Newspaper Page Text
VOL. V.-NO. 7.
NEWS GLEANINGS.
Virginia haa the larges mast crop
known for years.
The Virginia penitentiary now con
tains 652 convics.
About three-fourths of the fruit crop
of Georgia has been dried.
At Gainesville, Ga., Mrs. Chamber
died at the age of 100 years.
The South will make 7,000,000 gal
lons of cotton seed oil this year.
Bee-keeping is becoming a large and
profitable industry in Mississippi.
The trade in cotton in Montgomery,
Ala, last year footed up $6,000,000.
Florida has shipped, during the sea
son just closed, 25,000 head of cattle to
Cuba.
In some portions of North Alabama
corn is offered at twenty-five cents a
bushel.
Clay county, N. C., polls but twenty
negro votes, while Wake heads the list
with 5,128.
The colored military companies in the
South will hold an encampment in At
lanta this fall
The Selma, Ala., cotton mills have
just shiyped five car loads of cotton
goods to China.
H»le county, Ala., is looking out for
her moss industry and is gatherirg
thousands of tons.
Macon, Ga., has a bonded debt of but
$700,000, and taxable property amount
ing to $10,000,000.
Memphis has one-seventh of the
whole number of cotton-seed oil mills
in the whole country.
Over 400 mines, including silver, cop
per and other minerals, are being work
ed in biorth Carolina.
The first and only town clock in the
State of Florida surmounts the new
court house at Tampa.
Large and very rich deposits of iron
ore have recently been discovered in
Marshall county, Ala.
A-grove of eighty bananna trees,
eighteen months old, is bearing good
fruit at Waynesboro, Ga.
An effort is being made to found a
college at Greenville, Miss., for the ed
ucation of colored youths.
North Caroolina’s rice crop is good,
and this year will reach 65,000 bushels
of tide-water and 200,000 bushels of up
land.
, A stalk of Sea Island cotton nine feet
,n height and having forty-two branches
and 250 bolls, is on exhibition at Bron
son. Fla.
The Georgia Lunatic Asylum is full
1" overflowing, and cannot accommo
ate a large number of insane persons
waiting treatment.
It is estimated that over one-half of
e new manufactories started in the
nth •luring the last two years belong
to Northern capitalists.
Ark., voted on the
and d " e . , q “ e ’ tlon at the recent election
d decided by an overwhelming ma
mv to continue to “sip of the flowing
it is^ 6 * ,r^eans T'imes-Democrat say
ad r: p . robabie that the
S’uffs th- he South toth# West for food
less th? 1 ' WiH be * loo ><Woo
88 than paid in 1881.
my to tX" da an S erous ene
nose blep 1 Near Enni ” a man had
posited p WU 6 aßleep ’ and the fl y d *
later 256? that time ’ A few davs
* nian ’s none. WOrnlß ,r °®
table'hmrin? t ? DB . titution Polishes a
Georgia t() bo h \ aiable Property of
Nation, $290 000 000
Mt year’s J ’ ’° o0 ’ an increase over
returns of $16,000,000.
nace's 01 ?7, twent y-two iron fur
X Tbeßi -ingham
Wiles of Birrnin I? 1 " ** radillß °f fifty
th r eiß enou * b
a thousand _4 ars> hoUßand furnace « for
*t a T pass
aged ini Michael Hol-
S a ; ion We’ t d y d laßt , Week in
' talw art, aged ii i ' a ’’ and J ame«
“ v‘? h “ iU,t di " l
J lorida w;ii
Work of rail Wavg Soon , be a perfect neb
? pm ent oftbe y ’ and rapid devel
10W - H er Xu e WIU ° f CoUrse fol
*few years wi]l are Wonderful, and
IVehe «t of the Soutl o er araon g the
TheAm»- thern States.
I tb;,t during X (Ga-) Recorder Ba VB
ra Part of the city
SI) c El n Ito n '1 vgn
were blown dry. These wells, up to
the time of the gale, were unfailing.
The explanation of this remarkable
occurrence i» the existence of subterra
nean passages and the violent agitation
on the surface opened channels of es
cape for the water to these.
A curious looking specimen of the
bovine race was exhibited on the streets
of Greensboro, N. C., recently. The
animal is a Devonshire bull calf, three
months old, with a tail and hide similar
to those of an elephant. The calf is
about the usual size, and apparently
well and hearty. Its hide is entirely
destitute of hair, lies in heavy folds
like an elephant’s, and is of about the
same color. The tail is short and
spiked.
Many valuable articles have recently
been contributed to the Tennessee His
torical Society. Among them are the
writings «f Thomas Paine, printed in
1792; an eight dollar Continental cur
rency bill of 177 7; a Spanish silver dol
lar of 1783; an Indian tomahawk found
in 1814; a copy of Arrowsmith and
Lewis’ General Atlas, published in 1804;
the first volume of Marquis de Chattel
lux’s Travels in North America in 1780,
1781, 1782, and many interesting abori*
ginal relics.
A suit which will prove of great in
terest to theatre-goers and managers of
amusement halls has been brought at
Richmond, Va. A gentleman was ar
rested in the opera house of that city
for occupying a seat for which he had
ne coupon, although he bad a ticket of
admission. The seat was the only va
cant one in the house. Now he will
ask the courts to decide whether or not
the theatre is compelled to furnish seats
when a ticket is sold for it and the
money paid.
Putting Away Tools.
The wearing out of farm implements
is, as a rule, due more to neglect than
to use. If tools can be well taken care
of, it will pay to buy”those made of the
best steel, and finished in the best man
ner; but in common hands, and with
common care, such are of little advant
age Iron and steel parts should be
cleaned with dry sand and a' cob, or
scraped with a piece of soft iron, washed
and oiled if necessary, and in a day or
two cleaned off with the corn-cob, and
dry sand. Finally paint the iron part
with rosin and beeswax, in the propor
tion of four of rosin, to one of wax,
melted together and applied hot. This
is good for the iron or steel parts of
every sort of tool. Wood work should
be painted with good, boiled, linseed
oil, white lead and turpentine, colored
of any desired tint, red is probably the
best color. Keep the cattle away until
the paint is dry and hard, or they will
lick, with death as the result. If it is
not desired to use paint on hand tools,
the boiled oil with turpentine and
“liquid drier,” does just as well.
Many prefer to saturate the wood-work
of farm implements with crude petro
leum. This can not be used with color,
but is applied by itself, so long as any is
absorbed by the pores of the wood.—
Agriculturist.
How to Kill a Rattlesnake.
A working party on a railroad here is
made up of mountaineers and Georgians.
One of the latter performed a foolhardy
feat the other day that made the blood
of the unaccustomed spectators run cold.
They were at work clearing away the
thick underbrush, in advance of the en
gineer, when some one shouted : “ ’Ware
of rattlesnakes! ” He saw one of these
reptiles about four feet long and five or
six inches in diameter lying just ahead.
The Georgian cut a short stick with a
forked end, and creeping up to the
snake he deftly pinned it to the earth by
pushing the forked end on either side of
his neck. Then, seizing the tail in his
right hand, he ran his left down the
snake’s body, and grasping it firmly just
back of the head he held it up at arm’s
length and called on the others to “look
at the varmint’s mouth.” It was any
thing but a pleasant sight, and most of
the spectators were horrified. After
holding it a few minutes for general in
spection, he suddenly swung the snake
over his head with his right hand, let
ting go the hold of the left, and dashed
it with great force against a rock, kill
ing it instantly. It was a cool and dex
terous feat, but very trying to the look- .
ers-on, who censured the man for his
“folly,” at which he seemed to be
mightily amused.
—To Color Brown: For five pounds of
cloth, boil one and one-half pounds of
catechu in as much water as will cov
er the cloth until disso ved, then add
two ounces of blue vitriol, stir well and
put in your cloth, let it lie over night, I
wring it out in the morning, put two I
ounces of®bi-chromate of potash in a
kettle of boiling water, let the cloth !
stand in this till of the right color, and
wash when dry. Color in iron. Farm
and Fireside.
—Spirits oAturpentine is now made
from sawdust and refuse of the saw
mill. It is extracted by a sweating
process, and yields fourteen gallons of
spirits, three to four gallons of resin,
and a quantity of tar per c >rd. The (
spirits produced has a different odor ,
from that produced by distillation.
DALTON, GEORGIA, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1882,
TOPICS OF THE DAI.
About three-fourths of the Georgia
fruit crop has been dried.
Ben. Butler has been retained by
the Dorseys in the Star Route trials.
The last of the Irish suspects have
been released from Kilmainham jail.
A farmer at Valdosta, Georgia, has
made two crops of corn on one piece ol
land.
The proposed introduction of Chinese
labor into England is meeting with op
position.
Hereafter no breect,loading rifles
are to be included in stores for uncivilzed
Indians.
A fatal case of blood poisoning from
the bite of a mosquito is reported from
Louisville, Ky.
Sir Garnet Wolseley is a one-eyed
man, and was left for dead in the
trenches at Sabastopol.
Oliver Ames, Republican nominee
for Lieutenant-Governor of Massachu
setts, is a son of Oakes Ames.
“One country, one starry banner, and
one wife,” is the platform of an editor
whose field adjoins Mormondom.
According to the Minneapolis Tribune
there is not enough low grade wheat in
Minnesota this year to feed the chickens.
Lieutenant Danenhower will enter
the lecture field in a few days,having for
his subject “Arctic” and Siberian ex
periences.
The United Presbyterians have
agreed to raise a fund of $500,000 in
honor of the twenty-fifth year of their
organization.
It is the thing now for young men of
society who have nothing to do, to claim
they “ write for the papers.” It makes
them seem to have brains.
Ten thousand acres of oysters have
been discovered in the North Sea. The
attention of managers of church festivals
should be called to this item.
Half a ton of tbe silver three cent
pieces which originated under Buchan
an’s administration was shipped a few
days ago from Boston to the Philadel
phia mint.
A recent decision of the Supreme
Court of Florida makes railroad prop
erty liable to taxation, and thus adds
about $5,000,000 to the taxable property
of the State.
The Egyptian war helped the sale of
English journals wonderfully. The Lon
don Standard, on the day succeeding the
bombardment of Alexandria, sold over
300,000 copies.
It is stated that a block of creosoted
pine, in use in the street pavement in
Galveston for seven years, was recently
examined and found to have lost but ac
eighth of an inch.
Special inducements to plant trees
are offered in Dakota, where for every
five acres of trees, forty acres of land
with SI,OOO in improvements are ex
empted from taxation.
Moses Williams, who died in Boston
a few days ago, leaving a fortune of
$6,000,000, began life peddling milk in
the streets of that city. That’s what
comes of selling milk where water is so
abundant.
A Boston banker went to the Oceanic
House at the Isle of Shoals for recre
ation, taking five rooms for himself and
family. When he went away, September
1, he paid his three months’ bill of SB,-
000 and said it was cheap enough.
Herbert Spencer is in this country,
and he is sick, yet withal he is able to
use this forcible language iu speaking ol
Oscar Wilde: “He is that outlandish
person who attempted to reconcile
idipey with art and namby pambyism
with sentiment.”
The Louisville Courier-Journal ex
presses the opinion that if Alfred
Tennyson were to go through a news
paper waste basket, and attach his
name to all the original poetry ho
should find in it, he would still be read,
admired, and paid.
What sort of doctors have they in
New Jersey ? A Jersey paragraph says:
“The health authorities of Paterson
have declared the office and residence
of Dr. Daeumer untenantable from
filth, and the inmates are to be removed
and the promises cleaned and fumi
gated.” ,
A number of immigrants of various
I nationalities passed up Broadway, New
I York, the other morning. The Italian
men carried deep carpet sacks, and the
women, left far in the rear, and wearing
pink and green costumes, carried or led
half-grown children. The Scotch women
and men were about equally laden. ’ The
Englishmen carried nothing at all, while
the women, endeavoring to keep up with
them, were burdened with a heavy port
manteau in each hand.
The African expedition under Stanley,
sent out by the King of Belgium, is
said to have established the first four of
a line of various stations which, starting
from, the Congo, will for commercial
purposes tap the most populous districts
of Central Africa. These four stations
are described as cities in embryo. They
possess houses and gardens; they .are
connected by well constructed roads,and
at each a European acts as Chief of the
community, having another European
as sub-chief.
Mrs D. W. Lincoln, of Portland.
Maine, lately fell heir to $175,000, the
estate of her consin, Erven W. S.
Noughton, of California, formerly of
Maine, deceased. There is a romantic
history connected with the bequest.
Mr. Noughten and Miss Lincoln, in their
younger days, were intimate friends, and
would probably have been married had
it not been for opposition of relatives.
Mr. Noughton started for the West, de
claring he would never come back. He
kept his word. Business prospered
with him and he became wealthy.
Speaking of the Princess Louise, as
she appeared in that city, the Omaha
(Neb.) Bee says : “ The Princess made
her appearance on the rear platform of
her car to watch the antics of her little
terrier, in charge bf the porter. She
was accompanied by one of her ladies,
and only remained a moment, and few
of the crowd suspected who she was.
She was attired in the most modest man
ner imaginable. Her dress was of dark
lawn, and a spray of violets on her bo
som, a plain bracelet, and a couple of
plain gold rings were the only ornaments
she wore. She is a well-formed, hale
looking woman of thirty-five, or there
about, and is said to have the features
of her mother, and, like her husband, a
modest yet frank demeanor. Her face
is bright and intelligent, and lights up
very pleasantly when she smiles.”
xiive Jewelry.
“Here is something new’ in the way
of ornamentation,” a salesman in a large
up-town jewelry store said, opening a
box. Out walked a monster beetle,
fully four inches in length. About its
body was a solid gold band, locked by a
tiny padlock, to which was attached a
costly gold chain, about two inches in
length, fastened to a pin. The beetle,s
back glistened in light, having been
treated to a dress of gold, and as it
lumbered along its long legs worked to
gether in a curious fashion. “It’s a
shawl pin. You see the pin is used to
fasten the face of a shawl, or perhaps worn
on the bonnet, the insect crawling
around the length of the chain. They
are perfectly harmless and not expensive,
as they live on air—that is, they have
never been seen to eat. This one was
brought here to mount, which is a very
fine operation, as the legs and antennai
are all so delicate. After all, there is
nothing objectionable about them, ex
cept the idea of having them crawl over
you. They all come from South Ameri
ca, and the only lot in the city is to be
taken to France, where the owner w'ill
try to introduce the fashion of wearing
them. They costfromslo to SSO, depend
ing entirely on the amount of the ring.
There is nothing cruel about it, as they
are bound loosely, and the gold has no
effect upon their hard sides.
In Brazil the fashion of wearing beetles
is carried to a great extent. A well
known resident has a beetle with a col -
lar of gold which meets at the top, and
is there ornamented with a diamond of
great value. The insect has a cage sur
rounded by the plants among which it
lives in its native state, and nothing is
neglected to make it as comfortable as
possible. But the most popular insect
used for an ornament in Brazil is asmali
phosphorescent beetle. These are often
worn fastened in the hair, and as the two
phosphorescent or light-giving spots are
on the of the head, the black in
sect is, of course, invisible, especially
when in the raven locks of the fair Bra
zilians. Twenty or thirty of these bee
tles will throw out a light sufficient to
read by, and when arranged around the
head iu a circle, or grouped over the
forehead and held in place, the effect is
beautiful. — New York Sun.
—Ar. Indianapolis girl, forbidden by
her parents to marry the man of her
choice, pretended to be abundantly con
soled by the promise of a grand birth
day party. When all the guests were
assembled on that occasion she walked
in on the arm of her lover, who had
within the hour been made her husband
by a clergyman round the corner.
—James Field obtained a promise
from Jenny McHenry and her parents, in
Philadelphia, that she would become Ins
wife when she was sixteen, hei
that time being twelve; but on he
Serth OMh.4 ••<>•■!
cido instead of mairpng. r y ,
refused to keep the agreement— A. Y. /
Sun.
A Brave Girl.
It is customary among the wealthy
classes who leave town during the sum
mer to lock up their houses, notify the
Captain of their precinct to look after
the family plate and other valuables
and depart. in fancied security. The
records will show how often they have
been deceived as to the vigilance of the
police. Some people leave trusted,
keen and sharp-witted servants in charge
of their residences and return at the
end of the season to find everything in
its place. Which is the better plan,
with all due deference to the guardians
of the law. can be inferred from the fol
lowing story: Mr. William Armstrong
is a feather dealer in “The Swamp,”
and he resides at No. 105 Madison
avenue. He and his family spend the
heated term out of town. During their
absence the custodian of their mansion
has been a tried and true servant named
Annie Laussen. Annie is a young Ger
man girl, slender and apparently deli
cate, but possessing great presence of
mind and wonderful nerve. Unlike the
average servant girl—to whom the sole
occupancy of her employer’s house
means a perpetual picnic—Annie de
voted her whole time and attention to
the care and protection of the property
she had been left to guard. She never
left the house unless necessity compelled
her. On Thursday evening, shortly aft
er seven o’clock, such an emergency
arose. Knowing that she would be ab
sent but a minute she pulled the base
ment door to, but she did not lock it.
She then hurried out upon her errand.
On her return she saw a man coming up
the basement stairs, his arms laden with
Mr. Armstrong’s plate. The ordinary
woman would have screamed for the
police and then gone off into hysterics.
Annie is not an ordinary woman. A
sudden impulse prompted her to dis
pense with the services of the blue
coats and to depend entirely upon her
self. She sprang through the gate and
grabbed the intruder by the throat. He
was taken at a disadvantage, as the at
tack was unexpected, but he attempted
to free himself with Iris left arm, the
other still holding the stolen silverware.
Her hold was as secure. He dropped
his plunder and by using both hands
broke from her grasp and vaulted over
the railing. He and Annie reached the
sidewalk simultaneously. He struck
the girl in the lace and she threw both
arms around his body. It was no lovers’
embrace. He tripped her and both fell
heavily to the pavement.
Then the contest began in dead
earnest. Kick and struggle as he might
there was no breaking her hold. Both
were breathing heavily and the girl’s
strength was fast waning, but she ut
tered not a cry. She was determined
to capture the rascal who had stolen
her employer’s property. By a desper
ate cflort he regained his feet, drag
ging the girl up with him. Owing to
her failing powers he freed himself
from her grasp and attempted to run;
but, still bent on capturing him, she
grabbed him by the coat and tore it
from his back. In the struggle they ;
again fell and rolled over and over from
the railing to the curb. Annie’s clothes
were rent to shreds, but she still held
on. Findng her-elf on the verge of ,
unconsciousness and her hold relaxing
she gave utterance to a series of
screams. These were her only outcries
during the unequal contest. It had the
effect of bringing to the scene Rounds
man Haughey, of the Thirteenth-street
Police Station, who arrested the burg
lar. Here again Annie display ed her
wonderful courage. Such a protracted
battle with a stronger antagonist would
have used up the vital forces of any man
not an athlete, and prostrated nineteen
out of twenty women. Annie went in
to the house, washed her hands and !
fat e, combed her hair, slipped on an- ■
other dress and walked to the station- !
house to make a complaint against the
burglar, who f a d he was Joseph Will- 1
jams, of Albany. When this was done ;
she walked out coolly and composedly t
and returned home. She slept during
the night and had no need of medical
attendance.
Tn the Jefferson Market Police Court
on Friday she came up smiling and as
“fresh as a daisy,” showing not a sign j
of the ordeal through which she had j
passed. She was modest and reticent ,
and disinclined to talk about the mat- |
ter, leading the spectators to infer that j
she considered she had done nothing |
but what her duty demanded. Williams i
looked as if he had had a tussle with a
threshing-machine. Justice Ford com- j
mitted him for trial. The stolen prop- ;
erty was found in the front court-yard I
of the house, where Williams had I
drop; ed it.— N. Y. Herald.
No Nonsense About Iler.
“ I tell you what it is,” said young
Spilkins, “that Dodgers girl is just the
right kind of a girl. There’s no non
sense about her, you know, and she’s so
observing, you know; sees everything
there is to be seen, and she’s just as
economical ami modest-like as she can
be. I took her out to walk the other
evening, and she saw everything in the
shop windows. More than a dozen
times she said: ‘Doesn’t that candy look
nice?” And two or three times, as we
were going by an open door, she said:
‘How lovely that smells! It smells
just like ice-cream, doesn’t it?’ But,
la! notwithstanding she would like to 1
B I have had some, she never once /
l lme to give her any. I ted - > /
4 you don’t often /ind r 1 , vo n /
s j thoughtful and ,„ ,rrie.l. / f
trail Free Press
TERMS: SI.OO A YEAR.
SCIENCE AND INDUSTRY.
—A driver in the Troy fire depart
ment has invented a contrivance by
which his horses are unharnessed by
simply pulling the reins Trou (N. Y }
Times. '
—Dr. Isador Kitsee, of Cincinnati, has
patented a device for discovering fire
damp in mines before the miners enter
them. Electricity is used to fuse little
pieces of metal at various points in a
mine, and if an explosion of damp occur*
a bell is rung.— N. Y. Post.
—The Journal of Science says that at
the soiree of the Society of Chemical
Industry, held at Owens College, Mr.
Fletcher, of Warrington, Eng., demon
strated the possibility of the combustion
of gas without visible flame, the heat
obtained from a quarter-inch gas-pipe
being sufficient to fuse iron into drops.
‘ —A gun invented by a man in Ripley,
Miss., is, if it is what it is claimed to be,
one of the most wonderful inventions of
the age. It can be fired from ten to
twenty thousand times a minute, can be
. elevated or depressed or turned to the
right or left, inclined to cover the slope
f of a hill, contracted so as to bring the
fire to bear on one spot or expanded to
cover a wide area, and all with the great
est ease and in the simplest manner, by
, merely turning a crank. Chicago
Times.
I —lt is said that alcohol equal to that
made from grain can be produced from
■ acorns. The acorns are freed from the
, shell and ground finely; then they are
' mashed with malt and allowed to fer
ment. Acorns contain about 20 per
; cent, of starch and 18 per cent, of glu
ten. They would be a valuable article
for human food if it were not for the
’ tannic acid (about 3 per cent.) which
they contain. Vast quantities which ga
to waste every year, where hogs are not
fed in the woods, might be gathered by
boys and converted into alcohol for use
. in the arts, thus freeing an equivalent
amount of grain for use as food.
' —Considerable progress is being made
in reviving the mining industries of the
Isthmus of Panama. For many years
its mines excited the cupidity of Span
iards and buccaneers. Indian and ne-
I gro slaves were made to work in quartz
’ and placer by the most primitive proc
esses, and almost entirely without ma
j chinery, but their labors were very pro
| ductive, according to tradition. it is
I centuries, however, since most of the
mines were abandoned. Some were
worked out, others were not rich enough
to pay with hired labor, and all required
an investment of capital which the un
settled condition of the country, and
especially the fear all foreigners enter
tained for isthmus fever, effectually pre
vented from being made. — N. Y. Sun.
—An impetus has been given to the
nickel industry by the improved process
es of making it malleable. Many useful
as well as ornamental articles are now
made of this material. Nickel table
utensils especially are in great favor
abroad. This class of goods is now be
ing manufactured largely in Prussia,
and is preferred to similar articles of
other materials. The hardness of the
metal renders it capable of receiving a
high polish, which is not readily in
jured by friction of any usual kind; on
account, too, of the peculiar smoothness
of the surface, matters do not adhere
firmly to it, and cleaning requires but
little attention or effort. It also pos
sesses the ad vantage of not tarnishing,
like some other substances, when fre
quently used.— Chicago Tribune.
- - ■ - > 1
Life in the Deep Sea.
The conditions under which I' 1
in the deep sea are very
The pressure exerted by th -*’ ’
great depths is enormous,JJsTS
beyond comprehension. ’
roughly to a ton weight on 3TA.TOc>
inch for every 1,000 fathoms
so that at the depth of 2,500 jhest market
there is a pressure of two tor.
half per square inch of surface,
may be contrasted with the ” 1
pounds per square-inch pressure’ltu n
which we are accustomed at the level of
the sea surface. An ex]>eriment made
by Mr. Buchanan enabled us to realize
the vastness ot the deep sea pressure
more fully than any otiier facts. Mr.
Mr. Buchanan hermetically sealed up at
both ends a thick glass tube full of air
several inches in length. He wrapped
this sealed tube in flannel, and placed
it, so wrapped up, in a wide copper
tube, which was one of those used to
protect the deep-sea thermometers when
sent down with the sounding apparatus.
The copper case containing the sealed
g!".» tube was sent down to a depth of
_,JO fathoms, and drawn up again. It
was then found that the copper wall of
the case was bulged and bent inward
opposite the place where the glass tube
lay, just as if it had been crumpled in
ward by being violently squeezed. The
glass tube itself, wi bin its flannel wrap
per, was found, when withdrawn, re
duced to a fine powder, like snow al
most. —Notes by a Naturalist on the
Challenger.
If a man means what he says he will
' be deliberate in his speech and state
I his purpose in plain, simple
1 Intending suicide, he will not wake
i motions at himself tin”*
7^ bi