The Waycross herald. (Waycross, Ga.) 18??-1893, December 03, 1892, Image 1

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FOR NEKT ^Job^Pirinting f • CKLL RT . •THE HE^fllilD OFFICE. * CITY PRICES. VOL. XIV. WAYCROSS, GEORGIA, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1892. NO. 1 PROFESSIONAL CARDS. 0. 0. THOMAS, Attorney at law, COURT House, WAVCROSH, «A. B. H. WILLIAMS, D. D. a, Orricr: 1>«aik POLKS BLOCK* WAYCROSS, ®A. JT^ndro Ufa pnilMonal wrvlm to the D' ,R. JAS. C. MIPPARD, Physician and Surgeon, W Arcane*. Oa. Special attention Riven to Genito Urina- rfinr**cy. Can ml ways be ft Hind in \V il ia Mock, np stair*. April 14-tf. WALLACE MATHEWS, M. D„ PHYSICIAN AND 81TROEOK. WAYCROSS, : : : : GEORGIA, jan'ill-ly D IL P. C. POLKS, Plijaidan and Sur- _ fron, Wajcraaa, Ga. Office over T. K. Jewelry Store. Office bourn from 0 to 10 a. m. CsnJbe found nl my residence, comer Pendleton street and ltranawick avenue, ;wben not profes sionally engaged. jyt.ly OFFICERS OP WARE C0IT5TY. Warren Lott—Onlinary. W. 31. Wilson—Clerk Superior Court. 8. P. Miller—Sheriff and Jailor. E. H. Crawley—Treasurer. Joe I>. Smith—School Coramiseioner. J. J. Wilkinson—Tax Rereiver. T. T. Thlcpen—Tax Collect* »r. J. W. Booth—Coroner. County Commissioners—W. A. Cason. J. W. Davidson and D. J. Blackburn. Address. Wayrmes. Ga. CITY OFFICERS, WAYCROSS, OA. Arthur 31. Kftight, Mayor. Aldermen, W. A. McNiel. W. W. Sharp, J. H. GUlon. J.G. Justice. R. II. Mnrphy. W. I>. Hamilton. Clerk of City Cooncil. W. F. Parker, City Aweaeor and Collector. Warren I*ott, City Treasurer. 8. W. Hitch. City Attorney. John P. Cason, City Marshal. The Wayemea Herald, Official Organ. H. W. Reed. President; J. Secretary; W. J. Carswell, W. Hitch. II. P. Brewer. J. Walker. Board meets Second Saturday in month at 230 p. m„ at High School building. a A MIT ART A WATERWORKS COPJt. H. Murphy, Olim’n, W. 31. Wilson. M. Albertaon, I*in Johnson, W. A. Cason, II. W. Reed. W. D. Hamilton, Ex. Off. Clerk. Warren Lott, Ex. Officio Treasurer. II. W. Reed, Chief Engineer. DR. J. E. W. SMITH, Office Reed's Block. Special attention given iliwim of the Eye, Ear, Nose ami Throat. WAYCROSS, - GEORGIA. l)K. A. P. ENGLISH, Physician and Surgeon, WAYCROSS - - GEORGIA. war All calk promptly attended. -Bl DR. RICHARD B. NEW PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Office at 31 im Ilenwliart’H, WAYCROSS, ; ; ; GEORGIA. jan 3tMkn . F.; and A. M. Waycnew Lodge. No. 305 F. and A. M., meets 2*1 and 4th Wednedays at >. ra. A. P. English, W. 31.; K. II. 1 p. ro. A. Secretary BlaACKfUIRAR CIIAPTKR MO. *, R. A. Meets at Masonic Hall, Plant Avenue, 1st Friday in each month at 7 JO p. in. Ex Comp. W. W. Sharpe, II. P.; Rt Ex. <<nnp E. H. Reed, Secretary. tVAKKFICLD LODGE HO. UT, K. of P. BROTHERHOOD LOCOMOTIVE EM* Division 429, J. J. Widcman. Chief Engin eer; J. W. Lyon, First Assistant Engineer; II. A. McGee, Insurance Agent. .Meets 2d and 4th Sundays of each m«»nth at in a. nt,. Brotherhood linll, Reed block. Absolute!? Pure A cream of tarter baking powder. Highest of all in leavening strength.— Latnt U. S. Government Footl Rq*>rt. Koyal Baking Powder Co. 106 Wall Street, - Non- York. ENGLISH HOUSES. Those In the Country Etpfrti the Own er** TMU a.xl Kxperte^ce. Country houses hare' an initial ad* vantage over all town dwellings of the ordinal^ type, says the London Spec tar tor. The last are designed in nine cases out of ten by a builder or con tractor. who intends: them for other people. Country houses are. almost without exception, built by their own ers to suit themselves, v They are the expression not only ot the general feel ing as to comfort and .convenience but also of the owner's taste or experience. Every country house can therefore b« taken os a document illustrating th« exact modification wlji^h individual good sense haa made in the general type. Inthem, If'anywhere, we should expect to find the nearest approach tc perfect comfort so farces structure can secure it. Next to wan ith, which, with its doucomltant of shelter from the weather, was presumably the original want which led men to build houses at all, space the main condition of in door satisfaction. The living rooms art | ■■the ground floor, deriving their sup- $300 Will be Girtu any case of rheumatism which not be cured by Dr. Drummond’s Light- port of fresh air from the hall, which, ning Remedy. * The proprietors do not us in the London house, gets its stock hide this offer, but print it in hold tvpe on in turn from under the main door. Bat nil their circulars, wrappers, printed the greater space leaves ample matter hnd through the columns of news- » thorough wanning of the central ah |*pen evwywhere. It will wort won-j <-liaml*r. Yet In how few coontrj lien-one bottle curing nearly even 1 h °°s*» k th<t hall properly wwnned by If the dmggist has not got it, he ‘ “* “ will order it, or it will he sent to any address hv prepaid express on receipt THE LORDLY LIU Eton Fags Who Are Forced t« Walt Upon the Older Students price, $3.’ Drummond Medicine Co. 48-! 50 Maiden Lane, New York. Agents j wanted. Dr. J. P. PRESCOTT, Practicing Physician IIOIIOKEN, GEORGIA. I All .-.II, promptly ottewkJ. to**. 2SIT* 31., T. N. Syfan, Secretary. Meets 2*1 4th Saturdays each month at II. L. K. hall, 730. p. m. WAYCROSS RIFLES. Company —. 4th regiment Georgia Volun teer*. Capt. J. Me I’. Farr; 1st Lieutenant, J. 11. Gillon: 2d Lieutenant, T. O’Brien; Secretary. Jolin Hogan; Treasurer. \V. 11. Folks. Regular monthly meeting 3*1 Thun*- 8. L. DRAWDY, ATTORNEY AT LAW. r :.°o.; A W rilliams, Secretary. IIOMERVILLE,. DR. J.H. REDDING, OFFICE, FOLKS BI*OCK. Near Hotel Thoenix. HpifO-ly •ISO* W. HITCH KI*W. It. MYER*. HITCH & MYERS, ATTOBNEY8 AT LAW, Up Stairs Wilson's Block. WAYCROSS. GEORGIA. J N. WILLIAMS, Attorney at Law. WAYCROSS. - AMONG THE CHURCIIES. PRKSBVTKRIAM CHURCH. Williams Street, Rev. W. S. Porter, Pastor. ' Service* on every Habitaths except tin- fiitt, at II o’clock a. m. and 7:30 p. in. Prayer meeting Thursday night at 7:30 o'clock. HaMiath school at 0-3<» a. in. every Sunday. The Earnest Workers meet every I Wed nos* lay afternoon. METHODIST CHURCH, i Church Street. Rev. (I.W Mathews. Pastor. Services 11 a. in. and 7 p. m. Sablath : School 3 p. in. Christian En«l*-av*tr, 4:.'!» p.m. stoves. With that provision omitted, the size of hall and staircase merely prevents the air from ever becoming properly warmed at all, and for week? the passages and bedrooms remain at a temperature in which it would be un safe to allow even cattle to sleep. A further capital defect in most country houses is the absence of bathrooms, either of hot water or hot air, and the impossibility of obtaining any suddcc increase of temperature in case of chill or illness. Contrast this with the conditions fot indoor life as understood by the Ro mans during the three centuries in which they occupied this country. Every Roman villa, however small, as a visitor to any of the numerous excava tions may see for himself, was thor oughly heated with hot air, running in pipes under the floors and up the walls. Better than this, the same furnace which distributed this even warmth throughout the house also heated a small hot air chamber or Turkish bath, next to which waa a cold plunge bath. Tfe, Art of Cooking Acgeireil In nn Un> plonannt Mnnnor In thg Old Kd- nrntlonnl Institution* ot Eagland. Most people contemplating a debate In the house of lords from the gallery would be surprised to hear that a good ly proportion of the grave and reverend seigniors engaged in settling affairs ol state on the very steps of the throne were adepts at frizzling the toothsome sau sage and cooking the homelike “bloat er.” Yet so it is, according to the Boa- ton Herald,' for nearly half of. the peon of England are oiy Etonians, and one of the oldest institutions still cherished -under the shadow of the distant spire* and antique towers sacred to the memo ry of King nenry’s shade is that ol “fagging.” The first and second day oi every term, when the whole school has re turned, a sort of slave market is held in each house, at which the upper boy* have the privilege of choosing from among the lower boys their own par ticular “fag” for the next three month* or so. In some houses where thelowet boys—that is, boys who have not reached the fifth form—are numerous, an upper boy may have two such ser vitors for _ his own exclusive use. The duties of an Eton fag are many. The fag is responsible for getting his mas ter out of bed in time for early morn ing school. A dangerous and thank less task to perform on a big boy who is a hard sleeper and free with his fiat# and ijuick at throwing shoes when once awakened. School over, the fag 1ms tc prepare his master's breakfast. He lays the cloth, makes the tea and toast —woe betide him if the latter )>e burned or cut too thick—boils the egg* and fries any extra luxuries in the way of bacon and sausages his master may send him to purchase in the town. | The same round . of duty has to be i gone through again at supper time, j But fagging at meals is by no meant the only service which the lower boy lias to render. He has to scrape tht mud off his master’s football hoots, to . his clothes away after cricket Easily Settled. President (of Red Rhinoceros Mining Company)—Gentlemen. 1 have called you together to lay a.plain statement of the case before you. Work on the Red Rhinoceros mine has been suspended because of the inability of the miners, even with the best pumps money can buy, to keep the water out of the mine. It cornea in faster than we ean pump it out. The ore is there but we can’t get it. The question Is: What are we going to do with that water? — Directors (with one voice)—Put it ip the stock.—Chicago Tribune. m mm m. i Indian MatfopoUa That Was Forsaken Many Years Ago. SpUador. The renowned and now deserted city ot Amber, in northwestern India, flour ished with ita countless thousands of inhabitants and untold wealth and splendor in the time of the Ptolemy*. It is situated in a mountain nook, about fire miles from the present city of Jey- pore, aud is one of India’s jeweled pos- “Gwendoline, darling, do you lov« me?” “Have you satisfied my father with regard to your social and financ-ia* standing?” * h ??’ , , . . i sessions for antiquarians. * The great 'tZZESZ 1 Amber palace ubnilt of solid red sand- ; stone aud variegated Jrvpore marble. liahment you promised'. “You are.” “Horses, carriages, diamonds, and sc forth?” “Everything." “Then I do love you, Reginald!”- Boston Globe. In tb, Uot 3Irs. llerdso— If there Is anything 1 ! palace, hate, it is a backbiter. cisco c Mrs. Saidso—So do I. Now, there 1* j °* Hindu architecture, solid and secure. and inlaid with costly gems. It has stood for centuries as it now stands, upon an elevated mountain slope over looking a picturesque lake and sur rounded by steep and nigged fortified peaks, with the walled and long since doomed and ruined city below. The writer in the San Fran cisco Chronicle, is a masterly structure Mrs. Westend; what a gosaiper she U~ ; ? ct ornamental and beautiful. Entrance . aud such a liar, too! She told me het ; is gained through a massive and strong- husband got twice the salary yours did ! Iy fortified gate which leads into a —that she didn’t know how you man- 1 spacious central court, richly adorned aged to dress as you do. j with rar *' carvings, mighty trees and Mrs. llerdso—The old cat! Shelook 1 flowering shrubbery. The grand diwan- in washing a year ago to support th« I *' ani - or audience hall, la reached from v family, while the old man waa on a sis \ thl * spacious court by a massive flight weeks’ drunk. I hate gossips!—Truth of «»rved marble steps. This hall la a * noble example of llajput art, with Its t laeempetest Toatimaay. i double rows of shining marble columns Mr. Noodles—I confess, Miss Mull! 1 supporting a massive entablature, gatawney, to having loved you foi above which are latticed galleries of years- ! marble worked in rare designs. Miss Mulligatawney (just admitted U it was upon this floorthatthe ancient the bar)—Mr. Noodles, I have only t*: I kings and nobles of this once royal city remiud you that the standard writer? | witnessed many gorgeous scenes of on jurisprudence no longer accept a j gayety anil cruelty. Here they ap* confession unsupported by other evi- | plauded the royal tilts and sports, and dence as conclusive proof. Good day | here they reviewed the many fierce ir.—Detroit Tribune. A Scientific Definition. Son—IV. what is a whisky straight? Father (who knows whereof)—Er— well, my hoy, a large, swelled head; an erroneous impression of great and sud den wealth; a *li*»osition to fight a twice your size; an aptness fot conflicts between men and beasts, and between royal Bengal tigers and noble fighting elephants in the grand court yard below. It was also upon this tpacious floor that the kings and queens of this ancient realm gathered together at sunrise every morning for many centuries to witness the sacrifice of a The writer recently saw the remain?! running with the beagles, and take makinir the world to* anoear lott-sldec 1 Hving human being on that huge, black, of a Roman house, built some one thou not ^ otW boys in other houses Sdlto bl tZJKTZnblood-besmeared stone altar in the ' fuindvesrsftrrn.nerfeet.lv fitted with * : * , . , , and to be revolving rapidly, any one o» . RESTORES Normal Circulation, and Kind yemrs ago, perfectly dtted with . , Mr G)adli tone was somewhat lucky warming apparatus; while a modern in hl , t , ex i n g mt Eton, as he fagged fo. house of abt timaa Ita sire, in the garden his ri<1 „ brotherThomas, and naturally of which the old trllla lay, waa nnpm got let down eaaler than if he had hear Tided with any other meana of heal i apportioned to some strange hoy. Tli. than open grates. Naturally, th« warming of country houses may lx over-elaborated. But that is rare, though we. have known instances ir marquis of Blanford and his brother, laortl Randolph Churchill, had the repu-! lotion of being incorrigibly idle fags, vhen they chose to exert them- GIVE YOU AS NEAT which a difference of two degrees lie- : se| TM they were excellent cooks, and a, 1 tween the thermometer. In any tw< suc h were maeh In request It is equal- room, was rated with dismissal to th< | , to imagine the dignified laird domestics in charge, while the first im | t . Me . f Justice Coleridge making toaat : pulne of a visitor was to rush to open , „ a boiling eggs for his “master,’’ but tradition has it that he was a most ex- 1 revolving rapidly; any them may be called a whisky’s trait.- Jury. ful. Miss Elderly—Don’t try to taffy me. I was never lovely or amiable. I vra* always homely and spiteful. He—Will you allow me to say that you are remarkably well preserved?- Texas Siftings. small royal temple just over there to the right of this marble hall. Here they would sit on their gold-woven ruga and hear the dying moans and see and smell the smoke of these sacrificed vic tims in order to appease (as they de voutly believed and believe to this day) the divine Shiva’s wrath. It is. here that ojL-may seo every morning in the year oMmnocent goat' burned alive ae a substitute for a human being as an of fering to Heaven to appease the da- j stroyer's anger. From this hall, echo- window. EXTRACTION OF PERFUMES, i emplary fag. —■ In addition Six Differs:?* War* of Making fieeata fot My Lady** Handkercblcr. Six methods of extracting perfume* are known, according to Popular Sci ence Monthly. The first is e xpression by means of s special press, which is applicable with in addition to their regular daily work for their own master, the lower boy* have to fag in a desultory way for any upper boy who may want him during < •«*><**•* T*ll a LU. ; j with memories both gay and sad. Just throw me hnlf a doxen ■ of th. , „„ „, lnder through .pneinu. halU and MiSEI "“!!!?**' ' H gnllerh*. eUbomUly erred spurt- menu, up and down long rows of . *• . I S. I. not inflict such wounds as the vigor ously applied toasting fork of essential oils, suck as orange and citron peel, previously grated. Another method is that of dLstillo- the fish dealer. “Throw them?-queried the i len<1M sUi thmogh Mulpturwl “iMisndthen I'll go koine sndtall I g.tewsj. covered with lo.«sle. snd upper ooy who may want mm uunue i m T w ' f ® that 1 en,, lt * d*x»rs inlaid In Ivory , and preekm* rEay The h^mMter’, blrch d’ii ' ^ a - her ““ n ’ tmt ' “ n ° 1Ur - - IW • ’>■- — stones, until we ranch the highest ter race in the palace. This was excln- Trying t* Plea**. j sivelv devoted to the rajah’s personal o tedious ol ' Wife (in railway train)—It’s mortify- J apartments. These kingly apartments ali kinds' of fagging is to have to sit i ing to have you act so. Why don’t you I are beautifully constructed with mar- and read out the “crib” or translation 1 get up and help that young lady raise ble latticed windows and pavilions, to a number of upper boys preparing that window? gilt and carved ceilings and spacious toiin c. McDonald, BAPTIST rilORCI n UU i..« uicviiw » *£*•*. oiauuw- ^ Virgil ot Thucydides. This dotv Dutiful Husband—She’s ao pretty I ’ arched porticos. On our left is the jeh tton which consists of h«ating flower. , 22^1? the irksomeness of a was afraid you’d be mad.-N. Y ; mandir, or hall of victory, adorned by with water m a boUer. The essentia! £hool lcs^n W S ^vantage of ! Weekly. panels of alabaster inlaid with flower, oill. volatilized, sndl. condvn^d with | USZtovtt! IVhon a slto-rvlievo .ml wiling glittering -- ... , w j t j t mirrored and spangietl work for the vapor of water In a worm and a •earning noimng in return ior *» nen a rair Am Atlomey and Counselor at! EHzahcth street. Rev. W.n.S.-ruKs.Paato* *. * r» • ~ 1 Florentine receiver. The water usual- ‘ * lower ^ ^ ne 8 leCted hU work and | He-WiU you Idas Preaching every SaMiatli 11 a. in. and 7 III flllV Other. City 111 Geonna, ; " * - • - m. Sunday School every Sabbath 3 p .m. * s ’! Jy goes to the bottom and the oil floats. Law, WAYUKOSS, - - - l, ^° RfJ IA, j I’raycr Meeting every Thursday 7:30 Orricx up stain* in WiIm?u Block. | ^ . SAVANNAH ADVERTISEMENTS. .Hid at as low rates. Attorney at Law, WAYCBOSS, - - - GEORGIA EDWARD LOVELL’S SONS, We Use The Best of Stock. R. C CANNON, Attorney at Law, j WAYCROSS, . - - GEORGIA, j OrricC op stain? in WiUoii Bkn-k. Will practice In the Brunswick t'itvnit and elsewhere by special cunlract. Nov Ifr-’OlMy. ; iT T r CIT» A-PPT.TTV, _ attounky law. Wheels, Axles and Wagon WAYCROSS, : : GEORGIA. SAVAXSAIi; GEORGIA. PKALKItfi IX Hardware, Tinware, Plovs, Turpentine Manufacturers* Supplies, Bar, Band sud Hoop IRON. Office in the WiW DR. T. A. DENTIST, Officv nvvr C. E. Cook’ii, Pl.nl Annuo, WATCKOOO, OEOMIIA. ■m. J? WARREN LOTT, Fixe, Life and Accident In surance Agent, WAYCROSS. - - - GEORGIA* —Nothing hot flnt^MO componia ivpre- Time Tried and Fire Tested Kim, Life ami Accident Insnrancc Com- panicis *nd REAL ESTATE OFFICE. mr!9 ly Material, Guns, PiatoU and Ammnnition. d!9-ly Lloyd & Adams. DEAI.EI» IN Paints, Oils, Doors, Sash and Blinds, Terra Cotta and Sewer Pipes, BUILDERS HARDWARE, Lime, Plaster and. Hair and Cement. Owner t’ongre** and Whitaker Sts.. Savannah, : : Georgia. Sole Agents for Adamant preparation In the worid walls and veiling*. Write lor Anything in the , Printing Line VISITING CARD TO A POSTER Tht'~o'll>’ ol 'nerolT *roM."''natch™lT P 0 ™ 1 pnnUhment'n common form ot j proper. ' ! for -hloh Jcyporc. It. MicocMor. U now geranium lavender caraway’ etc. art ‘‘eorreotion’’is to mind the offender np I Ho (desperately)—Well, may I It Ik juatly celebrated. ^bSnMin uSw^ ‘o ••t-»yton's’’-n famon. eonfecUone. you? Oppoelle tlua grand hall of victory la The orocesa la not annUcahle to th« : in Windsor-to fetch a penny hun dm- , she (with enrpriw)—Why, certainly t *•“ ankh nawaa. or hall of pleaaure, the riolet, and for them recourse la had | ”tLrJl«i omnsing "“»>■ groa.painting.ofpleaaarMoneartl.aad St“^'mlneMl olU.'irt^h ’have’ri! hhurif in that particular playtime., Wealthy but Economical Father-Do in Heaven. Here are grove, from which or ““nezml oua, which have the . h to provethat he has really you know, my son, what strict economy j issue cool, clear streams of pure moun- (woperty of abKirblng odorous sub- | ^“ mnZ™Iod ba=k liy“ i^ag would do for yon? uin water, which 1. perfume.! and mad, stuieea, and are then wuhed in alcohol. , ^Tton ta^one “Layton’. ” ifagi Kobert-I know what It ha, done for ’ to run In e.rved channel, the whole TTie flowera are usually heatad in the . ...»t,. me. father, end I respect yon for IL- | length of the marble door to cool the the bun in one of “Layton’s” bags. fat for a variable number of j Brooklyn Life, lor perfume, which cannot endure . ‘Layton’s” on some pretext or other, and on the n»xt occasion they were sent for the penny bun to purchase that comestible at one of the “sock shops*’ in college and envelop it in the wrapper as evidence of a journey that had not been undertaken. high temperature the petals are plaeed between frames of glass costed with fat. This Is the process of enfleurage. The pneumatic process, which con sists in causing a current of perfumed air or carbonic acid to be absorbed by coatings of lard on glass pistes, ap pears not to have given satisfactory re sults. _ Another process consists in dissolving .c^Tific Writers to'th^fact that the perfumes in very volatile liquids, like i shspes of permanent hills are altered, aulphuret of carbon, chloroform, naph- j sometimes to a considerable extent, by th f* or chloride of methyl, and i thc blowing of the wind against them, volatilizing the solvents, which can be i this especUUy true in those cases done at a low temperature in a vacuum. 1 w b er « the hills are partly composed of The last method has given very sati» j ume f orm of rock that readily disinte- factory results in the extreme delicacy \ ^tes under the influence of the * “**” “ j weather; that is, the crumbling rock | is blown away, leaving the more solid N’KCK AND NKCK. and great accuracy of its returns. GLASSES FOR ANIMALS *SMtatlM Are r#**» o« Colt* to Maki Thom Blffk Stepper*. Although it may seem almost In dkrous to think of horses wearing —Truth. At s Teas* llotol. » uvn. „ B ,„ v ( Guest—Waiter, bring ioe ao rock behind and often in cm-ious forms. It is well known that the famous Waiter—Boss, I cant jeas recormem* sirocco, or the southwesterly wind, de jjjj w •• >*•- I “What is the matter with it?” ‘Nuffin*. ’ccpt *lar ain’t none.”—Tetsi Plaster. I»e*t •tk»u in the _ world for plastering |.| Eomiiai Piioling > spectacles. It Is nevertheless a fact 1 ential in shaping and molding hills and Sifting*. , that horses do sometimes wear them, valleys. It is asserted, too, that an ex- , starting in Tim*. The business of one well-known firm j tensive bay on the east coast of tht She—Must you go so soon, darling? of opticians in London consists largely ! Island of Malta owes its origin and ex- , It is only ten o'clock, and father won’t A GUT CH BATES. From Junk to October Try Tlio _ I blows directly into it. The npid He—True, my own. But that qnly changes from dampness to dryness, ; gives me two hours “in- which ' characteristic of the sirocco, and the | good night.—Life. crystalizmtion of the salt it deposits upon the rocks are reckoned among the powers of destruction possessed by this wind. ______ W. A. WRIGHT, J. P. p | And Agent For National Guarantee Co i Securities obtained on easy terms. Special ! attention given to the collection of claim*. ‘ Post Once Building, Way cross, Ga. If you want the very beat to eat and j something to eat it out of, buy you gro- i ernes and crockery ware at reasonable j prices from McNeil the grocer. L.50 PER DAY7 OFFICE Homethlax Had to Break. “Why did you break your ment with Mias Ilipton?” “It had to be the engagement or 'me, and I’m too fond of good living to gr The Old Reliable HARNETT HOUSE, rjna inh SAVANNAH. UA. |IIUU IIUU in the manufacture of horse spectacles. ■ tent to the agency of the sirocco, which ! object if you stay until twelve. The object of the spectacles is to pro- 1 - * ‘ - - * *- **• ”” —*-* ! — — ** - - mute high stepping. They are made of stiff leather, entirely inclosing the eyes of the horse, and the glasses used are deep concave and large in size. The ground seems to the horse to be raised and he steps high, thinking he is going nphill or has to step over some obstacle. The system of spectacle wearing is generally adopted while the horse Is young, and its effect on his step and action is said to be remarkable. It has been discovered that the cause of a horse’s shying is, as a rale, short sight, snd'it is now suggested that the sight of all horses should be tested, like that of children. It is maintained by those who have made a study of the subject that, by a a little artificial assistance, many valu able horses which have become optical- j lv unlit for work may be restored to Rivalry- o # „ Molly—My little sister’s got measles, into bankruptcy.”—Harper’s Bazar. Jimmie—Ho! So has mine. Molly—Well, I’ll bet you my little sis ter’s got more measles than yours has. —Harper’s Young People. How the Doctor r*lt Wellman—I say throw physic to the dogs. Doctor—All righL Do as you please. As for myself. I con get more for it else where.—Detroit Free Press. * be wooCars why It is Sbe speaks to bias so store- - la th* Orthodox Way. heated atmosphere anti the gay occu pants of this ball of pleasure. Adjoin- j Ing this beautiful hall are the aumpt nous bathing apartments and deep, cool J pleasure caverns surrounded by ferns and rare flowers, where the kings snd ! queens of this ancient castle bid de- i fiance to old Sol’s burning rays during ! India’s hottest days. Here they whiled j sway their happy days smkl love snd ! pleasures in an atmosphere rendered j sweet by the aroma of costly incense, i ■ listening to the strains of Indian music, gazing now and then upon the many beautiful girls as .they performed in scanty attire, as they do to this day. tits ‘ famous nsutch dance of India. Next to , these pleasure hsBs anil groves are tits | spacious apartments once occupied by ; the harem, an Indispensable adjunct to ! all eastern palaces. From every hall ; and terrace, from every arched paviliou | and earven-latticed window of'This i wonderful old palace we get glimpses j of this picturesque spot, this historic j city, surrounded as it is by all that na ture and art can do to make It beauti ful. The whole panorama gives evi dence of the barbaric splendor, enjoyed by this noble race of powerful llindr kings ao many centur ies ago. Not Qstto th* Sams* “Yes. he's a fine enough looking Imr**,” said the pn?spectltd purchaser, criti«-x1*y examining the spirited thor oughbred again. **IIe'A nothing extra, (•f course, but he’ll answer my purpose, I think. And his tail Ualready docked. I won’t have to get that job done.” “Curious thing about that tall!” said the owner of the horse, patting the ani mal’s glossy Hide, “It’s always been Just that length. He never had any more tall. He was born so.” “Born so!” echoed the other. “Then I-don't want him at any price. To not buying freaks.”—Chicago Tribune. St&ut Lad} —Does a bicycle reduce the flesh? L the Orthodox \Tsj. Mr. Slimpurse (wearily)-If you buy Smith—Jobson Is wedded to politics. .! It on the installment plan it does.—N ISrowr?- Yea, with s ring. —Truth. Y. Weekly Are hardly ef oee tyye;