os Maine street, opposite Postoffice.
jy28r«f
_
MARBLE WORKS
JOHN B
MARBUE AND STONE WOBKR
Monument*, Tombs, Headstones, etc. Esti¬
mates lurnDfied on application for all kind* of
Cemetery Work.
205 and 207 Broughton Street,
jy23-fcn Savannah, Qa.
HOTEL.
JESUP HOUSE,
T. P. LITTLEFIELD, Proprietor,
ft Jeanp, Ga,
lffhe attention of the traveling public is
m*et*d ^ytotei. to the inducement* offered them by
Bs, per day...,....,,,,..,, II S8S8
■e Meal*.................
Be M*tilth • • • »
Mo<.n> Ae Week,,.,,.,,.,,,.,,.,
discount Vi fywihta.
Blackshear News.
E. Z. BYED, Editor and Proprietor.
VOL. IV.
A FETE OF BLOOD.
The Barbarous Festival of the Shirte Salat
sailn i cl Mussett at Cairo.
A Cairo, Egypt, correspondent of the
Philadelphia Times writes : I have just
come from what proved to i>e one of
the most grotesquely horrible sights it
has ever been my fortune to visit. On
learning that the ..fete* of the Shirte
Saint Saidna el HuJaen would be cele¬
brated in the mosque bearing his name,
I procured the services of a Greek drago
man at he hotel and then bent my
steps m the direction of the Egyptian
quarter of Cairo. The Saint Saidna e
Hussen, whose fete we saw, is consid¬
ered by the Sbirte to be as great, if not
greater, than the prophet, and it was
owing to this that the coming cere¬
monies promised to be most interesting.
The chanting of the devotees became
more distinct, and we see red banners
with Arabic characters worked in gold
upou them. The crowd gets more and
more feverishly excited, »nd shouts of
“Allah” are heard resounding from
hoarse throats as the dervishes, now in
front of us, slowly pass ; those in the
front, naked to the waist, round which
is a loosely-bound white cloth, call gut
turally, though still musically on Hus
son ; they pass along, keep-ng time to
their shouts with violent -beating of
their breasts. Their hoarse cries, long,
disheveled and matted aureola, hair flying out.
in a sort of crini-form coupled
with the metallic ling of their chests,
as they give blow upon blow, is gro
tesque and almost fiendish in its wierd
ness. Behind them come men, who,
in a circle, made up of about fifty per¬
sons, puzzle us for a moment as to what
these red demons may be. Something
bright flashes through the air, and tho
fervid cjy of Husslen ! Hussen! Saidna
Hussen! rises with renewed fanatical
zeal in the air of the moonlit night.
The flash is caused by a long curved
cimeter, which, descending, divides
the flesh of another dervish, mak¬
ing the blood spurt and trickle
over his already gory body, which
shines and glances in a murderous
way, as the red light of tho braziers,
filled with charcoal, strike * upon it.
Thirty or fifty of these blood-beclot
ted children of Islam slowly passed by,
cutting and slashing each other with an
ardor, which even the police, strive
though they do, can hardly keep from
being mortal in its effects. They are
chanting “Hussen, Hussen, Saidna Hus¬
sen,” and opening efieh other’s veins
until their shoulders, arms aud loins
are streaming, and again uew;ly stream
with bright red blood of artery and
bluer blood of veins, their long hair
drips and trickles with gore, as violent¬
ly moving their heads, they hoarsely
cry to their prophet, and their white
teeth and partially shaved foreheads
gleam and almost scintillate as the blood
flows from the long red cuts.
There are Nubians among this pack of
mad fanatics, and the red blood on their
bodies, heads and necks, seems darker
as it flows over ebony skins, making
them look like demons in some blood
sacrifice qf ghouls. The bluish white
skins of some, perhaps more northern,
Moslem, with his forehead shaved.half
way up to the crown of his head, his
big black eyes that burn and blaze with
almost savage zeal, his white teeth and
curved nose, stand out in striking op¬
position to the other red, tawny and
black fanatics in this sanguinarily pious
dance. Blood streams from him as
from the rest, and his loins-encircling
white clcth is all encarmieed and be¬
smeared with clotting and half-coagula¬
ted blood.
Following this comes a sight at which
we can hardly suppress the cry of angry
pain and horror that struggles to our
lips. Picture it and think of it, ye
Christian mothers, who, with your lit¬
tle yellow-haired darlings at your knee,
have no thoughts save those of love and
care for the youngsters who prattle at
your sides, climb into your laps and
ask in their deliciously lisping baby
talk for “dcodies” or say “want to shee
wheels go round.” Picture it, I say
again, for here is, as well as my feeble
words can describe it, in all its hideous¬
ly horrid unnature a horse covered with
a flowing white mantle, whose blood¬
stained folds fall to the ground on eith¬
er side and gain new stains from the bed¬
raggling mud of the street, in whose
saddle is a little boy with half-shaved
head and tender little eyes, which have
now been gazing on the world for but
five years. His poor little face is hack
ed and cut, and blood trickles from
wounds in his forehead and face down
on to the white robe which he wears,
staimag and spotting it with the blood
of this poor infantile victim to the zeal
for Islam. »
In his hand he carries a cimeter, with
which he strikes bis forehead in a
mechanical, impotent sort of a way, the
blow being rarely bard enough to eaose
more tb»n a red mark. This poor little
••hap has ocen w ll trained in the pap¬
er t i.sd, which be toast play in this
blood/ natatnaliA. Hi* pale and chubby
BLACKSHEAR, GA.. APRIL 6, 1882.
little cheeks are very, very white, and
his eyes haye not that sparkling, rich,
bright and lovely black that you see in
the eyes of Moslem and Egyptian chil
dreu in this town of Cairo. They have
lost their light and the brave little naan,
wounds, and terror from h?s surround
cf ter-holdmg hV^r a nd° arm. At the end o this
fete of blood there will be no loving
mother to take her boy into her arms
and soothe and calm his poor scattered
senses, and dazed and terrified little
mind—no 1 She is sitting at home in
the harem, or, perhaps, is even gazing
on the sanguinary pageant from the
street, pluming and congratulating her
self that the child, who is flesh of her
flesh and blood of her blood, has thus
poured out some of herself in testimony anil
to the glorv aud truth of the one
only true religion.
Behind this blood-stained child come
more dervishes, nak«l to the waist,
though, thank goodness, not bloody.
I don’t think I could stand that again.
These are armed with bags filled with
bits of iron, each of which may weigh
from five to ten pounds. They call
hoarsely on Hussen, keeping time to
their sing-song, melodious shouts, by
blows with tho bags on their own anil
each other's bodiefi. A hideously fan
tastic company aro they, and as they
turn half round, as they go slowly
chanting, one wonders what it ail
amounts to, and marvels and is puzzled
at this display of religious zeal. These
close the pageant, and the shouting,
now falls thoroughly wrought-up, crowd
in behind and surges along, with
cries to Allah and the Prophet. Wa
wait a little while for the street to
"dear, and then start homewards with a
dazed feeling, as if we had been passing
through tho incidents of some horrid
nightmare.
Funeral of the First President Who
Died in Office.
During the illness of President Har¬
rison there were no telegraphic hallo
tins; tho telegraph then was but a
philosophic experiment; five years
wero yet to pass before the first practi¬
cal wire should be laid, Railroads
vere but ten years old; such a trip as
was planned and executed for Garfield
would have been, in Harrison’s time,
wholly impossible. Mail communica¬
tion was not one-third what it now is.
There were but twenty-six States. The
nation scarcely exceeded seventeen mil¬
lions. Yet the sorrow was as sincere
and tbe tokens as earnest and cordial
as those ihat are now witnessed. The
shock to the country was heightened by
the fact that Harnson was the first
President who had died in office. The
wheels of government had revolved for
fifty years without this check. The
people were unprepared for the event,
and were uncertain—nay, anxious—as
to its consequences. They had not the
assurance we enjoy that the political
system would bear the strain. As now,
bo then, everywhere were seen demon¬
strations of the national grief.
In Washington city nearly every
building boro tokens; the public build¬
ings were shrouded, the elegant dwell¬
ings wero heavily draped—even the
lowliest abodes bore some inexpensive
badges. Business was suspended. The
pageant was, for that era, very ceremo
nious. The procession was two miles
in length, and comprised the United
States troops stationed in and near
Washington, with many regiments from
other cities the general command of
Winfield Scott, besides numerous civic
societies and a vast body of civilians.
It was marshaled by officers in mourn
ing. The remains of the deceased
President were laid temporarily in the
congressional burying ground, the bur¬
ial service of the Episcopal church
being read by Itev. Mr. Hawley, and
military salutes fired, The car on
which the coffin was borne from the
cemetery is described in contempora¬
neous accounts as a splendid one, dec¬
orated with black plnmes and drawn
by six vbite horses. In July
the remains were transferred to their
permanent Bend, res’ing-place near North
upon a beautiful knoll rising
two hundred feet above the Ohio river.
In Australia.
The marriage laws among the natives
of Australia are very definite. Men and
women who carry the same irest, or
abstain from eating the same animal, or
plant, may not marry. Another restric
tion prevents marriage between rela
tiveson fhe mother’s side—that is, no
eon the can marry any girl who belongs to
same tribe as his mother, however
remote'? she io, roav be removed Th«J Chief*
may rnnr have huve as many wives as they UW like,
Lut subjects »mJy one. Girls are In*
trothed at a very early age, and as aw n
as tbe betrothal ceremony bt ower her
mother and aunt* mar. not *puak to the
lover.
Subscription, $1,00 per Year.
NO. 50.
FARM, GARDEN AMI HOUSEHOLD,
-
Carrots a* Foe* for Canto.
In Europe the carrot is grown to a
great extent for feeding to cattle in the
winter mouths. Boots of some kind are
^ 'S)°Zhels | «>ws says Vcre" he is
per
Carrots increase the flow of milk and
improve the appearance and quality of
butter. Beets are prefera.de to carrots
for increasing the flow of milk ; the
milk, however, which is produoed from
beets it not as good for butter. The
breeder mentioned above has found it
difficult to raise his calves on clear
Jersey miik, and advises the feeding of
that which has been bkimmed.
-
clover.
N - Griffin, at the Elmira Farmers’
Club, said*: “There is no substitute
for clover, so far as I know -nothing to
tak « place. It is better in its effect
0X1 lail( l 111411 any other forage plant. It
is that a good crop of clover—say
8Uch a crop as will yield two tons o.
cured hay lrom an acre—will leave an
e T lal weight of roots for tho soil. That
is likt ' a coat of manure. I am sorry to
hear that clover is falling into disrepute,
* or its renovating power is greater than
^at of any other plant. Lately clover
^ OP8 better than in a few years past, so
1 lu, P a we shall soon have all the old
measure of success. Many years ago the
farm « in Dutchess county used to give
lcr K° crops of timothy and they wero
tak « u away 1111,1 Those farms are
now exhausted-ruined because the
crops were taken off. But clover is
never all taken off when the roots aro
left -. Forty-five year? ago a great deal
timothy and was raised in Tompkins
county the land that produced it
rau Jewn under its production and the
occupants had to turn their attention to
clover. At first it was difficult to get
it established, but little by little under
its influence the lands grew better.
Farmers had to ditch their lands as the
first condition, then they used plaster,
and at last got fall crops of clover and
better crops of grain, for their lands
improved been through tried, clover. Hungarian
grass has but, like timothy,
when the crop is taken off nothing is
loft and the soil becomes poor. The
best crop is that which leaves most to
the soil, and that is what clover does.
I hope it will not lose its place in our
farming, for there is no other plant ho
beneficial in its effect.
Planting a Vlnevnrd.
The distance at which the vines may
be planted varies with the different va¬
rieties, the character cf the soil and the
mode of training. Most varieties have
a tendency to make more wood on light,
sandy, gravelly or loamy soils than on
elajs. Delaware Slow-growing and varieties, snob as
Catawba, may be planted
nearer together in the rows than strong
sorts like the Concord and Herbemont.
When the training is to be upon trel¬
lises, in any of the several modes, the
distance between the vines should be
greater than when the training is to be
on stakes in the serpentine or bow sys¬
tem. Many growers lay out all the rows
six feet apart, as this is a convenient
distance for cultivating and gives space
enough for man, horse and plough or
cultivator. With the rows six feet apart
they plant all strong-growing varieties
from eight to ten feet distant in the
rows, while Blow kinds are planted
about six feet apart. A rule given by
P. Barry is as follows : Bet strong-grow¬
ing sorts in loamy or rich soils, and to
be trained for trellis, ten or twelve feet
apart; on heavy clay soil reduce the
distance in the rows two feet Plant
varieties like Catawba and Iona eight
feet apart each way. Delaware and
other short-jointed varieties plant at six
feet in the rows, the rows eight feet.
Select good strong one or two year
old plants with plenty of strong, well
ripened roots that are smooth and firm
and have also well-ripened, short
jointed wood. Having * prepared the
soil for the reception of the plants ac~
cording to directions previously given,
make an excavation for each one eight
or ten inches deep in a slanting direc
tion and wide enough to admit the
spreading out of the roots. Raise a
small mound of well-pulverized earth
in the center and then lay in a plant
previously pruned with its tops and
roots shortened in, resting the lower
end on the mound of earth ; spread ont
the roots evenly to all sides and fill in
with well-pulverized earth, leaving the
upper bud above ground. Tne depth
to which the roots are cov. red should
never be less than four inches above the
upper or crown line, and if the position
ls a southern one, and the soil naturally
a^T’.I* 1 * wl11 he betu : r -
A Ul ? * ork * hou <l ** ,]oTih , wli, . ‘ n tLe
gronnd is in good condition ami dry
and mellow enough to bo worked in
among the roots.
__
HouM-ii(,i,t Him..
Enameled cloth makes a neat and
THE BLACKSHEAR NEWS.
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Three...... 00 OI
Fonr....... 00 ! *3 50
Eight...... oo; S oo
Sixteen.... 8
Transient advertisements il.00 per Aral ii>
eertion; 50 cents for esch subsequent one.
Special notices 10 cents each insertion
Bills due immediately after first insertion.
useful covering for the wide lower
shelf in the pantry where bread and
cake aie cut. It is useful also and
looks well on the kitchen table and
can be kept absolutely clean with little
trouble.
b Jr^Mm^in^areVade S th^in®
JSJE? crochet if‘some^lo^ anl
0 ,£j pen-work ^ pattern the width and
th £ yon ah , finish with a shell
ed a d draw throngh tll0
* r.noons oi any ooior
agreeable dentifrice for good
, 11 is ma<le from an ounce °f myrrh
in tino P°wder ant * a ./ lt ^ e powdered
Breen sage, mixed with two spoonful
0 “ one y* A druggist wi.l make
U P compound, and teeth should be
washed with it every night and
norniug.
Lentil Soup.— Mix a tablespoonf.il of
lentil flour and a teaspoonful of com
flour with a little milk till as thick as
cream. Boil three-quarters of a pint of
milk sweetened a little and flavored to
taste; pour this slowly on the flour and
milk, stirring meanwhile. Boil alto
gether for ten minutes, still stirring,
Add a whipped egg. This is a most
nourishing albuminous food and a good
substitute for beef tea.
Apples as Food.
From tho earliest ages apples have
been in use for too table as a dessert.
The historian Pliny tells us that tbe
Romans cultivated twenty-two varieties
of the apple. In these latter days we
probably possess over two thousand.
As an article of food, they rank with tho
pota' o, and, on account of tho variety
of ways in which they may be served,
they are fur preferable to the taste of
many persons; and, if families would
only substitute ripe, luscious apples for
pies, cakes, candies and preserved
fruits, thero would be much less sick¬
ness among the children, aud the saving
in this one Horn alone would purchase
many barrels of apples. They have an
excellent effect upon the whole physical
system, feeding the brain, as well as
adding to the flesh, and keeping the
blood pure ; also preventing constipa¬
tion and correcting a tendency to
acidity, and which produces rheumatism
neuralgia. They will c >ol off the
feverish condition of the system; in
fact, they are far belter for these pur¬
poses than tho many nostrums which
are so highly praised in tho advertise¬
ments and so constantly purchased by
sufferers. A lipe, raw apple is entirely
digested in an hour and a-half, while a
boiled potato takes twice that time.
Now that apples can be purchased at
such cheap rates, every iamily should
keep a dish of them in the dining-room,
where the children can have access to
eat ail they pleass of them. They will
rarely receive any injury fre m them, if
they aro thoroughly masticated. Baked
apples should be as constant a dish
upon the table as potatoes. Every
breakfast and every tea-table shonld
haws a plate of thorn. Baked sweet ap¬
ples are a very pleasing addition to a
saucer of oatmeal pudding, and when
served with sweet cream they are very
appetizing. They are not as commonly
used as they should be, as they will
supply as much muscular a id nerv;.us
support as dishes of meat and vegeta¬
bles. Thousands of bushels of sour
apples aro used for pies and puddings
in hundreds of families, where well
baked sweet apples would prove more
nourishing food and much more eco¬ for
nomical. They are also good food
old people and are usually greatly
relished by them. In my own family
they are always, when in season, a part
of the meals of the day and are asc.rn
monly used as a slice of bread.— Coun¬
try Gentleman.
Spoiled the Romance.
\ romantic story is told of a young
California lady reported engaged to
Lieutenant Danenhower, whose boat,
with five men from the .Jeannette, was
reported at Yakutsk, Siberia. She was,
according to the story, bitterly opposed
to his going on the expedition, but
having been ordered by bis country to
tc almost certain death, “his honor
would not permit him to break his
word, even for the being he worshiped.”
She fainted on parting with him, and
}m S spent most melancholy years pining
during his absence, and changing so
within that time, that she dow looks
like a woman of thirty, instead of a
gj r j 0 f nineteen. Such is the story. It
j H somewhat weakened by the fact that
the officers on the Jeannette were not
ordered to go, but were all volunteers ;
and Dv the understood fact that one of
the officers went, not, against the pro
test of a loving maiden, but to seek in
the icy arctic regions surcease of sor
row caused by his having lieen refused
t,v “the being he worshiped.”
' ■ . ..... —
The zoospores (microscopic the ote animal*) tha
awirm abcut in n ure oo
surface of a leaf or stem. Film though
it be, it is an oeea to sueh Hah.