The Search light. (Bainbridge, Ga.) 18??-1903, July 27, 1901, Image 3

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, 1 ***** trrtqg was always severely accurate. Farmers in the go th should make, Shortly betorf be pot oft the “Men.-bant and save all the hay thev unit thin hp «* * brother j actor If u«. could supply sonic stage “business" for the part of Shyloek. sews- . osa to the Iowa State ion M r - J. J- McCarthy, season. It is evident that in the , 0 f tliat body, made west the hay crop is going to lie a , uW w hiob have excited short one. And there will not be nt in the public prints, such an abundance of corn as there feeae,” which occurs upon Shyloek dls- liat perjury was the cry- usual!) is. Oorn amd hay will both ( covering that Jesstcu has fled wttli The actor being, like Shyloek. a Jew. thought be might, and naked Irving how lie meant to do the ••imprecation time, ami the main command a high price in the near I 1-orenzo and the Jewelry of her late , . i I mother, Mrs. Shyloek. frequent defeat ot jus- j future. j trying knelt, held hla hands prayer- orimiual and in civil) The south ts a good customer of HXr find rehearsed the terrible Impreta- th e courts. In tie the w.st for both hay and corn. For ’ toulll l ,1| I daughter were dead .. m. n .1 .. , * , , J at my feet and the Jewels In her ears." remarks Mr. McCarthy all they buy of these crops from this j t’pon the actor's saying he was I time until tlm corn md hay harvest | wrong, In-rag rejoined that be had fol- tliere a lawyer who has next year they wtll have to pay high: *°we<l the stage direction la the book, '" e,D . i * . r j * i and that nil the best Shytocks so did It. guilty criminal ptsu out ^prices. agricultural ootuoiis* gg tb^ Ketoa, Brooke, Fecbter and oom acquitted and set > sionea s of the diffe.eat slates of the Thelps of perjured testimony? middle west which are afflicted ' by the drought, are ullidg the farmers Can be properly run without' being Advertised, but lias seen the ■rsons and of property (1 trampled under foot, under due form of law, ml truly by use of oor- ml sometimes purchased things that beget dis- disrespect tor the courts tints, and for our boasted These are things that *y» 'y aching and invite well as a lack of oonfi-, se tribunals called courts ge of long experience ,up- wri’.es me that, in Ins -nt one-halt of the evi- ,.d on behalf of the de* inal eases is false, judge of equally high s that he believes 75 per evidetioe offered in di- approaohes deliberate writes that perjury is n a m ijority of important ud that the crime is rap- !ll£. witii reference to the ofperj ry. the time has words «f another, , wear a veil, not that she artial, but that she may for shame.” responsibility of this ngs the speaker intimated at the door of benuh and and jury alike, and was ill some measure to ry, expensive and techni- es’’ of proving tbe crime o ''ie scitisfa tion of a “beyond a reasonable ie went on to say: 11 us that the crime is mostly in the police petty , us a rule, the witness- 0 the vicious classes. But that it is committed ‘.ud by men profess cu on in society, church u iiiame a poor outcast ot false swearing when lire- iiluble citizens do the Why do we expend ey in proseo .ting v-orne P for stealing an overcoat m from freezing, when the )ink, the despuiitr of a '■r of human 1 fe or fhe ot thousands goes unwhip hv then proposed rem- d that oaths were too favored the a bolition 1 -I oaths and the emphatic ‘bon of the judicial oath. that the judge himself "‘• a t..i- all oaths; that it o ,! e with gravity and so!* u luai viinesses should be uo i punishment meted fra. L’iien the law should Perjury should be so leveivly puuii-li -d, and if p unshed a strong public would rapidly grow up moij would hesitate quitting this most he’tious, to save all the hay Alley can and to sow for another crop line year. They see that hard times are ahead for the drought -a51 deJ section of the west. The west will have very little, if any, hay for the south this year. If it consents to part with any ot its hay it will be because .it will he of fered an extraordinary high price for it. Bui there is no good reason why the south should continue to be dependent on the west for hay, or even tor corn. It can produce all it wants of both of these | roduyts. In order to do so, however, It must give more attention to them. , A great many southern farmers think it small business to out grass from their wheat fields or potato patches for the purpose of making hay ot it, butpit the western drought turns out to ho as bad as it now promises to be, they will think that the hay business is a pretty big one. stkppku .vro uvk cuam. When a child I burned my foot frightfully,” writes W. H. Iliads, uf Junesville. Va,. --winch canned terrible -ores for 80 ymis, but BucklenV Arnica •Salve wholly cured me-after everything else failed.Infallible for Burns. Scalds, (juts. S .res, Bruises aqd Biles, Sold by If. I, iiiek. 25u- "Yes," said the actor, "“but they were all Christiana. A Jew la Imprecating never kneels, but stands upright, pass ing his open hand over his race." Irving adopted the hint Boon afterward a well known London solicitor, also a Jew, who had ocen the new version, told the actor In question that lie bad not before been oware that Irving was “one of us." and be refused to heliere tbe contrary.—Ledger Month ly ■ ' Fmmlly Pnr»n at the Jaaktnaea*. A Harlem woman recently decided that family prayer* wore really neces sary to tbe proper bringing up of her young son Johnnie. Mr. Jenkins, nom inal head of the family, didn’t exactly see the necessity, but. of cohrse. yield ed to his wife. The next morning aft er breakfast the Jenkinses assembled In the sitting room with a feeling of suppressed excitement at the novel pro ceedings. After the Scriptural reading they knelt beside a long sofa. Mr. Jen kins at ;nc end. Mrs. Jenkins at the other and Johnnie In the middle. Then \fr. lent Ins offered up a prayer Invok ing the divine presen*. Jenkins' prayer was long and fervent After It had continued for five minutes Johnnie got restless, decided It was too monotonous and Interrupted In hla thli^ boyish voire with: “Yea. Doff: coni? and stay to dinner!'-' Mr. Jcnktns concluded hla Invocation with an abrupt "Amen!" Johnnie safe, ly out of fhe way. he strangely remark ed to his wife. “That's the limit!'’ Family prayers hove been abandoned at the Jenkinses’.—New York Tiroes. And no advertising pays better than newspaper advertising. The news paper goes into the homes of the people and is read through. If bat' gains arc offered, they make “a note of it. THE SEARCH-LIGHT a first-class advertising medium. rO.-.ili POSISCHIi’S. *• duel -rime. tlv " ' : °k Hazel Salve should jThe ships of the world,, excluding navies, are iworth $294,000,000, of which Europe’s share is $227,000,000. In New Hampshire tbe State gov ernment ’pays a bounty on deal grasshoppers at the rate of $1 a bushel. Labor in the South is in great de mand and the negroes are better paid than they have ever bedn in their lives. Canada lias the largest forest in the world. It is in the Labradoranii Hudson Bay district, and is, roughly, 1000 by 1700 miles. In 1900 the eight Southern Slates concerned m coal producing, uamely, Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Ken tucky.. North Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia and West Virghiia, had an output of fifteen times as much coal as they hud twenty years before, in 1900 (Vest Virginia's ruipnt was 21,- 280,430 tons, against 1,756,144 tons in 1880. The total value of the Southern product sn 1888 was $ 757,785 and in 1900 $41/753,573. A railroad man who works in one of the switch tow irs on the line to Atlantic City, surrounded by a mos quito-infested swamp, has a plan of his own for keeping them out of tbe tower. He makes a ball out of news papers and soaks it. in eoa! oil just enough so that it will not drip. He ! hangs tlii.. midway between two win dows and keeps it swinging all the time.. lie says that no matter how thick the tupq iiloes may b° outside they never care puss it. A por. :7.-JllXAlKK Lately starved in London because he could not digest bis food. Early u»eof Dr. King’s New Life Pills would have saved him. They stttngthen the applied to cuts, burns j stomach, aid digestion, promote assiiuil improve appetite. Price 25c ' get DeWitts. R. -taudquichly heals! j io|J 1 here are worthies ^ ;f not Sold by R . L. Hicks, druggist. Flaking Hookg. Fishing books are as util bb Adam. Wide of stoqe. bone, thorns and any. old thing, not to mention deer horn anil boars* task*. Tile bronze hook of the bronze age was succeeded by tbe hook of Iron. The aborigines of Colombia used gold books, while tbe anplont peo ple of Peru mode their* of copper. Tlie bronze hook of today la considered an espcuslve luxury. Far yetirs the most Import nut seat of fishhook manufac ture was Limerick. Ireland, but the orce popular Limerick has been super seded b'v several sty lea of American make that are not only tnucb cheaper, but are not Inferior As for our tine rods-well, we have them from two ano one-half ounces up to teu pounds, nod some of them enn t>e tied in bow- knots. Of course our llnea are utv equaled.—New fork Press. Wild Zebras, The zebra when, wild is n ferocious- animal, and an unwary hunter Is llkply to suffer from Its teeth and hoofs The author of “Kloof and Karroo" says that it Boer In Cape Colony bail once forced n zebra to the brink of a precipice, when i he d<*sperate creature turned up on him. attacked him with Its teeth am! actually tore one of his feet from the leg. Another author writes of a soldier who mounted u half domesticated *e- nm. The creature, after making the most furious attempts to get rid of Its rider, plunged over a steep bank Into the river and threw the soldier as It emerged. While the maq lay half stunned upon the gronnd the zebra quietly walked up to bloi and hit off one of his ears. The Pmaltj of Oelmt Id Is. Idleness Is at the bottom of tbe drunkenness, gluttony and sensuality which compass the destruction of one section of the community ut tbe present time. It Is at the tuiinm of that purtle- nlnr form of heartache which Is tbe plague of women—the heartache of a purposeless, miserable existence. Bach women often look forward to marriage to cure them, but when they ore tnar 1 rleil and settled the old malady recurs, and In our own day we see them run ning hither and thither after that elu sive something. Others try to find a cure iri the suffrage and others again In cigarette*.—Sarah Grand. • Arsenic Bater* Styrta. a duchy having a population of uboat 1.500.000 and lying tooth of ilretx. ut tbe mouutalnout portion of tbe great German confederation, la noted for tta arsenic eaten. Araenic eater* abound In every city, village and neighborhood, and In thousands of cases every adnlt In a family uses It almost tbe same os sugar, consuming uliout five and a half grains in tbe 24 boon. _ . As it is read generally in !>y the people very this county and many in adjoining counties. PUT AN AD. IN And work up your business to a payin point. Job Work •Oitr diotfk and jo1> office is busy turn- ang out first-class job work al! the ■time, mid we propose to give satis faction at reasonable iprioos. If yen need anything in the job printing line, write to us or sue us before pinning yemr order. It wdJ pay you. MS*W3Tyt7Z.I/X TEE SEABCE-LKHT.