Columbia advertiser. (Harlem, Ga.) 1880-18??, February 28, 1882, Image 1

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■■ ■ _ jl w. vwna, n»*«r « r«Mhk r , lau a. ■nn», pr* Rr t* ( . r VOLUME .Hl ’ SEWS GLEANINGS. There ere 1 JOO blacks aad 113 white in the (jgofgfa penitentiary. The Miamfefepi State-Grange fayora the agrieultaral lien igw. The Atilfeta City Qmuteil has vdtod lis l oob , for®hp purchase of a'bita for a «»y f**- y Jlh at Rich mond, V*., WjH hare a chime of Mb to awMr.ooo. A co*BD*ny,-*tath a capital of U«\ 000 hts bote Mjfssired to ratroduoe tpe rieettfc light at Cetambu-, Ga ■'omwierinnvr Hawkins of Tennessee m making arraagaenenta fbr esperiman tai tests in the eflbet of commercial far tiliaere on the crop* in every county i* the Stale. Soare Chicago capitalist* are jiegoti mnrjor tiy putvtre**- 18,60<)acre* of landln flequachee county, Tenn., aa an iareatment It la well timbered and rite in coal. The marble quarry near Calhoun, Tenn, baa bcpa leased, and 100 steam drills will beoptealed there. A railroad will be built and other preparations ■ade for extensive quarrying. The Atlanta Constitution discover* in the fact that the Eagle, and Phoenix sills of ColMa»haa,Ga, last year earned 85 iter ceni.' on their capital (took, one of the moat overwhelming political tri. tbe tfoufe. Th railroad has compromised with SHlry FTCI. whom the passenger ecod off Madison last wearing his coat in the Tfae road paid 15,000 for thia treatiarion -efrpaatta .•HteLlhang in the waters around *X> ha* become 'a Urge and t (ijrt About 100 men • Cheriretorf in ng* every week: * sheet ttaaa-eiaoa w» has room was, found, hid in a pen of cotton seed near Athena, Ga. It seems the proprietor krpt a barrel secreted in thia pen. with rubber tube leading therefrom, and when a customer wanted his jug filled it was eaaly drawn. It was reported to a rev enue officer and broken up. , Atlanta Constitution: Columbus ia about to turn her attention to building a canal. According to all accounts it won’t be a difficult job. With canals is Augusta. Columbus, Macon and At lanta, Georgia will have eufficicu. :m proved water gower to run all the cotton ■ill ia the United State*. Bft, really, we don’t want all. We will be satisfied with just half. Columbus (Ga.) Times There were four bales of cotton brought to market yesterday from the plantation of Col. F. Terry, who lives near Waverly Hall, Harris county, that was grown and gathered in the year 1860, naled with ropaa and have been reposing in his gin house ever since. He was offered 47i •raw for it in 1885, bat would not aell brrsare be thought the revenue tax of S «ata per pound was unjurt, and he said to had rather burn the cotton than sub mt to rate injustice by the government. He had at the clone of the war upward ** 160 bales of eotton. and still has a 1 hv more iej(. te the Hunke Orta a Hew Salt. people think that snakes only * < d their akin* at certain season nal the J**. ’ mid the keeper “That's » turn- If they are well fed anti k<-pt yt warm they change their costa “*•* every eight weeks through the St" “ Does it pain them ?" “ Not a °f H Ton aee the akin of a snake' *— act increase in sue as the reptile P®**. •" with us. While the old akin * F*** 1 !* —Miler by degrees, a new one " fcnntag underneath, and the other k fate dry. When it is ready to 1 A Vi rasas around the lips, and the •tele rube itself against the earth or ■• rote tn the catgv, and turns the np over th* eye and the lower j»art "re the threat Tbee it eommenre* to gte around the gjass case, all the time itself against aosnethirg until ’•'retire akm is worked off. Homeumrs t** takes three day* ; occasionally they Ad of th* tee* why an oe in a kv I don’t believe they have a bit " For *0 I feed them and •* «v them, they would** lief bite n><- G®7 riraagar. I earn handle a good «< tea** safely, but it s oniy the o* tbs thugnot that they woo t tAst they rant get the tea*.— M Hestea*. Mr. Waggle* jyy*’ y* ■KSKB' terne halter last feat 1 baaed you and y-r high weed, re fprererlst » -a** Wsggira (a reprobate-- tends, WOO it» More Hka low •***s•- I sails ft." tWmwhfa Mdiwfeet, TOPICS OF THE DAT. Thcsmax is said to be building Jus teaom for 1884, I’avti—Cmomnati Mateo Hall—twr Mbte-416,000. Poa military reasons England will op pose the Channel tunnaL Tea Pop- recommends that the pro pussd Hpanuh pilgrimage be abandoned. —■ Gxs. Shxbhux favors the compulsory of all officers sixty-two yean “ ** B ’ . Cottox returns indicate for 1881 ths to" of 300,000 bales by ravages of ths caterpillar. Thb English exports to .America fbr 1881 were 20 per sent fess than those oi previous years. Bixcb Sullivan pounded Ryan he is •aid to have had three offers of marriage. He’s a great masher. Ths appointment of policewomen on the New York force is now asked for by the woman sufFragista. • Mas. Gabfibld will not reply to Mrs. ‘ Scoville’* letter, appealing in behalf of the aesaaun of the President. Thk address to the throne in the Hous.' of Common has been adopted, thu» sustaining the government’s Irish Thomas Nasi, the well-known carica tnnst, has a plethora of money, so we are informed, and purpose* retiring to private life. Tin Fire Commissioner* of Eostoa have ordered fire-escape* to be supplied by all manufacturers employing five or mwe hands. Thk Prussian Budget ia made to a sur plus of 000,000. This is chiefly due to the working of the railroads bought State. * Prfrsro-Bt are being ftnported from Europe, and New York dealer* are some what disgusted. Buch invasions inter fere with “corner*." Cuba, just now, is undergoing a severe drouth, to the great injury of the sugar oane. We might spare her any quantity of water and not suffer either. " ' Bblli Born, the Confederate oorres reepondent, spy, and blockade runner, lives now in Corsicana, TAm, and fre quently delivers a lecture or two. Thb insurance on Barnum’s baby ele phant u iSBOO.OOQ. The insurance on the average Congressman u $5,000. Differ ence in favor of the babe, $295,000. GbKat distress exists among the peo ple of Sweden, the mildness of the weather preventing the transportation of produce by means of sleighs, as usual. Genxhal Cabb, against whom Gen eral Wiloox prefer**! chargee of a se rious character, has been released from custody, the President refusing to en tertain the charges. ♦ 1 — Fraxct seems not inclined to rooon vene th’e Monetary Conference April i, 'owing to s desire to avoid another fail ure in her efforts to secure a uniformity of view* on the pert of the Power*. Thb Government Printing Office, in spite of the scarcity of money and the agitation about the change of manage ment, is at work st a tremendous rate turning out books, pamphlets, and other printed stuff by the ton. *” Bxxatom Hill, of Georgia, who has submitted to a third operation for can cer in the mouth, reports that hi* con dition is now most favorable, and ex preseea great confidence that a perma nent cure ha* been It aftbabs that, after all, the portrait the temperano. ladiea had painted of Mr*. Hayes to hang up in the White Hoose, will not be used for that purpose. Premdent Arthur feeling inclined to de ■a be pfeaww about the matter. Thb State of Pennsylvania baa begun salt sgmte sevrateen railroads iwcanse of their failure to return to the Auditor tbter annual report within thirty dap after the expiratsoo of the financial year. The pevlty foe each road is $5,000. Mb. ftoovnxß propom* to lecture w xanreu locshtaaoo the sab>oct “ M«T erwPobttre refer intedsßtally to th* tml. e— h mm** that Egypt ta anwtam- Tte Devot*d the Interests of Columbia Cousty ate the State of Georgia. HARLEM, GEORGIA. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 18S2 Khedive spends but $600,000 a year, whereas his predeeearor spent *10,000,- 000. He ha* but one wife, and grants wwiiMMoar to aU rehgiow* tiana. Pent and Minnie Hater both got laryngih* durfeg th* Opera Fratival at Cintennati, and that's why thing* got ra terribly mixed up. All prima-dontw grt laryngitfs-bnoe in * while, and those who do not hereafter complain of laryn gitis occatemaUy are not what you might call great wafblere. i ' w» Gnmax. estuaatee W toe Department of Agriculture of crop* of 1881, a* com pared with thoae of 1880, show* a reduc tion of 81 per cant, in corn, 22 per cent, in wheat, 21 per cent in rye, and 9 per cent in barley. The total value of crop* In 18811*81,465,000,000. against $1,861,- 000 in 1680. Thb late Lord Beaconfield paid £4,- 000,000 for England's 177,000 share* in the Hue* OanaL Owing to the recent wild sjiecutativo mania in France, the price of the ahare* wa* forced up to £l4O, and if Her Msjeety's Government had cleared out at that figure, it would have realised £24,780,000, or a profit of £20.- 780,000. Thb Memphia .Appeif aay* a new day baa dawned fox the South, and that in ita light prejudices are vanishing, and with them the hatreds and the narrow ideas of the past, and that intelligence, reason and common sense are ready to make available the resouroee which science and experience have brought within reach. M Abott two-thirds of th* oountie* in Indiana have been antberixed to take olwervations of the weather, and aa soon as the instrument* and supplies are for warded by the General Giverument the service will be inaugurated. Indian* will be the first Btata to make these observations by oounttas, although other State* are moving in th* matter. . ■ e j - - ■ v t Aim persona, including officer* of the law, are opposed to the brutality of prus fighting, astetoe newspapers of ttretand have a great deal to say against it, but all newspapers take th* pain* to publish detailed accounts of such affairs, and with hardly a single exception, readers are not satisfied until they know just how each rourd came out, and who was finally whipped. Pnor. Hbxbt 8. V*xxoßhaa published • card in the Cincinnati Commercial declaring that he ia a tuccea* as a weather prophet. However, instead of predict ing weather a year in advance, he will hereafter print a monthly paper at Mon treal which shall contain predictions, weather maps, etc., for the ensuing month. Thus you see when a man gets so he can't tell the truth, he turni to editing a newspaper. A bbutb, by name John Wilson, of Taunton, Mass., has Ixsen in the habit of tying a heavy rope around the neck of hi* grown-up daughter and dragging her around after him. For thia he was fined ten dollar*, and the girl paid it with her own money. She ia one of the Chris tians who return* good for evil, although when it comes right down to carrying out the doctrine, it don't seem to be just the Hung aocordiag to the common way of thinking. w iLLrwrxATrvß of the destitute condition of j>eople in Southern Illinois, a cor reH[xmdent writing from Saline County •ays: “In thia countv nothing wa* raised, not even grass. There are farm er* who are as near stavation aa they well can come without actually starving. They are 1 iring on anything they can con vert into food to keep soul and body to gether. Their situation might tee im agined, but one would has* to aee it to fully understand it." I ■— At Lafatxttb, Indiana, an old soldier named John Baker was married to Mr*. Ann* Bmith, who had been nursing him (or some time past, and to whom he ewed considerable of * board bill. Baker knew his death was but a few days dis tant, and he wished to reward his kind benefactrsra by leaving her the pension which he had for several year* been re viving from the government. He died the day following fee ceremony, and tbe widoV, it ■ said, has, besides the monthly penatoo, a claim far 82,000 back pens Mu. Chablht W*K>n, tbe colored boot black, who saved two men at the recant New York fire by climbing a telegraph pole aad euiteng a■»• emved a medal frosn tbe Amerieaei Hu mane Society wtoeb makes bta* a eol- ia- <Ka 11*0 mnnr brureu. A*otbsr [ gold medal wiD be shortly given to bun. 1 He baa reeaived us money $W aste the | Humane RoeSsty wtfl prresat tom wife a I prana Be baa esrred «gb* s——lß fee ami at Gape May, for tores eum mras past. His father ia an African, hi* mother a Btoux Indian, Rev. Tsxmsob’h charge that tbe father of Bobi. J. Ingereoll, in life, fed and clothed hi* family sparing) v and “never •poke afend word to his wife,’’ has re ceived fee attention of Mr. John F. In gereoil, xW Waukesha County, Wiscon sin, who has printed a moat scathing re ply. Ha says that hia father was a asin istar on 8600 a year, and had to live sparingly, that he was kind to hia fam ily, and aa to Robert, while he did not believe doctrines the father taught, was 'Mb good and obedient boy as he •▼« kiaw.’ Mr. Ingereoll endeavor* to sham* the Rev. Talmage for going to the grave aa a ghoul, to tear up the ashes of tbe white-haired dead. . r ♦ Bfbgumtob-h in Cincinnati Opera Festival tickets were gloriously atuck— some to the extent of $1,500, and others for lees amounts, but all lost more or I*m in their speculation. This is as it should be. Whan a 10l of men buy up with a view to securing a '• corner ” at the expense of the msseea—extorting money from thoae who can least afford it—it is but justice that they should lose, and that Seavily. One Hebrew cittaen’ who had bought reserved Mata heavily at a big advance, stood about the door, tale at night, offering hia tickets at 35 cento apfece, and not ope of them had coat him tinder $7, and some of them aa high a* $24. People, rather than pat ronise him, ahoved him aside and paid $1 for ganeral admiaaiou, went in and stood up, ao outraged were their feeling* the affair. We never like to see persona IdMng ’money, but sometimes it is a good thing for the general public for would-be oppressors to suffer se verely thl truita of indiscretion. A Tovonxo incident ooouired at ths Midlothian mines in Virginia, the other night Superintendent Dodds mounted s coal car and addressing the wailing throng of women and children around him, said- “My poor friend*, it grievM me to state to you that for the present our search for the bodies of those you know aufir loved Wfll Ewve to -bwtibero doned. You know what fire in a coal mine means, and it may take months of watching to subdue it We will doe* the pit now.” The speaker's voice quiv ered with emotion. When he finished a beautiful little girl of fourteen years, Annie Crowder, the only daughter of one of the victim*, uttered a piercing aaream end rushed to the month of the pit, crying: “Oh, do not leave my dead papa to burn town there. Let me get into the cage and go down after him. Let me eave him.” The strong arms of the miner* held her back as the fragile thing tried to make her way to the cage, and mor* than one blackened face was made blacker as the hand went up to wipe away the tears. Men sobbed aloud and turned away to conceal their emotion. The little girl, finding her progress barred, swooned at the mouth of the pit. Wernes’* laaeuliae Idols. Every man who fills an effective pub lic position ha* an especially good op portunity of moraliring upon feminine frivolity and frailness A liandeome actor, * good-looking popular preacher, a charming singer, finds the women go down before him mnch as the ladies do liefore the hero of Patience, As very High Church young ladies dekght in standing up out of reverence to very young curates when they enter the chnxvii. so there arc many woman who would be charmed to go down on their knee* when one ct the heroes of society enter* a drawing-room. Good ipoka are not always neoeaeary, though aa a rule Women prefer their idols to be hand eome. Fineseive notoriety will do in stead. The men who, with no personal charm*—with, aa in some recent in stances, a poeithte unpieaaantnees abont them—-go through society worshiped and adored by the women, must indeed be inclined to adopt the true GuvLiv -Ing»toman view of the other aex. Three ladiea who sneak after the man of mush room notoriety, imploring him to come to their afternoons, begging him for his photograph or a copy of his poeoM, re an antograph letter, re a lock of his hair —must appear to him very “ pore little beasts ” indeed. Bwt however he mar despise them, he cen, to a certain extent, understand their motive* They want other women to aee him talking to them, to meet him at their hoaaae, to be aware that he baa written letter* to them and given them bis photograph. The ide* theee entertain must be that they obtain a second-hand distinction by be ing associated in people's minds with the idol of the hoar. Women have from all time regarded it as sufficient booor for theeaeel vee to be fee fevonire of greet men. Thia ia but a modern rest denag of the old story. They have mad* it tbe faetetou to ait in adorning etn lea, aroax*} their hero, and gaae upon bim with meek eyre Ci wonder, much ea if be were a Parstan patace, and they to* haasbie stores. Rot tbare ■ none of the charm of danger m tikis, and perhaps not ranch extaesasat; ire it ia all done in public, aad has beacaee a proasmrat festers in the prewraasm* as moat dr* *iag -roam eaterteraSMSkta. -wZowton A Cklcago GtrFs InH. “ Doe*your father keep a dog?" These words, uttered with the rimpl* earneatoem that showed how deeply their full meaning wa* felt by him woo spoke them, fell from the line of Ethefbert Dooley aa he looked tenderly in tbe fair, apiritualte face of Rosalind Mahaffv They were at the matinee, and a dull pein stole into the girl** heart, as aha shifted the last caramel in the box over to the starboard side at her pretty mouth. “Ethelbert doe* not love me,” the said softly to herself, while a look of pain whitened for an instant with a deathly palter, th* pm fepotad face, and the shapely hand grasped more tightly the dainty silk parasol that served alike to keep off ran and wind from the tithe form. “All gone," ahe murmured, sadly—" every blamed one'* —feeling earoestiy with her taper fin ger* in every corner of the empty box, and then a look of sweet contentment overspread her feature*, aa ahe plneed her hand in the pocket at her aaalakia saoqne, only to be succeeded by a dull, dared expression of grief and anguish She had tost her chewing gum. “• “You look ill, darling," whispered Etlielbert, aa the curtain want down at titeotoaeef the first act; “fey some of these," handing oat a neper at peanut*, With a glad look of tore in her beau tiful eye*, Rosalind turned to him and said: “I can never doubt you again, darling, I would follow yon to th* end el th* world."— CAtoage THbuiw. “Don’t Ten Believe Him. The Arabs tell a story to show how a mean man’s philosophy overshoots itaelf. Under the reign of the first Oalip there was a merchant in Bagdad oqoa-'ly rich and avaricious. One day ho had bar mined with a porter to cany home fre him a basket of preoelain vaaee for ten pare*: Aa they went along he said to tbe man: “ My mend, you are young and I am old; von can still earn plenty; strike a pare from your hire." “ Willingly I" replied tbe porter. Thia request was repeated again and again, until, whan they reach the house, the porter had only a single para to re ceive. Aa they west up stair* the mer chant said: “If you will resign tbe last para, I will give yea three pi*oee of advice.” “Be it ao,” said the prefer. “ Well, then," said the merchant, “if any on* tells you it is better to bo faeri inn than f Mature, do pot baliasa Lin, Ts ■ay one be-poct* than rich, do not believe him. If any one tells you it is better to walk than ride, do not believe him." “ My dear air,” replied the astonished porter, “I knew these thing* before; but if you will listen to ma, a will give you such advtoe m you never heard. The merchant turned round, and the porter, throwing the basket down the staircase, said to him: “ If any one tells you that one of your vase* is unbroken, do not lielieve him." Before the merchant could reply the porter made hia escape, thus punishing nis employer for his miserly greediness Ear and Brain. The mibetance of the following state ments with regard to the ear and brain ia from a paper in the New York Medi cal Journal, by Dr. Andrew*, surgeon to the Manhattan Eye and Ear Hospital, New York. Ear disease* are much worse than those of the eye. They are a principal cause of deaf mutism. They are ano among the moat frequent diseases of ohildhood,being developed in diphtheria, whooping-congh, scarlet fever, meaale*. •mall-pox, tvphoid fever, intiaonz* mul tubercular alfectiona of the lungs. Indeed, a simple cold In tbe head re sore throat rapidly spreads along the umconx membrane of tlie noatnle and pharynx to that of the ear, Haya the Ute Prof. Clark, of Harvard University, “ Ho imj*>rtant ia proper attention to the ear during anil after acute exanthemata (diaeaaea attended with rash) that a t >hvrician who treats such oaeea, and neglrata to give thia atteotioo, cannot be said to porform bi* dnty to hi* pa ti.int." But the most aeriou* fact about these cfou-aaee grow* out of the very intimate ootmection between the ear and the twain. Moat at the bony wall which contains the internal ear Be* to direct rootact with the membrane of the brain. Home part* of the wall are ao thin m to be tranapareat. There are also open ing* through it for the passage of nerve* and blood-veseete, and often parts of it are wanting through arreet of dtevalop ttxa&L Hence, purulent infiammatioos of the ear extend *° fe* brain—th* more ao, the younger the child. Tbaae may sitnibur im/laniwiatuxi of tba membranes, inflammation of large vein* and alisosMM of the brain. Nearly ooe-h*H of the latter are due to thia craw, chronic infUmmaUon of the ear-showing itself perhsps only tn * alight headache—lieing vastly more dsagerotm than acute.— I'onfA'e Osw*- ttatoon. A toumo, member of th* bar thought bo would adopt» motto fre himaeM, and, after much inflection, wrote fa lamp* tet ter*, and posted up againet th* wall, tbe following. “ i'ulqw," which may be irauriated. “ Let every one have hfa own." A countiy citant, coming to, ex» preaaod hinxxeH much graMed with the taaxtai, but added, “Yoa don’t apati M nghl. " “fcadeed! Th«n bow ooght it toLsepritr Tbe 'em qatak." A tun tuj ba erased, bet wife ths erarare gore pert of th* csiguiai taafewa. Obareatav can tenet tutet a stain wife out aome ton*. "“S wash- number 10. THI BLACK BKATM. O*wn W Um ristDiae* ‘ It ia generally supposed, asps feu Chicago TY-iicjite, th**fe* isuMioS tl the low. land* of th* Euphrates river is the only mum of fee oufeaualt M tike plague, re black death. They are a een tributing, but not th* ostly oauan Tbe real cauM of the peetiletM* bM bass known for years to th* Fenian and Turkish Government*, tati fee* luN* done nothing toward ita proreßSon. The black death ia not aa uncoaunon dteeaea in that at Mesopotaod* Mm aretfe weat from Bagdad, Iwtdnra fee right shore of the EiiphMtes and fee ferfem desert. It hM made Ha regular MMar auoe there ever sinew the year 1871, be tween fee Matifee al Deaaaabnr aad June. In Nedßff or Medashed AM. is tbe grave of All, tbe son-in-law of fee Prophet Mahomet. Fran three tends a desert road, marked out by fee bteaabal bones of camel* and human botaat, to the eo-calted Lake Euphrntaa, which re ceive* it* water through fee Hinitab canal. To the nrefewuet of thia take is situated the city of Karbeta, whsM to to be found the golden mosque aad th* grave of Huaacin, the son of Oriiph AU and the daughter of the Prophet. Thea* ti— -h— rrT m— F-TisiMir Titans* nf > the dreralfnl diaeree. To Nadfeff and Kerbeta the HhUtea, re religtooa follow ere of All and Hnaeeru. ahiafly Fewtoan, send the dead bedias of tbairlrtands and relative*, becauee they believe that to be buried near Hneeeia’a or All's grave will Maure their aoob oaetata admtoeton to paradia*. Caravan alter caravan, each camel loaded with two fait-covered coffin* <m each aide, aniue there daily . and deposit their gbMtly freight for in terment, which, during months of travel (rom the Persian hifhtande. has bean decomposing aad i* filling th* air with ita peetilaDtial odor. The coffin* are - placed in (hallow trench** aad ooreeed ■ with about *n inch re two of earth. Bat tliia ia not ail The whole country around Nedjaff hM beoouae on* vast graveyard, and, in ooneeqnsnee of the frequent floods occurring b the Eu phrates, all th* lands on both rides at the riv*r are inundated, fee light swear ing of earth is awept from th* coffins, which, being made of light material, fall to pteCMB t Mid thanaaillJKXß thoMNHIdB of ootpM* are taft rotting under the ran of an Oriental sun ® Tbe water* finally recede, re are gradually aberetoed by ths f soil, poiaoningall tbewriteiafetacoosaj. a«nd tfml than—ndf ot Uwiir to bs bttrfed near the mve of their reophet Ifebtot, which ia also near Kerbeta. Bwrids tita** 4 caravan* three arrive flotilla* el pilgrim boat* loaded with a ary ass on the Eu phrates byway of th* Haanswat teaarib and the Bar-i-Nadjetf. No* only are they filled with this pestiferous toetaht, but the coffin* are even hung ootoide « the boats, loading them down to the wa- • tar's edge. The constant arrival of tlieee caravans and flotillas with tbafr ’ freight of decaytag human scream, aad added to thia the caretaM burial, mart be regarded m the cause of tbe outbreak of the plague, and the fataitette nagM gencc at the Persian and Turktab Gov a enunento, which do not interfere until the disease hM become epidaMe, ex plains why it hM not been •upppreaed » during tbe test ten year*. For a lang time a special treaty hra been to uxtow anoe between there two Goveromsato • relative to the transportation of titaee oorp*M, but so far it has been a treaQ on paper only, Tbe people of Asaaem are in m much danger m tbe met of fee world. It ia about fene that the civil ised nation* of tbe earth should make this question of the trauepartaticu of oorpaM under an Oriental sun an inter national question, and sane tbe two Govemmento direetly mtareeted to exe cute the provtoiona of thrir treaty ia good faith. Tbe Uw at WeaKk. Thera ar* thousand* of rich awn who are not skinflints, who have tbe nputo tion of bring ao, b ernes they here never been known to have done any OMtal good with their oxmay. A man wheu* worth $60,000 ean do MfeTfe tadfe himself loved end reepeeted by aU udfe whom he aesnes fa contact, by the judioiooa expendftttr* of a thousand dol lar* fa <-barity, than by giving fee whole fifty thoosaad doitere attreheto dead. It seem* m though it would be afafety small eooeoiafeM to a .oOHnarirs toteare money to some abaritahte naem store death, and be ao coufeandsd dead feat be couldn't see tbe amitee of happtnare that hto gensroalto had created. Boppoae a milUoMto* who baa never had * kind word arid es Mm exaepi by fawning hypocrites, who hop* to ant some of Ma money, should lay emt a , beeutifol pack worth a arillion dollar*, red throw it open fro* to aU, with wrika, drive*, take*, shad* aad iiurjfetag - Me beret would be wanned up red feat bto day would betengfeened. Wouldn't every teokof feriusbavratikathoueaad dotiara to fa* man who bad so mash money ibaTlt made Mm reaadfeeul Aeeedt Wouldn't be bare mere ptoae ure than he would fa with a lawn aeowreF—lfaeAta dton. Taaan to « taccmgibte littte daeky down taWaebtagton, H« to » rears Ud, and htawktt alMmedMigaß tried kim by wMppteg Mm for fee feel half cf the <tay, aad hanging htae up to a bM and amoktag bfantheotbre Mm, brt fee | Il I A ‘r M sfi ' KPH i B WMMB*