Haralson banner. (Buchanan, Ga.) 1884-1891, June 13, 1890, Image 6
Tlooked where the roses were blowings They stood among grasses and reeds; I said, *“Where such beauties are growing, Why suffer these paltry weeds?’ ‘Weeping the poor things faltered, “We have neither beauty nor bloom; ‘We are but grass in the roses’ garden— ‘But our Master gives us this room. “The slaves of a generous Master, Borue from a world above, ; We came to this place in His whdqm—- ‘We stay to this hour from His love. “We have feed His humbles? creatures, We have served Him truly and long; He gave no grace to our features— ‘We have neither color nor song— “ Yet He who has made the roses Placed us on the sclf same sod ; He knows our reason for being— We are grass in the garden of God.” —Rev. James Freeman Clarke. o i A CAPE HORN INCIDENT. On a December morning, in the year 1883, a mail steamer, homeward bound from a New Zecaland port, was ap proaching the meridian of the Horn, but on a parallel more southerly than it is now the custom of steamships to take in rounding that stormy, ice-girt, desolate and most inhospitable of all headlands. December in those distant regions is midsummer, and the weather of that morning was as fair and still as a breezeless April day in this country; but the swell of the vast track of ocean ran ceaselessly, reminiscent respira tions of a gian'ess whose conflict with the heavens is eternal, and whose breaking-pauces are very few and far between indeed. Over this long, dark blue, westerly swell the long metal fabric went sweeping in long, floating, launching curtsies, whitening the water astern of her with a mile of milk-white wake. The frosty sun, whose beams in that sea have some thing of the silvery brilliance of the electric light, flashed a score of con stellations out of the gilt and glass and brass about the steamer’s bows and quarters and decks. A number of passengers were pacing the long hur ricane platform. Far away on the starboard beam, poised, star-like, upon the keen blue rim of the ocean, was an iceberg—a dash of crystalline light against the airy sky that out there, low down, wore the delicate hue of the opal. Otherwise the ocean swept naked to its confines, a plain of rich, deep blue, with the heave of the swell shouldering the morning glory under the sun as it ran, and making that part of the deep magnif icent with flowing light. The chief officer was on the bridge; rthe first breakfast-bell had rung, and “the captain, smart as a naval officer, -in buttons and lace trimmings, quitted Ithe chart-room and joined the mate to dake a look around before going be- Tow. The skipper was a man of eagle sight, and instantly on directing his eyes over the ship’s bows he ex claimed: ¢“What is that black object yonder?” The chief mate peered, and the cap tain leveled a telescope. | ¢<A ship’s boat,” said he, ¢‘and seem ingly full of people.” ‘The boat, when sighted, was some three or four miles distant, and the speed of the steamer ‘'was about thii teen knots. In a few minutes the alarm in the engine-room rang its re _ verberatory warning, ser-ding a little thrill of wonder throughout the ship, 80 rarely i 3 that telegraph handled on the high seas. ]I count cight men, sir,” cried the chief mate, with a binocular glass at his eye. Again the engine-room alarm rang out; the pulsing that for days had been ceaselessly throbbing through the long fabric, languished, and in a few minutes, to another summons of the metal tongue below, ceased, and the great steamer floated along to her own impetus, slowly, and yet m :re slowly, till the boat was within the toss of a biscuit off the bow, with the passen gers crowding to the side to look, and sailors and waiters and steerage folk blackening the rail forward. ~ The occupants of the boat consisted of eight wild, hairy, veritable scare crows of men, dressed in divers ~ fashions—Scotch caps, yellow sou westers, sea-boots, toil-worn monkey jackets, and the like. Vot g Yoar iy Lot g 8 wrong with.yourt o-o o o fli’* r‘“"%’?‘& ¢upiit \\ i “For God's sake, sjr, take uns aboard! Our water’s almost given out, and there’s nothing left to eat.” ‘Look out for the end of a line,” bawled the captain. ¢Are you strong enough to get aboard without help®” ¢¢Ay, sir, we’ll manage it.” A rope was thrown, and one after another the fellows came swinging and scraping and scrambling up the clean side of the steamer. The passengers crowded round and gazed atghem with curiosity and pity. Their sympathetic eyes seemed to find famine painfully expressed in the leathern countenances that stared back through mats of hair. “We must let your boat go,” said the captain. ¢Can’t help it, sir, thankful enough to be here, I reckon,” answered the fellow who had called from the stein sheets, and who acted as spokesman. ¢«Anything belongingto you to come out after?” ¢“Nothing. ILet her go, sir. If sailors’ sea-blessings can freight a craft she ain’t going to float long.” The boat was sent adrift, the engine bell rang ouat, once more the great mail steamer was thrashing over the long, tall heave of the Cape Horn swell. ““How came youn into this mess?” inquired the captain. The man who had before spoken gave answer: - «“We're all that’s left of the crew of } the Boston bark ¢George Washing ton.” She was a whaler, a hundred ‘ and forty days out. It were four days ago. I was the first to smell fire some while arter two o’clock in the middle watch.” «It wanted ten minutes to six bells,” ’exclaimcd'a man, aund a general, em !phutzc, hairy nod followed the inter ruption. 1 “I was the first to smell fire,” con tinued the other, ¢‘call it what hour ye like. I gave the alarm, and all hands ‘turned to with hoses and buckets. But there was a deal of oil in the hold, and the ship’s planks was thick with grease besides, and that gave us no chance. By ten o’clock in the morning the flames had bursted through and was shooting up mast-high, and then we calculated it was time' to look to the boats.” The others stood listening with hard, stolid, leathery faces, generally gazing with steadfast eyes at the speaker, but sometimes glancing askance at the cap tain and the crowd of others which stood round. “There was an ugly sea running,” the man went on, “and the wheel being desarted, the ship had fallen off and ran in the trough, and the lower ing of the stern boats, whalemen though they was who had the handling of ’em, cost our company of twenty eight souls the loss of all hands saving them as stand afore ye.” “A bad job! a measly, cruel, bad job!” here broke in a long-jawed man whose brow and eyes were almost con cealed by a quantity of coarse red hair. “Well, us eight men got away in the boat,” proceeded the spokesman, “bringing along with us nothin’ but a small bag of bread and abou! six gal lons of fresh water. We're been a washing about since Tuesday, and now, the Lord be praised, here we be with a chance of getting something to eat, and what’s more pleasurable still to our feelings, the opportinity of comfortably tarning n.? A murmer of pity rang among the passengers, several of whom were ladies, and there was more than one somewhat loud whisper to the effect that the captain ought really to -send the poor creatures forward at once to get some breakfast, instead of holding them, starving and dvy with thirst, in talk. The eagle-eyed skipper, how ever, asked several questions before. ‘dismissing them. : ‘ ~ «Since by their own confession the fire gave them plenty of time to escape from the bark, how was it they left her so ill-provisioned as they repre sented ?”’ , This was most satisfactorily account ed for. Other inquiries of a like na ture were responded to with alacrity ~ Every sentence that one or an- | i Andasd 8 g iaic Kb dic | forward, adding, that after a good hot meal had been served them they might turn in and sleep for the rest of the day wherever tliey could make a bed. At the breakfast in the saloon no thing was talked about but the whaler that had been consumed by fire, the dreadful drowning of some two-thirds of her crew, and the miracuwus de liverance of the survivors from the in expressible perils and borrors of an open boat in the solitude of the stormi est part of the ocean the wide world over. A benevolent gentleman pro posed a subscription. Before the lunch eon-bell was rung a sum of thirty pounds had been collected. The incident was & break in the monotony ; and when the eight men re-appeared on deck dur ing the afternoon they were promptly approached by the passengers, who obliged them to recite again and yet again their melancholy story of mar time disaster. On the morning of the third day, following the date of this rescue, a ship was sighted almost directly in a line with the vessel's course. As she was negrad she was seen to be rigged - with stump, or Cape Horn top-gallant masts; she was also under very easy canvas which gave her a short-handed look in that quiet sea. Great wooden davits overhung her sides, from which dangled a number of boats. She pre sented a very grimy, worn aspect, and had manifestly kept the sea for some months. It was observed by the chief officer, standing on the bridge of the steamer, that the eight rescued men, who were look:ng at the sail ahead along with some of the crew and steerage passengers, exhibited several symptoms of uneasiness and even of agitation. Suddenly the stripes and stars, with the stars invert ed, were run aloft to the peak-end—a signal of distress! The engines were ‘glowed,” and the steamer’s head put so asto pass the vessel within easy hailing distance. A man aboard the bark stood in the mizzen rigging. «Steamer ahoy !”” he voared through his nose. ¢Hallo!” «] have lost a boat and eight of my men. Have you seen anything of her?” The captain, who had gained the bridge, lifted his hand. “Bark ahoy!” he cried; ¢<what bark is that?” «“The ‘George Washington,’ whaler, of Boston, a hundred-and-eighty-four days out.” The captain of the steamer con trolled a sour grin. ¢'How came you to lose your Dboat and the meén?” «They stole her one middle watch and sneaked away from the ship.” The captain of the stcamer uttered a laugh. - ¢“We have your men safe here,” he shouted. <«Glad to learn that you are not burnt down to the water’s edge, and that tho rest of your crew look brisk considering that they are drowned men. Send a boat and you shall have your sailors.” Twenty minutes later the eight whalemen were being conveyed to their bark in one of their own boats, mest of them grinning as they looked up at the line of heads which decorated the steam er’s sides; and, indeed, there was some excuse for the smiles, for among them they were carrying away the thirty pounds which had been sub scribed for them. It would be inter esting to know what their skipper said when he learned that they had lost a fine boat for him; but ocean mail liners have to keep time, and the steamer could not wait to send a representative on board the whaler to report the many elegancies of sea-dialect which we may reasonably assume embellished her skipper’s rhetoric.—New York Independent. ~~ Greatest Fires in Nistory, The two greatest fires in history are: The London fire of September 2-§, 1666, in which eighty-nine churches, many public buildings, and' 13,200 houses were burned; 400 streets laid waste, and 200,000 persons made homeless. The ruins covered 436 1811, in il A 8 MM 10l e : ) FARMERS' ALLIANCE NOTES. NEWS OF THE ORDER AND ITS MEMBERS. WHAT IS BEING DONE IN THE VARIOUS BECTIONS FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OF THIS GREAT ORGANIZATION.——LEGISLA TION, NOIE3, ETC. An Alliance warehouse will be built at Cheraw, 8. C. g *" A baggage factory will be built at Winona, Miss. * % K The Alliance in Putnam county, Fla., tell the county commissioners that they must be more economical in the disposi tion of the county funds. * * The Alliance co;ers all the territory from Texas to Minnesota, from Maine to California, and yet it is hardly five years old.—Alliance Vindicator, * * % Alliancemen should attend every one of their meetings. Things will be dis cussed that may benefit you. Know what is being done by your lodge.-—Mineral Post, !k** The Farmers’ Alliance Exchange of South Carolina has been in operation two months and a half and has done a busi ness in that time aggregating $50,000,— Cutton Plant. * * Will those men who oppose the sub treasury plan place themselves on record against the national bank plan, the whis ky warehouse plan and other like schemes? We pause for a reply.—(At lanta, Ga.) Southern Alliance Farmer. * * ok Cowley county, Kansas, Alliance will celebrate the Fourth in grand shape. They have secured Ralph Beaumont, of " Washington, D. C., and L. L. Polk, Nationa% President of the Alliance, as principal speakers for the day. . * ok An immense elevator will be built at Bt. Joseph, Mo., in which a large quantity of wheat will be stored and held for bet ter prices. A bank in that city will ad vance money to the farmers. This is the Sub-Treasury plan by private individuals. * % % Alliancemen and all others have a right to ask questions of the office-seekers, and the office-seekers, have a right to an swer or not, just as they please. In fact it is well to know how a man stands on public issues before he elected to official position.—Acworth Post. * k %k The enemies of the Sub-Treasury plan and the farmers tell you that it will not benefit the poor man for that bill to pass. Do not be deceived by such talk. The Sub-Treasury plan, if adopted, will assist in freeing the poorest farmer from the clutches of those ‘‘so-called friends.” That’s what’s the matter. * * % The chiefs of the Alliance organization throughout the United States, report to the New York Herald a membership of about 2,000,000; of these there are some thing over 1,000,000 votes, with the mem bership rapidly increasing. The Alliance is becoming a power in the land which will soon be felt in the political as well as the commercial world. * X ok An Alliance in Davidson county has expelled their President upon the follow ing charges: “‘Tirst, for using language in open Alliance calculated to disorgan ize; second, for denouncing the State Or gan; third, for putting wrong construc tions on the demands made by the Alliance for the purpose, as we think, of misleading the members.—Progressive Farmer, Raleigh, N. C. * % ok As yet we have seen no argument gagainst the Alliance sub-treasury plan that has any weight when weighed by the scales of justice and equal rights. The farmers only ask that they be aided to secure a fair compensation for their labor by advances upon a deposit of evidences of wealth. Bankers are enabled to rob the people with the consent of the gov ernment,. by the use of the evidences of indebtedness. The Alliance proposition is more honest, more honorable, and more just.—T7'he Tocsin. * k% The object of the Farmers’ Alliance summarized, is to unite the farmers for the promotion of their interests, socially, politically and financially. How can they promote their interests socially with out understanding their social condition, and how can they promote their political interests without understanding their po litical condition, and how can they pro mote the financial interests without un derstanding their financial condition, and how can they understand these conditions without a discussion of them?— Dexter (Kan.) Press. % * ok A most powerful farmers’ organization, a branch of the Farmers’ Alliance, is un der way in the State of New York. The obligation of members isas follows: *‘l hereby affirm that I will do all in my power by vote and influence to serve the passage of an equal tax law, and such other laws as will, in my judgement ben efit the agriculturists of the state.” This new organiza‘ion is said to be goin ~ahead like 8 lightning express train, ang it is expected thatbégmf its enrolment will contain 100,000 members.—Z%e SRI e Ga., Allian %i me days ago, the follow. s e Ak e ) L %@;@’ service to Georgia, and a consistent, el Jfi quent and able exponent of Alliance prin ciples; therefore, e Resolved, That in further recognition of the conspicuous services he rendered to our order in this State, we hereby an nounce him as our choice for the next governor of this State, and request hi% to announce his candidacy at his earli&i&%g convenience. a 8 A GASOLINE EXPLOSION # ¥ WHICH ELEVEN FIREMEN ARE nunxmff?%i SOME OF THEM FATALLY. & On Friday, at Philadelphia, while %’b men were engaged in extinguishinia \‘3«; in a small building of the Penn Globeand Gaslight compuny, the flames reached the - storage basin in which were twelve bar- | rels of gasoline. A terriffic explosion . followed, and eleven firemen were caught - in a shower of burning oil and were ba%lyfi.‘g; burned. Some of them will probably from their injuries. g A CYCLONE’S WORK. ) TWO INDIANA TOWNS REPORTED TO HAVE BEEN SWEPT AWAY. Information was received at Jefferson ville Ind., stating that Huntingburg and Jasper were almost swept away Monday niggt by a cyclone and that many per sons were killed and injured. Hunting burg is seventy-five miles distant from Jeffersonville, and Jasper eighty-two miles. No particulars were given, as tele graph and telephone wires were down, A BIG SCHEME, EFFORTS OF NORTH DAKOTA TO GET THE LOUISIAJA STATE LOTITERY. A Bismark, Dakota, special of Wednes day says: Efforts to sccure a charter for the Louisiana Lottery in North Dakota - are being renewed with great energy. The state is swarming with agents of the lottery, and it is said that $500,000 will be expended with the view to sgcuring} the election of a governor and icgislature favorable to the scheme. FOR ARBITRATION. THE BRAZILIAN CABINET ATPROVES OF THE AMERICAN CONFERENCE. ; The Secretary of State (Blaine) has te ceived a dispatch from the United States consul at Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, an nouncing that the cabinet has passed a resolution enthusiastically epproving the actiol of the international American con ference in recommending arbitration in all questions of differences between the several governments of America. WILL WIN. : TWO-THIRDS OF LOUISIANA’S LEGISLATURE IN FAVOR OF THE LOTTERY. A dispatch of Thursday from Baton Rouge, La., says: A poll of the mem bers of the Legislature of Louisiana shows that the necessary two-thirds vote will be secured for the proposition to submit to a vote of the people a const';i tutional amendment permitting the re-¥ chartering of the Louisiana state lottery. Rob Roy’s Sword. On one of the tables in the library of the Long Island Historical Society’s building in Brooklyn there lies an object that is more than ordinarily interesting. It is o sword bearing the marks of time, as well it may, for it is more than two centuries old. None but a strong man could yield it. Its original owner wasa strong man, if what we read of him is true, for the battered sword in question is none other than the claymore of Rob - Roy MacGregor, whose fame has beem ' perpetuated for all time Dy the genius of Beott. v The wars of the Highlanders were con cluded long ago, but looking at thisa great blade one can almost imagine that those tierce feuds and battles which Scotfi@ has so graphically depicted were but things of yesterday. Rob Roy’s blade was not drawn in the fights of the High landers alone, for it was swung right sturdily in many of the battles over the border between the Cavaliers and the Covenanters. The famous Claymorsis about five feet long, weighs some fifte:n pounds, and has a broad, two-edged blade of the - finest tempered steel. It has a baskéfig hilt of strongly wrought brass, so fashfi% ioned that the weapon could be used with one hand or both. This was at one txmu%fi covered with leather, which has beenz worn away by time and hard use. Theté:é is a wee picce left, however, on which the name ** Rob Roy,” with the exception of che first letter, may still be seen. T‘ blade, though much nicked, is as strong™® as it ever was. HE The relic is the property of John M;fi Gregor, Esq., of Brooklyn, and was ex hibited at the Philadelphia Centennialin 1876. It is by the courtesy of Mr. Mac- Gregor that it is exhibited by the Long Island Society. e L T va;g N BRAIDENTOWN, 17a., has a :’”g' : curiosity in the shape of a three-legged = pig. The little thing is perfect in every respect, being the %nest of'a'. g six, except that his left foreleg isabsent, the place where it should h ‘*}‘é* being marked by a boneless projection ~about an inch in length. He seems to got around with periect ease, and isal Toye resdy for o frolia wiis Big S 4’ eK . e P 7 b