Newspaper Page Text
VOLUME VIII.
■■ ■ : . ! > ■ . . I
Church Directory.
METHODIST.--Douai,isviLLE—First, th r
And fifth Sunday ’.
BaltSprimob .second Sunday, and Satur
before.
Midway—Fourth Sunday, and Saturday I
fore. W. R, BIOTE, Pastor i
Baptist—Dougiaxville, first and fourth Sun
days. Boy. K. B. Vaughn, pastor.
Masonic,
Douglasville Lodge, No. 289, F. A. M.,meets
on Saturday night before tlie first and third
Sundays in each month. J. R. Carter, W. M.,
W. J. Camp, Secy.
County Directory,
Ordinary—H. T. Cooper.
Clerk—B. N. Dorsett.
Sheriff—Henry Ward. i
Deputy Sheriff—G, M. Souter.
Tax Receiver—E. H. Camp.
Tax Collector—W. A. Sayer.
Treasurer—Samuel Shannon.
Surveyor—John M. Huey.
Coroner—F. M. Mitchell.
■UfBBIOB COURT.
Meets on third Mondays in January and Jul}
and holds two weeks.
Judge—Hon. Samson W. Harris.
801. Genl.—Hon. Harry M. Reid.
Clerk—S. N. Dorsett.
Sheriff—Henry Ward.
COUNTY COURT.
Meets in quarterly session on fourth Mon
days In February, May, August and November
and holds until all the eases on the docket are
called. In monthly session it meets on fourth
Mondays in each month,
Judge— Hon. R. A. Massey.
Sol. Genl.—Hon. W. T. Roberta.
Bailiff—D. W. Johns.
OKDINAHY’S COUBT
' Meets for ordinary purposes on first Monday,
*nd for county purposes on first Tuesday in
each month.
Judge—Hon. H. T. Cooper.
justioks coubts.
780th Diet. G. M. meets first Thursday in each
month. J. I. Feely, J. P., W. H. Cash, N. P.,
D. W. Johns and W. K. Hunt, L. C. i
788th Diet. G. M., meets second Saturday.
A. R. Botnar, J. P. f B. A. Arnold, N. P., 8. C.
Yeager, L. C.
784th Diet. G. M. meets fourth Saturday.
Franklin Oarver, J. P., 0. B. Baggett, N. P.,
J. C. James and M. 8. Gore, L. Cs.
1259th Dis!. G. M. meets third Saturdav. T. 1
M. Hamilton, J.P., M. L. Yates, N. P., 8. W.
Biggers, L.C., S. J. Jourdan, L. C.
1260th Dist.. G. M. meets third Saturday. N.
W. Camp, J. P.l W. 8. Hudson, N. P., J. A. I
Hill, L. C.
12715 t Diet. G. M. meets first Saturday. C.
C, Clinton, J. P. Alberry Hembree, N. P.,
1272nd Diat. G. M. meets fourth Friday.
Geo. W, Smith, J. P., 0. J. Robinson, N. P.,
1273rd Dist. G. M. meets third Friday. 'IW.
White, J. P., A. J. Bowen, N. P., W. J. Harbin,
1.. 0.
Professional
ATTORNEY AT LAW
DOUGLASVILLE, GA.
(Office in front roum, Dorsett’s Building.,
Will practice anywhere except in the County
Court of Douglass county.
w. a. James,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,|
Will practice in all the courts. Slate an
Federal. Office on Court House Square,
DOUGLASVILLE, GA.
WM. T. ROBERTS.
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
DOUGLASVILLE, GA.
Will practice in all the Courts. AU legu
bnaincM will receive prompt attention. Office
m Court House.
4 ***** * a
c. r>. CAMP,
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
DOUGLASVILLE, GA.
Will practice in all the courts. All business
intrusted to him wiU receive prompt attention.
B. G. GRIGGS,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
DOUGLASVILLE, GA.
WiU practioe in aU the courts. State and
Federal.
JOHN M. EDGE,
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
DOUGLASVILLE, GA.
WiU practice in all the courts, and promptly
attend w aU bnaineas entrusted to his care.
Zs7j*»es7
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
DOUGLASVILLE, GA.
Will practice tot the courts of Douglasa,
Oampbe’i. Carroll, Paulding, Cobb, Fulton and
adjoining eonnute. Prompt attention given
to all tasineM.
j. h. McLarty,
attorney at law.
JX)VULASVU4.<R, GA.
Will praclKT In ail the court*, both State and
ftatemi. Ctebecitona a specialty,
JOHN V? EDGE.
attorney at law.
POOQLASVm.It, OA.
Urmtngham. England, still make*
fttatleck muskets tor use in the in
tamr of Africa, where pemwion cam
V aut farm of fixed ammunition would
©ftea’ be taMtoWte to obtain. while
powder can always be made and flinta
picked up to the desert
Wrauo Star.
HUNTINGJJEOPARDS.
How the Savage Animals are
Utilized in India.
The Ferocious Cheetah Trained by Native ß
to Run Down and Capture Antelopes.
It was here that I witnessed the only
instance I ever saw of the black buck be
ing run into and killed by the cheetah,
or hunting leopard. Many consider this
a low kind of sport, but I think it is
quite equal to partridge shooting, besides
being a beautiful sight. I shall therefore
describe as well as I can what I saw. On
arriving, with my friends, at the place of
meeting in the jungle, we found a few
rough-and-ready-looking natives in charge
of three carts, or rather small two-wheeled
platforms, drawn by two bullocks. On
each vehicle sat, in an erect attitude, a
beautiful leopard, strongly chained and
with a hood over his eyes, similar to
those used for hawks. We were soon
under way and driving toward the herd of
antelopes which could be seen grazing in
the distance and which had been marked
down beforehand. There was no difficul
ty In getting the carts to within 120
yards of the deer. Then one of the chee
tahs, a fine male was unhooded and set
free. Its departure from the gharry and
its decision in choosing the most covered
line on the open plain for rushing on its
prey were so instantaneous and rapid as
to be quite marvellous. It seemed to
vanish from the cart and appear simul
taneously halfway toward the fine black
buck it had sighted out for attack.
When at about thirty yards from the un
suspicious troop, they suddenly became
aware of the deadly peril they were in.
One and all sprang into the air with gal
vanic bounds, and no doubt expected to
escape easily by flight. But the hunting
cheetah is, I suppose, for a hundred
yards, by far the fleetest of all wingless
things; and this one was soon in the
midst of the affrighted throng, which
icattered wildly and pauic-stricken in all
directions, as their leader—a fine black
buck—was struck down. in their midst.
Thrirhe lay, alone, in hik death agony, in
the deadly clutch of his beautiful and re
lentless foe. We all ran as hard as we
could, and were soon surrounding the
strange group. w
Neither animal moved, for lae buck
was paralyzed by fear—his starting eye
balls and dilated nostrils alone gave evi
dence of life. The cheetah, on the other
hand, with his body spread out over the
prostrate form of his victim, seemed to
strain every nerve in pressing liis prey
against the earth as, with his long sharp
fangs buried in its delicate throat, he con
tinued the process of strangulation. He
| was very motionless, but his eyes were
fixed u|K>n us with a glare of extraordina
ry ferocity that became intensified as his
keepers rushed forward and seized the
deer by the hind leg. The brute now
growled fiercely, and, tightening his
clutch, looked so extremely dangerous
that I was far from envying those who
. were in such close proximity to him. But
they knew their trade. With a long
sharp kuife they cut the deer’s throat and
caused the warm blood to spout in tor
rents into the face of the half-wild beast,
whose whole frame now seemed to thrill
with ecstacy. One of the operators, in
the meanwhile, caught a quantity of the
crimson life stream in a wooden bowl, and
forced the steaming fluid under the very
; nose of the excited leopard, who quitting
his hold, at once began to lap with avid
ity. While engaged in this process the
leather hood was swiftly; clapped over his
eyes, and the collar with two chains at
tached, was adjusted round his neck.
While this was going on a third man had
cut off one of the bucks hinds legs, and
this the “lion’s share,’’ was held close to
the bloody chaiace, which was no sooner
emptied than the brute seized the meat
thus provided with a vice like grip.
Each ehdn was now grwstptxl by a differ
ent man, who by keeping apart so that
the tether n maims 1 taught, kept the
leopard between them in such away that
neither was within reach of his claws or
j teeth. Then the third individual, who
had ever retained his hold of the shank*
bone of the leg of vinison, gently drew
the cheetah to the little eart that had
now been brought close up. As soon as
the beast felt himself against the edge of
his own familiar chariot he sprang light
ly upon it and proceodetl to demolish his
succulent wrmtH at his ease. I now in
sp<'rt<\i the carcass of the deer, with a
riew to ascertaining, if possible, how th®
cheetah iuul been able so instsmtaneosly
to strike down such a powerful animal
immediately on getting up with it. I at
once observed a single long deep gash in
the flank, which was evidently caused by
thedtcvsiT blow. But I could not im
igine with wliat weapon the leopard had
J been able to inflict this very strange
looking wound, for the cheetah has «
foot like a deg> aod his claws are net re-
FAWNING TO NONE-CH ARITY TO A.L.L.
DOUGLASVILLE. GEORGIA. TUESDAY. APRIL 13. 18St>
tractile. Turning then to the beast, as it
sat on the cart, I inspected it closely, and
saw that the dew-claw, which in the dog
appears such a useless appendage, is rep
resented in this brute by a terrible look
ing talon exactly suited to the infliction
of such a gash.— Our Indian Station*.
Men and Beasts.
s a class of people who progress
. « meal something after tliis fashion:
A long draught of coffee, tea, milk or
water, as the case may be, begins the
performance; this is followed by a
mouthful of something solid; only a
mouthful, however, for the stream if
turned on again down the throat. A
glass of water disappears; then the food
is attacked and voraciously; again the
stream. Once more attention is given, tc
the food, but always the stream has the
first consideration. We silently ask, and
wonder how long the man can stand it.
To say notliing of the utter disregard of
the laws of health in thus eating and
drinking simultaneously, it is an absurd
spectacle.
A tired, over-heated man drinks twice
as much water as he needs, first, because
he is so tired he doesn’t know what he
is doing till he sees the bottom of the
glass; and second, because his blood is
at boiling mark, and the sudden chill is
delightful, and he would prolong it till
his capacity to swallow gives out. For
the same reason he drinks rapidly, that
the succession of chills may lower hu
temperature as speedily as possible.
And then he goes out to his stable:
“John, be sure to give Black Prince no
■water just yet. Rub him down well,
John, and cool him off slowly.”— Good
Houtekreping.
. Susan and Elizabeth.
One of the daughters of Mrs. Eliza
beth Cady Stanton gives an amusing ac
count of the way her mother and Mrs.
Susan B. Anthony work together on their
“History of Woman Suffrage.” 338.
Stanton is a stickler for the philosophy
of the suffrage movement, and Miss An
thony is punctilious about dates. The
two dear old ladies often get into ex
cited discussions over their subject, and
dip their pens into their mucilage bot
tles and their mucilage brushes into
their ink bottles in their excitement over
their work. They sit at opposite sides
of a large double desk in Mrs. Stanton’s
library, and occasionally they find each
other so persistent in opinion that they sit
back and stare at each other in a silence
that is very near anger. Once in a while
they will march out of the room by dif
ferent doors, and there seems likelihood
that their beautiful friendship of forty
years is about to be broken, but after
awhile they will be found peaceably at
work again together. They never take
time to do any “making up,” but cover
their disagreements with the mantle of
dignity and silence. Boston Record.
Longevity.
In order to live a hundred years, it has
lieen announced that you must breathe
all the out-of-door air possible, and
breathe it deeply, and that you must take
your sleep as nature indicates, eight or
nine hours in the early part of the dark,
which will allow you to be up and fully
refreshed at sunrise. In addition to
these important items of sleep and
breath, it is further declared that you
must not permit yourself to get angry or
to fret or worry; but that, if you must, at
once take a bath and some immediate
slumber: that you must eat more vegeta
bles and grains and fruits than m»-aLs,
and dismiss wines and spirits, coffee and
tea; that you must bathe often, wear
loose clothing, and keep warm; and that
you must control your appetites and pas
sions, cultivate cheerful serenity, and be
governed by the advice of your physician.
—Basxir,
How We Spoil Our Luugs.
House air is almost always fillet with
more or less dust. During the w inter,
when the ventilation is imperfect, this is
especially the case. The stove is a most
common cause, as its heat dries up every
bit of dirt in the room, and it is wafted
about by currents of air, and stirred up
by the skirts of women. Women proba
bly do not know how much dust their
skirts send into the air whenever they
sweep over the carpet. It is invisible to
the eye, except when the light of the sun
shines on it. All this is breathed, and
helps to spoil our lungs. Is there any
help for it t At least one; and that is
ventilation. Frequent and thorough ven
tilation, especially when the rooms are
swept and dusted, while it does not rem
edy the evil, makes it less.
A Miracle.
“Jenny, do you know what a miracle
kF
•Teshn. Ma says if you don’t marry
our new parson it will be a miracle.”— I
GOINGITO THE SOUTH.
A Great Army of Welcome
Tramps in
Their Services isl Taking Off the Sugar
Crops and Building the Levees.
j A recent letter from the Parish of Plaq
uemines, La., to the New York Sun says:
“The army of wandering laborers —like
the wild birds which have their summer
1 and winter haunts—come to us about the
first of November and go North about
the first of April. Many people call
them tramps, but they are a kind of wel
come tramp, which is more, I suppose,
than could be said for the real, sure-
■ enough tramp. We rely on this labor to
take off our sugar crops and to build our
levees, the latter work being usually done
iat low water in winter. In February and
March it comes in handy in planting cane
i and digging the ditches and canals by
which our fields are drained. Os course
we get a good many no-accouht men,
but by weeding the poor ones out we at
last reach Darwin’s survival of the fittest
’ and get a pretty good gang organized.
The nucleus of this army starts
in Canada, is added to in New
York and on the lakes, takes in a!
large corps of recruits at Chicago, and i
when it reaches Cairo commingles with
the legions from the great Northwest and •
California and sweeps on to New Orleans, j
Its transportation is free. Some few
work their way <>n the Mississippi river
steamers, but the great majority beat
their way on freight trains. Most of the i
men have money to provide just food I
! enough to exist on, and as soon as they |
reach the city they are distributed by la- j
bor agents to the various plantations and |
works needing hands—and then how ;
i they do gormandize! You are not able >
to tell what a man really is until he has
been on place long enough to get over i
the prostration caused by over-eating.
The fare is not usually very tempting, but
there is always a full supply of meat,
'' bread, beans, rice, potatoes, coffee and
molasses. A b’ankt*t and a little hay are
also furnished, and the ban-acks, or cab
ins, generally have a fireplace or stove,
with fuel supplies. Take it altogether,
it is B pretty rough mode of life, but the
toen seem light hearted and contented. I
often wonder if the millionaires who j
come on Pullmans to the South in winter,
and go on Pullmans to Saratoga in sum- i
mer, really get more enjoyment out of
life.
You will find iu this army men of all
nationalities, trades, and professions.
Not a few doctors and lawyers have I
seen putting cane on the earner, and not
a few doctors of dentistry using a cold
chisel chipping the huge teeth of a spur
. wheel. And all these meh have histories.
A man’s name, or the name he gives, is
written on the time book, but it is never
heard among these associates of a mo
ment. The place he comes from or some
i personal peculiarity christens him with
the appellation he bears here and proba- ■
bly elsewhere. Frenchy, Dutchy, Pad
dy, Scotty, and New York, Chicago, and
Frisco are common nicknames, or if he is
small Shorty it is, and an auburn tinge is
sure to give the name of Reddy.
> Now and then I hear some interesting
fcicidenta from the lives of these wander
ers. A foreman I now have told me of
■ how near he was to getting into trouble
; last summer in Sedalia, Missouri. He
> reached there iu the morning and took a
room at the Atlantic Ilot'l, and a few
minutes later a stranger was given a bed
in the same room. Mr. M said his
• ‘ roommsite seemed to be a taciturn kind
of a fellow, but otherwise noticed noth
ing peculiar about him. After dinner he
wished to see a friend off on the train
and hastened to the depot. The train
was a little late, and before it came in a
policeman appeared and arrested Mr.
M for murder. Though conscious
of innocence, a stranger in a strange land,
he could at best but feel uneasy. He
was taken to his room, and on one of the
beds lay his roommate in a pool of blood
—dead! When the coroner arrived the
dead man, who was lying face down
ward, was turned over, and the examina
tion commenced. It seems that an hour
before that the man had been seen to
take a hatchet from near the well in the
yard up to his room. It was evident that
he had tried with a dull pocket knife,
which was found by his side, to cut the
arteries of his wrist and then to cut his
throat. He had also stuffed a silk hand
kerchief as far down his throat as possi
ble, and then had wounded his head by
self-inflicted blows with the hatchet.
The coroner found that none of the
ghastly wounds was fatal, but that
death was caused by the stoppage of the
air channel with the handkerchief. A
verdict of suicide, of course, released
Mr. M from his close shave.
Felt bonnets are again in demand.
THE FAMILY PHYSICIAN,
Best For « Sprain.
Prof. Brinton says that the best thing
for a sprain is to put the limb into a ves
sel of very hot water immediately, then
add boiling water as it can be borne. •
Keep the part immersed for twenty min
utes, or until the pain subsides; then
apply a tight bandage and order rest. '<
Sometimes the joint can be used in
twelve hours. If necessary, use a silicate
of sodium dressing.
A Simple Remedy.
Lard as an application for bruises is
considered indispensable at our house. If
put on as soon as possible it will usually
remove all soreness and prevent discolor
ation that follows such a hurt. If the
braise ia severe it may not cure it en- ;
tirely, but will help it in any case. A
blow on the face followed by a black
and blue spot is especially annoying, but
unless so near the eyes as to settle black
under them, lard will prevent such dis
coloration. Try it when next you are so
unfortunate as to get a bruise.
Coffee and Indigestion.
Observing physicians learned long ago
that coffee is a hindrance . to digestion;
but scientific evidence was needed, and
so M. Lavid, according to La Medecin
Practician, has been making experiments
on dogs to determine the exact fact with
the following results:
“To a dog whi6h has eaten 210
grammes of meat he administered 30
grammes of coffee and 15 grammes of
water. After three hours he killed the
dog, and found the mucous membrane of
the stomach pale, discolored, and pro
foundly anaemic. The vessels of the in- i
ternal superficies, like those of the peri
phery, were contracted; 145 grammes of ;
the meat remained undigested; the coffee
then had retarded the stomach digest
ion.”
If coffee will thus delay the digestion
of a dog, notably strong, especially in
the digestion of meat, who will attempt
to dispute that it must be equally injur
ious to human stomachs? It is a well
recognized fact that dyspeptics are ex
ceedingly common in all nt nt ties where
tea and coffee are frequently used, as in
this country, England and Holland. No
dog of common sense would continue
the use of the fragrant beverage after be
coming aware of the above fact; but how
many tea and coffee topers will exercise
as much sound judgment in reference to
the matter as the average caninc?— Good
Health.
The Bright Side.
There was never a night so dark that
some would not speak of the dawn, and
never a day so bright that some would
not think of the midnight. It is well
that the enthusiast be balanced by the
conservative, perhaps, on the principle
that a little shade improves the tone of
almost any picture. It is, however, a
thankless mission that the grumbler en
; ters upon, and his is a work that shadows
his own mind and heart more than that
of any other. Most of us see enough of
the hard side of life, hear enough of the
woe and weariness, adversity and ani
mosity, disappointment and disaster in
life, without Ixfing formally reminded
thereof. The newspaper finds more
readers when it announces a ship’s wreck
than when it chronicles a launch. ’ Its
column of obituaries is more sought for
than its wedding announcements. A
firm’s failure is read by a hundred per
sons to one who would read of an “open
ing”; and a man who steals SIOOO re
, ceives more newspaper notoriety than a
* thousand men who should deposit SIOO,-
000 each. It is the natural elasticity of
the mind and heart that keeps the aver
age man hopeful while the sad and evil
! tilings of life are running before his eyes
or are being poured into his ears. There
should be a systematic effort on the part
j of all people to see the bright side, sjxiak
of the hopeful things. When a majority
of business men talk the dark side of
I finance there is a panic; when a majority
j of laboring men see the dark side of life
there is a Nihilistic tendency. There is
too much danger in every direction for
any encouragement of the already too
active tendency to see the evil in busi
ness and society. Let us see the bright
side and call other people’s attention to
it.— Boston Traveler.
Not Always Successfnl.
Deacon Dewgood (retrospectively)—
I remember so well, Mr. Goodman, the
day that you were installed as minister
of our little church. What a pleasant
and successful affair it was!
Minister—Ah, yes, deacon, much pleas
anter and more successful than ssme
other installments I can recall.
Deacon—You refer to your previous
charges, 1 suppose.
Minister—No; I refer to my salary in
stallments. Many of them have been far
from pleasant or successful.—JYw Fori
Sun.
NUMBER 10.
STAGING IN THE HILLS
Taking a Trip by Stage to the
City of Deadwood.
A Journey in the “Wild West” that is In
vested with Many Novelties,
The name of Deadwood, a city that is
still in the “wild West” in spite of the
rapid improvements thirty years have
seen west of the Mississippi, is familiar
to many people who know nothing what
ever of it except that it lies somewhere
out in the mining region.
Traveling from the East, it can be
reached within one hundred miles by rail;
the remainder of the distance must be
taken by stage. The railroad ends at
Buffalo Gap. Six horses, carrying a stage
[ coach with three seats in it, await the
Deadwood traveler. If there are more
than six passengers and any of them are
inclined to obesity, there is apt to be a
lack of comfort.
If it is during the spring or autumn
rains, there is much jolting and careful
driving, and perhaps some seasickness
I among the passengers. •
In the bitter winter weather, warm .
wraps, furs and heated soapstones art
necessary. Perhaps the ride is most de
lightful in the autumn, when there is gol
den morn, and lazy winds and a cloud of
purple haze in .the west.
; The one hundred miles are traveled in
j thirty-six hours or thereabout. .Every
ten miles the horses arc changed, and
every twenty the drivers change.
The stations are simply large barns
where the horses arc kept. These are as
well trained, and enter into their task
with as much spirit and seeming delight
as the horses of the fire department in
cities. They grow to be familiar with
every step of the journey and know their
driver as children know a parent. The
coach stops for meals at regular stations,
three times a day. Quite an excited in
terest is visible at all the towns passed,
through. The coming of the stage, with
its galloping horses, its air of mystery
and restlessness and the charm of know
ing it has c<nMe from the outside world,
which, like Rasselas in his valley, every
one envies to be in occasionally, is quite
an event in the lives of the village people.
Ca?sar in his commentaries, speaks of the
inhabitants of inner Gaul gathering
around the merchants when they came to
trade, and asking questions innumerable.
The merchants were often tempted to ex
aggerate and sometimes to invent stories
of the outside world, which temptation
they often yielded to, and were eag'
believed by the Gauls. So the H re
coach driver after answering many < • -
tiofis to suit himself amid the admi :
gaze of the populace, with a flourish .’
his whip, a word to his horses, is go
Gone for a wild ride over dangerous ro<; .
now winding along a mountain pa
now between rocks, now along a riv .
bank, and again out into the level w
j like stretch, that seems to reach in infii.
distances on every hand. The drix ,
find their work to possess a strange fas
cination. No stage driver ever feel -on
tent to go hack to the tame life of a s i
dweller. Each one of them has his i
tation and is known by his peculiar <
acteristics all along the route. In i :
lower part of the stage, under the seats,
is a place for baggage, much like the
hold in a ship. The trip is worth taking,
especially in spring or autumn, when the
driver is glad to give a share of his scat
for at least a few hours each day or night.
Deadwood is a very pretty town h ■:li
med in by mountains. It is in the ex
‘ treme western part of Dakota, not Lit
from its boundary line. It is only JSO
miles from the Yellowstone Park, ami is
surrounded by mountains upon every
hand. Some valuable gold and silver
t mines are located near the town. — De*
trait Free Press,
The Farmer’s Rejoinder.
The following anecdote is told of Sir
William Johnson:
“Do you know\ sir,” said SirWflliai
angrily to a tenant with whom he differec
on some agricultural question, “that 1
have been at two universities, and at two
; colleges in each university?”
“Naw,” answered the farmer, “J
' i didn’t know it.”
“Well, sir, it is sc
“But,” asked the farmer, “what of
that? I had a calf that sucked two cowl
once, and I observed that the mbre he
sucked the greater calf he grew.”—
. ’ Louis Magazine.
A Man of Nerve.
“Know Jigbee? Os course I do; i. i
1 { what’s more, I know him to be a man
1 nerve.”
“Nonsense! He’s as timid as a moils*
* A man of nerve! Ha-ha! What in the
world put such a notion as that into
y<xir head?”
I “Well, sir, I heard him contradict hi«
: xnra wife the other day, and to
I too, at that.”— Gbuago Ledger.