Newspaper Page Text
( 5 ]*:nkhal news.
k the present time there are estima
-r
, ,‘y, ,-' )P in the United States 40,000,
heep, 40 000,000 cattle and 20,000,
L s In-t\vo-thhdsof , the country
■ ,es.
1",.: .affinals require and to they be fed wifi from
three t..ft»e months, con¬
sume an aggregate’ represents of the ----,
•tfhich, at $3 per ton, enor
#ious sum of *450,003,000. Is not hay
therefore, ?
~ prohibited,
Tee sale of liquor is now
iB whole or in part, in seventy-one coun¬
ties in Georgia, leaving less tnan halt of
the counties in which the sale is unre
strieted. ' The last Legislature prohib¬
ited the sale in nine counties more and
provided for elections in thirty others.
p- Jacksonville, Fla., the other day
wdl of a store settled several inches
01 ie fell in. Upon exami
and the -sidewalk
Hat; it was discovered that nearly the
r,
•whole length of the foundation wall and
part of the front wall, and sidewalk, had
been wholly undermined by rats.
1 bridge over the Miss issippi river at
Kew Orleans, where the river is 2,400
feet vvido, is prated,. An engineer pro
poses seven span*' -of 300 feet each, sfeo
he a draw. The piers are to be creo
o andheav
oted piles, driven in clusters,
]v canned and cased in iron. The depth
of water will be no obstacle, as the piles
can be spliced. The. estimated cost will
he $13,000,000. Southern
Di:. Basil Manly, of the
Baptist theological seminary, in his ad¬
dress before the educational convention
at Louisville, said that statistics proved
that the south before the war had more
colleges, college students and professors,
more academies and parochial schools
than the north, only lacking free schools.
This, he said, was an evidence that the
sonth has always had a strong interest in
schools, and will not fail to manifest it
now.
New Oi:weans States: Paso Del Norte
is 3G0 years old. It has one lone street
exactly seven miles long. Its principal
point of interest is the Gaudaloupe Cath¬
edral, which is over 300 years old, end
lias had no repairs for at least 200 years.
It has no pews, There is only a piece of
Cftrpet spread in front of the altar, and
on this the worshippers kneel one at a
time. Generations have come and gone,
and nothing has been done tfo improve
this ancient town until now, when they
have begun the restoration of the Grand
Plaza, The Mexican Central railroad
depot is the only modern edifice in the
place.
An Irrigation Sell epic.
The I,os Angeles Herald enterprise says:—
The most gigantic irrigation of Califor¬
ever inaugurated in the State
nia lias been commenced in Fresno
county, the canal for which will be the
largest in the State, and fed by Kings .
River. The water is intended to irri¬
gate 30,000,000 acres of rich land, at
present barren through lack of water.
The source of supply of this canal will
be higher than any other debouching
from the same stream. Its dimensions
are as follows: One hundred feet in
width at the bottom: levees, an average
of 15 feet in height and 8 feet wide at
the top, broad enough for a wagon road.
The depth of the water is expected inches to be
five feet, with a fall of 18
to the mile. The dam in the mountain
canon, whence the water will be taken,
will be a wonderful and permanent one.
It is 25 feet high, 800 feet long, 140 feet
wide at the base and 25 feet wide on top.
It is rip-rapped on the inside with heavy
rock, and every precaution taken to
make it sufficiently strong to securely
hold the great weight of water that must
be supported. The water is led into the
canal from a large headgate, constructed
of heavy timber, 100 feet in width and
18 feet high. It is planked over so as
to make a bridge for heavy wagons and
has wings to protect it from the floods.
The canal is expected to carry 1,300 cu¬
bic feet of water per second.
RECKONED IT WAS.
A blaze in the cabin of a resident ot
“Kaintuck” called out the engines the
other day, and after them came the
Firo Marshal to investigage and report.
“Do you know how it calight?” he
asked of the householder.
“Well, eah, I reckon it was what dem
big folkses calls sponfus conbustibus. combustion.” ”
“You mean spontaneous
“Dat’s ’zactly what I means, sah.
Yes, sah, I reckon it was dat.”
“What makes you think so?”
“W 7 eil, in de fus place, I sent de gal
ap in de garret to fin’ my ole butes. In
de nex’ place she took a candle. In de
las’ place she upsofc de candle ’mong a
lot of newspapers an’ cum shinnin’ down
de ladder wid her eyes as big as turnips
an’ tole me dat the cabin was all afire.
Yes, sah, I reckons it was spontaneous
Combustion, an’ soon’s we git de furni¬
sher till she back in Ize gwine to lick knowed dat gal
dat can’t holler! She orter
tbiu’ spontaneous combustion was sun
that couldn’t be fooled wid.”—
Detroit Free Press.
Regrets—M iss Gushington (to young
Jfidow fortune)—That whose husoand is the fourteenth has left a mourn¬ large
ing costume I have seen you wear in
three days, and each lovelier and more
becoming *-Oh than the other. forty—but Young Widow such
! my dear, I have
a At bother as they were to have made!
one time I almost wished that poor,
dear George hadn’t died.— Life.
AJohnsvtlle young man concluded
"* apriukle red pepper on the floor of a
®“ice hall, “just for a joke.” The joke
carried out—and so was the young
■ I Md out quietly ^ a tt«r, however, the former. was not car
so as
■r- •
f if. "1 '4i
m It H li k
m W : rs I ; i H m
-JS-24w. J m m m sy m
VOLUME VI.
\UIii\IXG TO OLD LOVERS.
AN HNGUISII PlCTi:HE. WITH SOJIR
AdVmjK THAT IS WORTfl ATTEN
TiO-N.
lloiv Olil Air'll Become Infatuated- with
Voinov Girls ami Lose Their Better
Judgment.
The London World has the following
spicy communication, signed “Sweet
Sixteen ” :
“I wonder if you ever coil descend
to accept the ideas of women on men.
I will try and draw one picture for vou
which strikes the feminine mind asab
surdiy amusing—the spectacle of a re
spbctahle, elderly, steady-gaing manned
man, making a fool of hjinsblf with a
young with girl. Girls fuel a happy freedom
a man old enough to be their
father, and with daughters older
than they are themselves; and he on his
side, I am sorry to say, allows himself a
little too much freedom of manners in
return. The young girl puts on, as you
say, ‘ her pretty manners ’ for him be
cause she is better brought up than her
brothers, and is taught to be civil to all
comers, and the elderlv gentleman_
what of him ? He forgets his gray and
probably bald head, his bulky propor
tions and general ‘ lieavv fatlierish ’ ap
pearance. He pulls himself together
and struts behind his young friend, feel
ing again the young and jaunty beau of
soient days gone by. He becomes almost in
in his depreciation of women of
his own age, especially of his wife,
Sometimes he is weak enough to imagine
that were it not for that hard and fast
knot which ties him he might again
enter the lists with younger men and
carry off his prize; his elderly and rather
rubicund face glows and shines with the
thought. Every look of the girl who is
the present object of his heavy atten
tions is transformed by his self-conceit
into a token of admiration. He gives
her little presents, which are received
gushingly by the young lady, and after
ward shown by her to her friends, with
a laugh and the remark, ‘What a dear
old thing he is ! You know he was an
old friend of papa when they were both
young.’ And the girls have a good
natured laugh at his expense; for he gets
up a correspondence with her, smiles
blandly in when he sees a letter from her,
andif the family circle he places it
on one side turimiT (who°knows tbe address inside it)
lest his wife all about
ml, ,,om.n oj.lyla„ e .„to
swers 8 " it 1 at ono“ and ‘ 1-1 looks JOOAo out it 101 for . in. 11 -
oto.-r , with almost , the eagerness ot a
^jg 5°”^? ov K Z**j!T , r i ■ + »Z3,*IP A
r
Stick to your wife and your own daugli
arei do nol ]„al. i\ w „„„ dta
and heavy omlMea. Kentembe,- .vi.at
vou l_f|iat are ad, at your age, so apt to forget
—mat, give nive voualwavs you anvays a a ten ten years vears’start start,
si s
a man is great that you often take lit
lie pains to preserve any of those yonth
till graces of manner or appearance •
which w nen helped ntq a vou yo,i,_ when vouii" E’ to 10
Sm vo”:L d ;™/TaS -e “ot;
peasant sight, and yom- h.hbaly ilWm
tioa, noth yonng girls make you tin,
laughing stock of your own sex, both
vnnno- young and ana old oia. You i tu have nave captivated apmatea
one woman, and by your own account
twenty twenty others otneis were were ready reauy to to succumb sucGuiauio to
vour charms had you given them the
chance cnance. Therefore xner acre, yuu vou sav say ‘ Whv \vuy not uji
now as ever?’ My dear friend, look m
the me class- glass, then men you you will know juit w. And -Aim
bear this m mind: Were you freed to
morrow moirow from nom the me tie tie which wnicn binds Pinas you von no no
(h,„ m h“
father, except under strong pressure
from liom the tne npthm-ities autnonties that that he oe. Parents parents
may tell her ,that the proverbial old
man’s darling gets the best ot life—her
heart does not respond, and, should her
feelings be overborne, she may, and
often does, ‘ get the best of it, hut she
never does it of her own free will, and
she always retains more of the daughter¬
ly than of the wifely feeling for and her
spouse. And, if Providence is kind
removes the parental husband she rushes
into matrimony a second time, either
with her old lover or with a man of her
own age, and they together enjoy the fat
jointure the doting old gentleman has
left her, and for which, if she be not
nice, but on toe contrary a calculating
young lady who has voluntarily put her
neck under the yoke, she probably dear, bald- mar¬
ried him. Now I will bid the
headed, grizzly and stout elderly gentle
man good-by, and I beg him in the
future to keep up his dignity. Let him
lie polite, fatherly and kind to his young
lady friends, but trespass not on the
lover, and take no absurd liberties in
speech or look, for as sure as he does he
will get laughed at as an old silly behind
his back, if not to his face.
An Irishwoman can always manage to
toil a disagreeable truth in a very agree¬
able way. “How did your husband die?”
•sked the Judge, very sternly. “Well,
sir, very suddent like,” was the reply.
‘But what was the matter with him?”
“Why, I believe, sir, he fell out of a
window, or through a kind of cellar
door or something of that sort.” “How
far did he fall?” “Not more than five
,r six feet, Yer Honor.” “And how
r-oiild such a fall as that kill him?
‘You see, sir, there was a bit of storing
o* cord, or that like, and it got round
poor Mike’s neck, and he never spoke a
word after it.”
We would advocate no theory whieh
we believe to be false.
CONYERS, GA.. KTOBER 2G..18S3.
A MILWAUKEE WEDDING.'
The JBon-Ton Stvle el <*etting Married In
tbe Wild, Wild West.
October, the popular month’ for fall
weddings, is near at hand. The Mil
waukee belles who are to become brides
during its auspicious, reign, having hv
this time “got their sewing done,”, ore'
engaged in deliberating and consulting
with Reference to the details of the im
portant ceremony to which they natural
ly look forward with much delightful
anticipation. “A wedding among the
nice people who make no pretensions to
-fashionable display,” she said,
be managed something-in this way: The
parlor carpet, stair carpet, with and front hall
should be covered white muslin,
h’-idas nicely as possible. This prelim
uiary the bride should rather insist upon^
for it gives a bridal air to t-lie entiresur
rounding, and is very little trouble. It
improves matters immensely if the car
pets are a little shabby, and the muslin
is just as good as new for all sorts of
uses afterward; besides, this use of white
covers distinguishes a wedding from an
ordinary party. The room should be
charmingly fresh and pretty, with has
kets or bowls of flowers here and there,
and the bride and groom should decide
beforehand just where they will stand;
usually the space between the front win
dews or in front of the high mantel is
chosen if the house is an old-fashioned
°ne. If the Episcopal service is used,
bvo placed hassocks, covered with white muslin,
are for the happy pair to kneel
upon. The company should he assem
bled in the parlor a little while before
the hour set for the ceremony, the min
i-ster standing near the place to be oc
copied by the bridal couple. When the
hour arrives, the groomsman and brides
maM precede the bride and groom down
the staircase, then loiter a moment at
the door of the parlor until the bride
and groom are just behind them, then
they enter leading the way for the bride,
and take their places just upon the left
of the place where she is to stand. This
brings the two girls in the center with
the tw0 lnen on the outside, and the
tableau is a pretty one. The party, of
course, face toe company, and the family
of the bride and groom take their places
on either side, so as to at once offer their
congratulations. the At the takes close the bride’s of the
ceremony minister
hand, calls her first by her new name,
and, if the moral sense of the company
‘he Thi Ito
man to pay his fee. He has provided.
“Xbiv j. At *:5“) o-old mid ni--.ee at least
an nicT-lv’wrapped ea4e possibly a
cC Tt is up in tissue
jt the parson’s palm, saying softly
«.**»■ «» daliv r« to .ho
moment me paa -.on nas congratuiatea
toe happy pair; hut the groom had bet
„ttenlto it himself At; The oroom’s
oongralnlations »' among relatives, l.ecanse to
^ “
thta new e uangnter. men me otne,
fiends come up and say civil things.
P.-p<spnts mav be sent anv time after tbs
onght to l» sent altv.v. Worethodn,
J vel ‘ 7 jrlwS ireqneniiy SL vioiaica. 5A* int puac
writes a pretty little note to each giver,
expressing u nei pl . +hsmks man ks ind ana her ner pleasure pitasuie
-- remembrance. Aerhal thanks do not
count , as aP acxnowieagmenr k, 10 wledffm e nt of oi bridal onam ffifts gins.
The collation should be laid in the dm
mg-room . ant. -, small n tames tables mav m.iy 1 oe )P
placed about the room. Some member
ot the brides tamiiysnoma 1Tn ;i vs l, on ]d see see to to ittnat itthat
tlle olcl P to P l0 among toe guests are
sea t e d and served before
iftrs.'ssr^ss'S.tSB loom, ine cmuis 11 Tue " ru ) al
partv a are to occupy are prettily desig
. . „ v ;i,i, nns ”
1 - A____
________ ,
The Maltese Cat.
-
The bloodthirsty and ravenous Mal¬
tese cat has broken out in Atlanta, Ga.
As is usual with this feline fiend, it
made friends with those it wished to de
stroy. It pretended to be an amiable
and'meek retainer of the household of a
Mr. Ellin, and then when the proper
time came it attacked Mr. Ellis, and
while purring against liis leg suddenly
seized him by the great toe. Miss
Winnie Ellis, who came to his rescue,
was bitten in the calf of the leg. A
negro child was cruelly lacerated. The
demoniac passions of the terrible cat
were now in full play. The neighbors
organized themselves for defense. The
authorities passed an ordinance. At¬
lanta was aroused, and after great hard¬
ships and much public excitement the
cat was killed. This ought to be a les
son to householders to abjure Maltese
cats and confine themselves to bull
pups.
Yl’here it Was Found.
Abraham and Joshua had been invited
to a splendid dinner.
It was impossible for Joshua not to
make capital out of such an opportunity;
accordingly ho managed to slip a silver
spoon into his boot.
Abraham was green with envy at
Joshua’s success, for he had not even
manipulated a saltspoon.
But an idea struck him.
“My frents,” he cried, “I will show
you some dricks. ”
Taking up a spoon, he said, “You zee
dees spoon? Veil, it ees gone!” he
cried, passing it up his sleeve. “You
vill find it in Joshua’s booeft. ”
It was found.— Li/e.
A FLORIDA ROMANCE.
A (Irim Hnii^iold Skeleton which Love and
Kornlvcnesn Burled.
One day during the progress of the
Phil Thompson trial one of the Florida
Senators, who had remained in NVash
ington ^ greater part of the time since
adjourned, told a group of
of an incident that
ca me under his observation, wuich, in
all prbbhhility, has not its parallel in
history or fiction,
“When a candidate for the United
States Senate,” dozen he other said, “in company
with ten or a gentlemen, I
canvassed.the S^ate of Florida from one
eni 1 4° the other. Just at dusk one evening
we arrived at a farm-house of rather pre
tentioiis appearance. We who were warmly knpwn
welcomed by the owner, was
at least- to one ot the party. V. r o were
served with a splendid supper, at which
we were waited upon by the iai’mer’s
daughters—three bright, beautiful girls,
The tanner occupied one end of the
table and his wife, an elderly lady, with
snow white hair and a benevolent iace,
the other. I was at once attracted by
the amiability of the family. lacy were
very cheerful and apparently happy, very
??xious to make each other very
The greatest regard was paid to the
mother, and no opportunity was lost to
show respect and devotion to her.
‘ ‘ hen the time came tor retiring the
farmer tookfrom a shell an old, well
thumbed Bible and said :
‘ Gentlemen, for nearly a score of
years it has been my habit to have tamily
worship before xetning. I hope you will
3 0 ” 1 " 8 to-mgut. (.’1
> He r f ac } a chapter from he the Bible,
arid we all knelt while made a short,
eloquent prayer. The next morning the
were sumti noticeable. or ^ er > cheerfulness When we and rode kindness away
feom house I said to a gentleman
who was next to me that I had never
witnessed a more peaceful, prosperous
home, and one where theie seemed to be
so much genuine happiness,
My friend said . Is it possible that
you do not know this man s stoij He
passed through such a tnal as dines
many men crazy. His life is a mold
lesson. He has shown the moial com •
age that not one m a million shows. He
is a hero, dwellingheie ^nioiig the peace
ful pmes of FJonda Ho was a Con
federate soldiei, and a biave one. lie
has many scars upon his person made
S«” »ih« Sft'l.cldnd ita
t:.n>n-s imy were, rio \\.is uDseiu xnree
vears; WMe away indiscretions. Ins wite committed
the gravest of all When
tlie husband returned, his heart hungry (nil
<ov«.ol,v rl .,tad™„n«,, he
a J^XThim 1 a^d d^s
tor lietoigemd
S"c1 Thl atSS .di .Cl *3
hto .o
cion the woman to in hellate. ]lA1 .
“ “Youcannotbrmghertomy »■& ^ church,”
™ h-" gjfljj S imm? JWJ gSgfi* ° (“a'Se
to
lt iie wen J . t to a neignDor neighbor—a a good e- 0 od
«»'**» man, a great-hearted man—and laid the
“ 1*^ **»• 1- .*>,-*«« ™‘ »**« ft
Suef KigitoldSdStt t
conaone „ nndoup i,; ms s wire s offonse onense, to to take take her nei
back to Ins homo and let her love mid he
, , childivn He took his
‘ * J
o , advice. , The , , struggle , was
n a ui at nrst, put it grew easier witn tl
years. j To-day J there is not a happier i y oi
a moiq mgniy lespectea mmuy m me
peninsula i of Florida. The man has
piosperea wonderfuHv wonaeiiuny. He tie is is rich ikii HE tu
v-ife is received everywhere, and his
" maae m . ldp a n d( aetp .,.p impression impression on on me. me Th-ive tnave
thought of it many and many a time,
and have wondered what would have
been the fate of that man and that man’s
wife and children if revenge instead of
duty and pity had conquered.”
A Porter Who Didn’t Discriminate.
Governor Hamilton the other morning
was boarding a train for Springfield. He
had on a white hat. like that which the
President wears. Ho had a cigar in grip¬ liis
month and was carrying his own “
sack. ” He stood on the rear platform
of the coach and looked in. The coach
was crowded, “ Can’t I get a seat any
where?” lie asked of the colored por
ter. “ You ’spect to get a seat in dab,
wid a see-gar in yoh monf. De smok¬
in’ keer am back ov de mail keer. You
can get a place up dali, and leave yoh
grip heah.” The Governor turned to
iiis companion and said quietly, “I did is
not think of the cigar. The porter
right.” And he went forward. “Do
you know that was the Governor of II
linois you were talking to ?” I asked the
porter. “No, sail,” he answered.
“ Dab’s been so many big folks trabelin’
ovah dis heah road lately that you can’t
tell one from a commoner, And it
would hab made no difference to me ef I
had known him. No man can smoke in
dat keer, whedder he be a Gubner or a
President. I wouldn’t let the President
ob dis road do it.”—Chicago Inter
Ocean.
Speedy Justice.— When Mr. Book
waiter was in China he beoame ac¬
quainted with a Judge who invited him
to see a case tried. The culprit was ar¬
raigned for larceny. Within thirty min¬
utes that Chinese court tried the prisoner,
convicted him, sentenced him to death,
took him out in an alley and cut his head
off.
NUMBER 31.
When to Begin Keeping Poultry.
There is no doubt that a well-kept
dock of poultry is the most profitable of
ill farm stock. But a little flock well
kept, like a little farm well tilled, brings
die most nrnfit ^ to the .'j farmer ’ Just * as
many as caai be kept , \ . without , crowding, ’
„ uu t w ea { lUl i y !> \, ,,[/ *n u \
profitable. ,' Poult will not
the most y
boar crowding anymore 1 an shoe] or
m -s or people and it is well known that
wnen any ot these are too closely kept
disease appears and works nuschioi,
\r Lt is ^ a necessity nccessitv of ot the the case cast, b-eriso b' caaso
cleaulmess must be sacrificed co neces
Wo would not put more than 50 fowls
in one yard, nor confine thorn in a yard
all the time. Success witli poultry is
totally impossible with close confine¬
ment. The fowls must have a run
abroad at least half a day, and a grass
run is the host. There they secure an
abundance of insects, ss grasshoppers,
flies, crickets, beetles, caterpillars, ants,
mul worms, all of which are their nat¬
ural food. But on a farm the number
of fowls must not exceed the limits of
ground provided for them, or, like Mr,
Mjcawber’s financial condition, it will
produce misery. When this gentleman
kept his expenses within half a cent of
his income his comfort and pleasure
were unbounded. The half-cent was a
perpetual joy to him. But when he
went half a cent beyond his income life
was a burden. The debt was a ■source
of misery. The principle applies strictly
to poultry-keeping. One hen too few,
and health, comfort, and wealth abound.
One hen too many, and disease, death
and loss result. The line may he drawn
right there, for it is so narrow and so
straight that it is quite as easily over¬
stepped as that.
Bat as with other live stock, there are
good and bad, And profitable should and unprofit¬
able, fowls. we get the
best. If a dairyman were to begin
business he would buy cows and not
calves. Intbeoiu case his profits would
begin .at once: in the other his expenses
only would begin, and his profits would
be in the future. It is the same with
fowls. If one procures a dozen eggs of
some good kind to begin with, he must
spend a year and some money before any
income be made. For the price of two
settings of eggs a trio of fowls can be
procured, and while the eggs would be
hatching and the chicks rearing the two
hens would lay a hundred or two of eggs
and rear 20 cliicks themselves. Thus it
is easy to get into stock fowls quickly and at
less cost by procuring this the than by get¬ for
ting eggs. And Early pullets is season he
chased beginning. quite cheaply, can while in pur¬ the
now
spring no breeder will sell them, because
they are making him a profit. In Janu¬
ary or February they will begin laying,
and if a few common hens can be pro¬
cured for brooders, a largo number of
chicks can be hatched in March by good
management. That is by having ayvarm
place specially for the hens, where they
will not be disturbed by anything, and
if need be by putting a small stove in it
to keep it warm. A large sunny window
on the south side is very desirable.
Young chicks are excessively susceptible
to cold, and warmth will cover a multi¬
tude of mistakes and dangers.—H knry
Stewart.
Sober Second Thoughts.
Literature is a mere step to knowl¬
edge, and the error often lies in our
identifying one with the other. Litera¬
ture may, perhaps, render make us humble. vain; true
knowledge must us
There is no evil we cannot either face
or flv from, but toe consciousness of
duty disregarded. bought
All pleasure must be at the
price of pain. The difference between
false pleasure and true is just this—for
the true the price is paid before you en¬
joy it; for the faise, after you enjoy.
When we know how to appreciate a
merit we have the germ of it within our¬
selves.
No matter what his rank or position
may be the love of hooks is the richest
and the happiest of the children of men.
’Tis not full the lip or and eye joint we ln-auty call,
hut the force effect of all.
No one sees the wallet on his own hack,
though everyone carries two packs, one
before, stuffed with the faults of his
neighbor; the other behind, filled with
his own.
Old friends are best. King James
used to call for bis old shoes; they were
easiest for his feet.
To be flattered is grateful, even when
we know that our praises are not be¬
lieved by those who pronounce them;
for they prove at least our power, and
:,how that onr favor is valued, since it
is purchased by the meanness of false¬
hood.
See first that the design is wise and just,
That ascertained, pursue it resolutely.
Do That not for resolved one repulse effect. forego the purpose
you to
A Novel Selieme.
Captain Eads proposes a railway to
convey ships overland from one harbor
to another. The author of the success¬
ful Jetty System at the mouth of the
Mississippi proposed this which scheme as a
substitute for the canal De Les
seps engaged to construct Engineers through the
Isthmus of Panama. say
that Captain Eads’s proposition is en¬
tirely practicable. Steamers and ships
could be hoisted to the cars on one side
of the Isthmus and conveyed by steam
power, to be launched again on the
other side. This would be even more
practicable Isthmus of ou Suez the than low-lying in the sands of the
more mouu
tainou8 regions of Central America,
— IJemorest’s Monthly.
DAKOTA NOMENCLATURE.
Mcanitiff of Some Names Used
ically by White Men.
The following have been mostly
adopted from the language of the Souix
Indians:
Anoka (anoka), both sides; the name
of a town in Minnesota.
Chaska (caska), first-born boy; tlia
name of a town on Rum River, Min¬
nesota.
Cliokia (cockaya), the middle; the
name of a station on the road to Brown’s
Valley.
Cakato (eakata, pronounced chokahta),
at the middle; the name of a town on
the Manitoba Railroad. It is difficult
to see how the metamorphosis of the
name was made.
I “ dlaDS ° : r al ! f° cag ot T » ;
be & Stat6 ’ aUlJ
Eyota U ^ ( •
(bVotau), greatest, most: the ,
name of a town near Rochester, Minn,
Tfo ltaska , (not , , Dakota;, T n , . . the . u ^ name oi a
lake in Minnesota in which the Missis
si f/ Ej ^ads. It is said to have
b( n formed ^ by taking £ part * of each of
th Latin veri s ( u
Kandiyolli * (kandi v bllft lo fish 9 and
*Johi . f to , reach , to), , , the name _ ot ,, a , lake ■>
town in Cental Minnesota,
Kasota (kaBota)> clear or c i eared off>
as the sky free from clouds; a sniall town
in Minnesota.
Kewanee (kiwani), winter again, said
of snow coming in the spring after the
winter is supposed to have been over; the
name of a town in Illinois.
Mankato (maka and to), blue earth; a
town on the Minnesota river.
Mazomanie (maza and omani), walk¬
ing iron; the name of a town in Wis¬
consin, between Madison and Prairie du
Chien.
Mendota (mdote), the mouth of a river
or lake; formerly the name of General
H. D. Sibley’s trading post at the mouth
of the St. Peter’s, and transferred from
that to a number of other places.
Minneapolis (mini, water, ha, curling,
and polis, Gr,, city), city of the waterfalls.
It is not absolutely certain how the “a”
came into the word, but it is supposed
to come from the Dakota rather than the
Greek.
Minnehaha allowable (mini and ha ha), curling it
water; it is to translate
laughing water, a well-known cascade Snelhng, on
Little Falls Creek, neat Fort
Minn.
Mimic inne-opa (mini and inonpa), sec¬
ond water—the name of a beautiful wat ¬
erfall above Mankato—it is the lower of
two near together, lienee the Dakota
name.
Minneiska (mini and ska), white or
clear water—the name of a town on the
Mississippi River in Minnesota. The
Dakota name of the stream was Miune
ska; the “i” has no business there.
Minneopa, the same as Minueinneopa,
raiiroad station near Mankato.
Minneota (minaand ota), much water;
the name of a station near Marshall,
Minn.
Minnesota (mini and Rota), water clear
or slightly clouded; the name of the
State and river. The latter was former
called St. Peters.
Minnetonka (mini and tanka) great
water; the name of a much frequented
lake in Minnesota .—Fargo Argus.
Dirt Eaters of flic Amazon.
“You say they are dirt eaters ?”
“Yes, sir; and I mean it in its literal
sense. You know the French traveler,
Macroix, who explored the sources of
the River Amazon, found a tribe of In¬
dians so infernally lazy that, having
eaten up all the'four-footed animals in
then- reach, including parrots and mon¬
keys, snakes and creeping things, were
reduced to live solely on bugs and in¬
sects. These Qttomacs as fully as bad,.
They live upon mud-balls when the river
is high and fishing ceases. It is a sort
of unctuous clay of a peculiar kind, which
ho finds upon banks of streams. It is
soft to the touch, like putty. In its
natural state it is of a yellowish-gray
color, hut when hardened before toe
fire it assumes a tinge of red, owing to
the oxide of Iron that it contains. ”
“Is it nourishing ?”
“Not in the least. It merely fills tip
—produces a satiety and satisfies told the
pangs of hunger, I have been by
chemists ami medical men who have
analyzed the little balls into which they
roil it to store away that it contained
nothing nourishing, simply silex and
alumina, with 3 or 4 per cent, of lime.
He calls these balls poya , and stores
them up into little pyramids, just as
cannon balls are pitted in a fort. Each
ball is three or four inches in diameter.
When hungry, he takes a ball and soft¬
ens it by wetting, and eats about a pound
a day. There is something in the dirt
eating habit which produces a sort of
craving for it. I do not think that the
habit is confined exclusively to generally the Ot
tomacs, hut believe that it is
known among the Indians of the tropics.
I have heard of a poor class of whites
living in Norfh Carolina who, when
pressed by hunger, eat the mud daub
ings that hide the chinks in their cabins.”
—Cincinnati Enquirer.
A Determined Hen.
A California hen, while recently en¬
gaged with her brood of chickens in
plowing up a garden, was charged upon
by a full-blown rat. The hen imme¬
diately established herself as a cordon
round her flock and awaited the on¬
slaught, whereupon the rat, somewhat
checked by the hold front presented by
his antagonist, crouched for a moment,
and then made a dart for one of the
chicks. In an instant the old hen opened
her cackle battery and commenced bat¬
tle. She flew at her enemy, and striking
him with her bill, grabbed him by the
back and threw him into the air. The
rat came down with a thump upon the
walk, hut beforo he could regain his
feet the hen repeated the performance,
and kept it up until the rat was only
able to crawl away a few feet and die
in disgrace. After contemplating her
fallen foe for a few moments tht.
hen called her brood around her and
walked off.
“Ma, is Long Branch an awful dirty
place?” “Why no, my child—what
made you think so?” “Why here is it
advertisement that says that it is washed
by the tide twice a day.”