Newspaper Page Text
VOL; V.-NO. 13.
news gleanings.
Four negro colleges flourish in Atlan-
ta,
Talbot was the only county in Geor
gia that hejd a fair this year.
A stGck company has been organize*
at Birmingham, Ala., to build a eottoi
factory.
The n ew directory for Knoxville,
Tenn-, places the population of that
city at 17,151.
M. W. Harris, of Perry Ga , has some
Egyptian cotton growing on his place
which is ten feet high.
A lot of Confederate bonds, amounting
to $145,600, was sold recently at Charles
ton, S. C., for sl2 50 per thousand.
Columbus, one of the most progress
ive cities in Georgia, is moving tn build
a thorough system of street railway.
George Crane, who murdered his wif<
in Daugherty county, Ga., has been sen
tenced to life imprisonment in the pen
itentiary.
The Selma (Ala.) Times says $15,00<
Jbas been squandered by Selma peoplt
in matrimonial insurance companies, al]
of which has been lost.
At Tirzah church, York county, S.C..
Felix Jones and Charles Starr foughi
over a woman and Jones was killed
Starr, who is but eighteen years old i
escaped.
A meteor fell at Mt. Airy, N. C., re
cently, burying itself several feet in the
earth. The mass greatly resembled iroi
ore, and weighed several hundret
pounds
A North Carolina exchange says th<
Liberia fever has broken out strong!'
among the negroes of that State, and t
large number are anxious to emigrate tv
that country.
I wo years ago so little dried fruit was
shipped from Tennessee that it wa
scarce worthy of note. The business has
now grown, however, to be one of tin
most important in the State.
Near Luray, Va., recently, an eagh
whose body was snow white and wing
jet black, was killed. From tip to t ,
of its wings it measured six feet sever,
inches, and weighed twenty pounds.
The artesian well at The masville, Ga ’
has reached a depth of 1,100 feet mostly
through sohd rock, without getting a
flow of water. Many tine gpecimen9 o ,
08811 sea shells are brought up from the
bottom.
and l !?' 9810 ? oVerrun with rats
tt is said the rodents have become a
about"tJ’ a f gUe ’ ln the countr y ™und
• the farmers are loosing heavily by
t( an<l CBn fincl no wav t 0 Pro
tect their grain or kill off the raiders.
G- . Hobbs, of Sampson county, N
pilZ y "? bited " very «->»-
th« ofbsy’™™’ bU ‘ hM “ ° d ° r
rpi
con / C °: ; ° Q P ,anter s of Mississippi are
at'T” 8 the Cott „„ Seed X ci ;_
olh ” j, T ’ N '™ Orl “"’
<erril t ,Tv W ’j^““ ,e ,hey b *’ e di ’ lde<l
S ho dfi, ' dr * tef »” red - They
” tTOd,ho ' ddbe s<”-
by the laws of trade.
dre Tb J™ 1 hy the heir, of An
l«d i„t ,MOVCT 160 «f
Fifth w e mo(lt ’tillable portion of the
lh( Pte„ t hJider.ofX"’" “
">■■<’'l7 ««i."" di “ t<!l '" tye “' P»r
--.b e "° f '“ nd *“ ,heY ‘
IW.OOO acres of 't ”1 D ° W *’ xam ■“i ntr
'»p«rci,« n pnelandwi,h »’i«
b ’*t3,W, Ml ’ y ” di “'=h.ve
ln Texas. of grazing land
i «MiuX h f’.””."""™ 1 h ” "»t.»
th « classic battlein lda ° bs< ‘ rve > from
Marco, at St a enU o,d Fort San
I Ven «« Novem^^ 111 !’, the transit of
carf y with th Pm • he ex P« di tion
Wei ghing 30 000 sc ’ entl6c apparatus
H" Th"“,vear
j N ashvil le A merican . T i
yeßter <lay foun(l * Can ’ The grand jury
i mu,d er in the lndl «ttnents f or
i Wlth intent J * degree and assault
1 ‘<>ese cases ffere murd er. All
I T ielar g e numWrof m , e^ nt occurai >ce.
I and othe , B,alte “P ted
I * h,ch have occur* ? ngu,nar y affairs
I the capital city an ‘J here are giving
I mere. • an Unenviable prom-
®hc Ultillon Glrgns.
One of the most brutal crimes ever
committed is reported from Danvillet
Va., A little negro boy, aged eigb,
years, had a silver dollar, which Dave
Mills, a colored man, coveted. The boy
refused to give it up, and Mills, in or
der to coerce him into compliance with
his demand, caught him and held him
over the escape pipe of a steam engine
until the little fellow was nearly cooked.
Mills has been arrested.
A few days ago, says the Gainesvill’
(Ga.) Southron, Mrs. Martin and four
children undertook to cross the Chatta
hoochee at Faulkner’s ford to the left of
Belton. A little boy had charge of the
boat, and it becoming unmanageable
he little fellow jumped out. At this
Mrs. Martin became frightened, and her
little child fell overboard. She jumped
out to save it. Both were drowned. An
other little girl went overboad and was
irowned. Two others saved their lives
by clinging to limbs and rocks. The
bodies were all recovered as soon as the
neople in the neighborhood could get to
the scene. The water was not over four
feet deep where the victims met their
death.
A somewhat singular case, and one
whose decision will be looked forward
to with interest, was argued before the
Supreme Court at Raleigh, N. C., a day
or two ago. One Scott had been sued
at the spring term, 1878, of the Superior
Court of Wake county, but i e died
about a month later. His death was
never suggested to the court, and in
1879 judgment was taken against him,
no administrator having been appointed.
It would appear to any one not up in
law that such a judgment w r ould be
void, but strange as it may appear,
the question is a doubtful one and
is being contested, one side claiming
that it is Worthless and the other
that it is binding on the estate.
Floor Coverings.
It is a mooted question whether mat
ting should be taken up and laid away
o- le t on the floor under the carpet.
Under an in ’ rain tin seams ir the mat
ting undoubtedly wear the carpet, un
less three or more th cknesse- of paper
are la d between them. Tapestrv and
Brussels carpeting are but ittle attecte I
bv the matting which undoubtedly
keeps better upon the Poor. Indeed, if
it is left down and covered with coarse
brown wrappi g paper, such as grocer
use, put between t and the carpet. it
will be foun 1 nicely cleaned by spring.
We have found stains which resist >d al
other applications disappear entirely
under such treatment.
Carpets Which have been la d away for
the summer should be carefully exam
ned be’o e putt ng down* and if the
moths have invaded them should at once
be sent to the steam-cleaners. Ingra n
carpets may be nicely mended bv
si p ing a patch under the hole and
pasting patch and carpet together with
stiff flour paste, taking care that the
figures match, and ironing with a hot
iron to make the edges lie smooth and
adhere properly.
The popular fancy for rugs and ma s
is an economical one, s uce it renders t
easy to hide any worn or faded spo s in
the carpet under their friendly shelter.
A faded carpet may often be mu h
freshened by washing wth beef’s gall
and water -one part of ga’l to three o
cold water. Rub this into the carp t
either with a clean flannel or a -oft
brush- rinse the la her o f with cold wa
ter, and rub the carpet dry with a so t
cloth. If there are any very d r y places
wash them w.th gail only. It will b>
wise to speak for the gall a few days
before it is needed. Light colored
Brussels or velvet carpets may b ■ deed
to form the center of a large rug, or or
a carpet with bright I order. Dying
will expo-e anv worn places merci le s-
Iv, for the carpet must necessarily he
dved all one color; but where the carpet
is a good one, end the light color is ob
je ted to, the experiment will probable
prove satis actory in the hi Jiest degree,
giving an entirely newe ect, well suited
to the fashion of the day.
Stained floors w.th la ge rugs in the
center of the room g ovv < onstantly in
favor, and some han Isome new houses
have floors of costly woods highly pol
ished lor the purpose. Ele ant Turk
ish and Pers'an r gs are used on these,
but the fashion o>ti ns also in heaper
fabrics, and ingrain and tapestry rugs
are shown in abun lane al the arpet
stores, along with the pretty Smyrna
rugs which imitate the Oriental rarpets.
Philadelphia Press.
Didn’t Want a Pass.
The other day an Arkansaw man se
cured a free pass over a railroad. He
was very much pleased at first, but after
discovering that if injured in an acci
dent he could not rec >ver damages he
approached the Superintendent and
said; “Look here! how about this
thing?” “What’s the matter with it?”
“What if I get killed on the road, my
wife wouldn’t recover damages.’ “No,
sir.” “Then I don’t want the pass. 1
ain’t got no wife nor no relations, but
I want to feel that if I had a wife she d
get pay for my death. I’m much
obliged to yer, but I reckon I’ll have to
walk.”— Arkansaw Traveler.
DALTON, GEORGIA, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1882.
TOPICS OF THE DAY.
A telephone has been run into a
church in Olean, N. Y.
Lieut. Thackara has resigned from
the United States navy.
Minister Hannibal Hamlin will pass
the winter at Bangor, Me.
The revision of the Old Testament
will be completed in a few months.
Daniel Sealis, of Cleveland, is said
to be the wealthiest colored man in
America.
* ♦ •
The new directory for Knoxville,
Tenn., places the population of that city
at 17,151.
Any Roman Catholic who can prove
that the Apo-tle Peter had no wife, can
obtain a $5,000 prize offered in Scot
land.
There were more people killed and
wounded on British railroads last year
than all the British casualties in the
Egyptian war.
Father Ryan, the poet-priest, is lec
turing in Gulf Coast cities on “ Atheism
and Infidelity Tried at the Tribunal of
Reason and Common Sense.”
The bronze statue of the late Senator
Hill, to be erect d at Atlanta, Georgia,
will cost about SIO,OOO, of which one
half has already been subscribed.
It is asserted that in the three years
ending 1880, there were no fewer than
252 theaters destroyed by fire, or partly
so, resulting in 4,370 deaths, and about
3,400 injuries.
General Brady, of Star-route noto
riety, is said to have lost $75,000 in op
erating his Canadian lumber mills,
which he is now trying to dispose of to
avoid further loss.
One of the benevolent New Yorkers
who helped introduce the English spar
rows here, has had to remove every
bracket from his house and go to an ex
pense of SIOO for painting.
A new underground railway is pro
posed for Paris, to cost about $30,000,-
000. Toe central station is to be at the
Palace de la Bourse. In all, the lines
will be twenty-four miles.
Miss Gabrielle Greeley has begun
making improvements on the Greeley
swamp at Chappaqua, and has given a
plot of ground to the Episcopal Society
of that village on which to erect a
chapel.
In the high school of Dedham, Mass
achusetts, the experiment is being made
of using daily newspapers instead of
text-books in the reading class. The
Principal thinks that the plan is suc
cessful.
A book has just been issued in Ver
mont entitled “The Resurrection of
Christ from a Lawyer’s Standpoint.” It
is an investigation according to the laws
of evidence, and it ends with a full ac
ceptance of the resurrection of Christ as
an historical fact.
The Hon. Levi P. Morton, is giving
laudable attention to the interests of the
American colony in Paris. He has re
cently been chosen as a warden of the
American Episcopal Church in that city,
and has become a patron or the “Paris,
British and American Schools.”
Jay Gould stopped at Rochester re
cently on his return from the West. On
alighting from a car at the new depot,
he stepped on a sidetrack in front of a
moving locomotive, and would have been
run over but for the outcries of those
standing near.
Professor Reese, an astronomer, de
nies that the comet of 1882 is identical
with, the comet of 1843 and 1880. From
data given after observation of its orbit,
he says it will not return to our systent
in less than four thousand years. It is
not necessary, therefore, to lie awake al
night dreading a catastrophe.
* ♦
Richard Wagner has sold the copy
right of all his musical productions to
Schott, the Mayence publisher, the con
sideration of the agreement being the
yearly payment to the composer of 150,-
000 marks (about $35,000). This an
nuity is also to be paid to Wagners
heirs for thirty years after his death.
And still it is thought the publisher has
made a profitable contract.
Drunkards are suffering in the rural
counties of Wisconsin, where the local
option law of the State enable the total
abstinence people to vote down the pub
lic sale of intoxicants. Heretofore the
traffic has been continued out of sight,
but now the railroad companies have
prohibited their employes from taking
therefore obtain only very limited sup
plies.
Confederate bonds still have some
value in the South. A large quantity of
them belonging to the estate of Jacob
Barret, of Charleston, South Carolina,
were sold recently at auction. The
whole lot, $149,600, was bought by Ed
ward Moteland at $12.50 per SI,OOO.
The bidding, which started at $lO per
SI,OOO, was quite spirited, $6,450 oi
Confederate bank bills were also sold at
$lO for the lot.
Guiteau’s skeleton is not yet articu
lated. It is ready for wiring with the
exception of the thigh bones, which are
Lot yet sufficiently bleached. They are
submerged in an ether bath where they
will remain for some weeks before the
process of preparation is completed. It
is not likely that when articulated the
skeleton will be placed on public exhi
bition. It will probably be consigned
to repose among other ghastly relics of
the Medical M iseum. upon which the
eye of an outsider is never allowed to
rest.
The harvests of 1882, with few excep
tions, resulted favorably, and there is
immense wealth in the grauaries of the
country. Crop failures were appre
hended, but not realiz d. The autumn,
too, has been most favorable to the ma
turing corn, and that which the usual
frost might have destroyed was saved by
the prolongation of fine weather. But
in the face of the great wealth which
lies back in the country in the hands ol
the agricultural classes, business is dull.
The boom that was expected to follow
the assurance of good harvests has not
been experienced, and merchants in the
country and in the ci ies are complain
ing of slow sales and slower collections.
Enough is already known of the radi
cal movement in France to justify great
uneasiness. The conspirators, who are
mostly young men in cities andminu
facturing villages, are united in close
organizations, which long escaped obser
vation by passing for trade unions. In
cendiary papers and tracts are sedulous
ly distributed, and as each group or fed
eration of alliances has its distinctive
name, the existence of a national league
was uot so apparent. A central com
mittee, composed of one delegate from
each federation, has been meeting
monthly at Ge leva. Tnere are evidence*
not only that the objects of the conspir
ators are akiu to those of the Russian
Nihilists, but that one, at least, of the
champions of the latter, Prince Krapat
kine, is an associ itc of the French plot
ters. The federations of Pai is and vi
cinity are known to have more than
1,200 members, while Lyons is anotb *r
stronghold.
Hedgehogs in Confinement.
Now and aga n for a series of years
we have had captured hedgehogs kept
in the house for the purpose of keeping
down beetles. For some time past we
have been very unfortunate with our
hedgehogs, as. whether from being
captured in traps or from in juries other
wise received, their existence has been
of very short duration. Recently, how
ever. some members of our family,
while visiting at nheimbcck, near Ham
burg, picked up a couple which have
since been the source of great entertain
ment to us. Onboard steamer a few
days after their capture tiiey became
qu te tame, and ceased coiling them
selves when touched, appreciating the
passing of the handover their prickles,
as down the back of a cat, and having
their heads scratched. Within a fort
night of the r arrival they have cleared
the house of beetles, which had previ
ously been swarming to an intolerable
extent. They enter and leave the house
like a cat or a dog. with this difference,
that they retire to the r respe tive dor
mitories till dusk, after which they come
forth to enjoy a good feed of bread and
butter, the butter be ng preferred, and
over their meals they have an occasion
al fight. The only ob eetionable feat
ure.'df kept in too close proximity, is
their extraord nary puffing, suggestive
of a toy high pressure steam engine.
We have put a hen s egg before them,
but they have declined to touch it.
When they desire to enter a room they
scratch at the door, and should they cre
ate a noise by the upsett ng of any arti
cle which mav come in their way. it
does not frighten them. Perhaps this
note may suggest to some of your re d
ers the kindliness of this gentle and in
foresting animal, and enable the ques
tion to be solved as to whether it does
or does not attack egjs /-gn /on Field.
Meteorological Item.
There had been a heavy thunder
storm the night previous and the
school-teacher asked little Johmu :
‘•Were you not frightened. Joinin',
at the thunder and lightning, last
night?”
“No, sir. n t a bit.
“That's right. Johnny. You are a
good little t unday-school bo “.
know who causes the storm, don t you,
Johnnv?” ~ 41 ~
• Yes sir. mv grandfather.
am shocked at y° storm. *
thornier and ligh ning.’‘"J before the
• •May be so. b Xj old grand atbei
:S"V“n i“'i» d. —r—
ISiftinas.
Dot Oafercoat.
He was a full-blooded American, and
he had seen second hand sind “hand
me-down’’ clothing dealers in his life
time, and gone them one better.
He entered the Israelite shop, and
performing the Masonic sigil manual of
the Jew, by elevat ng his hand to the
level of his ear and shak ng it parallel
to his shoulders, exclaimed; “ How you
vas, mine frendt?”
“I vas not so veil,” replied Moses.
“Has you a forty-live dollar oafer
coat vot vas make to order for a stu
dent, vot you vill sell me for dree dol
lars ?”
Moses looked at the would-be pur
chaser from head to foot. “Vas you an
orphan?”
“No, I vas no orphan; but I has a
brudder mit Schattam street vot sells
goods vot vas an or| han.”
“1 think you va give me taffy.”
“Well, how about that overcoat, old
man?” suggested the prospective pur
chaser, in regular U. S. language.
“ Isaac, vill you show the gentleman
dot make-to-order Brince Albert oafer
coat, vot you puy tone veek ago mit dot
student?”
The coat was produced and thorough
ly inspected.
“Y< u vill ell dot coat for dree dol
lars? ’ asked the purchas r.
“How could 1 do dot, mine frendt?
Dot coat vas cost me dwenty dollar. I
could not sell him to mine brudder for
less than dwenty-fife.”
“ Perhaps your sister would take it
oft your hands for fifteen,” suggested
the buyer.
“ But I has no sister,” said Moses. “I
think you vas no puy dot coat; you vas
come here mit shoaks on me.”
“Now, mine frendt,’ commenced the
buyer, again giving the sign manual,
“vot vas the le ist monish vot you take
mit dot coat? ’
"' oses’ face brightened. “I vas sell
dot coat for fifteen dollar; but if youefer
dell a litin soul vot you pay for him I
vas a rune I man.”
“ 1 ha loss dot gombination mit mine
safe, l>u! 1 va* gif you a tile-dollar note
irom mine bocket book.”
* I could not sell dot oafercoat for
less dan ten dollar,” said A ose . “I
vas lose a ten-dollar p 11 mit him then?”
* Will you take the V ” asked the pur
chaser, as he ffot to the door.
I aac, you may do up the oafercoat
for the gentleman. He is a beculrar
frendt mit me.”— The. Judge.
The Aquarium.
In answer to several inquiries we con
dense directions for making an aqua
rium. A tank of ten by eighteen inches
will support about twenty fish. These
should be nearly of a size, and not more
than three or four inches long. Lizards,
eels, tadpoles, several species of beauti
ful snails, and some kinds of bivalves,
which are valuable as scavengers, should
not be omitted. The tank should be
filled with clean pebbles and sand to the
depth <>f about three inches. A few larger
stones arranged so as to form caves
and grottoes produce a pleasing effect,
and most fishes love such hiding-places.
Nearly all plants found growing under
water are suitable for a tank ; yet they
should be sought in slow-flowing
streams and ponds rather than in rapid
running brooks. None but soft spring
or rain water should be used for filling.
It is a mistake to suppose that it is nec
essary to change the vva’cr frequently.
The contrary is true, as fishes can not
thrive when subjected to frequent
changes of water In an aquarium, as
well as in lakes and ponds, the water is
kept pure by the action of the plants
growing beneath the surface. The tank
should stand near a winddw or skylight,
and not in direct sunlight for any length
of time. If the glass becomes coated
with c mfervse or slime, it can easily be
cleaned with a sponge fastened to a
stick. The plants and animals should
be so selected and disposed that they
become mutually self-supporting and
flourish as well as in their native locali
ty, forming a little world of their own.
—Jf. Y. Tribune.
Cookery by Music.
It is a melancholy thing that the di
vinl’ art of music should have been de
graded to cul nary uses, but that a Ger
man, of all national ties, should have
been the first so to employ it, is a still
deeper humiliation. A Prussian com
poser has given to the world an “I gg
ro’ka.” not named from any fancied re
semblance of properties, but tor a rea
son fully explained in the ‘‘directions
for use ’ prnted on the back of every
copy. "Let the polka be placed, open
at the first page, upon the piano forte
desk. Then drop the egg into a pipkin
half full of Lolling water. Set the pip
kin on the fire. Thon play the polka
through in strict time, as per metro
nome indication. One nipleting its last
bar the egg will be cooked to a turn
that is, its yelk will be fluent, and its
white about as yielding to the touch as
the flesh of a rpe plum. Those who
wish their eggs hard-set will play the
polka andante maestoso. The contrary
effect will be produced by an alleg.o vi
vace rendering of the composition.
' -About one mile from Kansas City
the Hate Ine dividing Missouri and
Kansas s located. Just beyond this »
town has sprung up calle ktt " sa^
— ’ riot --
there is no niinutesget i do a
l.lin- laws and 1 n gambiffig law.
State where the ie'- C bStcWn i
but strict Prohibition Jaws.
Inter Ocean.
TERMS; SI.OO A YEAR
WIT ASl> WISDOM.
—The man who worships the fortune
he ha* made is no more intelligent than
the heathen who prays to the little
wooden god he has whittled into shape.
—lt is an old and true saying that
opportunity has hair in front, but is bald
bciiind. if you catch her by the fore
lock vou can hold her. but if you wait
till she gets by your hand slips and she
is gone.
—A queen bee lays in the height of
the season irom 2,0u0 to 3,000 eggs in
twenty-four hours. The man who will
dis over how to graft a queen bee on a
hen will make money enough to buv out
the whole continent in six months.—
Pin adelphin News.
—ln a village near Cork, a physician
was disturbed one nigh by repeated
ta pings at his door, and on getting up
he round a laboring man. “Have you
been here long?” as*ed the doctor.
“ Indeed I have,” answered the caller.
“Why didn’tyou ring the bell?” “Uch,
be ause 1 was afraid of disturbing your
honor!”— N. Y. Herald.
—A smart young man asked a gen
tleman from Cape Cod: “What’s the
di erence betwe. n you and a clam?’
thinking that the Cape Codger would
sa\ he didn't know, and then the young
man would pity him for not being able
to see any difference between himself
and a clam, but the thing didn’t work.
The Codger took the young man and
swept a path across the street with him,
and then, after crowding him into an
empty flsh-barrel, and yanking him out
again, said: “A clam wouldn’t be play
ing with you in ths way. That’s the
difference between me and a clam.”
The young man had no more questions
to ask — New Haven Register.
—The Ass and the Cat: An Ass one
dav Observed a Cat ascend a Tree to
Escape from a Dog, and a Bright Idea
emered his head. “ When my Master
ernes to set me to Work I shall ruii up
the Tree and Rema n for the Da .”
And when the Master came, lo and be
hold. the Ass Started lor the Nearest
Tree at Full Speed, and Ascended about
four Feet when he fell back totheGround,
and was so Completely Knocked Out of
Shape that Ins Master found it Impossi
ble to Adjust his harness on him, and
was obliged to Des'roy him there and
Then. Moral—Never Attempt to b«
too Versatile, and don’t Endeavor to
] odge Honest Work when you have to
Work for a Living, lest Peradveiiture
you get Left. — R. N. D., in Puck.
A Nervous Tendency.
Not a few are born with an excessive
susceptibility of the nervous system. It
renders them, not only specially < apable
of pleasure and pain and of quick men
tal and physical activity, but peculiarly
liable to nervous ailments.
Others may suffer such ailments, if
the cause act long enough and strongly
enough; but the slightest disturbing
causes are sufficient in the < ase of the
former, just as a brief exposure may re
sult in consumption, where one has in
herited a tubercular tendency.
Among thee ailments is hysteria —
popularly hysterics —the most terrible,
when severe, that can come to a woman,
not only for the fearful sul erings and
the little sympathy it elicits, but for the
bad moral qualities that often seem to
be developed by it
Females are more subject to it than
males—in the proportion of about
twenty to one only because the nerv
ous element more strongly preponder
ates in their constitution, while their in
door and sedentary file does not give
them that toughening which generally
comes to men from their employments.
Ailed to hvstera is catalepsy, a
disease in which H e person becomes
wholly, or partially, unconscious, and
her fimbs take on a waxen stiffness and
remain in whatever position they are
placed. One form of catalepsy is
trance, in which, while lying perhaps
apparently dead, wonderful visions are
seen. n ,
Other diseases are St. Vitus J lance
(chorea), which has been described as
"insanity of the muscles ” neuralgias
of various kinds, some forms of epilepsy,
spinal irritations and insanity.
As this nervous temperament, with
its countless possible ills, has been in
herited from one or both of the parents,
a si ecial obligation is placed upon ths
latter to check, from the first, the ac
tivity of their children’s nervous system
by bringing them up to simple habits,
to ample bodily exercise, proper ac
quaintances, practical and sober read
ing, instead of imaginative; by guard
ing them against coquetry, extravagan
display and sensual indulgence, and by
accustoming them to domestic duties
and to a quiet and natural employment
of bedy and mind. J oulh s Lum
panion
Incredible, Hot True.
The rapidity with which a Texas ne
gro can hide away a “
wonderful, and the number of water
melons that he is able to absorb on the
shortest notice baffles the numeral _sys
tem Not long since, when watermelons
were fashionable, an Austin eentieman
bet a friend that a hired colored boy
could eat a fortv-pound watermelon: in
four minutes. The boy was
told the nature of the be*•
permission to retire, whan g r -adi -
On h s return, he of the
n ess to accomplish the ecJip
nicion in the given ,,
[ “ Why did you try es I
“I went »*»/• b practicin’
°° H ' d "Jhirlv oo?nd nSons, and I
on two thirty-oounu , Kight
put de fort y-P° he did it,
wid a minute to «P* r *’ d #f , H> t getting
but he was d, *“£P /or d»y.—Texas
a steady contract tor m j
Sijtinys.