4 . ' ' ANEXCELLHINT,,, Official Organ of Washington County. FIRST OF ALL THE NEWS. ADVERTISING 4 HEDItfMT Circulates extensively in Ihe Counties' ot"" Martin, Washington, Terrell and.Beanfor ' ; v ' Job Printing In ItsYarious Branches. 1.00 A TEAR IK ADVANCE. " FOB GOD, FOR COUNTRY, AND FOR TRUsTH." SINGLE COPV, 5 CES1 VOL. IX. PLYMOUTH, N. C, Fit r DAY. JANUARY 1898. LONG I once knew all the birds that came And nested In our orchard trees ; . , , For every flower I had a name My friends were woodchuoks, toads and bees, I knew where thrived In yonder glen Yhat plants would soothe a stone-brulsed toe- , , , O, I was very learned then', i- ' i But that was very long ago. I knew the spot upon the hill Where eheckerberrles could be found ; ' I knew the rusWes neat the mill Where the pickerel lay that weighed a pound 1 ' . .. I knew the wood the very tree Where lived the poaching, saucy crow, And all the woods and crows knew me But that was very long ago. t J' T" a A. Gat and; Dog Aunts are often odiously eccentric persons.' The idea had occurred to me even while Aunt Maria Markhain was alive. After her death I was convinced of it. . . . i-'i So was poor, dear Julia, though cir cumstances (thanks to Aunt Markhain) withheld her from informing me of the fact. By Aunt Maria's will I was to have the brute of a bulldog and Julia the cat. ! 'The conditions were that with each quadruped the legatee wan to re ceive $500 per annum. This sum to be paid as long as the cat aud dog re spectively enjoyed life in this terres trial sphere, and afterwards also for our respective lives (Julia's and mine) if the said quadrupeds eventually died natural deaths. . ' ' , It was simply iniquitous for sev- ral reasons. To begin with;' Stronjr,, as.,the bull- 6g was called, had frightful teeth and a yet more frightful temper. I should think aunt had paid hundreds of dol lars in" hush-money to folks whose flesh and blood the brute had tasted to say nothing of trousers, dress skirts and hose. Sweet, as the cat , was named, was an enormous object, with enormous claws. Its temper was really not bad. But once arou"sed,Sweet was a demon; nothing less. ' Iu aunt's time I had seen thf -great tiger of a cat stroll care lessly inco the yard where Strong was chained and there lay itself down to rest just three feet from the limit of Strong's tether. The sight of the dog when it happened Was pathetic. But it didn't trouble Sweet. ' NThe cat lay half curled, with its green eyes on Strong, and I would not have put odds on the bulldog if they could have had a straight set-to without any favor. Visitors loathed Sweet. She pos sessed a lazy, cool way of clawing up a fellow's legs and yawning while she hung on to the skin. And no lady was safe from her. Be tho dress ma terial what it might from cambric to' satin Sweet was bound to assault it on the sly. ' ; But all this was comparatively noth ing to the great hardship of all. In jest I had more than once told Julia that I had told Aunt Maria that she (Julia) was the only person fit to take charge of such a dear treasure as Sweet in case of sad happenings. Really, I had done no such thing, but Julia now disbelieved my solemn as severations. - "I will accept Aunt Markham's charge," she said, "but we must never see each other again,, you and I." We were cousins, you know, and rather better than engaged, I imagined. I could (previous to aunt's demise) have conceived; the collapse of the heavens, but not Julia's repudiation of our joint future. , And so she fetched Sweet and in stalled the slick demon in her dear studio, and I. was left to console my self with that more than demon, Strong, the bulldog. It' was under stress of this treatment by Julia that I did a thing that now i3ltus to me superhuman. 'Please, sir," said my aunt's house-; keeper, when I contemplated the dog that was mine, "I don't know how you'll ''get him to your rooms, nor what you'll do with him when you get him there. Since the poor missus' death he has.been fiomething awful." "Oh, he has, has he?V said I, staring like one fascinated at his awkward, broad chest. 1 1 ; I walked off there and then driven by rage and the thought of Julia aud came to an old curiosity shop. . Here there was a complete suit of rusty ar mor, not too h javy for an athlete of my build. . I arranged to barrow that armor, put it on in aunt's own parlor and then with my rliinoceros hide stick walked up to the lair of the dog. Mean it mahave been. I care not. For y''- Ves ' I smote Strong q T i.l,:fe left in him. ,1 'V.i, marks .and hat didn't ''Ktiinutes .Kin;Iy, ' ,'U.ul. ACO. And pining for the joys of youth, I tread the old familiar spot. Only to learn this solemn truth : I have forgotten, am forgot. Yet, nere's this youngster at my knee Knows all the things I used to know i To think I once wus wise as he But that was very long ago. '"'' 1 ' " "' ' r """ I know it's folly to complain Of whatsoe'er the Fates decree ; . Yet wore not .wishes all in valrf, js i ? iC 1 tell you what my wish would be : I'd wish to be a boy again, 'Back with, the friends I ttsed to fcnow; For I was, Oh! so happy then ' ""' r - But that was very long ago. Eugene Field. A ftr r A -Jl AAA f Jfc -ftr A Life for Tmo. V WWWWVWWV . Julia was madly devoted to art. She wore "new" garments aiid "new" modes of hair; but they all became her, though hideous on any other girl. With aunt's 500 a year, she had money to scrape along on. Literature was my rope of fortune. I had enough to keep myself in bread ' and cheese and the dog in bones. But a fellow: requires other things than mero necessaries. I. yearned for Julia, i Thrice I made ah effort to see her, and thrice I wrote. All in vain. I had the wretched bulldog as com pensation and nothing more. , , Now in the third or fourth week I began to experience the joys of being master of such a brute as Strong. He had to be kept in my own room, if you please, because there w as no yard. While X was in it was all right; he would sit watching me as humble as a dog could be. ( But the moment I was free of the house he would bark and rave and keep it up until I returned. . Of course X got served with sum monses on behalf of the nuisance. ' AH this time I was without explicit intelligence''of Julia.' It was madden ing. To think of this poor, dear way ward child alone, as it jwere (though not quite) in a great city, consuming her own pride. For I felt, you see, that she really still loved me as I loved her. And yet hot one word v could I get from the worthy, devoted old housekeeper who looked after her. But one evening, when many weeks had passed and I had bred a wrinkle on my brow, who should come to see me but Mrs. Green herself this same good housekeeper. . .""lis no good , talking, -'Mr. Wil loughby," she (burst forth,' "and ; for nobody that ' lives will I siee my dear Miss Julia breaking her precious heart least. of all a cat." " "Go oh, Mrs. Greeri," I urged, and she went ou. k ; , ; "The times we've had, sir, I'd never have believed possible, and all along of that Sweet wretch.' You're ac quainted with the animal, Mr. Wil loughby, but not as she's- grown up of late.. There's an evil spirit in that beast not fit for a decent person to live with and least qf all a j tender young lady like Miss Julia." , ... "You' are extremely right, Mrs.. Green, extremely," T remarked. "Tell me more."' ,, . ., . ' - ;. . ' . "The very last thing, sir, was the scratching of the "King, of Scotland" from head to foot and him ready to be sent to the academy. , 'Six weeks' hard work and all for nothing!' my young lady sobbed and said,a-pointing at the cat, which lay purrin' like the evil hypocrite she is. There's nothiu' safe from the false great object. And ilia milk it drinks and the dainty bits it does steal- why, . it's $5 a week damage it does one . way or another, if you'll believe nie, Mr. Willoughby." I believe every word you say, my dear Mrs. Green," I replied. ."Look at that other object." I pointed at Strong as I spoke aud made a click with my tongue. Strong obej'ed that click. He stole, growling towards MrR.'Green; w-hd jumped up,1 screamed and fled. But I arrested her outside and took her by the arm aud whispered in her large red ear and was so glad that I could hare kissed her, though she carries much hair on her upper lip and r unequivocal down on her chin. ' ' '' "We will go in a cab," said I at length, -when I had sootlied her. And on the way I convinced her .that my plan w as "a reasonable one and that she (Mrs. Green) would be far more comfortable and opulent as house keeper to two souls than as house keeper to one, soul and a demon- cat. And in tho street", where Julia gives consecration to the atmosphere, I first, pressed adollar into the dear creature's palm and then sat her on the pave ment. . Then back I drove to my rooms to find that Strong had, in a playful fit, reached down my collection of foreign stamps' (in a $20. album) and divided it into an incalculable number of parts. But for once I did not curse the pretty creature. " "Good uld Ig," I said, as I patted him on the head. And he wap;se.l his v tail and straightway proved his '.V'ooduess by swallowing a British Ml'iinea stamp of 1835 worth np of 1835 worth and .,4night 1 dreamed many dreams "Vnlin, Mrs. Green, tne dog i tfil'vue cat hwec But I aw 1 VAfor I was . tflKbe cat Sweet were strange- ivoke l .ifreshed, ras full of hone. Jtor had I any compunctions, for J felt that the happiness of two human souls was better than the happiness oi a couple of demoniacal quadrupeds. In the morning an insurance ageni called and, speaking in a high voice that seemed menacing (though ol course was not), got mauled at the ankle. "The law, my friend, will give me my revenge," said this gentleman, when I had escorted him in safety downstairs. . You see, I had not wanted to insure my life. . But at half pastthree I uprose and, taking Strong by the chain, led him into the street. Thus to the studio. Here Mrs. Green received me with a pale face. "Miss Julia is not in," she said; and I, dissembling, remarked that il was a pity. . "If I might rest awhile," I pro ceeded. "Oh, certainly, sir," replied the astute creature. "Perhaps you would like to leave the dog iu the kitchen?' The good soul opened the door. Then I slipped Strong's chain, pushed him in and shut the door. Immediately afterwards I invaded Julia's studio and Mrs. Green with me. We shut ourselves in and dis cussed the weather, the last cure foi colds (Julia having oue) and. much else. We talked without ceasing, in deed, for many minutes. But in spite of everything the riot in the kitchen reached our ears. Ter rific at times it was, with fateful lulls, followed afresh by piercing cries, now of a cat and now of a dog. I opened the door an inch and peeped in. At length, by half-past four, uttet peace reigned. Mrs. Green and I looked at each other and started foi the kitchen. : On the landing, however, whom should we meet but Julia. "James!" she exclaimed, bliuhing divinely. . ... "I brought the dog with me," I murmured. "I am going now. I only wanted to know that you were well. He is in the kitchen." Her eyes brightened when I men tioned Strong. Hatred of Sweet pos sessed her she said so afterwards. Then I opened the door, and in a moment I saw that we were saved. "Oh.Miss Julia!" cried Mrs. Green, running to the lifeless body of Sweet. ' 'Strong, w hat have you been doing ? ' said I. But I expected'no an3wer,for side by side with the cat lay the. life less dog. ' For many seconds we contemplated the dead warriors. Then I turned to Julia. Tears were in her eyes, Mrs. Green considerately went away. "Dearest," I said, "there is nuthing now between us," and I opened my arms to her. She hesitated for a moment, then came to me, and I , kissed away her tears. The death of Strong and Sweet was, after due legal debate, reckoned ex ceedingly natural. The quadrupeds slumber in one grave. or. .Louis fotar. MASTERFUL MRS. SLIMS. The Neatness and Despatch witU Which She Broke Up a Iog Fight. The man who was doing the talkiug has endured a good many hard knocks while making a very successful way through the world, aud, like most per sons w ho have survived such experi ence, has very decided opinions of his own. "I have always regarded woman as the weaker vessel," he said, "but want to say right here that Mrs. Slims is a very remarkable person. I don't believe she could teli a Perch tr on from a Kentucky thoroughbred, yet I saw her start a balky horse the otl r day afte'r twenty men and boys h&.l been beating, kicking and cursing the poor brute for half an hour. The per suasion she used was a couple of lumps of sugar and a few kind words. f 'But it was just yesterday that she convinced me of her great superiority. You can gauge her knowledge of dogs from the fact that she paid $5 for a long-haired mongrel puppy, under the impression that she was buying an aristocratic pug. Slims has a bull ter rier that's a professional fighter, and Torton, who lives next . door, owns a big St. Bernard. The two dogs began an argument through the fence, and the larger one simplified matters by crashing through a board into Slims yard. The whole neighborhood was soon engaged in an effort to part them. Strong hands tugged at tails, legs and ears. Clubs were freely used, water was dashed upon the belligerents, and the stern orders for them to 'break away' could be heard blocks ofiP. When Mrs. Slims appeared on the scene she seemed to grasp the situation in one terrified glance. She flew into the house, dashed out again, and insid9of a minute had the savage fighters slink ing away from each other." "How did sb e do it V" "Bottle of ammonia. Surest thing on earth to break np a dog right, and it's original with her. Why, those two terrible beasts quit like pet sheep, and the joke of it is that each dog thinks the other administered the aw ful dose. They never see each other now that thev do not cilrl their nose as though sui fling amn onia, and ectiuns."- trot -De- briskly in opposite ' dii troit Free Press. . The skeleton of n weiaha about twenty i average vhale five tons. GOOD ROAD OF AMERICA. STRIKING SCHEME FOR A GRAND TRANSCONTINENTAL HIGHWAY. . General Roy li. Stone, Chief of the Good Itoadtf Bureau . in the Department of Agriculture, Suggests How (Such a Na tional Thoroughfare Might Be Built. . A good many incomplete references, ' some of them misleading, have been made to the suggestion of General Stone of the department of agricul ture concerning a grand highway to cross the continent. What he actually suggested. was that: , "A great national highway might be constructed, called, perhaps, 'The Great F.oaa of America, ' Which should first join together the states along the Atlantic seaboard; then strike across the country on a central line, say from Washington to San Francisco, joining there another line which connects the states on the Pacific coast; . this road to be built, not by the general govern ment alone, but by the states, under such arrangements as they may make within their own borders, and by the government through the territories and its own lands and reservations; built not by taxation of the states or the people, but practically out of its own benefits. I have seen so much of the benefits of good roads, and of the . s. . i r i l their lines, that I see the . possibility of building even a great national.thor oughfare, costing ten or twenty thou sand dollars a mile, and building it ul timately out of its own benefits, by a temporary use of the government or state credit, to tide over until those benefits can be realized. "There is no question but that such a road would benefit .property to the extent of five miles on either side of it. Suppose that property were to be assessed with a long term of payments in instalments running up to ten or fifteen or twenty years, and suppose the property actually adjoining the road were to be assessed two dollars an acre, for instance, and the next balf mile back a little less, and the next a little less, and so on, but al ways giving the party owning the property the privilege of selling out his land at a valuation if he did not choose to pay the assessment, and of buying it back again by paying the in terest, if he found he had made a mis take. The government could well af ford to mke that liberal proposition, and it would result in nearly all the present property owners getting the actual benefit of the increase of the valued of their property, And paying the assessment entirely out of such increase of value. j , "I have merely outlined this, not as a perfect scheme, but as something that has suggested itself to me out of my experience in road building, which, I think, with proper study and care, might be applied on a grand scale. Such a scheme would arouse great in terest among the whole people of the United States; it would be something worthy of the nation; something wor thy of the beginning of the twentieth century. The'inere location of such a road would have great historic value and importance. The line along the Atlantic coast would be the old post road in the time of the Revolution.' The route across the Alleghanies might be the line that the early settlers of this region followed when Daniel Boone and his comrades came over the mountains to settle these beautiful plains. The line across the Rocky mountains might be the line of Lewis and Clark and Fremont, and when we struck the Pacific coast we would strike the oldest road in all our his tory, the Camina Real, the great Span ish royal highway which joined togeth er the Catholic missions of the Pacific coast. The whole scheme would carry with' it something that would inspire the entire nation. It is not any new scheme; it is not any new idea. It van the idea of Jefferson and Madison and Gallatin and 'many other great men who helped to start the national road which led through Pennsylvania, Ohio and Indiana, and reached as far as the Mississippi river." . . j COOSE-PLUCKINC. Odd Scene in a New York Basement Where Women Are the Workers,. An. important business function of the east side is the weekly goose plucking, carried on sometimes by a private individual and his family, sometimes by , a poul try-dealer, who pays his assistants so much; a ..bird. The pluckers are invariably women and young girls, and some are experts at the trade. The plucking begins about three o'clock on Thursdays, .in anticipation of the early buyers on Friday morning, which is market-day in that section. The plucking con tinues until Friday afternoon, and ambitious fingers, spry at the task, strip off great quantities of feathers in that time, and reap quite a harvest of nickels. Five cents a goose is the highest price paid by, auy dealer.- The scene of the goose-plucking is odd enough to unaccustomed eyes, i A basement, down to w hich a stepladdei gives entrance, is the workroom. The big, bin-like compartments, barrels aud boxes for stowing-away the feath ers, and the benches on which the pluckers sit are the chief features of furnishing. The air iu this under house pluc'tiag ' place i3 misty with drifting down that adheres to ihe ceiluhMind settles over the" elothina of the workers. The hair,of tha girh and. the wigs of the older women, are decorated with' tiny white feathers. The geese are killed according tb th'e l Jewish method, and are pluck afi as soon after as maybe, .as the feathers quit the skin more, easily when the flesh is warm. , . '. . ' "It's a k pity , that one coatingfol feathers is all we can get," said the manager of a Ridge street goose-plock-ing. ' 'If them birds ?uld have been plucked when livin' and then turned loose, they'd give lis as many pounds again later. We get 40cents a'ponnd for these breast-feathers," he added, plunging his - hands down into the yielding mass of curliness. . "TJiia qualitv don't need any curing. Those in the other bins are the inferior grade. I am careful to keep thera separate. " . Geese half-plucked, wholly plrfeked, and those yet to be plucked hang head-downward from the walls or' lie scattered on the stools and boxesi The pluckers all . wear-; big, coarse aprons, and the yellqw breasts of the birds gleam bare and pimply in the straggling daylight as they are di vested of their covering. ' "Rip ! rip ! rip !" is the only sound in the place; the pluckers are- too busy to 'talk: 4 - 17 ' ' luc c-x uc " i ;,3 u mem; boiiih me . uoi ; wormue ai are . not woi Kmg at so much a bird, but by the hour,, or to pay oft' some past obligation. Only the younger women can speak . Eng-. lish. A country goose-plucking, where the squeaking goose hasher long neck twisted round . under the 1 pluck'er's arm, and is robbed of her glory under the very eyes of the hissing, rebellious gander, is far. more spirited,' particu larly when, j after the ordeal, - the plucked victims find themselves free, and waddle ofi in loud conclave, mak ing indignant ado oyer, their treat ment. The east-side goose-plucking in the basement is tame in compari son. . "' ' The orthodox Jews use goose-grease in the preparation of all their food lard being prohibited, and even butter is prescribed in the cooking of certain dishes. This obligation makes neces sary the consumption of . many geese.. The flesh of the goose is liked also, not only by the Jews of that populous neighborhood, but by the Germans as well, so the weekly killing and pluck ing of the long-billed cracklers-assumes important place in the- doings of that particular vicinity. New York Post. . . . The Antiquity of Gold; " Gold was probably the"first 'metal' observed and collected, because of "the instinctive understanding of its- in trinsic value. About it superstitions grew, religious and ceremonious rites, and strange crimes weve acaiimitted for its possession in the days .when, it was believed that it was of. .such, stuff that the sun itself was made and. .the. halls of Valhalla paved. : Rock paint ings and, carvings of Egyptian tombs earlier than the davs Joseph indi cate the operation of washing aurifer ous sand, and a subsequent melting in furnaces by the aid of blow-pipe's. Less than twenty years ago the old mines of Nubia, so. graphically de scribed by Diodorus, were redis covered on the shores of the Red sea, together with a line of ancient wells across the desert; the underground workings where ore veins had been followed by the pick, the rude cupel ling furnace for assaying, picks, oil lamps, stone mills, morfars and pestles, inclined warming tables of stone, crucibles and retorting fur naces of burned tile, by which the en tire process could be' traced. ' Here slaves and hapless prisoners of war exchanged theiriife blood" foT glittering dust to fill the treasuries of their captors. In India and Asia Minor the powdered ore was washed down over smooth, sloping rocks and caught gold in the fleeces of 'sheep skins sunk in the stream. It was literally a golden fleece that Jason brought back from the Cauca sus. Further .north, and following the eastern foothillof Mount Ararat to the southern slope of. the Ural mountains in Russian Siberia, where last year millions were taken out of the old mines, the ancient Scythians broke up rock and gravel with copper implements, -scraped out the glitter ing dust and-nuggets with the fangs of wild boars, and carried their gain away in bags of leather." Modern Machinery. Wild Geese Cnme Aboard. " On her down trip on Green river, recently, near Cromwell, 1 the steam er Gayoso ran into a flock ol wild geese, and ther electric liglit sc dazed them that they flew toward the boat, striking the forecastle and chim neys, aud getting, tangled in .the guy ropes. There was great excitement among the passengers and crew, each trying his best to "catch a goose." In the exciting struggle, which lastedbnt a few moments, they succeeded in capturing three out of the number. They were placed in a coop aud the next day the passengers were treated to a sumptuous wild goose dinner. Louisville Post. At BeVeles,Suffolk, Englaud, 'there is a" young man, a nephew of a former rector of the parish, who, though blind, is a skater, dancer aud bicycle rider. SCIENTIFIC SCRAPS. 4. The baked banana is the .ideal fooJ, . for nervous and anaemic brain workers. - Oil . an average, ' man's" physical , strength begins to decay at the agf of -thirty-six. - - " A curious present for a deaf person in Germany is a fan, deftly concealing a' tiny ear trumpet in its stick. ' . The temperature of the cucumbei has been found to be on a degree be low that of the surrounding atmos phere. . ' According to French figures, 'a man " adds eleven years ' to v his theorejca',' and statistical life by marrying a4 , C age oi mirty. , , ihe most powerful microscope er , invented has just been perfected byr Professor E. L. Gates of Washington; D. C. Its magnifying power is 3,000, -000 diameters. .' Lighthouses in Denmark are sup plied with oil, which is pumped on the waves during a storm. This ex- ' plains the fact that two or three ves-1 sels are always to be seen round each lighthouse in rough weather. At present the world's production of nickel is considerably in excess of the consumption, but as there are but four or five districts in the world whet e it is worked the price is maintained by controlling the actual production. The -world's total output last year was about 4803 metric tons. . Of the candidates ' for the British army who fail. to pass the tests four ou of five are rejected because of de fective vision. The "eyesight" test consists of being able to count cor rectly with both eyes, as well as each eye separately, a number of small black dots exhibited on a card ten feet . from the candidate. According to the statement of the Engiuee' ng and Mining Journal, an , authority on mining matters the new Klondike placers may be expected to produce about $60,000,000 in gold. , This statement is admittedly limited by the fact that there has been no systematic examination of the alluvial deposits to admit of an exact deter- : ruination. ' ' A strongly phosphorescent strontium ; sulphide has been investigated by Pro- . fessor Mourelo of Madrid. The pure compound shows no phosphorescence, " the presence of a small quantity of alkali seeming to be necessary and a trace of subnitrate of bismuth an ad vantage. After cooling from a high temperature slowly, . the substance is niade strongly phosphorescent by even . a very little light. Pulverization de stroys this property, which may be ' restored .by long heating with starch. . - , Mexico has now.becomei producer of sulphur, aside frota that which is obtained from the crater of Popocate petl for local' consumption, a trial con signment having been received re cently at Yuma from the . mines in . Lower California, which are being exploited by an American company. Arrangements for the construction of ' an aerial tramway to bring sulphur on a large scale from the summit of P0210 cate'petl to the foot of the mountain have been discussed for a long time, and surveys have been made. , The Trade in Locusts. Locusts are regularly shipped from Algeria to London, ' where they are worked up by manufacturers of guano. This information is of unusual inter est now .owing to the report of a pur chase for the English markets of Ar gentine lo -usts, which may compete with the African article. In this con nection a report of the British consul general in Algiers is of importance. Algeria had two flights of locusts last year. Tna visitations in .that country are of magnitude is shown when it is stated that the area over "which the egg3 .were laid last year was, 424,500 acres, while 270,120 bushels of young locusts were destroyed, and these are said1- to be below the real figures. The barriers or lines of de-,. fence, made of the "Cyprus appara tus," or of zinc, extended over 322 miles, while 27,113 ditches were dug at the foot of these to catch the young locusts. The damage for the year is estimated at about $250,000. Bos'ton Transcript. An Aluminum House. A. F. Howes of Weyouth, Mass., has recently secured patents , in this country and in Canada on a port-able aluminum house, which when .packed sfor transportation is in three compact bundles and weighs but 130 pounds, including the stove and sundry cook ing utensils that go with it. The Klondike home, as it is called, will comfortably house four people, and besides being built.in such a way that its inmates ar -well protected from the coldest weather, is is . fireproof, a fea ture which is'of no small importance when one considers the strong incli nation of prospectors to overheat their . stoves in order to keep oue half com fortable. Washington Star. A specimen of German architectural and business solidity is afforded by the fact that in Nuremburg there are houses still in good order which were erected iu 10H0, and that in the same; town alirm has been engaged in man ufacturing harmonicas since 1560, sixty years before the settlement in New England. . .', . . .... - i 1