Douglas weekly breeze. (Douglas, Ga.) 190?-1905, November 21, 1903, Image 7

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The Alderney Ereed. "Tito Akierneys and Jerseys are so closely related and so much alike in appearance that the description given for Jerseys will apply to them. They can he classed as the same breed, but bearing the name of their island home. The main difference is that the Alderneys are smaller and more delicate, and for this reason are not so much in favor.” The above passage was printed in a book which I judge is in the ’rands of many fariners throughout the «oun try. When Channel island cattle were first imported to the Uniisaf 'States, and for a long time thereafter, both Jersey and Guernsey, and especially the former, were called by many peo ple Alderney cattle. The Island of Alderney is one of the Channel group, and although the third in size is too small to export any cattle. It prob ably has no cattle except a few for family use, and so far 'as records show none were over exported from there. The name may hare originated from the fact that AliJefney, having a good harbor and being nearer Eng land, all the Teasels carrying cattle or produce from Guernsey and Jersey formerly 'cleared from the Alderney port before leaving 'the islands for England. This may have given the impression to early English importers that they were Alderney cattle, and the name bo came to this country. The fact is that there is no such thing -as an Alderney breed of cattle. BE CHART T> l*!»E IN JUDGMENT. Don’h wholly condemn, though his fierce exhibition Of ire cause your sensitive nature to shiver; Perhaps ft is due to a had disposition, And mayhe, (again, it is only his diver. —Washington Star. 'UNDERSTOOD. F'irsft Toy—‘When T toW de boss yistid’y dat’l wanted to git off ’cause my gran’mother wu'z dead he said, *“Cert‘ri*y. go ahead.” Second Boy—He's a real sport, ain't he? —Philadelphia Ledger. B 1 1” U iCK RESULTS. the Peace, Ray«: “Doan's Kklivey ordered kidrwjys from which I a great deal of trouble aod pain. The'kidney secretions were very irregular, dark colored and full of sedi •mertt. -The .Pills cleared it all up aool 1 have not had an ache in my back since faking the last dose. My health generally is improved a great deal.” Foster-Mliburn Oc.. BuiYalo, X. Y. For sale shy all dealers, price 50 cents per ibex. The British Government has decid ed to be more liberal with its soldiers and 'sailors in giving them sugar and coffee. Among ‘the experts .in such ■matters the belief has been gaining ground for years -that moderate al lowances of sweet, stuff and of the Anfbian berry are beneficial to strong; heajthy -men who are called upon ts perform heavy tasks and endure hard ships, While the entire medical profes sion appears to be inclined to the the ory that weak and feeble men, women and children should, as ia rule, refuse uadi indulgences. CDPP STUART’S * ft ILL. C!N»nd BUCHU To nil who suffer, or to the friends of those •who S’ ffer with Kidney, Liver, Heart, Bladder or Blood Disease, a samjile bottle of Stuart's Gin siud Buchu. the (treat southern Kidney and Liver Medicine, will be sent absolutely free of cost. Mention this naper. Address STUART DRUG M ’FG CO.. 28 Wall Bt.. Atlanta. Qa. ■jWB—BBB WW m mmcom There is> no satisfaction keener than being dry and comfortable when cut in the hardest storm. YOU ARE smt OF TMS ST YOU WEAK & "tCfWEjjy O t'SHt ßKfi> 7/ j iTEPPQOOP lu :D CLOTHING f be ;m black or. yellow I KID BY OUR OUARANTEf. wita i-Q .goaTov.HAi.s.us J \ADIAS CO.LI-ItTES.TCiuSro.CAN. P7-V- C VOUR DEALER. U he wit) not supply yoj in send Tor our Tree catalogue or garments and hats. —H—IHBBBMBBWWMWmB Ocean Springs. Hiss.—KUßSEßlES — Kifttsed. Ga. (ESTABLISHED 1375 1 HE 3 * lEG G 3XT Grower? of and dealers in larre SOFT itrd PAPER-SMELL PECANS of these celt beaten varieties: Con,Mhi.an. Stvakt. Va * I>E!(an and Capita;.. Budded, grafted or seed- . Lr.ct trees for sale. Mention this paper. STI'ART-ROESON PECAV C 0„ Kirkwood, Go. WAGES ARE SLASHED By all Gotha Mills in Fall River and Eighty Thousand Textile Work ers Will Be Affected. About thirty-two thousand opera tives in cotton mills in Massachusetts were notified Wednesday of a ten per cent reduction in wages. If it is fol lowed by the step which is usually taken when the mill owners of Rhode island and Connecticut take similar action, 80,000 men will be out of em ployment. The notioe of the reduction was posted in all the cotton mills of Fall River, where 30,000 operatives are employed, and also at Taunton, where 2,000 mill workers are affected. The reduction in Fall River goes into ef fect November 28 and that at Tauu : tGn five days earlier. The eutdown is attributed to the unsettled state of trade, resulting from the high price of raw material, and to a pronounced hesitation to buy on the part of the usual purchasers. The action taken in Fall River is of | widespread importance, since a step ; of this nature in that city usually is : followed by 'mill owners in southern : and central .Massachusetts, Rhode Js t land and eastern Connecticut, where a total of about 50,000 men are em j ployed. .It .is thought that no general i strike will be ordered at this time by | the Textile Workers’ Union, which is arranging to -consider the situation. It was learned that the reduction was decided upon at a conference ox .Fall River men in Boston November .2. About eighty mills, owned by forty •corporations, are represented in the (organization. Most of the local mills make print .cloths and coarser goods, although a few of them are engaged in the manufacture of fine goods. The mills of Fall River, New Bedford, Rhode .island and those at numerous points in central and western Massa chusetts, together with mills in 'east ern Connecticut, made a general ad vance in wages early in 1902. The cotton mills of northern New England did not increase their scale and it Is not considered probable that the pres ent .change in southern New England will affect the industry further north. CLEAR SAILING FOR CU3AM TREATY. AH Opposition by Republicans Withdrawn. Congressional Routine. Speaker Cannon was assured Wed nesday by one of the most prominent leaders of the opposition to Cuban reciprocity in the last congress that there would be little or no opposition among republicans to the bill carry ing .into effect the Cuban reciprocity .treaty. The speaker was assured that the sentiment among tne republicans was to stand by the speaker, that it would be impolitic to have a division of the party at the beginning ot the session. The senate began business in ear nest Wednesday by receiving for the first time during the session a num ber of petitions and a number of bills. ■One petition protested against Sena tor Smoot remaining in the senate. In presenting a numerously signed petition asking the senate to expedite the consideration of the charges against Mr. Smoot, Air Hoar took oc casion to remind the senders of the petitions bearing upon Mr. Smoot’s case that the proceeding is out of or der and improper. He based his re marks upon a purely judicial proceed ing to be determined by the laws and the constitution of the United States. The senate at 12:20 went into exec utive session and adjourned at 1:45 p. m. The house convened at 12 o’clock. After prayer by tho chaplain and the reading of the journal Messrs. C. C. Reed and Minor Wallace and T. 0. Kyle, of Ohio, were sworn in as mem bers of the house. On motion of Mr. Payne, the house, at 12:05 p. m., adj'ourned. Colombia’s Protest is Acknowledged. The reply of the state department to the protest of Dr. Hcrran, the Co lombian charge, was forwarded to him Wednesday. It was merely a formal acknowledgment that the protest had been received. NEGROES ANXIOUS TO COME BACK. Colonists Trom Georgia Suffer Great Hard ships in Far Off Liberia. There is a movement on foot at Valdosta, Ga., to bring back from Li beria the Irwin county negroes who, last February, emigrated to that coun try. The horrible predicament of these negroes was described in a letter from , the United States minister resident and consul general at Monrovia to Hon. John Hay, secretary of state. Wmhingtcn, D. C„ and trar»:r.itted by him to Congressman Brantley, oi Georgia. CURES RHEUMATISM AND CATARRH. 11.K.5. Cures I)ee.p-Sei»te»l Cases Kspeclally —To Prove It 15. B. B. Sent Free. These diseases, with aches and pains in bones, joints and back, agonizing pains in shoulder blades, hands, fingers, ‘arms and legs crippled by rheumatism, lumbago, sci atica, or neuralgia; hawking, spitting, nose bleeding, ringing in the ears, sick stomach, deafness, noise in the head, bad teeth, thin hot blood, all run down feeling or eatarrh are sure sijns of an awful poisoned condi tion Of the blood. 'Sake Botanic Blood Balm (B.B.B.) Soon all aches and pains stop, the poison is destroyed and a real permanent cure is made of the worst rheu matism or fcndest catarrh. Thousands of j cases cured by taking 8.8.8. It strength- | ana weak kidneys and improves digestion. Druggists, $1 per large bottle. Sample free by writing Blood Bai.ai Go., 54 Balm Bklg.,_ Atlanta, Ga. Describe trouble and free medical advice sent in sealed letter. The currency in circulation among the jicogle of the United States is $29.75 per JUST HIS LUCK. “I long to go about doing good,” said Mrs. Henpeck. •‘Don’t hang back on my account,” replied Mr. Henpeck wearily. “I know a woman who will come to take care of the children for her board and clothes.” Then she flared up and wouldn't ca. —Chicago Record-Herald. MAKING IT USEFUL. “What in the world are you doing with a phonograph, Harkeer? Thought you hated them?” “I do; but we use this one to keep the neighbors away when we don’t feel like entertaining." —Philadelphia Record. Of the strikes in Great Britain last year 30,917 were successful, '35,515 unsuccessful -and 41,045 acceptad com promises. Microscopic experiments have shown that the electrically made steel is not different in any way from crucible steel. Stats orOmo, Cits of Toledo, t Lucas County. i ‘ Fiiaxk .1. Cheney make oath that he i=t senior partner of the firm of F. J. Ckknf.y ,fc C 0.., doing busluess in the City ®f Tolodo, County and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of one hundred dol lass for each and every ease of OATA.nunthat cannot be cured by" the use <»f Hall’s Catarrh Cube. Frank J. Cheney. Swora to before me and subscribed in mv . . presence,thtetith day of Decomber, 2 seal. |A. IX, 1835. A. W. Gleason. * —v— * Rotary Public. Hail’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and nets directly on the blood and mucous sur faces of the system. Send for testimonial*,, lree. F..J. Cheney <t Co., Toledo, O. Hold by all Druggists, 75c. Hall’s Family Pills are the best. The longest telephone wire span lit the world is 3200 feet from pole to Foie, spanning the Suscpiehanna River, near Lancaster, Pa. The tenement inspectors of New York City have found over 325,000 occupied rooms which have neither light nor ventilation. FITS permanently cured. No fits or nervous ness after first day’s use of Dr. Kline’s Great Nerveltestorer.iJ2trial bottle and treatisefrea Dr.It.IL Kline, Ltd., 931 Arch St., Phlla.,Pa. In Boston there are one and a half elec tric lights for each person. Mrs Winslow’s SootMngSyrup for children teething, soft en the gums, reduces inflamma tlon.aliays pain,(Aires wind colic. 25c. a bottle Emperor William will erect a monument to the memory of Krupp, the gunmaker. Plso’s Cure is the best medicine we ever used for all affeetions of throat and lungs.—Wji, O. Endsley, Vanburen, Ind., Feb. 10, 1900. Salzburg has a cafe which has been in existence for 150 years. Carpets can be colored on the floor with Putnam Fadeless Dves. One in four of the people of Chicago is a German. i DISFAXp': Corner/ Q^nsti^liondO/ THACHER MEDICINE CO. , Chattanooga, tenk. j. For Mile itt ul! # <letiler*. XV liri limn IIIIHPI' I 111 I n lIMiM WWIliH— Himmi'Hßlll ■! ■■ mi ■ n I ■ GUARANTEED CURE for all bowel troubles, appendicitis, biliousness, bed breath, bad blood, wind on the stomach, bloated bowels, foul mouth, headache, indigestion, pimples, pains after eating, liver trouble, sallow skin and dizziness. When your bowels don’t move regularly you are sick. Constipation kills more people than all other diseases together. It c}iron -* c ailments and long years of suffering. No matter what ails you, start taking C ASCARETS today, for you will never get well and stay well until you get your bowels right Take our advice, start with Cascarets today under absolute guarantee to cure or money refunded. The genuine tablet stamped CC C. Never sold ir bulk. Sample and ; booklet free. Address Sterling Remedy Company, Chicago or New York. 50a woman of Jacksonville, Fla., daughter of Recorder of Deeds, West, who witnessed her signature to the following* letter, praises Lydia E* Pinkham's Vegetable Compound “ Dear Mrs. Pinkitam : There are but few wives and mcflfrerj who have not at times endured agonies and such pain as only women know. I wish such women knew the value of Lydia L.’dMnkhans’s Vegetable Compound. It as a remarkable medicine, different in action from any I ever knew and thoroughly reliable. “ I have seen-cases where women doctored for .years without perma nent benefit, wherwere cured in less than th£ee months after taking JLonr Vegetable Compound, while others who chronic and in'/uaJLle came out toured, happy, and in perfect health after a thorough with tMßmedicine. I have never used it myself without gaining benefit. A few doses restores my strength and appetite, and loufe&jHj the entire system. Your medicine has been tried and found truo,fi3fi||| I fully endorse itl” Mrs. R. A. Anderson*, 225 Washington tiUppl sonville, Ma. Mrs. Heed, 11. Cumberland St., Philadelphia, P^a., “Dear Mrs. Pinkham:—l feel/it to write and tell you the good I have from Lydia 11. Pinklmm’s YegetaddJfl ill! “1 I'hVP been a great. s u il'e '***> 1# trouble, trying dillep-nt doetor«g**CjßHH| r/ with IV> benefit. Tv.o y "j gJrajreSgßk an ojieration, and il left" PBBb3sBSe —cir— f e.iiidilioii. 1 bad s!o|fi;.< || t r A li«-:»d:n-1 i*•. palpital i--a of ili<- hjjflHK3S9H|[ N v..^ n . li iierv’.tr: in fm L l :il '}JDlj|j|f|p »-f '£ \X "■ ( 'p'' 't >v ■i• ■ ll i '<.-11 ■i- ■ -.;.;iJB;;Z , /1 / Compound to all hen t i.• na • • t r 1 ■•:(•,.! : ;■! •. . 1 ,i r• r[~i i i U<" ' I' u>- -rri . •.. • t • . . f 1:, * - \ f" Ib- . 11. !l i i ' i • • I,; ■ , :i. i'l.o indim\-t,ion. .•! n. •,u rut i< m tt. f ! i ha,, n •• Lydia i.. Pinkham's \ > ■-j , I:‘ i removes such Iru-übli-.s. The experienee and testimony of •li’omen of A no-idea go to pro\e, be\ond a 'y Pinh ham’s \ < vtc i>l« f'ompound -.'.i1l and norma I eomjilion. if in Ji. -, a- (' •-.:.••■• I <i .. lf< . .dm ■ ifl *4‘s •** ( ,Vj N' * sr»- n f..i hi i t *1? *• • e forfeit i ■; i■i ii t « P 7 -r>\^XpC/ ;• '\'\i ; C *■'; ” C A' , ii All r?: t\ ii A n ■, ;■« ..f ;• * : | V OR. THAOH£R'M ' Liver smisi ------ Syrssp V Geras by Ramoving the A THRU - FOLD REMEDY for all ill* due toMM tiortul troubles. Aits on the LIVEfr and hIUNE^KS# PURIFIES THE BLOOD. " . .1