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HARLEM. GEORGIA
PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY.
B*U«rcl «*> Atlrln»oii<
PBOf’UBTOM.
At the recent International CongroM
of the Salvation Army, bold in London,
it wae Mated that there are 1,652 rorpt
and 3,002 officers. Twenty-eight thou
sand, two hundred weekly, and 1,460,-
400 yearly serviced are held. The news
paper of the army it printed in nineteen
different languages, and the Salvation
banner waves in nineteen different coun
tries and colonics.
Eternal vigilance is the price of prohi"
bition. A Boston whiskey dealer bought
a cheap coffin, put a four and seven
eighths gallon keg of ryo whiskey in
side, screwed a (date on the lid of the
coffin, on whir; i were engraved the name,
age and birthplace of the alleged cor,Me,
bored the r ofli i, ns is usual, an I shipped
it to a town in Maine. There an under
taker took charge of the box and drove
ten miles into the country before the
coffin was opened nnl the liquor re
moved.
The science of engineering is advanc
ing. An iron bridge on the Penmyl
vania railroad, weighing IVO tons wot
recently moved bodily thirty-two feet in
forty-eight minutes l>y half a doz-n men
under the supervision of M.istcr'f ’.irpen
ter Webb of the Pittsburg division, with
the object of placing it on a stone arch.
This is the third operation < f the kind
since May. There was no im|>cdiincnt
to the passage of trains, the rails being
elevated as the bridge was lifted and
ballasted by the trackmen. Three sixty
ton jacks were placed under each end.
There are more methods of acquiring
knowledge of the art of war than are
taught in the drill rooms of Franc.-, S-t*
of poeki t handkerchiefs, Stamped with
military rules and regulations, diagrams
and other inf< rmalion imjiortant for the
soldier to acquire nnd remember, are
being sold for the use of the French
soldiers and are officially encouraged by
the French government. By purchasing
eight cheap, ornamental ami, of course,
useful handkerchiefs the French soldier
is provided with a complete pocket
manual ot military instruction.
“There is on exhibit! in in Paris,” says
the liritieh AMical Journal "a ty,e ot a
very primative race. It is a very curious
Specimen, entirely covered with hair, tlm
skin very dark ; the child would remind
one of the chimpanzee. The hairs on
the arms and legs follow the same direc
tions as those on tlm monkey; the legs
are thin and short, while tlm iirtiw are
very long. It iip|>eius that tlm triba to
which she belong* dwells more on trees
than on tlm ground. The child is
twelve, nnd seems to have a certain in
telligence, mid takes great interest in
her doll. Her eyes nnd hair are very
tine, her no c is flattened, and her ears
are deprived of tho cartilage. She him
thirtern pairs of ribs, nnd consequently
thirteen dorsal vertebitr. The race to
which she belongs is found in the north
of Siam, an I several families me kept at
the court of the King of H am.”
t
A rancher mar Albuquerque. N M.,
recently commenced digging for a well
on the site of an old rum d pueblo. At
eight feet he struck a huge bowldi r
Underneath this was found m saury,
and when this was pierced a cavity was
discovered. 1 |«>n examination it was
found that the workmen had penetrated
through nn arch of stone, supported by
heavy pillars of mason rv mid largo pine
timber. When tho was cleared
away a volume of pure water was di ■
closed siitli ient to supply a great num
ber of cuttie. Among tlm discoveries
made in the vault were stone axes and
hammers, flint-knives, arrow heads mid
quantities of pottery in fragments. Hu
man remains were also brought to the
surface, including two skulls in nn ex
cellent state of pie-O. valion. ThebuiM
ing is sup|HM>ed to have belonged to mi
extinct race of people, ns the relies found
evidently antedate anything hitherto dis
covered in this ten ton
On tho crest of die eastern bank nt
Woolfolk's B. nd, on the t'hattahix'heo
river in Georgia, one of those- curious
mounds left by the mound builders
stands. The re has just been taken from
it, beside the human remains, by a Col
umbus, Ga., antiquarian, some fine
sainpbsof [lottery, most of which is of
unique design, with some attempt nt
decoration. The largest [rerfcct ve-sel is
in sha|K> something like a carby, with
shorter neck and mouth more flaring.
Though tho base is globular, it is so
fashioned or weighted that, turn it as
you w iil, right side up with care it bob*
serenely. On one side of the smaller
pots a copper d sk was snugly titt d as a
cover, and in it wire a number of beads,
suggesting the possibility that it had
once served some ancient l>e)le of ancient
days as a jewellery case. Other pieces
in design resemble the modern cuspidor,
and others still are shaped as the regula
tion pot of this dav. He also secured
wveral Indian pipes, four stone fishers,
two stone axes or wedges, medicine stone
•ad innumerable arrow heads, etc.
i The tide of a young woman who earned
her bread by the sweat of other peoples*
brows is related by the Pref of Portland.
She was the daughter of a well-known
Portland merchant who was unfortunate
in business. After an unsuccessful at
tempt at keeping a boarding house in
Boston she obtained work in a Phi lade!
I phia clothing house. One day, in a fit
of desperation, she abandoned the shop
I to invent a band in gentlemen’.-. hats to
| prevent perspiration, which proved
I highly successful. She has now returned
to Portland to buy back the old home
stead where the family lived in their
former days of prosperity.
Tho Chinaman of the Pacific slojio is
evidently advancing in knowledge of tho
wnyt of American civilization. Rs
cently one entered a store in Sacramento
and desired to sell a doz.cn brooms ho
had ia his possession. The proprietor
did not want to buy, and the Chinaman
1 departed with his wares. After a while
1 or.o of the storekeep- rs went out to get
a bunch of brooms which had been dis
played outside the store, ascertained
that they were gone, ami realized that
they were the very brooms which tho
, Chinaman had offered f r sale. The
j heathen then had simply taken them
down from the nail ami carried them
I into the store.
Salmon are in the rivers and bays,from
' Oregon to Alaska, often in numbers that
appear to b - inexhaustible. A Montana
■ correspondent says: “Where tho cur
rent is swift the ti-h, in their ascent of
the river, must swim near its surface.
Here, close to the bank, a huge wheel is
constructed. It has perhaps a dozen or
twenty arms, which rench down into the
river nnd form the motive power. There
are at their ends a succession of scoops,
made of iron network. The current of
the river furns them, and ns they revolve
through the water they capture the fish
and senop them up. As they reach the
top a means of escape is provided for the
fish, but it is a pathway which directs
him into an immense tank in which the
salmon are gathered. A firm who have
a wheel nt the Dalles said they did not
i core to run it more than nine hours a
day, for they could not take care of tho
■ fish that they caught .beyond this. Its
manager said he hud thus far shipped 290
tons of salmon. One day he began to
fish at U o’clock in the morning, and at
12:40 he had caught eighteen tons, nnd
I had them nil aboard the cars, in ice,
i shipped to the East. This was an extra
j ordinary day, of course. The swift cur
rent supplies ample water-power to turn
I the huge wheel."
Uslrich Peculiarities.
The ostrich is an anomaly, a fond
parent nt one time, nnd again devouring
its offspring, showing nn idiotic gentle
ness now, ami again kicking one of its
1 ttle ones into kingdom come. It will
scan tho horizon with the wisdom of an
astronomer, and tumble headlong into a
muck hole nt its feet. A single wire
will keep it in bounds at ordinary times,
and a jack rabbit will drive it into a
spasm of terror. There is nothing on
earth like it, Ido believe, unless it may
be a woman trying to cross Kearney
street on a Saturday afternoon. Their
1 way of showing anger or fear is peculiar,
j They squat on their ham dies and
| stretch out their ungainly necks almost
I level withthe ground,and sway them from
! side to side, m iking a strange drumming
sound somewhere in their true inward
‘ ness. When grown they are the ugliest
I things on record, atid look all leg. They
are connoisseurs in metal buttons, vina
' grettes, and even hairpins, and will not
hesitate to transfer one or more at a
! gulp from your person to their own cast
iron stomachs, with a knowing wink of
their red eyes; but it was a game of give
and take, for in retaliation the visitor
would make a grab, and many valuable
plumes were lost in this way.—
/•’r-mcMiv Chronidr.
How Ho was Bauirht.
“Say, papa,’ 1 queried a little boy. “I
thought you told me they couldn’t buy
people here nowadays i”
“They can’t, my child,” re-died the
father. “The late civil war settled that
forever. But before, the people of tho
South owned slaves, but tho war liber.it
ed them and an amendment to tho con
stitution male it impossible to hold tho
e dored people as slaves in the Unite !
1 Stat-’.’’
! "I don’t mean colored people,” con-
I tinu d tho boy. “1 m-an white gontle-
Inn a like van. Was vuu ever bought or
soldi”
| “What a question! What put that
1 idea into your head
“1 hard Mrs. Goss p talking to a caller
I when she didn’t know 1 was round,
i They got to talking about you and mam
ma. She said mamma was so homely
the would stop a clock, and that her
money bought you. body and soul."—
>.*, Foul Olohe.
Decline in Real Estate.
Landlord (to stranger.)—The proper
tv u worth st’>s.ooo. I wouldn’t take
ks«.
Stranger.—l don't want to buy. j
1 am only the tax assessor.
Laudlord. —Oh, I beg your pardon.
, I should consider myself a very fortunate
man if I could got $17,(00 for that pr.-p-
■ arij.—Fud.
GOING TO FIRES.
Fast Time Made by the New
York firemen.
Etilling on Tbdr Way a Few Seconds
After ths Alarm Gone Strikes.
The sharp clang of the big alarm gong
rang through the coney quarters of (.'apt.
Rafferty’s Fire Patrol, No 3, in West
Thirtieth street, on Friday night. In
stantly the horses dashed to th<- patrol
truck shafts with a swift clatter,and just
is swiftly driver Abram Lyell was in bis
scat, and had the heavy reins grasped
tightly in Lis brawny hands. His appear
ance in his place was so sudden that it
looked like magic. The gong had struck
but a single stroke of the alarm when he
sprang from his bed, on the second il >or,
and came slap bang through a trap door
in tho ceiling, just like a harlequin in
the pantomime. It took him less than
nine seconds to leave his bed and start
the horses out with a rush from the
patrol house. Driver Fl. S. Root, who
rides with him, was just as swift in drop
pingdown beside him. The beauty of
the performance was that it wasn't an
sxhibition test, either, but a bona file
answer to a call to a fire at Tenth avenue
ami Thirty-seventh street.
The way Drivers Lyell and R rot leap
through the trap door every time there
is a fire is an improvement in speedy pre
paration for responding to fire calls that
is at present exclusively the proud feature
of Capt. Rifferty’s wide awake company.
The trap iscutin the ceiling immediately
ov< r the driver's seat on tin: heavy truck.
It is surrounded on the floor above by a
polished brass railing four feet high,that
shines like a mirror. The driver's beds
are right beside this railing. When an
alarm sounds at night they spring from
their beds together, seize the railing,and
let their bodies dr rphorlz. ntally through
the trap. The instant tho door opens
they let go and catch a second brass bar
fitted into the ceiling, like an acrobat
dropping from one trapeze to another-
This second bar balances them and pre'
vents them from falling forward in their
five-foot drop to the truck seat. A
weight attached to a pulley rope shuts
the trap door with a bang the moment
they disappear through the trap. The
whole device works as smoothly
and quickly that it is only a question
of time xvhen the trap will be intro
duced in all the engine houses in
i town. It saves some seconds of time lost
i in shinning down the brass sliding poles
j and clambering to the seat on the en
gines. In exhibition drills Drivers Ly
ell and Root have been able to drop to
their scats and started the truck in less
i than two seconds,which is ahead of any
thing in the patrol truck manning.
Every day the brave fire laddies of
| Gotham arc getting to be more expert
■ in swiftly answering fire alarms, and are
' on the lookout for improvements that
i will cut down shorter the few seconds at
present occupied in hitching up horses
und starting the engines or trucks rattling
on their way to the fire. The sliding
pole was an improvement on the old
fashioned pell mcll ru->h down the stairs
that saved nearly a minute of prepara
tion. Quick dressing is one of the fea
tures of fire laddie activity nowadays
1 that fills every layman with amazement.
The laddies have got the business down
to sueli a science that they literally jump
j into their clothes. Every fireman goes
I to bed with his red fire shirt on. His
trousers are always kept tucked into the
legs of his heavy rubber boots, and when
he retires he simply lets tho trousers
slide off him and down over the boot
leg and then steps out of the boots.
When he wants to dress he steps back
into the boots again, yanks the trousers
up around his waist, fastens them with
a spring buckle, an<l makes dashes for
the sliding pole, quick as a wink, com
pletely dressed.—A' w Yrrk Sun.
A Prayer far Coffee.
During tho war the people of Arka
delphia, Ark., kept up their religious
revivals. They argued that the Yankees
might keep out sugar and coffee, but
that they couldn't keep out the Lord.
Among the most fervent of tho revival
ists was old Sister Boyle. Without her
no revival could hoj>e to boa success,
and whenever there was the least draw
back, she was called upon to pray. One
night, at a meeting, the mourners Were
slow in “cornin’through.” Sister Boyle
was called upon. She took a position
near the altar, knelt down, raised her
hands, and said: “Oh, Lord, we arc in
great distress. We have tried rye,
• browned potatoes, parched corn, okery,
imd many other things, trying to get a
coffee taste out of 'em, but, 1. >rd, thou
knowext as w ell as w.- d > that parched
corn an’ sich lacks a right smart of being
: coffee, so now. Lord, knowing all this,
please open the blockade an' let the Lin
coln coffee pour in, an' we'll praise thee
early an’ late. Amen.” Arlaneaie
j Truee/er.
A Trustworthy Animal.
Liveryman (to customer)-There, sir,
is as good a boss as ever pulled a wag
' gin. An’ you needn't lx- afraid of him.
i He puff.-et’y safe an' reliable.
Customer (eyeing the animal dubiously)
—ldont kno-v’bout that. I d hate to
trust him with any oats.
Sound Telegraphing in Africa.
The system of sound telegraphy used
by the people living on the boardei
of the >rulf of Guinea, West Africa, is of
interest as a primitive solution of the
problem of communication through shot!
distances. Bertram Sparhawk tells in
the Scientific Auurican how the instru
ment is made, as follows:
Take a log of hardwood, about twe
feet long and about a foot in diameter.
Piano off one side longitudinally to a
surface four or five inches wide. In the
centre of this surface mark eff an elon
gated and somewhat distorted Greek
cross. The longer arms are placed longi
tudinally, and occupy about one-third
of the plane surface. The transverse
arms arc three times as broad, and ex
tends entirely across this surface. The
natives dig out the wood within the out
line of the cross, and from there gradu
ally hollow out the whole log. The sides,
beginning at the centre, are
trimmed off laterally toward
the ends, which are rounded off.
The instrument is now ready. Il will be
perceived that by tlic method above de- '
scribed we have a hollow drum with
four tongues in the centre, each being of
a different thickness, so as to produce a
different sound when stuuek. Two
pieces of bamboo, the siz: of a man's
wrist and about two feet long, arc sc- j
lected and stripped of the hard outside, i
which leaves the soft, pithy portion for j
use. This bamboo is of a peculiar kind,
free from knots and solid throughout.
With these sticks used in a proper
manner on the four tongues of the drum,
a combination of sounds is produced,
which, in connection with time as used |
in music, forms a perfect telegraphic
language, readily understood by the ini- |
tinted, the air being the transmitter.
With this simple instrument the native 8
of the gulf of Guinea readily communi
cate with e'ach other for a distance of a
mile at least on land and a much longer
distance by water. Messages can be
sent long distances in a short time by
parties nt different points passing them
along from ono to another. The writer
has seen canoes coming down a river
from the bush markets signaling people
in the town and giving and rcteiving
general news at a distance of fully threa -
miles.
Knawn by the Nick In his Boots.
A well-known Treasury official, who
does considerable railroad travelling,
says he has made an amusing discovery,
which if properly carried out insures un
usual care and attention from employees
on parlor and sleeping cars. The tourist
who has been initiated is provided with
the most comfortab e seat in the dining
car, receives special care und attention
from the waiters, and is always sure to
have a lower berth in the sleeper.
Should any of his fellow-passengers be
come jealous at the marked courtesy
shown their comrade, and inspired with
curiosity to know why the distinction is
made, they have only to look at the
heels on the shoes of the favored one,
and they will observe that there is a
small “nick” or notch there. Inspectors
or “spotters” of the palace car service
are constantly travelling over the rail
roads to see that the passengers receive
proper attention. They do not intend
to have their connection with the com
pany known to the railroad officials,
but frequently the latter “drop” to their
little game and stamp them so that they
will be known all along the road. The
porter in gathering up the boots and
shoes in his car cuts a “nick” in the
hind part of tho heel of the shoe be
longing to the inspector, so that the
other porters will recognize him as soon
as they look at his shoes. The Treasury
official, in a mysterious way, became
aware that a nick in the heel of his shoe
would greatly facilitate his comfort and
pleasure in travelling. He tried the ex
periment, and it worked to his entire |
satisfaction. He found he was served !
with the best provisions the buffet af
forded, his shoes received the brightest
shine, nnd although he had been obliged
to purchase an upper berth, the conduc- '
tor on the sleeper kindly placed a i
"lower” at his disposal. It is probable
that a uew system for tagging tho “spot
ters" will be adopted in the railway ser
vice now that their trade-mark becomcf
known. B-iltimore Sun.
A Turpentine Farm.
A turpentine farm must be seen to be
appreciaied. When the farm is pitched
the boxes are cut one to three in a pine, '
according to size. The trees are counted
into crops of so many thousand, and this '
is called a virgin crop. The queer little
guago called a buck is then brought tc
bear and a streak is cut above the box,
which is simply a deep oval notch, point
ing downward so as to lead the gum
which excludes into the box below.
Th se boxes are made to hold about a
quart. This first run is as clear as oil,
and is the finest of all. After being
dipped out with a paddle, it is distilled,
and the hard rosin left is sometimes as
white and clear as glass. It is very
beautiful, and brings a good price in the '
great naval-stores markets. Second
years gum is not as good in quality, but
fully so in quantity. Third year boxes,
when the monthly hackings have made
the tear high up, are still poorer, and .
f:tm then on tne crops hardly p.y for
working.— Atlanta Ccnttitution.
Moravian Co toms.
The Moravians have settlements r.ot
on yit Germany but also in England,
Switzerland an I America. They hold
to nearly all the doctrines of Luther.
Their largest settlement, called Herrn
hut, is in Saxony, and the Moravians in
many parts of Germany bear the name of
Herrnhuter. In each community there
xre two houses set apart —one for the un
married men, calleel the “ Brothers’
House,” and the other for *ll unmarried
sisters or widows who wish to entet
tlu-m. The Moravians cannot mairy
without the consent of the elders of tlieit
church, and in some cases the bridegroom
has been chosen for the bride. They
seldom marry outside the community,
and their engagaments are nearly as sol
emn as their marriage, t The weddings
arc very simple, the sister wearing but a
dress with a white lace handker
chief, and her pretty cap with her pale
pink ribbon, which is changed afterward
fur a pale blue ribbon when the cere
mony is finished. There are always twe
r.ngs at a wedding in Germany, as there
a married man always wears one, which
he receives from his bride in exchange
for his. The Moravians wear no crape
nor mourning for their dead, and they
speak of them as blessed, and of death
as “going home.” They call the grave
yard “God’s acre," and they take tho
greatest care of their graves. But there
also is the division, as in the church, for
the men are buried on one side of the
cemetery and the women on the other.
The Moravians are all well educated, and
the poorer brethren among them enjoy
the same privileges in their excellent
schools as do the richer brethren. Life
among “United Brethren” is simple and
(inartificial, love to God and man being
their first principle; and many who have
lived among them bear in their hearts a
loving memory of their goodness, and
of the pretty little village of Neudieten
dorf.
An Old-Time Oyster Supper.
General Eaton invited one evening
Jackson Van Buren,the French minister,
General Cass and several other gentle
men to come around and assist him in
disposing of a barrel of oysters just sent
him from Norfolk. A few moments af
ter the arrival of the distinguished party
the butler announced the oysters ready.
Mrs. Eaton led the way escorted by
Mr. Van Buren, and as he approached
the kitchen door, he exclaimed: “Good
Heavens, madam, where are you going
to take us?” “Into the kitchen, of
course,” replied Mrs. Eaton cheerfully.
Mrs. Eaton was a model housewife in
her day, taking as much pride in her
kitchen ns in her parlor, and as she
threw open the door a novel sight pre
seated itself. The floor was as white as
soap and water could make it, and cov
ered with fine white sand. The table?
[ooked like boxwood and the tins were
bright as mirrors. Added to this th<
appetizing odor of oysters roasted in the
shell, the novelty of the occasion, and
the sprightly beauty of the hostess, one
would suppose that even Mr. Van Buren
might melt into a state of pleasantry.
But on the contrary his features re
flected only his inability to enjoy a frolic
or this kind, and he sat upright and
unsmiling until towards the end of the
impromptu fete, xvhen he turned towards
Mrs. Eaton and said: “'£his is the first
meal of the kind served in like manner I
have ever indulged in, but I trust it will
not be the last. I think oysters never
had such a delicious taste before.— Ben.
Perley Moore.
A Mysterious Noise Explained.
Much has been written on the subject
of mysterious noises, which, in most
cases, if intelligently looked into, would
be found to have no mystery at all about
them. A professor at Philadelphia re
cently recorded tha' at a certain hour
each day one of the windows in his
house rattled in the mo-t violent manner.
On consulting the local railway time
table he could find no train running at
the hour specified. Bat on examining
another table, which included a separate
line, he found that a heavy train passed
at the time, at a distance of several
miles from his house. He then referred
to the geological formation of the ground
between the two points, and at once saw
that there was an outcropping led<»e of
rock which formed a link of connection
between the distant railway line and his
home. It was the vibration carried by
this rock from the passing train that rat
tied the window.
The Nerves of Taste.
The discovery that heat influences
one set of nerve-points in the skin while
sensations of cold are received bv an
other set, hxs been followed by aa inter
esting investigation by two Italian physi
ologists, whose experiments seem to in
dicate that the various tastes result from
the exciting of distinct sets of nerve
fibres in the tongue. "She prolonged ap
plication of ice removed the sensibility
for all tastes —sweet, sou", salt and bit
ter. Cocaine destroyed—temporarily, ot
course—sensibility for bitter oniy.
Other substances, such as cafieine and
morphia, reduced the power of discrim
inating between different degrees of bit
ter. Diluted sulphuric acid had a pecu
liar effect, causing distilled water and
era* quinine to taste sweet at the tip of
fce tongue, although the bitter of the
was elsewhere tasted as usual.
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With Case and Manual. Size, iu.;
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Additional instruction by mail, free, if desin-d
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