The Advocate-Democrat. (Crawfordville, Ga.) 1893-current, May 14, 1897, Image 4
A Handed Hordersr. Tottrrlr,. kills the *erm»of SSs:rr,‘s«s Savanna-t* La. Every me Who has grout fulfil has great power for - yoo'l. >o-To-I'.»o lor Filtv Ontp. TfKulaO- Over «>.<»• or remove cured. ^ p.Kir <1.1 iiw ,(. $2- •£» ...... $1.00 avail druggi»t». An Investment In knowledge PW the- bout Interest. EShilV»?A Druggist4i cnre it, 75c. for catarrh they ever sold. No man whh ever converted while nursing in aching tooth. ,JQ|t t a 10c. tmx of Csecarets. the finest rv regulator made. Iverain l bowel ever Nothing giv<‘« one a inorc melancholy feeling than than a clock that docsn t run. tion, allay* pain, cares wind colic. ^ -»• oottlc. The greater our growth In grace, the greater our need of coimnon cn»e. I*i«o’»Core cured n.<- of a Throat «»H™« .ft* pnrmenenOycnrwt. NollMornervotis S'"*fel£,™V i»*>! if. k'i.ixk. 1 sftrialb<'.wie*ndtre»tl«Ifn* Art M..,I’WI»..I’». n. I.W..WU niUleifto i'litl'r 'u . ... „ lR liell- per theuter or tavern In Koland. Case aiit.tm stimulate liver, kidneys and bowels. Novel r Mickeu, weaken or gripe; ; 10c. It t« an unforinnale fmt thot clerical 'morale do not always go with clerical garb. If afflicted with «o r <- <•>.<* T .<• Dr.linaacThornp fcou'n Eye-wnti-*'. Druggie eJl at.%<’.{«• r bottle. Impure Blood “I havn found Hood’s Harsapsrillft nffludwl nn «x collnnt mndicirit'. My liUlu «lrl w«» with eckoroii for seven yoftrs and took many klndsof maillolna without relief. After taking a few Lotties of Hood’s Bnrsannrllla kite was ourwi.” Mils. Emma Kkxskmk, Ilood’i Honeoye, Now York. Got only be cause Hood’s Sarsa¬ parilla Is the bout ii fact the One True Iilood Purifier. Hood’s Pills Fun Sji l p and health making ’ nre included in the I making of H1KUS Rootbeer. The prepa¬ ration of this great tern perance drink is an event of importance in a million well regulated homes. HIRES m Rootbeer y is full of good health. Invigorating, appetiz ql ing, satisfying. to-day Put and .3 some up ready put have it to 5.W down whenever you’re thirsty. by The : Made only Hires Co., Charles K. P!1 Philadelphia. gallons. A pack nge makes 5 E§£ Sold everywhere. IN CASE: LYON «CO'l YUU ./F^ PickLeaf &0jg Wkin»Tob*TU> If TM* f«e«TJ ■ --t- ■Si 0 •; ' *;> .< I • < B i EXTRA SMOKING TOBACCO *r«Ur lkH»k gwi " illi each » v**- pouob. ALL FOR io cents. A PlMiMinJ. Cool .nj Drllvhllul .‘moLr. Lyon A Co Tos.cco Won.. Dunm.h N C Am. N. V. No. 19. 1897. I — I 351-53. . .— . HcvU CtXifN t4j rupv t*im* two*. L w tn uwft 'oM clrt ug -y'A. b 0 -------- z U) 3 IXIsBil!®* H N 0 NOTES AND COMMENTS. “Give me $150,000,” observes Explor er Pf-arv “and I will find the North Pole. ” We decline with thanks. We can’t afford to fritter away that much money on a cold deal like this. There are only three towns ia Rhode j Island now unprovided with public or semi-public libraries, and these three, are being spurred to equal the public spirit of the rest. The number of horses consumed in France each year is now about 120,000, and of this number 24,000 are sent to j Pair is. In 1896 only 2,500 horses made their final appearance in the guise of beef. Of the 120,000 now consumed it : is, , ,, of course, lmpoesib i r ,, T „w„ihlp . to <sav • y how many are eaten in ignorance of tne ; fact that they have probably once the shafts. - - I been between l The city of Paris is making a sani tarv y record of every building in the city. „ Since March, u 18.)4, .,.,,000 hou^.s have been described, and it is expected ; that the register will be completed by; 3900. It contains for each h jusc descriptlon of the drains, cesspools 1 | and wells, and of the plumbing; a «; cord of whatever deaths from contag ; OUfl diseases have occurred in it, and of all disinfections and analyses of j water, air or dust. ! The long-talked of project of a rail-; roart connecting North and South | | America is being revived. The nego | Rations between Mexico and Guate mala, which were interrupted two years ago by the strained diplomatic I relations of the two countries, have been resumed, and Mexico has just appointed a commission to act with a similar commission to be appointed by Guatemala. It will he the duty of I the joint commission to select a feasi- j ble route for the proposed road. Butte, Mont., is now credited with being the busiest place in the West, i The Anaconda copper mines, that vast concern which makes a profit of from $5,000,000 to $6,000,000, a year, ex¬ plains the status there. It is employ¬ ing more men and has a bigger pay¬ roll than ever before, and its em ployees get the highest rate of wages paiil anywhere. No wonder that Iiutte is prosperous, for where several thousand men get steady work and high pay there can be no stagnation. Professor Dussaud, of Geneva, Switzerland, announces the discovery of a system whereby the deaf can he made to hear. The apparatus is known as the microphonograph, and it consists of an exceedingly sensitive phonograph connected to a micro phone. The speaker talks into the phhnograph and the words are trans mitted to the deaf person through the microphone. Prof. Dussaud expects •vt/wJWLVS. Jlla. qnparatus perfected for the Paris Exposition sol hat lark-T fences of deaf persons may listen to j lectures. | A letter in The Ohio State Journal claims for John W. Burton, once a resident of Columbus and now living in Texas, the honor of being the youngest man who carried a musket from the beginning to the end of the Civil War. lie was a member of Company A, Forty-sixth Ohio Volun teer Infantry, and was only twelve years old when he enlisted. He was a hoy of remarkable size for. his age and showed few signs of his extreme youth. There were many drummers younger than Burton, but lie was a real soldier from the first, and always did a man's duty. The report for the “Darkest Eng land” scheme for the Salvation Army in England for the last year shows that 3,231,917 meals were supplied and 1,339,246 nights’ lodging; 2,501 men were received into the factories, 411 into the first prison home, 11,899 pro vlded with employment, temporary or permanent, and 1,535 women and girls received into rescue homes. Although there is no pretense of making the work self-supporting, the shelter for food and lodgings received over $190, 000 from those sheltered; the city ony with its many branches returned $176,000 toward an expense of $193,000, and the farm colony, in spite of very many difficulties, came within $25,000 of meeting its expenditure of $350,000. The OutliHik tells how the school children of Rochester. N. V., have by their industry succeeding in ridding the city of a pest of moths. These moths had become so destructive that the Forestry Association offered a prize of five dollars to each of the children of any one school who would bring in 1,000 or more of the cocoons of this insect; three dollars to the three bring in the second largest num¬ ber; two to the three bringing in the third largest number. This was in 1893. The next year the amount of the prizes was increased to ten dollars for the boy or girl who brought in a greater number of cocoons than were brought in by any one pupil in 1893: this was 44,900. Twenty children each won a ten-doliar prize, •pho school children of Rochester have gatherod from the bark of trees, fences, rough places in houses, etc.. almost 9,000,000 of those moth co¬ coons . and now the city is free from those insect pests through the efforts of these children vO -4 ti VAO» y. NdUji LiiCia auantlon to the difficult task of rapid- ly and cheaply liquefying air This, when accomplished, will be of great value for many purposes, of which re frigeration and the moving of engines, stationary and locomotive, are the most important. By the most sue eessful methods hitherto used, a Ger man experimenter was able, with a copper tube apparatus weighing 132 pounds and a pressure averaging more than 190 atmospheres, to liquefy air in two hours without resorting to auxiliary cooling expedients. By means, however, of a machine exhib ited last month before the Dublin R j Socie ty, liquid air was produced jn twenty . five minutes. The air pres oure in tbjg case was less than eighty “ Beve atmospheres, and the apparatus weighed only , twenty . , pounds. The The air was not in quantity large enoufeu . . UP b or: of o comm ercial import marKoa t . ance, hut the system was a j mprov ement on all its predecessors. It is rather „ ther sun) surpriBiug rising—as news from a ^ uf about home matters often is . t h a t a party of English is coming over here this summer to shoot wild horses. Oi , animals somebody has told the ev Nlm rods, there are at leasts qqqqoq galloping about the mountain .. . habitants ^ suc h a nuisance are thejb tQ the of the country ttm ai( j j n decreasing their numbers wij be gratefully welcomed. Once, af cor( iing to the veracious narrati from w hich these facts are gleaned. much attention on the ranches w/s paid to tbe rearing of horses as f o lbat 0 f ca ttle, and they were so vaV abl( , t ba t to steal one of the animjis y,- g regarded as a crime worse tltiU mur der, but now the man who wotid round up a few hundred bands of these an imals and run off with them wculd elected a Senator, The story toes not state whether the horse nutters coining chiefly for game, as tene factors to ^helpless people, or betanse they have Senatorial aspiration^ but coming they are, and there is no^loubt they will have a lot of excitfment before A flock they of go wild back. pigeons, so i mer ous as to recall the hunting Stories of days that were supposed tc have passe d forever, has Shasta taken Count, possession Cal. (}{ a grove i n when the birds are on their.fvraging to/form Expeditions tiiey are said a ]j ne a m j| e in length and froh 100 to uqo yards wide, is like while that the of I jbunjd furious of iheir wings storm. At night they gat/er in a black oak forest, where, seeti ovt a n area 0 f about 169 acres, they to cover every twig and bough. Ijb numer 0 us are they that people in the vicini ty kill as many of them aj they can carry away, doing the work ( with clubs an d stones rather more effectively than with guns. IajcaV ordthologiBts l pigeon fomrnon in Kentu«<-4,-. -. io, and and afterwards *&*en Been further west, though rarely flocks so large as this one. Tiiey /are do scribed as not quite a foot long from the tip .of the bill to the end of the tail. The prevailing color is a bluish gray, in some parts will) green and purple reflections, and wit'll two broad and distinct bars of blacit across the wings. The lower part of the back is white, while the tail Is a deep gray, with a broad, black bar at the end. The bill is blackish brojwn, and the legs and toes are of reddish orange, both The birds size and show color. great i|nlformity in ( The emergencies ere;Ited by the Plague have been the cjuse of some thing like a revolution In the case of some of the most deep! f rooted social and religious prejudices of the natives in India. The increase of the pest has compelled measures, such as the isolation of the sick, which are in direct antagonism to the most chei’ish ed tradition* of religions observance, personal liberty, and family life. At the outbreak of the epidemic very few sufferers could be persuaded to accept hospital treatment. For a time it seemed impossible in Bombay to in due© more than twenty-five patients to enter the wards. By the beginning of March, however, tbe Arthur Road Hospital alone contained nearly a hundred patients, while numbers were availing themselves of the hospitals of the Parsee, Jain. Hindu. Khoja, and Jlohamntedan communities, and of special institutions, such as those of the Port Trust, the Sahibs’ servants, and Parel. The devout Hindu dreads above all things to die in the hands of men of another caste, and to he de¬ prived of the last rites which his own kindred are alone competent, accord¬ ing to existing usage, to perform. It is not merely a question of sentiment in this world; it is also one of salva¬ tion in the next. Vtnosi without ex eeption. until now the respectable classes of Indians have preferred the certainty of dying among their own people to the chant •' of recovery in a public hospital, hox-ever considerate its management, if t involves separa Don from their families. Rut segre cation :s the essential condition of hospital treatment in a great epidemic, and for the first me in India it is ttot only being enforced, but is accept e<i as inevitable by tbe people them¬ selves . A few months ago such sani •i *- - y ^4 jmnI Vi Uu,U ua* w nammM most fanatical opposition. A County's Criminal Record, Mingo county, West Virginia, has a remarkable record. It is a young coun ty, auq but few terms of court have been l,eid. There are not quite 1.800 votes 4u the county, but there are over 1.000 trimlnal cas< s to ho tried, most of them on indictments returned by the last two grand furies. / --- -A Boston woman advertises tor class¬ es ih the “art of conversation.” This means more spokes in the hub. Religion finds the love of happiness wjl o*. and the principles Its mission of is duty to reunite separated them. in • sTieinvention of Alabastme marked a new er ^ jn wab coa tj DK3i an d f rom the srand p<jj nt of the building owner was a most im PJrtant discovery. It has from a small be ginning branched out into every couctry of tl,* .civilized world. The name “kalsomine" has become so offensive to property owners manufacturers of cheap kalsomine Preparations are now calling them by some 3 tv, er name, and attempting to sell on the Alabastine companj-'s reputation, tine are so thoroughly known that the peo pie insist on getting these goods and will ^'VTew centq# Thus it is again demonstrated that merit wins, and that manufacturers of first elwys articles will Unsupported by the people, Generally when a mans acts return to plague him, he whines around that he is persecuted. When Bilious or costive, guaranteed; eat a 10c., Cascaret, 25c, candy cathartic; euro In the reign of Richard III, the use of post horses began In England. REASONS FOR USING Walter Baker & Co.’s Breakfast Cocoa. 4. Because it is absolutely pure. m 2. Because it is not made by the so-called Dutch Process in which chemicals are used. l. 1:0 1 4. 3. 5. Because Because Because a the cup. it it beans exquisite is is the made of most the natural by finest a economical, method flavor quality and which are costing odor used. preserves of less the than beans. unimpaired WALTER one cent Be sure that you get the genuine article made by BAKER & CO. Ltd., Dorchester, Mass. Established 1780. fro. at - . i Iranrovpments patented 1890 Jn the T7. S,, Canada and Euroj>e. STRONG-A T*Tlt F. PROOF—Proof against foundation. sparks, cinders, burning brands, etc. J.IG IIT— Weighs heavy but canvas 85 lbs.per ft. when laid complete. 100 sq. FhE.V f RLE -Containsno coal tar, and retains indefinitely its 1 eath lor-like pliability and tough new. KAMIGY APPLIED—Requires no kettle or othe r expensive appar atus. Clan be laid by any intel iigent workman. SEND FOR SAMPLES AND DESCRIPTIVE PAMPHLET. H. W. JOHNS Randolph MFC. PHILADELPHIA: CO., I OO WILLIAM 170 & 172 North ST., 4th St. NEW BOSTON: YORK. 77 h 79 Pearl St, CHICAGO: 340 k 242 St. ^sANDY CATHARTIC CURE CONSTIPATION < riKiig 10 A 9 i ALL 25 * 50 * DRUGGISTS __ ABSOLUTELY GUARANTEED pie and booklet free. Ad. STERLING REMEDY €0., Chicazo. Montreal, Can., or Ncw York^ |; c-T . Mi V’MFj / Y/ & t ' r Ifltea m ■j i / i: v iti tfi ^ V i ^ ir- mm r “I I 1 if !. OSL-Ji US ii j4._ f 7 < A Southern farmer, whose home is somewhat in the backwoods, in an interview with a newspaper correspondent said: “I am 6i years old, and until I was nigh unto 50 years old 1 was always well and peart, then for a long while ! suf¬ fered with indigestion and could not eat anything hardly at all. My daughter, who lives in the city, sent me some of Ripans Tabules told me how to tak« them, nnd they have completely cured me. 1 want vou to tell everybody how 1 got cured, for it is a blessing to humanity.” HALL’S Vegetable Sicilian HAIR REN EWER Beautifies and restores Gray Hair to its orig'neh cobr and vitality; prevents baldness; cures itching and dandruff. A fine hair dressing. R. P. Hall & Co.. Props.. Nashua, N. H. Sold by all Druggists. Second Hand TUERK WATER /V\OTQR For Sale , Large size, cost $400, in tue feat months. WILL BE SOLD AT A BAROAINU Apply at once to Atlanta Newspaper Union, ATLANTA. a.A HAY PRESSES! geEWTS. r^ n t‘o°?. e nX». t in this CV'TTCtV ™ Best paying »rticle on earth. We pay VVashim all ex pc nse . Addre** flLYZA CHEM. CO.. stun, U. C.