Newspaper Page Text
JiS.’MtWdKXiis;—-1
VOLUME I.
rsfu nitraaan tort
-iTwiM 1«W»' » <w« M's
TW bee* wn bsnua* on lb, tre*
»rt )M Mt «Wr. trow and mo.
* »«*»■*
°»rr "f+'W*** bu4>
lb( <M tertr ♦taatva ckMtedM
■ Wtan y**s Mat ■***, thcw Wetter vnrda,
WM* ytm Brat vtaw«rel brr» to sue t
AttMreaaaeMafcivty 4MU
Qnj akMre* ampt oWr toad and mb;
trn me to jw Ud*.
"TOaa kto ySs’wbWprrert tor. to me.
, •* ro * ’*•• •* *“«'
’ A *MM n«*« «tosimd OWr Um M.
Tto «M| P— «*l toad. Maaradul plalat.
AM *M pae skawaM tor. to Bar.
aM MV, *ta btrtta <rf aprlii* 1 tear
tteepao*** *•*• toadra wa,
ISM* Mat avwt ttaaa, ray tear,
Vteß to« Sret Wktoprrrd krra to a*.
■■■■■MM—
ADVLnfafravr or food jxd
DtVOI
The New Ycrk Legislature at its eat
twaino paaeed a law to prerent the ad
ulterstxm of food aad drugs. The duty
« committed to the State Board of
Health tri Moeatadning what articles are
adulterated, and thaSanitary Committee
of the board has appointed eight cu.
ieta to make the investigation. To,
ratal of tepee chenuste certain kind,
foods or daps an to bo araigned for
yiirchaee Mad aaalyate. The Bar;x »
1 -igiaoat has already directed atto. y .
to "wee classesof aittetea adulteru. k
k*. tot bto epteiKm. require to fie
dyaad, exposed and checked. Th.
Vtdtyd «f ported hat year to ,
«nea end Italy C«B.MA gallons of
’tewwwi ash It is what may be
called "in opgß^eeerel” that much of
this ofl ooatoa back to to is “pure
tain oil.” It io also known that a
magty otocttonseot oil does not gu
..bboad, bat as pat up in bottles seeem
bling th MS of foreign make, aad tebcte 1
“ olive rnl," and etad m such. Another
article adulterated » caetile soap Thu
i« commonly regarded m the purest artich >
of italund, and is consequently in grea*
demand for certain purpose*. But near
)y all the neatilo soap, even that put to
medical user, is now aaid to be more or I
Iras good or bad imitations, the purity
of the soap being at thia tim» an ex- !
ceptioat instead of a rule. Our win<
are also largely adulterated, and somo |
el the beer and ale that is so largely
’omutned in this country have been
subjected in the brewing to similar I
fraudulent processes. The New York '
Sun gives a long account of the adul
terations practiced in the hat-mentioned ,
article* of drink, and prints the opinion*
of physicians as to the effects produced
in drmken by oocculu and cannabis in
dicaa) gfrMMfo, etn, effects especially
noticeable in diseasr* of the kidneys.
QUotes, when properly made, and
freed froui the acids Used in ita manu
facture, is aaid to be harmless, and the ;
same harmlnwnnsi is attributes! to
Uesxnargarine when the manufacture is
n 'natpjfr gflji adne regard to oleaah-
nem knd tbaflikia the procsM of oon- j
version ia pure. In both cases these
article* are held to be deleterious when
tbs s4dii* gtatxto. has not been com- |
pletely removed, and the fat from which
'•womarganne ia made is of an inferior
quality. In Chicago it has been com
monly reported that it is the al moat
ganaral practice there to mix stearin,
with commercial lard for the purpose of
r.Arrirmng it, Hpsces also art- largely
adulterated; their aharaeter easily per
mitting unacrupcxxia manufacture and
handling. Os twenty -seven samples of I
mustard, carefully selected in New Ycrk |
foxn responsible dealers, Dr. B<uart
found that only six were entirely pur .
It to oonaoirag, however, to be told that
•duhssutauu in this country "aeldotn
take a form that is dangt'rous to health."
However foua may be, there are pomibil
ittea of such a peril wherever adultera
tAcuaure resorted to. A purchaser whe
P«ys far a pare article and does not grt
vhat it la guaranteed to be should have
*>tee stnngent power of redrew, and
this is whet the Engliah law and what
the lew just paaaed in New Ycrk undea*
take to give, hemdw affording inoden
t*l pratecitan to the public by author-
• rigid system of inapection. /ia-
Ottyw Wirr., wiM* he was asked
’bather he liked newspaper work, an
•veend: “Yes, for it baa no yester
days." Ttasaams up very forcibly tbs
•hem there it in newspaper work. It
• ahRR ’’«* of the to-morrow.
No rstiaiMg of etepa, no delving into
fate, no yeateadey always
lomrYPteMm, of Cleveland, Ohx>, who
hrahtMfeaAy eased from drowning a.
ddforent ftatea neerty 100 persona, bM
•** Rts ete uil with a gold medal
’<<tb tl&O by the Cleveland Board of
Columbia Ufarfeer*
FovarfALnra nnrtm roarrr 1
XKAF3 Aao.
A story told by Charles T. Congdoh, *
I of the New York Tribune, in his ’• Rem-
I uuacen.W of* Bqatqp editor, Richard (
/ Haughton of The also illu-itrate.
the personal tuilueaoe of the journalist
in the old Whig days.
In 1840 Daniel Webster thought the ’
Whigs should notn taste him for Pnei- (
I dent. Mr. Haughton, believing that
Mr. Webster could not be Sleeted if *
nominated, favored the choice of teen
, Harrison. It was a bold act to come out ,
! against the great man in the city when
he was idolised. But the editor wa.
capable of doing more than that—he i
I dared
To bw.l Um lion tn bl. don,
Tbo Does Ao In bl. boll.
Taking a proof-sheet of the article, in |
which he indicated the course he ia- j
tended to pursue, ho called on Mr. Web- ,
, ster. The great man read the artich- (
and flew into a passion. He ordered the ! i
editor out of his house, but the com
mand was not heeded. Waiting for Mr. i,
Webster to become calmer, Mr. Hough- j
‘on set forth the polHtoal situation.
You cannot be President, Mr. Web
‘er,” he said, with editorial plainnee-i ,
o' ipeech; “but you can have an office
die as important and honorable; you '
ena be Secretary of State. You know -
, how it will irritate your friends in Boa ,
J ton. Ido not ask you to say to them ; 1
that you approve of it, nor that you dis |
approve of it I merely ask you to say 11
nothing ”
These were breve words to speak to i ,
Daniel Webster, for he was than tik> ,
dictator of Mmwachuaetts pohtica. But •
they were effective in persuading hhn
that siitmoa Would lie the most dignified ,
course for him to pursue, 1
Great was the commotion in State (
Street the next morning, as Mr. Webster |,
walked down it with more tii&u usual ,
dignity. “Mr. Webster, have yon seen I,
the AllotT* “ Mr. Webster, have yon
read that aliaaseful srttefeF* Tried one
. and another of his friends.
“ I have not seen the Atla»,“ he said, ,
Iwaring Limeelf magnificently; “ nor do |
I care to see it I suppose that the od- ! (
itor expresses Ills opinion*, as ha has a
■ right to do.”
Thru the great man, heeding the edi- !
tor's frank suggestion, took himself out . ,
'of the way. He became Secretary of I ,
, State, and thereby was enabled to do
his most serviceable act to the republic,
I the negotiation of the Ashburton
; Treaty. J
A FUFDaFFUL ATOFT.
Some gentlemen were dining together ;
and relating their traveling adventures, i
when one of them dealt to much in tha '
marvelous that it induced another to I j
I give him a lesson.
"I aas once, sir,” said he, “engaged
in a skirmishing party. I advanced t<o 1
far, was M|>arated from my friends, and (
; saw thre- Indians in pursuit of me ; the ,
horrors of the tomahawk in the hands I
of angry savage' Lxtk poasMaion of my
mind. I rotisulert.! for a moment what .
was to be done ; most of us love life, •
and mine was b th preefons and n.- ftu 1
to my family.' T was swift of foot, and
fear added to my speed. After looking
back—for the country was an open one
l*at length perceived that one of my
enemy's had outrun the others, and th.it
well-known saving, * Divide and con- ,
quer,' occurring to me. I slackened my
speevi and allowi'l him to come up. We
I engaged in mutual fury. I hojse none ,
here (Ixiwing to his anditors) will doubt
; the result.* In a few mrnutce he lay a
coq*e at my feet.
“ In tills short space of time the two
Imluma hail advanced upon me, so I
took again to my heels with the hope Os
reaching a n«ghl»nng wood, where 1 ,
knew dwelt a tribe friendly to the E»- I
gliah. This hope, however, I was forced
to giva up, for, on looking back, I saw
one of mv pursuers far te-.ore the other.
1 I waited for him, recovering my almort
exhausteti breath, and soon thia Indian
shared th- fate of the first. I had now
only on- enemy to deal with, but I folt
fatigued, and. being near the wood, I
was more desirous to save my own life
than to destroy another of my fallow-
1 creature*. I plainly perceived smoke
' curling up among the trees; 1 reiioubted
my speed. I preyed to Heaven, I felt m
j lured my prayer* would be granted ;
I bat at thia moment the yell of the In
dian's voice eouwdoi mmy ears—l even
I thought I fait his wanu breath ; there
wm no choice-1 turned round-"
Har* the gentleman who had related
the prwvtoM wonderful atory grew un
patent pee* all endurance, and erted
°°* ’• . . , M. '
“ atr, ami you kilted hue, alao“
•• No, rtr ba kilted me r-JVeseur*
kspsster
Devoted the Interests of Columbia County and the State of Georgia.
HARLEM, GEORGIA. TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 20, 1881.
run aft or coaromrw.
sin still another branch have the Gar*
tans succeeded. American Liachen
k> w to their sorrow the difficulty en
countered in educating scholars to ba
easy writers—that is, to write what so
gincrally'kuown With us as essays or
•Omfsiaitiona. Th* fault lies just
Miere, u doos in all our other Eighty
♦hi.lies—it u not begun early cimugh.
tye wait until wo think that their riinfik
ar>- a tr.fle mature uud tb?n cdkne upon
them with a wild cash of rhetoric, his
tory end all the frightful curriculum.
toWman girls begin to write casayr
when they are 9 years and continue to
do it, not once a month or twice a quar
ter, but every week of the school year,
until they are 16 or 18 yean of age.
For the first year it takoa the form mere
ly .4 a dictation with an occasional ea
a iy. Twelve German poems are learned
durffig the year and may be used as uis
t< rnd for cotnpositioiui in prose. Enter
ing the class above this I found a meth
od ib progress certainly very strange to
the most American schools. Tito
t.ue lier was a gentleman ; the girls wefß
10 years old on an average. Standing
out Ix'fore the class, lie began to tail
tlv m the fable of the woman whore hen
lanl’iir her daily a golden sont —•
fi.ld so simply, every word of it weighatf
•o carefully, every idea expressed with
Hie acme of precision—and all in a voids
»> low and distinct that the class aat
hushed while bespoke. Hethen began
it again, pausing this time at the end »f
every w>uteno« to talk it over with the
school, asking what noons, whst verbs,
what adjectives they had noticed while
lie talked. In thm manner he carridt
them through the fable to the onfF
Then he went back and told it connect
edly all over again. Finally he called
upon one little girl to repeat what alie
could of iL Where she failed othem
camo in to help her. Then another girl
t-sjk up the story and told it better, un
til, after many times told, the fable bad
entered all theixiittle minds and bectyne
n fixed mental posseMiou, and when the
master asked, “Now, do you kuo# it
quite well?" “Dochl" “ l n
“Ja, jal gcwLss 1” went up in a snt.ut
from all parts of the room.
“Well, write all yon know about it
and bring it to me Monday.”—CVrre
tvondence Button Journal.
A Fine Meteorite from Alaska.
About eight months ago, John Muir,
celebrated as a traveler and a litterateur,
noticed in the ,xwis.-*si<>n of some Alaska
Indians an aerolite of rare lieauty, and
brought a fragment of it to the State
Mining Bureau of California. This
n|x> imen was examined and tested by
subjection to the etching process. The
application of acids revealed upon its
face the exquisite line* of crystallization
which characterizes tree meteoric iron.
The body was seen to fall, a mass of
flame, by the father of one of the oldest
Indiana tn Chil< at, over a hundred years
ago, and wa< afterward sought out and
carried to hi* hnt in triumph. Through
the cooperation of tlie Northwestern
Trading Company, the Mining Bureau
succee cd in conducting negotiations for
its purchase, and, lor n consideration
which seems meager as Esau a tn< as of
jxittage in the eyes of scientist*, the
State of California acquired clear title to
the meteor, and it Las arrived in San
Franci-ce. The aerolite is exceedingly
irregular in shape; and the projecting
pointe are as bright a* if they had been
burnished. A suco s*ion of nnt-shaped
hollows, which cover auaoat the entire
surface, nnd give it a curious asjiect, and
iti fantastic contour looks slnioat as
if it had been molded by some unknown
power into the shape of the head of a
strange lienat. It weighs a hundred
pounds or ttpwaad, and lias lieeu chris
tened, in honor of the i<x-ality from which
it wiv- procured. "CUilcat Meteor.”—-
San Praneitco Chronicle.
UK OIK'T UB rounv.
An Englishman wntei from New
York Picture an American h>>rscmau
tn the park here. Long, lanky, bony
horse, with we 11 -acooped-out back, tall
flowing to the ground, half groomed,
with dirty reins and dirty irons ; saddle
cloth with a big monogram ; a man in a
velvet or plush skull-cap, tight breeches
buttoned all the way down the leg ; long
leather boota, Mexican stirrups, toe just
in and no more, heel well in, toe well
out, dragoon spun and the rider’s legs
almost meeting under the horse ; yellow
gauntlet gloves, gold-Upped riding-whip;
rain hand well Bp under the chin, other
hand straight m an arrow down the leg ;
never naing tn the trot—voila.
A cvxiora passage tn the political life
of cx-Gov Gove Saulsbury, of Dela
ware, was his canvaM tor the United
rttaha Sena- in opposition to his broth
era. Eli and Willard The fight was be
gun in th. caucnsra for the State Leg>»
aturu which wm to elect a Senator in
1862, and wae exceedingly bitter. Each
brother aecnred the member* from iaa
own district, but Eli was the winner.
•OKB tYAKK BTOKIBB.
A fanner in Devonshire once told an
♦hat he caught a viper, partially dis
abling it by a Wow from a stout atick,
and, with the aaaistaiioe of his men.
Ixiund it, still living ,ui the fork of a
tree. (Ho mm a kind-hearted and fairly
intelligent man, who would not have
tolerated any ill-treatment of a horse or
a dog---far les.' have been guilty of such
a thing himself—but ho *aw no cruelty
tn thus punishing the'qxxir reptile).
There they loft it, striking with ita
fangs on all sides in its rage and agony.
Wiuui they returned next day the riper
had escaped, but tho limb of thp tree
wa* dry and dead as though blasted
with lightning 1 I was young and ho]x>-
fu) at tlie time I heard tills tale, and un
wise enough to do all in my power to
diasuade the narrator from the belief he
held, or, at any rate, to try to convince
him that he wrongly eoumwted canae
and effect in the case ; but, as he said,
he “ see'd it himself,” and he went down
to the grave in that faith. That he
honestly believed it there could be no
.oubt, for he had not enough poetry in
aim to invent such a romance. It reminds
one of ths Yankee who told how he bail
killed a snake with a hoe, tlie handle of
which the “varmint” turned and bit
several times before receiving its coup
de grace. "You mayn’t believe it,
Squire,” said he, “bnt, just a* treew as
you stand theer, in lean than three min
utes that hoe-handle wa* swelled up M
big as my leg I” Have you ever heard
of the hoop snake ? They alxiund, ac
cording to Mveral aocounte I have been
favored with, in India and Australia,
and derive their name from the peculiar
ity of their mode of progression ; taking
their tails in their mouths they bowl
along like a hoop ! Fact, an an old In
dian officer in formed me, who had often
aecn the native soldiers chasing them
with short bamboo sticks (ho wm fear
fully cireumrtsntial I around the com
pound* or along the rowl*. What an
acquisition a couple of these would be
to our zoological gardens, in an inclos
nro of their own, with a Sepoy or two to
ren round after tlx in with bamboos at
stated hour*. The following ni<v little
anecdote was glnanml from an English
colonial newnpajicr, where it wm pule
lished m an actual <K-curren<x> in the
immediate neighborhocxi during the
week, with much local and collateral
detail: A Ixia-oonatrictor woke up hun
gry from a three months' nap and
caught a rabbit, which he bolted whole
in the usual way. Thia did not satisfy
tho cravings of his capacious stomach,
so be went afield in search of further
victuals, and presently he came to a
fence, which ho eaauycd to get through.
But the lump cauaod by tho defunct
though undigeated bunny atop|>od him,
when his head and a few feet only of his
body hsd paaaixl l>etween tho rails; anil,
lying in this attitude, ho caught and
swallowed another ralibi' which had in
cautiously ventured within his narrow
sphere of action. Now, what was the
state of affair* ? Ho could neither go
ahead or astern through tho fence, being
jammed by his fore and aft inside pu»-
engera, and in this eniliarrsMung posi
tion he was slam with ease. —lxtution
Held.
FALBK KUOKOFY.
Many people tldnk it economy to buy
cheap food, and aavo in article* which
really are more necessarian than they
believe Thera are people who really
grudge 10 cents for vegetables, lxx-au»>
they say it ia too dear ; others will re
strict their children in milk ; others will
buy no fish, IwcauM there ia nothing in
it; others will deny the littia ones a re
freshing orange or banana, and other*
will never have a pudding on the table
Meat and bread, hot cakes, chops and
steaks they call cheap, because it is rea|
food. These people forget that variety
really nouriaheo tho body, and makes up
for that food which can alone supply our
requirements. Beside that there ia no
real economy in it Meat aad bread coot
mure than vegetables and pudding oom
bined with them. The former leave you
craving for something atoo, which you
have to eatiafy, while a good mixed diet
supplies all yoar wants.
Yon can often see workingmen or boys
gulp down their hunches ot bread and
meat, and look around them for > oom
thing they have not got The thint
quenching, succulent vegetable ie not
there ; the tasty second dish is wanting,
and the craving remains unsntiaded-
Hail, double ia spent in drinks.
It is now that the young baseball
player hnagisaa that there is no future
for him, beeeueo he to kept house from a
mateh to rake up tho gardan-rubbiah
end get seedy foe a digging-bee
IMOMWS CIOAKKTTKB.
It was the American who invented Ilia
patent cigaroltee; not ao much to eave
tiie consumer the trouble of making tlie
article aa to get a good chance to adul
terate them. Thera to not a cigarette
made In America that any man, boy or
woman would smoke if the making and
mixture of them could be seen. Every
brand makes a loud boMt of using rice
paper; whereas any one who takes the
trouble to examine the rice plant will
ee<> at a glanoe that there ia no fibrous
consistence in it to make paper of the
sort used in cig axe t tea. Prodigious fort
unes have been made and are making,
and millions of people are slowly ruin
ing their digestive organs by inhaling
tho foul stuff wrapped up in the various
brands that claim to be pure. Let any
smoker of cigarette* subject his tongue
and throat to a medical examination
after smoking a pxrkag* of cigarette*.
Vitriol itself leaves no more sinister im
pression on tongue, throat and palate.
If the cigarette were made of pure to
bacco and fairly good papers it would
be no more harmful than a cigar, which
the world ha* come to agree substan
tially ia not harmful at all. But the
greed of the trade enters thia like all
other euterpnseo that spring up to sup
ply sudden demand. A package of twenty
cigarettee, which may ruprMent an out
lay of from 8 to 6 cents, the manufactu
rer exacts 12 to 16 cento for. There is
rarely in a package of twenty m much
genuine tobacco as a smoker consume*
in one honest pipeful. It may be safely
said that, with perhaps one or two ex
ceptions, every cigarette made ia a source
of violent physical reaction, destructive
of vital tissses and Die active principle
of lurking and inaidions diseases, and
that it ia better to smoke a j»ouml of to
bacco in any other form than the pinch
mingled with poison that makes up the
ridiculously expensive and utterly worth
ieM article of cigarette that holds the
market.— Philadelphia Timet.
KOT A FAMILY AYrAItL
Aii Austin boy come homo from school
very much excited and told his father
that be believed all human beings
Wi ra 'i -cended from spec, which made
the old man so mad that he replied an-
"'Hiat may be the caao with you, but
it ain’t with mo; I can tell you that,
now.’’— Texat tiiftinge.
Lrxtrr. Coxntn hM advocated that
tho site of the crucifixion is u knoll north
of Jerusalem, mar Jeremiah's grotto,
called the " Plana of the Stoning."
|B°H
A PERFECT BTRENQTHENER.A SURE REVIVER-
IRON BITTERN are highly renornmomfad for all dUMses re
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ii««< Preen, Want </ Ai<pMOe Bott vs Strength, Lath of etc. Enriches
the blood, strengthen* tiro mueclea, aad gi vae naw life to the nervsa They act
like a charm on the direst! ve organs, removing all dyspeptic symptoms, such
as 7W«M the Pood, Hdthma, Heal to the biomack. HeorAum, ata Tho only
Iron I*rrparution that will not blacken the teeth or give
hosMinciic. Sold by all druggists Write for the ▲B 0 Book, *3 pp. of
aaeful and amusing reading—ar>U fret.
BHOWN CHEMICAL CO.. Baltimore, MtL
[bitters!
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KlKEir CI FT FOUNDRY AND MACHINE WORKS,
101 l to 1026 FENWICK STREET, AUGUbTA, GA.
(MV’Near tbe Water Tower] Repairing promptly dene at towset prices.
Staler repair* of all kiwi* don* promptly. dwfl-ly
OPERA HOUSE GARDEN
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cnoicu WINKS, LIQIORB AND CIGARS.
PHILADELPHIA AND CINCINNATI BEER.
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feell ly •
TSMMn-aieoMr awMaee
IM AMTANCK
NUMBER 40.
jrrr s; KxrKKiMKKY fob rovM
FUUU.
Roll up a piece of paper, a pempkHV
to make a tube abofit nine or twelve
inches long and an inch or so acroes.
Put this tube to your right eye and took
through at some object, attentively
keeping both eyes open. Now hold up
your left hand with ita back toward yow
Mud bring it very near the lower end of
the tube, looking at your hand with the
toft while your right eye to fixed on
something through the tube. If yon hit
the right position, which you san do,
putting the edge of the hand against,
not over, the lower end of the tabs, you
will be surprised to see very dearly the
tiiinga beyond. It to a very easy, bwt
moat surprising tittie experunant, and
will please old m wall M young people.
You will, of course, wish to know why
this is eo, why there arama to boa hole
where there ia none. The actontifie
journals are talking about thia, buttheir
•xplanationa would hardly suit young
atera. We usually look at the asms
thing with two eyes, and the two images
make one in our mind. Hara wa aaf>-
arate the two eyes in an unnonai man
ner, and the mind brings together the t
circle made by tho tube for one eye and
the hand seen by the other, and makao
one of them. You can vary this in aov.
era! ways If, when looking through
the hole in the hand, you atreteh out
tlie left thumb ao that it will be aeon by
the right eye through the tube, the
thumb will appear to bo direotiy anrora
the hole in your hand. Instead of toofo
Ing at your hand, um a card; make a
black spot on the card as bag aa a hall
dime, and look at it aa before ; the black
spot will appear to bo floating' in tho
center of the hole, with nothing to hold
it there. Another venation to to Banks
a round holo in tbs card of ths aira of the
half-dime ; look at thia hole with tho loft
ye, so that tho real holo will be in the
i uaginary hole ; the hole will appear •«-
.•edingly bright, and aurrounded by a
ring of ahadow.
Homx men are eo stapid 1 (Scene jAt
the Vav Moura dance). Wai tear (to hoet
.*•' fair daughter)—“So glad to find
you alone al teat, Mira Vavaeow.”
Muw Vavaaonr—" Yon ar*—very kind. "
Wsltxer—“ Not at aU. Bui tell aao,
you ar* not engaged ? " Mira Vavasour
—“No-o." Waltser—“ Then may I
hop*—” Mim Vavasour—“Ohl really
—( apt. Hawley—yon must talk to
miuuma.’’ Waltaer (blankly)—“What
about?” Moot opportunely the waHs
strikes up and they plunge into it