Newspaper Page Text
L f 4 w A. HARP Publisher.
VOLUME Y.
T II E (
YERS EXAMINER
Pulisbed rtvery Friday,
CONYERS, GEORGIA,
i 50 per Annum in Advance.
JOB PRINTING,
Every I>c«cription, Promptly and
Ex,•cub'd, at. Reasonable Rates,
v
T i;s FOR ADVEKTISING
Iverlis eme nts will he insertedfor ONE
flAK per square, for the first inBer
q, 1 I1I TY CENTS per square for
coiJUnuftnce, for one month, or iess,
p lon -"r period, a liberal discount will
;L<le. length, less, const!
• One inch in or
k fl, 8C|.lUir6* will t be
"Notices in tlie local column
-t d at Ten Cents per line, each inser
ferriages Ejms and deaths will be published
oi news, but obituaries will be
Lvi for at advertising rates,
FALL AT THE
IAILR0AD RESTAURANT.
finder the Car Shed,)
ATLANTA, GA.
k e re all the delicacies of the season
i„. furnisqed in the best of style and
hhpap as any establishment in the city
Lf [' Meals furnished DURAND. at ‘allhours unei.20 of the
li.lLLARD &
fl hiif is Soiling J
|Hi lie soiling system is that by which
■ , of various kinds are excluded from
■ fields, ami the tood prepared
fol to them regularly. associated with The what soiling
cm is alwa\ s is
“high farming,” which has
is rule “the largest return from the
svailahlo spaee,” tuul it is to
point we are journeying on our road
oirf. cl ion ill agriculture. It is a
f :iml TT'Vn close iit.cnt ion, t irnd T mie. *T> that
K f ‘- I gr«>:it «x|¥*n«c. ........ «.? It calls lif for con- rt
W T
111 order to prevent m>ury . to them
rni H' tHlS C w'll m dIf t? ly
ilie, most, progressive fanners have
nM on. the plan, it is safe to s^y
“cut success is due more to good judg-.
.nil rum !ban to the sysvem itself,
th « ani^ds is
m.vnuMl. ImUhal it is the only true
|k V.roping-ianus »'■ «*« dcpie.iL in a high state of
But few
loos arc required in soiling* This i 3
-A considerable saving.. The
m*" I'".i" !•"' h( ' °i‘ ;l r-'iriab’e character, and
t?T, ''-0' **} N /"";ofol 'r «r-Y preparation, ^ “'<> in ••>»!-' ae
f - rr and te fern,, Whulhcr k lhe desire ^ of tho
, )llt Tlm
?
1 " Ifui'„OM-.s t i,.sir.JI tlman^ .m i i ‘\*1 •;“: d * T
of c Stock v» ever vwi |fe
s 'i. TTr y . being
|| mj***! 1 no expense
i T,v ’* "■ »« ?'{
I no hero „„| V it! ,i In "'•! ,vT r piesbned. ''r
hiiis animOB ?’
li.-Miii, jj ; L. '“i.ed ;. l,a V UU as nn ‘‘ x i article >os . lue . fe ot
ho iiiiiit bl nkT • 1
Ji..iiti.slj n-.'V i ' aS J 11 -'' mtc '! 110 F*5»t 1 ■'V
lull fiuuu-r ‘ | 'J 1 i 1IS . s tock, yet, with
f,j s :V.. dli/.'AV i?V,1, 11 >r fee
v.lt .*».•, at un - ''Inch to
iiivvK.. s n ', is
'
: it U,e soil
ill! k ’
van t ^ div ends larger, and the
l i
i; ^ aud
tho m ln I
>vvr Vo a ‘, energies are wi
limiiev < A’i ! l ! tjni(1 \ law) f a M
p.-ribl,.' •!)•(• ,vmh. l cMnV^U . hr S iall ^ !t
l"*rt lhe S|,; ‘ K ... thu* " L ^ d< r ° r ^. sU V.’
amount *
Lttj 'raiumLmw-el™^'^ ?T *¥
1
,1: um-iipr. Hu. Rp ’
besl ,, "nd
flit’v do
Mia
,l '*• Ptoper svvtonx of rotation'W fun fol
and the host m-i ^ i
hist th ohi.cf,™," -, “
"u pa v. issUy'nt i„
' ' !l: ,1 it <I T' em " tm a # ^ r ‘ 1
V To Sleep, Eat Onions.
1 venture to suggest a new but simple
■I'medy for " ant of sleep, says a man
All . ; had t experience. Opiates, in
v ev fe the liquor and
‘lilt 1 Utu " will leave opii redat
' traces of their in
flttv next < uiorning, I, therefore,
Til t°r myself and have fre
—
so for others—onious ;
rtlmi u ' mniOQ stewed onions, will do. raw, All but know irpan- the
'
^ u ‘dal nuns ; this is due to a peculiar
At aud up healthy ‘iitamed in this most valu
root. The oil has, I
’ uglily they soporific powers. In
never fail. If I am
d with work and feel that I
; -- 1! I pat two or three small
'• aud tlie effect is magical.
excellent things to eat when
< v posed to intense cold. Finally,
' h>u not sleep, it is because
t! pan
" 1 ls in the brain, and not in the
1 he remoily, therefore, is ob
t ^ all the blood from the
, . • down
V , ' 1 the stomach. This is to be
! v , mating a biscuit, a hard-boiled
• a >U of bread and cheese, or some
* °'dow this up with a glass of
V."’ l’, 0r and eV( m w ater, aud you will fall
will, I trust, bless the name
h^r. — Exchange.
^ *5* va hie of projiorty inti to
j,. 1 (>s ls hehl 10 be fully
,, ’• m ikuior , ujUru.u,; the
acrid. in
‘ 1 L H)o, (
w ith 8 >7 ) Th
trei hihiibhffii W EfigtaBll TI
aiftl n lire United States
tl.UOd —Chicago Herald.
x ppaCTHJ^Esasi •Wfiir.2 OiTAKOTUA giS ’eon^sS olio: ■ OJjlq
# ; *w :i : i
f
[#. <
Os ©
*
a™ y 1 6 Fnnce of Wales fa is
a „.. .ctodwithgo^-- , , .
aXa&sr is miiDg ■**>
^msmm *-&&**'*--'
t's- *
si: :
vented a gunpowder that watenwill not
ntFpr-t
-— ___
Benjamin JzJSZ H. Hmii expecto to oublish TT
his father^ 0 ^ 11 ’
er with a biographical g .phical sketch sketch,-sh shnr ortly.
™
--
An Indiana schoolma’am ^^w> says it is not
“rr t r nicestZr bieto
|.l«s and ts
a o„, " " Toma / »a«Jl ^ per \ i- *.u that the
fin finances of f Canada must be m good con
dition if the royal party can afford to
visit Niagara Falls and Chicago in close
succession ......'
-,...- , ,
The war in Egypt virtually ended
when the British took possession «f
p Cairo. • England -p 1 ■% has • wanted * 11 Egypt ? * for t a
century, and the coveted land has fallen
into her hands like a ripe apple.
---
George Fbanois Twain still lives,
which we learn by the statement that
se ven teen boys torWtt^ were recently arrested in
.
Wew York tor toimentmg him white sit
ting in the park of evenings.
■ ■ ■+*>
- — *> -
Lord Dufferin, Admiral Seymour,
Sir Garnet Wolseley and Lord Beres
lord, who Egyptil have distinguished cam/aign, themselves al“
™ ** u,„I, are
, Bms pl Lngland a is • under . =, renewed • , obliga- ...
tions to Ireland.
“^— ”w *—-- r
A gentleman writingirom-Geor^
a frieDd in.Washington, says that Cto.- '
c rnOT Colquitt Will probably succeed fee
late Senator Hill to the United States
Senate. The election of Senatpr Will
take place at the S next J session of ° f thb
tQ be 1 ^ d h tal1, \
■
. ,
/ * M . Qt .,„ inKpm , a Jaw ,„ w ^^r«aire<i makes Ifie me nn , )lflr
ot a house habie for treble any loss that
may be„susfcaiQqdyby feerein
with his consent;. A galobn deeper St
».»«>, so" the » ix^>ney rntmey,,going ffoinK to to a a man mau who whq
load lost ®ly *600 m playtng poker ott
f r ^ TTr-
^^; ifw^ tt fl
ot
hwtion : Mo-/ta»»»»-ed (short a,) Ma
.
(long a,) ifo-hom-et (short a.)
^op ronpl erl dv 7 sneaking speaking Mahomet Mmmet is is the the name mane
f successors, «94 and 1ife‘gg therefore^ e ?J^
gh mild only be known as Mahometanism.
--- rM
Mb. Lot, who accompanies Herbert
fDo^r^ortitSSSadof ^lAncer on his visit to this country told
? | et ... tm S ^ , tter ,, , Mr. T Speincer l
; His trouble *is the nafere
woj'se. i&tle in eflekpYx
insomnia. Ho is not to
lybt a ! i. i «»„ aild aCv starts Niaht after
w tossef
m3ht he he tosses about,^ana and the e 34 y y
^of ® 8 only to find him more fatigued
he reared.
J ijdge Hilton, who refused Banker
^eiglman entertainment at the Grand
Hotel, Saratoga, because the lat
fc> cx&ra fnnd fcr «» Wl .t
Hcbr °w refugees. Several gifts
subscriptions offered by Judge
Hilton to differentJewish charities have
been refused. Dr. Brown, of
the ! Jewish T ol Herald iLf thinks trlwL that the so
Cie y rehef f t H 0X1169
should aocepUhe , pit. f
-
New York Herald: Cetewayo, says
Loudon Truth, objects to the barbarism
of taking different kinds of food on the
same plate, and insists tipon having his
vegetables served separately. What
would be think of a beauty at a cele¬
brated watering place hotel, who had on
her plate a roast, two entrees, mashed
potatoes, succotash, and several sauces
aud juices, and then, pointing her jew¬
eled finger at a dish of wine jelly, said
to the waiter, “Bring me some of that
liver?”
A North Carolina, correspondent of
tho Atlanta Constitution writes ; “ I sup
pose Morehead City is the only city in
the world without a wheel in it. I do
not think there is a wagon or a buggy
horse in the town, and very few in
« r ,y. Eveo-.h i n g is done i n
There is not a hou^e m the county that
a boat can not get within a mile of* Not
the rt y °™
a m bouts. The
people . to funerals boate, and tvlfau
go in
tb.y >"»*•? arrest a man they cany him to jml
: l '
A WAR W
the
aud Jfe un wmm
h# pht Great -.^■sagg
t. 1 tnnaporlaum from all
W( aai f,*thar campaign, ended at the
hf§ tooeh of arm., srith a vmtory
inhfe ***•
tffir led Mrt-W UTOiittfaa.
*- {■I -A. ,2*51 -- . , .>-v* MH 4MM6IBCIIM • «•* *C ^
ERROR CEASES?TO E)E DANGEROUS WHILE TRUTH IS LEFT FREE TO COMBAT IT.”
CONYERS, G§A„ FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 29, 1882 .
ai ii*-. «.^ir»h ^ -arn* T>r 4 fi«h ««/»
ler J*
£»Sgr ^^&s±r
Stable in the outcome, and it may be
. -i . . . AfteraI1 „ ^ ... mi11 ...
"
Y tar y glor^.f^e 1 thing passes to the realm
of diplomacy, and the other powers will
claim to lmye a finger in the pie of
Egypt. The outcome may be a sort of
4 »*- «a
commercial security than that which ex
isted before the British destroyed it by
;«« Stn nvh^ ry
milted Strawberry vines that have been per
to cover the ground and have
borne one;good crop of fruit, will not
pav the labor of weeding out, and as a
nd e shoui<l be plowed under as soon as
lhe ero P' has.) een gathered r but if one
spring,'^ neglected to set a new bed the past
fam % d^ires tb grow enough for
***K two or three rods of the old
bed may real bk saved, and made to furnish
another what fruit is wanted for
home t’Ae.
One of the easiest and perhaps the
best wav. to 4 lean out an old bed; is to
spade fodt if. ih the width vines, and leaving four feet rows about A
a apart.
good dressU1 ^ of manure should be
in with the vines; and the rows
ot vines left standing should be well
cleaned out, leaving neither weeds or
gius$. Some believe it best to mow oft
the nevcf tbps of the old vines, but as we have
tried this method we cannot
^ )ea * c of lts advantage from experience; W do!
mg, >f “«« it would f? be d ° an ^ improvement, f be
cause it Would lessen the labor of Weed
lug back ,„t, which is the one great draw
^ on continuing an old bed; not
a very tedious task to weed it
the will £r greatly ass will lessen become the so thick that it
crop the next
season. If the land be in good eondi
tii e Ah space vZs spaded before up will be well
if cold weather
sets in; so, then next spring the old
v iiics may f be while spaded in to make paths
to sUm(i n picking the fruit.
If; one has a strawberry bed away
from the garden,, and it has been kept
cleah of grass and weeds, it may be left
mother season without cleaning
out: anJ 11 V " 1 F***!* *»™M« bait S
crofi anotlwr season without expend.
except the use of the Jahd; but if in the
should un|er ^
no circumstaRccs be per
nil*ted to ^taiid over the second year
without being ye^ kept as clean of weeds as
5t is;the first We know that the
al i.» a fa grew to let it stand,
; in S to have time to clean it out,
lejsion ||hich m many should eases be made never comes. within The two
wdks after the crop is gathered; and if
Sgis decided work of to cieanin let it stand another shouhf year
Smmeneqd S be
Workman. at onee. —- Massachusetts
jp Tlie Draft of * Plow Sulky.
S a
^ Lh™^ nn, IS. w • SVki°J»v7 A *T~ ^ ,, .
&nswers |“ a n that a of writer a walking inithe plo%\ Oh o asks Parmer, and
- 1S car ^ c 4
^L trSTSl« to^t iioo^tlfe
"bottom board causes the plow mK S
of the furrow with so
^>*£« tairow, with !t»i&ctim. ¥ to
;i that is’beinv overturned g tYaUhe Wit
So £ be^tk^ed
&”ed|e common plow offf| wUl
tod«dS
verv smooth urodnceiLS track in the furrow which
nSssure einonlvbe
ThinE SftSRIRteJte a!™?!!
two whe«K ® * l be e 110
nllin ^„ f Sd . an^m rT
i n g a wider fiprow, with Hin~r mint iti ifl
S'is si-*.S§^eS iusteS hofated .^“ wteel^'Tmo^
Dlace of
1 h a lkv ’
Why He Fainted.
He „ was a thing of beauty, with his
waxed mustache, green kids, little cane
and curly hair. 1 wo old women on the
-car were wondering when the if he would stopped melt and in
a rain-storm, car
a stylish-looking bowed, lady smirked got in. and The
young man rose
up to take her wiU®vS%^j far fe
silver dollar,
bac |FjL aad ** *.».
“That’s chaftge.”
too old,” replied the driver.
?9tei
*. Got a hole S,*Jf in it- no o-nod.”
.. JSS. e beuviUm seSni
mm &SSkfrtedoUa'ba^totte“a- ™, v „ h i, e in a
ma’am/ He just toShStmWone fainted dead awav p£.
andhe ne.or Mme ?Sl
seng.-r was left on ihe oar. Your
mnr
^JL^-'T townfee
About About Ah two two miles miles from
u ‘ l " "" ,,r “ " r
3 :sss^ -
J‘I “Are aee^ there tt^ks*’» not hundreds of horses
pasturing on the prairies, and how do
you know that this is hot the track of
one of them?’’
‘‘ Because he is shod, and the horses
h ® rdl ^ 011 the P rairies a ° not wear
“^sr.^c trail; the horse saddle k and m,
has a on, the
rope hangs from the horn of the saddle.”
aad ^ ^ }'oa insist tl.„t it
“Because, if a man had been on his
back he would have ridden him on a
straight moved course, but this horse has
from side to side of the road as
he strolled along and that U a plain
8 l g? that he grazed as he went and that
he had no rider.”
After that it would not s.urpnse
»f d doctor, “it you were to tell us
the age of the horse, and the name of
theown f .” .
■ ‘‘ Well, that would „ not. be very hard
to d ®-. 1 here arc signs flia^ have told,
me the owner’s name, and, thflre are
other sigus that, if 1 had time to- exaih
P* ^°uld toll me has age. I know he
is one ot old man Pendegrast's horses.
down Pendegrast has;a targe bunch of
m the bottom, and an old nigger
dow » does, all his shoe ng, and
shoes no othfr horses except his. So-we
know lus shoe track just the-same as wfe
know his brand.”
Afterihis conviction on cn-eumstan
»U eviW it *oM not have sec n.ed
extraordin if the Kemnant had given
us his opinion K^d-hen, of the life and character
of our drawing, hi,
conclusions from an exam mat on of
some of our physical peculiarities.
beJ‘So"SftStaT *KT £TS£
No “signs” on the prairie or in the eyeball WOfldA
sign escapes their practiced
manner of tracks, trails and marks are
to them data on which to ba^e
sions. The peculiar movement of ,n
animal will indicate the presence of
some other animal in the neighbor-,
hood. A broken limb of tree. ;
a a
crushed weed, the debris arohml a
camp-fire, the flight of a buzzard, and
other such sighs are to the cow-boy and
the frontiersman what the sign-hoards
»d advertiaem^t. are to people wh o
By* fo C; Itiea—Wi*. SiftHw..
Thp n„»,.pl T.,.,,..- !
ences by M. Daubree. After referring
to fee three stages of the work, the sci
entitle researches, the preparatory op
erations, and the execution of the lJnen pro
jeot. he points out that while the
chalk fa water-bearing- in its upper
sla*ota it is only FrenclTAs^ociation slightly so in its lower
beds. The have dug
two wells at Sangatte, ea li about nine
ty-five tJo yards galleries deep, and have be<nm Card to
run from them
Shakespeare’s of these Cliff galleries, under the sea. In
one of sixty ' seven-teiiths at a depth
yards below
the French hydrographic
mark, the U Beaumont nndTfhLthffVhe perforator m”
will be at W
c y ne of Mr. Brunton will ifeWdMnTl be employed.
On the English side the
gallery 6 yar?ls begins at a depth of about thir
ty-tw below the French hydro
graphic bench-mark, thanks to
nature of the chalk near the
and runs under the sea at a
-teS £Tngil[
itasyet. The mass of the rock through
which the tunnel is bored is ^ quite dry,
bllt from tiroe to tlme little nn els of
2?^ 331 fcbe *“ 10C ^“ ^* h cylindrical *?■? form crack of ?
bore adopted , by Colonel Beaumont has
an advantage under these circumstan
<=es as it allows of-the gallery being in
eulated from these tricklmgs by means
of an iron lining ^ formed of rings haviim
of th? gallen?
Tliese rings are in five segments, bound
gether, ^ and each ring to the next ones,
hen a water fissure is encountered,
last joint is tightened by a band of thin
sheet iron inserted into it. When the
spring from the rock is tolerably strong ref
it is luted with a cement containing
lead before the rings are placed over it
If the fissure is oblique a sort of tube
has to be built up of the rings until it is
masked, but half an hour serves to place
a ring into position. Owing to the slope
of the gallery the borers recentlT at
below
depWolfow waHw At this point
five and one
bottom was there aboutffiEiv- vaiils. -
Scientific American. v ‘
.opal . -f?S Thuiches pa^ore of of loik, tne m«* Pa, publish ?F »- a
T 1 ?" Dg ^ ,or Tehlsm £
? tte “,a “so-called Methodist camp-moet -
say, are not under the control “? r f of i f es anv - *>W de
partment of the church, and are---
is!s=rs»
1 ‘ii* i l ,afluonce 18 more neiptul than
I”' * the cause °f Cnrist.-’-gjfgj
Wb.tSWIPfte exceed,
^ Wliy * a Kerosene K_ ^Bursts. Lamp Bursts.
*-LHrt s, as as well well as as bora, boys, need need to to uuder- under
■ abouty keroseue explosiaiis,; A
«yg
<yill dry up-that is, “evaporate’-a with
little and will ter m, by mingling
the air in the upper cannot! part, a very explo
siye gas. You Me this Bufif gaS any
more than yoit can seoair. it is
disturbed aritl dW-ven-otH, ahd a
caches it, there; will be^ tefrible explo
vwy. Benzine is one; burning fluid is
another; and naphtha, aleplx?!, etheit,
old lighted a cigarette, "and threw thh
burning match $d on dream the floor close to the
can. He not there was any
danger, because the liquid was corked
up in the can. Bui there was a great
explosion,-and he was badly-hurt. This
$y is fha^the very mysterious. had been The probabil- standing;
can
there a good formed,"some wliifli ana a good which deaV of
had of
eaked out around the stopper and was
h&ngmg m a sort of invisible cloud over
ami around the can; and this cloud,
when jthe match struck.it, exploded.
Suppose a girl tnes'te ; fill a kerosene
JvvUhout first blowing it out. Of
lamp is nearly empty or
not care-to fill it. This empty
space is idled with a cloud of explosive
arising from Hie oil in; the, lamp,
Wbeii she pushes the nozzle ot the can
i#o the lamp at the top, and begins to:
pgur the oil, r-mning into the lamm
# s empty space and pushes the-'
tfte WODliged.topqur lamp, phtotrer the,sages of
at the top, into the’room out
«£■ Wazipg Ot^, wick ^fifcblf ? uhich o it the strikes gill is holding
fejsdfc clffbf ®
and spatt^ya: furniWe it over her
cipthes and oyer the of the
room - Ihis is the wav hi which a kev-r
bSenQ happen lamp when bursts. , The same thing oS
Jter Jjay the fire .the a girl pours the
m range or stove,, if
feper tJi ere is a cloud of explosive vapor mfhe
part of the can, or if the stove is
hot ehough to vaporize quickly some p'f
the oil as it falls. Remember that it is
net the oil but the invisible vapor which
explodes. Taking care of fee oil will
not you. There is uo safety ex
cept m tlie rule: Hover pour oil ou a
l*hted fire or into a hglitedlamp—
™*»**»**«..
WilH-vti Camden Bassett in wd Slav ne^rnlivina celebratei
in N J 'last 7di 6
bio r-'fiih bl ^thd^and is without f doubt r m
* AM f “e k f
Kftl. _° 5 ’ wb y ie bis P ar ® n ^ s ■ were slaves,
2?S d ^ " ya L d
!^ dy a * y° ^mrng un man the Revolution of twenty-one Basaett, or
o
b wefity-two, the of Wilson. working for Wlnle a farmer
y name tneie
and became the father of a
f a JS outhved. e fefeilv, eaeh Upon member-ot the death whom of his he
W 1 f ' 8 Bassett married again. When the
war broke out in 1812 he became a body
servant t° Col Moms, ci Jackson’s
T™*' ^ hom be accompanied' < to the
front at New T Orleans. He married his
th,rd mfe upon his return from the
b 9 «th, and had by her quite a numerous
Jkmiiy, tb 9 cl all vd but war. one For of whom ^he last died eighteen prior
to'vn, to and from whicn places he has
traveled on foot many atime. I he last
hf JanfifnS *?I ° • S
----
‘ Predictions Verified.
Senator Jackson, of Tennessee, was
reminded not long since by a friend who
was at the University veriflcatioTo” of Virginia predt with
him of the curious
tions made thirty years ago and more,
in the fast DniSty friends, of vSfa ^mpanions S
were constant
aasssa*asi«er.i rzxs^i^ttxs
mine,” completed the drawing. “ Put under
said Jackson. “Jackson address
ing the Senate of the United States ”
“ And under mine,” said Malione “ de
liveiing University a lecture to the"students of the
yo^ Kor of Tennessee ^Oh ” “And Fenno? under
from’the an
nouncing bffiS^LoSSS!” a decision mfewriStoS Supreme
were appended. uSte^States Jackson is to-lav Maho^ in
if the Senate of the Mahone
and^Innor^^^ «* memberof theSura^i
! 1 flfl fl ifl II Frinfffl4 ft i ff S
Chinese as U
A OhinamlmYtos sor^cos to
publisher of a monthly papei- in this
<%. send *° him <* proofs «P •» ** of **»• of his paper,
each Xied article, and
““ k ? «* comoctji’m ..fai:^ the
proofs when returned, ftr>d convev J tho
'------- *• —’ -—- " -
WEBB &5SHSsS 1
work'for two other biiineS periodical in the city,
T and h$y Canton, learned tbe in Hong puldiaieS Kohg
aW i„pere „r
of Franofaeo ae ^hitf lkWr^«W
Bulletin. ...
7~W
Foot ■**-»• Wa> k *
” s *
W&gSssasm 33?ss
, a j 3 t be principal , E points poims or of mcerest interSt
. . ThrE*°nf^ l
P ^ t ' entlo n
t o the mountains Ii i +kf S U
- 1
h . ’
K *5 ^ lp , • *
^ Xo-reed ® J £ to kM
d
Sfi ^ 1 f li6nds ^et<. takpii Cphi
.
t ^ ^ oSttih ftSjie”RrhK
“ rt To ^
make the ‘ n.^Ii ?K® th e W y
« that fnmw ,
.■ J X : reeei^^eSSmfd^Sh ivono®vS SSS^Ea
P. at an .V one then a only
f ofaSir . > giievant.es
f contimWl^S sex F i
. .
f d f fe Mlrflknerbuo S- tW^mdd MdA£t of
s i ste pl,in d in their pmhmsc 5 SS£,S -but 5 S!
, t^ien P rnnM sheTeiS th-Kicv exneii’
and
f Wv miscHev^usIv^aN^
hTh they c ?' ousl y Y‘ l uT,
. <
L,L | h Eyi®|W
ft . n f t 1 SoSSJESfo G f the uartv
SI seve ^S v bli^S^fee^ ’SSSFhSSi it?4^d
T. ,,,
L k^hfif' ^av' she 4e^vV‘‘ : ?o''cr-bn
,
j ^ImXhe t 4 itUt
fattened f afte^lhe w
fer(J | n eC 'S^ rM 6 Wiv K 2>SS^l^?d£?A twelve°ahd eighteen t f el1
^
d( ;P J^Slev? “VflrFwall-rr fl'S'of
wwp
J, J “L : £ ‘ ]? nnft?,L Vnin
° ond
. f n t w, f il¥^i3h
sacks ® llT , 0 h mf^S\h
nackfed-^^'bam : (
“i®f“LY™'„ 4 harc“^itoZi
bears ' Much of fee time they slept in
the dpen air in their hammocks under
canvtis coverlets, which were used to
shie l d them from heavy n/o, dews and rain.
Pne night, ten day, tl.ev approl.cndin? grav.f
» severe storm, camped in a
yard and slept between the graves.'
Anotiier night, in the mountains, they
were thrown,into consternation by the
3 appekrance P |^ frightened of a bear, as’ but the beast fled be
S they molest were, them.
i without offering .nyountaius'. to they
n the were
j a great terror of rattle-snakes,
but did not encounter any of
the reptiles. S3, kindh® Along their route they l
many ot the ho
pitable farmers entertaining them, but
they shunned notoriety and avoided all
the towns and villages, out° frequently rathe? going
BO me distance of their way
than meet crowds. A novel feature of
their undertaking was the log-book. keeping In of
wha,t they called their
Wriiten pages Although frequently declined,
offered sayfng vehicles, they always deter
that they started with the
mirlatioa of waking. Theyspent three
days in exploring the celebrated Bald
Mountains whose created mysterious rumblings
some nontfotoj years ago so much excile
ascent|H 2 | n^lyflje tbfh but. w.ppt^iKftjne »
the crevices, which »t# they examined nn
»«tely. wiffi We WMBWfehg
what caused thh sta-aflge sounds nl the
shout! but thorb'tSghfkftf iiS they .'tad -.avoided' tffe
crowded they; \VefAffghio
k
that they would nof make four bumUed
the month. The parties
modest^®hd §huh notoriety;- how becauie Th^Uter thi-fe
they end3Hfe‘-^trip! will begin, 'feqlr :'^icjbW< 5 l
their^mtiftber September, but they
days early in '^r assert.
their:, detorminatiom to walk ®
unexplored sumifcr. portion of the #tate- *mxt
v Hendei^sq'nvi^s.^
lor theirrtpmes, heat Chidotb «
Monro* - (A)i 1J Gor. : L
---_
.
Honest, SkwH But not Reliable.
Not on
J ch aumbufg, to find put if a colored
,%oman five^fe. w>° ^d formerly ^ b^en aservant
Seto '
‘‘She vashoocstt.wr honest f to suit
B e, pit she VSs net relfaMt. . T.'V
“FeU, “fjotriil the world/ean.tbat leaves'* ftv^fcUar. be?’.
you day I
vast •'tfeMHMtMh pSh-shiJ I v&e in-hope
dates.dot deiT I
aH B PBW M f
reliabfa, but maybe she
— Te&u Siftinoa.
$ 1-50 PER ANNU'M IN ADVANCE
'
NUMBER 37 ;
.-
EkvmSm* fedba^g
tas been arrested in New
York tor counterfeiting theater tickets
His villainy bas.put him in “a box,” but
( - he vUle%r,alU. sighs-for tb^ family cirde. -Steuben
'■
~B is said that the debt of the world
is over ' but so tong as it is
cr
<
^ 1 es,. sir, sajs the oldest resident,
S?m55' Boston^as^Sver Yhe r^nil'Tn\ t f
qnire°d|is iSien^fled theT,o ?
solemnly remarked the ancient mariner.
r ~Bdgg has milFoAs got an idea a't, last, and ho
a y 8 t ^ ere wani. ’ 8 in it, as it s meets m
It is nothing less than
a a P revolym^house, lv 4 »W the which best rooms is to turn shall upon al
face the ; winter and be in
ways ade^insUmmer sun ,m
f hc f -New Haven Register. Fogg has a great
—A student of human whoymdertS nature was tfta
Yankee schdolm’am tte
care of * school out West, where her
predecessor, window a m<au, had been tossed
P«Pda" through the by the rebellious
asked -Shegot alongsplendidly; she Managed and,
when how f it, re
plied: little “Oh, 6 easily and enough, thrashed
b 1 y* mthhod the big
ones ” —• -
-
A. coach in an calls upon the doctor
to ask what <^od can be the maiter with
him scienc^ “ My man ” sakUlte SiSatV prince
what ! ails’ f.V. y dir” JKLtod "Bropsv'-*' WhV.s
-
A- «*vifcies. within th«
bodv—in voiir case I Lake It hvdroned
but know} eurabl'e bv naracentesis ” “I
but’ Vliat is if English?”
fleets MkSn^^Der h moanent mustil?e t 1 >“ That scoundrel of
Ws'
liquor Hiiln’i and yet he swore to me ho
»’» ! ™ rh»- <
.
REtljSIotlS ii
AND Ei)UCATl()YAL. ” V >
• *•
—The'oldest? Presbyterian Church m
the w j> rid * the Waldensiau, sends put ,.
more imissionaries ^rmn her highland
vaileytbthan aUfeer piipisteys at home.
-Three havebeei H.ous.uu! buiHio iive thi hundred 'countrvdur-' M
3 the pa| P flfSL^ea"| 3 anlmoie tlxiA.
ra do, gave as a reason.&r the length
ened pandiid days of.summer the that (hey were ex
Contract by ^ } L hfeat yrinM^Leawtwfim . 1 Of course they
S» Iff “ <?” ■
jT.,] , rh’rkti-m Miss Ahm, Olivers-,vs that tlm
wnmon i! tsS - the salva/km kS
■ k
./ Pi. ' p b.Vfnith ,/ A ii^i’liV j Church j., k‘ 'and
. • .. SrChedC , -„
‘
.„ f all/’fpaifc '
... listening
—A Hindoo mother, alter •
hoyr after hour to the daily missionary
as she exclaimed: explained the way l„e of free salviv
tion, -Tell more” At
last when the long talk must elose the
old mother drew frorh under her veil
the, thin, havl gray Hairs, saying: “These
hairs; grown white waiting for
such jwords as these.”
—The'industrial schools are having
an apparently good e'loct upon the in
^ Sic
that within^ve years, with 100 In
dians at Hampton, Va., and the 300 at
Carlisle, Pa., and others under intruc
ti „ n elsewhere, allthc shoes and W
Ae ss needed on the plains hoiSe.—■ qan be made
bv the „ men at Ckidagd
“ '
i^f-Mr. Spurgeon, while in Scotland,
recently prrj,ached in the grounds of
Benmore. A temporary - pulpit was
Mr _ s pur „ e0 „
--- A open-air congregation of
from, sons having ‘all the'eountry^de widked °\ei. ten. many mi m_
fia.ufc.- . • • •
w* Flash Words.
think theie j habit—I ha said to
is one
.
on! ^ company t ku that a day of oi t mug . It _ » i„ F,
pun
& £ A” ual substitutes o -
I have*known s .„g
^ deliquesced “Lots whose into whole some half voo^y dozen ^ ex
passions. All things Ml mto one o
g^at calamities of life overtook their
these ]ast were spoken of as be
; | e wor d “bore.” These ex
be algebraic sympbols weak
^“ d ^ dfaS^n?te. have itrown too or
t They are the
isasais™
s ^ or studying * the opium- fimokwg
Chinese, state it as their opm
(hat yS**argg as a,vice itisnomore prevMeah
.5 c k ing is far loss hurtful than
ppium-eating. pimn u o