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RlBGE 3 TPTR TQTr -1 WEEKLY JOURNAL FOR HOME AND FARM; GIVING RELIABLE INFORMATION OF THIS NEW COUNTRY, VOL. II. HIGHLANDS, MACON COENTSVN. C., SEPT. 4, 1884 NO. 33. "1 v- Good-bye, Proud World. Good-bye, proud world! I'm going home; Thou art not toy friend ; I am thine ; not Too long through weary crowds I roam; A river aik on the ocean brine ; Too lone I am tossed like the driven foam ; But now proud world, I'm going home ! Good-bye to Flattery's fawning face, To Grandeur with his wise grimace ; To upstart Wealth's averted eye, To supple office, low and high ; To crowded halls to court and street, To frozen hearts and hasting fret. To those who go and those who come, Good-bye, . proud :.. world, Ha. . going home. I go to seek my own health-stone, Bosomed in yon green hills alone ; A secret lodge in a pleasant land, Whose groves the frolic fairies planned, Where arches green the livelong day Echo the blackbird's roundelay, And evil men have never trod A spot that is sacred to thought and God. Oh, when I am safe in my sylvan home I meek at the pride of Greece and Borne; And when I am stretched beneath the piucs Where the evening star so holy shines, I laugh at the lore and pride of man, At the sophist schools, aud the learned clan; For what are they in their high conceit, Wbn man in the Lush with God may meell -Ralph Waldo "Emerson. A Tribute to the f eniory of Sirs. Lolfl Taher, Wife of Our Slost Hiffttly Es teemed Minister, JErviii G. Taber, Who Depart ed this Life Aug. xa, X884. We might truly compare her to a full blown ropo, which had been plucked be- f. e its time for decav ; but unliVe the rose Jt! - tt. her wo k watt done : Jesus sweet ly wi-fcpered : "It is eaougb-red eou! "cwtp up higher I Then on snowy pin ions Be qoietly aud sweeny wafted her glad spirit up to ih. t rest, and home for which she had so pat'eutly and faithfully waited. Mr. ud Ms. Tuber were former ly of the 6:le of Vt. bat feel.;.-g it bis du ty to wc.k for the Matter, Mr. Taber re moved to Iowa; tbevce to the iutitoa Territory; heo to this ti.it., YeJlow-b'U Swain Co., where be now "revdes. Hi wife k'owy md uico tipl..i dagly fell under tie hand oi that slow b it ure cankering wo rn Consumption, but for many years Mrs. T. was a cousin. ent member of the Friends' church. She leaves a kind hus band and two little gHs, six and ten years old and many v:ue uieuus to mourn their loss. As a neighbor she was friendly and obliging; as a wife, loving and true ; as a mother, kind aud affectionate. She was one of tbe most perfect models for a moth er 1 ver saw, her only mode of correction being -o refuse her little dapghters their aeea&iomed good night kiss, which proves very eZectuaL The witter tad the pleatu'e of sending some time with this kind and interesting family, acd while there, learned much in regard to the true life of a Christian. Duri-ig family devotion, after the father had eeaeed to invoke God's blessing and there was a pause, a clear, sweet voice of the little girl only six years old broke the stillness asking God for Christ's sake to take care of, and bless them all. "Bless our kind friend and may she call on Thee day by day for tbe sake of Jesus, who died for her ;" then the sweet voice ceas ed. Amen and amen ! was the true re sponse of the listener's heart, as tears filled the eves ; and may God help her never to forget it. Sleep on, dear f-iend, wife and mother. Though gone from the earth, your works still follow you. Tour hosbaud will ever bear the glal tidings of the Saviour yn loved so well, till the death angel shall summon him to meet the wife to whom he was so attentive and kind",' and whom he loied but too well. The' day before Mrs. T. died she re marked : "My sisters know that I love Jesus," then eomir-g to, after a fainting fit she regretted that she had come back to earth again.- She then asked her hus band if he was ready for her to go to sleep. He replied in the rffirmative. She then closed her eyes and slept for a few minofes, awakening only to remain with her loved ones here but a little while. Her prayers were that she might leave this n orld without pain, and God answer ed them, for she calmly and peacefully fell asleep, without a straggle.. - Our dear sUter is not dead, bat sleep eth, and we are reminded of those most true and : touching words of our great .t:W. : "There is no death J the stars go down, To rise npon eome brighter shore;. And bright in heaven's jeweled crown They thine forever more. "There is no death I the choicest gifts That heaven hath kindly lent to earth Are ever first to seek again Tbe country of their birth. "And all things that for growth or joy Are worthy of our love or care, Whose loss has left as desolate, Are safely garnered there. "The voice of birdlike melody That we have missed and mourned so long, Now mingles with the angel choir, In everlasting song. "There is no death ! although we grieve When beautiful familiar forms That we have learned to love, are torn Froarotur-embraeiBg arms. "Although with bowed and breaking heart, With sable garb and silent tread, We bear their senseless dust to rest And say that they are dead, "They are not dead ! they have bat pass ed Beyond the mists that blind oe here, Into tbe new and larger life Of that serener sphere. "They kave but dropped their robe of clay To put their shining raiment on ; They have not wandered ?ar away, They are not 'lost' or 'gone. "Aud ever near us thongh unseen, The dear, immortal spirits tread For all the boundless universe Is life ; there are not dead." Ever in fond rtmemberance of the de parted, I remain, L. Z. Waynesville News pltaae copy. Thackeray's General Inri tatiou. I first saw Thackeray at the house of my brother-iii-law, with whom I was then staying in txlooeeeter-place ; they bad lived together as young men at Weimar, but had never seen one another since, and their ineetiiig was very interercsting. Their hues iu life had been different, bu ihe recollection of old times drew them to gether closely. A curious and character istic thing happeued on the occasion in question. There were a" dozen people or so at dinner, all unknown to Tbackery. but he was in good spirits and made him self very agreeable. It disappointed me excessively when, immediately after din ner, he ioforinvd me that he had a most particular engagement, and was about to wish good night to his host. "But will you not even smoke a cigar first V I in quired. "A cigar f Oh, they smoke here, do they f Well, to tell you the truth, that was my engagement," and he remained for some houis. There was an ancieat gentleman at the table who had greatly disitnguiahed himself half a centu ry ago at college, by whom . the novelist was much attracted, and especially when he told him that there was nothing origi nal in modern literature ; everything, he said, came indirectly more or less from I think he said Pindar. "But at all events Pindar did not write 'Vanity Fair,' " I said. "Yes, Sir," answered the old gen tleman confidently, "he did. Ia the highest and nobler sense Pindar did write it." This view of affairs, which was quite new to him, delighted Tbaekery, who was so pleased with his even:ug that he invited the whole company 14 in all to dine with him the next day. I mention tbe circumstance not only as being a humor ous thing in itself, but as illustrative of a certain boyish and impulsive strain that there was iu his nature. He told me af terward that when he subsequently went to the club that night he had felt so dan gerously hospitable that it was all -he could do to prevent himself "asking some more people ;" and as a matter of fact he did ask two other guests. He had been very moderate as to wine drinking, and was only carried away by a spirit of gen iality, which now and then overmastered him. The guests who had so mueh taken his fancy or perhaps it was only the an cient classic, whom he could not well have invited without the others were of Bourse delighted with their invitation, but many of them had scruples about accept ing it. They called the next afternoon in pairs to know "what we were going to do about it," and "whether we thought Mr. Tbackery really meant it." For my part I said I should go if I went alone ; and go we did.- An excellent dinner we got, notwithstanding the shortness of the no tice; nor in our kind hostess's manner could be detected the least surprise at what must nevertheless have seemed a somewhat unnlooked-for incursion. James Pnyn, in the Cornhill Magazine An eld negro at Weldou, North Carolina, at a recent lecture said : "When I sees a man g iog home with a gallon f whiskey aud half a pound of meat, dat's temper ance lecture enough for me, and I s es it ebery day. I know dat el-ery thing in his house is on the same scale gallon of misery t ebery half pound of comfort." Ayer's Saraparilla will cure your Ca tarrh, and do away with that sickening odor of the breath. Tbe Art of Character Read ingf. rSOM FOBNKT'S PBOGBE88.J The ability or rather power of correctly reading character, is not only a distinct bat a most rare faculty. Most people im agine they are personally and singularly gifted in this way, when in reality-they have received merely an impression from an individuality stronger than their own, which when they endeavor to convey to others ia language signally fails of its ob ject. It is so difficult, indeed, to. lose one's self even in tbe attempt to describe others. They have an instinct which aids materially in giving serviceable bints, but they are speechless if called upon to ex press these hints to other minds. Every one indeed can easily trase and portray the most prominent characteristics, of a mere acquaintance ; a commonplace phrase, a mere formula of social custom, will sometimes give a fair enough descrip tion and completely satisfy the curiosity of a chance inquirer- It is only when the hearer wants to have, and the observer would fain give, a true, just, comprehen sive estimate and picture , of a character, that the difficulty presents itself. There are so many indescribable details that mean so much to the close student of hu manity, and which,, when described, fail to carry the impression from your mind to another, and it almost seems that the better we know an individual we wish to describe the more impossible it appears. There is his voice, which is so full of meaning to ns, the tones of which we can hear as we speak of him, and yet cannot de scribe. There are his hands, portraying strength and tenderness to us, and herhaps creatiug no impression upon the sensibili ties of others. We are all so differently constituted that what might mean vol umes in the one instance might pass fur naught in the second. Intelligence in Cats). About 20 miles from the town of Larne there resides a gentlemau in the posses sion of a cat, which is so great a favorite that every day a plate and chair are plac ed for her beside her master, whose re past she shares with supreme content. One day for some reason the dinner- was postponed, but the cat came in at the na na! hoor. She was evidently much dis concerted at seeing nothing, walked once or twice disconsolately ronud the table, then disappeared. Sho-tly after ward she reto'ned wub'a mouse, which she laid on her masters plate, then going away, she car; ' . A 4y time with a mouse, whieh sne put on her own plate. She postponed further proceedings until hfit master returned, when she immediate ly begrfn purring and rubbing herself agaiosir bis legs, as mueh as to say, "See how nicely I have provided for yon." Between this town and the village of Holy wood there is a country house which happened to take fire. The cat of the house, which had access to the servant maid's apartments, ran up a?d pawed the youug woman's face. Being very drowsy, the girl turned to sleep afresh. The cat. however, after some interval, returned and proceeded to scratch the girl's face to such a purpose that she rose, and, smelling the fire, wakened the other membenfuf the household, and the flames were extinguished. A nephew of mine who is fond of rats generally keeps three or four, and by dint of pains and kindness teaches them a variety of tricks. I saw one of them sipping cream from a ieaspoon, which it held between its. two fore paws. Nature. A Dream of a Husband. Said the hotel-keeper : "There was a lady of my acquaintance once, who awoke her husband in the night by the most ex travagant manifestations of delirium. When he inquired what ailed her, ahe told him 'to mind bis own business "At breakfast she told him she was dreaming, oh ! snch a delightful dream. She thought she was at an auction where they were selling men. Oh, there were such splendid specimens there. But fiey went so hgh she feared she couldu't get one of them. At last the auctioneer took com panion on her and knocked down a glo rious fellow to her and and then she awoke. " 'But,' pleaded the anxious husband, 'didn't you see any there like me V " 'Like yon 1' said the spiteful beauty, 'laws, yes. They were pat up in bundles, like celery, and sold for ten cents a bun dle.' "Pittsburg Telegraph. How ti spoil steak fry it. To spoil custard bake it too long. To spoil house plants water them too long. To -spoil batter do not work ont all the milk- To spoil a carpet sweep it with a stiff broom. To spoil pan-cakes bake them on a luke warm priddle. To SDoil a breakfast- grumble all the while you are eating. To spoil potatoes let them lie and soak afle t. m "si - i j . a uouiug. x o apuu nrewi uw pwi uutu and let it raise until too light and it runs over. To snoil scissors cut avervthinjr ' - ' f 0 C from a sheet of paper to a bar of east iron. To spoil gaiments in maxing cut mem ont eareksslv and run all the seams. To spoil a school change teachers every time some one in tbe district finds fault. To spoil children humor them in every thing they happen to thiak they want. Ex. Tne Starring Indiana. The starvirg to death of the Blackfeet Indians is a disgrace to the United States Government Some of its agents evident ly need hanging for murder of the worst kind. The Bev. Father Prando, who has just left the dying remnant of Indians, says that he could not bear to hear the inces sant cry of the famishing children for food which he bad not the power to supply, nor to see the agonizing tears of the moth er whose babe is dying for want of nour ishment. Starvation has done its deadly work among the children, weak women, and decrepit men. The tongue of Father Prando grows painfully eloquent when he says : "We meaning the Government pen np these helpless Indians on gameless reservations and bid them live upon their arid plains, whose boundaries they are forbidden to cross, thns prohibiting them rom CYereisvog that holy law of nature, self preservation." Tbe Mmtsna papers say it is generally beleived that the Gov ernment fo'jisbed suffic;eut supples, if properly delivered, to support the Black feet that are now dying and famishing for food; The Helena Herald says : "Such a dire necessity should not come npondcmb brutes, and when it does er'st among hu man beings within the reach of a civilized community tbe remedy should be a prompt tnd as effective as the exigency demands. ; Tt is by somebody's fault that . these poor c-eaiO'-es are neglec:ed and left to die from vat ion-. Tbe very thought that snch a s Me of things ex;sts among the poo Indians of tbe mountains and in the Ter ri tory is revolting to all our natural im pulses. , As there is a just God, may we not expect a retribution for the fearful sin of laming a deaf ear to the pitiful cry fo Veadf" Virginia, (Nev.) Enterprise. Habits. husbandman, ELHIRA, k. t. Bad habits enslave the persons upon whom they are fastened, but it is unwise to assume that the hateful bondage can not be broken. It is true, habits when confirmed are sometimes exceedingly difficult to break, but when the effort is accompanied by resolute will the task is by no meanB hopeless. It is also true that resolute purpose is ' essential in di vesting one's sell- irom riabits or prac-tices-reprebonsrble in their character. The person who has vigorous moral sense will recognize the duty to free himseif from whatever is wrong in his character, and it bad nabits are fastened upon sucn a person when he has understanding of that fact he will feel !wtisrible inclina tion to make the correction which will re lease him from bondage irksome to his better nature. It is none the less a duty that every person must feel to correct whatever is bad in his character, and this is especially important for persons who have not passed the period of middle life, for . by indulgence bad habits become strengthened, and, therefore, mure diffi cult to break. Selecting1 a Horse. The Turf, Field and Farm, than which tleve is no better authority on the Bubject ys "that iu baying a bose, first look at his head and eyes for s'gas of intelli gence, temper, courage and honesty. Un less a horse has brains yon cannot teach him to do anything well. If bad qualities predominate in a bocse, education only serves to euU ge and ioteoshy them. Tbe head is ihe indicator of disposition. A square mrzzel wih btrge nostrils evidences a large b eathiog apparatus and power. Next, ree that be is well under the jowl, with jaw booes broad and wide apart un de the tb o. le. B -eadth and fulness be tween tbe eyes are always desirable. The eyes should be t all and hazel in color, ears small and thrown well foiward. The horse vbat lo-i-s his ears back every now and ibeu is oot 10 be trusted. He is either a biier or a kc er, and Is sr-e to be vie ion, eau never be trained to do anything well, and so a horse with a rounding nose, tapering foebeJ, and a broad, full face below the eyes is always treacherous and not to be lelied upon. Avoid the lung legged, st:lted animal always choosing one with a short, sUatght back end rump, good .depth of chest, fore legs short, hind legs straight, with low down hock, short pastern joint, and a round, mulish shaped foot." The Worth Carolina State exposition. Arrangements are making by enterpris ing firms to have the industries of Balti more fully represented at the North Car olina State Exposition, which will be held at Baleigh, beginning Oct. J and con tinuing JintiJ the 28th of that month, tt is roughly estimated that Baltimore trade with North Carolina amounts to over $12,000,000 annually. Boston, New York and Philadelphia will make a good showing at the exhibition, bat it is hoped the merchants of this city will outdo them. Baltimore Sun. "Who Am My If aybur." "Whe am, my naybnr f asked the old man, as he opened the meeting and blew bis nose with tbe report of an army mus ket, loaded to kill a mile and a half away. There was a deep silence throughout the hall for a moment, and then he continu ed: It's none o my business. If my nay bur wants to bony an' lend an' be friendly,' dat's all right, an' I sha'1 meet him half way. If he wants to lib secluded dat's my business. It's none o' my affair whar' be cum from, what he works at, how roach he gits, what he eats or wears or where he pats in his time. If be am a good man, so much de better for society. If he am a bad one, let der purleece lake care o' him ! I has been hangin' onto l;fe ober seventy It ng y'ars, an' when I si down of a night and reflect an' wonder an' recall, it 'pears to me dat one-half de trou ble au' worriments of life cum from min- din' other people's biziness an' lettin' our own go at loose ends. I got frew wid it a good while ago. Dar was a time in my life when' if a strange nigger passed my cabin ridin' a cream cull'd mule an' fol lowed by a yaller dog I'd quit hbein' co'n to wonder whar he was goin', how old de mule was, what his wife looked like, how many children he had an' a hundred odder things. Am it any business ' my naybur's whedder I prefer on'ns raw or cooked f Not a bit. Am it ary biziness o' mine whedder my naybur an' his wife agree or fight f Not a bit. I run my bizness to please myself. I let my naybur do de same. I don't ask whedder he am jist out o' State prison or jist cum from Chicago. I doan' care how he got his pianer, or whedder he has paid for his ca'pets. If be exhibits a naburly speerit by axin' to borry my shovel I shall respond by axin' de loan of his ax. "Dar am three or fo' members in dis club who am greatly troubled over odder people's biziness. Dey can't tee die, an dey wonder ober dat, an' dey suspect an' suspishun an' go to bed mad bekase it ain't all writ out on de ba'n doah for 'em to read. I want sich members to disreck ollect that any one pusson who aims a libin, pays his debts, and keeps outer de hands of de doctahs and purleeee has all de biziness he kin 'tend to. If he imag ines he hasn't I kin make mo' biziness fur him I" There was quite a rustle of excitement as the president finished, and if Lonesome Sanders had not had his face in the wa ter dipper he would nave observed ntty different individuabi taking Jn hisrecUtror,, in accoance witn tbe age. non. Drinking: in the Middle Ages. We are of opinion that drinking had not in the Middle Ages reached anything like the disgusting extreme at which we find it in the latter part of the seventeenth and the whole of the eighteenth century. Chaucer, it will be conceded, was an ac curate paiiiter of the contemporary man ners. With the exception of Shakespeare, no Englishman has surpassed him. Many of the characters in the "Canterbury Tales" get drunk, and misfortunes happen to them in consequence, but nothing is ever said to indicate that the poet had any sympathy with this gross form of vice. The same may be stated of the Elizabethan dramatists. It is not until we reach tbe reign of Charles II, that we find writeis of repute speaking of excess in drink as if it were no frailty, but rather a virtue. This distorted view of things continued getting worse and worse until the days of our grand-fathers. All eighteenth-century literature is full of it. There was a print once so popular that it was found on the walls of cottages, as well as in bar parlors, which represented two compartments. Iu each was a man Bit ting. The fint was labelled "A jolly good fellow ;" he had a tankard of foam ing beer beside bim. The other had for inscription "A muckworm," and repre sented a thin and careworn man making entries in a ledger. The inference to be drawn, of course, was that the man who cast up bs accounts was infinitely inferior in the social scale to the boon companion who stupe&td himself with beer. We imagine this was the common feeling of the time, and that it continued in many classes down to the beginning of the pres ent re:gn. We ourselves knew a farmer who had broken his ribs twice and an arm three times by falling off horseback when returning drunk from market. The Aeademy. As the time approaches for opening the doors of the Worlds Exposition at New Orleans encouraging reports from various foreign and domestic commissions indicate that the riches of the great fair have been by no means over estimated. The scheme has. grown so rapidly that it has been found necessary to erect additional build ings from time to time in order to accom modate the increasing number of exhibit ors. Three and possibly four buildings will be found to be larger than any similar erections of any age or country. This fact gives the Exposition a pre-eminence among world's fairs that will be potential in drawing stangers from far-away binds. Those who have made up their minds to see one world's fair have now the oppor tunity of seeing tbe best example that has yet been devised in America or Europe. There can be no such thing as failure now. With abundance of money in hand, and the largest number of exhibits ever booked at an exposition, and thirty-five States and fifteen foreign countries partic ipating, the management may "Well feel proud of the success already achieved. In addition to the products cf art, science and industry of the old wo-Id, such as have made other fairs renowned and attractive to remote dwellers of tbe round globe, the New Orleans creation has unique features. The Mexicao. green of five , acres will contain one huW?ed rod" itHr varieties of trees from eve y pat of tbe Republic. Matty of the woods have a high commer cial value and yet, s range to say, some of ihema-epvaci'cal'y rVnowointhe UaUed States. The Mexican cedar, mahogany, Campecbe logwood, saffron and linaloe, that has a perCu re that never leaves it are all trees of geat value ia commence. The timber g- owth of Mexo is practical ly unlimited, and tb3 e s boc idlers wealth in many untouched fof.s s awa'i'ng the hand of enterprise aud iodnv ry. Should the Exposition feD"eeed in mak ing known to the people of tbe world the riches of the North, Ceni'-sl and South American forest3, it wiH bat e accomplish ed at its close a highly iirpo hat mission. But wbst is said of trees may be repeated in dffe eut axd moe p' ecVe largpage of t Topical fro'ts tha i a e to be brought to the g -eat E position. Tbe diffe ent vai'elies of figs, grapes, oinDgea, mangoes, banan as, pine-apples and many ra e ,"VuU8 wi1! be shown growing upo a pl?nts or trees, thus peseoting a rare spectacle to North ern eyes. Whi'e tbe depii .oeDts of for estry and ho iieoliare will be the largest yet seed, the other features of the Exposi tion such as tbe cotton, tugar, mineral machinery, goveiameut, and live stock exhibits, wiH a . . acl scarcely less atten tion. The actual jesul.s already obta'ned are quite snffie'ent for tbe management to base a preiiic "on unon, to tbe effect that the courog World's Indus; vial and Coiton Ceuled?i is to be tbe largest, most com plete and satif factory of tbe rineteenth. centuvy. Amusements of Italian Stu Dents 200 Years ago. The festivities and amusement of the Jousts and tournameinyS Anffgwsgu favorite pastimes. They were held at fixed times : on the occasion of the elec tion of a Hector, on the taking of the high est degree, or laurea, and on the arrival among them of a celebrated .Professor. On the feast of St. Cateruia the lawyers made merry ; on that of San Romualdo the medical students enjoyed themselves, subscribing money for the occasion. These religious festivals and convivial meetings were numerous, especially in carnival time. There was likewise the "orange feast," wfcen the students drove in carts through the town, getting every one with fiuit. In Bologna the Jews were obliged to contribute 104 lire annu ally to the jurists, and 70 to the artists for their carnival festivals, and at the fall of the first snow the students could collect money from the doctors and citizens, but not until the syndic of the university had been assured that snow really bad fallen, for on mild Winters, when disappointed of their toll, students had been known to fetch snow, from the neighboring moun. tains and palm it off as having just fallen, whereby many innocent people were tak en in. Ihe money thus collected went toward a fund tat the painting of portraits, or for statues of the leading Professors. The British Quarterly Review. Tne Colossus of Rliodes. The city ot Bhodes is situated on the Ward of tbat t?.me- which .Ues some twelve miles f"om the coast of Asia Minor. It was founded 400 years before Ihe birth of Chrkt, and among other things it was no ted for its colosius, wh:.ch was reckoned to be one of the seven wonders of the ancient world. The colossus was a gigantic statue in brass of Hel ios, or the sun, and stood at the entrance of one of the ports. It was 105 ftet high. According to one beVet which, however U now abandoned the colossus bestrode the harbor, one foot res.ing upon a pier at one Bide, the-ober upon a pier at the other, wh'le the figure it?elf was so lofty that ships in full sail could pass underneath the outstretched legs. Sixty yeara after it vas built it was thrown down by an earthquake. Little Folks' Mayazinel Ry. Arthur Annioeseed, of TJtioa, is a disciple of WiMe, and pronounced by his lady parishioners a very zephyr of poetio piety. His preaching is very delicate. Last Sabbath he read a portion of sacred writ detailing a rehearsal of Jonah's sub marine adventures. "We come now to Jenah," said Arthur, "who passed three days and three nights in the whale's alien society." . ""IS
Blue Ridge Enterprise (Highlands, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 4, 1884, edition 1
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