Newspaper Page Text
J.W. VERONEE,
VOLUME 11.
HEWS GLEANINGS.
Mississippi will hare * Htate famaie
collet#.
Georgia ha* 762,981 male* and 779,199
females *
Birmingham ba* hopes of a large car
manufactory.
M lariaaippi has four times aa much tim
ber a* Minnesota.
Marion county, Fla., ha* 23,000 acre*
of land in oranee grove*.
Russian Jew* are constantly fettling
in all part* of Miaaiarippi.
Fifty-five cotton mill* in Georgia, and
other* in process of erection.
Real estate at Milledgeville, Ga., has
doubled in value in the last two year*.
Birmingham, Ala., has raised the li
cense of whisky dealer* to |350 a coun
ter. •. ' .
A bill baa been introduced in the Vir
ginia Senate to abolish the whipping
port
The salary of the Mqyor of Savannah
has been increased from 61,500 to 12,000
a year.
It La said that twenty-seven of the ex
hibitoraat Atlanta are going to establish
factories there.
There are eleven men in the Clarks
ville, Ark., jail charger! tiitli murder in
in the first degree.
Three Butler county, Ala., boya in one
day'* hunt killed fourteen foxes and
twspty-two cat squirrel*.
Forty thousand dollars have been sub’
•cribed toward a proposed car manufac’
tory in Montgomery, Ala.
Mrs. Nancy E. Pearoe, who cut off her
child's head in Howard county, Ark.,
has been adjudged insane.
The street letteMxyie* ip San Anto
nio, Texas, have been robbed ho freq neat
ly that the postmaster has ordered them
taken down.
Many Georgia farmer) believe there
will beta great advaaqy in cotton next
apring, aad are holding berk u much <>f
their crops-wpoeribte. ** *■
Blnee 1860 Tennessee has acquired
nearly 400,000 additional population,
and ha* made crop* every yew of an
average annual net profit of 127,500,000.
In the four States of Georgia, Alabama,
South Carolina and Tennessee the num
ber of person* employed in the manufac
ture of cotton is 11,788, against 5,890 in
1870.
The Mayor of Birmingham, Ala., has
given order* to the police torce of that
city to require all merchant* to discon
tinue the sale of cigars and tobacco on
Sunday.
The father of Rev. Richard Jordan of
Rhea county, Tenn., is still living, at the
■ge of 106. His son is seventy-five. His
wife i* eighty-seven, but looks older than
her husband.
. The Cincinnati .Southern railroad has
contracted tilth the Glen-Mary (Tenn.)
mine* for twenty car loads of coal per
d»y for their engines, at seven cents per
bushel unscreened
The new capitoi building at Austin,
Texas, is to be 366 feet high, 566 feet
long, and 286 feet in depth, the seventh
highest building in tKe world, and the
"econd in the United States.
The Trustees of the Georgia Academy
for the Blind hare purchased ground at
Macon for the erection of an academy
for the colored blind- The State appro
priated SIO,OOO for the jmrpose.
In North Carolina there are fifty three
eotton milk in operation, and six others
in progress and nearly completed.
There are also four or five woolen mills
h operation in “ the old North State.”
A mulatto woman named Fgpnic
Crawford hai just returned to her farm
>n Mississippi, with fifty negroes fronl
Sumpter county, Ala. Thia year, about
closing time, ahe worked 300 hands on
her farm, which ahe manages herself.
With increased capital pouring into
New Orleans, with the jetties opened for
Waaels, with four railroads
waning there, and at least three more
on the way, the Timea-Democrat wishes
the whole world “a happy New Year.”
The Vicksburg and Ship Island and
the Memphis-and Vicksburg railroads
• ha»e leased 800 penitentiary convicts
from theHimtamppi State Board of Pob
i*r Works which are to be divided be
tween the two roads and put to work
Vicksburg.
A geed dead of syrup made in Alaha
“* *bis season is found to be unfit for
because the sugar cane from which
11 made was grown in cow-pens The
wlttmfe Aiterfmer.
•Wk* of the cane were unusually fine,
mt the flavor of the syrup is M id to be
absolutely naweous.
Memphis Appeal: Mrs. Erwin, who is
mentroae.l a* the “ Southern Florence
Nightingale,” dies! at Huntsville, Ala.,
fwently. During the war she had hos
pitals wherever the army of the Tennes
see could be reached, and after the war
she established an asylum for the orphan*
of Confederate soldier*.
It is reported that the Woodward*.
•he great nail manufacturers of Wheel
ing, \\ eat \ irginia, are arranging to
come to Birmingham, Ala., where in co
psrtrersbipwith Mr. Deßardeleben. they
propose to enter largely into the manu
facture of nailaand other irons.
There are 1,000 Indians yet in the
Everglades of Florida. They speak their
own language, but by frequent inter
course with the white people at the trad
ing posts, on leitke Okeechobee, have be
come Civiliwd. They are friendly and
honest in their dealings with the whites.
The extent of the manufacture of
pure olive oil ’ from cotton seed is in
dicated by export statistic* from Now
Orleans Os 0,000,000 gallons shipped
thence during 1879-80, eighty-eight per
cent was sent ts the Meditcranean and
and one half of this
I Ujt- Marshall A Co. of London,
have t <to.- ... <] 1,300,000 acres of land
from of Mississippi. The lands
lie mostly in the Yazoo delta, and com
prise ?ome of the richest cotton and
timber land in the South. It is the in
tention tn improve, cultivate and colo
nise these lands.
Hpm J. F. Cunningham of Fulton,
Ark., has invented a cotton-picking ma
chine that pulls ofl the cotton bolls,
limb* and leaf, and then separates them.
The hbrse and wagon pans over the news
that have been picked and the machine
gathers on the side. He says that by
attaching the separator to the gii> power
he can pick two rows as fast ns the team
* AM ■*-
Atlanta (s>ustitution : The cct of the
Exposition was $250,000, of which $l5O,
000 in round figures were put in build
ings and improvements ard the Imlance
paid out for running expenses, printing,
etc. The receipts were from $220,000 to
$250,000, of which $115,000 came from
stock, $15,000 from privileges, $15,000
fr m entry fees, $90,000 from' gate re
ceipts, and $5,00) from miscellaneous
resources.
Eastman (Oa,) Times: L. L. Burch,
of Telfair county, killed a bald eagle
last week which measured eight feet
from tip to tip of its wings. One of the
feet was sent to this office, and the claws
from point to point measured eight and
one-third inches. This monstrous bird
had a grown sheep down when Mr. Burch
discovered it, and forced him to relax
his hold by eending a rifle ball through
his eaglcabip,
Durham Recorder: The farmers in
Eastern Carolina seem to be tardv in fin
ishing up the year’s crop, hence it is al.
most impossible to employ a man to drive
deer. Sport in this line, however, is
fine. Deer are abundant, so mcch so
that migratory sportsmen believe them
to be more pumerous in the everglade
counties of Pender, Jones, Onslow, Cra
ven, Pamlico and Carteret than in any
part of the South.
The Dempsey family and the Norriv
family, of Cherokee county, Ala., have
long been enemies. The older meirtlrm
have spent a life time in continued bick
erings, and have wearied of it. But the
boys have taken up the cudg< l, tod here
is the result: I-ast week two of the
Dempsey boys and two of the Norris
met to fight it out Both of the Norris
boys were stabbed, the younger mortally.
Tbe families stand high in the commu
nity, and great excitement has grown
out of the difficulty.
Jackaomville (Fla.,) Union: During
the month of December there were 6,-
200,000 feet of yellow pine lumber
shipi>ed from this port, against 3,318,000
feet for same mouth last year, an increase
last month of 2,882,000 feet over the
amonnt shipped during the same month
in 1880. The above does not include
lumber ahipped north via Fernandina,
over the Fernandina, and Jacksonville
railroad. During the year just close
there were, not including that shipped
via Fernandina, 58,887,451 feet of lum
ber shipped from this port, against 41,-
719,255 feet shipped during 1880, and
88.978,938 shipped in 1879, an increase
in 1881 ever l«80 of 17,118,190 feet, and
over 1879 of 24,858,518 feet.
Devoted the Interests of OolumMa County and the State of Georgia.
HARLEM, GEORGIA* TUESDAY, JANUARY 17, 1882.
TOPICS OF THE DAT.
-
Fbaxcib Michxl Pascal, the French
sculptor, is dead.
I - **
A foktt-thbxx-dat female faster has'
died in Washington.
Hon. John O. Naw, of Indiana, is
studying the map of Russia.
Tire. Mississippi Democracy returns
Damar to the United States Senate.
Montrxal ioe men are preparing to
freeze us out at a high price next summer.
Gxx hundred and eighty-seven ves
sels were lost at sea during the past year.
Tnovnnxs on the boundary lietween
Russia and China are tiecoming serious.
In Rvasu theaters are now required
to be closed both on Sunday and Satur
day night.
A portion of Tammany Hall, New
Turk, have organised an anti-Kelly
movement. ,
Trnns are very few localities through
out Hie Stake that have not been reached
by smallpox.
Mu. Ort u, of Indiana, pnikwhsl
against playing second fiddle in the
Committee on Rules.
A ballot-box staffer, in Philadelphia,
received on New Year's day, six months
in the Penitentiary.
Mr. Fiucniatcx J. I’hiluhi has as
sumed the duties of Private Secretary
to President Arthur.
♦ —~ 4
JtmoE Cox believes that a great, c.iu.-
inal is a great thing—and to be treated
with consideration, too.
Th* provisions of the naturalisation
treaty with Atnoffoa have finally l»een
extended all overlfftpnany.
Mbs. Langtby, whose eyes are said to
be very delicious and eloquent, is earn
ing SSOO a week on the stage. ‘
Govxbnoh Long, of Massachusetts
tn in lavui ur women sunnigv ana mA
abolition of capital punishment.
Tiikrb were 12,479 more doatha than
births in New York City the past year,
The difference in 1880 was 4,401.
Empkbok William, of Germany, on
New Year, received over 1,000 congratu
latory telegrams, some of them from
America.
Tub Mormon missionaries in England
are having a hard time of it. Pick
pockets got after them and robbed two.
of their numbers.
Hon. Thomas L. Jambs, ex-Postmaster
General, has assumed the duties of the
Presidency of the Lincoln National
Bank, New York.
An Ohio Senator says there is little
difference lietween the two leading
political parties and the fight is now
chiefly for patronage.
StxTKKN out of twenty-one Massa
chusetts towns reports smaller debts
than one year ago. That is at least one
good feature about 1881.
Two hundred and fifty thousand dol
lars were expended to make the Atlanta
Ex(>oaitiou a success, and ttw receipts
came very nearly np to that amount.
Duanro 1881 Judge Lynch disposed
of twenty-five lives, nineteen being
negroes, and one, in Colorado, being an
innocent man, mistaken for the crim
inal.
Lsnr dressmakers who go to Wash
ington to supply the upper crust with
material made outside of the District,
are required hereafter to take ont a
license.
It m pretty well remembered that
there was nothing funny alxmt the trial
of the assassin of I*resident Lincoln, tent
it seems that American humor is now in
the ascendency.
Ths Alliony (N. Y.) Journal goes for
Vennor with its- gloves off. He deoerves
it every bit. We predict that the Ven
nor rimoose, hereafter, will baa dead
weight on the market
Hon. Amdbbw Williams, of Burling
ton. Vt, made bis wife a Christmas gift
of $50,000. The point about this is, the
money was kept in the family «nd is
safe oat of the reach of creditors.
Ths crop fadurea of 1881 are equally
liorns by the producer and consumer.
While the one has littte or nothing to
sell, the other is cotnpslted to pay sa
advanced pnee for everything he gets.
A Naw You Judge baa dwwted ilia t
1 to puff cigar smoke m a man’s fare is Mv
sault and battery. Ws presume H so
wounding with intent to kill (at some
other time) to do the same thing to a
woman.
Oscar Wildb is a blonde young man,
with flowing locks, little blue eyes and a
pnpninent jaw, and itandu six-foet-two.
What is more, he will lecture for g3OO a
night, and oonsMera that yon are getting
off pretty cheap at that
Tua Cardinal Archbishop of Rouen,
who has recently returned to Paris from
Romo, urges the Italian* to choose
another capital and leave Rome to the
I'ope, in order to avert the necessity of
his departure from that city.
Tire cable announces that J. R.
Keene's Foxhall, and Lorillard’s Iro
quois, Gerald and Aranza are among the
entries for the city and suburban handi
cap Foxhall and Iroquois are also en
tered for the Epeom and Ascot gold
cups.
Marton L. Dow is the name of a fe
male stock broker in Philadelphia, and
Harriet 8. Dunning ia the name of
another female who is {wosecntiug her
up the charge of swindling. Wo say,
give woman her rights, and she will do
the thing np for all the world just like
nwi do.
t Prbswknt Anrin a ia down on the
interminable invasions of Maryland
delegations and says the thing must be
stepped. If further persecuted by the
friend* of those seeking office he will
mniu' a public announcement refusing
to receive importunate visitor* at the
White House.
Thx Temperance Colonization Society
of Canada intends to establish a colony
total abstainers on a large scale. A
million acres.of government land have
been secured for the purpose, and txmple
wfao hate alcohol are invited to settle on
it, the farms being sold at slightly lee»
than the established price
(Patti and Theodore Thomas and Gary
and Pendleton and the Cincinnati news
paper*, altogether, succeeded in getting
up a firet-dlass row. and all because
Thomas asked Patti to take a drink of
brandy out oi a bottle, and Patti felt in
—» u>r> ,
when she went on the stage, and Cary,
who hadn't been stopped by the bottle
arrangeasent, had flopped herself into
Patti's seat. We trace the whole matter
to the bottle of brandy.
In nisNsw Year’s sermon, Rev. Henry
Ward Boocher stated that anfflfcai. who
inrverted one dollar intended for the
education of children should bo gibbeted
a* a criminal, and he concluded by ask
ing, what would be said of a man who
made the loss of virtue a condition of
giving, place, and what punishment
could be found for such a miscreant ? At
a meeting of the New Brooklyn Board of
Education, a few day* later, the remark*
were read, and a motion was made that a
committee of three lie appointed to visit
Beecher, and ask him for the informa
tion on. which he based hi* remarks. Ths
motion, being ont of order, was over
ruled, but will probably come up again.
Oscar L. Baldwin, late cashier of the
wrecked Mechanics’ Bank, of Newark.
N. J., has filed his answer to the appli
cation of the Receiver for a permanent
inj auction restraining him from dispos
ing of his property on the ground that
he had applied the bank funds to bis
own use, in which he demes that any
part of the banks money was ever im
properly diverted to his own use, and
rrplaias in detail how the several fundn
with which ho is charged with transfer
ring to his own use came into his posses
sion. He tells, in a long narrative, the
true story of his life, bow he began work
in the bank as messenger, rose to be
cashier, and finally, in 1872, was induced
by the representations of Christopher
Nugent, of Nugent A Co., morocco
manufacturers, to extend his line of
credit io the amount of $147,000. He
says he concealed thia fact from the
Directors, and that Nugent, on learning
this, used it to force him to continue the
loans until tbs time of the failure, when
they amounted to $2,400,000.
I—U. . .. - ...l"™
I sautes of Almshouses.
There is a prevalent idea that the
almshouses, for the most part, shelter
the unhappy and guiltless poor, wbot|
nnmereifui disaster has followsd fast
ami fallowed faster until it has chased
them into this last refuge- -people who
have come from vine-covered cottage*,
or tidy rooms up one flight of stairs in
tenement bouses, with a Hj Bible on
tbe table sod a pot of flowers in the
window ; or even from luxurious homes
desolated by commercial panics. A* a
matter of fact, the great majority of
American indoor paupers belong to what
are called the lower etassse, and seek
tbe almshouse not because of oommer
rial disaster, but because of very com
mon vises.
It is said that Lamdsesr never painted
a full-grown cat. Ho painted kittens
nod •• left tbe rest to nature. ”
t rriXD THE DOO.
Th. mln ml nn ih.fnr.nt Srxnn.n,
Ths hoar of tw-lm had ttal,
The 4<w «*• Shsiusd on ta ih« ban>,
Hnr father was In b»J
Th. hslress, to hl* mind, bs'd won.
So Is UkaH hs Mid :
1 Oh, tetwssnd bond* Ibsl HI oall silos
hsr dear p* Is dead I "
rtassßO* was clianeM <a that front Bien;
Hs.lucUv» vtsionakM,
Tta do* was Mriu> from Urn bare,
Her pa was out of bad.
Ths nM man ahooM, “ Sick ht»i, Ball; •
min whlaaad fworl th* «*ta;
So did . dab th* old tuna throw
iUatruak him co th* pats.
H. f<ol Iwsdirm* upon ths walk,
H» fall tbaosnlus tat.
A t>i«w frmn nt h's hlndsr jart-
A large niouthlul of steak.
Hs dreamed of goMea pounds no more,
But nmmd upon the hssd;
And when that swain would fain all down
Hs wished her pa was dead.
Attack on the Idol of Juggernsst.
An sttsck has boon made upon ths
idol of Juggernaut, at Pooree, ths most
•acred shrine in India, by a body of
fanatics.
The rioter*, who numbered twelve
men and three wornun, and were almost
in a state of nudity, succeeded in en
tering the temple, and tried to foroe
their way into the inner reoeeson. Al
though upwasd of 1,000 pilgrim* were
present, they were not expelled without
a severe struggle, in the oourse of which
one intruder was trampled to death.
The rest were arrested, and sentenced
to three mouth's imprisonment.
The inquiry showed that they belonged
to asst of Hindoo dissenters lately
founded in the Humbulpore district, and
known as Kumbhupatia* from the fact
that the follower* Wear ropes of bark
around their waists.
They allege that their religion wls re
vealed to sixty-four persons in I(W4 by a
got! incarnate, whom they style Aleknew
amy—that is, the Lord—whoso attri
bute* can not be described iwerriting.
They believe in the existence of the
300,000,000 of Hindoo deities, tut do
not reepect their qnsges, saying it fa im
posaible to represent a Supreme Being .
whom no brie has ever seen. Tliey are
subdivided lute throe daises, two of
which renounce the world anil make no
distinction of caate, while the third lead
a family life. Their habit* are said to
be very filthy, and, like seme Eurojiean
loots, they take no modtoinu in illnere,
out rely addy on divine hdp.. Their
attack on the Pooree temple was
prompted bv the belief that if the Jug-
ion, and the tlte«
lunbrsoe the truth.— Valmitta Gfuettc.
Tm Bexon* wore the meet faithful
alliee of the F.mjieror until the battle of
Ldpaio, the diief city of Baxony, though
not its capital. There at tho moment
that Napoleon a 60,000 was closing in for
its inevitable triumph ths Haxon corps
crossed the field and fired into their
former comrades. Thia decided the
contest. Napoleon, having made his
combination* ami despiaing tho un
wieldly enemy, had retired to eat his
tliuner in jteaoo. Ho was finishing a leg
of mutton, a meat whidi ho never ven
tured on until his duly of tho day was
done, when an aide delivered the fateful ,
message. ‘‘Well," ho remarked with
comjxwun', “one must never out until
his battle is won. Now we shall have
tho whole work to do over to-morrow. I
shall never eat mutton again, vola tout."
The next day he did indeed worst tho
over-confident enemy, but ho didn't
crush .him, a* in the glorious day* of
Wagram, Austerlitz and Jena, and while
his losses couldn’t be replaced, the
swarming levies of Austria, Russia,
Prussia, Bavaria, Haxony and the Rhine
-paid by British gold—renewed tbem
aolves dally, until finally, though they
met nothing but defeat, by sheer force
of number*, like Grant at Petersburg,
the Emperor's victorious legious were
fought to a mere guard. Then came the
fateful day of Fontainebleau, when ths
man who bad mastered Europe alwlioated
his place and relinquished his glorious
mission.
Nix Hundred Victims of Whisky.
The Corwin during her voyage to
Alaska landed on St Lawrence island,
having orders to investigate tbe whole
sale starvation of the natives. At the
first village at which they landed all were
dead ; so also st the second, where fifty
four dead bodies were counted, nearly
all full-grown males. At another place
IWpereona—men, women and children—
were dead. At tbe next settlement,
twelve dead bodies, sml at the following
thirty were found. All the tahabitanta
op the north side of the island, where
Whisky traders sold liquor, are dead
net One escaping The general atarva
tam occurred two years ago last winter.
Bines then the presence- of the Ccrwm
in Uia Arctic has brrium up this inhu
man whisky trading. The empty whisky
kega are seen strewn all about. The
total number of dead bodies found on
Ht. Lswrence island was over (WO. The
survivors say that white traders from
Honolulu sold whisky, which the natives
bought snd got drunk remaining so
during the season tor laying in their
winter supply of walrus tod seal Nan
Franoieoo Alta.
Tw Imperial Library at 8t Peters
burn contains over 1,0)0.000 volumes.
£XgtbX-ures<rf die inatitntion
b Voltaire's library, many ofthovul
nmea of which bear tbe former owner’s
auxograph notes. A psripstetic tectare
upon ill* library, its contents tod asso
b (Or* 11 twins s wesk (ones ou
Hundsv). which usually secures • mueb
mtereriad group of listeores, snd sug
gests the
be toUawea with benefit to the
jpublio eiee where.
T ““JirtS'»WS““
NUMBER 4.
HUMORB OF THI RAT.
A Fsvrr of the battle-field—grape.
A IxiumvTLLi belle has in tier pariar a
lieautifui embroidered motto, " B Harl
bus, yum,yum."
Last word* of the balloonist: "TVs all
up with me." Last words of the got Hag:
••It’s ail down with me."
Thkm are some days when you oan'k
Jay np a cent, and other days when you
can’t gat hold of a cent to lay np.
It is more blessed to give than to re
ceive, when a kick from a Na 10 boot is
the question at issue. *9fm«bsmriMe
/Zeraftt.
CtisTOMxn—" You say that those fig
ures are life sire? My dear air, they
»oem very small.” Artist—“ PerMotty
oomot, sir; you know • life is short’"
Why doth th* Imllvb loJwb aaaav
Improv* each ablnln* laisiris
acratch her head from atom ta sl(S«f
B*t*um thrn'a mHllaaa ta IL
-Am FroaHM* Wtayr
“Yas," exclaimed Brown, “yea al
ways find me with a pen in my hand
I'm a regular penholder, my boy. "Let's
seo,”salii Fogg, musingly, “a penholder
ia usually a stiok, isn't it?—.Horton
TYwiacripf. .
Twiasi* tvlakla, dlmlaaU** ijf» si SBkaiar
j^oaeeaastlßs;
tnr-lllalo upon your eomposlUoa,
situated abor* thl* obtaia >*barnlil *1 aacb *a *M
tau*,
lu almllltudtan inlnlUalmslrry»uUiaml<wi*( Bar
hou in lb* bin* aaipyroaa.— OU OU* Darrla*.
“ No," said the charming actress to *
her devoted lover, “ No, Charite, I won’t
marry you; but you osa havs the privi
lege of {laying for all my little rappam
•nd carriages after the theater, and
you'll be envied by all the boya. That
ought to satisfy you."
'• But, yonr honor," says tho aenaad,
“thia is a ease of sutetda.” EHa
honor— “7" The accused—“ Ha always
said he wrntod to commit suicide. Mri *
that he hadn't tho courage. Bo UME X
helped him I’* His honor—“ Bat why,
afterwards, di<) yon take his watahF* The
accused (with a shrug)— “ Why, beoouae
ho didn't need it any more I'—JVwnoA
paper. .
Tnmna was a little company at Mr.
Brown’s and tho youngest daughter, a
bright girl of seven, was talking to her
sister's beau. “ Why, Mr. Sydney,” she
said, loud enough for everybody to hear,
“you can talk real plain, can't you?"
“Os course I oan, Fanny. Did yoa
think I wasn’t old enough- to talk ’
plain?” “Yea,” she answered. “I .
thought so, for I heard you talklag 1®
sister the other night, and you Sept
saving, *Oo tweet ring, oat Oo
Mffiuow urtt-WW.
but you had a unpegiment in year
•pseck” Fanny was excused and Mr.
Sidney was carried out on a shovel.—
Aiteuticnvillo Herald.
'* I coms over to see about your boy,”
arid a neighbor last evening. “Ha’s
very troublesome about my house. He
has been throwing rotten apples into my
front yard and calling my wife ’Old
Molly Grnbs.’“ “And I was going
over to sec you about your boy, was
the rejoinder, •’ Ho chalked my wood
shod all over with a picture jot my wife
driving mo out of the back door with a
kettle of water in one hand and a broom
in tbe other,” “Is that sol Then Igo
in for civil service reform within gam
own families.” The boys never knew
what they were “ licked ,r for that night
—New Haven Ji emitter.
■_■!= u m
Brother Gardners's Philosophy.
“ Doan’ seek to make angels of r«-
relvea,” quietly began Brother Gardner
as the meeting opened. “In de fust
place din am no sort o'ksntry fnr areßfo. .
an’ in de next place you would be
mighty lonesome. De rfion or woman
who l-ecomes so sweet to' soft an* good
dot dey expect ebery minit to rias un to.
fly doaui’ take so much oomfort as folks
who feel dot it will bee ohm share to
git inter heaven. A ieetle wish (fin ass
>icklea a man an’ makes him keep all de
K-tter. When I trade mutes wid a man
I prefer dat he ahouid suspect ma wid
an intenshun to make an ebon $25 by de
operaahun. When I deal wid a butetoar
I like to feel dot be will wort in to’ ounces
of bone fur ebery right ounces of meat
if I doeu' watch him. I like to hare de
bootmaker tell me dat American cowskta
am French calf, an’ I am pleased when
do sto’ clerk warrants to' cent oaliker to
wash lik<- aheet-iron. De man who am
not a ieetle wicked has no chance to teal
sorry : no uae fpr prayer ; no need of
churches. He cannot eay to a toßow
man ; * I wronged you—l in •oily—
“De man who neber sins makes a
poor nex’ doali neighbor. Do women
who keeps feelin* of bar shoulders to see
if wings hare started makes a poor
mother an’ a wnse housewife. If you
have neber injured a man an gate to
him an’ axed his pardon to’ ma> up
you down’ know what real hepptoess
am. If your conscience has neber drib
en you to prayer you can’t feel de goeo
nase of de Lewd. My advice to you am
to be a leetle wicked-oot 'nnf to steke
men fear at hate you, but just ’uni to
keep you convinced dat you must hrin
to support churches an’ pay ohm attest
shun to what de preachers say er pgß*U
be left behta' when de pwroeshna etarte.
ft .
Loan Dubby has tan men servants in
ths boute and about forty mere dsreea
tics feeding drily at his board. • B are I S
tag tomorrow he and his wife aborid
agree to struggle along on SIOO,OOO a
year hocouldsavo at tenet (MUM a
year; white were the Dakas ed Woet
mtaoter, Devonshire and Bedtad to de
likewise their savings woald be MB
greeter BuppoetagLesd Darby to cm
at this rate for thirty years what aa ■*
miibonatre be woald b leant s I