The Sandersville herald. (Sandersville, Ga.) 1872-1909, January 15, 1908, Image 6

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THE SANDER8VILLE HERALD. NATURE AND A WOMAN'S WORK Nature and a woman’s work com bined havo produced the grandest remedy for woman’s ills that the •world has ever known. In the good old-fashioned days of our grandmothers they relied upon the roots and herbs of the field to cure disease and mitigate suffering. The Indians on our Western Plains to-day can produce roots and herbs for every ailment, and cure diseases that bafllo the most skilled physicians who have spent years in the study of drugs. From the roots and herbs of the field Lydia E. Pinkham more than thirty years ago gave to the women of the world a remedy for their pe culiar ills, more potent and effica cious than any combination of drugs. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound is now recognized as the standard remedy for woman’s ills. Mrs. Bertha Muff, of 615 N.C. St., Louisiana, Mo., writes: * •' Complete restoration to health means so much to me that for the sake of other suffering women I am willing to make my troubles public. “For twelve years I had been suffer ing with the worst forms of female ills. During that time I had eleven different physicians without help. No tongue «&n tell what I suffered, and at times I could hardly walk. About two years pgo 1 wrote Mrs. Pinkham for advice. I followed it, aDd can truly say that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com pound and Mrs. Pinkham’s advice re stored health and strength. It is worth mountains of gold to suffering women.” What Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege table Compound did for Mrs. Muff, It will do for other suffering women. •Id? Cures Constipation, Diarrhoea. Convulalona, ■tile, Sour Stomach, etc. It Destroys Woraia, Allays Feverishness and Colds. It Aids Diges tion. At Makes Tsbthino Hasy. Promotes Cheer- fulness aud Produces Natural Sleep. If love is blind how can there be love «t first sight? CAPUDINE ■ a m It removes ths cams. ■ J I I Iv toothsi Iht nerve* ana i W !» reltrrea tbs aebst and COLDS AND ORIPPE ' Ptvsrtib nett, 'it 'tnti all ktsdackts and Neuralgia alio. No bad Ufbcts. 100, Me and 60# bottles. (LwuaJ FREE A POSTAL [ROM YOU And We Will Send Free, to Prove That it is the Most Effective External Cure for Rheumatic Pains and Aches, a Large BOTTLE OF fMlNARPSl mSBSSt iLinimenTj Confident that it will do for you what it has done for others, and that to use it is to praise it, as does the writer of the following grateful letter: — “With muscular rheumatism I suf fered to the extent that even to control the pen held in my right hand was impossible at times. On one such day I first used Minard’s Liniment. No . indorsement could come from a worse sufferer or more grateful heart than S ino. G. W. D’Vys, Cambridge, Mass.” md a postal to Minard’s Liniment Co., 69, Framingham, Mass. > ' The Glass Eye Industry. “The manufacture of glass eyes has been reduced to a science," said a gentleman who Is compelled to wear one of them. "No two natural orbs are exactly alike, each one differing In size and color. It takes the nic est kind of calculation to get an ar tificial eye that Is approximately the same In size and color as the natural one. If the artificial eye fits the soc ket on all sides tho muscles which would move the natural eye grip the glass one when they are called Into play, and in this way the artificial orb Is moved slightly, thus lessening the disagreeable Impression which a glass eye gives. Matching the color of the natural eye, however, Is the hardest part of the manufacturing pro cess, and requires the most expert workmanship. When the glass eye is perfected an exact duplicate is made und kept on file just as a business man keeps a card Index list, so that duplicate orders may be filled by mall. The life of a glass eye varies from three to six months The chem ical properties of the tear act upon the glass, dulling Its luster and giv ing It a dead appearance.”—Phila delphia Record. FEEDING WITH HIS KNIFE. ‘‘Jokley was tolling me he saw you In a restaurant yesterday," said Coak ley. "Yes,” replied the new-rich Kadley, “and I cut him. Did I10 tell you that?” "No, but he said he was in constant fear that you’d cut yourself.”—Phila delphia Press. FITS,St. Vitus’DanreiNervoeis Diseases per manently cured by I)r. Kline’s Great Nerve Restorer. $3 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr. H. R. Kline, Ld.,031 Arch St.. Philo,, Pa, The railroads of the world, It la estimated, annually kill less than one- fourth as many people as the mo squitoes, notes the Washington Post. As there Is no way of suing the mo squitoes, th?Te Is a great deal of profitable business lost to the law yers. A professor making observations has discovered signs of atmosphere on the planet Mercury. Is this hot air? demands the Mobile Herald. TWO CURES OF ECZEMA Baby Had Severe Attack—Grand father Suffered Torment* with the Disease—Owe Recovery to Onticura. "In 1684 my grandson, a babe, had an attack of eezema, and after trying the doc tors to the extent of heavy bill* and an in crease of the disease and suffering, I rec ommended Cuticura and in a few weeks the child was well. He is to-day a strong man and absolutely free from the disease. A few years ago I contracted eczema, and became on intense sufferer. A whole win ter passed without onco having on shoes, nearly from the knees to the toes being! covered with virulent sores. I tried muny doctors to no purpose. Then I procured! the Cuticura Remedies and found immedi ate improvement and final cure. M. W. LaRue, 845 Seventh St., Louisville, Ky,, April 23 and May 14, 1907.” Some men wouldn’t take advice If It wore offered to them In capsules. Pile* Cored in 0 to 14 Days, i’axo Ointment is Pile > Ointment is guaranteed to cure any of Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding • in 0 to 14 dayaor money refunded. 60c. It is easier to secure a vindication than It Is to restore virtue. Itch cured in 30 minutes by Woolford’s Sanitary Lotion. Never fails. At druggists. Wise is the man who can correct a mistake before he makes It. REASON FOR WOMEN’S “NERVES. In Very Muny Cases It is Weakened Kidneys. Mrs. Frsfnk Roseboom, 612 South Washington St., Moscow, Idaho, Says: “Inherited kid ney trouble grew steadily worse with me until so nervous I could not sleep at night. I was aiziy and spots floated be fore my eyes. My back and hips achea and every cold set tled on flay kidneys and made me worse. I have used many different medicines and was discouraged when I began with Doan’s Kidney Pills, but now the symptoms that alarmed me are gone.” Sold by all dealers, 50 cents a box. Foster-Wilburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Ibis andH >M Ideal Place to Faint. "If you must faint in church,” re marked the woman with aesthetic ten dencies, "do it In St. Patrick’s cathe dral. You may not realize it under the circumstances, but it Is extremely gratifying to your artistic sensibilities to know that the glass of water that has revived you has been poured out of a charming silver pitcher that the ushers always keep somewhere neur the entrance for just such occasions. Then think of the bliss of being looked after at such a time by the usher, who looks just like Harry Lehr.”—New York Press. It’s easy for a millionaire to preach the virtues of poverty. Only One “Bromo Quinine” That U Laxative Bromo Quinine. Look for the signature of E. W. Grove. Used the WoAd over to Gore a Cold in One Day. 35c. Oratory Is merely talk with its Sun day clothes on. Poru-na Almanac in8,000,000 Homes The Pertina Lucky Day Almanac has become a fixture in over eight million homes. It can be obtained from all dreg- gists free. Be sure to inquire early. The 1008 Almanac is already published, and the supply will soon be exhausted. Do not put it ofll Speak for one to-day. May heaven help the rich; the poor have no automobiles. Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children teething,softs ns thegmns, reducesinflammo tion, allays pdin,cures wind colic, 25c a bottla A man usually gets what Is coming to bfin when the postman calls. A Duchess Opens a Creamery. The Duchess of Abercom's cream ery Is at BaronBeourt, und she sup plies milk and dairy produce to Lon don hotels artd to some of the ocean liners. She Is an aunt of Lord Howe and a sister of Vice-Admiral the Hon. Sir Assheton Curzon-Howe and of Lady Emily Klngscote, one of the queen's women of the bedchamber. The duchess herself was Queen Alex andra’s lady In waiting, and her maj esty stood sponsor to her first daugh ter, Lady Alexandra Hamilton. Her eldest son, laird Hamilton, and Ills el dest son, little Lord Paisley, who Is three years old, are both godsons of the king.—The Sketch. Woman Wins Horse Race. Clad in bloomers and with her long black hair streaming behind her, Mrs. Minnie S. Hesford, a country girl, aged twenty-six years, pnssed the post a winner in two straight heats In the event for maiden Mississippi bred trotters at the state fair races at .lack- son, Miss. Mrs. Hesford drove Blue Nellie, her own three-year-old which she bred herself. Miss Queen, four years old, driven by a man and the only other starter, was distalnced In both heats. Mrs. Hesford Is a typical Missis sippi girl. She loves horses and dogs and maintain# her own stables and kennels. She wears the blturcated skirts only when In the sulky.—New York World. The Art of Happiness. The art of happiness consists in being pleased with little things. Peo ple with great wealth or great power are seldom happy. The leaders of the world, great men or great women, are seldom satisfied. The society leader, with millions at her command and the homage of many men and women, rarely knows the happiness that comes unasked to the young wife or mother in humbler circles. The possession of money decreases the power of enjoyment. A child gefs more pleasure out of a ten-cent toy than a millionaire does from a $5000 yacht. Ten cents has greater value to the child than $5000 has to the mil lionaire. The joys of life belong to the little people—the quiet men and women who are satisfied to live their own lives and make lltle mark on the lives of others. It Is In the power of the least of us to be happy and to make others so.—New York Journal. A Plague of Society. A woman who was believed to be devotedly attached to the tiny Pekin ese that has accompanied her to most of the social functions she has attend ed for two or three seasons, has just surprised her friends by the state ment that in her opinion, If we could only all go mad on Teddy bears as quickly as possible one of the worst plagues of society would be removed. "I assure you,” she said, “that women detest carrying about irritating little animals, all yaps and sniffs and wrig gling leys, and they are constantly be ing made more unhappy by the fact of other women possessing smaller, ug lier, or more expensive pet dogs than their own. • But a Teddy bear is a per fect pet. Its manners at meal times are exemplary, as it will sit on a chair and smile Iterminably without covet ing any food. When you and your friends are all talking at once at the top of your voices it doesn’t make the clamor more deafening with Its barks. It never ,jumps abruptly into your lap, that already has a teacup or when you are at bridge scatter your winnings and your hand far and wide at a critical moment.”—New York Tribune. What Finnish Women Want. The nineteen women members who sat In the Finnish Diet included elev en Socialists, and while they will work and act in accord with their male colleagues of that party, they promise to force some distinctly l’em inine and sex Issues to the fore. Prohibition of the manufacture and Importation of liquor into the country, radical changes In the marriage and divorce laws, equal recognition of il legitimate children, and education for all are among the issues on the worn an’s program, and if their male party associates hesitate to support them they have a powerful weapon in their hands to bring the men to their sens es. The women of Finland have their own Socialist party, which has grown tyith lightning speed until now the ambition of every peasant girl in the villages is to become an enrolled member. It is asserted that more than 70 percent of all the working women and servants In this land of the midnight sun already are mem bers of the Socialist Women’s Union, They aim to rule the country— through the men. The women and their wishes will be treated with re spect and the deference due to such a powerful and influential constituency as they represent.—Finland corre spondence In New York World. Marriage Without Love. The man who has loved a woman and married her only to discover that she has given him her hand without her heart inevitably deteriorates. The knowledge humbles his pride wounds hiR love, takes the rest and hope out of his career, and after only a few years the man will be far more to be pitied, more soured and disap pointed than nny misogynist who has been jilted and professes to hate "the sex.” And for the woman, life with a man she does not love is perfect misery. Her liking soon turns to indifference, indifference to dislike, and if she be an honest woman, who feels thnt she ought not to let her husband suffer more than she can belli because of her mistake, the struggle to conceal and crush down this recoil from the one person on earth who stands near est to her at every turn of the long lane of life will simply wear her out. This is the kind of misery that kills far more readily than any pang 1 of disappointed love. It certainly does happen sometimes that the husband’s passion kindles In to flame the fuint glow in his wife’s heart, and the woman who only thought she cared begins to care In real earnest. But this occurs only seldom, and In consequence the wom an who risks a loveless marriage in the hope that "love will come” is ex tremely foolish.—Daily Mirror. An Indian Woman Lawyer. The only Indian woman lawyer In the United States, Julia St. Cyr, a Winnebago Indian, has been before the federal court in Omaha this week, where she defended herself on a chargo of having accepted too large a fee as a pension attorney from an old Indian squaw of her tribe whose hus band had been a scout under Crook, and so well did the Indian *women conduct her defence that the jury found for her on the very first ballot. During tlie trial Miss St. Cyr used all the arts of a trained pleader, not neg lecting to shed a few tears at a crit ical moment. But having departed from the customary stolidity of In dian character long enough to make her Impression on the jurymen, she returned to the impassive mask of the red man, and when the verdict of “not guilty” was announced simply said, with the greatest indifference: "Well, I knew it would be that way." She did not attempt to thank the jury for its verdict, but with head erect stalked out of the court room when told that she was free. Julia St. Cyr, the Indian woman at torney, is a woman of intellectual at tainment and is well known all over the Winnebago and Omaha tribes. Although a Winnebago herself, when any Indian of either of those tribes gets Into trouble he runs to Miss St. Cyr for advice. And so much influ ence has she over them that probably half the disputes of the members of those two tribes are settled by her, never reaching a court of law at all. Her word is mighty near law on the reservations.—Pittsburg Ditpatch. Fashion Notes. Lingerie waists are beginning to sell again. Moire antique is a favorite for waistcoats. Whether the coat is short or long it must be cutaway to be correct. ffienille is being used quite exten sively for trimming evening gowns. Madame Fashion has sent out word that the cutaway coats shall continue. Coats are either short or long, the tendency being toward greater length. If your outer skirt is cut circular, do not fall to make your petticoat cir cular, too. The surplice corset cover Is a boon to ITie thfn woman, and it is one of the most fashionable models In lin gerie. Buckles of Persian design studded with colored stones are the ultra cor rect fastening for the belts of Persian galloon. Satin broadcloth, chiffon broadcloth and similar terms indicate the finish of this always elegant cloth as it is worn today. Very wide circular bands of crape appear on exquisite Paris mourning gowns, and bretelles and bolero are of the same material. Perhaps there is no prettier finish for the gowns of those in mourning than double frills of dotted filet, edged if the wearer chooses, with dull fin ished ribbon. Antique pendants, either real or copied, are the correct ornament for fine neck chains, and the green stone, regarded by the ancients as a good luck bearer, is one of the most fancied at the present day, GRAFTERS IN UMBO Greene and Gaynor Now In mates of Atlanta Pen. TO SERVE FOUR YEARS World-Noted Convicts Received by Warden Moyer as Ordinary Prison ers Are Taken Into Uncle Sam's Domicile. Benjamin D. Greene and John F. Gaynor, known throughout the world for the hard fight they made to ke«() out of the federal prison, after being charged and then convicted of em bezzling $575,749.90 from the govern ment on the harbor contracts at Sa vannah, are now ensconced in the fed eral prison, near Atlanta. Wedensday morning they arrived to do a “four-year sentence,” and begin this sentence, whereas If they had gouts at once to prlsop after being cpnvictod they would now be walking out free men. it Is doubtful if Gaynor ever leaves the prison alive, as he is In wretched health now and has been for some time. The prison physicians made an exam ination of both, and the warden will decide what work they are to do, If any. "All convicts work here,” stated War den Moyer. “If their physical condition will permit. I am awaiting the report of the physicians on these men.” The noted prisoners left Macon with much secrecy Wednesday morning, at 3:06 o’clock, over the Southern, accom panied by United States Marshal George F. White, Deputy Marshal Dave Riley and C. W. Hubbard, jailer of the Ulbb county Jail. They were due to arrive In Atlanta at 5 o’clock, but It was 8:30 when the doors of the big prison closed upon them. Notwithstanding efforts made to keep their departure a secret, the news leak ed out, and was known In Atlanta long before the train arrived there. The Southern arrived late and the train was stopped near the prison. They were admitted and were quickly taken in hand. Entering the prison, they were on a par with the moonshineri, who arrived a little while before them from North Carolina. These men, who have spent a fortune seeking to evade what they had at last to yield to, wero taken Into the private office of a deputy, searched and stripped. They were pho tographed aud measured by the Bertil- lon system. After this they were turn ed over to the bath room attendant, and made to take a bath, after which they were taken to the prison barber, shaved and their hair cut. Donned in the striped suit of the short-time pris oners they were led into the corridor, where their description was again tak en and a number given each. Hereaf ter they will be known only as num bers and the words, “Greeno and Gay nor,” will not be heard for four years, less time off for good behavior. The term of four years each began to run when the two men were turned over to the warden of the penitentiary. The long Imprisonment that has ac companied the fight of the two men will count nothing In their terms un less some credit is given in the future. They are also held under fines of $575,- 749.90 each imposed by the court in addition to the service in the peniten tiary. The question has often been asked, whether the prisoners will ever pay these large sums. A pauper’s affi davit will meet the requirements in the ordinary criminal case, and an oath made by the convicted person that he has no more than $20 will stand in stead of the fine; but these two prison ers may never attempt to escape by the method. Should they decide to make such oath, they will probably be put to a hard task, when it comes to getting such affidavits into the courts In satisfaction of the heavy fines im posed. WILL OPEN NEW ROAD. Tourist Trains Soon to Be Run Between Miami and Knight’s Key. The Florida East Coast railway will, on January 16th, open the new road from Miami to Knight’s Key, the last arch having been completed a few days ago. Already steamers are plying between Knight’s Key and Key West and Ha vana, making the trip In six hours, and on and after January 16, tourist trains will run through to Knight’s Key. MANY THOUSANDS IDLE. Labor Situation in Chicago Reachss Deplorable Stage. A careful canvass of the labor sit uation In Chicago reveals the fact that there are 13S.590 idle working people. There are normally 50,000 men out of work at this season of the year, namely, those whose employment ceas ed In the winter time, so that the number of men idle as a result of business depression Is 88,950. Grateful Patient—Doctor, how cm I ever repay you for your kindness to me? Doctor—Doesn’t matter, old man. Check, money order or cash.—Brltlsb Medical Journal. The plea of self-defense, declares file Louisville Courier-Journal, is n hack number. The 13.000 word hy pothetical question and a first-class alienist wdll suffice. Proof Against Rust. Consul Albert Halstead, of Bir mingham, reports that an option on the American rights to a patent pro cess called "sheradlzlng," which, It Is asserted, makeB iron and steel rust proof, and has been successful in England for a time, has been sold to a firm In New York. He adds: "It Is claimed for this ,:e=s- than it ocats iron and steel with zinc as 1 well 0 r better than ordinary wet gal vanizing, and that the iron and steel thus coated can be brilliantly polish ed. In the process zinc dust is placed In a cylinder which has been brought to a temperature of 400 to 500 de grees Fahrenheit; that is, below the melting point of zinc. The articles It is desired to "sheradize” are put Into the cylinder, which Is then re volved. The zinc In this process 1b not actually melted, but forms an al loy through the surface of the articles absorbing the zinc, and then a coat ing covering the whole visible sur face is deposited to any desirable thickness., Articles thus treated are said to have an even and adherent coating, which wears excellently and does not strip, and that by the ubo of a lime mop are easily polished. Aluminum and antimony can be sub stituted, it is said, for zinc, with success, while when copper and Its alloys are subjected to this process their surface Is so hardened as even to turn the edge of a steel tool.—• Consular Reports. High Salaries for Playera. Of all the people who work for their living, vaudeville performers are the best paid. Of three-fourths—yes, seven-eighth3—of the traveling theat rical companies, the whole salary list doeB not amount to $2,500 a week, and yet In vaudeville that much Is paid to one performer who gives an eighth of the performance, It is true that a $2,500-a-weok performer doesn’t appear often In any one theatre, but an act that costs $1,000 a week has become the rule rather than the ex ception in every bill, while a great majority of the acts cost from $250 to $500, and in the best vaudeville houses no act costs less than $75 a week. “Chasers,” employed to drive audiences out of houses giving con tinuous performances, get that much. In the good vaudeville houses tho sal ary list of performers ranges from $2,600 to $4,000 a week, and tho max imum is paid more often than the minimum. Occasionally the cost will run to $5,000 a week. The standard In practically every first class vaude ville house in the country Is $3,200 a week, and each manager tries to keep as close to that as possible. It has been found that this will provide an attractive bill and yet leave a fair margin of profit.—Everybody’s Maga zine. VERY TRUE, BUT—. “Oh! dear,” exclaimed the society woman, “I feel so wretched, and this is my receiving day, too. I do hope no one will call; for I’ll be in mis ery all the time.” “Well,” remarked her husband, facetiously, “I always understood that ‘misery loves company.’ ”—The Cath olic Standard gnd Times, THE COURAGEOUS BACKER. "Who plays tLe part of the hero In our new drama?” And the author, whose mind was elsewhere, replied: "The man who Is putting up tho money.”—Washington Star. RAILROAD MAN Didn’t Like Being Starved. A man running on a railroad has; tp be in good condition all the time, or ho is liable to do harm to himself, and others. A clear head is necessary to run a locomotive or conduct a train. Even a railroad man’s appetite and diges tion are matters of importance, as the clear brain and steady hand re sult from the healthy appetite fol lowed by the proper digestion of food.' “For the past five years,” writes a railroader, “I have been constantly, troubled with Indigestion. Every,! doctor I consulted Beemed to want to starve me to death. First I was dieted on warm watel- and toast un til I was almost starved; then, when they would let me eat, the indiges tion would be right back again. “Only temporary relief came from remedies, and I tried about all of them I saw advertised. About three months ago a friend advised me to try Grape-Nuts food. The very firBt day I noticed that my appetite was satisfied, which had net bean the casa before, that I can remember. “In a week, I believe, I had more energy than ever before in my life. I have gained seven pounds and have not had a touch of indigestion since I have been eating Grape-Nuts. When my wife saw how much good this food wsb doing me she thought sho would try It awhile. We believe the discoverer of Grape-Nuts found this 'Perfect Fpotr,* “ Nfunefiven ttfr postupa' Co., ©Afctle <Jr0feh,$iofc. P«k£l"th0 Robd to Woll- There’S &JUM0B,’'