The Lee County journal. (Leesburg, Ga.) 1904-19??, July 29, 1904, Image 2

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WHERE SILENCE IS GOLDEN. J. Axson Bond—Would you have loved me had I been poor? She-—Certainly, my love; but I'd have kept yoy in blissful ignorance of the fact.—Smart Set. R . VB S i AN R R, ! ! | /B.BR AHouseho!d Remsdy I SCAROFULA, “KANX Cures °icens, O ’{/ %HA nnsu&g, ec;_ . , every form o Q ~ 5 0 \ maliqrnanty SKIN B LO 0 D ERUFTION, besides being «fficacious in toning up the system BA LM - nd restoring the con stitution, when impaired ( frcm any cazuse, fi is a fine Tonic, and its almost supernatural healing properties justify us in guaranteeing a crre of B 01l blood diseases, if diroctions are followed. Prico, $1 per Bottle, or 6 Bottles for §9. FOR SALE BY DRUGAISTS, SE"T FREE BOOK OF WONDERFUL CURES, togoether with valuable information, BLOOD BALM CO., ATLANTA, G/. . Machine . v :. . PP i fil‘ (R i o ‘; . & AR I T S I e er o ‘,‘l':'.“‘“L.dv-;“f/ &l A, T WD I P . ¢ ORI I SN B | e o TR T Nl i o TR SO T “ R W BN e R AR i - [ A R WR LT Al 5 i i S e AN '_'f'.g": ; :-':f H!y [ RN . s { 4 S R e e - o R PO et . S LA ) 8 P el 1 T G B oS PRATT. MUNGER. WINSHIP. EAGLE. SIMTH. We make the most complete line of any concern in the world. We also make ENGINES and BOILERS, LINTERS for OIL MILLS. We sell everything needed about a Cotton Gim. Write for Illustrated Catalogue. ® ® Continental Gin Co., Birmingham, Ala. A SURE HOME CURE. Opium, Morphine and Whiskey Habits. A positive, safe and painless home treatment. No publicity. Continue your business. Write for scaled hooklet. The Georgia Medicine Company, * 16 Grant Bldg., Atlanta, Ga. L The Great East TV ' and West Line AND Across the En tire BStates of ‘wt;n""' \ W',:x,’ THE 7;_7‘ e g B @ e Se s . TEXAS Tpf“’P PACIFIC 5 ‘ ‘: » 1 "*. : \A“‘?.\\(\\“g " 09 RAILWAY N~ No trouble to answer questions. 85 miles shortest route Shreveport to Dallas. Write for new book on Texas, free. E. P. TURNER, Ganeral Passenger Agent, Dallas, Texas. N - CURED ) I ru s Givei R 3 8 & Quic " Ry & W J Relief. AR Removes all swelling in Bto 20 days; effects a permanent cure : ] in 30to 6o days. Trialtreatment gy . AN givenfree. Nothingcan be fairer i A I _ Write Dr. H. H. Green’s Sons, T N Specialists, Box B Atlanta, Ga. NOTICE TO TEACHERS. To advertise the best book-keeping, business training and shorthand while attending SUMMER SCHOOL OF THE SOUTH, June 28 to Aug. 6, Teachers will be given tuition and supples for Five Dollars or less. Clipand keepthis- it willnotappear again. McALLEN’S BUSINESS COLLEGE, Qorner Gay & Church Streets, Knoxvliile, Tenn. WORLD’'S FAIR ST, LOUIS, Louisville and Nashville Railroad. If you are going to the World’s Fair you want the best route. The L. & N. is the shortest, quickest and best line. Three trains daily. Through Pullman. Sleeping Qars and Dining Cars. Low Rate Tickets sold daily. Get rates from your local agent and ask for tickets via the L. & N. All kinds of information furnished on ap plication to J. G, HOLLENBECK, Dist. Pass. Agent, Atlanta, Ga. Warning Tablet From Herod's Temple A cast of one of the insecriptions on Herod’s Temple, at Jerusalem, warn ing Gentile not to enter, has been re cently added to the collection in the Utiiversity of Pennsylvania Museum, says the Old Penn Weekly Review. The Jewish temple was sacred to the followers of that rzligion, and upon the big slab imbedded in the doorpost was written in Greek and Latin: “NgQ foreigners shall enter within the bal ustrade and irclosure around the tem ple. Whoever is caught will have himself to blame for his death, which shall follow.” It will be remembered that the Jews were much stirred up against Paul because he “brought Greeks in to the templs and hath polluted the holp place.” According to Josephus, these inscriptions were at every gate, but only one was found. While Professor Hilprecht was working in the Imperial Museum at Constantinople as director he discov ered the stone and had the cast made for the university. . i @ Since 1840 the world’s production of meat has been increased fifty-seven per cent. and grain four hundred and twenty per cent. FITS permanently eured. No fitsornervous ness after first day’s use of Dr. Kline’s Great Nerveßestorer,s2triad bottle and treatise free Dr.R.H.Kuisg, Ltd., 931 Arch St., Phila., Pa . The population of London has increased eleven per cent. in fourteen years. Feeot Hurt, Sweat, itch, blister? Rovar. Foor Wasn cures them. Removes odors of feet, armpits, ote.; stops chaflng. If not at druggists send 25¢ to EaTox Drua Co., Atlanta, Ga., for full size, postpaid; sample for 2¢ stamp. One application proves its merit. Money back if not satisfied. Immense Circular Saw, The largest circular saw in the world has just been made in Philadelphia. It is seven feet four inches in diameter, and will be used to cut pine stumps into shingle bolts. Deafness Cannot Be Cured by local applications as they cannot reach the diseased portion oftheear. Thereis only one - way to cure deafness, and that is by consti tutional remedies. Deafness is caused by an inflamed condition of the mucous lining of ~ the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is in ~ flamed you have a rumblingsound or imper ~ fect hearing, and when it is entfrely closed Deafness is the result, and unless the inflam mation can be taken out and this tube re stored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever. Nine cases out of ten are caused by catarrh,which ig nothing but an inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. - We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh)that can not be cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars free. F.J. Caexey & Co.,Toledo, O. Sold bg Druggists, 75¢, Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation. No Milk While in Mourning. When an Arabian woman is in “mourning for a near relative she re fuses to drink milk for a period of eight days, on the principle that the color of the liquid does not harmonize with her mental gloom. . ' » Or. Biggers’ Bucklekerry Cordial The Great Southern Remedy, cures all stomach and bowel troubles, children teething. Made from The Little Huckleberry ~ that grows alongside our hills and moun tains, contains an active principle that has a happy effect on the stomach and bow els. It enters largely in Dr. Biggers'. Huckleberry Cordial, the great stomach and bowel remedy for Dysentery, Diar rhoea and Bloody Flux. Sold by all druggists, 256 and 650 c bot tle. AN EX-CHIEF JUSTICE’S OPINION. Judge O. E. Lochrane, of Georgla, In a letter to Dr. Biggers, states that he never suffers himself to be without a bot tle of Dr. Blggers’ Huckleberry Cordial during the summer time, for the relief of all stomach and bowel troubles, Dys entery, Diarrhoea, Flux, etc. Sold by all drugglists, 25 and 50c bottles. HALTIWANGER-TAYLOR DRUG CO., Proprietors, Atlanta, Ga. Taylor's Cherokee Remedy of Sweet Gum and Mullein will cure Coughs, Croup and Consumption. Price 26cand$1 a bottle. Give the name of this paper when writing to advertisers—(At26.o4) Specific Ophthalmia | NoMoreßlindHorses .2 s it & otnor | Sore Eyes, Barry Co,, lowa City, la.,have a sure cure ‘CUSTOM OF PARLIAMENT. How Strangers Sometime Wander Within Sacred Precincts. The stranger within the parliamen tary gate (at Westminster) continues periodicaily to excite a good deal of interest, l The elective chamber resembles Vir gil’'s Avernus in that there are many easy and different approaches to it, and that night and days its portals, at least, are open to the crowd. Un authorized entrants may, therefore, now and then elude the most sphynx i eyed of doorkeepers. Never in m}’l time has the casual invader actually voted in a division. | I have repeatedly seen strangers‘ from Westminster hall, mixed up in a little group of M. P.’s, pass unchal lenged through the lobby, then in troducing themselves to the interior, find sitting-room below the gangway —for a time. The moment of detec tion and ejection, sooner or later, in variably comes. In 1876 two strayed revelers ffom the licensed victualers’ dinner table walked in unnoticed, perhaps even not quite conscious, and sat down not far from the sergeant-at-arms, within three feet of so sympathetic a neigh bor as the great testotaler, Sir Wilfrid Lawson himself; they remained there nearly half an hour. They might have stayed longer Lad | not one of them caused his companion to laugh immediately by the sugges tion that he should cail on Mr. Speak er for a song. In the summer of 1878, during the debate on the calling of Indian troops to Europe, a deeply iuterested visitor, not hearing quite well from his proper place below the gallery, moved sev eral yards up, so as to be quite close to the member on his legs, who hap pened to be Sir George Campbell. He only reached the place of new members waiting to be sworn; of these there were several. Only an in discreet exhibition of interest in the I_debate disclosed the intruder, who just as he waited an opportunity of getting nearer to the Speaker, found himself a prisoner and in course of removal by the sergeant-at-arms. Very often these experiences at His Majesty’s theatre royal of St. Steph en’s pased from the purely comic in to the broadly farcial. In the old days the visitor unfurnished with a mem ber’s card could gererally get into the gallery by giving a silver coin to the custodian. Hence, of course, many more or less authentic stories 'of droll mistakes. Toward the close of the last century the sergeant-at-arms amused. his guests in ‘Gossett’s room” by telling how a successful applicant for admission | showed his gratitude by pressing half a crown into the terrible official’spalm. tSimilarly Disraeli’s atorney-general, politely giving an ‘“order” to some one he overheard asking for the absent Sir John Cross, received sixpence. For an exactly similar service an eloquent Irish member, A? M. Sullivan, was re warded with twice that sum. The third Marquis of Salisbury, prime min ister till 1902, once showed himselfl | equally obliging, hut was less lavish- ! ' 1y recompensed; the stranger whom he had helped out of some small dif ficulty could only put in his hand some coppers to get a glass of beer.— | T. H. S. Escott, in Chamber’s Journal. I The Seedless Apple. ! The time honored jest of the rustic | apple eater, “There won’t be no | { core,” will soon prove a stern reality. | | Long standing as a type of monument- ‘ al selfishness, this retort will be a cold commonplace of the market be- | fore the decade is gone. A man in Colorado named Spencer has devel- I oped the seedless apple and has 2000 | | such trees réady to put on the mar- | ket. After the seedless orange andl the seedless lemon this news was to be expected in due course. Spencerl will no doubt reap a fortune from his ingenuity, but in proportien to the spread of his new variety of fruit trees | will be the reprobation which will | follow his name each succeeding spring. For with the apple seed Spebn cer has abolished the apple blossom, too. What would a spring landscape be without the pink tinted beauty of applé orchards abloom? If to escap® the apple seed we must lose the most beautiful flowering trees that grow, then to the stocks with the scientifi¢ promologist. Better the chances of appendicitis and of the diseases which Spencer says come from moth eggs Jaid in apple blossoms, than the blot ting of flowering orchards from off the face of the earth. Sometimes the sci entists know too much. They will be gin to apply their economics to the human race next—and about that time the race will wake up.—Brooklyn Ea gle. A PEARLS OF THOUGHT. Those who have the most happi ness think the least about it. But in thinking about and in doing their duty happiness comes because the heart and mind are occupied with earnest thought that touches at a thousand points, the beautiful and sublime real ities of the universe.—Thackeray. The soul of man does violence to it self when it is overpowered by pleas ure or by pain, when it plays a part and does or says anything insincerely and untruly, when it allows any act of its own and any movement to be with out an aim, and does anything thought lessly and without considering what it is, it being right that even the small est thing be done with reference to an end.—Marcus Aurelius. To be famous depends upon some fortuities, to he rich depends upon birth or luck, to be intellectually emi-: nent may depend on the appointment ot Providence; but to be a man, in the sense of substance, depends solely on one’s own noble ambition and determi nation to live in contact with God’s open atmosphere of truth and right from which all true manliness is in spired and fed.—T. S. King. Unfailing courtesy, kindness, tender ness and consideration for others are some of the greatest ornaments to the character of the child of God. The world can understand these things, if it cannot understand doctrine. There is no religion in rudeness, roughness, bluntness and incivility. The perfec tion of practical religion consists in at tending to the little duties of holiness as well as to the great—J. C. Ryle. Keep the sunshine of living faith in the heart. Do not let the shadow of discouragement and despondency fall upon your path. However weary you may be, promises of God will, like the stars at night never cease to shine; to cheer and to strengthen. The best harvests are the longest in ripening. It is not pleasant to work in the earth plucking the ugly tares and weeds, but it < as necessary as sowing the seed. The harder the task the more need of singing.—‘“Royal Path of Life.” I may be your prayer is like a ship which, when it gets on a very long voyage, does not come home laden so soon; but when it does come home it has a richer freight. Mere coasters will bring you coals, or such like or dinary things, but they that gec afar to Tarshish return with gold and ivory. Coasting prayers, SucCh as we pray ev erv day, bring us many necessaries; but there are great prayers which, like the old Spanish galleons, cross the main ocean and are longer out of sight, but come home deep laden with a golden freight.—C. H. Spurgeon. Would that it were possible for the heart and mind to enter into all the life that grows and teems upon the earth—to feel with it, hope with it, sorrow with it—and thereby to become a grander, nobler being! Such a be .ing, with such a sympathy and larger existence, must hold in scorn the fee ble, cowardly, seclfish desire for an immortality of pleasure only, whose one great hope is to escape pain! No. Let me joy with all living creatures,let me suffer with them all; the reward of feeling a deeper, grander life would be amply sufficient.—Richard Jefferies. All Austrian officers possessing mo tor cars have been ordered by the min ister of war to report themselves for service, bringing their machines.