Newspaper Page Text
T. J. lUMPKIN, Editor and Proprietor
VOLUME IV.
NEWS GLEANINGS,
In Florida 3,000 pine apples can te
raised on ap'scre of ground.
One thousand men are employed in
the iron works in Cherokee county, Ala.
The only drawback to cocoa nut rais
ing in Florida is that it takes ten years
far the trees to baar.
Fifteen hundred executions for delin
quent poll taxes have been issued in
Union county, 8. C.
An old man an Cauey Fork, in Mid
dle Tennessee, caught SO,OOO worth of
saw logs during the last rise.
lennessee has a State law which im
poses a fine of SSOO for failure to report
small pox cases to the State Board ol
Health.
At Louisville, Miss., John D. M.
Thrasher has been sent to the peniten
tiary for life for the murder of W. D
Triplett.
The Georgia Supreme court has de
cided that the cities of that State musi
stop their debts at 7 per cent of their
taxable property.
Six hundred partridges in boxes,
shipped from Danville, Va., arrived in
Wilmington, Del., last week for the
Delaware Game Association, which is
trying to restock that State.
Fifteen thousand dollars have been
expended on the North Georgia agri '
culturel college at Dahlonega. It wilt
take $5,000 to complete it.
Col. Benj. S. Ricks, of Yazoo county,
Miss,, the second largest planter in tl e
South, employs 1,000 men, and made
2,000 b des of cotton last year.
The acreage of wheat sown over East
Tennessee is unusually large, and tin
prosDect for an excellent crop was nevei
more encouraging for the time of year.
Within the last three years over $2,-
000,000 have been invested in manufac
turing enterprises in Georgia, and nearly
$lO, 000,000 have been invested and con
tracted for in new railroalsin our State.
Old Aunt Bonnie H dloway died in
Fauquier county, Va., last week, in the
one hundred and fifteenth year of hei
age, the oldest citizen probably in the
Old Dominion. When Lord
passed through Eastern Virginia in the
summer of 1781 she said she “was aeronfi
smart gal, big enema 1, tv get married.”
The Nashville Banner, in some raw
recountings, says : At another race over
the Clover Bottom track Gen. Jackson
entered his famous horse Truxton, and
was backing him quite heavily. Gov
Cannon was on hand, hut had no money,
so he bet a wagon load of negroes with
the General. Truxton won tho race
and the General took in the negroes.
Gold is being washed from alluvial
lands within the limits of Gainesville.
Ga., which pays 50 cents to the pan.
The city covers a deposit of gold-bear
ing material which should he utilized,
and no doubt will he as soon as the ca
nal Atlanta so much needs passes
through that section. The bed of that
canal for a distance of forty miles will
he cut through veins and deposits of
gold bearing ore.
There are three ereat land companies
now interested in Florida. The Disston
company holds 2,000,000 acres of the
4,000,1)00 acres it bought from the State.
A third company (headed by Disston
also) proposes to drain the Lake Okee
chobee region and reclaim the swamp
lands. The area of reelaimation is as
large as New Jersey, Connecticut, Dela
ware and Rhode Island, and the Disston
company will get half of it, the State
retaining the balance of it. Two enor
mous dredging Itoats are already at
work at this, and the work will be pushed
to completion.
Atlanta Constitution Florida Notes :
Eight years ago there was only $120,600
invested in steamets on the Si. Johns.
Now there are twenty eight steamers
plying that river, one of which cost
$240,000, and to this fleet there are con
stant additions. The Indian river and
South Florida lakes and inlets are now
dotted with sail boats, carrying freight
to and fro. In a very short tiiffe these
will be supplemented by steamers, and
then the quesaion will be settled, anew
region opened, the fertility, and beauty
of which cannot be put in words.
A contemporary asks : “ How shall
women carry their purses to frustrate tho
thieves ?” Why, carry them emptv.
Nothing frustrates a thief more than to
snatch a woman’s purse, after following
her half a mile, and then find that it con
tains nothing but a recipe for spaced
peaches and a faded photograph of her
grandmother,
1 little (toinifii fmetfe.
RISING FAWN, DADE COUNTY, GEORGIA, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY JO. 1881.
TOPICS OP THE DAY.
Cincinnati reports 188 cases of small
pox under treatment.
Denvkb will hold a National Mining
Exposition in August.
This is tho season of the year to make
predictions about spring.
The persecution of Jews in Russia is
exciting general attention.
The Ne% York bar will give Judge
Porter a complimentary dinner.
A woman in Graves County, Kentucky,
is undergoing a forty days’ fast.
Vanderbilt pays over two hundred
thousand dollars annually in taxes.
Strawberries from Florida are selling
ki New York at $4 and $5 per quart.
This is t he year that the Mohammedans
expect the coming of their Messiah.
Of the 601 convicts in the Arkansas
State Prison more than 100 are murderers.
Canada is considering the feasibility
of abolishing the duties on tea and
coffee.
De Long has been traced to a definite
locality. The next thing now will be to
find him.
A St. Louis man has started a fund
for the Guiteau jury by contributing $1
towards it.
We find that the more the editors say
against the Gainsborough hats the higher
they loom up.
Cincinnati will probably try the ex
periment of propelling street ears by the
cable system.
The Cleveland fund for the Garfield
monument is not quite SIOO,OOO and
there it sticks.
Ridgeway is under the impression he
can freeze Gniteau’s body so that it won’t
stink. It may he that he can.
February 27 is the day upon which
Mr. Blaine will deliver his eulogy, on
President Garfield in Congress.
The reporters of Chicago have ruled
women out of their press club. Men
want to get to themselves occasionally.
I.Lunc Is one thing Guiteau may rest
assured ot : He will be cut up, or froze
np—exhibited in the flesh or as a skele
ton,
Female teachers in Boston who have
been in service ten years want SI,OOO a
year. If they can t get married they
ought to have it.
The Spanish pilgrims to Rome are
Carlist soldiers or well known friends of
Don Carlos, who urges the movement in
letters to his partisans.
The Russian Government claims that
the persecution of the .Tews in that
•ountry was originated and is kept up by
revolutionary agents.
The work of tunneling the St. Law
•ence River is to be completed in four
years .at a cost of $3,500,000. Mon
treal has the contract.
Wilde’s face is so long that it is said
to have the appearance of being reflected
from a convex mirror, Grief over he
fading lily produced it.
Undeb the law District Attorney Cork
hill will get S2O for prosecuting tho
assassin. Dr. Bliss might give Corkhil]
a pointer on making out bills.
Oscar Wit.de thinks Walt Whitman
is die gieat.est of living poets—not even
excepting Longfeliow. Mr. Whitman
will now pilease tickle Mr. Wilde some.
The Grant phalanx, known as the
Three-Hundred-and-Six, are to be pre
sented with bronze medals as mementos
for their unswerving fidelity in the hour
of sore trial.
If Barnum could secure the body ol
Guiteau, and then engage Oscar Wilde
as lecturer, he might double his fortune
of $3,000,000. The scheme is worth
looking into.
We reckon Oscar Wilde don’t like
America excessively. Shafts of sarcasm
are hurled at him from every conceiva
| ble quarter. He must think we Arneri
-1 cans are awful reckless.
Tobacco is a foul weed, but it seems to
yield an enormous revenue wherever it
is raised. The tobacco monopoly of
| France last year yielded a net profit to
the State of about $60,000,000.
Since Liszt went to Rome his health
has greatly improved. But he still de
votes hours to the fatiguing work of
j composition, and forgets sleep, food and
“Faithful to the Right, Fearless Agaiast Wrong.”
everything else except the work before
him.
The St. Petersburg police have issued
an order forbidding appearance of
any actors or dancers on the stage of the
theaters of the Capital whose and reuses
have not been previously rendered in
combustible by means of chlorate of
lime. The same rule has been in force
in Berlin for five years.
An official report on the condition of
the eyes of school children in Philadel
phia says: “Hypermetropic eyes at?
more numerous than both myopic and
emmetropic ; that next to myopic astig
matism, distinct lesions are most preva
lent to the eyes with hypermetio astig
matism ” Thi3 will be startling news to
most people.
In its continual use iu the Guiteau
trial many people have asked, what does
‘court in Jjanc” mean? “Banc,’
brought into legal language from the
French, means “bench,” and comes to
as from English law. “Banc Regis”
was the title of the King's Bench, which
was above all other courts, and appeal
to which was final. The “ Court m
banc'” therefore means the Supreme
Court of the District in full bench.
Sixty Harvard students, wearing knee
breeches and black silk stockings and
bearing lilies in their hands, went in a
body to one of Oscar Wilde’s lectures
in Boston. Oscar, strange to say was
not pleased. To see himself as others
see him so disconcerted him that he
failed even to enjoy the rapturous ap
plause that occasionally greeted him
Perhaps this sort of monkey business, if
pursued long enough, will teach the dis
ciple of aestheticism a wholesome lesson.
Editor Eamsdell of the Washington |
Republican, recently offered $5 for the
best written letter accepting an offer of
marriage, and here is the letter, by Ger
trude Nelson, which won the prize :
“J/// Dear Donald —Fresh with the
breath of the morning came your loving
missive. I have turned over every leaf
of my heart during the day, and on each
page I find the ssme writUu- *-*- 1 ; ,
gratitude for the love of a noble man, hu
mility in finding myself its object, and
ambition to render myself worthy of that j
which you offer. I will try Yours j
henceforth. ”
George Q. Cannon, one of the con- j
testants for the seat of Delegate in Con- 1
gross from Utah, speaking of the re
pressive measures respecting polygamy,
says: “Our people will be obliged to
submit with the spirit of martyrs, aa
they have heretofore submitted when
oppressive laws have been enacted
agaiust them, or when they have been
expelled or mobbed from their various
homes, before polygamy became one erf
their tenets. They actually rejoice in
persecution, as it intensifies their ad
hesion to the doctrines of their church, i
and confirms them in their belief in its
diviuo origin.”
A cotemporary tells the following
story: A man named Harsens who
keeps a saloon and a parrot in New York
went out a few minutes the other even
ing and on his return missed seven silver
watches he had there. A few nights
after William Cox, who was the only
person in the sa’oon during Harsens’
absence, came in with some friends; and
while lie was drinking at the bar, the
parrot startled him by saying gravely,
“Billy Cox stole those watches.” He
hurried out to sue the owner of the par
rot for defaming his character, when he
was arrested for stealing another watch
which was found in his possession.
According to the New Y'ork Herald,
now engaged in examining the Clerk’s ac
count of the disbursements of the House
of Representatives, the most shameful
recklessness prevails in the manner of
spending the public funds. We quote
from the list: “Two perfumery cases,
bought for a member, S2O, three fans
bought for a member, $16.63; six tooth
picks, bought for member, $28.17; two
fourteen carat charm magic pencils,
bought for a member, $30.60: seven
knives, bought for a member, $lO9 67;
three card cases, bought for a member,
$10.33; one fine opera glass, bought for
a member $10: one shaving case, bought
for a member, SIJ. These are only
a few of the long list given. The
Herald, commenting, says: “Surely Mr.
Adams, the late Clerk of the House of
Representatives, who furnished these
extraordinary articles to ‘a member’ at
the public expense, on the pretense that
they were needful for the discharge of his
i legislative duties, does great injustice in
withholding the ‘ member’s ’ name from
the curious taxpayers. He must have
been engaged in very dirty work to need
so much perfumery.”
On;: old Irish dame asked another,
touching some person recently deceased,
tho following question : “ Eh, dear Judy
alarm ak, iv what did he die ? ” “ Ayeh,
dear,’ replied Judy, “he died iv a
Tuesday, I’m to .Id. ”
Spoojiewlyke iu the Hole of a Sports-
MU.
“Say, my dear,” said Mr. Spoopen
dyke, as he drew a gun from the case
and eyed it critically, “I want you to
woke me up early in the morning. I'm
going shooting.’
“Isn't that too sweet!” ejaculated
Mrs. bpoopendyke. “ I’ll wear my dress
and my Saratoga waves. Where do we
go?”
“I’m going down to tho island, and
you’ll go as far as the front, door,”
grunted Mr. Spoopendyke. “Women
don’t go shooting. It’s only men. All
you’ve got to do is to wake me up and
get breakfast. When I come home we’ll
have some birds.”
“Won’t that be nice !” chimed Mrs.
Spoopendyke. “Cau you catch birds
with that thing?” and Mrs. Spoopendyke
fluttered around the improved breech
loading 3hot gun, firmly impressed with
the idea that it was some kind of a trap.
“I can kill ’em with this,” exclaimed
Mr. Spoopendyke. “This is a gun, my
dear; it isn’t a nest with throe speckled
eggs iu it, nor is it a barn with a hole in
the roof. You stick the cartridge in here
and pull this finger-piece, and down
comes your bird every time. ”
“Isn’t that the greatest thing! I sup
pose if you don’t want a partridge you
can stick a duck or a turkey iu that end,
too, or a fish or a lobster, and bring it
down just as quick.”
“Yes, or you can stick a house or a
cornfield, or a dod gasted female idiot
in there, too, if you want to !” snorted
Mr. Spoopendyke. “Who said anything
about a partridge ? It’s a cartridge that
goes in there.”
“Oh !” ejaculated Mrs. Spoopendyke,
rather crestfallen. “I see now. Where
does the bird go?”
“It goes to night school, if he hasn’t
got any more sense than you have,”
snorted 31r. Spoopendyke. “Lookhere,
now, and I’ll show you how it works,”
and Mr. Spoopendyke, whose ideas of a
gnu were about as vague as those of his
wife, inserted the cartridge half way in
the muzzle end, and cautiously cocked
the weapou.
“And when the bird sees that be
comes and pecks it! Isn’t that the fun
niest !’ and Mrs. Spoopendyke clapped
her hands in the enjoyment of her dis
covery. • Then you put out your hand
aud catch him !”
“ You’v, ■ struck it!” howled Mr.
i-i
the half cock and was vainly pulling at
the Trigger to get it down. “
idea ! AU you need is four faJrnera and
a gas bill to be a uiarti ! With
your notions you only want anew stock
and steam trip hammer to be a needle
gun! Don’t you know the dod gasted
thing has to before you get a bird !
You shoot tlienoirds; you don't wait for
’em to shoot you !"
“At home we used always to chop
their heads off with an ax,” faltered Mrs.
Spoopendyke.
“So would I if going after
measly old hens,” retorted Mr. Spoopen
dyke, who haiKmanaged to uncock the
contrivance, “At when I go for yellow
birds and sparrwfs I go like a sports
man. While I’m waiting for a bird,’
continued Mr. Spoopendyke, adjusting
the cartridge at the breech, “I put the
load in here for safety, and when I see a
flock I aim and fire. ”
Bang ! went the gun, knocking the
tall feathers out of an eight-day clock
and plowing a foot furrow in the wall,
perforating the closet door and culminat
ing in Mr. Spoopowlyke’s plug hat.
“Goodness, gracious !” squeaked Mrs.
Spoopendyke, “ Oh, my !”
Mr. Spoopendyke gathered himself up
and contemplated the damage.
“Why couldn’t ye keep still!” lie
shrieked. “ What’d ye want to disturb
my aim for and make me let it off?
Think I can hold back a charge of pow
der and a pound of shot while a mcaslv
woman is tearing it through a gun bar
rel ?”
“If it bad been a bird how nicely yon
would have shot it!” suggested Mrs.
Spoopendyke, soothingly. “If yon
should ever aim at a bird you’d cat.'ll
him sure.”
The Crater of Fopocatapell.
In a letter to the Philadelphia Record,
Mr. Nat Iran E. Perkins describes at
great length the ascent of the Mexican
volcano Popocatapetl, having reached
the crater after a toilsome clin: b, and de
scended as far as he could without a
rope. From this position a good view
was obtained of the crater-walls. The
bottom was hidden by ascending smoke
and steam. The lower walls were hung
with large masses of sulphur interspersed
with icicles hundreds of feet long.
“Tho crater is about one mile across,
and lias the appearance of a large funnel
whose sides are but little inclined, and
the bottom is not visible. There seem
to be three distinct rings, which divide
it into four zones, the largest being that
nearest the mouth. From the summit
the City of Mexico, although over 100
miles away, was plainly visible, and,
surrounded by lakes as it is, seemed like
a magnificent gem set around with
pearls. The whole great valley of Mex
ico cau be seen at a glance. At our feet
lay Amoca, over thirty miles distant,
with ite luxurious growth of tropical
plants, orange groves and banana plan
tations, and on the right Pueblo and the
old cities of Chilulo and Tascalla, with
their 365 churches and spires. The dis
tant mountain of Orizaba, nearly 200
miles away, the snowy peaks of Melen
clia, the White Lily and several others
iii the distance, stood arrayed before me.
I felt fully repaid for my toil in having
climbed the highest mountain in North
America, whose summit is about 18,000
loot above the sea-level. ”
Consult the lips for opinions, the con
duct for convictions.
USEFUL 111 NTS.
Never lean the back upon anything
that is cold.
Never begin a journey until breakfast
has been eaten.
Spirits of ammonia diluted with
water, if applied with a sponge or flannel
to discolored spots on the carpet or gar
ments, will often restore the color.
Skim-milk and with a little bit
of glue in it, made scalding hot, will
restore old rusty black crape. If slapped
and pressed dry, like muslin, it will look
as good as new.
A paste made of whiting and benzoin
will clean marble, and one made of
w'hiting and chloride of soda, spread and
left to dry (in the sun if possible) on the
marble will remove spots.
Celery boiled in milk and eaten with
the milk served as a beverage is said to
be a cure for rheumatism, gout and a
specific in cases of small-pox. Nervous
people find comfort in celery.
Never stand still in cold weather,
especially after having taken a slight
degree of exercise; and always avoid
standing upon the ice or snow, or where
the person is exposed to a cold wind.
A flannel cloth dipped into warm
soap suds and then into whiting and
applied to paint will instantly remove
all grease and dirt. Wash with clean
water and dry. The most delicate tint
will not be injured, and will look like
new'.
To remove grease from white goods,
wash with soap or alkaline lyes. Col
ored cottons, wash with lukewarm soap
yes. Colored woolens, the same, or
ammonia. Bilks, absorb wath French
chalk or fuller’s earth, and dissolve away
with benzine or ether.
For salt-rising bread, stir up quite
thick in the usttal wav, using cold w r ater,
and place upon the sitting-room coal
stove over night; it will life light enough
to sponge the bread by morning, and is
quite a help when the daj# are so short
for raising tho emptyings ; nß,’ family
prefer this rising. When one has not ’a
warm-enough place to set their milk put
hot water in to raise the temperature.
To make a light W’heat loaf, take the
thick buttermilk from tbfrbottom of your
buttermilk dish; stjj| just aa you can,
allowing oue heaping* teaspoonful of so
da to a pint basin of bnttennilk. Pot
pie. is nice maria in tW Kamo.way, only
ding made in the same way with dried
cherries and steamed in the cake dish
with a hole in the center is nice. The
advantage of the hole in the center is
that tho steam passes through the center
of the pudding into tho steamer. Eat
this pudding with sugar and cream;
nice tart apples will answer very well
for fruit.
POPULAR SCIENCE.
For several years it has been observed
that the European glaciers are steadily
retreating.
The molecules of hydrogen, at a tem
perature of 60° Fahrenheit, move at the
average of 6,225 feet in a second.
Flammartan says that the tail of a
comet must sweep through space with
the velocity of 16,000 leagues per second, j
Mr. Stone, her Majesty’s astronomer j
at the Cape of Good Hope, has just com
pleted his great catalogue of Southern
stars, the result of ten years’ labor at the
cape.
The algae known as protococcaceae
have one peculiarity—they do not live
in the water but in other plants, some in
dead, some in dying and others in living
parts.
Some people have come to believe
that salting or smoking will kiii irichimc,
but a temperature of 212° Fahrenheit,
or at least 160° should be reached in
every part of the meat to bring about
this result. - * w
The colors which distinguish our sum
mer and autumn flora—reds, pinks, btues
and yellows—aro caused by the presence i
of substances which require a strong j
light and high temperature for their
production.
It was at one time supposed that
among twining plants each had its own
direction, some twining toward the sun
and others against it; but, though tho i
theory is true in the main, there are ,
found exceptions to the rule.
The amount of nervous action may be
measured by the quantity of blood con
sumed iu its performance. The plethys
mograph, measuring the volume of an
organ, when the arm is brought in con
tact with its records the amount of blood !
drawn from the body to the brain, and
thus indicates exactly the effort in meu
ml action.
Experiments have recently been made
to show that the presence of ozone pro
duces luminosity hi phosphorus. In
pure oxygen, at a temperature of 15° C.,
and under atmospheric pressure, phos
phorous iR not luminous in the dark,
and a bubble of ozone introduced under
the bell glass produces momentary phos
phorescence.
The practical value of the Faure ac
cumulator for the storing of electricity
is yet to be proved, it is said that sev
eral such batteries stationed in a house
and charged with electricity during the
day will be sufficient to light up the
roems at nigbl and perform such light
operations as nirning a coffee-mill or
sewing-machine.
“ Parting is such sweet sorrow,” re
marked a bald old bachelor to a pretty
girl, as ho told her good-night. “I
should smile.” she replied, glancing
1 upon his hairlessness and wontiering how
j he ever did it.
Fritz has named his dogfoloku
- ur, because it does not follow.
TERMS—SIOO Annum stric ly in Advance.
The call of Thurman upon the Senate
was characteristically heralded: “ A
noise like unto a clap of thunder at sea
was heard in the Senate chamber to-day.
Davis, of Virginia, sprang to his feet in
amazement, Hoar trembled, and Vest
laughed. Beck looked as though he had
heard that noise before, turned his head
toward the Democratic cloak-room, and
beheld ex-Senator Allen G. Thurman,
with liis old bandana in one hand and a
gold snuff-box in tho other. Beck told
Davis not to be alarmed ; it was nothing
but Thurman blowing his nose; and the
Senate proceeded to business. ”
QUiNiNE SUBSTITUTE.
THERMALINE
Th© Cn!y 25 Cent
AGUE REMEDY
IN THE WORLD.
CURES
CHIItS&rEVEK
And all MALARIAL DISEASES.
From Eldkr Thomson, Pastor
I BKI °f ‘l l ® Church of the Disciples of
! -.V-.Vg?..Hwh Christ, Detroit, Mich.—“My sou
was dangerously ill ami entirely prostrated from Chill*
*nd Fever. Quinine and other medicines were tried
without effect. Mr. Craig, who had used Tint? MALI Nit
as a tonic, advised a trial of ThxkmaUNS, which was
done, resulting in his complete recovery within a few
days.”
AT ALL C2T0918T3, 03 B 7 HAIL, 235. PEE BOX.
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All Druggists, or by mail, 75c. and $1.50
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Instantly relieved by the use
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THE BEST j
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FOR MAN AND BEAST.
For m or than a third of a century the
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known to millions all over the world as
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MEXICAN
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MUSTANG
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which speedily cures such ailments of
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eases, Foot Hot, Screw Worm, Scab,
Hollow Horn, Scratches, Wind
i galls, Spavin, Tlivnsh, King hone.
Ibid Sores, Poll Evil, Film upon
[the Sight and every other ailment
Ito which the oceupants of the
| Stable and Stock \'ard are liable.
I The Mexican Mustang Liniment
I always cures and never disappoints;
I and it is, positively,
! THE BEST
OF ALL.
FOB MAN OB BEAST.
NUMBER 10.