Newspaper Page Text
r
Good Advertising Medium.
Devoted to Local, Mining and General Inrormatlon.
Vol 40—Xo. 10
DAIILONEGA, GA., FRIDAY APRIL 13.
CONSTIPATION
And Attendant Ills Relieved
By Taking Black-Draught.
The Rev. Granville Ed
wards, who lives at School-
field, near Danville, Va., was
troubled for a long time with
constipation and its attend
ant ills, which kept him from
feeling fit. Ho writes:
“Luckily I then, which was
nbokt twenty years ago, heard
about Black-Draught and be
gan to take it. After tak
ing Black-Draught for a littlo
while I noticed that my trou
ble began to disappear. The
poisons, which had accumu- E
lated in the body, as a result
of constipation, were elimi
nated, and I felt a hundred
per cent, better. Tho dizzy
feeling, which I had felt al
most every morning boforo
breakfast, was gone.
"Black-Draught is a house
hold article with us. Wo al
ways keep it on hand.”
Try Thedford’s Black-
Draught for constipation.
- Sold everywhere. 25c.
Thedford’s
Purely Vegetable C . 1; , S
PLAGIO LIFE QF NAPLES
Goscips Declare Mysterious Cure Was
Used by Sexton to End
Girl's Sufferings.
CARD OF THANKS.
I take this method of thanking
those who voted jfor inc in the re
cent primary. “The Lord givelli
and tho Lord takoth away. Bless
ed he tho namc of tho Lord.” The
people of Lumpkin county have
been extremely kind .to me. I
have tried to act so that no one
ever regretted having voted for
me. So I hold no ill will toward
any, and thank all and every one
whoever at any time thought
enough oftme to give me their
support. Willr the kindest feel
ing toward every one, and espe
cially toward those giving me
their support, I wiliin b ly bow to
the wishjof the people
^ Respectfully,
C. Sirui/r;:.
Romo.—The placid life of Naples
lias been upset for some time by a
particularly grewsome case of sorcery
which lias just talien place at Monti-
celli, not far from Naples.
In the little town of Monlieelli, a
woman named Annunzintta Seogna-
niiglio, lu;d for a long time tried all
means known to medical science to
cure her niece, a little girl named
Gazzolino, who was suffering from
nrlhrltlsm. and whose sufferings were
intense.
One day, gossiping with neighbors,
Signora Scognamiglio learned that
Salvatore TastI, sexton of the ceme
tery, had an Infallible nostrum against
all ills.
“He’s a bit of a sorcerer,” the neigh
bors said, “but his secrets ore oxeep
tionally cllieaclous.”
Fear of sorcery was not sufficient
to prevent Signora Scognamiglio from
trying to end (lie sufferings of her
niece. Accompanied by her sister, she
took the child to see the graveyard
keeper. Tasti understood what was
wanted immediately.
“Follow me,” lie said simply.
All three went into the cemetery
with their guide, who look them to a
bier where reposed the body of a
child named Andreeti, who had just
recently died.
Tlie sexton raised the cover of the
bier and then taking the child Gaz
zolino in Ids arms, lie touched her
body to that of the deceased infant,
pronouncing all the while in a solemn
voice various formulas of incantation.
When the rite was finished, Signora
Scognamiglio gave $50 to the sorcerer.
Then, by some strange hazard of
circumstances, it happened that ttie
little girl shortly afterward recovered
completely.
FOR SA LE : I a Dalilonega, on main
residential street, three acres with
frontage of 210 fecton Bark Streotand
about tiUO feet on side street. Will
sell in one piece or divide into lots.
OaPT. W. A. iiKYDEN,
Box K, Dalilonega.
G. H. McGUIRE
DALILONEGA. GA.
Repairs watcHe*, clocks, pianos, or-
ans, sewing machines, Jewelry, Ac.,.
Next to Burns' Barber Shop.
PRESSING CLUB.
Wo have cnstaUed a Dry
Cleaning Machine and arc
able to give you first class work.
For Dry Cleaning 85c.
S jrubbed and Pressed (>0c.
ilats blocked and cleaned
65 cents.
Mailorders given special atten
tion.
ABEE L .JOHNSON.
li & Athiiti !lis:; Line.
M.
M.
Leave Dalilonega ( 7 gO A
Leave Dalilonega 4 P
niiTU it n.
Leave Atlanta 7 :3O A. M.
Leave Atlanta <5 P. M .
Best cars. Careful Drivers
PRINCETON HOTEL
Bus Station 17 North Forsyth St.
See
F R E I) .1 O N'jlFS,
Da 1, loticg 1.
Statement
7 x 2=14 x 2=28 Billion
DOUBLED and HUE Pc
all WITHIN FIVE \
\J
Bricklayer, Aged 84,
Is on Job With “Boys”
Itushville, III.—All unmindful of the
displeasures lie is causing the gentle
man with Hie hour glass and scythe,
Robert Rippetoe, a Civil war veteran
and veteran bricklayer as well, cele
brated liis eighty-fourth birthday by
starting to work with the rest of the
beys on the addition being built to
tiie Presbyterian church here.
Sixty years of experience has given
him uncanny skill ns n brick mason.
“I nin not happy unless I keep at
my work,”, he said. “Moreover, it
doesn’t look ns though I could retire
if l wished. There doesn’t seem to
lie any young brick masons taking up
the trade hero, and (lie jobs must be
done,” he philosophized.
Six months after taking up brick
laying, lie responded to President Lin
coln's call for volunteers and served
with Troop B, Seventh Missouri cav
alry. for four years and twenty-eight
days.
On Ins return lie resumed his trade
and Is still at it. There were only
two brick buildings in Rushville then
and lie claims to have worked on vir
tually all that have since been con
structed.
Rippetoe keeps a record of his daily
.work and is often called on to verify
construction dates.
“I linvo known Cardui
for a long ’time,” writes
Mrs. Hattlo Bourk, of Jack
sonville, Fla.,
“Recently, I used Cardui
for had spells which came
on mo .... I would got
very dizzy nnd would often
bo out of my head for a
short apaco of time, from
sheer weakness.
“Having taken Cardui
before as a tonic, I began
to use it regularly. I im
proved at onco. I kept on
taking it and do not know
liow I should havo got
through this time, without
It. I havo been feeling
normal now for some
months.”
Cardui has helped thou
sands of others. It should
help you.
Buy it at your druggist’s.
na
In Use 45 Years
anrmBHllwii;i!iii'Tn;|r"i:! 1 ' 1 m 1 '.rrwiriHw-wT'i'miniiii
QDTOaLliliiiiiiuiuiiiUmnmroTxramimmTiTi'rHiHiiHnjiEiEi
\U
Oi
D
C1C A R.E1TES
A WORD OF THANKS. r|
Words can never mxpress my
gratitude to my loyal-friends for
t ieir support even iri'defeat. Wish
We
' E STATE it as our horn*
est belief that the tobaccos
used in Chesterfield ciga
rettes are of finer quality
and lienee of better taste
than in any other cigarette
at the price.
Liggett Sl Myers Tobacco Co.
I could Icll on eh one ot you per
sonally lu>*v T thank you for your
help and vote. I think I will be
in the race again four years from*
now. Respectfully yours, :
G. f\ Satterfield,
FOR RENT. ,
The dwelling in Dalilonega known
as the Herchel liider] House. Apply
to Bex S. Sattickfikmi.
WANTED.
HITTSTE RELICS .
FOUND IN TEMPLE
Butch Windmill Is Now
Explorers Make Rare Finds
in Palestine.
OFtlie ownership, management a-
required by tho act ol August 21. 1012,
of the Dalilonega Nugg -i. Ikihlonc-
ga, Ba., Editor, Mating', a a Editor, Bus
iness Manager and Publisher W. P>
Townsend, who is entire owner, nnd
no debts, mortgages or any thing of the
kind against it.
W. B. Toxsxxn.
Famed Hunter Off to
Seek “White Rhino”
Los Angeles, Calif.—George I!is-
tnny, rated among the mightiest of
living nimrods, became in tho Inst
20 years lie lias traversed 500,000
miles of desert and jungle to capture
8.000 species of rare animals nnd
birds, was among the 800 travelers
arriving aboard the liner Belgenlniid.
Mr. Blstany this time Is on route to
the African Sudan, there to search
for the giant white 'rhinoceros, here
tofore never captured alive. The
quest also will tie for tlie great Afri
can bustard, tlie secretary bird, whose
food Is poisonous snakes, and ihe
giant forest wart hog, all native of
the Sudan jungles.
In ids adventures, Mr. Bistany lias
been injured by wild 'beasts 27 times.
The naturalist lias captured the
wild ass from the Nubian desert, shoe
bill stork from the Sudan, the Kame-
roon gorilla, paradise birds from
Dutch New Guinea, the Sudan Ibex,
African hartebeestes, the snow leop-
ard from India and 1,-100 monkeys
from Sudan.
Plants to Tell Time
on Sundial in Manila
Manila, P. I.—Flowering plants with
Sworn to and subscribed be lore me blossoms n n () ie year round will mark
this the Oili day of April, !•'-
Mv commission expires Decembi
31, 1028.
T. F. Christian
Clerk mi; orior Court,
Lumpkin County.
, 1 tho passing hours on a 115-foot sun-
1 dial, one of the largest in the world,
1 which is to ho constructed soon on the
University of the Philippines campus,
j Tho largest sundial is In England,
being 180 feet across.
Jerusalem.—Fresh evidence of (he
time when possession of Palestine
was disputed between 1 lie Ilitlites
and Egypt Iras been unearthed by tlie
Pennsylvania University museum’s ox-
Pedition under Ihe direction of Alan
Rowe.
The latest discoveries have boon
made from Tel el llosen, the great
mound which covers the Biblical
Beth-Shnn. The expedition lias previ
ously discovered hieroglyphic inscrip
tions of t lie Pharaohs Seti and
Raineses II. Rowe lias since un
earthed six Canaanite temples rang
ing from 1 lie lime of Thollnnes III
to Raineses II. The period involved
was when the new Egyptian empire
was at its 1 eight.
All the temples contained objects
from surrounding countries: Pottery
and seals from Cypress and Anatolia,
and serpent-cult objects which ap
parently originated in Babylonia.
The same story is told by the latest
discoveries from llie two temples of
Thothmes III. A beautifully made
1 bronze military standard hearing the
1 head of tiie Goddess Ilatlior was in
cluded.
It is presumed tiie garrison includ
ed a Ilatlior division, as well as tiie
division of Ra and Sutekh, which are
mentioned in tiie Belh-Shnn inscrip
tions.
A valuable blue faience ring with
ihe eye of Horns was Included among
tiie jewelry, and also one of the
finest lapis lazuli scarabs ever found.
One of the most fascinating por
traits found in the temples wire of
an Egyptian officer named Rameses
Wesr Kephcsh, cut in a door jamb.
The officer was honored as tiie
builder of one of tiie later temples,
1 which, though erected in tiie time <>•'
j Rameses II, was probably standing
three'centuries later.
It lias been identified by Rowe with
tiie “House of I logon,” in which Saul’s
bead was hung after his defeat ut
1 lie battle of Gilboa.
Sacrificial equipment of one of tiie
, earliest temples constitutes probably
! I lie most important of all the findings.
Remains of a sacrifice were found in
1 lie hones of a three-year-old bullock.
I The equipment, with tiie sacrifice, was
complete.
Driven by Electricity
The Hague.—Many of tlie famous
windmills of Holland, always u pic
turesque sight and object of interest
ever: year to American tourists, have
recently been replaced by electrically
driven mills. Many feared that tiie
typical character of the Dutch land
scape would in time lie effectually
changed by these modern introduc
tions.
It is now learned that such “dese
cration” of ihe landscape will he pre
vented in the future by an invention
of a Dutch engineer which makes it
possible to keep Ihe windmills I11 their
original form.
The Dutch minister of public works
commends tiie invention, declaring his
satisfaction that these picturesque
landmarks will not in future be ob
literated. It is now generally expect
ed that tho Dutch government will
prohibit any further demolition of the
J existing old type windmills.
BRIGANDAGE WANES
WiTH OLD LEADERS
Travelers in Mediterranean
Countries Safe.
Finding $10,000 Pearls
Is Cosily to Bootblack
Chicago.—Cares were few lor i’eter
Kyriakos, youthful bootblack, until
he found a $10,000 pearl necklace.
Now he has become involved in mul
tiple legal tangles that threaten to
cost him (lie price of the necklace.
When Kyriakos found tiie pearls he
thought tiiey were cheap, lie took
them to a jeweler, who astounded him
by announcing their value and by
calling the police, who took Ihe gems
and held ’the bootblack.
After several legal skirmishes, the
court awarded the necklace to Kyria
kos ns no one had claimed-it, hut (lie
police still refuse to surrender it
without more litigation.
liis first attorney has already filed
a suit for $3,500 attorney’s fees.
Rome—Brigandage in Mediterra
nean countries, tradltionalized in
opera and romance, is now at a low
( hh. One by one the leaders of ban
ditry have fallen into tiie bands of
tlie authorities and in Italy, Greece,
Corsica, Asia Minor and Turkey tho
lawless have been curbed.
Recently “The Wolf of Siln,” who
was captured by troops about the
middle of the last century nnd sen
tenced to life Imprisonment, died in n
Calabrian village, where he had lived
since liis pardon, at the advanced age
of ninety-three. Styled the last of tlie
“classical brigands,” the Wolf gave
the government plenty of trouble be
fore the forest wilderness of Cnlubria,
a bandit domain for hundreds of years,
was swept clean of robbers. Roma-
Ambition ', industrious white per
son to introduce and supply the{de
mand for Kawleigh Household Pro
ducts. Good openings lor y< u. Make
1 sulcsof $150 to $000 a month or more
Kawleigh Methodsget busines every
where. Noseliing cxpcricccne need
ed. We supply iSnlcs nnd Advertised*
Literature and Service Methods,ving
erything youjjiccd. Profits increase
ry month. Low prices ;
lies ; complete service. W
leigli Co.,‘Dept. G. A3 28(13,
Tenn.
good val-
T. Kaw-
Mempliis,
Stork Takes Vacation
in Pennsylvania Towns
Momicu, Pa.—One ot the most re
markable records in the history of
ihe stale was made In I’ottei and
Raccoon townships, ibis county, In
11)27 when the stn"k failed to unite
a single visit. There were eighteen
deaths In Potter township and four
in Raccoon, according te Elmer Fish
er, county reglslri ■ of vital slaiisth-s
There are several hundred families
In I'.liter and Raccoon townships and
mo; t of them come from the ofii
f-trains who In yea s past were wont
to raise big families nod lake Ihe
greatest pride in their descendants.
notti, slain by French soldiers not
long ago, was a brigand who mixed In
politics as well as carrying on tiie
trade of an outlaw.
Found Easy Picking.
The business of capturing travelers
nnd holding them for ransom was re
vived by Mediterranean brigands
abont 1800 nnd far better systematized I
than it had been by tiie robber barons!
of the Middle Ages. Once it wns dls-1
covered that the British government!
would pay ransom for those of its
subjects who were too poor to settle
for themselves, what amounted to
guerrilla warfare against tiie British
treasury wns set afoot in Italy', Spain,
Greece and other places infested by
brigands.
The sum of £25,000 was paid for the
release of Lord and Lady Lancaster,
seized with a party of four in Greece,
nnd Ihree of tiie party were slain lie-
fore the money was handed over. Tiie
governor of Gibraltar once paid out
£27,000 ns ransom for two Englishmen
■Captured in near-by Spanish territory.
Ransoms of size became tiie order of
tho day.
It was extremely ■difficult (o trap tiie
old-time brigands, who flung gold
about freely among the peasantry, and
not until the populace bad been edu
cated to understand that tiie bandit
was a menace to them did it become
possible for tho Mediterranean gov
ernments to stamp them oat. In the
Pyrenees, tiie Apennines, Sicily, Cor
sica and tiie mountains of Greece and ;
Turkey the brigand continued to flour-
Ish until recent-years, t.ong ago no
lost the complexion of a patriot or
partisan, such as Fra Diavolo, Pietro
Maneino and others of classical repu
tation, nnd became merely a proyer
on his fellow-men.
Changed by Transportation.
Tho railroad, and still later the au
tomobile, helped put an end to bri
gandage as a craft. Travelers no
longer rode on horses over lonely
ways or lumbered along in coaches,
stopping at inns whose proprietors
might ho in league with bandits.
Tiie high ransoms demanded proved
(lie final factor in the downfall of
such brigands. The Mediterranean
governments as well ns the British
were stirred to action by the protest's
of influential citizens and called out
tho iroops in a general effort. Even
then there wore' reverses: Andaloro,
the Sicilian brigand, destroyed a com
pany of soldiers before liis capture,
and Tchakirdji in Asia Minor dis
persed Turkish forces sent against
him.
The bandits of nn earlier day ap
pear to have been a long-lived race.
There is record of Vassili Tchoumnik,
condemned to twenty years in Siberia
at the age of seventy-four, escaping
and finally dying in a prison hospital
of injuries ho had received at ninety-
six.
Same Statue Used
for Many Notables
Paris.—Statues with interchange
able heads, so a long series of notables
could be honored with tiie same mon
ument, date hack before Die Christian
era, say French archeologists. The
recent proposal in Warsaw that such
an arrangement would bo economical,
recalled to ihe French that their re
search workers in Greece discovered
that such a system was used more
than 2,000 years ago.
As tiie name of (ho temporarily fa
mous person could lie inscribed just
under tiie head, it was possible to
make a new head in tiie likeness of
tho new notable and put it on tiie old
marble base, for as long ns the notable
needed to be honored.
1
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