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JOHNNY JONES.
BOW HE KMCAPED IMPRISONMENT
BY HIM RHYME.
An Eccentric Maine Mnn Who Made Wordn
Jingle In a Pnnnv Way,
The Bath Times tells the following
story:—There used to be considerable
lumber business done on Merrymeeting
Bay, and there lived a noted character
od the bay shore, named—say Johnny
Jones, who was noted for the handy way
in which he could make a rhyme. He
used to steal logs from a certain man,
who was Justice of the Peace, and cut
them up into shingles. His arrest was
caused and he was convicted, and bail
was wanted for his appearance at a
higher court, but he couldn’t get it, so
he appealed to the Justice to go his bail.
“If you will make me a rhyme I will,”
said the Justice. He agreed to, but said
he must make it from his boat. So he
got into the boat and took up his
paddle.
“Now, Johnny, for the rhyme,” said
the Justice, who was afraid he might
deceive him. But Johnny was true to
his promise and gave him this one: “As
true as I am in this boat, and you are
on the shore, I have stole forty logs
from you and I’ll steal forty more,” and
away he went. They used to elect
Hogreeves at a town meeting, officers
whose business it was to impound stray
hogs ; they also acted as fence viewers.
Well, they elected a fellow named
Doughty, whom old Johnny didn’t like.
As soon as they voted Johnny got up
and got off the following : “It appears
very strange to my weak brains, that
men should be possessed, to pass a vote
to choose a shoat to govern all the rest.”
A professor at Bowdoin, it is said, gave
him a suit of clothes for that rhyme.
Johnny picked up a canoe one day on
the bay and put it in his boom. A man
named Hunter, of Topsham, heard of the
find and declared he was going down to
get the canoe, although it was not his.
JohnDy heard of it and was on the look¬
out for the enemy’s approach. It was
on a bright moonlight night that Hunter
started to fulfill his oath. He unlocked
the boom and proceeded to the canoe
and stepped into it. Just at that moment
Johnny stepped out from some birches
that grew by the shore, gun in hand,
and spoke as follows : “If you get that
I’ll pawn my hat. I’ll stand not to dis¬
pute you. I have got both powder and
good shot, and I swear by gad I’ll shoot
you.” The canoe was not taken.
An Hour at the Old Play-Ground.
I sat au hour to-day, John, beside the
old brook stream where we were school¬
boys in old time, when manhood was
a dream; the brook is choked with
fallen leaves, the pond is dried away,
I scarce believe that you would know
the dear old place to-day. The school
house is no more, John, beneath our
locust trees; the wild rose by the win¬
dow side no more waves in the breeze;
the scattered stones look desolate; the
sod they rested on has been plowed up
by stranger hands since you and I were
gone. The chestnut tree is dead, John,
and what is sadder now —the broken
grape vine of our swing hangs on the
withered bough; I read our names upon
the bark and found the pebbles rare laid
up beneath the hollow side as we piled
them there. Beneath the grass-grown
bank, John, I looked for our old spring,
that bubbled down the alder path three
paces from the spring; the rushes
grow upon the brink; the pool is black
and bare, and not a foot this many a
day it seems has trodden there. I sat
me on the fence, John, that lies as in old
time—the same half panel in the path
we used so oft to climb—and thought
how o,er the bars of life our playmates
had passed on, and left me counting on
this spot the faces that are gone !—The
Judae.
IT MAKES A DIFFERENCE.
“So you have been fighting again od
your way home from school !”
“Y-yes, sir.”
“Didn’t I tell you that this sort of
business had got to stop?”
“Yes, pa, but —”
“No excuses, sir ! You probably pro¬
voked the quarrel!”
“Oh, no ! no ! He called me names !”
“Names ? What of it ? When a boy
calls you names walk along about your
business. Take off that coat!”
“But he didn’t call me names !”
“Oh, he didn’t ? Take off that vest!’
“When he called me names I never
looked at him, but when he pitched into
you I—I had to fight J”
“What ! Did he call me names ?”
“Lots of’em, father! He said you
lied to your constituents, and went back
on the caucus and had— J”
“William, put on your coat and vest,
and here’s a nickel to buy peanuts 1 I
don’t want you to come up a slugger,
and I wish you to stand well with your
teacher, but if you can lick that boy who
says I ever bolted a regular nomination
or went back on my end of the ward,
don’t be afraid to sail in 1 ”—Detroit
('res Press.
FRED DOUGLASS’S MARRIAGE.
The Colored People of Washington Sorry
ho Married a White Woman.
A Washington letter says: Fred
Donglass’s marriage was a surprise even
to his own family. In the morning he
went into the Register’s office, and, after
a few moments’ whispered conversation,
the Register took down his big book
and filled out a blank. Mr. Douglass
paid his fee and went away, after urging
the register to make no announcement
of what had transpired. The news did
not keep, however, and in a short time
it became known about the City Hall
that a marriage license had been issued
for Frederick Douglass, aged 65, to wed
Miss P. Hill, aged 35. Mr. Donglass’s
age is mere guesswork. He does not
know whether he is 60 or 70 years old,
but surmises that he is about 65. His
hair, which is abundant, is gray, and
his beafd is white. Miss Hill, who is
from Avon, N. Y., is a very pretty
brunette, a white woman, who has been
employed in Mr. Donglass’s office for a
year or more as a copyist. Mr. Douglass
Is the Register of Columbia. While
those in his employ have been aware
that he was very kind to this woman,
nobody dreamed that he had any idea of
marrying her. When the news was
taken to his daughter she was overcome.
About 6 o’clock in the evening Mr.
Douglass, with the bride and a friend,
drove to the residence of a Methodist
clergyman, and were married. Then
Mr. Douglass took his bride to bis home,
which is a fine house situated on the
eastern branch of the Potomac, just
opposite the navy yard. There was a
wedding supper, and the bride and
groom left for a wedding tour.
The colored people of the District ex¬
press great regret that Mr. Douglass has
seen fit to take a white woman for a
wife. Mr. Douglass associates more
with the white than with the colored
population.
Trichinosis in Germany.
A letter from Berlin says: The re
cent outbreak of trichinosis in several
villages of the Prussian province of
Saxony has not failed to attract general
attention, a special commission having
even been deputed by tbe French Govern¬
ment to study the epidemic on the spot.
Dr. Stammer, a physician residing at
the village of Emersleben. in the centre
of the infected region, has just published
the first detailed accounts in a scientific
journal, from which I take the most in¬
teresting passages. Emersleben is situ¬
ated about four miles from the district
capital, Halberstadt, and numbers about
760 inhabitants. For many years it has
been the custom in this neighborhood
to use minced but uncooked pork as
food in great quantities, the field laborers
especially being accustomed to eat this
meat spread on bread for their lunch.
This was again the ease during the past
summer. On the 14th and 15th of Sep¬
tember last, a large quantity of minced,
uncooked pork had been consumed, the
entire supply coming from the same
butcher, at Emersleben. Tbe first
symptoms of the epidemic already ap¬
peared among some persons on the same
day. The first patients treated Sep¬
were on
tember 20, and the last on October 15.
The total number was 257, of whom 50,
or about 20 per cent died. The greatest
number of deaths took place during the
fifth and sixth weeks, when 10 and 11
succumbed respectively. The ages of
the patients whose cases resulted fatally
ranged from 12 to 76. The sufferers
also included many children, the young¬
est of whom had not yet completed its
second year, but they all escaped with
their lives, except one boy of 12. Those
persons who had eaten the pork after
cooking or frying, suffered for from two
to three weeks from stiffness of the
limbs and some swelling under the eyes,
but none were obliged to keep their
beds. All persons, however, who had
consumed more than a quarter of a
pound of the meat have died. Not one of
the remedies employed by the physicians
had the slightest effect.
A .Prison.— ... Here _ , de- ,
Russian is a
scnption . , of , a „ Russian prison, written by
Professor Thun, of Leipsig: “The
prison at Kara, near Irkutsk, is said to
be one of - tne ,, worst. , x It . is . an ordinary
farmhouse, -i surrounded n . by * high . . fence, «
a
rrn_ I here are ^ no __» tables 11 or chairs, * . only , plat- , ,
forms on which the prisoners lie packed
like sardines. The food consists merely
of bread and soup, with a very little
grit There is no hospital or other care
or the sick. All those condemned to
hard labor are compelled to wear chains,
whether at work or in prison, and al)
correspondence is forbidden. =
Smelting. -It is claimed that $10,000
has been spent at Ticonderoga, N. Y.,
in arranging for melting iron by a new
process devised by a French inventor,
The iron, instead of being melted and
run off imo pigs, is heated to what is
called a sponge heat, and all impurities
are then extracted, leaving the refined
product so soft that it may be cut with
a knife. It is said that by this new
process a saving of 524 a toq is effected.
OLT OF THE DEPTHS.
Onr Corrtif'poiiiieiit’g Researches an«l a Ite
inui Laliie Occurrence He Drs ribes.
St. Albans, Vt., Jan. 10, 1884.
Messrs. Editors: The upper portion of Ver¬
mont Is one of the plea antest regions in
America during the summer and one of the
bleakest during the winter. It affords ample
opportunity for the tourist, providing he
chooses the proper season, but the present
time is not that seas m. Still there are men
and women hero who not only endure the
cl mate, but praise it unstinting y, and that,
too, in the face of physical hardships the
most intense, 'i he writer heard of a striking
illustr: tion of th s a few days since which is
given herewith:
Mr. Joseph Jac ]ues is connected with the
Vermont Central railr ad in the capacity of
master n a on. He is well advance i in years,
with a ruddy complexion and hale appear¬
ance, while his general bearing is such as to
instantly imures; ot e wtli his s rict honor
and integritv. Severn years ago he became
atllicted with mos- distressing troubles,
which prevent eel the pro-ecatlon of his du¬
ties. He was anguid. an 1 y«t iest!ess, while
at tines a dizzii ess wo Id come over him
which seemed almost blinding His will
power wa strong, and he deternii ed not to
give way to the inyderi u; influence which
seemed undermining his life. But the pain
a ,d annoying symptoms were stronger tl an
his will, and he kept growing gradually
worse. About that time be began t > not co a
difficulty in drawing on his boots, a ,d it was
by the greatest effort that h * was ab'e to
force his feet into them. In this manner sev
i rai weeks passed by. until finally o le night,
while in great agony, lie discovered that his
eet had, in a short while, swollen to enor
moi s proportions. The balance of the narra¬
tive can Iffist be de: cribed in his own u ords.
He said :
“When my wife discovered th fact that I
was so bleated, she sent for the doctor im¬
mediately. He made a mi st are.'ul ex¬
amination and pronounced me in i very seri¬
ous condit on Notwithstanding his care, I
grew wor e, and the sweli.ng of my .feet
gradually ex'ended upward in my body. The
top< f my head pained me terribly; indeed,so if it
badly t hat at times it seemed almost as
would burst. My feet were painfully flannels col 1,
and even when surrounded with hot
and irons felt ns if a strong wind were blowing became
them. Next my right leg
paralyzed. This gave me no [ ain, but it was
exceedingly annoying. About thmtime I be¬
gan to spit blood most freely, although my
lungs were in perfect condition, and I knew
it did not come from them. My physicians
were careful and until ing in their attentions,
but unable to relieve my sufferings. My
neighbors and friends thought I was dy¬
ing and many tailed to see me, lullv twenty
five on a single b unday that I now recall. At
last iny ag< ny seemed to culminate in the
most intense, sharp pains 1 have ever known
or heard of. If red hot kn ves t bar. ened to
the highest degree h d been run ter ugh my
body constancy thee could nit have hurt
me worse. I w u’d s ring up in bed, some¬
times as much as three feet, cry out in my
agony and long for death. One night the
misery was so intense that t aroeanl at¬
tempted to go int i the next, room, but was
uin ble to lift iny swol en feet ab ive the uttie
threshold that obstructed them. I fell back
upon the bed and gap ed in my agony, but
felt unable even to breathe It seemed iike
death.
“several years ago Rev. Dr. J. E. Rankin,
now of Wasliington, was sla ioned here as
pastor of the Congr.gaion.il church. We
ail admired and i es, ected somewhere him, and that my he wife had
remembered seeing
spoken which had in the cured big lie t terms f his of intimate a preparation friends.
some <
Redetermined to and, tiy this make remedy, long cccird
ingiy sent for it, to a story
short, it completely from restored the my and health, 1
brought me back grave, owe
all 1 have in the way of health and strength
to Warners tale Cu.e, better known as
Warner's Safe ividnev and 1 iver Cure. I
am positive that if I had taken th s medicine
when I felt the ftrst symptoms above de¬
scribed, I might have avoided all the agony
I afterward endured, had from to say death.” nothing of the
narrow escape I
In order tliat all possible facts bearing upon
the sub e t might be known, 1 called on Dr.
Oscar F> bassett, who wa; for nineteen years
United States exam ning surgeon, an i who
attended Mr. Jacques during his sickness.
He stated that Mr. Jac pies had a most pro¬
nounced case of Albumii uria or Bright’s
disea e of the kidneys. That an ana ysis
showed the presence ot albumen uud casts in
great abundance and that he was in a con¬
dition where f, w if any ever recover. U.s
recovery was due to Warn m's .Sat'd Oar •.
Mr. John W. Hobart, general manager of
the Vermont Cen: rai ladroad, stated that Mr.
Jacques was one oi the best an 1 most faith¬
ful of his employes, that hi.s sickness had een
an exceedingly severe one and the company
were n> t only g'ad to again have his servi es,
but grateful to the remtdy that had cured so
valuable a man.
Mr. James M. mechanic Foss, assistant superinten- Vermont
d nt and master of the
CV-n'rai railroad, is also able to co firm this.
I do net claim to be a gi eat discoverer, b it
I do think I 1 ave found in the ab vo a now,
ren arknbie < a .e, and knowing the unusual
iijorea eof Bright’s disease fee. that the pub¬
lic should have the b; nefit of it. It see os to
me a ren edy that i an accomplish so much in
the last stages ought to deceptive do eve., more for the ble
first appr. a h of this yet ten
trouble. F. B.
Struck Oil,
It was a Woodward avenue car. A
lad j richly dressed sat in a corner of the
oa/ *Jid said to some one with her:
T smell kerosene oil.”
“So do I,” ’ answered her friend.
One after another got into . the and
car,
the lady in the corner sniffed suspicious
]y. and at last , fixed _ - , her quiet .
eyes upon a
looking , , . little ,. J4 , the door. ,
man near
“I believe he s got the , oil, .. „ she said
in a stage whisper to her friend.
“I know it,” / replied 7 the friend,
“There ought , , to . be law against . .
a carry
kerosene oil in the street cars. n Such v
mg °
odor _ ! ... and , she , glared . , at .xi the little
an
man.
“I shall inform the superintendent,”
said the first lady, aloud,
“I shall inform the president of the
road,” said her friend, with a fixed and
glassy stare.
“Ladies,” said the little man, cheer
fully, “hadn’t you better move!
ker osene from that lamp in the corner
of the car ha8 dripping down on
ye ever gince we 8 tarted, but seem’ ye
both knew so much I thought I wouldn’t
8 ay anything .”—Detroit Free Press.
Don’t think, young man, that just
because it is leap year you axe going to
be snapped up right away. The girls
want % chance before they leap, ,
Chopping Wood.—You must know
something of your business, even if it is
wood chopping. An old Eau Claire
logger says that if you are cutting small
lumber, which may be severed at from
one to a half doxen blows, an ax with a
long, thin blade, and as little bevel as is
compatible with strength, is chosen,
and at every stroke the blade is buried
to the helve. If the purpose is to fell
large trees or cut heavy timber, and this
same ax is used, it bites deep in its
strokes, but the chip remains in the
timber after the incisions, and many
more blows are required to dislodge it
than were necessary to its formation;
therefore, for this purpose, an ax having
a thick, heavy bevel, and cutting not so
deep, is selected. The bevel, now act¬
ing as a wedge, forces out the chip
at the same stroke by which the in¬
cision is made.
“A bbave man carves out his own for¬
tune,” says some philosopher. He does
and no mistake. But let the same brave
man attempt to carve a turkey, and he’ll
get left, unless he has learned the trad
through a seven years’ apprenticeship.
“Improve your opportunities,” said Bona¬
lost parte to a school of young men ; “every hour
now is a chance of future misfortune.”
No opiates or drastic cathartics are to bo
found in the peerless Samaritan Kervine.
The dentists take the stump during a politi
al campaign.
From Boulder, Colorado, Miss N. E. Wilder
writes: Samaritan Nervine cured my epilepsy.
Perfect valor consists in doing without wit¬
nesses all we should be capable of doing before
the world.—Rochefoucault.
Piles! Piles! Piles.
Sure cure for Blind, Bleeding and Itching
Piles. One box has cured worst cases of 20
rears’ standing. No one need suffer five min¬
ifies after using William’s Indian Pile Ointment.
It absorbs tumors, allays itching, acts as poul¬
tice, gives instant relief. Prepared only for
Piles, itching of private parts. Mailed for $1,
Frazier Med. Co., Cleveland. O.
He that hfcth a trade, hath an estate ; he that
hath a calling, hath a place of profit and
humor. A plowman on his legs is higher than
a gentleman on his knees.—Franklin.
A Caie Not Bey n 1 He'p.
Dr. M. H. Hinsdale, Kenawee, Ill., ad¬
vises us of a remarkable case of consump¬
tion. He says: “ A n ighb >r’s wife was at¬
tacked with violent lung disease, and pro¬
nounced beyond help from quick consump¬
tion. As a last resort the family was per¬
suaded to try Dr. Wm. Hall's Balsam for the
Lungs. To the astonishment of all, by the
time she ha 1 used one half dozen bottles she
was about the house doing her own work.”
He that maketh haste to be rich shall not be
innocent.—Solomon.
Dr. Sanford’s Liver Invigorator purifies the
blood, aids digestion, regulates the bowels.
To be happy is not the purpose of oar being,
but to deserve happiness.—Fichte.
Wouldst see blithe looks, fresh cheeks beguile,
Aye, wouldst see December smile?
Wouldst see hosts of new roses blow?
Carboline makes the hair to grow Elf
On the baldest of heads. ■■ «***■»*• ri
One of the gublimest things in the world is
plain truth.—Bulwer.
spirits For dyspepsia, general indigestion, debility, in depression their ol
and various
forms, also as a intermittent preventive against fever and
ague and other fevers, the Ferro
Pbosphated Elixir, made by Caswell, Hazzard
A Co, New York, and sold by all druggists, is
the best tonic; and for patients recovering
from fever and other sickness, it has no equal.
To enjoy the pleasure of wealth thou shouldth
first experience the fatigue of labor.—Chinese
maxim.
Ladies’ and children’s Boots and Shoes cannot
run over if Lyon s Patent Heel Stiffers are used.
Drinking water neither makes a man sick,
nor in debt, nor his wife a widow.—Spanish
maxim.
The short, hacking cough, which leads to
consumption, is cured by Piso’s Cure.
Nothing is so credulous as vanity, or so igno
ant of what becomes itself.—Shakspeare.
Consumption Can Be CuredI
DR WM ; HALL’S
wmlBALSA
cures Consumption, Difficulties. CoUls, Pneumonia, Bronchitis, In
fiiienza. Bronchial
Organa/ Hoarseness, soothes and heat* Membrane Jh-eatlilHS
It tbe
oi the iimigs, inflamed and poisoned by the
disease, and prevents the main sweats and
titflitneem acrone tlie chest which accompany
it. i-ohsuM otion is not will an incurable malady.
HA MAS 1IAI-SAM tails. cure you* even
tbou^k prokMioaui aid
ei^ven , nfwsdfajfr' for number
of -the Philadelphia weekly
CALL.” It contains a list of valuable Premiums three to
bemven PRIZE PUZZLES, to every yearly the first subscriber, of see which our will
solvers re
ceive § 25 , 5 , and $10 respectively, if your
newsdealer is out of NUMBER ELEVEN, send free, us
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WKKKLy* aEl/bP hii'deiptiil,’ |^” prwtor rHE
-PATENTS— Washington. LKNOX D. C-, LawyeiS. SIMPSON and formerly Se Exam¬ CO.,
I Attorneys
iners in the Patent Office; since, for Munn A
'Jo. in more than 16,000 cases. Familiar with every
ranch of the business. Describe case ; write for te rms.
~\7 X r O UNO and live agents wanted in every town at
once. W. H. Dennis «fc Co. 265 W. Ith St. Ciun, O.
TR .u.itK', PRINTS. i,\»et,s. vur. PATENTS*
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J eirriVt your invmfio*. IV athinylon , 11.C
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Don’t be persuadefi to buy old styles: get only
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Watches. Send for Catalogue.
J. P. STEVENS WATCH CO.,
ATLANTA, GA.
UtST op »ise.vs Es
axwats curable by t'SR-g
mustang LIUIMEUT.
07 HUMAN FLESH. m
Bhenmadam, a.,,. ^
,
RunuuadScaW,, SOngs and Bites, S.,r e8Al ^’ f"’
Cuts and Bruises, Spavin, Cr »
Sprains Screw
& Stitches, Foot fio t U ?
Contracted Muscles Lameness 4
Stiff Joints, tSwinny Pea
Eruptions, Backache, Sprains, Sore Fee Stra ^ f na
Frost Bites, Stiflhcss,
and oil external diseases, ondsveryhurtotaca
For general use i a family stable and stock
, ™
THE BEST OF AI,L
LI
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FAILS? |j Spasms, Epilepsy,
IEYER Conti
II sions, Fallh}
Sickness, S.Titu
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ism, Opium Eat
ing, SyphiilU,
Scrofula, J&,j,
Evil, Ugly Biooj
Diseases, Ihjipcp
(tSESStexs* r—r—i—!—r—;-—r-i eta, Nervousna
Nervous Weakness, Costiveness, Brain Worry, Blood Sor a,
Biliousness, Nervous Prostration,
Kidney Troubles and Irregularities. §1.51),
“Samaritan Sample Nervine Testimonials,
j. is doin' wonders.”
Dr. 0. McLemoin, .Menander City, ill
“I feel it my (lut.y to recommend it."
Dr. D. P. Langhlin, Clyde, Emit
“It cured where physicians failed.”
Rev. J. A. Edie,Bearer,h
US* Correspondence freely answered, 13
The Or. S. A. Richmond Med. Co., SUosepItlt,
For testimonials and circulars send stay, it
At Druggists. C. If. Crittenton, Agent, J. I
19
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OFIDH stamp w *
M.D., Atlanta, Georgia.
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