Newspaper Page Text
E. KAEP, Publisher.
‘r()IJO l '
T U E
CONYERS EXAMINED,
pulisked every Satuiday,
By W. E. HARP,
lT TW 0 POLIAKS PEE ANNUM.
K vrK s FOR ADVERTISING:
\VvertiHenic*nt» J will for be the inserted first insertion, for ONE
• j’ Mpiaro,
VlFtV 4 »)tr ENTS for each
, i » per square con
f ‘ for one month, discount or will less, be For made. a long-
11 a liberal
id One inch in length, or less, constitutes
X gtjiiiire. in the local column will be in
£,'/Notices Ten Cents line, each insertion.
fit per
Marring*'* and deaths will be published a
j.,,*.,is of ni ivs, hut obituaries will be charged
e r at advertising rates.
' r liberal rates will be given to merchants
na others, who desire to advertise by the
“ W. A. HAltP.
♦mar. Business Manager.
1 bW
rj iM No. 12 St. N. Louis, Eighth PAc. Et.
Who h»" Md th mule experience female In the than treatment of the
• ml troubles of be pud n: y pliycielnn
hi no V.V't. Rtvea the re. ulta cf his long nntl succcudul
nr-eticc in lus t-.vo now works, jq^t published, entitled
Tho PHYSIOLOGY OF MARRIAGE
Tho PRIVATE MEDICAL ADViSEa
tjooki pertaining that arc really to lunbood fluidca mid an ! Self-Instructor* \t hood, und in supilya all mat
(,,, mn an
rari {lung felt. cusiiy They undcretood. ereteautifiilljr The two iUuitrnled, books and embrace in plain 515
Iwrutigf and , contain valuable Information for both married: and
mi<»r», with n,! the recent improvements in medical treatment
liMtle, Item! wiiat nr.r home papers say : “The knowledge imparted
In Hr. Until.’ new tt’orftil in in no way of questionable che.r
irtrr, Visit. but is victim something of early that in<ibcrction*llic every on^sliould know. 'Ike
Ibe Jinn, otherwise
rr r ir;;-; the y an5 c Ilia her ia hefrl
from mtiJiy bcx
ir,”—Ft. Louii .rournnl. MEjk a y d
. roiMT.Aii rifitf s — fiO j
both 25 in fti. one rtf volume, .Sent $1; umbr in cloth seal, and^ onjiS if m
filt, ;>ricy ra. in atampa- .i
r»c«i^t ot money or
QEO. W. BLEATQM 3
attorney at LsrWj
•hNYKUS : : : : : GEORGIA,
if ill pio cticem tlio Superior and Supreme
joui’tf of the Stitt).
Social attention given to the, collection of
eWiim. nmy3-i y
A. 0 * McGALLA,
Attorney at Law
CONYEiiS, i GEORGIA
Will practice in Itockilalo and adjoining coun
tie*. v3-n!5-ly
3
37 Cut Place, LOUISVILLE. KY.,
Jl rctjnlnrly educated and legally qualified physician Cures al and 1 forma tha
n.o>tmi icessful, as and his practice sexual dlsoascs, will prove. ^pflrnUltor'*
of private, chrouic aB** 1
rliea and Impotenoy. the result of self
ftliUie iu youth, sexual *excessesic maturer years, or other.
CtuiiOH, and prcdti ing some o ftho following effects: Nervosa
Bpj*„H'Miiinal Emissions, Dimness of Sight, Dofectivo Mcm
uyi Hmalea, riWsloalDccay, Cl^dowldh nmnie* oil Less i itee t of avitmou Sexual w Power, &o.
Of ideas, unhappy, are thoroughJy f
rcuderlngmarriL'tf end permanently cured. improper SYPHIMSA or 0 ^^
ORRHEA, cured and entirely erndicatcd from the system;
Gleot, Stricture, Piles and other pri
rate diseases Oonsultatloa quIcKly cured. free and Patients invited, treated charges by rcasonubiq, mail orex
•ud press, corrcapondcnco strict! confidential.
7
A PRIVATE COUNSELOR
Of200 pn^ca, ai-nt lo any address, securely sealed, for thirty
(S,n cams. Should bn lead bv nil. Address as above.
OiCoo hours from 0 A. M. (-0 7 P. H. Buuilays, 2 to 4 P.M.
TV* Itameily of tlio 10(li Century.
TRADE Barham’s 3nfa!!5b*o
Jt Manufactured by the
BarHamPiloCuroCo.,Durham,IT.C.
11 never falls to eiirt Hemorrhoids
\±S or 1*>1<‘«, when a cure tcbtSxaoiil< fa possible'*
ivice List and bona fids
furnished oo application
T% M, MimFV*
89, Whitehall £t. Atlanta, Ca,
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN
Way, CM Glass ad Stone faros.
Lamps, Lanterns,
. SILVER-PLATED GOODS.
ftnd fih'VTGoods Short Carefully Repacked. Established Quick sales
Profits, for CASH. lSovh
march 2 , 1878 . Gm.
PRESCRIPTION J FREE! Lost
ortho speody Curo ofSominal Weakness.
Manliooif iiiul all disorders brought on by Indis¬
cretion or excess. Anv Druggist has the ingre¬
dients llr. W. .SADUttM A N«- 1*0
West M\th Street, tllucimiati, O.
LOOK BEFORE YOU BUY.
WEAVER & SDADDHL
DEALERS IN
88 ? E 0 SDS,
NvJTIONS,
HATS, CAPS,
BOOTS,- SHOES, Ac.
wKOOBBIES & 9
OF ALL KINDS.
Tobacco and Cigars, Confectioneries
ia fact, Everything Kept in a
FIRST CLASS STORE.
HONEST DEALING, IS ODR MOTTO,
fc&TERMS CASH and Short Profits.
Gmycrs Ga. Fob. 16, 1873. tf
l^^.mvdver \st lyCo.KusaviUe.Te Novelties! ** uu
MORSE FOTTTZ’S
AND CATTLE POWDERS,
4
tmg 0
v
Will curo or prevafft Disease.
OPIUMiiili
JOB PRINTING
AT THIS OFFICE.
flfl'l %
B ff 1i tuskis
ili s M 3 P i(] in KXAM
: 1 'AN
mi II a
«
Error Ceases to h% Dangcro’ds, While
CONYERS, GA-.
Purifies the Blood, Renovates
find Invigorates the Whole
System,
ITS MEDICAL PROPERTIES ARE '
Alterative, Tonic, Solvent,
and Diuretic.
Vegetine is made exclusively from the uicee of
carefully-selected barks, roots and herbs, and so
strongly concentrated that it will effectually eradicate
from the system every taint of Scrofula, Scrofu¬
lous Humor, Tumors, Cancer, Cancerous
Humor, Erysipelas, Salt Klieum, Syphi¬
litic Diseases, Canker, Faintness at the
Stomach, and all diseases that arise from, impure
blood. Sciatica, Inflammatory and Chronic
Rheumatism, Neurulaia, Gout, and Spinal
Complaints, can only be effectually cured through
the blood. - ^
For Cleers and Eruptive Diseases of the
Skin, 'Pustules, Pimples, Blotches, Boils;
Tetter, Scaltlhead, and Ringworm, Vegetine
haa never failed to effect a permanent cure. A
For Pains in the Back, Kidney Corn
plaints, Dropsy, Female Weakness, Lcu
corrhcea, arising from internal ulceration, and
uterine diseases and General Debility, Veg8
*ine acts directly upon the causes of these com¬
plaints. It invigorates and strengthens the whole
system, acts upon the secretive organs, allays inflam¬
mation, cures ulceration and regulates the bowels. ■
For Catarrh, Dyspepsia, Habitual Cos*
tlvcness, Palpitation of the Heart, Head¬
ache; Pile's, Nervousness, and General
Prostration of the Nervous System, no
medicine has ever given such perfect satisfaction aa
the Veoetine. It purifies the blood, cleanses all of
the organs, and posesses a controlling power over the
nervous system.
The remarkable cures effected by Vegetine have
Induced many physicians and apothecaries whom we
know, to prescribe and use it in their own families.
In fact, Vegetine is the beat remadyyet discov¬
ered for the above diseases, and is the only reliable
BROOD PURLFIEltyet placed before the public.
,tHE BEST EVIDENCE.' ’
ia
Tno following letter from Rev. E. S. Best, Pasto*
of M. E. Church, Natick Mass., will be read with
interest by many physicians * also thoso suffering
from the same disease as afflicted the son of the Re V.
E. S. Best. No person can doubt this testimony, as
thero is no doubt about the curative powers of
Vegetine. j..ii ■
Mp. II. R. Stevens i Natick, Mass., Jan. 1, 1874.
, Dear Sir,— We have good reason n for for regarding
your Vegetine a medicine ui of tn« the grea greatest value.
We feel assured it has been the the means means of of saving our
son’s life. Ho is now seventeen years of age For
the last two years ha has suffered from necrosis of
his leg, caused by scrofulous affection, and was «o
far reduced tnat nearly all who saw him thought hti
recovery ftouM impossible. A council of able physicians
give us but the faintest hope of his ever rally¬
ing ; two of the number declaring that he was beyond
the reach of human remedies, that even amputation
could not save him, as he had not vigor enough to
endure the operation, dust.then we commenced
present giving him he has Vegetine, been and from that time to the
has lately resumed his continuously studies, improving’ He
crutches and and thrown away his
strong. cane, walks about cheerfully and
,
Though there is still gome discharge from the
opening where the lnnb was lanced, we have the
lullest confidence that in a little time he will be Der»
feefcly He cured.
has taken about threo dozen bottles of Vege¬
tine, but lately uses but little, as lie declares that
lie is too well to be taking medicine. a
- Itvspoctfully yours, ® ,
E, B. BifiSST,. .... • - \
Mas. L. C. F. BEST.
VECETINE
Prepared by
H. K. STEVENS, Boston,Mass ; 1
Vegetine is Sold by ail Druggists.
go io
BJ©B LAliTOBirg
FOR WINES,
' LIQUORS,
CIDER,
CHAMPAGNE, &c.
Oysters, Sardines,’
Crackers,
©caps,
Blacking.
FINE CIGARS and TOBACCO.
Pickles, Peanuts, Candies, &c.,
BOTTLED BEER OF THE BEST BRANDS.
A Specialty.
«^TAU Kinds of FANCY DRINKS
at Short Notice.
A FINE BILLIARD TABLE
attached and Privately arranged.
Under the Whitehead House,
Conyers, Ga. Feb. 1G, 1878.
SMITH & FARM IP.
NO; 19 WHITE FRONT,
CONYERS, GA,
— Dealers in—
DRY GOODS, FAMILY GROCERIES
HARD-WAKE.
CUTLERY,
CROCKERY-WARE,
GLASS-WARE, <tc.
HARNESS,
doling; Hats. Cans, Bools, aite, Cheap.
A full line of Notions and Ladies Dross
CrOods.
A FINE LOT OF
GOOD TOBACCO, CIGARS, ETC;
WOODEN-WAKE, TIN-WARE,
Jug-Ware, and Bralania D;p[>ers, &c.,
Sardines, Crackefs, , a
Fancy Candies, Nuts, etc.
It. fact, we keep a good stock of all that is
usually kept in a first class Dry Goods or Gro¬
cery s?6re. All of which we
WILL SELL ON TIME TO dOOD PARTIES.
aplr. IS, ly.
i fi a week in your 6wn town. ^5 outfit
t,V free. No risk. Reader, if you want
' V business at which persons of either sex
can make great pay all the time they work,
I write for particulars to H. Hallet & CoTCrt-
1 l aid, Maine.
n —tmm mi
BELL’S TELEPHONE.
hat is a telephone ?
‘An instrument to convey sounds by
means of electricity. That gives answer a gen
* ra1 idea ot ir ; but, after all, that
is not the right one. The telephone does
not convey sound.
‘What dots its name mean, them T do
you ask ?
S mp v. that it is a far-sounder; but
that does not necessarily imply that it
carries sounds afa-. Strictly speaking,
the te ephone only changes sound waves
hto waves of electricity and back
again.
[ he most von probably know that
sound is produced by rapid motion. Put
your finger on a piano wire that is sound
ing, and you will feel the motion, or
touch your front tooth with a tunings
f uk that is singing; in the last case you
will feel very distinctly the raps made by
the vibrating fork Now, a sounding
body will not only jar another body
which touches it, but it will a’so give its
motion to the air that touches it; and
when the air motions or airwaves fkirike
the fbnsitive drums of our *>ars, these vi
biate, and we hear the sound.
Thus, from our every day experience
we have proof of two importdiit faots,—
first,sound is caused by rapid motion ;
second, sound-wiVes give rise to corres
ponding motion. Both diese facts are
involved in the speaking telephone, which
performs a tvfro fold office,—that of the
ear on the one hand, that of our vocal or
gans on the other.
io serve as dii ear, the telephone must
be able to take up quickly and nicely the
sound-waves of the air. A tightened
drum-head will do that; or better, a
strip of goldbeater’s skin drawn tightly
over a ring or the etid of a tube. But
Professor Bell wanted aii ear that would
translate the waves of sound into waves
of electrici ty.
Just when Mr. Bell was thinking about
this, some one expefhheritirig with, a
magnet having a coil ot silk-covered
wire around it, found that when a piece of
iron was moved in front cf iho magnet
and close to it without touching, the mo
tion would give rise to electric waves in
the coil of wire, which waves cuu’d be
sent great distances along wire3.
This is just what Bit; Beil wanted. He
said to himself, ‘The sound of my voice
will give motion to a thin plate of iron
as well as to a sheet of goldbeater’s skin ;
and if I bring this vibrating plate of iron
close to a magnet, the motion will set up
in it waves of electricity answering ex
actlv to the sound-waves which move the
iron plate.’ %
But the instrumeiit must not only
translate sound-waves into electric itn
pulses ; it must also change these back
again into sound-waves ; it hum not Oil
ly hear but also speak!
You remember our first tact in regard
to sound : it is caused by motion. All
that is needed to make anything speak is
to cause it to move so as te give rise to
Ij«.,.„cha, the >•„«» makes.
Mr. Bell’s idea was to make the iron
plate of his sound-receiver speak.
He reasoned in this way. From the
nature of the magnet it toilo ws that when
waves of electricity are passed through
the wire coil around the magnet, the
strength of the magnet must vary with
the force of the electric impulses. Its
pull on the plate of iron near it must va¬
ry in (he same manuer. The varying
pull on the plate must make it move, and
this movement must set in motion the
air near the plate iu sound waves corres¬
ponding exactly with the motion setting
up the electric waves in the first place ;
in other words, the souud~motion in one
telephone must be exactly re-produced as
sound-waves in a similar insrument joined
to it by wife.
Experiment proved the reasoning Core
rcct; and thus the speaking telephone
was invented.
The receiving and sending instruments
are precisely alike, each arswers lor both
purposes; but there must be two, since
one must be hearing while the other is
speaking.
When you sjieak into-the mouth-pie«e
of Bell’s telephone, the sound of your
voice causes the ‘diaphragm’ to vibrate
in front ot the magnet. The vibeations
cause the magnet’s pull upon the dia¬
phragm to vary in force, which variation
is atoSwered by electricial waves in the
coil and over the wires connected with it.
At the Other end of Lite wire the pull o!
the magnet of the speaking telephone is
varied exactly iu proportion of the
strength of-the electric impulses that
come over the wire the Varying pull cf
the magnet sets the diaphragm in motion,
and that sets air ia motion in waves pre
| cisely like those of the distant voice,
When those waves strike the listener's
Tiuth is Left Free to Combat it,’ 1.
JUNE Lo, 1878.
pfu lie seems to hear the speaker’s exact
Jones, and so; substantilv, he doe's hear
tiiem. J/, /J, St, N icholas for tTiine.
More of thx mystery of the Mind
_
lue following psyoliologicia! incideut,
which u as told to me by a gentleman of
undoubted veracity, may prove of inter i
est to those of vour readers who are
studying the occult phases of nervous i
phenomena. i he narrotor, a man of fine
nervous organization, was taking his af- i
ternoon fiesta ; his daughter; 3 young
h*d) ot seventeen, silling by his side, j
with her hand in his, and reading. As
he passed from the wakeful 'state into 1
ofie of semi-slumber; he saw- or seemed
to see, appear at the foot -of his bed a
tall man. with a sorrowful expression
upon his face, who, bending down ten
derlj, lifted up a coffin Pud disappeared;
Be was so disturbed by the strange and ;
after unaccountable tossing restlessly nature of for his vision few that, |
a mo
meuts, he opbned his eyes atid said,
•Daughter, I believe I cantiot sleep to*
dav, and will get Up.’ Looking up from
her book, in which sbe was evidently
deeply absorbed, she said, ‘Papa, thisis a
strange book that I am reading.’ ‘What
is it V said he. ‘The ‘Life of Marie An¬
toinette,’ she replied j and then read
from the pages before bet; a recital of
the exact incident that had just coristitii
ted his dream, Louisville Zledieal
News ,
Madison Wisconsin May 28 A large
number of citizens are v siting tile scene
of the l client tornado. Viewing the de¬
vastations of the storm. None of the tic*
counts have been exaggerated, nor has
hardly hall been told jf its destnfbtive
ness, 1 he eastern towns did not suffer
so much as Primrose, Boiilwell, and Per 0
rv. Thirty lives were lost in this county
alone, akd nearly a hundred persons were
seriously injured, while the destruction
of property will reach into the millions.
From the first appearance of the eycl one
at Mineral Point, tli^oifgh its whole
course across the State; the destruction
was great. It is estimated that 5o per¬
sons have been killed, and from 200 io
250 injured serious y: while scores are
leli homeless, many of them not knowing
where their next meal is coming from,
rite accounts ot survivors are harrowing
in the extreme, aud the woe and desola¬
tion everywhere visible are extremely
painful.
A is worth $3,000 in cash. B arm C
have each a farm wd» - th $3,000 at the
present volume of the circulating medi¬
um, but in order to resume the eireubv
ting medium lias to be reduced to bile*
half its present volume, which will cor¬
respondingly reduce the sale values of
B and G’s farms, so that they can then
only get $1,500 each for them, Bnt A
still has his $3,000 in cash. At the start
she three men were equal, but new A is
able to buy B and G both out. What
advantage is resumption lo the two far¬
mers? And what does the capitalist
make by resumption ?—JJdstoii Stan¬
dard.
A W t fe Turns to Foisen Ukr Hus¬
band.-— The VVorceeter (Md.) Shield is
informed that one day last wee'e a white
woman went to the office of Dr. Ham¬
mond, in Berlin, Worcester county, and
asked him to give her a dose of poison
for her dog. The do. lor did so, and the
woman then took the poison home and
told her husband that there was a doseot
powders the doctor said he must take;
He took it, and at last accounts was very
ill. The Shield does not give the names
of the parties in question.
George Parson, a prominent agricul¬
turist near Floomington, Iowa, has on
his farm a turkey gobbler which not on¬
ly takes to water like a duck, but will
stay under water for minutes at a t’rne,’
and after emerging, vainly tries to in¬
duce other fowls to enter the water with
him,
How to Dkown Easii.y.— If death by
drowning be inevitable, as in a ship*
wreck, the easiest way to die would be
to suck water into the lungs by apo#er
iul inspiration, as soon as one went be¬
neath the surface. A person who had
the courage to do this would piobnbly
become almost immediately unconscious
and neVer rise to the 6urfbce. As soon
as the fluid filled Lis lungs all feelings of
(ihitfibess aid pain would cease, the in
discribable seml-deli'rrdra that accompa¬
nies anesthesia wbuld come on, with
ifinging m the ears' and delightful visions'
of 6oft»r aud light,- while he would seen!
to himself to be sinking to rest on llVe
softest of beds and with the roost delight
fnl cf drejms.—kt’opiilar Scicaej Meath
ly.
TWO EOLfcAKS Per Anniim
AN INFURIATED ELEPHANT.
Gh\nipoke, April 8—There was a
dreadful scene here on Tuesday after'*
uc on 1 v\ hen h very lahfe mad eleidmul
ran through the station and killed half a
dozen jh rsons. The elephant belonged
lo the Rajah of \ iziartitgram and was
brought liei'e fV am Benares by a wealthy
Mahometan on the occosion of the mat
ria » y °f a relative of iiis: The animal
wiis, as the mahout reports, kept in the
SUI1 > overworked and not properly ratiew
during its journey. The mahout
Stittes thdt he asked tor some money for
medicine from his master, who ordered
payment of four annas or so~\vhieh be
declined to feceiVe. There were a couple
of men on the howdah and the mahout
.
was on the shoulders of the elephant
when it ran away. The riders got
free ot the animal by catching hold
°‘ the branches of trees by which it
passed. The Mahout remained for some
tune on its back and tried V:s best to
ki fep it in cheek, but when he saw it was
impossible tor hint to control the animal
he jumped from its back; The brute
killed six persons and injured two. One
°t the deceased climbed up a bamboo
tree in his endeavor to escape, but the
animal uprooted the tree, the man fell to
the ground, and (he blepllihit killed him
on the spot. At eight o clock in the
evening the elephant turned towards the
Government Treasury and the Reserve
Police lines. Some of the sepoys, leav¬
ing their charpoys, climbed up the man¬
$ro trees and sbmb bolted towards the
English quarters, Continuing its mad
cai’eer; the elephant, entered the com
pound of Mrs. Cooke’s bungalow, now
occupied by Mr. Nicholson, sub Deputy
Opium Agent, who fired and hit the ani¬
mal on the head. This made it more fu
nous, and it endeavored tb oilier the
room occupied by Mr Nicholson and his
brother. Seeing the elephant in the ver
rand a he fired again, hitting it on the
trunk, and blood poured profusely from
the wound. The animal was at large un¬
til next morning; when it wits with, great
difficulty secured with chains by th e ma>
hout and several others. The elephant
was belli hero *UJ fcaturdav, tht. 7<u i««j-.
and lhen taken to Benares Under guard
The Mahometan, has been called upon by
the Magistrate to explain why he did not
take proper steps when he was informed
of the symptoms of madness in the ele¬
phant. Th© Case is pending in the crimi¬
nal courts.
WOULD’NT MARRY A MECHANIC.
A young man commenced visiting a
young woman, and appeared to be pleas¬
ed. One evening lie called when it was
late, ivhich Jed the young lady to inquire
where he had been;
‘I had to work to-night.’
‘What! do you work for d living?’
she inquired in astonishment.
‘Certainly;’ replied the young man. ‘I
am a mechanic.’
‘I dislike the name of a mechanic,’ and
she turned up her pretty node.
This was the last time the young man
visited the young lady, lie is now a
wealthy man, and has one, of the best
women in the country for a wife. The
young lady who disliked the name of a
mechanic is now the wife of a miserable
fool—a regular vagrant about grog shops,
and the soft, verdant, silly, miserable girl
is obliged to take in washing in order to
support herself aud children.
You dislike the name of a mechanic,
eh ! You whose brothers are but well
dressed loafers. We pity any girl who
is so verdant, so soft, iw to think less of a
young man for being a mechanic—one of
God’s noblemen—the most dignified and
honorable personages of Heaven’s creat¬
ine-, Beware, young ladies, how you
treat young men who work for a living
for you may one of these days be menial
to one of them. Far better to discharge
the well-fed pauper, with all lvis riu>-s,
jewelry, brazenness, and pomposity, and
take to your affections the callous-han
dCd, industrious mechanic. Thousands
have bitterly repented their folly
have turned tlleir backs on honest in
dustry. A few years have taught them a
severe lesson.
Every living thing was put into this
world tor some good ; even the crow was
not made without caW£
A little urchin in a school being asked
‘What is Rhode Island celebrated for V
replied. ‘It is th’e only, one of the New
England States which fe Hie smallest.’
--- *
If you sea a wife carefully footing her
husband’s stocking,yon may conclude that
ho will not find it difficult to foot
bill^. '
--------—
Few meff are driven lo desperation?
without having had’ thtEiselVes 'a hand
in- the driving, -
NO t'riSi
irt>Jtt£*V WHO PILFER.
‘It is a hard thing to say,’ said the siO
eiintendent of rhe largest stores iti
America to a New Yoik reporter, ‘but
stealing seems to come natural to a great*
many women. \Ye have some lady cus¬
tomers win m we have known for yea;?,
with whom we would not hesitate to
leave a fray of uncounted diamonds,
out we have some others who would
whisk off a calico dress, if they loan u 1 a
good chance,'although they would never
wear it. We sometimes think that s o mo
people like ;
to steal where they are clc-c-"
! .v watched, jus' to cotivi.nce themselves
of their shrewdness, and glbdt over it m
private. There are some people who do
not hesitate to boast to their female ac
quaiutanees that yesterday morning
people they ‘capt ured’ such and such a thing-I
who are not professional thieves*
They are not, of course, peo|>lo who
move in respectable society. But we
cannot shut our doors ‘igaiiist oil who-do
not move in respectable society. Kverys
body who has-money to pay may demand
the i'ight to buy. Our liouest customers
really are in very little danger of being
falsely arrested. There may be womeii
so absent-minded as to walk out with
articles they have not bought—indeed, I
ihmk there are, but they are not one in
100,000, and those vviid know themselves
to be subject to this disjase, hof I tliifk
it is a mild form of disease,) should guard
themselves carefully. Thebe may be
such a thing as kleptomania, bat it is
difficult to detect it. I hardly think there
is such a disease, but, undoubtedly; there
• s a mama among some people to steal.
A man might go along the street and
little see
some smoker’s article and covet it;
although a second before nothing was
further from his thoughts. But he
would not be likely to take it, oven if the
opportunity offered, unless he was *
thief: A womaii sees something she
would like to wear in her hat or arouncf
her neck, and her first idea is to possesi
herself of it. Most women will pass ill
b >N saying to themselves th itth ey cannot
afford it- xiui otnero, and , they are un*
fortunate, will have it in their pocket be'*’
h>re, as I believe, they half know whj^t
they are doing, I have no doubt what*
ever that thousamH of articles have bceii
stolen from this and other stores, with*
out detection, by women who were real*
ly honest, but who took what did not be¬
long to them without a moment’s best*
tation and bitterly regretted it afterward;
all the more bitterly that they did not
dare return the articles tin- feaf d£ expo
sure.’
Alexander II. Stephens was the friend
of Grant when that worthy held office,’
and no .v he is the apologist of Ilaj^es.—*.
But then Mr. Stephens is a privileged
individual, and can do things that no
other man in Georgia coiild do and still
retain the confidence of Isis constituents,
ihe people of the 8th District seem to
think that evc.iylhing he does is just and
proper. Even his opposition to the pas¬
sage of the Potter resolutions wil? be*
considered ‘proper under the circnnr
stances,— [Darien Gazette.
The greatest want of the Aotfntfy con be
summed up the following sentence, to
wit: ‘Fewer men who seek office and
more men whom the office seeks.’ Wo
know men whose conversation from’
morning to night is naught but ‘my
chances for such and such ..office, 1 True,'
they may not come square out and say,
‘I want Ihe office,’ but you' can tell fioni
the drift of their gab what they are driV
ing at,—fMor.tazuma Weekly.
-Sa
The Florida sub- committee of inves¬
tigation has concluded its labors and de
parted for Washington: MoLin finished
^ lls testimony yesterday, lie exposed the
whole fraud, and implicated Noyes, WaD
lace and others of the‘visiting statesmen*
<3il ’ ectl y therein. lie says the returning
board Florida Republican leaders 4
generally were promised positions as the'
P lice of tlie lVauds » and mention^?
lnan y of the prominent actors in the re¬
warded with office*by Ilaycs. He claim¬
ed that, for hims'elf, he was actuated by a
partisan spirit alone, though the pi crui¬
ses of reward had their weigh*. The
most amusing portion ‘of his testimony
is that the ‘visiting statesifibn’ claimed
t’uey came to Florida to give ‘moral sup¬
port’ to the Republicans iu their highly
immoral •practides.
.
To Menu China.— lake a Very thick*
solution of gum arabic iff #aier, and
Btir jnto it p!as fer of Paris, until the
in ; xture j s of a proper Consistency. Ap
ply it a brush fo the fractured 1 edges 4
the china, ana stick them together:
In three cfe>s the articles cannot’be bro
j. en t *} jC s ' u . ie place. The w'biteness’
of too cerdent renders it dodbly VsTuaL
Wte.*