The Jackson economist. (Winder, Ga.) 18??-19??, September 20, 1900, Image 3

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fIUST GIVE UP THE GUILTY! fiiis Is tbe Demand Made By Germany Upon the Chinese. preliminary™ negotiations Declaration of Kaiser’s Intentions Come With Count von Wal dersee’s Arrival In China. The German foreign office has sent i circular note to all the powers an iionnciDg that the German govern ment considers that an indispensable preliminary to the beginning of peace negotiations with China is the deliver ing up of those who were responsible for the outrages. The text of the telegraphic note is as follows: ‘‘The government of the emperor holds as preliminary to entering upon diplomatic relations with the Chinese government that those persons must be delivered up who have been proved to be the original and real instigators of the outrages against international law which have occurred in Pekin. The number of those who were merely instruments in carrying out the out rages is too great. Few of those whose gnilt is notorious should be delivered up and punished. The representa tives of the powers at Pekin are in a position to give or bring forward con vincing evidence. Less importance attaches to the num ber punished than to their character as chief instigators and leaders. Wholesale executions would be con trary to the civilized conscience and the circumstances of such a group of leaders cannot be completely ascer tained. “The government believes it can count on the unanimity of all the cab inets in regard to this point, insomuch as indifference to the idea of just atonement would be equivalent to in difference to a repetition of the crime. The government proposes, therefore, that the cabinets concerned should in struct their representatives at Pekin to indicate those leading Chinese per sonages from whose guilt in instigating or perpetrating outrages all doubt is excluded. Von Buelow.” The note has been sent to the Ger man embassies at Washington,London, Paris, St. Petersburg, Home, Vienna and Tokio. GERMANY HIDES NOTHING. A Berlin special says: The publica tion of Connt Von Buelow’s circular note, which was made through The Nord Deutche Allgemeine Zeitung, vrns decided upon because it was deemed best to let the world see that Germany had nothing to hide regard ing her real aims to China. The diplomatic corps here so interpreted it. The note shows also that Count Von Buelow's sober and moderate views regarding the Chinese muddle and its solution have now triumphed over Emperor William’s more expensive plans. The leading German papers approve the note. The Freisinnige Zeitung, calling particular attention to the passage declaring that wholesale ex ecutions would be contrary to the civilized conscience, says: “This is in striking contrast with Empenor William’s instructions to the departing troops to spare no one, and to make no prisoners.” A London special under Tuesday’s date says: As might have been ex pected, coincident with the arrival of Count von Waldersee in China, comes the most important declaration of policy yet issued by any of the allies. The Daily News remarks: “Germany’s circulrr note has turned the tables on Russia, whose evacuation proposal has put Germany into an awkward corner. Now if Russia as sents to the German note she will be nuable to continue,” says The Daily News, “to pose as China’s lenient and forgiving friend, while if she dissents Russia will lay herself open to the charge of rushing the punitive expe dition to a farce.” The London morning papers have little but praise for wbat is called “Germany’s admirable note.” T he Morning Post alone, in a cogent and well-reasoned editorial, points out a grave objection, namely, that if the real authors and instigators of the up rising should be identical with the personnel of the Chinese government they could hardly be expected to de liver themselves up, and that if the Chinese government should be desig nated as guilty, it would be under the ban of the powers, a condition of things only terminable by the conquest °f China or a revolution producing a fiew government. SUFFERING AND RELIEF Three Letters from Mrs. Johnson, Showing' that Lydia E. Pink ham’s Vegetable Compound Cures the Ills of Women Wrote for firs. Plnkham’s Advice November. i897 Deab Mrs. Pinkiiam :—I rm a great sufferer, have much trouble through the lower part of my bowels, and I am writing to you for advice. Menses are irregular and scanty, am troubled with leucorrhoaa, and I ache so tlirough my back and down through my loins. I have spells of bloating very badly, sometimes will be very large and other times very much reduced’. "—Mbs. On as. E. John sox, Box 33, Rumford Center, Maine, Nov. 20.. 1897. Improvement Reported December, i897 “Drab Mbs. Pinjchaml with to tell you that I am improving in health. I am ever so much better than when I wrote before. The trouble through the lower part of bowels is better and lam not bloated so badly. I was very much Bwollen through the abdomen before I took Lydia E. Pinkhams Vege table Compound. I still have a feel ing of fulness across my ohest. I have used three bottles of it and am on the fourth.”— Mrs. Chas. E. Johnson, Box 33, Rumford Center, Maine, Dec. 13,1897. Enjoying Good Health June, i899 “ Dear Mbs. Pinkhams— Since a year ago I have been taking your medicine, and am now strong and enjoying good health. I have not been so well for three years, and feel very thankful to you for what Lydia E. Pinkhams Vege table Compound has done for me. I would advise all who suffer with fe male troubles to try your medicine.”— Mbs. Chas. E. Johnson, Box 33, Rum ford Center. Maine. June 1, 1899. Womnn’s Rights. Stox—Do you believe in women aaving the same rights as men? Slnggs—Yes, I do. There was one *tood in front of where I sat in a car today and trampled all over my feet, nd if she’d been a man I would have hit her one, sure.—Detroit Free Press. How News Will Travel. “While on a visit to the south re cently I obtained a box of your Tet terine, recommended for all skin dis eases. I find it to be a marvelously good thing. I wish to get some more, and would like to establish an agency here for its sale. Please let me know the price of one dozen boxes. W. C. McCall, Grantville, Ohio.” At drug gists, or by mail for 50c. from J. T. Shuptrine, Savannah, Ga. Sermons Without Text. Some Paisley weavers were speaking about their ministers. One said that it was wonderful how much his minister could bring out of Scripture. He had known him to preach several sermons from one text. Another said his min ister surpassed that, for he had preach- j ed six sermous from the shortest text in the whole Bible. ‘‘But that’s neathin’ to my wife,” said the third. “She's been preachin’ to me for sixteen years frae nae text at a’.”—Chicago Chronicle. To Cure Cold In One Day. Take Laxative Bkomo Quinine Tablets. All druggists refund the money It It falls to cure. E. W. GKOVE's signature is on eaoU box. How She Knew. Speaking of kindergartens for color ed children calls to mind the experi ence of a “befo’ de wah” matron who was teaching one of the little darkies on her plantation how to spell. The primer she used Avas a pictorial one, and over each word was Its ac companying picture, and Polly glibly spelled o-x, ox, and b-o-x, box, etc. But the teacher thought she was mak ing right rapid progress, so she put her hand over the picture and said: “Polly, what does o-x spell?” “Ox,” said Polly, nimbly. “How do you knoAV that it spells ox, Polly?” “Seed his tail,” replied the apt Polly. —•Cincinnati Enquirer. The eye ought not to be drugged except under the special care of a physician. Mitchell s Eye Salve makes the use of pungent drugs unnec essary and saves you from all the inconvenience and danger of that painful treatment. Price 25 cents. All druggists. HALL & RUCKEL, New York. 184*. London. Plantation Chill Cure is Guaranteed Measures of Lenjth la the Bible. The measures of length used in the Bible with their equivalents in our modern use, are (E. 1.. Hull) as fol lows: The great cubit was 24,888 Inches, or 1,824 feet, nud the less cubit 18 inches. A span like longer), half a cubit, or 10,944 inches, or .912 of a foot. A span (the less), oue third of a cubit, or 7.29 C inches, or .GOB of a foot. A hand's breadth, l.f> of a cubit, or 3.684 Inches, or .304 of a foot. A finger’s breadth, 1.24 of a cubit, or .912 of an Inch, or .076 of a foot. A fathom, four cubits, or 10.944 feet. The mile, 4,000 cubits, or 7JJ96 feet. The stadium, 1-10 of their mile, or 400 cubits, or 729.6 feet. The parasaug. three ef their milea, or 12,000 cubits, or four English miles and 580 feet. A day’s Journey was about twenty-four miles. A sab bath day’s Journey, 3,500 feet—An swers. There 1* more Catarrh In tbl* section of the country than all other diseases put together, and until the last low years was supposed to be Incurable. For a great many years doctors pronounced It a local disease and presc; lbed local remedies, and by constantly falling to cure with local treatment, pronounced It In curable. Science bas proven catarrh to be a constitutional disease, and therefore requires constitutional treatment. Hall’s Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. .1. Cheney A Ce., Toledo, Ohio, la the only constitutional cure on the market. It Is taken Internally In doees from 10 drops to a teaspoonful. It acts directly o* the Mood and ntuoons surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars for any case It fails to cure. Send for circulars and testi monials. Address F. .1 ( henry ACO., T#le<lo,o. Sold by Druggists. 75c. Hall's Family Pills are the best. Out of the Public Kye. “Do you believe that 50,000,000 Americans continually fix an admiring gazing on the New York Four Hundred?” ‘■Naw; 49 999.600 of us never think of them at all until they go abroad aud do something to disgrace our country.” ri "1 No matter how pleasant yottf surroundings, q health, good health, is the foundation for en lt\ 1 joyment. Bowel trouble causes more aches and Y'fC/V pains than all other diseases together, and when JjZ-S'E \ Kj you get a good dose of bilious bile coursing f kI through the blood life's a hell on earth. Millions I tof people are doctoring for chronic, ailments that _ o started with bad bowels, and they will never //" \\ get better till the bowels are right. You know how it is—you neglect —get irregular—first / \ 1/ ( I suffer with a slight headache —bad taste in the | \ i ! \jj mouth mornings, and general “all gone" feeling \ J / ,/ u [X\ VUr during the day—keep on going from bad to r . I I \ /It iVI |/ 1 U worse untill the suffering becomes awful, life - -Jl loses its charms, and there is many a one that ' . ]/ 1/ has been driven to suicidal relief. Educate your \( \ If — p—7 ® bowels with CASCARETS. Don't neglect the I nTuL slightest irregularity. See that you have one ) ; 1 J f natural, easy movement each day. CASCA ; ( RETS tone the bowels—make them strong— ‘ and after you have used them once you will wonder why it is that you have ever been without them. You will find all your other disorders commence to get better at once, and soon you will be well by taking — THE IDEAL LAXATIVE CATHARTIC^^^^r To any needy mortal suffering from bowel troubles and too poor to buy CASCARETS we will said a box free. Address Sterling Remedy Company, Chicago or New York, mentioning advertisement and paper. 421 Tiger Killing From a Train. Writing from Ootsl. a correspondent of the Buluwayo Chronicle states: ‘•As No. y train was going its usual patrol to Lobatsi, a tiger ran across the line, and it was noticed that It had a trap on Its foot. The train was stopped, and several of us Jumped off and followed the spoor. Eventually we came up to the tiger lying on the grass. He gave a growl and then got up to run away, but one of the men— Bell, a son of the It. M., who is a trooper on the train—fired at and killed the beast. The tiger gave a big roar before he died. The body was carried back to the train in triumph.”—Lon don Globe. London has 13,504 policemen, or 19 to the square mile. Sixty per cent of them are on night duty. / That’s the way some dealers do! Push cheap goods ‘t*/ because the profits are large. Why let a man push a \ cheap Buggy off on you when you can get tho best I 7 at Ol, ly a dollar or so more? Do you ever think about 1 / it that way ? ... ROCK HILLWSLSS-c' Did You Ever Know any one who smoked the same kind of Five Cent cigar any length of time? Five Cent cigar smokers are always dissatisfied—always trying something new—or something differ ent, as there always seems to be some thing wrong about the cigars they have been smoking. Ask your dealer for Old Virginia Cheroots They are always good. • Three hundred million smoked this year. Price, 3 for 5 cents. WINGHESTE g% FACTORY LOADED SHOTGUN SHELLS Jill “Newßivzl,” “Leader,” and “Repeater” Insist upon having them, take no others and you will get the best shells that money can buy. ALL DEALERS KEEP THEM. SOUTIIEIIN Telegraph College, 117 Whitehall St., Atlanta. Georgia. Offers rare loducements to young men and women to learn TELEGRAPHY and TYPE WKI lING. A complete knowledge of Railroad and Commercial Telegraphy taught by practical methods Write at once for further Information, and take advantage of reduced rates for next fifteen days. Day and night sessions. That Little Book For Ladles,!f£fi ALICE MASON, ROCHITs, N. T. ■GHWHraFM“(f Naj Beat Cough Syrup. "'autos Good. Uo ri% ff} tntima. Bold i-y druggists. Kfl 4ii P>o ADCV NEW DISCOVERY; kits* Lit BV Vr u v 9 ■ quick rliet nd curs* worst cams- Book of twtinjoniAii Mid 10 (lays’ troatrusa* I roe. fir. H. H. OkEEH'SIIOIIS. Box B. Atlanta, Os. Mealion this Paper