The Atlanta commercial. (Atlanta, GA.) 189?-1???, September 10, 1896, Image 2

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THB ATLANTA CDMifIB&MAL. ATLANT*. GEORGIA, f Published Kv.ry A:teniooo. Kxewpt Sunday BENJAMIN M. BLACXBCSN. ’■ Entered »t the postoffice »t Atlant* as K*'on<i class mail matter. » SVBBCBIFTION RATES: One ve*r. by mall ——• —»• ’ SIX months, by mail - 1 .. Three months, by mail... . h '„ Delivered by carrier wltb.n the limits or the city of Atlant* for S cents a weelt.orli "a year. . All subscriptions payable In advance Sutactfbera foil..nt to receive their papers Will confer a favor by noiifyitfo us Mail anbscriben. an- to rcn I by check, postoffice mon y oruer or li.hl'r.l letter. Sample cojtles sent free. Advertising rates furnish'd on application. r Allc-ommunlcationk roUtmen*► CoMWFIO.'IAI i.. limit, r-“ ‘111?- - TIXKI’UONK No. ~00. THURSDAY, SbtI’TEMBKR 10.1890. WATSON’S DALLAS M’KK< H. The Constitution and the Journal, In reporting Mr. Watson’s speech in Dallas, Texas, on the 7th, said that it pas not marked by special enthusiasm. To show the prejudice ot these pa pers, we quote what the Dallas News •ays of the speech and its effect: Thomas E. Watson of Georgia ad dressed 5,000 persons at the fair grounds yesterday, brom beginning to end of his speech the wiry little Georgian set the crowd afire. The cheering was something more than the ordinary man i testation ot the ap preciation of the people. At times it lasted for two or three minutes. Throughout the speech there wore in terjections and exclamations ol de light. And all went away pleased, if not converted. The introductory exercises were short. Mayor Holland welcomed the visitor and Gov. Barnett Gibbs pre sented him in a very few words. Then tho throng got a chance to neo the man many of them had come many miles to hear. As the orator stood up and surveyed the wide reaches of the grand stand, the center section and tbattotho north packed and jammed, there were expressions of disappoint ment. Some had evidently come with the idea of seeing an Apollo or a giant statue. They were visibly disapponted, as Watson would never take a prize in a beauty show, or last a single instant in front of Corbett. “Why, he’s a little snip of a man,” remarked a lady in front of the speak er’* stand. •‘■Yea," said a big, brawny man be hind her, “he's little, but full of plzen.” Watson fell to work In good style. There are no pyrotechnics about him, nothing of histriouism. lie never re hearses a speech or studies a gesture. Ue makes both just as they come to him. His gestures, by the way,are not as graceful as a dancing master’s, b it they are very impressive. And they frequently emphasize the speaker’s words on the mind of the hearer. Wat son uses his little body to perfection and his postures, unstudied as they are, form one of tlm mcrst attractive accompaniments to his speeches. His ; voice is rather harsh, but it carries ' well, and with a wind blowing across I the stand, lie was heard yesterday to | its remotest coniines. The first great cheer after the speaker started in wna when ho referred | to The News. The crowd just made: the rafters quiver for a minute or so. i ■ When lie paid his respects to Mr. Sewall the applause was deafening and again wlien lie declared tbat.tlie I’opulist party did not propose to be swallowed up by tlm Democratic party. All through the speech, the enthusi asm continued, reaching its climax at the end. When he had finished Wat son's hand was squeezed so that il pained. Dozens and dozens of people were fighting their way to the speak er’s stand to tell him how well they liked his speech and give his arm an other wrench. In this the women vied Vith the men and .Mr. Watson was the recipient of some very extravagant compliments from lh« opposite sex. Forrlffn Noles vs Rrnl JutereM Russa's old st r ;iment, !he Erivan I Grenadiers, formerly tlm Boutyrsky; Regiment, on its 251th anniversary, telegraphed |ts oompUtnettte t<> the; sen! >r French Regiment, the Second Infantry. princess Catherine Youriewski, daughter of Czar Alex dor 11. of; Russia by his morganatic marriage I with the Princess Dolgourouki, was' recently engaged to Count Boson de i Talleyrand Perigord, second son of the : Prince de Sagan. Though quarantine was practically abolished iu England by the sanitary , laws of 18"5, it was only a few days I ago that the quarantine hulks in the; Solent were put out of commission. Tpey have been maintained for twenty-; "tie years with a full staff of medical attendants and nurses, apparently be cause no one thought of recalling the order by which they were established. A Naboth's vineyard is troubling Queen Victoria in the roadway run ning between the two'lodge gates at Osborne, which belongs to the East Cowes District Council. Some years ago she offered the council a part ot her estate to be used for a reservoir site as an equivalent, but the district pre ferred to get its water in another way. She has now offered 110,000 for the laud, and loyal councillors suggest that the district should mark the six tieth anniversary of the Queen's ac-i cession by letting her have her way In TO Kt V. SAM JOSES.' The Commercial has always ad mired your quaint originality, your cutting satire, your deep sincerity and your bold courage. The letter which your sense of fair ness and patriotism led you to address to Chairman Clay, of the Democratic I committee, was very fine, to employ your own words to Mr. Clay, “as far as it went,” but it did not go far enough. In this it did not do justice to Sam Jones as the people of Georgia know i and esteem him. In this we were disappointed, for we never read anything from your pen without expecting to see the bone of controversial and argumentative con tention scraped of all unnatural and corrupt growths. You say, tliat if Mr. Clay refuses to | accede to the fair demand for honest elections in this contest, you will hold ; it against him two years hence, and , stump Georgia against these corrupt ing methods. Why wait until another election? Don’t you know,distinguished friend, that it is Governor Atkinson whois being served today, and that it is lie and his immediate friends who are backing Chairman Clay in his refusal i to grant the pledges of which you ' speak? This being true, isn’t it the part of wisdom and courage to fight the evil 1 before it corrupts the whole body pol itic? To employ your own vernacular,! wouldn't further waiting on your partl be like lhe case of the fellow who locked his stable door after his best horse had been stolen? Don’t you know that all the circum stances indicate a determined purpose to stuff the ballot box if needs be, in an effort to throw Georgia to Atkin son? Don’t you know that Governor Atkinson and his satellites are to be the direct beneficiaries of this ras cality? Why, then, wait until the next elu - tion to make your-fight? The peop’e are in danger today. Why not throw your magnificent courage and splendid individuality into this fight, and save your great state from the corroding I effects of machine control and an im pure ballot? You say that Governor Atkinson has made a good governor,and that his op ponent, Mr. Wright, will make a good governor. Do you think that a good I governor would quiet in the face of a demand for fair elections? Do you think that a good governor would make vicious appeals to ignorance for votes, and endanger the homes of Geor gia by encouraging an increase of crime by using the pardoning power for political vantage? Do you think; that a good governor would turn a deaf! ear to thousands of Christian people for a commutation in a case that did not involve brutal intention to kill, as was the case with llanye, and respect the petition of a few political friends in exercising the pardon power in be half of the brutal, confessed murderer of the one-armed negro in Wilkes county, Hinton? Do you think that a good governor would profit political ly by relating his pardon of a “negro; twice convicted of felonious assault on a white woman and sentenced to hang?” Granting that his act, in this matter, was just, a position that we do not take, do you think it right for a gov ernor to use his pardon power to get votes, when he knows that such language' inflames and misleads? Do you think that a good governor would allow the circulation of cam paign circulars in his behalf that are ( calculated to inflame the vicious and i ignorant and increase crime in bis stale? Governor Atkinson has been guilty of all these things, and though be may pray to God every day in the week, and every hour in the day, for direc tion, so long as he makes such a use of; his pardoning power, we will never; think that he is a good citizen, what ever may be said of his being a good governor. The editor of this paper recalls lhe many times that lie, a tender youth, threw bis arms about your inauly THE COMMERCIAL: ArUANfA. GrA., THURSDAY AFTERNOON, SEPTEMBER 10, 1898. i neck and was carried upon your will ; ing back to Lis home from a country I school. He loved you then and honors you today. While your teachings of late years have not been religiously followed by his wav ring steps, still ; they have not been altogether unheed ed. In view of these tender associa tions, he contends, that he has the right to ask that you be direct, force ful and positive in this matter. He has a right to ask that you be brave earnest, determined, that you be Sam Jones, and lend your voice to the cause of the right today. Gome out boldly, Mr. Jones, and i help the people now. Don’t wait, i Don’t refuse. Don’t, we pray you, ■ hold your tongue or stay your pen. i Your letter is going to be ignored by Mr. Clay. Warry your protest to the ; people. They will hear. Remember, that you have always said, that the i way to whip the devil is to fight him [light tho devil, Mr. Jones. Don’t ■ threaten him. . THE LI FAD. How It May Ho I wed In a New Style Pro posal. Li has left ns a heritage. We shall apply it to the cnlivcnment of our pro ; uaic society. The new style of proposal, ; ns agreed upon by a party of swells, is j an follows: “Charmed to make youracquintance, Miss Ladot. ” “What is your maiden name, Eu- I genic?” “I like it. Who is your father? ' Grtmdet Ladot?” “I have met him. How much is ho worth?” "How did he make his $50,000,000?” "How much is our dowry to bo, Miss Eugenio?” “Only $5,000,000. Is it well invest “ How old aro you? Just 20?” “Why aren't yon married? Noone ever asked .you?" ‘‘lmpossible! Do you want to live in Newport or Europe?" “Both! J'.x' -’ih nt! Would yon like to have a husband?” “How would I do? I would marry yon, dear. ’ ’ “So sudden? Os course, but it is the Li Hung <-hang idea.” “My darling, one sweet kiss, and I shall announce our engagement. ” “Tho happy day? Tomorrow if it please you. I am entirely satisfied with your prospects—and with mine. ’ ’ —-New York Press. Mr. WllkiiMton and His Faithful Plaster. After struggling several hours to re lease himself from embrace of a p ous plaster, 1 jet ry Wilkinson of Jef firson, S. D., visited a physician, to whom ho confess, d that the pain of the operation v-.c-’ more than lie could bear. He ii. sought, th ■ doctor to give him an an:estlictic in: 1 complete the task. Undei pretense of making an exami nation before complying with his pa tient's request, tho num of medicine seized a corner of the plaster and gave a long, strong pull. Wilkieson howled with agony, 1 ul a moment lab i he and . tho plaster were divorced forever. A large square of epidermis was miss ing from his anatomy, however, and hud not tho physician exceeded his pa tient ju size in the ratio of nearly 16 to 1 it is likely that Wiikieson would have been avenged on tho spot. As it is lie has tiled tho original no ! :e<> of a \ ?(i'i damago suit against tho doctor. Ho will demand compensation not only for physical and mental Buffer ing, but for the ductor's notion in relat ing tho circumstance to his friends and so holding him up, as ho says, to public ridicule mid contempt,—Chicago Times- Herald. Electricity Th Safer. Insurance company statistics prove that t lei trio lighting, when tho wiring is done iu uccuidaueu with tho rules pre pared by them, is the safest of all illu miuants. Tho figures show the follow ing eempurative risks in one largo city: Fires tn one year from paraffin and kerosene, 259; from gas, 110; matches used for gas, 85; candles, 88; aro lights, 7, mid incandescent lights, only 1. Trucher 1 or tho Cleveland Children. Miss Mary Bannister Willard, nieceo( Frances C. Willard, and a recent gradu ate of the Post ale . i K.ndeigni't’. n school at Berlin, Germany, has bien chosen by Mrs. Cleveland us tho White House kindergartner. She will have charge of the education of tho president’s daugh ters, beginning her duties upon their return to Washington for the winter season. An Adventuroue American. Tho London Times says that a 13 ton boat, yawl rigged, named tho Spray, has arrived at Samoa from Boston via the strait of Magellan. It is sailed by a man named John Slocum, whose only companion is a mastiff. Sloeum in tends to make a voyage around tho world. Bristol has the oldest patent theatre in England outside of London in the < Tiles tre Royal in King street, opened! by David Garrick in 176 G. A number of gold and silver tickets were then is-i sued, admitting to every performance ever given in tlm house. Balloon experiments were made re cently by the Austrian government to test whether serviceable observations could be made at a safe distance from the enemy's tire. A balloon 33 feet in horizontal and l(J feet in vertical di ameter was sent up from a point 5,500 yards away from a battery and w: 8 kept at a height 0f2,600 feet. Eighty shells, containing over 19,000 bullets were fired at it, but only three small holes, which did not affect its work ing, were found when the balloon came down. Tiie itu'ereuoo is drawn that in actual warfare balloons can be used to advantage at tbatdUtauce. A PLUCKY CONJURER. He Displayed More Nerve Than Did His Volunteer Asa! Mt ant. A very pleasant anecdote is told of Profi - j or Anderson by Mr. Arthur a Beckett in bis “Gr?i n Room Recollec tions.” Ho says the professor in his grr.nt gun trick used to give one of the ! audience a rifle, some powder and a marked bullet. Tio marksman was ; then requested to load and prepare to ; fire. Thereupon tho professor walked to i tiie end of tho stage and invited the ri | tinman to shoot him. Then, after the I marksman had fireo, he used to produce • the marked bullet, insisting that he 1 had caught it ou a plate. On one occa [ sion a fuend of mine, who was an ad-’ j mirable ama . ur c njurer, offered him self as an aszistart. Ho took the gun I and tho ammunition and duly loaded. It was the custom of the prof' ssor to I give tho bullet a final tap with his ; waud to sen that it was rammed down I properly, and this Inal tap, I have been told, extracted tn- bullet. This my I friend knew, and' when the professor , offered his assistance he politely de ;cl ined. Anderson did not insist, but I coolly walked to the end of the stage ; and called out, “Now, sir, take a good I aim at.me and fire.” My fiAsgid hesitated, as lie was well ' aware tbAthe gun he was holding was really loaded. “Eire, str, fire!” cried tiie professor. Mvfnend lower-d the weapon, and, Knyjtfg he could nor let it off, returned 1X to Anderson, who immediately, un filer pretense of aing whether it had been properly load'd, extracted the bul let Then ho gave tho guu to some one else. But before the rifle was fired ho addressed the audience. “Ladies and gentlemen, ’ said he, “the person who has just resume d his seat km w my trick and foiled it. If he had fired, this prob ably would have been my last appear ance before you. But he hadn’t suffi cient nerve to shoot me.” When it dawn .1 upon the house that Anderson had risked his life rather than confess himself beaten, the applause was deafening. My friend told mo that ho felt rather small aad regretted his penchant for practical joking. BEAUTIFUL SEVILLE. There Is Always Something Amusing. Pic torlal or Urawutic to Seo. The landlord at the Hotel de Paris was very patient and good humored with us, though.we walked him all over his own house before we chose a room that open* ' upon a small, dark, well-like court, fttlj of palms tmd orange trees and with a fountain. He sceim d delighted when he found that we were satisfied. “You know,” he told us, “I always say that strangers who come to Seville in tho summer time must bo mad. ’ ’ Yet only in the summer time does one see Hie true character of the coun try, and more especially of Seville. Tho town was as hot as, if not hotter than, Cordova. All its stock amusements were off for the time. There were no gypsy dances, no bull fights, but nothing could have been gayer mid more animated than the mero u/ncct of the place. Its narrow nlleyvu’ ■> \vhero the fioweij laden balconies althost met above our heads, were lined with houScs, shining white or pule rose or green or gold in the sunlight. Tho market places were at all hours crowded with clattering and luughiug peasants, while the air, perhaps, was cooled by a fountain play ing in the center. Th" shops opened, eastern like, without windows, upon the streets, their wares tumbling out al most at cue’s for t. Hardly a green square but had a gau dy little booth at each corner, where old men or women sold fresh water and sweet iced drinks. No matter iu what direction wo v wit there was always m thing amusing, pictorial ordramat ic. Now it wa's :t wonderful church or conveht or hospi'al, with flue flamboy ant doorway and romantic associations, or again it was a garden of palms, a high mirador, aflame with roses; a dark interior, with oxen in the far shadows; a long arcade, making a frame forth ■ Moorish wal I of the cathedral mosque, and always it was a long train of mules in gorgeous trappings, coining and go ing er resting in a narrow street ami under the shade of a highwall, with, as like as nor, a row of potted flowers on its top.—Elizabeth R. Pennell iu Cen tury. xraea That Whittle. The musical or whistling tree is found in the West Indian islands, iu Nubia and the Sudan. It. has a peculiarshaped leaf and pods wfth a split er open edge. The wind passing through these seuds out tho sound which git s the tree its peculiar name. In Barbados there is a valley tilled with there trees, and when the trade winds h’ 'W across the islands a constant moaut-.g, deep toned whistle is heard from it, whit'd iu the still hours of tho night, has n veiy weird and un pleasant effect. A species of ucaoia, which grows very abundantly in the Sudan, is also called the whistling tree by tiie natives. Its shoots are frequent ly, by the agon y of the larvre of in sects, distort'd :t shape and swollen in to a globular bladder from 1 to 3 inches in diameter. After the insect bus emerg ed from a circular hole iu the side of this swelling, the opening, played upon by the wind, b.ccim-- a musical instru ment, equal iu sound to a sweet toned flute.—London Tit-Bits. Tho British colony iu Borneo issues its own coinage, cents, half cents and notes of sl, $5, $lO and $25. Ail accounts are kept in United States eurreney. One of the most disagreeable duties of the Hawaiian police is the examination and arrest of persons susp' ted of hav ing leprosy. 3 ! ._. Whitehall street is tl» place to carry your old Hats for repairs. Bussey, FREE PILLS Send your address to H. E. Bucklen & Co.. Chicago, and get a free sample box of Dr. King's New Life Pills. A trial will convince you of their merits. These pills are easy in action and are particu larly effective in the cure of Constipation and Sick Headauhe. For Malaria and Liver troubles they have been proved in valuable. They are guaranteed to be perfectly free from every deleterious substance and to be purely vegetable. They do not weaken by their action, but by giving tone to stomach and bowels, greatly Invigorate the system. Regular site 2.’>c. per box. bold at all drug ■tale*. A Portrait’s Eyc-s. Wollaston's curious discovery was that by ad ling to each pair of eyes a nose directed to the right or the left the eyes lose their front direction and look to the right or left, according to the di rection of the nose. By means of a flap representing tho lower features in a ! different position, as Dr. Wollaston re marks, “ a lost look of devout abstrac tion in an uplifted countenance may be exchanged tor an appearance of inquisi tive archness in the leer of a younger face turned downward and obliquely toward the opposite side. ” As by changing the direction of the lower features we change the direction of the eyes, so by changing our position the eye of the portrait apparently fol lows us. If a vertical line be drawn through the tip of the nose and half way be tween the eyes, there will be the same breadth of head, of check, of chin and of neck on each side of this middle line, and each iris will bo in the middle of the whole eye If we now move to one side, the apparent -horizon tal breadth of every part of the head and face will be diminished, but the parts on each side of the middle line will be diminished equally, and at any position, however oblique, there will bo the same breadth of face on each side of the middle line, and the iris-will be in the center of the whole of the eye ball, so that, being on a flat surface, the iris will be seen in front of the pic ture or obliquely.—Notes and Queries. Grant’s Birthplace Cabin. A building to inclose and protect the cabin in which General U. S. Grant was born, which was removed from Clermont county to tho Ohio state fair grounds at Columbus iu 1888, was, with the relic, dedicated the other after noon. Governor Bushnell, presided, and Henry T. Chittenden, who presented it to tho state, made the address. The cabin was constructed by General Grant’s father nearly 80 years ago and is in tho same condition as when it stood on the banks of the Ohio. Mr. Chittenden presented a letter from Mrs. Grant in which she attests tho complete restoration of the cabin. The Cost of Church Membership. Dr. 11. K. Carroll says in a Forum article that it requires $10,355,000 an nually to pay the bills of the Protestant Episcopal church, $23,863,000 to pay those of the Methodist Episcopal church, nearly $14,0X10,000 for the expenses and contributions of the Northern fresby terlau church, $11,673,000 for these of the regular Baptists and $10,355,000 for ‘.bo.-" of tiie Congregational denomi nation, making an aggregate of SBB,- 000,009 every year contributed by 10,- 768,000 members, an average of $8.16 per member. 14 Thinks These Three Great Men. In response to ti request for an inter view regarding his impressions of the. capitol, Li Hung Chang sent out the following by one of his secretaries: “Tho tlirw foremost men in history have been Napoleon, the Chinese Em peror Yao and Washington. “Napoleon created an empire which was speedily destroyed. “Yao created an empire and then pro ceeded himself to rule over it. “Washington built up a great nation, then stepped aside, leaving others to govern.” Au OIQ I*pitnpn. A most quaint and ingenious epitaph was copied years ago by up American traveler from a tombstone in Hadley churchyard, iu Suftolk, England: The churiial mounted on the w 'I bt ts io be ;'-en ia iuiivr - A matron plain iom< lio MotsJDNv, not gay. not ; rodig ( Y< t neixhborly and bespit { a * * 11< r (hiidi-t.i a n yot living H r sixl v ■ nth j ear hi nee did c To rest n r body nalur In hopes to rise spiritu. Mice With lUnk Legs. In the Missouri river, near Platts mouth, Neb., is an island which is over run with curious mice. They have a golden brown coat, while the lower part of their bodies is pure white. Their legs are pink, and their eyes are jet black. No such mice aro found any where else. Miss Adelaide Utter of Kansas City, who was elected corresponding secretary of the Social Science Federation at its last meeting, is also clerk of the circuit court. Bussey, the Old Hat Man, is at 3% Whitehall street. Bring your old Hat. 98 ’ Pritz * C o , Distillers, Cincinnati, O. « Proprietors of tha World’s Famous '66 B. F. STOCKTON, Sanitary Plumbing, Steitm and Gas Fitting. ELEVATORS REPAIRED. ALL WORK GUARANTEED. F. Alabama Street. ‘Phone 161. B'OR SAVE Ol< KICIN F by .v -W.xTHCSWS 37 North Broal Street. Elegant,property at East IMnt. Six. seven* eight mid nine-room residences; large, airy, convenient and commodious. No prettier nr<*|M'rty can bo found, with all tho convcn b‘oces »ind accommodations you could wish for. Will Ik' sold on easy terms or rented at a low price to aceeptabh* tenants. W« will take pleasure in showing you this property at any time. GREEK & MATHEWS, 37 N. Broad St. EQPXe KENT. Far Rent by John J Woodside, the Renting Atfent, N Broad, corner Walton. 8-r. h J.ong’y Ay»*.. at Marietta road. H.R.P. ?7 0a ! :;-r. h.2li l.ove.at Martin aw ;; r. !i. 420 Frazier, at C oo hr. h. I.■»«»•, ii* Rhod.es COO 2-r. h. 14.‘ >. Boulevard, at E. 2-r. h. Rear 12i» Gilmer, at Pratt 2 •*>'> 2-r. h. Me.Phetson, at d<*pot 4 i n 2-r h. Fourth, at South, and M acres .pasture 2 50 2-r. n. and ball. Gilmer, at Butlerloo. 2-r. h. b. A. I. and W. & A. R. R. Junction. X 4-r.h.t’T Verrhts uve GaAV j? 4 r. h. M A.vxander‘ I r. h. 7 W clhorue, West End 7«• I r. '.M M Oft 1'» w * r. h. 4WI Piedmont 12 60 3>r. h. G Rhodes 7u » • mow tvuauu tree. notice. V. _ t_.2x.rt o x' ' • / / Hawthorne as a Wor Jeer. There is a story about the famous Brock farm experiment to the effect that several of the most distinguished members, Hawthorne among them, found the place so uncong’enial that they used to lean over tiie pigsty and scratch the pigs’ backs for amusement. When, however, it became Hawthorne's duty to feed the pigs, he drew’ the line. Scratch a pig’s back he might; feed a pig be would not. His daughter, Mrs. Lathrep, denies that he was a finical man. She writes in the Cambridge Mag azine : “Hawthorne could work with his hands too. He hoed many a vegetable garden, planted sunflowers, of which he was a thorough admirer, cut beau poles cheerily and ate his personally raised fr sh vegetables with tho best of us. He did not fear to help his wile in their early marre d life by doing the house work when she was not strong enough. Moreover, he did not do it with surly innuendoes and sudden suarlings, nor did he abruptly stop and sir- down to niggardly reproach. He washed dishes and cleaned knives and cooked like a prince cl' fairy tale reliability and gen tleness.” The Woman of It. She had road tho sign, “Do notspeak > to the motor.?.a:i, ” and sljo said, “I I wonder why not?” Th a ia winsome ; voice she inquired of that functionary, ' “Why mustn't one talk to lhe motor- , man?” H» told her it was against the rules. “But why is it against tho I rules?” “Because it is.” “Then you don’t likato be talked to?” “Oh, yes. but— Thunder, I came within an ace of running down that old gent!” “But I should think it would bo nice to have somebody to speak to instead of talking to nobody all day long.” “Lady, you aro going to stop talking, or there’s go ing to boa smash up on this line, and a big one, see?” “The hateful thing! And I did so want to ba sociable!ike. He’s married, I’ll bet. He’s just like Henry when he’s got the paper under his nose.”—Boston Transcript. He Had Sense. The Louisville Courier-Journal tells a story of a woman who was learning how to ride u wheel. One morning, when she was out on her bicycle, mak ing good time in rather uncertain curves, she saw a man corning toward , her in tho middle of the road. St-ill speeding along, she hailed him: “Oh, mister, mister, won't you please get out of my way?”. The kind heart.d‘gentleman jumped nimbly off on the grass at the side of tiie road, and as she sped by he ex claimed : “Yes, indeed, I will, good lady. I wouldn’t stay in your way for a $lO bill.” Discrimiuation. The young man with longish hair was gazing abstractedly cut of the car window when the fatherly old gentle man camo along looking for a seat. Having settled him? If in comfort, he engaged Jfls neigh’ in conversation. “Been on a long journey?” he asked. “Not very. ” “On business?” “No, sir. In pursuit of my profes sion. ” “Oh, excuse me. Might I ask what the difference is?”—Washington Star. SbapieJgh’® 'Body Petrified. The petrified body cf Henry C. Shap leigh, a messenger of Merritt’s express, who on Oct. 10, 1803, left his home in Salem to buy a newspaper and never came back, has been found in a bog hole at Paradise crossing, Beverly, Mass. It was well preserved and easily recogniz able. A rope was around the neck. In the pockets were keys, three knives and sll in bills. Shaplcigh was 60 years of age. The only explanation given for his departure from homo is that a recent illness may have turned his mind. The translation of Quintus Curtins by Vaugelas occupied 30 years. The trans lator rendered every seiitence five or ten different ways ami finally chose that which d i:i:a be I. ■ ‘ ''' ■ . j. ; 4 *< '•■•- ,/,■■ ; ■ > ' ! ' ’ pvt- <et »t • 1 * ! . ' ! ' ' j_ v THE LION BREWERY. "[tye U/ipdis<;tp BrevuirjO <£o. Qpelppati, O!?io. BREWERS ANO BOTTLERS OF High Grade Beers. Our Celebrated Brands. LAGER, PILSENER, LION BREW, ST ANI >A KO AND LION ENFOKT BOTTLED. Received highest award at Cotton States and International Exposition, Atlanta, Ga. AUGUST FLESH, Sole Bottler, No. 88-S5 Mangum Street. NORTH GEOR6IA JpilM CcHep, DEPARTMENT Or THE UNIVERSITY, Rt Dahlonega, Georgia. Spring term begins first Monday in February. • Fiill term begins first Monday in September. FULL LITERARY COURSES. TUITION’ iKTE With ample corps of teachers. IKROBGH MIUTAHY TRAHIWI6 under a U. S. Army Officer derailed by Secretary of war. Departments cf Business, Short hand, Typewriting Telegraphy, Music and Art Under competent and thorough instructors. 10UNG LADIES have equal advantages. r SPEST Ku. 3Eia the SOUTH Fcr catalogues and full inform? 1 a d_ dress Secretary or Treasurer of Beard Trustees. Collar of Honor. In France the Society For' the Pre vention of Cruelty to Animals decorates dogs who have distinguished themselves by deeds of bravery with a tastefully designed “collar of honor.” Says a Paris letter: Amo’tg the animals already deco rated in this way one of the most cele brated is Bacchus, a large bulldog, whose specialty it is to stop runaway horses by jumping up and seizing them by tho bridle. It is calculated that the intelligent animal has already saved ii.- lives of light persons, if not more, in this way. I .utland, another bulldog, received a collar iu 1887 for saving his mistress um the attack of a footpad, and Turk, a splendid Newfoundland, has had a simitar honor for saving three young children from drowning on different oe. casions. 818 Baying. A very dear little girl indeed is Em ily, the granddaughter of tlio bishop of Clothton. His lordship took her with him ono day when he went to a con firmation, and she was taken into ths rector's nursery to tea after service. The children were rejoicing over theiz reminiscences and possessions. Doro thea, the rector’s daughter, was especial ly jubilant over a hen of which she had recently become possessed. “It lays an egg every day,” she said. “Oh, but my grandfather is better than that,” said Emily. “He laid a foundation stone yesterday.”—Loudon Church Timeo. I'roveTbs or Asicam. Here are some rather clever proverbs cf Assam: ‘ ‘The best crops grow on oth ers’ fields, but the best sons are at home” “A bird is a little thing, but it builds its nest on a lofty faulung tree. ” “Buy land which slopes to the middle, and naarry a girl who has a good mother.” “The biggest jack fruit al ways hides under the leaves.” “If a man slips down, it is always his eldest wife’s fault, but if his youngest wife makes a mistake he says he will see about it.” “A hasty cook, a hasty broom, and the husband goes fasting; a slow cook, a slow broom, and the hus band cats three meals a day. ” Iceland’# Hiss Karthqilalre. The severest earthquake since WB4 occurred in Iceland on the night ol Aug. 26, returning steamers report . Many farms and two ohwrcfiaa ot Hrepp and nearly all the farms at Bol lum, Laudi, Kanganllum and Fgolshtid were destroyed. The sheep wpd cattle on these farms perished, but no human being was killed. The center of ths disturbance appears to be the volcano Hecla. $3.50 HOUND TRIP. To Lookout Mountain, Tenn., via South ern Railway, Saturday evenings and Sun day mornings. Tiains leave Atlanta 1:20 p. in., 10 p. m., 7:30 a. m. ‘tickets good returning until train leaving Chattanooga Ba. m. Monday following date of sale. Ticket office Kimball house corner and union depot. C. E. SERGEANT, City Ticket Agent A. HOWELL, Depot Ticket Agent. Air-Line Hello Summer Schedule. The Southern railway train, tbe“Air- Line Belle,” will be operated between Atlanta and Mt. Airy, Ga., until Octo ber 1,1896, instead of between Atlanta and Lula, as heretofore. $2.00 round trip to Indian Springs Satur day and Sunday. Tick ets good unti! Monday. Dr. Lyon’s PERFECT Tooth Powder An Elegant Toilet Luxury Used by People of Refinement For over a Quarter of a Century