Newspaper Page Text
ii-. T wwasrK*sSK“" i
VOLUME I
>• rem b*»d «> m lhal.
*•'’'• F» VW's* awW. *•*.
* UsrcvtaiSn.ta*,
Ita assirt*.’ tmt
/ ( . Tb««fc aatiba- aaal* mt cm, Sms,
Tka ter to m* tetr
UteaXMte o’ Iks ItoaL
Toaw* tea* to< saS Wv*. /«*,
Xiat teteto *MUd aao, Jm*.
as* I’D waliin row
X*retMAo’**l*sL
That try teat toarfa* aa, Jaaa;
To *• Latel o’tea LaaL
Osr boato bate■* tear*, Jaaa,
tea aaa bate fate aa4 tetr, Jaaa,
Aa4 aa rn>d«*d bar aaix
To tea tand o' tea Laal;
Bat aama*a aalf aaan paat, Jo**,
And toX 1 * a-eemla’ fast, Jan,
fbete teat 'a »y* to teat,
la tea Land o’ tea Laal
A 1 oar **• ■*■*•> Jaaa I
w.'T.Ugj boon toft alana, Jaan ;
But wJlfa’ mart •«>!>
. . U tea Lwtet </tea Xual
Moto fate ya waaJ, my ala Jaaa I
d» • ■*• WteteMth am to rata, tea;
Wall moat, aad aya ba fate
la tea iMdtitiw ire.
■«,' " _
th* wmrzMorrrr or rrveenve.
Teo jmh cannot be axerciaed in
jpattcngttma itblind the young girl* of
t»-day, and Wgttuuhi wish to imprest
tins fart upon fam mmd * of the young
eaen.wibo are jnta oomingupon the stage
Os mqxbb mate along tn yean
< dgtiwkeed advice. The boy* ere apt
to pc Jnxw* f orce in th* right arm than
they areawen of inenah c**»>a, 100 per
J5»®V Stare than they wo- 1.1 be apt io do
■ sawing wortfl <*tasjryuig up a scuttle
of loAi. They>li(»i!<| bear in mind that
Rid* are too vahinblel<> be used for de
faitaptiig the teteßotai aa you would a
gymnasium. ion don't have to squeeae
toRMMt horlivßr ia forced from it# nor
mal position, nd she choke* up and
catches her breath, to show that yon
krra her. A gentle squeeze of the hand,
the stealing of the arm around her waist
whdn aba b not looking, and the least
pressure upon her belt is all the law re
quires. She can tall by your face wheth
er you lore her, aa you sit there in the
twilight looking into the guiding tear
eyes, a* well as though y an grablxxl her
aa you would a sack of wheat and hung
on like a dog to a root. Don’t make
a barrel hoop of yourself, and try to
ffhwk every stave in the girl yon think
you love, and yon will not have cause
for the sorrow the poor young mao in
lowa hss, who meant no harm, but
lacked a governor to equalize his power.
Hug easy till yon find that the patient
will stand more, and then yon can ap
ply the proper equeezure. Sometimes
we think there ought to be a professor
ship in pur female school* for testing ths
rapacity of scholars tor the trying ordeal*
which they must pees through. If
toere wae such a professorship, and
£rl* ware given a ticket or certificate
showing just how much hogging would
be good <W Ahem, IL might save many
valuabis ‘"kwa, bnt we don't know of
many who could hold such a professor
sh>4 erita egedil Thea, d the girl* were
fivdn aMimdkeii they might alter the
figures and art mote hugging than was
gtooffcr titter health. The bast way is
for ymng men k> use their good judg
mant and than all will be well.
cbm tzar rrxojr.
, uaed to hold that a fatal
nwraritairt follow the formation of tuber
clea on the lungs. Bo long aa tubercular
formations could be arrested, there was
hope of a patient’s recovery ; but when
these had planted themselves in the
lungs, their growth was inevitable and
fatal. But nature is wiser than physi
cians, and teach as those who study her
ways valuable lessons. Careful -Hesrr
lion tn recent years has brought to light
many eurtoua facta Foremost among
thane in the certainty that consumption,
in its tubercular form, ia often cured.
A aeriea of post-mortem examination*,
in aa Wintnigti hospital, dtectoaad the
fact tbst the lung* of oae-third of the
persona who died after 80 years of age
boss mark* of tubercles whose growth
had been cheeked, and ia many ore
ths disesse wholly cured. Part of the
lungs have aven been destroyed, and the
canto** filled by the ocnsraotion and *d
hsefon of the walla. In aom* caaea
heotes Beans hid ooetpletely metoeed the
parts dismtegrato 1 by the die seas. If
octestoteptu* is curable, aa these facte
aeeas to tofi—-» ( scientific physician*
will BSMT reel till they have ascertained
toe aiMttifcntito methode of treatment.
MfcV — —
“ Mb. ■town, ocmHte't yo« give me a
positMtoteMtoße kind with youT “'▼cry
rasy. <fcn*l Mtik there is any vtetemey
in my astiiMfKment " "H you have
asttoteg atoe, employ mm aa your ad
nans." |•• Very wail, you may begin by
hew lean best get rid of
tom"
IO * ♦ Z tTCC^r /4
tommfe Bmwteer*
HOW KKOUMIJU UTtC.
The dwelling* at toe Kroumir chief*
are somewhat supenor to the other in
habitants’, but even the chief* Am*
their homes with the mules, the' sows
and the goats. The dwelling conaiata
of but one room, divided into two une
qual compartment* by a roughly-made
I’H/titiou about a metre high. On one
side of this wall the family live; on the
other the cattle At the entrance to
s<*ch viUaga ergTOufcof tnmd huta there
is a sort of public building called the
’’ Djemaa,” or meeting place, and it is
here that the people assemble at inter
val* to discuss matters of general inter
est. The men wear a looeely-fitting
woolen or cotton shirt, and over it one
or two burnous, according to ths sea
son. Their head-gear ia a kind of akull
cap, knitted or of red felt The arm*,
legs and the neck are left bare, but the
feet are protected by a piece of leather
attached to the foot by a number of in
tertwining strtoga. The dree* of the
young women ia described as extremely
graeeful. A large piece of woolen stuff,
folded in two, is attached to the shoul
der with a metal brooch, and reaches
just below the kneea. A bright-hued
girdle encircles the waist, and their tea
let is completed by a gaudy handker
chief wound round the head. With re
gard to moral* the laws are strict. No
man is allowed to have more than one
wife, or to live with a wotmui unleto ttm
union has lieen sanctioned by marriage
ceremonies. Women, however, are
bought and sold like oaitle, And a widow
can be appropriated by a male relative
of her deceased husband without any
payment being exacted for her. The
usual diet of the tribe consists of “ kous
kouason." a national dteli, milk in
abundance and fruit; the aged alone eat
wheat or meat The Kxoumirs enter
tain scsat respect for the authority of
the Boy, but regard with reverence Ab
dallah -ban-Djemal, their patron; it ia
thia marabout or priest who, they be
lieve, protects their territory, and to
whom they look for guidance.—Aet'ue
ds (JcugrapM*-
ofrun-tMUKrnt nt cimr.t.
The habit of opium-smoking i* com
mon all over China, but it » in the com
paratively m.known half of China, west
of the 110th meridian, that it is mod
prevalent In some parts of Western Hn
Pei and Eastern Bzechun it is all but
universal; there are but few adults in
any station of life who do not take an
occasional whiff, ssid the very streets of
the town* and villages reek with opium
fumes. The practice i* there indulged
in in the most open manner, and no
more stigma or disgrace attaches to it
than to smoking tobacco. Mr. Watters,
the British Consul at Ichang, made
careful inquiries last year into tlie origin
oftehs practice, and he found that it had
been indulged in for several hundred
years before either the present ruiguiug
dynasty or foreign merchants and their
opium were ever dreamt of. The cus
tom generations ago pasaetl into the
family sacra, and at funeral* in the West
of Ohm*, among other gifts which are
transmitted into the next world, by
burning fao-similea of them in this for
the eoiaee of the deceased, is a complete
•et of opium-smoking requisites—pipe,
lamp, needle, eta. By toe people the
habtt, sc far from batng regarded a* a
curse, ia looked en as a sine qua non for
a Chinee**" who wishes to make the
l>«st of both worlds.
.q«q o> oU pnv ro(xsd etp
at jno <np urn} neo no! pus ‘vprrrtuv
‘eaofi req o’pnfl • ■ ‘l”” tu< ”l ”
daop re aoio* * Sfrq.a eq} nj yno
|oq« oq pas ‘pirn « ipm darn** pj°
}u( psq oao emos ;i re 'pnqt aoqoq ‘qnp
v oureo «u»q tnq „ —rerni e*op Ipraoj
eqi wooQ I p»Hir« Xtn *noX p®re«R n
para annul wqs .4“™ P»»wiUi no*
a*vjj ~ poouiquro Xsqx « 1 vpmuif,,
jefprtg „ Xtaqqruq* eqi jotno psyrewe
r»*O| poitfopfiwoi n»q
■«a “ , j” ihnibn* ‘tq®’* 4
euo 'eptrere* eq, jo torqysi eqt re* o
Ifrnuwt eSM lesuiip oßeongys williM
<teir ro rjK»ror»w> r*«ar.
Aya, meaning yes, ahowU be pro
Boe »o*d f; ayte ■»—'"< always, a,
Cairo, m Egypt, Kr-ro; ia the United
fttatee, Ks-ro; e-ner-vate, not esi-er
vata; Bie-marek, not Bees marsh;
Hm-na, nte Hme Final sin German
i* never aslant. Mrieermior— aas e<wi-ys;
j It r r ** a>Mr4
4 in the last syllable.
Anonres poeeeaae* a river of vsrtteble
toK Two stream*, one starting from a
regfen where the soil is fernypnore, the
other from a peel swamp, meet aad form
th* river, where inky aenrtitneory is
due to the mixing of the men aad gnlhe
add whfeh U» two tributary stream*
respectively contain
Devon-d the Interests of Columbia County and the State of fioorgia.
dIARtrEM. GEORGIA. W-BSDA'¥."Jm,Y 26, 1881.
r-j’iii fwi'i w
mow uh soxwhr wraan a sex
OaL Boioa’a boy Bam traded off hbr 1
yellow dog to Jem Jenkin* for the lat
teFsoldsnay muaitet Bun haflfcever
fired a gun, bnt he had a notion how it
should be done. Hie father had half a
pound of powder in the bouee, which
Bam poured down the muazla, then
jammed down a whole newspaper, and
filled the remaining spat* with ohunks -
of lead which he cut from the lead pipe
in ths kitchen with the butcher knife. '
The cap was put in place, and, armed
with this Osar destroyer, the boy went
forth tn search of adventure*. Jfpon the
roof ola« adjwiauighoare ware<fi->M<ri
doves, ebd Ham sretM his gtdJver fte
fence, pointed the juuarie in Ibuir direc
tion, arid, saying to himself, M They
won’t know what hit ’em," shut both
eyes and pulled the taigger.
For about half a unuute that aeigh
bcrfaood was so filled with feathers,
noise, chunks of dovos’ meet, pieces of
wood, beys' yell* and women’* shrieks
that the people thought there liad been
a collision on thu circa* train and the
elephant was taking out an old grudge
on th* lions Ham laid fist on lu* back,
with the gun a rod behind him and still
shivering from the concussion. Half of
Barn’s faoo was blank and blue, and he
didn't daru to get up until hu was sure
the gun had gut all shot off, and even
then he wasn't certain that mqne thpn
half the load had gone out. Ana three
dovM 1 Why two dozen had been par
alyzed, and the top of that house looked
aa If a shell had bunt in the attio aud
blown a feather bed with a servant girl
np through the roof. There wasn’t
enough left of the doves to di*tingui|di a
fan-tail from a bull-terrier, and the peo
ple in the ttrighlmrhood are preparing
to move away unless Bam is sent into
the country.—ZterricA
A HAWK AXb A KATTLKBWAXB.
My musing* on the ages of change
that it must have taken to mold the
scene to its present aspect were broken
in upon by a large rattlesnake Riding
out on a bare rock, within fifty feet of
the point where I was sitting. Un
seemed to search around like a dog for
a place to suit hi* snakes hip, and then
stretched himself out to enjoy the
•■rarmtii. I was thinking if it wa* worth
while to hoave a stone at the monster,
when a big shadow swept down and a
hawk nearly caught him napping, bnt
not quite. The snake aprung hi* rattle
and coiled himself ready for attack
while the hawk hovered around, making
a dash, now on the right aud now on the
left. It was quite an igtsrestiug skir
miah, buk at last the snake made a
spring and apparently failed to strike,
and, before he could recoil himself, the
hawk seized him with both talon* close
liehind ths head—in fact, he had him on
the neck—end swept into the air, while
i the snake struggled and twists.l. sway
up into the bine, in wide, circling
sweeps, until the struggling reptile hung
limp and lifeless, when the hawk c«me
to earth again, and, alighting on a
neighboring tree, made hu meal on the
snake. — Arizona Glob*-Democrat.
' COLD AJTD HBAZTU
In * report as Registrar of Providence,
Dr. Snow remarks : "There is a popu
lar error, which ws often hear spoken of
in the winter season, that clear, cold
weather is favorable to the public health
The truth is, that in this climate severe
cold weather, if continued more than
two or three days, increaaes the number
of death* aa certainly as continued hot
weather, though in a different manner
Hevere eold depreeeee th* vital forees,
and opoeure to it produces fatal results
among those persona, or claase* of per
sesw. whore vital force ia weakened by
say cause. Breh person* arc the aged
and the very young, and also all who
are risk or debilitated from any other
reresu Beside this, severe eoU is no
pi li retire of, but on tbs eontrery is
tevesabte to, the spread of arere of ths
most fatal dfeeassa, as emaihpox, diph
theria and seariatiu* "
AH IDHIUn HAnBH.
There was joy re the farm when Ben,
the oldest boy, came beck from eoilege
tn Us Sophomore year, aed the village
was proud of to ’* Obeuae it, cully,"
, he said, when he snot aa old friend, the
■on nt a neighbor who josned farms with
tea lathes ; ‘‘stitaet U. ««U>; shove n*
your flipper; eieneh daddies, pardy.
How’s h» nibs aad wbafe the new rack
ets" And hie pvred ted father mid:
"It was jest worth more twioe’t tbs
money to hear Ben rattle off Greek
i pat like * livin’ laagaage.AAreiw
port (Zte.) nmea
As am aruhor saakrn staright titi ar
row, so a wise bmo makes sttaigbl hie
threflbb *• MR*
r -M. '"tl I *
niriDiTtn rooo urr ora*.
A very strange custom prevailed wtih
both the Greek* and the Romans of the
ktawtti renting awsfy With them tha
viands that remained uneaten. Martial
has an extremely witty epigram on this;
but the drollest aooount of it ia tn fae
u" Bympoeium " of JLuoiati. The party
oonattled of learasvana tfignifiod phi
| ioeophera whom, of course, the author
intend* to satirise. Up to a certain
1 point'the remnants were fairly divided,
I but unfortunately one ohiakan, bmsc
I plump than the rest, attraoted the at
' tention of qne of the party who had ao
it. The proper owner ■
wnuhf ateltedt go, so they both tugged
at it; a gvneral tumult ensued, and the
gueeta grasped the tarda by the tegs
and hit each ofliarin the tape with them,
puUed beard*, and pelted with
cups. Thai such soe&ae really kook
place at the dinner* given to Boman
ohenta ia eenotuily affirmed by Juvenal
(v. 26), and in ooeof the mttrio play* of
.dtechylu* ("The Ostologi"), a guest
cumplaina that a vessel was broken over
hi* head, "by no means so fragrant a*
spot of spikenard. Indeed it would
be a rather cuneus Inquiry how far
drunkenness was sottiahuries or mere
excitement, for it ia obvtous that suoli
a term is but relative aud i| ia Ukaly
oa<H<fa that Aha Wreak tetapgrifflehf
WM eecily rowedto fwry by a very small
anionfit 6f Crofthol. Oertainly, no rigid
etiquette prevented practical jokes of a
serum* kind.
We read in Plautus of an unfortunate
parasite having a pot full of ashes flung
at his heed st dinner, for no other pur
pose than to raise a general laugh
against him. Beane hnstidotee are told
which confirm this view. One Phil ox
«nu*, a jioet of Cythera, was dining with
Dionysius. Observing a small null let
served on his plate, but a large quo un
that of the hoot, he took the cooked
fish and applied it to hi* ear.
“What are you doing 1" asked the
host.
•‘I am writing a poetn entitled •Ga
latea,* and I want to learn from this fish
sometiiuig about Nereu* 1 But it says
it was caught too young, whereas the
big fish on your plate followed in
Neren*' train, and knew* all about him.”
The host laughed, and ordered the
fishes to be exohanged. A certain Spar- I
tan wm dining at a table on which sea
urchin* wer» served. He took one, aad,
not knowing how to manipulate it, put !
it into lua uiuutb, and crunched it shall
and all. After making wry faces over
it he exclaimed, with true Bparten
bravery:
‘‘Filthy eating I I Stu not going to
turn a coward, and give you up now,
but I sha'n’t take you any more. ’’
HOT MIBTAKHH roLITBHBM.
It is almost impossible to err on the
sideof tiring too polUe, Mrireforo It i*
by no mean* mutakeu politeneee for a
young gsntieman to lift his hat to ladies
he has knows for years, and it would
certainly bo considered as very impolite
for * gentiaman to cease lifting hie hat
to a lady after she is married. Etiqm-tta
requires that wbreever and wherever s
gsntieman meets a lady, even his own
mother, or wife, or his si»t*r», or hi*
cousin*, er hi* »nnti, he ought, a* soon
s* the lady ha* ooadmoended to reoog
nize him, to lift hi* hat. Moreover, if
yon meet a gentloanan in the atroet, or
other pubtie place, with wham yon are
’ acquainted, who is aocompeuted by a
lady that you do not know, yon mnit
' lift your bat to that lady out of respect
! to your friend, sad your friend most
acknowledge the compliment by raising
. hi* het in return.
nmm cold.
An investigation, conducted in the
phymrel laboratory of Harvard Univer
sity, baa ted to the discovery of tire re
markable fact that intenae eold can de
prive magnstiaed steal baas of naasty all
the tnagnotiam whfeh may harm been
impasted to them. The tatanee eold
wm produced by soHd earbonto said.
This fata fare sb imposteni hearing upon
obaarvnticaia of fas sngvirtte nmißtii n
of the earth taken hi high tetthntea ; for
wtmt appear to be daffy and yeattf
changes In the earth’s taagnetteni map
be dao tn large part to the eoodtttana of
tasnperetam, whfeh aflhta the magnate
uaed tn the ohaarvsifoam It also must
be irestaiterl thsi the asoleretar aondh
tire ta ateal h ehreged by greet eaid.
irwr wort
The Boston 7>onsartp< aeakae the fob
tewing rwnark, wttteb mart be scad very
■hiwfaUy in the tafee of the «»w York
World i "When a hone taiba ttwy pot
a halter abret tea aook. When a tare
cribs— Why ahoald a man be treat ail
with more ooaridsrstion thaa a hone T
—Breton
vow ttVM&ajr bxaibo lTtb.
On hia etJfrel the priaoncr is driven
straight to the police ward, where he h
inspected Uy A police offiour who ia ab
sohite ford and master of the district.
This repraeentative of the Government
requires of him to answer the following ,
questions : His name ? How old! Mar
ried or single ? Where from f Addreel '
off parents, or rotations, or friends I
Answers to all, which are entered in th*
beaks. A sotemn written promiac il ,
then exacted of him that he will not
giv* lessons of rey kind, or try to teach
any «)e ; that every letter he writes will
go thr >ugU the Ispravuik's hands, and
that he will follow no oocupetien exoapt
ahoemaking, carpentering or fiekU alter.
Ha is than told that ha is ire*, but at
th* same time ia solemnly warned that,
ahoald ha attempt to pass the limits df
ths town, be will be shot down like a
dog rather than be allowed to secopc ;
and, should he l>* takan alive, shall Ih»
sent off to lataern Siberia without fur
ther formality than that of the laprav
nil's peraonal order.
The poor fallow takes up his tittle
bundle, and, fully realising that he ha*
now bidden farewell to the sritorc and
material comfort of hia past life, ho
walks out into the oheettaas street A
gro|p exifyfa qU retaiafd omaefated,
ar* there to great him, fake him to scan*
of their miaarable Jodgiag* and tever
iahly demand newa from fyttne. Ths
new comer gasc* on tttaß m one in (
.♦ms; | some are melancholy road, filh
ers nervously irritable, and the remain
der kava evidently triad to find solace
in drink They live in oommunih.w of
twos and throes, have food, a scanty
provtsfor of clothes, asoney and books
In oommou, and ootuldar it their snored
duty to help eaoh other in every emer
gancy, without distinction of au, rank
or eg*. The noble by birth get 10 shil
lings a month from the Government for
thair maintenance, and ixitnfnonor* only*
10. Winter taste eight month*, a period
during whteh th* surrounding oouutry
prueanta th* eppemranoe of a noiael***,
Hfaleaa, froean marsh—no roads, no
communication with th* outer world, no
means of escape In course of time al
most every individual exile is attacked
by nervous convulsions, followed by pro
longed apathy and prostration. Th*y
1 begin to quarrel, and even to hate aacb
other. Borno of them contrive to forge
false paeeporte, aud, by a nnracle, aa it
wart, Mtako tboir escape; bnt thu great
majority es these vistima of the Third
Bection either go mad, commit suicide or
die of delirium tronicn*.
|RO||
A PERFECT STRENGTHEHER.A SURE REAVER.
IKON BITTERS are highly rcmmnwnded Ibr stl disease. re
quin ng a certain and edinisnt ton i c ; mpeuiaUy JnUr-
unllrnl Ferri, H'a»U </ dpprtUz, Jami </ Slrmyth, J/irk qf Enrkhta
the blood, strengthens the muscles, and gives new life tn thensu'fae. "Hfey act
like a charm on the digestive organa, removing all dyspejitsc sy mptem>, such
as TiMoaj <Ac Jbod, Brlrhing, Ural in <A« Sbmacn, Heartburn, tie. Tnn only
Iron Preparation that will not blacken thwtectli ar give
hrMulaohe. Hold by all drvggisi*. Write for the A. 11C Boo|t» 82 pp .of
useful and amusing reading—wits /res.
BROWN CHEMICAL CO., Baltimore, Md.
BITTERS
BAW MII.LS, LIWT MILLS. CANE MILLS.
Plantation and Mill Machinery. Engines ami Boilers, Cotton Screws, Shafting
Pulleys, Hangers, Journal Bries, Mill Gearing. Gndeons, Tur+dn’w Water Wheels,
Gin Gearing, Judson's Governors, Disston’s Circular Raws, Gam Mar* and Files,
Belting, Babbitt Metal, Bras, ElUlog*> Globe and Cneck Vaivee, Whistle Gangers,
etc. Iren and Brass Castings, Gin Riba, Iron Fronts, Balconies and Fence Railing.
CJ-MO. It. LOMU AHO & CO.,
FOREST CITY FOUNDRY AND MACHINE
Wit k>1026 FENWICK STREET, AUGUSTA, GA.
the Water Towrr.] tUT ßepairing prumptly dene a| J»est prices.
Boiler repairs of all kinds done promptly. aec2l-ly
OPERA HOUSE GARDEN!
BEN NELSZ, PROPRIETOR.
M WIW, LIQIORS AND CIGARS.
PHILADELPHIA AND CINCINNATI BBER.
BROAD AND KLLtt BTRFTW, AtTGUHTA, G*. ‘
•janll-ly
I *»
NVM-BSR62.
Ova (rends' faults jwaonrila us to their
virtues.—
Thu place of cjiaiis like that of God,
Is everytihefe,- Pinta” 1 ’ 1
Politmwms fa lUti'jMfa thoughts—it
oomee from the heart! •* ’< o’
Honrotwo motisy 'fa "tibvetouanses,
s«]uandenng it is equal tailyeaad sin.
Povwrn may eaapaa.h shabby eoat,
but jt ia no excuse toishgbfey nxwal.
Iln wbo has ata mataetfal himself, by
whom can lie not be j^^jome.—Bos
rwet.
Nstuxb ha* written a letter of credit
on some man** facta" Which is honored
wbMu*«r ttteoesedted!*' •
Thh most delicate, Ole Miost s*u*ibl«
of *U idi as tubs, eontistii in promoting
the pleasures of otiMtawwCaf Uruperc.
Hi who is false to pre* eta duty break*
a thread in the th *
defect when |he wearinged a lifetime is
unrolled.
Farm, tike shdtiM ever be
simple and tuibefl«9h|f; ’dflfle love, like
WBtßrih, should beokr foMh on every
side and bead
Lrq man MuptiSA
no map can take it away from him.
Au investment in pays
tha beta interest. FhtaCTk
Witst a' deHghtftfl rest is I The
bed has lreeme« platawd luxury to me.
1 would W aanhange ifltfjr all the
tlwone* in the
Tbm »re* of retigto* droj* its leave*
. imtimiAlly afjci.,lkV e doa ®
apd the ,tw
and stronger by the hglp or each on* of
i Uiem.^7A<wfo^r
‘•Ta* eufity M m«»A Afttil Jtfasad;
iteenore «*»■ a— •***»» *«rr.r.
th isvmmi m bsmismt-’ ■ ‘
Ova saves ate-tike* bhbb nompltoetod
machine, werkteg an bmibMs of a wall,
aud dulneriqg thg fabric on th*
other. We cannot eroea the barrier and
see the end. The wort fl'tt our hands
—the oompletiod ia n<JF’** n
Tim noble silent mcfl’i&ttered here
and there whom no tnomfflg newspaper
makes mention as I Thayttfe th* salt of
the eertii. 'A countoy thataiia* none or
few of tire* 1* Hl S iHMbtigy I • forest
that hM uo route, all tmm4 tato leave*
aud boughs, whfeh and be
no forest.— Carlyle,
—\ ..
Tas Peruvian bark te not any wore*
than it* bn*.