Newspaper Page Text
THE
MIL INUTOX, <1A .
FRIDAY, APRIL 22. 1381.
■
Don’t Whip
A inrent who doesn’t know how to
child without whipping i.
gomn a
ought to snrrender the cure of tlint
cilia! to anno wiser person.
won onc<! thought .i u <> was nuLtwsaij 10
'. tlioir 4 | . tlogmn , training „ fWl th ru f/ f ;r fll0 »e
Jih.j r
field. They know now that the whip
should iievor be used. Horsemen once
thought it was necessary to whip colts
to teach them to start and stop at the
word an l pull steady. They know
that an apple is better than the lash,
and a care.-s bettor than a blow, jf
dogs and horse* can bo thus educated
without punishment, what is there iu
our children which makes it necessary
to slap and pound them? Have they
le. intelligence; have they C( ,i d
hearts; an • the? any lower in the scale
of intelligence? We have heard man v
oil another peoples#? “If wo were to bring
up child. We would never
whip it.’ They are wise, but a little
too late. Instead of God doing so
little tor childrc n that they must be
whipped into goodness. He has done
so much for them that whipping can¬
not ruin them—that is, as a rule.
Many children are of such a quality
that a blow makes them cowardly, or
reckless or deceitful or permanently
ugly. Whipping makes children lie.
Whipping makes them steal. Whip¬
ping makes them break their spirit.
Whipping makes them hate their pa¬
rents. Whipping makes home distaste
fill—makes the boys runaway, makes
the girls seek happiness anywhere aud
anyhow. Whipping is
Don’t whip.
A Blue Baby.
The Pittsburg Leader publishes nil
item about a perfectly blue baby re¬
cently born in that city. Every inch
of the child is as blue as indigo.
The cause of this freak of nature
wlmt might be called a malformation
of the heart. An opening exists
tween the right and left sides of the
heart, and allows tho blood from
the arteries to mix with the blood
from veins before it has been purified
by the action of the heart aud air,
and this produces the bluish cast of
the skin. The child is about two
weeks old, and is not expected to live,
“A blue babe,” at birth is not uncom¬
mon but by placing the child on its
left side the opening in tho heart
closes by the power of gravitation,
and the circulation of tho blood then
proceeds naturally. For a child thus
nffiictedto live is unusual, medical
books placing the ratio at one in 30,-
000. A Pittsburg physician is nc-
queinted with a young man, twenty-
foitryears old, who was not only a
•‘blue babe,’’ but lived to be a blue
man. He is well developed, healthy
in fact like therestof humanity except
jn the color of tlu> skin. This G blue
us indigo and medical skill is power-
jess to afford a remedy.
Telegraphing Without Wires
Professor Loomis has been for some
months experimenting in tho West
Virginia mountains on his aerial tel -
egrnphy, and has succeeded, by run¬
ning up wires to a certain altit ude, iu
reaching the current of electricity
which he claims can be found at that
height, and by at-•«ns of which com¬
munication can be hud at any distance
It is said tho Professor lias telegraph¬
ed to parties eleven miles distant by
merely sending up a kite at each end
of tho distance to a certain height,
attached to which, in place of an or¬
dinary string, was a tine copper wire.
When both kites touched tho same
current communication was had be¬
tween them, aud messages were teat
from one end to the other by means of
the ordinary Morse instrument
invented by Professor Loom
is. lie now 1ms a project for a series
of experiments from a point on one
of tho highest pearls on tho Alps, in
Switzerland to a similarly situated
place in the RocKy Mountains otr this
side of the world. If tlris succeeds, of
course his invention will rartK iu im
portnnee with that of the electric tel¬
egraph itself, aud vastly reduce the
cost of telegraphing.
Nevada farmers are in a quandary.
When tho-ein Carson valley began to
plough they found that they were turn¬
ing up whole beds of grasshoppers.
The Virginia Chronicle says that if
they cultivate the crops they will be
eaten by the grasshoppers, and if they
do not stir the soil they will have no
crops. Farmers have suspended plough
iug to consider the matter.
Mahoae and Hili Ag^airi.
In the senate, on <he, I2Ui, the
fight between Senator IVTn 1, me ami Hill
was renewed, anil closed temporarly as
follows;
Mr. Mrdione—I have nothing to do
with the Senator's opinions. I have
risen to ask the Senator front Georgia
.. .
a P '* ‘ ,ln ' 1 ' ‘ 1
utor from Georgia has us.:d language
which lias be. n read. He knows
whether lie intends to convoy the im-
* " 1 '• ’ ’
,n y V0 ‘" 1(1,1 , h, ‘ < n bo,, K ht - He
-
Ei.nws that (with emphasis), and I
respectfully ask whether he so iuten.
ded; that is all.”
Mr. Hill—‘T answered y-m fully/ It,
will be found in the Record,"
Mr. Mahone—‘‘As the Senator fails
here to answer directly a direct qties
f,ou 1 wi,! K ,ve llim •» T^stim, to solve
He bllal1 llllVB a conundrum. I say to
l>im that if he did mean to imply that
m y vote h,l<3 b,!fin or could be bought,
1,8 s, 8tes, or undertakes to convey,
" llkh !K fon1 ’ » n ‘>uthfnl and false,
aad tb(lt »<* >«» ‘Dan ft
C0Wftld ' vonkl Wl,ke “• 1 6 ‘*y
him that he can solve in his own miod
whether lie so intended or net (address,
mg himself directly to Mr. Hill in a
menacing tone.) Yon can solve that,
sir, if yon choose. That is all I have
to say to yon now.’’
Mr. Hill arose to reply,but Mr. Ma¬
hone, continuing bis remarks, said:
“Yon can solve that question for your,
self whether you intended to convey
that meaning or not. ” (A good deal
of applause in the galleries, which pre¬
siding officer Kellogg endeavored to
suppress.)
Mr. Hill (studiously emphasizing
every point and expression)—“Mr
President, I have too much respect
for the Senate, too much respect for
myself, too much respect for the peo¬
ple, to bandy epithets with the Sena¬
tor flora Virginia, or auy other Sena¬
tor here. I have never sought to
receive or to give or to resent an in¬
sult in this chamber. I would not
in this Chamber. The Senator can¬
not insult me. He is powerless to
insult anybody. The Senator (M a-
hone) asked me a question. I answer¬
ed it explicitly. That answer is in the
Jiecord. It will remain there. It was
a truthful answer. I answered precise¬
ly as I felt and thought at the time.—
1 used words. Any Senator can read
those words, If the Senator (Mahoue)
thiu * that he (emphasizing the pro-
noun) cun tippre«8 gontlumen in tlis-
cu m n this Senate by assuming to
piny ihe bully he has made a mistake.•
Tills ended the discussion for the
day, which was followed with interest
by a large audience in the galleries.
Household Hints
t o!toil wool wet with sweet oil and
laudanum telievis the earache very
soon.
To purify a sink or drain dissolve
one half pound copperas in two gal-
Dais of water. Pour in half this liq¬
uid one day and tho other half the
next.
You can get a bottle or barrel of
oil oil any carpet or woolen stuff by
applying dry buckwheat plentifully
and faithfully. Never put water to
a grease-spot, or liquid of any
kind.
The skin of a boiled egg is the
most efficacious remedy that can be
to a bo 1. Feel it carefully,
uot aud apply it to the part affected.
It will draw off the matter and relieve
the soreness in a few hours.
To take iron stains out of marble
an equal quantity of fresh spirit of
vitrio and lemon juice being mixed in
a bottle, shake well, wet the spots and
in a tew minutes rub with soft linen
till they disappear.
The Rev. John W. Reunion, of
Brooklyn, has secured five carts bear¬
ing huge coffee urns, and proposes to
furui'h poor people with hot coffee
and bread at cost price, and thus lie
hop* s to check intemperance in a
measure.
• ■«*■ •
A Jacksonville dispatch states that
tho company whsclt propose ‘ ‘ lo build a
ship , canal , across Florida T has . received
ft charter from tho State. Its cauital
iS $30,000’000.
The latest telegrams from London
repot t Lord Beacons field’s condition
as “very critical, although the doctors
have not abandoned all hopes.’’
1 h€ Otncial . , lTpOrt , SUOWS , that ,, , the ,
inspections of fertilizers in Georgia h
r ’«" e ‘ U,i r" sr ’' ,U ' r,, ’“ n “
‘
’
• —-
Dr. Ewell’s Horse Powders are the
best they need but Ja trial to reoom-
tuend them. uov26tf.
CD a week in your own town. $5
S'fc Outfit free. No risk. Header, if
. V you want a business at which per-
eons of either lex can make great pay all
the time they work, write for particulars
J. II- Hai.lp.tt & Co.. Portland, Ala hie.
A Cottgh,CoId or Sore Throat should
be stopped. Neglect frequently results
in an Incurable Lung Disease or Con-
sumption. Brown’s Bronchial Troches
are certain to give relief in Asthma,I
Bronchitis, Coughs, Catarrh, Con¬
gumptivo and Throat Diseases. For
thirtv years the Troches have been
recommended by physicians, and i »]• . 1
ways give perfect satisfaction, lliey
are not new or unti led but having
been tested by wide and constant use
for nearly an entire generation, they
Dave attained well-merited rank
among the few staple remedies of the
age. Public speakers and singers use
them to clear and strengthen the voice.
Sold at twenty five cents a box every-
where. octlo lv
Subscribe—It Will Pay!
F.very Farmer, Planter, Merchant and Me¬
chanic In this community should Subscribe
for bis County Paper and one or two more
good Publications. They will find that
it is a paying investment. The better the
publication the better it will pay. For the
purpose of promoting th» Idea, w. have
arranged to Club this Paper with the
Southern Farmers’ Monthly, a hand¬
some Farm awl Family Journal, and the
Savannah Weekly News, “the biggest
and the best” Weekly Newspaper in the
South, both of them well known and re¬
liable publications, wortli ten times what
you pay for them.
CLUB FATES -^Payable in Advance.
— We will send, postage paid, the Advance
and Southern Farmers’ Monthly, one
year, $3.
The Advance and Savannah Weekly
News, one year, $3.
The Advance, the Southern Farmers’
Monthly and Savannah Weekly News,
one year, $4.50
1821. 1881.
THE CHRISTIAN: IKQEX.
AND
SOUTHERN BAPTIST
PUBLISHED AT ATLANTA, GEORGIA
AND
Edited by BE. H. H. TUCKER ,
And aessisted by a corpse of our Ablest
.Baptist Writers.
THE INDEX is in the 59tli year of its
existence, aud is regarded by the press and
cheapest first-class family newspaper in the
Southern States.
Single subscription, 82.00 a year, Portrait with
copy of our splendid engraving the
Gallery of 351 prominent Georgia Baptist
Ministers; and or for $3, will send THE INDEX
one year, copy of that splendid volume,
The Story of the Bible.
• For the ensuing 30 days, our terms
TO CLUBS,
In order to facilitate the work and assist
our friends in every community to form
clubs, we propose to send
THE INDEX, 1 year, to clubs of
lo or more with a copy of our Por¬
trait Gallery for the low price of.. .$2o oo
THE INDEX, 1 year, to clubs of
2o or more, with Portrait Gallery... 36 oo
An extra copy, also, to the gottcr-up of
the club.
FOUR-PAGE INDEX.
to clubs: I
Four-page INDEX, to clubs of lo
1 year............................. 81o oo
Four-page INDEX, to clubs of 2o,
l year.... ..... 18 oo
I Four-page INDEX, to clubs of So,
year,............................ 24 oo
And copy of Portrait Gallery, extra, to
each subscriber who remits an additional
6o cents.
An extra copy, also, to the gettcr-up of
tin- club.
SSUTlie Portrait Gallery alone is worth
more than the subscription price, and will i
prove baptist an parlor. appreciative Address ornament to anj^i
JAS. P. IIARRINON & CO.,
Publishers and Printers, j
jou21 Atlanta, Ga.
Sole Proprieiors anil MamHacnirersUnder Contract ol tie
f w '•i
m
—
Ti SH ■
I- L
m
vW/c (Ck ,
<JlSfjj "i.
KlNffeSM ”•/
All lnt« Ira provements. India Rubber Pedal Carpets—fotiid only on
w *** t "“
Shipped #%» • i Direct TOF "598.
This Style ot Organ is OKuslly Catalogued nt about $300. KoM>
tw or ureett?r toned Instrument can ha msiie. It costs lothinj upw^A. to
tryU * Church * Hall, duapel and Parlor Organs. $16 #uc
IPRlpISIl
French grind aclton, fret deck, c/krvcdpedal, noUti roMew»o/t mould.
orevi, «,trJm.JtT.SS y J
*r« n t» for-MlI inferior liMrument. Remember this pinnohiu seven
tnent »s usually catalogued at from ^S00 to $1,000.
ShippedPirectfor-8288.
rofertoth.'iivStN.uoiiaoriJmVNMioMtSiMic^mifSw’Mto responsibility. Send Catalogues.
eur for Address
The Meriden Purchasing Co.,
Meriden, Conn.
AN INDUCEMENT!
j
j
j NOW IS THE TIME TO
to U ±jai --- H
j I—S i
When you can get
THE SA VANN All
WEEKLY NEWS,
one of the oldest, ablest and most re¬
liable newspapers in the State,
-—AND-
Arlington Advance
FOR $3,10 PER ANNUM.
SECURE THIS OFFER
BEFORE IT IS TOO LATE.
Sav. Fla. & Western R.R.
General Manager’s Office, (
Savannah, May 23th, 1880, )
/AN AND AFTER SUNDAY, May 23rd,
\ /Passenger Trains on this Itoad will rur
as follows:
NIGHT EXPRESS.
Leave Savannah daily at... . .4:3o p.M
Arrive at Jesup “ “ ,7:2o p.M
.. .
Arrive at Thomasville “ “ .6:2o a.m
.. .
Arrive atBainbridge “ “... . 9:3o a.m
Arrive at Albany <t it . lo:25 a.m
Arrive at Live Oak u .....2:oo a.m
Arrive at Tallahassee “ “ .....7:oo a.m
Arrive at Jacksonville “ “ .....7:50 a.m
Leave Tallahassee U .( .....6:oo p.m
Leave Jacksonville a .....5:8o p.m
Leave Live Oak (( ... .11:15 p.m
Leave Albany U .....4.00 P.M
Leave Bainbridge a .....4:oo p.m
Leave Thoinasville a .....7:30 p.m
Leave Jesup u .....6:30 a.m
Arrive at Savannah (( .....9:00 A.m
No change of cars between S’avannah and
Jacksonville and Savannah and Albany.
Pullman Palace Sleeping Cars daily be¬
tween Savannah and Jacksonville.
(Sleeping cars runthrougli to and from
Savannah and Albany, and Jacksonville
and Albany without change. Fernainlirui
Passengers from Savannah to
Gainesville and Cedar Keys take this train,
train.
Passengers for Darien take this train.
Passengers from /Savannah for Bruns¬
wick take this train, arriving at Brunswick
6:oo a. m.
Passengers leave Brunswick atS:oo p.m.,
arrive at Savannah 9:oo a. m.
Passengers leaving Macon at 7:15 a. m.
(daily including Sunday) connect at Jesup
with this train for Florida.
Passengers from Florida by this train
connect-at Jesup with train arriving in
Macon at 6:25 p. m. (daily including Nun-
day.)
Connect at Albany with passenger trains
both ways on (Southwestern Railroad to
and from Macon, Eufaula, Montgomery,
J/obile, New Orleans, etc.
Mail steamer leaves Bainbridge for Apa¬
lachicola Columbus every Nunday and Thursday even¬
ing: for every Tuesday and /Sat¬
urday afternoon.
Close connection at Jacksonville daily
(/Sunday excepted)for Green Cove /Springs,
/St. Augustine, Palatka, Enterprise and all
landings on St. John’s river.
Trains on B. Si A. R. R. leave junction,
going 4:-io west, 11:37 a. m., and for Brunswick
at p. in., daily except /Sunday. Berths
Trough Tickets sold,.Sleeping Car
secured at Bren’s Ticket Office, No. 22
Bull street, and at .Savannah, Florida and
Western Railway Passenger Depot.
ACCOMMODATION TRAIN—EASTERN
DIVISION.
f i \O 3,t DupOtlt :: 'it / .OQ P.M ™
I / Cave ® uP »nt “ 5;3o a.m
Aeave Blackahear “ 9:5o a.m
Jesup “ 3:06 i.oop.m
Leave McIlltOSll “ P.M
* V11 Xrt'fVG l ' C at Savannah ^ * UDan 5'4o P Yf
Leave 1 hOIURSVllle , “o™ ? me « “ i|£V 2:3o V.M
Leave Camilla, “ 5:23 p.m
lr ,. ive a * ^banv, “ 7:15 p.m
‘ 6:3oa.rn
Leave pave Camilla Albany “ “ 8:48 a.IU
Arrive Leave ThomaSVille, at Thomasville, “ u ll:3oa.m 1:45
’ p.m
tete Dupont 7:3o »{S
Arrive at “ p.m
J■ <S, Tyson, -Vaster of Transportation.
H. A. HALVES,
General Manager.
GFCT.A.:CTO!
I am agent for the two celebrated
brands of
FERTILIZER,
which I heartily recommend to the
public,
U STERLING ”
--AND--
I can supply you, also, with
Angiers Brand of BONE,
the best in the market,for composting.
CALL AT ONCE,
if you want a good article.
Office in Sheffield’s law office, up
staiis in Butler’s building.
Respectfully,
W. O. BUTLER,
dec3-tf Arlington, Ga.
OLID REItlABLB !
The Neatest Ear and Only Billiard ISaloonin Town
REAS THIS GARB, TKER QQM SEE FOB TQBiSELf,
9
At Saxon’s Bar and Billiard Saloon
You ran pt Fins IMies, Brandies, Wises, Cijars, TeSaccii,
JPTJJ&tt ALOOHOL
For Medicinal Use, aud, in fact anything usually kept in a first-class bar
With several years experience, I think I know something about liquors,
and when you ask for a good article and such is not furnished you,
it will not cost you anything. By keeping u first-class bar,
I receive a large patrouage, for which I am grateful,
aud solicit a continuance of thesame during 1881
My BILLIARD SALOON, which ia arranged in the- most convenient and
neatest style, is never closed, and there is some one present to enter a game
with you. Respectfully, W. T. SAXON.
RE-fitl the HEWS,
-O—--
WEBB & HIGHTOWER
Come to the front again with more goods and prettier goods than lias ever
been displayed in this section. Any and everything you want kept constant¬
ly on hand. We call special attention to
OUR STOCK OF DOMESTICS,
which rivals competition in quantity, quality and beauty.
OUR HEAVY STOCK OF DRY GOODS
should be examined before purchasing elsewhere.
EXAMINE OUR NOTIONS
and you will surely buy of us.
Sometbmg Nice for tlae Ladies :
Kid Gloves, Fine and Fancy Hose, Ladies’ Imperial Marino Vests, Collars
and Cuffs, Ties, Fichus, Perfumes and Toilet Articles.
SHOES, SHOES, SHOES
of all sizes and in great variety of style. Don’t fail to examine them; they
will be sure to please you.
Clotliing and Gents’ Furnishing G/»ods.
In this department we have anything you want. Over 500 new boxes of fine
collars just received. A handsome lot of Gents’ Ties and Scarfs, all of the
latest styles. A full line of Gents’ Hose.
The Latest Thing On Ice—Our Stock of HATS.
We never fail to sell when we have an opportunity of showing them. A1
sizes, men’s, youths’, and boys’, from the cheapest to the finest.
We are daily receiving fresh supplies of FANCY and FAMILY GROCE¬
RIES. FINE CANNED GOODS a specialty
Iu addition to the above named articles we keep a large lot of
GLASS- IVA HE, SADDLES, HaRNESS, BRIDLES, & C., &C.
A full line of HARDWARE AND PLANTATION SUPPLIES on hand.
Chairs and Bedsteads a specialty. One and Two-horse goods. What Wagons always on
hand. Come and see us. No trouble to show you don’t see
ask for. Respectfully, WEBB &
oct ly HIGHTOWER.
Halbert E. Paine,
Late Commiuionee c/ Patents.
j5enj. F. Grafton. Story B. Liul
PATEN TS.
PAINE, GRAFTON A- LADD,
Attorney s-at-Law and Solicitors of American
and Foreign Patents.
413 Fifth Street, Washington, D. C.
Practice patent law in all its branches in
the Patent Office, and the Supreme and
Circuit Courts of the United States. Patn-
phlet sent free. declO-tl
roil
The telv Ftaomp
ONE YEAR.
THE PHONOGRAPH
Contains Local, City, State, National
and Foreiglin news, and the publish-
ers intend to make it ttie best weekly
in the South. For a club of ten and
§10.00 we send one copy free.
The Daily Phonograph
Contains all the news of the day in a
condensed form, and is the bpst paper
in the South for the price. Terms:—
§0.00 per annum;$3.00 for six months;
$1.50 for three months; 00 cents tor
one month.
The Daily and weekly will contain
full Legislative reports when that
body is in session, and Daily editing f!^.
bus the Supreme Court reports iu
Address,
W. T. Cristopiiek & Buo.,
32| Broad St., Atlanta, Ga.