Newspaper Page Text
VOL. IV.-NO. 52.
NEWS GLEANIIOS,
■ Gull eggs sell at fifteen cents a dozen
■t Tampa, Fla.
I Atlanta, Ga., capitalists talk of start
■g a large shoe factory.
I Georgia has turned the tables, and is
■lippingoats to the West.
■ The hemp crop in the blue grass region
■ Kentucky will be short.
I Texas has nearly $1,000,000 cash bal
■nce in the State Treasury.
I A cotton seed oil mill has been con
tacted for in Greenville, Ala.
■ The cotton crop of Florida will be
■out the same as that of last year.
■ New corn is being contracted for at
t enly-five cents a bushel in Texas.
| From Key Largo, Fla., 360,000 pine
tples have been shipped this season.
■ The fine quarries of marble in Pick
ets county, Ga., are to be developed.
■ Americus, Ga., according to recent
trveys, is just 320 feet above sea level.
■ Rich deposits of phosphate rock have
ten discovered in Chatham county, Ga.
■ Preserving figs is an important indus
ty at St. Augustine and Jacksonville,
■la.
■An Atlanta druggist says there are
■OOO confirmed opium-eaters in that
■y.
■North Carolina now leads the South
er i States in the number of her cotton
■lls.
■ St. Augustine, Fla., is manufacturing
Hd shipping large quantitses of orange
line.
■Virginia has 681 prisoners in the pen
ilntiary and 291 hired out on railroad
w»rk.
■
■Three hundred Swedish families will
Mttle along the line of the Florida Cen
tr; * Railroad.
HA Jewish synagogue, fashioned afte r
an ancient Palistine palace, is to be
in Athens, Ga.
■A large factory will be erected near
Norfolk, Va., tor the preservation of
jßmber by the creosote process.
■For the first time in the history of
■flerson county, Ga., no intoxicating
can be purchased within its bor*
s -
■n the past ten years Georgia has in
-’d the number of her farms ninety
eqll't per cent., and now has a total of
10,626.
■Trs. Wm. Beardintr, who died recently
>». ‘erry county, Ala., was 107 years
o|. Her husband, who survives her,
>« (| 9 years old.
■'ho great iron viaduct for the track
iHthe ’Frisco railway south of the Bos
mountain tune], in Arkansas, is 321
felt high and 890 feet long.
■*f the 1,231 convicts in the Georgia
women are among the number,'
and but one of them is white.
■ b I nited States troops stationed at
are to be moved to Mount Ver
■V, Ala., and the Tampa post will
be abandoned altogether.
■ ' n <'e the spring of 1880 Memphis has
eight and a half miles of streets
rut down forty miles of sewers and
miles of subsoil pipes. The cost
$500,000.
■'Hannah parties are endeavoring to
H>6lish a semi-monthly line of steam
eibetween that place and London, Fmg-
for the purpose of bringing immi-
to this country.
Vbu .. parties in the South are now
rimenting in the manufacture of
B' ir front watermelons. A bright,
■ s -' ru P made to the proportion of
to eleven gallons of juice.
B' he editor of the Key West (Fla.)
noerat, Gen. Songer, is twenty year-
F " e 'gbs thirty-five pounds, and is
forty inches high. He was born in
'*" m ingo and was raised in Florida.
,y ■ ’ icst g f it for the manufacture of
tones to be found in the world is
( rr 'ed in Moore county, N. C. It is
t«H ,Ulral Co ™P° siti o n of flint rock am
which sharpens rather than
S ■ '.se.
1 •<i•• •u t on,* t holl -am I a. i -
.BB‘ '
| ICMfc l|r
H
aar imi'i
K. *
"'aY' aMBBBBMBhh
Che Brtlton Stains.
ry, $120,000, and an iron company, $250,-
000. There are besides, two founderies
doidg a business of SIOO,OOO, and six
flouring mills, all doing well.
Peter Griffin, colored, lives near Au
gusta, Ga , and owns a farm of over 300
acres, all of which is under cultivation*
He has 100 acres in corn, and will make
fifty bales of cotton this year. He has
twenty acres in oats, and raises on his
place everything that he needs. There
are six plows under his direction, and
he has a home that is fitted up with
every convenience and comfort.
East Tennessee letter: Ancient mum
mies are found in East Tennessee caves,
with sandals petrified to their feet. Tim
ber in our forests disclose wounds in
dieted near the heart, with sharp-edged
tools, long before Columbus quit wear
ing petticoats. Triangle-shaped coins,
of unknown alloy, of the date of 1215,
are plowed up in our fields. Fossil re
mains of animals, long since extinct, are
found petrified on nui hillsides Dried
brick, prepared of clay and cut straw,
are unearthed many feet below the sur
face of the earth, where they are sup
posed to have remained for many centu
ries.
Bread Baking in London.
A London bakehouse is almost invari
ably situated in a cellar. Generally it is
a cellar that might do well enough for
the receptioh of lumber, but is utterly
unfit for any other purpose, and, of all
purposes to which it might possibly be
put, for the manufacture of bread. The
writer spent a night in such a place a
short time ago. The walls were bulging,
cobwebby and old; the ovens were un
der the pavement of the street; the
refuse of the bakehouse was deposited
near the ovens; the four or five com
partments into which the cellar was
divided were small and close, and when
the gas was lighted at midnight cock
roaches were swarming over walls and
ceilings, chasing each other about the
sacks of flour,and holding assemblies in
the bins. This, however, was rather a
superior bakehouse. The dirty and
dismal caverns in which most of our
bread is made are inaccessible. If the
baker does not regard cleanliness as a
moral obligation, he is, at any rate,
fully aware that the cellars in which he
practices his mystery are not quite such
show places as they ought to be. The
circu instance that they are underground,
and that the ovens are so placed as to
draw tiie air which feeds them —often
from the close proximity of the drains—
over the troughs in which the dough is
kneaded, is in itself sufficiently appall
ing. Bread readily absorbs the air that
surrounds it, and ought never to be
made or to be kept in confined places.
In London, however, it is habitually
made in dens so confined and nauseous
that the baker’s trade is one of the most
unhealthy in existence.
The condition of the bakehouses is
one of the least evils connected with
the existing system of bread-making.
Bread is made now after much the same
fashion as was in vogue, probably, in
the Cities of the Plain. The baker still
uses his naked arms in the process of
kneading. The “sponge” is laid in long
wooden troughs. Over these the jour
neyman baker, often working in a tem
perature of ninety degrees, bends for
half an hour or so while he kneads the
dough. Os course he perspires. His
occupation is as laborious almost as that
of the blacksmith, and produces similar
outward effects. However much he may
be disposed to cleanliness, he can not
pursue his occupation except under
conditions that to any one not accus
tomed to the process are sickening to
behold. After belaboring the dough
much as a housewife belabors a feather
bed, he “rubs his arms out” —that is,
he clears them of rhe paste with which
they are encrusted by dipping his hands
in dry Hour and rubbing them down his
arms. The dough comes off in little
rolls, which are returned to the trough
ane kneaded in with the bread. This is
not the case only in bakehouses which
are doing a “cutting” business. Lt is
the process common in all bakehouses.
The (lough which adheres to the arms,
saturated as it must be with impurity,
would otherwise be so much waste, and
in a bakehouse nothing is wasted.
Such things are not pleasant to dwell
upon but bread is the chief food of the
people, and it is as well that we should
know how it is manufactured. Before
being made up into loaves and put in
the oven it goes through a tiresome
amount of handling. After being
kneaded in the troughs it is pulled out
in pieces and rolled vigorously on a
bench. Now and then a knife is taken
up and the bench is scraped, and the
scrapings are returned to the trough.
The old proverb about eating a peck of
dirt has a more literal application than
is generally supposed. We take agreat
deal of our allowance in our bread. It
is a remarkable fact that there is more
popula r ignorance on the subject of food
than on anything else which is necessa
ry to our daily life. In nothing, more
over, do we take so much on trust as in
the article of bread. If, by some acci
dent, the public could watch our bakers
at work for a few hours there would be
a general and immediate resort to home
made bread.— Mall Gazette.
Venice is the richest city in Italy—it
is almost free from debt. And with all
•>> canals, too 1 The Venetian Alder-
K —nd State legislators are fearfully
& \ the age.—PwcA.
■Mi i
DALTON, GEORGIA, SATURDAY, AUGUST 12, 1882.
TOPICS OF THE DAT.
Yellow fever is creating considerable
excitement in portions of Texas.
George William Curtis’is fighting
the administration without gloves.
Southern New Jersey and the Dela
ware Peninsula are suffering from
drought.
The Creek Indians are on the -war
path. This time they are fighting
among themselves.
The hop crop is 25 per cent, short this
year as compared with last. In this ease
the pressure is on the brewer.
The nomination and election for a
third term of Governor St. John, of
Kansas, is said to be assured.
It is proposed to build an under
ground railroad in Paris. The cost of
its construction is put at $30,000,000.
“ The President now drives out with
a four-in-hand.” While this might mean
almost anything, we presume it means
four horses.
The London Times expresses the
opinion that the Sultan will send his
troops to Egypt expressly to thwart the
purposes of England.
Cbop reports from England say that
wheat will not nearly amount to a fair
average crop ; barley rather less than
an average crop ; oats good.
Six thousand acres of walnut trees
have been planted in Kansas. They
propose that future generations shall
have all the walnuts they want to eat.
In is stated, as common rumor, that
although the President vetoed the River
and Harbor bill, he secretly worked,
through his friends, for its passage over
his veto.
There arc symptoms that the fight in
Egypt will not he confined exclusively
to the English and Moslems. The pro
portions of a general war are indicated
by late dispatches.
There is a class of people who, on
their arrival at a seaside resort, register
their names at a first-rate hotel, the fact
is announced in the newspaper, and then
they go to a cheap cottage.
An actress in a London theater is a
sixteen-year-old Bohemian girl, eight
feet two inches high, and still growing.
She believes the time has come for
women to occupy a higher level.
The Cincinnati Commercial argues
that a drunk honest man is preferable to
a sober thief. That is owing somewhat
to the size of the drunk as well as the
size of the steal. Let us have the .’spec
ifications,
. » ♦ ■•
Wheat and corn, at some points, bring
the same per bushel, a state of com
merce that doesnot of ten. occur. The
abundant crop of wheat is now on the
market, whereas, corn will be scarce for
some time yet.
As a rule, New York merchants were
loud in their praise of the President’s
act of vetoing the River and Harbor
bill. The improvement of Western
channels is a matter of little interest to
Eastern merchants.
Tennessee has nine daily papers, of
which four are for Bates, the repudiat
ing Democratic candidate for Governor ;
four for Fussell, the State credit Demo
cratic candidate, and only one for Haw
kins, the Republican nominee.
The Arkansas Traveller gives the fol
lowing bit of good sanitary advice:
It’s ebery nigger’s duty ter be baptised.
Even if he ain’t got the faith, dq water’ll
do him good.
'This same advice will apply to white
men.
- ——
Simon Rkicuard, his wife, two sons,
and two daughters, of Mauch Chunk,
Pennsylvania, weigh together 1,522
pounds, and claim to be the heaviest
family of six in Pennsylvania. Their
several separate weights are represented
to be 245, 235, 220, 222, 200, and 400
pounds.
The Supreme Court of lowa rules that
a police officer is guilty of manslaughter
if he strikes a prisoner a fatal blow with
a club to defeat an attempt to escape,
unless the officer Jias reason to believe
that he is in danger of great bodily harm
or loss of life.
—♦ —
Brooklyn shows a total church mem
bership of 269,462, agsinst 138,705 in
1862, of which there are Catholics 200,-
000, 110,000 in 1862. The greatest per
centage has, however, been for the Uni
versalists, next the Baptists, then the
Congregationalista.
H. T. White, who is the author of the
Chicago Tribune's humorous novelettes,
which have captured more than national
notice, is a graduate of a theological
seminary, and was at one time sporting
reporter. lie is grave and calm in his
speech, and is rather bashful.
England sensibly objects to the land
ing of Turkish soldiers in Egypt with
out first knowing who they are going to
fight for when they get there. She
demands that the Porte denounce Arabi
Bey a rebel. It will give a clearer un- j
derstanding of what the Sultan proposes
to do in a crisis.
A scandal prevails at Loveland, Ohio,
concerning the boy evangelist Harrison.
The Camp-meeting Association erected
a cottage at a cost of $175, furnished it
in elegant style, and set it aside for
Harrison’s exclusive occupancy, or use.
When the camp-meeting closed, the
other day, Mr. Harrison offered to dis- |
pose of the cottage, furniture and
grounds, all in a lump, for S2OO. He
was notified by several members of the
Association that it was not his to dis
pose of, but on his vacating it, reverted
to the Association. Mr. Harrison was
non-plussed, and went away dissatisfied,
and now there is considerable talk and
scandal about the matter. The ladies
all think Mr. Harrison ought to have
the cottage, but not so with the hard
hearted men.
What Arabi’s rebellion is already cost
ing Egypt may be judged from the
Alexandria dispatch to the Manchester
Examiner. Her cotton crop averages
two hundred millions of pounds an
nually, and that is altogether lost for
this year. Her exportation of wheat
ought to be about twenty-five millions
of pounds, but there will be not enough
garnered in this season for the support
of the native population. England has
recently been paying her ten millions of
dollars annually for cotton seed that is
compressed into oil cake, and now that
item of revenue is sacrificed. The Lon
don Shipping and Merchant Gazette de
clares that it is almost impossible to
compute the monetary disaster to
Egypt. The deficiency in the cotton
and wheat deliveries to England must,
however, be supplied by American ex
portation, and if the war is inevitable,
our shippers may conscientiously con
sent to make all the money they can out
of it.
Burns.
Extensive burns are apt to be fatal,
even when death does not iollow from
the shock caused by the accident. Why
they are fatal has been a cause of sur
prise in cases where no internal organ
has been harmed. Recent examinations
of persons who have died from this
cause have shown that the blood was
thick and viscid. Much of the blood
water (liquor sanguinis) had been
drained from the blood, rendering it
unfit for its functional purposes. The
loss was undoubtedly due to rapid exu
dation from the inflamed surfaces.
To what an extent exudation
place has been shown by the large
drops of fluid that have been pressed
from the burned skin of a rabbit. When
the animal was placed in a hot room,
the fur over the burned part remained
moist, although it quickly dried when
moistened on other parts of the body.
In cholera there is a somewhat simi
lar loss. but there are also great t hirst
and shrinkage of the muscles, which is
not the case in burns. It is, however,
only the serum—blood-water without
the fibrin—instead of the water of the
blood-proper, which is drained oft. As
this changes the density of the latter,
the blood-vessels, according to a well
known law, tend to draw a supply to
meet the lack from the muscular tissues,
causing their great shrinkage.
In the case of burns, however, there
is simply a diminution of the quantity
of the blood-water, and no change in its
density; hence no absorption from the
muscular tissues takes place.
Burns in which the scarf-skin is not
destroyed do not so seriously atlect the
system.
The aim in the treatment of burns
should be to arrest the exudation of the
water on the surface. Soda not only
removes the pain of burns, but it will
save life even when the burns cover
surface enough to cause death. Its re
markable curative power probably lies
In the fact that it renders the surface
dry. Youth's Companion.
. He Took the Cue.
A Chinaman, clothed in the conven
tional costume, sauntered into a Sixth
Avenue cigar store yesterday, laid down
i a ten cent piece on the counter, and held
up two fingers. The mute demand was
1 readily complied with by the intel-
I ligent tobacconist, who, with the
utmost suavity, addressed his customer
I in “pigeon English:”
“ Livee ’round here, John?”
i The Celestial gave his interrogator a
curious look and replied in excellent
English, with a faultless pronunciation:
I “ Weil, not in this immediate vicini
ty; I am temporarily sojouring with a
friend on Fifth Avenue, but eventually
expect to return to New Haven and
prosecute my studies in the 'School of
: Science. Good morning, sir.” _
i The cigar dealer had entertained a
Yaie graduate unaware.- N. Y. Com
mercial Advertiser. . . |
CON..KKHSMBN have away of “(ffizing
th' mails to their own prullta. Ihat
frank-
The Hydrogen Locomotive.
The following is a description of the
locomotive which recently ran upon the
Jersey Central Railroad, the fuel being
hydrogen gas, which was constantly re- ;
produced by its own heat from water by
md&ns of naphtha, as explained by the ;
inventor: The new locomotive is fueled j
with hydrogen gas, which is constantly I
reproduced by its own heat from water ,
through the mediation of a small pro
portion of crude naphtha. No oil is
burned in this process in the ordinary
or proper sense of combustion. It is
used exclusively within retorts without air
as a decomposing agent for steam. The
present i. vv locomotive, commenced at
the Grant Works in Paterson in the sum
mer of 1881, was originally designed
with considerable modifications sup
posed to be favorable to the utilization
of gaseous fuel. The boiler as then con- |
structed was tried in October, 1881, and, |
as the result, the more extensive and
costly changes were rejected and the '
simple ordinary pattern of boiler, with |
certain adaptations only in the fire-box !
and vent-pipe (no longer a “smoke- ■
stack, as there is no smoke), was sub
stituted last winter. The gas-making
retorts are four in number, of massive
wrought-iron, semi-cylindrical or dome
shaped, the size and shape being nearly
that of half a peck measure with the
convex side up. They are set on short
iron posts in a row across the fire-box,
near the floor and near the door. The
interior of each retort is a single undi
vided chamber, into which enters from
the top an oil-pipe, extending to within
one inch from the bottom, and also
pipes from the steam-space and water
! space in the boiler, all opened and
, closed by finely-fitted and gauged
I valves. An outlet pipe also passes
from the top of each retort to
a “manifold” joint, in which these
four pipes unite and so connect with a
massive cast-iron gas “main” running
centrally through the fire-box fore and
| aft (length eight feet, diameter three
inches), at level of about three inches
below the bottom of the retorts. This
main is divided into three sections by
i cut-off valves, enabling the engineer to
supply or withhold gas to any section
of the burners at pleasure. From each
side of the main horizontal branch
pipes of one-inch caliber and three or
four inches apart extend at right an
gles across the fire-box, to the number
of sixty-two. Each of these pipes (ex
cept the extremes) is pierced on its
upper side with two rows of minute
burner holes, alternating in position and
obliquely pitched in such a manner that
the gas-jets from the right side of the
i one pipe and those from the left or
nearer side of the next pipe converge
I and meet in pairs, each pair uniting at
an angle of, say, forty-five degrees di
rectlv over a one and one-fourth-inch
air-hole in the iron floor of the fire
box. The total number of jets thus
placed is 548. The air-holes are opened
and closed wholly or partly at will by
under-slides controlled by levers from the
engineer’s cab. Under the whole is
constructed an air-chest, open forward,
to secure a pressure of air into the air
holes during rapid motion, and also to
warm the draft and thus save the great
; heat radiated downward from the fire.
The retorts of a locomotive in service
will seldom be cooled; but for initiating
the process in cold iron a small prim
ing oil-pipe runs under the four re
torts, touching each of them with six
jets which are turned on and lighted tem
porarily until the retorts are hot
enough to vaporize oil in their interiors.
—N.Y. Tinies.
Rats on Ships.
Rats greatly infest ships, and are by
them conveyed to every part of the
world. So industriously do they make
homes for themselves in the numerous
crannies and corners in the hull of a
ship, that it is impossible to get rid of
them. Ships take out rats as well as
passengers and cargo, every voyage;
whether the former remain in the ship
at port is best known to themselves.
When the East India Company had
ships of their ow n they employed a rat
catcher, who sometimes captured 500
rats in one ship just returned from Cal
cutta. The ship rat is often the black
species. Sometimes black and brown
inhabit the same vessel, and unless they
carry on perpetual hostilities, one party
will keep in the head of the vessel and
the other to the stern. The .ship rat is
very anxious that his supply of fresh
water shall not fail; he will come on
deck when it rains, and climb up to the
wet sails to suck them. Sometimes he
mistakes a spirit cask for a water cask,
and he gets drunk. A captain on an
American ship is credited (or discred
ited) with an ingenious bit of sharp
practice as a means of clearing his ship
from rats. Having discharged a cargo
at a port in Holland, he found his ship
in juxtaposition to another which had
just taken in a cargo of Dutch cheese.
He laid a plank at night from one vessel
to the other; the rats, tempted by the
odor, trooped along the plank and be
gan the feast. He took care that the
plank should not be there to serve them
as a pathway back again, and so the
cheese laden ship had a cruel addition
to its outward cargo.—AT. Y. Scientific
Times.
—The living skeleton of a San Fran
cisco side show went out for a walk on
a railroad track. A locomotn c kn<>ekv<l
him down , / nl - four j
an<l continued us ;11l l the .
inches between " ft>l . /,is /
( , ios /,«<! been bm ‘
d m dulses amt
y. tiun.
TERMS; SI.OO A YEAR.
FOREIGN GOSSIP.
—A man smashed every one of the
large plate glass windows of the London
office of the Dublin Freemen's Journal
some nights ago because, as he said,
they had no right to write about En
glishmen.
—Venice and Amsterdam are the
cities of bridges. The first has 450, the
last 300. London has 15, Vienna 20, and
Berlin will soon have 50. Altogether
the most beautiful and striking bridge
in Europe is that over the Moldau at
Prague.
—lt is found that the mind of Under
Secretary Burke’s sister, who lived with
him, has given way. She has not shed
a tear, and sits at the window, exclaim
ing at every footfall, “He is coming.”
It is impossible to divert her thoughts
from him.
—They pulled down a chimney at the
Royal Mint, in Berlin, the other day,
and it occurred to the architect that it
might bo worth while to analyze the soot
still adhering to the inner bricks. The
result was that they found four pounds
of pure gold, worth a thousand dollars.
—Mr. Dijoud, who had previously
been convicted eighteen time®, and
spent thirty-five years in prison, lately
set fire to Valence Cathedral, but, the
fire being quickly discovered, only
$7,000 of damage was done. He said
he was tfred of prisons in France, and
wished to end his days in New Caledo
nia—twenty years’ penal servitude.
—The recent solar eclipse calls to
mind an incident of Francois Arago,
who gained among his simple country
neighbors an almost uncanny reputa
tion by his accurate prediction of a total
eclipse. Not long afterward he was a
candidate for election to the National
Assembly, and was elected by an al
most unanimous vote of his constituents.
The wealth and government influence
of the rival candidate created no impres
sion upon the voters. “No, no,” they
cried; “we must vote for Arago, for, if
we don’t, he may get mad and hurl an
other eclipse at us!”
—The newest fashion in Paris, that of
wearing black underclothing, has be
come the furor among the women of the
highest aristocracy. The undergar
ments, like those of the Eastern odal
isques, are composed usually of silk,
generally of what is called foulard des
Indes. From head to foot the Parisian
lady appears, when divested of the outer
robe, as just emerging from an ink bath
—the stockings of black silk, the slip
pers of black velvet, the corsets of black
satin, and adorned with black lace, and
the petticoats of black surah, filled
around the bottom with a stiff mousse
of black illusion or net.
—The following clause was found in
the will of a Yorkshire rector: “Seeing
that my daughter Anne has not availed
herself of my advice touching the ob
jectionable practice of going about with
her arms bare up to the elbows, my will
is that, should she continue at my death
in this violation of the modesty of her
sex, all the goods, chattels, money,
lands, and all other things that I have
devised to her for the maintenance of
her future life shall pass to the eldest
son of my sister Caroline. Should, any
one take exception to this as being too
severe, 1 answer that license in the dress
of a woman is a mark of a depraved
mind.” ________________
Killed the Wrong Heirs.
An irascible sea-Captain settled down 1
to Portland life by the side of a well
tempered man, and the two got along
very well until the hen question came,
up. Said Hie Captain: ft'
“ I like you as a neighbor, but 1 dor«Ji
like your hens, and if they trouble l?_|
any more I’ll shoot them.”
’l h.e mild-mannered neighbor studtea
over the matter some, but knowing
Captain’s reputation well by report, he
replied: '
“Well, if we can’t get along any'
other way, shoot the hens, but I’ll take
it as a favor if you will throw them
when dead over into our yard and yell
to my wife.
“ All right,” said the Captain.
The next day the Captain’s gun was
heard, and a dead hen fell in the quiet
man’s yard. The next day another hen
.was thrown over, the next two, and the
next after three.
“Say,” said the quiet man,
“ couldn't von scatter them along a lit
tle? We really can’t dispose of the
number you are killing.” n
“ (live ’em to jfour poor relations,
replied the Captain, gruffly.
And the quiet man did. He kept his
neighbors welt supplied with < mckens
for some weeks.
One dav '••c Captain said to the quiet
man; .
•* I have half a dozen nice hens I m
going to give you if you’ll keep quiet
about this affair.”
“ How is that,” said the quiet man.
“ Are you sorry because you killed my
hens?’ .
“ Your hens!” said the < aptain.
“ Why, sir, those hens belonged to my
wife! 1 didn’t know she had any until
I fed you and your neighbors all sum
mer out of her flock.” — Portland (Me.)
Transcript. _
c —The Sherman (Toxas) Courier hum
bly apologizes to the Governor as fol
lows • “We doubly regret the error in-
. to which we were led some
the compositor, makingr» B du
i Roberts that he H ’ ; ‘? ,! ~" r
I
fiblo
I m (ar
the greiitvt _