The Covington news. (Covington, Ga.) 1908-current, October 18, 1911, Page PAGE SEVEN, Image 11
§LS I AFRICA Known English Tells of Trip. Gaunt Rode 700 Miles In ujrv ; ; Through Tropical Coun o k Woman Where White W f n "; Before. Never Had Been After traveling 1,500 miles Xmwa S Africa, in a a hammock- large por tropical being through * . her journey white woman has where no ’ before, Miss Mary Gaunt, f known authoress, has book re- of London to write a to iences. “SeTday she narrated Is pleasant some of She a resoluto lady. been ail along the gold : m the western to 8 be said, "from intern borders. 1 also visited ( tbe German territory) and in the northwest province ol the back of beyond, where no yhjte woman has gone, ether, 1 have been away eight Sow I want to go to Timbuc L | must write my book first jshantl 1 created quite a sensa jione of the natives had ever t white woman before. ■I turned out with guns and Jem off, and they Crowds beat deliclous- to toni-toms. came ,t me. ‘dashed' me (gave me) sheep dickens and eggs—some of tere hoary with age—and Ions. That meant, of course, ad to 'dash' them, which cost ill the time 1 was In tropical laever felt the heat so much hie done since I came home, y.four degrees in the shade hottest my thermometer regls tat It was very humid, and rusts and rots, Including clothes. liay 18 1 lost my medicine uy boots, knives and forks, and all I possessed. happened on a 360-ton bar in the mouth of the Volta The surf was so bad that it the bulwarks, the boats, the the galley, and the water *rose engine room flush with the We thought we were going The waves were mountainous, the only passenger, and a too, so 1 did not say 1 was I said to the captain: It magnificent, isn’t it?’ iilcent!’ he said. 'Good ; we can’t stand any more of are going down! ’ He blacks, crew and all, ran leek, crying and wailing. The , a German, stuck to his post, poping about amongst scald He said: ihlnk It finish, but 1 may as li out" this way as another.' »me through all right. In the tit his face was scalded. He ’mail. taveled 700 miles in a ham ill over the gold coast, carried four at a time, hfgomeda my carriers were to go any further because of ~er from the Krobo Hill. The used to come down and catch sacrifice them to their blood Augotneda 1 heard a leopard a "d I wanted to get on. We ®and found a bright, moonlit tee 1 thought we would camp, 7 said: ‘Oh, no; bad place!’ Ion. st hand was a gloomy em which they said was the L™' The 7 clapped their hands ned to make noises like a very company. hlack clerk riding by on a bl ad disappeared there. The . c ome down with pronged Tjth .J. which Declt they and seize their * W11 to carry them torture them. “there I went to Laboiabo, l.. e ,® teep Evet0 mountains and 7 1 “ German colony, where UenoJ’ 617 600<1 ‘ 1116 Ensllsa °* Ma JoHty. ia ! 7° n Datents U ry have been is . serve ’ m ° Bt of whIch 4 no other - Purpose than to , lrv ■- dre “'* s »lth the Cynic. SjresV! 6 !lke you money; when you If fou , lose ’ may rlBk some ; It, folk will still be “ ave Plenty to spare. imber and Cheap Prices. £ carrying as large a lot of® as was ever before placed on» Market and at prices to suit the m ’$e. * j^erials teest quality. consist of If every thing contemplating in the builders building, line get and our o ^ you are g 0re You place your order. ^ EVANS LUNSFORD * l * l ***t*l.HB.|.a*B*fr** B * ll * B BERLIN IS VERY QUIET CITY Needless Noises Are Wl6ely •y Suppressed and In Kaiser’s Capital, Mrs. Rice Finds. Remn.-’-Noise^ Germany” has “aao Z L r' 1 '? New i “ lpr Vork. “ 5 '"“ president °' »” Mrs. Unnecessary thTthe^dVaXTS ouier things re a " 6Cessary evil on railroads has method’ h 6 ” ^ by ,he Ge ™“ A couple of years ago, In quence of the kaiser’s conse ing by night habit of travel and his dislike of being disturbed, orders were Issue! that Ger Accidents AoHd ! r ° adS on German Sh ° Uld n0t railroads USe whlB tles. rare w hl]e , are ® ties n Belgium( where are screeching continually, theU they are trennent The same ,s in In Germany ten minutes before the train starts the officials tell the sengers to take their pas¬ 1 seats. There is ^ a “ d when U 18 t^e. a whis¬ tie tle like like a boatswain’s is sounded the train starts. and Mrs. Rice would like to see the same system introduced In¬ to the United States. Mrs. Rice has been devoting special attention to automobile horns. They are as great a nuisance abroad she says, don hotel as at at home. While In a’Lon¬ ing a busy hour in the even¬ she counted 488 whistles in 15 minutes, and during a comparatively Quite time 656 In half an hour “In Paris,” she says, “our chauffeur own sounded the horn 55 times in less than three minutes, and it in quiet was a street. “I noticed in passing through the streets of Paris that scarecely a win¬ dow was open. People cannot sleep with open windows on account of the noise. I am happy to say that several so¬ cieties for the suppression of noises are successful In Europe. They have even Induced hotel people to post signs reading, “Kindly keep quiet.” THEATER ON WHEELS CLOSED Balky Traction Engine Caused Paris Manager to Abandon His Pet Pro¬ ject-Will Try It Again. Paris.—One of the most Interesting theatrical experiments of late years, the Theater Ambulant Gemler, or the Gemier Traveling Theater, is about to come to an end in its present form, and the company is going into liquida¬ tion. Mr. Gemler, the enterprising actor manager of the concern, formerly of the Comedie Francaise, states that although, from the point of view of the receipts, averaging $600 a day, the new venture has been a complete success, it is impossible to continue the present method of tugging the heavy theater, scenery, properties, dressing room, caravans, lighting plant, etc., along the roads by means of a traction engine, which, when working properly gets up a speed of three miles an hour, and at other times, falls into ditches, dashes down hills Into churchyards and otherwise complicates matters. The founder, therefore, thought It best to go into voluntary liquidation; but he has not the smallest Idea of giving up this portable theater. He will still take it around the country, putting it up In town after town as he arrives; but henceforward all the vans will be transported by rail In a special train. —* M. Gemier seems to have had noth¬ ing but trouble ever since he started. Another setback was that at a number of towns booked he was unable to give performances owing to the dear-food riots. ARCTIC VOLCANO IS RAGING Explorers Find the Pavlof Shooting Fire Thousands of Feet in Air— Spread Out Like Tree. Seattle, Wash. Mount Pavlof, the volcanic peak in the Aleutian islands, was active during the summer, accord¬ ing to advices brought by the bark Gug C. Goss. Owing to the vigor of Bogosiof, Shishaldin and Pavlof, all famous Aleutian volcanoes, during 1909, sev¬ eral expeditions were sent out to pho¬ tograph them, but the weather in 1911 was so foggy it was dangerous to ap¬ proach the volcanic islands. On the way north, the Goss ob¬ served Pavlof sending a column of smoke thousands of feet into the air. This column spread out Into branches like the li mbs of a huge tre e. Builds Hopes on Sand. He that waits upon fortune is never sure of a dinner.—Benjamin Franklin. the COVINGTON NEWS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1911 1 WOOED BY WIRELESS Bashful Swain Who Could Not Muster Courage Is Aided. Indianapolis Business Man, in Love With French Girl, Carries on Courtship by Telegraph and Wins the Lass. New York.-The wireless as an aid to bashful swains who cannot muster courage to tell their love in their fiweetiiearts presence stepped in to accomplish a marriage solemnized in New York the other day. A Trench girl, Miss Marguerite Cas taign, a daughter of Colonel Jean Cas taign, was the heroine of the Jules V era like romance that the wedding disclosed. James Guy Haugh, an In¬ dianapolis manufacturer, was the hero. The various scenes are laid in France and America and on three liners tljat crossed the Atlantic at various times this summer. And neither the cable, which runs far be¬ neath the surface of the ocean, nor the ether above the water was with¬ out its share in conveying the mes¬ sages of love which Anally brought the two together. Haugh met Mile. Castalgn on ship¬ board last June. He was attracted to the charming young woman, and she in her turn appeared to regard the American with favor. Arrived in France Haugh managed to make the acquaintance of Colonel Castaign, the young woman’s father. He visited the Castaigns several times, and his ac¬ quaintance with the daughter grew. 1 he time came for his return to America, but he could not summon sufficient courage to ask the fateful question so soon after he had first met her. They parted. The time when he might return to France was indefinite. Mr. Haugh, after a restless period, decided he could wait no longer. He approached the wireless operator of the vessel, and a few moments later a message for Miss Castalgn was flashing into the ether from the mast¬ head of the retreating steamship. It said, in the language of dots and dashes of the telegraph code: “I love you. Will you marry me?" After more restless days the liner reached New Y’ork. There wa 3 a ca¬ blegram waiting for Mr. Haugh. “I certainly will,” it said. The cables between America and France hummed with other rapid-fire correspondence between the two. Mr. Haugh was unable to return to France to get his fiancee, and so she agreed to come to him. The other morning he met the French Line steamer La Bretagne, and Miss Cas¬ taign landed and that afternoon she became Mrs. Haugh. FROG EATING FOR G0RMANDS French Taste, With Art Trimmings, Extending to England—Various Ways of Cooking Delicacy. London.—The taste for frogs has spread to some parts of England. In Cambridgeshire and Norloik house¬ wives occasionally serve them up whole, fried in breadcrumbs. But this is not the right way to treat them. On the continent only the hindquar¬ ters are eaten, either grilled and ac¬ companied with bacon, or served in an omelette. Frog and bacon sounds a repugnant dish to British ears, but those who have tried it generally ad¬ mit that it is as good, if not better, than veai and bacon. Another delicacy of the same order is frog pie. This is sometimes a most expensive dish. Not long ago, at a dinner given at Monte Carlo, to celebrate a phenom¬ enal run of luck, among the Items on the menu was a huge frog pie for which the host paid 600 francs. In this case, however, truffles were mixed with the frogs, and they helped to swell the cost. Francis Hindes Groome, in his "Two Suffolk Friends,” tells of a friend of his youth who seems to have carried his passion for frogs to excess. “In summer time he loved to catch small ‘freshers’ (young frogs) and let them hop down his throat, when he would stroke his stomach, observing (for he stuttered badly), ‘B-b-b-b-eautifully cool.’ ” At the time of this strange diet he was a middle-aged man, yet it did not appear to hurt him in any way. SKY ROCKETS IN A ROMANCE Man Writes Note on Piece of Fire¬ works, Girl Finds It and Wedding Is Natural Result. St. Louis.—A skyrocket romance that originated in St Louis a little more than a year ago led to the mar¬ riage in Ashland, Ore., of George Mold, Jr., of Alton and Miss Sophia Bindell. Mold, while working In a fireworks factory in St. Louis, filled an order consigned to George Bindell of Artesian, N. M., formerly of Alton. On a rocket he wrote: “The girl who finds this will be the girl who will me—George Mold, St Louis. Miss Bindell unpacked the fireworks, found the rockets, answered the note and the wedding followed. Take Pictures From Balloons. Paris.—The rooms of the French Aero club at Paris tell of what has been done tn the way o. photograph¬ ing from balloons, a hundred or more curious pictures of Paris taken from great heights adorning the walls. A new room will soon be given over to photographs taken from aeroplanes. THESE TURTLES CAN’T SLEEP Too Much Food Gives Them Insomnia or Some Other Fashionable Dis¬ ease—Fast Is Advocated. - « Los Angeles, Cal.—Six turtles in the chamber of commerce exhibit hall are suffering from insomnia or some oth¬ er fashionable ailment. The creatures doze for seven months at a stretch in their native habitat in the desert, but here they seem unable to obtain sleep. The custodian tried every method of inducing slumber. He draped old bags over the turtles’ box and tried shutting them up in a dark closet. becretary Wiggins was appealed to to find some method of bringing re¬ lief to the sleepless eyes of the six turtles. I think they have been overfed,” said the secretary, “and would advise a prolonged fast Dyspepsia often causes sleeplessness. Maybe that’s the trouble with the turtles. Anyhow, I can t see but what they look pretty lively.” They ought to be lying down nice and quiet,” said the attendant. “In¬ stead of that they waddle to the edge of their pen whenever visitors come near. They want fresh lettuce, and water every five minutes. These tur¬ tles didn t get much green food when they lived in the desert.” Two turtles were brought to the chamber of commerce about ten years ago. Since then others have been add¬ ed to the collection. For some time they would eat only once In two months. Now they are hungry all the time and refuse to sleep at all. When one goes out on the little outdoor porch of their quarters they sidle up to the fence and draw out a foot of neck to gaze at the visitors and see if any fresh feed has been thrown In. 1 hey like apple parings, oranges, grapes and lettuce. SERUM TAKEN FROM ROOSTER Dr. Kyes of Chicago, Reports on Ob¬ taining Antibodies Preparation With Aid of Chanticleer. New York.—Serum with a protec¬ tive action against pneumonia when inoculated into certain animals has been perfected by Dr. Preston Kyes, of Chicago, who contributes an article on the experiments he has made to the current number of the Journal of the American Medical association. Most of the studies which have been made regarding the germ of pneumonia have been made upon ani¬ mals which are very susceptible, and Dr. Kyes has selected what he be¬ lieves are the most insusceptible of creatures availahJe—barnyard fowls. One of the most elaborate experiments has for its subject a White Leghorn rooster weighing almost five pounds. The preparation obtained from a hum¬ an lung involved with acute lobar pneumonia. Dr. Kyes believes that it Is possible by the inoculation of fowls with ex¬ treme doses of pneumococci to obtain a serum of specific antibodies and pos¬ sessing distinct protective action against pneumococci within certain hosts. He shows by a series of tables and reports that the immune serum which he made did not in any case fail to show a protective influence against the disease. FOG HORNS ROAR OUT TUNES One Is to Be Set Up on the California Coast and Can Be Heard for Distance of 12 Miles. San Francisco.—The time when a ship will be welcomed twelve miles out to sea by national airs, popular tunes and, perhaps, eventually phono¬ graphic records bellowed from gigan¬ tic fog horns, seems not far distant. Pleased with the tuneful tooting of electric automobile horns, Lleut.-Com. William A. Moffatt, lighthouse inspec¬ tor of the sixteenth district, made in¬ quiries as to the possibility of making a similar horn for lighthouse service to replace the dismal blare of the fog horns now in use. He learned that one could be made which would be heard at the Farrallone islands, 23 miles out at sea. As a sample, how¬ ever, he decided to order one with a 12-mile range. It will be Installed im¬ mediately on Blunt’s point, Angel island. HORNETS OWNED THE STREET Yellowjackets In Oregon Town Roused by Boys Take Full Possession of Side of Thoroughfare. Hood River; Ore.—Yellowjackets in a crevice beneath the boardwalk at the west end of cascade avenue were aroused by small boys the other morn ing and took complete possession of the north side of the street. Pedes¬ trians were forced to take the oppo¬ site sidewalk, and even then wander¬ ing yellowjackets. found several vic¬ tims. Marshal Lewis was stung on the nose by a vindictive hornet. The marshal returned to town, obtained a beeman’s mask, gloves and other safeguards, matches and sulphur, pre¬ pared for battle. The fire was applied and most of the yellowjackets were killed. A few escaped, and were so violent in their attacks that the crowd that had collected was unable to get close enough to extinguish the fire that was burning the sidewalk. Seed Crop Nets $30,000. Halleck, Minn.—A. L. Briggs the other day sold a wagon of timothy seed from this year’s crop for $850. Briggs, who is a retired merchant, coming here from Colorado two years ago, has Just finished harvesting 700 acres of timothy, which will net him approximately $30,000. PAGE SEVEN New Racket Store Spot Cash! One Price! BIG VALUES! New goods of season arriving every few days, many new lines added more to follow. Yours Very Truly J. J. GUINN a Insurance For Farmers The Newton County Division of the Farmers Cc-oparative Fire Insurance Co., was organized ten years ago for the benefit of farmers. Has grown from $50,000 to $280,000 cost $5,00 per $1,000 for Policy no renewels. No other cost except, make good the losses and necessary expenses. Average cost to its members since organized only $2.63 a $1,000.00 per year. No excuse to go with out protection. Cheapest insurance in the world and safe. E L. D. ADAMS AGENT. COV I NOT ON QA. S3SM8XMKRB8HIBBI REDM TI V V jTE chew HOLD for up Red men. Meat—the Always No good—better spice to make your now tongue than |||ps ||||*:| ever. yf sore—no excessive sweetening to N make you spit yourself away and ruin your stomach. Just high-grade North Carolina tobacco, properly sweetened by a perfect process. Sure ’s you ’re bom » it’s the real thing in good chewing. yourselfjfilij Get busy today and find out for Cut out this ad. and mail to us with your name and address far cur FREE offer to chewers only. Name Address . Made only by LlIPFERT SCALES Co., Winston-Salem, N. C. TOBAOC DR. WRIGHT’S I have a few lot of Rhode Island Red Pullets and Cockerels I am closing out cheap to reduce my stock. Now is your time to get something good at reasonable price. 1 want to close them out at once. If you care to put some new blood in your flock I can give you something fine. FOR RENT. I have a house and lot on Washington St. close in and convenient to rent can give possession at once. Come to See me. I am still carrying a large line of specticles and Trusses and guarantee satisfaction in adjustment and prices. 1 i DR. J. A. WRIGHT, Druggist • Covington, Ga. £ * — ARE YOU HUNGRY? When you want something especially nice to eat, well cooked and of the best the market affords, you should by all means try our place. Meals served promptly, and if you prefer we will send them out to you. We also serve and sell pure ice cream, and will also send it to your home except on Sunday. REMEMBER THE PLACE PHONE 221 i COVINGTON CAFE