Newspaper Page Text
died Advertising Medium,
VOL. XIV—NO. ,<8.
IMjtowp
Devoted to Local, Mining and General Information.
/) A
One Dollar Per Annum
DAI1LONKGA, GA., THURSDAY, JANUARY >8. i 9 o|.
W
H. I OWNSEND, Editor and Proprietor
& BBO..
DEALERS IN
fif
,-r> , #
Clothing.
Shoes.
Dry Goods,
Hats,
Notions,
GrocErieS.
Bacteria of the Soil. Spotting the Married Man.
(Continued.) i “There’s tv married man,” said
condition's k o u H.vcTKKiAf. 11 111:111 wlio stood in front of a do*
oitowTii. pnrtment store in Brooklyn, on
I. Mointork.—Moisture is hoc- Saturday night. The one to
cssary for id I plant life. When 1 w hom ho pointed was standing on
we dry fruits, vegetables, meat, ' the corner,
•fee., to nrosorvo thorn. we nnli* l “How dt
-v&s^^&jse»szxsE&?A}!iim2i£SBaaai6i&samKm
♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ m
BARGAIN STORE.
^T^ri^fYhMiiVi^iH/rf*TTHfnVWTfTry ii*TTii%irir wiys i VirBaiUf k
Anderson
6c Jones.
CLOTHING
Shoes, Hats,|
Furnishing’s,
Dry Goods, Notions, Guns, Machines, Groceries.
Clothing a specialty.;*
They willsell you clothing for cash*
at Gainesville or Atlanta prices. M
|nice line of samples and will take!
your order for tailor made
I
goods.
DAHLONEGa
Livery Stable,
Moore Bro-, Propr’s.
0
HI Hew StaDle on College 81.
RUN a DAILY HACK LINE
to and from Q ainesyille.
FARE, $1.50-
C. W. SATTERFIELD.
Dealer in
FAMILY
GROCERIES
preserve them, we only
Hinder the conditions unfavorable
for bacterial growth and thereby
prevent decay. Dried ecrjrs a |*c
now placed on sale fo” food.
Seeds arc now preserved so long as
moisture is kept from them.
-• Tkmi’kii.vit uk. —Some species
thrive almost at the freezing point,
while some soil bacteria grow al
most at the boiling point. In gen
eral, t ho temperature range is very
wide and for this reason bacteria I
are widely distributed. They are j
destroyed by boiling, but freezing
only cheeks their action and when
the temperature is raisd, growth
begins again. Cold storage is
used to stop bacterial growth.
Milk placed iu spring or well
water remains sweet for several
| hours, because the cooling lowers
the temperature of the bacteria
that sour it. In the canning of
fruit, if all the bacteria are do
strayed by heating, and 1 then the
jars arc hermetically scaled lo
| keep out the bacteria, the fruit
j cannot sonr.
| id. Absence of Sunlight.—Two
I hours exposure to sunlight will
j destroy most species. Ordinary
daylight is not very injurious.
WlfAT BACTERIA DO.
Bacteria disintegrate the dead
bodies of plants and animals and
the elements of which these bodies
are composed are restored to the
air and to the soil to he used in the
construction of new forms of life.
This renders the life cycle coins
plete, “All that has lived must die,
nndall that is dead must be disin
tegrated—the elements which are
the substratum of life must enter
into new cycles of life.” Without
I bacteria the world would be cover
ed with mummies of animals and
plants and the food elements would
in time become exhausted, and life
would become extinct.
The general function of bacteria
is destructive — but there is a
group that arc constructive, i. e.,
instead of breaking down com
pounds, they construct new ones.
For instance, the bacteria that
work upon the roots of clover,
lucern, peas, &e., are constructive
—they take the nitrogen from the
air and unite it with oxygen and
other elements and form nitrates
which are soluble and can be read
ily used by plants.
The greatest number of bacteria
arc found a little below the surface
of Ihe soil. Ilousson found them
in the soil us follows:
BACTERIA PElt GRAM.
At the surface 1,680,000
At a depth of two feet... .900,000
At a depth of four feet 25,000
At a depth of six feet 410
Chas. W. Davis,
N. G. A. C.
you know?” the man
with the detective instinct was
asked.
“Oh, it’s easy to pick them,”
he replied. “There’s another,
and there’s another.” lie point- |
od to two others who were suunt- I
ering back and forth, one young. )
! the second gray-haired and smok-
1 ing a cigar. “Now. Mint fellow)
I 1 there, with the baity buggy, is I
easy, the speaker continued.,
“You can’t make any mistake I
j about him. Their wives are in
! the store, spending the week’s al- I
j lowanco and the men are waiting i
j for them. You know men hate a !
I department store.
“There! Wasn’t! right?” lie)
i asked as a woman came out of the
| store and walked away with one of
j the men. After a time another
j woman appeared and was joined
J l>} T one of the sauntering men.
j Then out come the woman who
I belonged to the baby buggy, and
after depositing an armful of
small packages at the feet of the
baity that party moved on.
“How did you come to notice
this? ’ the student of human na
ture was asked.
“I learned it by
was his answer.
Just then he lifted his hat to a
woman who came out of the store.
She slipped her hand under his
arm and they walked away to
gether.—New York Press.
This Space Delongs to
r*
t
I )ealer in
General Merchandise,
I >AHLOISTEGEAl, GA,
FINE SHOES A SPECIALLY
A Tip to Young Wives. j Eat and
experience,
The Lion’s Roar.
Major Austin, writing of his
travels in central Africa say:
The grandest, the most awe in
spiring, the most tremendous
voice on earth issues from the
throat of that king of beasts, the
lion. It is rather difficult to de
scribe that mighty roar bursting
out into the silence of the night
and seeming to shake the very
ground beneath one. It makes
one feel petty, insignificant, of no
account,-when his majesty voices
his satisfaction at having dined
well on some poor unsuspecting
antelope which has allowed itself
to fall under the clutches of tlint
ponderous paw. The men hud
dled together; a deadly stillness
follows; there is a catch in one’s
breath, and it is with a sense of
relief a whisper, perhaps, of
I The wife who tries to keep alive
I her husband’s love for his mother,
not only in his heart, hut in out
ward observance as well, m the
end serves her own interest bettor
than iheirs. The hov who loves
his mother and sisters, and who is
always thoughtful and tender with
them, will lie a good husband nine
limes cut of leu. The love of the
many comes with the love of on 77 ,
and j list as truly as he loves his
sweetheart hotter because of his
mother and sisters, lie mny love
them better because of her.
The poor, heart- hungry mother
who stands by with brimming
eyes, fearful that the joy of her
life may he taken from her, will
be content with a little if she may
but keep it for her own. It is on
ly a little while, at the longest, for
the end of the journey is soon, but
sunset and afterglow would have
some of the rapture of dawn if her
son's wife opened the door of her
thoughtless young heurt and said,
with true sincerity and wells of
tenderness, “Mother — come!”
Pittsburg Dispatch.
Question for Question.
A young Japanese compositor
employed on a Japanese journal
was riding down town in a city
hall train the other morning. He
was engrossed in his morning pa
per and paid little attention to the
other passengers. But a fresh
looking young man who sat next
“Simbft shiba” (the lion is satis- i him and who had boeli eyeing
tied) arises, and consation grad- 1 idong suddenly said:
ually resumes its How. i “What sort of a ‘nose’ are you,
! anyway -a Chinese or a Japanese?”
A merchant recently srt.d to the j t, 10 little WH8 uot cailfr|lt
editor of Ad-Art that lie was | uappin ^ Quick as a wink he re- i
afraid to stay out an issue ot his j pjj cc ]-
local paper because that might be j « whftt g()lt ((f a » key , are you
just the date when some people | anywav _ a monkey , n donkey or a
could be induced to buy, and the i y ankeo pj
absence of the announcement from | Tho fresh young man had no
| more to say and left the train
A Curious Ruling.
A man was arrested in San Fran
cisco the other day for cruelty to
animals in offering live lizards for
sale. Just where the cruelty came
in was not satisfactorily explained. Ad-Art.
that one issue might be just tho
thing which would cause the wait-
awhile habit. The every week ads
yertising may not convince all the
people, but it is just what makes
the general impression and that
gives the store tho advantage over
the other man who is waiting.—
I am puzzled to know how it is
more cruel to sell lizards than to
sell dogs, cats or horses, but the
amuscing feature of the case was
the reason given by a police judge
for dismissing the case. lie said
that testimony failed to establish
the fact that a lizard was a animal.
—San Francisco Town Talk.
General
A3STD
Merchandise.
Under the decision of Judge J.
H. Lumpkin, a laborer can’t waive
exemption from garnishment in
Georgia.
That diphtheria may hye in
packed clothing almost idetimtely
is shown by an incident which oc
curred in an Ohio village. A
child died of diphtheria and its
mother packed its dresses and toys
in a chest. The mother died fif
teen years afterward, and her
daughter, who opened and bun
dled the contents of the chest,
was duly taken ill of diphtheria,
although there had recently been
no cases m the village.
quicker when City Hall station was
reached.—New York Mail Ex
press.
The Timid Advertiser.
Enthusiasm is the life of trade
—not the irrational ebullitions
coming from those who imagine
they know it all, but an enthu
siasm born of eonlidence ability to
make goods move. The timid ad*-
vertiser never succeeds*, the tenta
tive advertiser sometimes, but the
euthusiastic advertiser always
wins the goal. It is the knowl
edge of men and things that makes
the successful advertiser. Adver
tising requires some mouey and
unlimited hut rightly directed en-
husiasm. —Iowa Trade Journal,
the Railway Coni*
pany.
A poor man, a son of Erin, who
after a loug and hard pull hiui
managed to acquire the ownership
of a small farm of seventy acres
in a western state of poor and in
different quality of soil and con
tour, was recently approached by
the right of way agent of a rail
road company which wished to
split his little farm in two with a
new line of road. Pat tiegged
and protested; did not want to sell
the right of way; wanted to have
them go around his place. Being
unable to buy the right of way,
the land was condemned by pros
cess of law, and Pat had to take
$1,500 and sec his farm split in
two pieces. Curiously enough,
when tho road was built it involv
ed a deep cut through Pat’s land
when a splendid quarry of stone
was unearthed, tho existence of
which Pat never dreamed of, and
he was able to make a long time
lease of the quarry to a stone com
pany at the handsome rent of #1,*,
500 per year. Thus does Dame
Fortune sometime convert our
seeming misfortunes into blessings.
No Fun in Being a Brides
maid.
Nowadays brides think they are
lucky in getting the bridesmaids
they wish. In fact, the average
girl “in Ihc whirl” has come to
dislike tho role of attendant. She
must buy her own gown and bat,
of course, and sho must not hagglo
over the question of cost. For in
stance, at the Fanshawe-White
wedding the hats cost more than
$110 each. Valuable osprey
plumes were used and also bands
of sable. The Goelct-ltoxburgho
turbans were less expensive, al**
though th05% too, were trimmed
with Russian sable. Still, many a
girl clinches her social position by
appearing at a “smart” weddiag.
—New York Post.
Town Boom Hints.
Never let no opportunity pass to
praise your town and extol its ad -
vantages.
The community with the beet
roads is very likely to be the beet
community.
More disease is removed from a
town by proper cleauiug than can
bo cured by all the doctors in the
place.
The town or city which keeps
its advantages persistently before
the outside world through reliable
newspapers is the place which
shows the greatest increase in pop
ulation and material wealth.
FOLEYSHONn^IAR
Cures Colds; ffraw*ti Pneumonia